JURISDICTION. 27 



VIII. LIEU SELECTION. 



No right now exists to exchange private holdings 



within forest reserves for lands elsewhere, except when 



such right was established before March 3, 1905, and 



except the indemnity-selection right for school sections 



* 16 and 36, referred to above (p. 25). 



JURISDICTION. 



The authority to grant special privileges and rights 

 of way within forest reserves is divided as follows: 



I. Applications for permission to occupy or use 

 lands, resources, or products of a forest reserve, which 

 occupation or use is temporary in character, and which, 

 if allowed, will in no wise affect the fee or cloud the 

 title of the United States, are under the jurisdiction of 

 the Secretary of Agriculture. 



II. All applications affecting lands within a forest 

 reserve, the granting of which amounts to an easement 

 running with the land, are within the jurisdiction of 

 the Secretary of the Interior. 



All privileges within forest reserves, except for tim- 

 ber and grazing, are "Special privileges," and the fol- 

 lowing are the more usual ones under Class I and must 

 be applied for through the forest supervisors: 



CLASS I. 



(a) Trails and wagon roads. 

 (>) Schools and churches. 



(c) Hotels, stores, mills, stage stations, apiaries, 

 miners' camps, stables, summer residences, sanitariums, 

 dairies, trappers' cabins, and the like. 



(d) Pastures, drift fences, corrals, and agricultural 

 land. 



