Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 57 Part 2.djvu/102

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PROCLAMATIONSar 26 1943 PROCLA/ATOS--, Ap. ' 1, 1943 [57 STAT. 736 Day, and that the President of the United States be requested, as Commander in Chief, to order military units throughout the United States to assist civic bodies in appropriate celebration to such extent as he may deem advisable; to issue a proclamation each year declaring April 6 as Army Day, and in such proclama- tions to invite the Governors of the various States to issue Army Day proclamations: Provided, That in the event April 6 falls on Sunday, the following Monday shall be recognized as Army Day"; WHEREAS the men of the United States Army have carried the flag of the United States and the ideals which it represents to every part of the earth, and with their brothers-in-arms from the nations united with us are offering their lives for the future of America and of the world; WHEREAS our soldiers on the firing lines and in posts of danger depend for their very lives on the constant flow of ammunition, weapons and supplies from their brothers at home; and on the fidelity of their countrymen to maintain the ideals which they bravely defend: Designationof April NOW, THEREFORE, I, FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT, Presi- 6,1943 as Army Day. dent of the United States of America, do hereby proclaim Tuesday, April 6, 1943, as Army Day; and I invite the Governors of the States to issue proclamations appropriate to that day; and I request that on Army Day, while intensifying the war effort in factories, fields, mines, transportation lines and ports, the American people reflect upon the soldiers whose very lives they hold in trust and upon ways and means of increasing the flow of supplies to them and of maintaining in this nation a country worthy of their sacrifice and fit for their return. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States of America to be affixed. DONE at the City of Washington this 26 th day of March in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and forty-three and of the [SEAL] Independence of the United States of America the one hun- dred and sixty-seventh. FRANKLIN D ROOSEVELT By the Presidenlt: COIRDEII, H[UTII Secretary of State. CAPTURE OF PRIZES April 1, 1943 [No 2582] BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA A PROCLAMATION 5Stat 74 upp WHEREAS the Act of August 18, 1942, Public Law 704, 77th II, app. §§821-828 . Congress, contains in part the following provisions: "Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That the district courts shall have original jurisdiction of all prizes captured during the present war on the high seas if said capture was made by authority of the United States or was adopted and ratified by the President of the United States and the prize was brought into the territorial waters of a cobelligerent or was taken or appropriated for the use of the United States on the high seas or in such ter- ritorial waters, including jurisdiction of all proceedings for the condemnation of such property taken as prize.