156 C. A. SCHENCK. 



dispose of carcases ; 



salt at designated salting places ; 



extinguish camp and other fires. 



3. Permits are also required for stock merely driven across 

 a forest, except over highways. 



4. Special permits are required for erection of fences (division 

 fences; drift fences; inclosing tracts up to 320 acres). 



5. Leading livestock associations may consult as advisory 

 boards with officials regarding numbers, districting, and spe- 

 cial rules, 



!!!. SPECIAL PRIVILEGES. 



These privileges must not amount to an easement, but rather 

 to a lease. Hotels, mills, apiaries, residences, schools, churches, 

 farms, roads or trails, canals, ditches, pipelines, reservoirs, private 

 railroads, telegraph lines belong into this group. 



The decision in matters of special privileges rests, in small or 

 urgent cases, with the supervisor, but usually with the district 

 forester. 



IV. TRESPASS. 



The main cases of trespass on national forests are the fol- 

 lowing: 



1. grazing or driving without permit; 



2. fencing without permit; 



3. squatting; 



4. building roads, canals, reservoirs, telegraphs, sawmills, or 

 carrying on any kind of work unauthorized ; 



5. willful destruction of notices, or damaging any property 

 of the United States; 



6. firing the woods, or negligence in use of fire; 



7. cutting timber, except that used by travelers; 



8. cutting more timber on an unpatented mineral claim in 

 a forest than is required for its development; 



9. destroying corner marks; 



10. cutting timber on one mineral claim for use on another; 

 IL turpentining. 



Trespassers can be arrested: 



without warrant, on sight by any forest officer; 



