Behind the blocks which front on the south side of the 
same road there is about 18,000 acres on the proposed ex- 
tension of the Bnkit Rotan road. Between this road, the 
protective belt reserve and the eastern boundary there is 
another tract of some 15,000 acres, omitting the part next 
to the deram river, which is subject to floods. South of the 
protected belt there are some 10,000 acres available for 
selection. The last-mentioned two acres will be served by 
the proposed Batang Berjuntai road: at present access to 
the eastern portions would be a matter of some difficulty, 
Klang. 
So far as rubber is concerned there is very little avail- 
able land that is worth considering'. Near the Buldt Rajah 
Estate, a few hundred acres of hilly land might be found, 
and careful selection might reveal 2,000 acres along the 
Klang river; but the latter would require much drainage: 
neither locality has easy access though it is not far from 
road or railway. At Klang there is a Land Office, of which 
the District Officer is in charge, and a District Survey Office. 
' Kuala Laxgat. 
Jugra — the head-quarters of the district and the seat 
ot residence of the Sultan — is 10 miles by road from Klang, 
the Langat river having to be crossed by* a ferry which will 
carry 7 a good-sized motor car; the Government launch runs 
once a week between port Swettenham and Jugra. 
At r l elok Panglima Garang, a branch of the road turns 
to the east to Tanjong Duablas — a point on the Langat 
river whence traces have beeu made for roads to Bangi, 
on the railway line, and Ayer Itam in the Ulu Langat dis- 
trict. To the south the Batu Coast road, Morib to Sepang, 
may lie extended. At Morib, on the sea coast, some miles 
south of Jugra, is a Government Sanatorium: it can be 
reached by launch from Port Swettenham. Apart from 
Jugra, the only village of any importance is Sepang, on the 
river, which forms part of the boundary between Kuala 
Langat and the Coast district of the Negri Sembilan. 
In the Labu division, some 10,000 acres of undulating 
land, towards the Negri Sembilan boundary, might be ob- 
tained: this would be difficult to access. In Batu, a coast 
division, south of Morib, there would be about 25,000 acres, 
with access from the coast road at Sepang; the country is as 
yet unexplored, and it is difficult to say what area would be 
available — it is estimated at 30,000 acres— this part of the 
