95 



(1) The number of head should be Hniited so as not to exceed 

 at the start one hundred mares. 



(2) The period of the Hcense should be for five years, with 

 the privilege of an extension, with a revised schedule of pay- 

 ments, for five years more. 



(3) The government should reserve the right to grant, either 

 to the original licensee or to others, additional licenses for the 

 apiary privileges, for the keeping of pigs, or for any other uses 

 not inconsistent with the horse pasturing license, for each of 

 which additional compensation should be demanded. 



(4) The cutting of algaroba trees for export to other parts 

 of the Territory should be tabu, except as special rights were 

 granted, for additional compensation, to the original licensee or 

 to others. 



(5) It should be required that reasonable care be exercised 

 not to misuse or injure existing houses and other improvements 

 and that all new permanent improvements should become the 

 property of the government upon the termination of the license. 



B. — Reclamation provisions ; 



(6) The licensee should be required to take all reasonable 

 measures to police the island and prevent injury to government 

 property through trespass by fishermen and others. 



(7) Provide at least one laborer to work under the direction 

 of the licensee's foreman, in accordance with an outline of in- 

 structions to be drawn up by the territorial forester, to collect 

 and feed algaroba beans to the horses at designated places, to 

 collect the seed-impregnated manure at these spots and carrying 

 it with pack animals, systematically to place it at strategic points 

 along all the gulches, so that the spread of the algaroba forest 

 may be hastened in the places where it is most needed. Later, 

 were additional laborers employed, they should put in part of 

 their time on other planting work, as of trees and soil-binding 

 plants on the upland, coconuts along the shore, etc. 



(8) Have his employees read the four rain gauges now in- 

 stalled on Kahoolawe and make and transmit to the territorial 

 forester such other meteorological observations and records as 

 may from time to time be required. 



(9) Have his employes assist, as far as they reasonably can, 

 such agents of the Board of Agriculture and Forestry as may 

 visit the island, especially by allowing them the use of horses and 

 by providing them accommodations at their camps. 



(10) Use every reasonable endeavor to rid the island of any 

 sheep and goats that may have escaped at the time of the drives. 



(11) Later, at the expiration of the five years term, it will 

 probably be found advisable to require the construction of fences 

 to shut ofl^ the pili grass area from the upper lands, on parts of 

 which by then some of the native grasses will probably have re- 

 established themselves. A provision covering such work could 



