made only by registered applicants and in the order
established by the drawing. At each land office,
commencing Tuesday, August 6, 1901, at 9 o’clock
A.M., the applications of those drawing numbers 1 to
125, inclusive, for that district must be presented
and will be considered in their numerical order during
the first day, and the applications of those drawing
numbers 126 to 250, inclusive, must be presented and
will be considered in their numerical order during
the second day, and so on at that rate until all of
said lands subject to entry under the homestead law,
and desired thereunder, have been entered. If
any applicant fails to appear and present his application
for entry when the number assigned to him by the drawing
is reached, his right to enter will be passed until
after the other applications assigned for that day
have been disposed of, when he will be given another
opportunity to make entry, failing in which he will
be deemed to have abandoned his right to make entry
under such drawing. To obtain the allowance of
a homestead entry each applicant must personally present
the certificate of registration theretofore issued
to him, together with a regular homestead application
and the necessary accompanying proofs, and with the
regular land office fees, but an honorably discharged
soldier or sailor may file his declaratory statement
through the agent representing him at the registration.
The production of the certificate of registration
will be dispensed with only upon satisfactory proof
of its loss or destruction. If at the time of
considering his regular application for entry it appears
that any applicant is disqualified from making homestead
entry of these lands his application will be rejected,
notwithstanding his prior registration. If any
applicant shall register more than once hereunder,
or in any other than his true name, or shall transfer
his registration certificate he will thereby lose all
the benefits of the registration and drawing herein
provided for, and will be precluded from entering
or settling upon any of said lands during the first
sixty days following said opening.
Because of the provision in the said act of Congress
approved June 6, 1900: “That the settlers
who located on that part of said lands called and
known as the ‘neutral strip’ shall have
preference right for thirty days on the lands upon
which they have located and improved,” the said
lands in the “neutral strip” shall for
the period of thirty days after said opening be subject
to homestead entry and townsite entry only by those
who have heretofore located upon and improved the same,
and who are accorded a preference right of entry for
thirty days as aforesaid. Persons entitled to
make entry under this preference right will be permitted
to do so at any time during said period of thirty days
following the opening without previous registration,
and without regard to the drawing herein provided
for, and at the expiration of that period the lands
in said “neutral strip” for which no entry
shall have been made will come under the general provisions
of this proclamation.