60 FOREST BESEEVE MANUAL. 



(4) Survey work. 



(5) Miscellaneous work. 



(6) Planting and seeding work. 



(7) Grazing. 



(8) Agricultural settlements. 



(9) Sawmills. 



<10) Special privileges, hotels, stores, etc. 



(11) Special reports. 



(12) Timber trespass. 



(13) Trespass other than in timber. 



(14) Fires. 



(15) Accounts. 



Every report of ranger or supervisor, regular or special, is 

 entered in this record. This record enables the supervisor at 

 anytime to see how many agricultural claims, sawmills, etc., 

 are within his reserve and where every one of these is located. 

 It will serve the supervisor, as well as superintendent and 

 inspector, to see where and what kind of work is under way, 

 and also to facilitate the work of preparing the monthly report 

 which for the most part will be a mere excerpt from or copy of 

 the records of the several items. Where special circumstances 

 make it desirable to keep additional records, temporarily or 

 permanently, there is, of course, no objection to such addi- 

 tional record. 



MAPS OF RESERVE. 



In every supervisor's headquarters there should be kept at 

 least two maps of the reserve on which important work and 

 other data are noted for convenient reference. One of these 

 maps should indicate all cuttings. Every cutting is marked 

 on the map by the number of its case: It appears, therefore, 



as ^p if it is sale No. 67, etc. To keep sale and free-use 

 cases apai-t the former are noted in red ink, the latter in 

 green. Where the cases are too numerous, an enlarged sketch 

 map of the particular district should be used. 



On the second map all alienated lands, i. e., lands owned 

 or claimed, and therefore not vacant, are shown. The ordi- 

 nary mining claims need not be thus indicated as they are 

 usually too small; but where large groups are held or a large 

 part of the land is in mineral locations it should be indicated. 



