View in Pine and White Oak "Flatwoods" after Lumbering (page 6) 



Stack of Four-foot Pulp-wood Logs at the Mill (page 6) 



exceptions they are owned neither by 

 the states nor the Nation. They are 

 held by thousands of individual owners 

 in tracts of from loo acres to ioo,oc>o 

 acres each. The problem then is to see 

 that such measures are enacted, and 

 that such an enlightened condition of 

 public sentiment is created, as will 



bring all these forests to their highest 

 producing capacity and make their 

 products the most fully utilized. The 

 whole public is concerned. The con- 

 sumer must unite with the man who 

 owns the timber in working out meas- 

 ures for the common good. Forest 

 fires must be stopped, for so long as they 



