58 THE USE BOOK. 



MARKING SPECIAL-USE BOUNDARIES. 



Whenever the land to be occupied under a special-use permit 

 will not be inclosed, or is not a legal subdivision, the Forest 

 officer in charge should, in order to avoid disputes, mark the 

 boundaries by blazing or suitable monuments. 



LANDS WITHDRAWN FOR ADMINISTRATIVE PURPOSES. 



Land withdrawn or to be withdrawn for administra- 

 tive purpose^ may be used under special-use permits, as 

 any other National Forest lands, so lo"ng as the special 

 use does not prevent on interfere.. with . tlie admimst.ra- 

 tive use. Land to be used for ranger stations may be 

 occupied under special-use permits until such time as 

 the Forest Service may need it, and the special use may 

 continue jointly with the administrative use if that is 

 found to be practicable. When a special-use permit is 

 issued for land which the supervisor knows will later 

 be needed exclusively for administrative purposes, the 

 permittee must be notified. 



FREE PERMITS. 



Xo charge is made for the following classes of special- 

 *Tise permits : Agricultural use by applicants having 

 preference right under act of June 11, 1906 (pp. 41-^3) , 

 cemeteries, churches, corrals, dipping vats where no toll 

 is charged, drift fences, irrigation conduits and reser- 

 voirs, miners' and prospectors' cabins, miners' ditches, 

 etc., used exclusively by actual miners for mining pur- 

 poses, municipal water plants applied for by municipal- 

 ities, roads and trails (which must be free public high- 

 ways), schools, sawmills sawing timber obtained from 



