FOREST ADMINISTRATION. 133 
II. The Wards into which the Forests are divided, and 
the duties and privileges of the Forest-Wardens. 
III. The Forest Reviers, or Districts, and.the manage- 
ment of these. 
IV. The Forest Treasury. 
. V. The Sale of Forest Timber. 
VI. The Inspection of the Forests. 
VII. The Relation of the Governors of Provinces to the 
Crown Forests. : 
VIII. The duty of the Central Forest Administration of 
Land Surveying and Forest Economy in regard to the 
superintendence of Crown Forests. 
In the Third Chapter it is stated in regard to the classi- 
fication of trees for taxation, Forest-Masters are required to 
see that the wood be felled and cut in accordance with the 
classes and designations prescribed as available for different 
kinds of timber, or only of use as firewood, including in 
each wood for which inferior wood could not be substituted 
in accordance with the division into 1, Ship timber ; 2, 
Large timber; 3, Logs; 4, Building timber; 5, Beams or 
railway sleepers ; 6, Telegraph poles ; 7, Lathwood ; 8, Tar- 
wood; 9, Fencing; 10, Poles; 11, Hoop and stave wood ; 
12, Charcoal and firewood. : 
Par. 18 enjoins that the Forest-Masters prepare in the 
month of June each year a report of what has been done, 
and a specification and estimate of what it is proposed 
should be done, in thinning, felling, and planting in the 
year to come. 
Par. 19 enjoins that the sale of timber shall be con- 
ducted in accordance with the prescriptions laid down in 
‘Chap. V. of the regulations. 
Par. 20 enjoins that the Forester or Forest-Master shall 
keep— 
ak journal, in which shall be entered, in accordance 
with a. prescribed form, a notice of everything which 
eccurs in connection with documents, &c., received and 
dispatched, and in connection with oral communications 
