delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee, an Indian of the Quileute tribe, brought suit in the Federal District Court for the Western District of Washington to determine his right to an allotment of an eighty-acre tract of land in the Quinaielt Indian Reservation in that State. Authority for bringing the suit is found in 28 Stat. 305, c. 290, as amended by 31 Stat. 760, c. 217. The treaty with the Quileute and other Indians, made in 1855, among other things, provides for the removal and settlement of these Indians upon a reservation to be selected for them by the President, and for the payment by the United States of $2,500 “ to clear, fence, and break up a sufficient quantity of land for cultivation.” 12 Stat. 971, Articles 2 and 5. The President is authorized by Article 6 of the treaty, at his discretion, to cause the reserved lands to be surveyed and assign the same to individual Indians or families for permanent homes on the same terms and under the same conditions as are provided in Article 6 of the treaty with the Omahas, concluded in 1854. 10 Stat. 1043, 1044. By the General Allotment Act, as amended, it is provided:
“ In all cases where any tribe or band of Indians has been or shall hereafter be located upon any reservation created for their use by treaty stipulation, Act of Congress, or executive order, the President shall be authorized to cause the same or any part thereof to be surveyed or resurveyed whenever in his opinion such reservation or any part thereof may be advantageously utilized for agricultural or grazing purposes by such Indians, and to *448 cause allotment to each Indian located thereon to be made in such areas as in his opinion may be for their best interest not to exceed eighty acres of agricultural or one hundred and sixty acres of grazing land to' any one Indian . . . ” 24 Stat. 388, c. 119, as amended by 26 Stat. 794, c. 383, and 36 Stat. 859-860, c. 431.
The land in question was selected by Payne in 1911, after survey, through and with the approval of an allotting agent of the United States. It is of mixed character, forty or fifty acres being timbered, and the remainder being bottom land, lying along the Raft River.
The sole question we are called upon to decide is whether the land, being timbered, is to be excluded from the operation of the Allotment Act which speaks only of agricultural and grazing lands. Both courts below determined the question in the negative,
It is common knowledge that vast bodies of land, originally covered with timber, in some of the public land States, including eastern Washington, have been acquired by private entry, cleared and brought under cultivation. The view that such lands were open to entry for agricultural purposes seems to have been generally recognized and acted upon (see
Johnson
v.
Bridal Veil Lumber Co.,
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
