1498 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



COTONEASTERS 



'C'EW, if any, shrubs 

 ■*- are more dainty 

 ;-^ and desirable than the 

 Cotoneasters. They are a de- 

 Hght all the season from the time 

 the white or pink flowers open in 

 early June to the changing foliage in late 

 fall. And then there are brilliant red berries which remain nearly 

 all winter. Some varieties are small (only 2 feet high), while 

 others grow 10 feet or more. 



"Foundation Plantings" a monograph on the desirable shrubs 

 and trees for large and small grounds, describes and prices the six 

 desirable Cotoneasters. Let us send you a copy with our 

 compliments. 



HICKS NURSERIES, Box F, Westbury, L. I., N. Y. 



HILL'S 



Seedlings and Transplants 



ALSO TREE SEEDS 

 FOR REFORESTING 



T>EST for over half a century. All 

 leading hardy sorts, grown in im- 

 mense quantities. Prices lowest. Quali- 

 ty highest. Forest Planter's Guide, also 

 price lists are free. Write today and 

 mention this magazine. 



THE D. HILL NURSERY CO. 



Evergreen Specialists 



Largest Growers in America 



BOX 601 DUNDEE, ILL. 



Ort<jinn(.:l anU hit F'-imfl hy Ij! 



THE ELM CITY NURSERY COMPANY 



Wuudinont Nurseries, Inc. 

 Box a05, Wl'w lluven. Conn. 



Fall Plnntiny AilvisciL Send for 

 Box - BarlxMTV J'oldi-r and Gener.it 

 Nursery CjitnloKue. 



H 



ARRISONS' NURSERIE 



Fruit Trees Buddeii from Bearing 

 Orchards. Peach, apple, pear, plum, 

 cherry, quince, grape-vines, straw- 

 berry plants, raspberries, blackber- 

 ries, evergreens and shade trees. 

 Catalog free. Box 71, Berlin, Md. 



S 



FORESTRY SEEDS 



Send for my catalogne containing 

 full list of varieties and prices 



Thomas J. Lane, Seedsman 

 Dresher Pennsylvania 



PLANT MEMORIAL 



TREES FOR OUR 



HEROIC DEAD 



Orchids 



We are apecialists in 

 Orchids; we collect, im- 

 port, grow, sell and export this class of plants 

 exclusively. 



Our illustrated and descriptive catalogue of 

 Orchids may be had on application. Also spe- 

 cial list of freshly imported unestablished 

 Orchids. 



LAGER & HURRELL 



Orchid Growers and Importers SUMMIT, N.J. 



timber transportation and commercial 

 phases of forestry, and a special course has 

 been arranged at Syracuse to permit him to 

 do the special work which will be of value 

 to him and promote international relations. 



Mr. Schard has been in the Swedish 

 forest service since his graduation from one 

 of the big universities of his native land, 

 and has traveled extensively in Germany 

 and France and other countries studying 

 forestry methods. He is one of the first 

 students ever sent to the United States for 

 forestry study under the operation of the 

 American-Scandinavian Foundation and the 

 recognition given the New York State Col- 

 lege of Forestry is accentuated by the fact 

 that this year marked the first time that the 

 Philippine government has sent a student 

 to Syracuse for forestry study, in the per- 

 son of Luis J. Reyes, who was in the Philip- 

 pine forestry service six years before com- 

 ing here for special study. 



A surprising demand from American in- 

 dustry for men trained in forestry has been 

 disclosed through the placing of graduates 

 the past few weeks by the New York State 

 College of Forestry at Syracuse. The de- 

 mand for men not alone from concerns in 

 the lumber industry, but especially from in- 

 dustries using the products of the forest in 

 manufacturing. Announcement has been 

 made of the placing of seven foresters 

 who are returned soldiers, and of three 

 other recent graduates of the College of 

 Forestry in positions applying to practical 

 life the training given in forestry. 



OREGON STATE COLLEGE OF 

 FORESTRY 



pROF. H. S. NEWINS, who spent more 

 than a year with the .\ircraft Pro- 

 duction Division of New York, as inspector 

 of timber used in airplane construction, is 

 back in his former position as Professor of 

 Forestry in the Oregon State College. He 

 made the trip from Brooklyn, New York, 

 to Corvallis, Oregon, by auto, covering the 

 distance in thirty days. 



Forty members of the School of Forestry 

 attended the sessions of the Pacific Logging 

 Congress in Portland, October 8-10. 



P. F. Shen, a junior student of the School 

 of Forestry, who hails from the south of 

 China, is completing his course in the Yale 

 Forest School. Shen plans to cover the 

 principal forest regions of the United 

 States and then return to his own country 

 to aid in working out forestry problems 

 there. 



At the sessions of the Pacific Logging 

 Congress, held in Portland, October 8-10, 

 the following Forest School men were in 

 attendance: E. T. Clark, Professor of 

 Logging Engineering, Washington State 

 University; Donald Bruce, Professor of 



WE WANT TO RECORD YOUR MEMORIAL TREE PLANTING. PLEASE ADVISE 

 THE AMERICAN FORESTRY ASSOCIATION, WASHINGTON, D. C. 



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