which will provide us with permanent forests. Ic will permit 

 of a classification, in the first place, to determine what lands 

 are fit for agricultural, and by elimination, what lands are not 

 so fitted. It is upon these latter, the non-agricultural lands, 

 upon which it is a vast economic mistake to permit settlement 

 by farmers, that a permanent forest policy for a permanent 

 timber supply will then be developed. 



17 



