FOREST SCHOOL NOTES 



1499 



Forestry University of California; Dorr 

 Skeels, Dean of the Forest School of 

 Montana; E. M. Buol, Professor of Log- 

 ging Engineering; H. S. Newins, Professor 

 of Forestry, and G. W. Peavy, Dean of the 

 ■School of Forestry, Oregon State College. 

 During the Congress these men held a 

 round table discussion relative to the prob- 

 lems peculiar to the western forest schools. 



PENNSYLVANIA STATE FORESTRY 

 SCHOOL 



pROF. C. R. ANDERSON has been ap- 

 pointed Extension Representative in 

 Forestry. He will continue to give the 

 courses in Management and Finance in the 

 Forestry School and devote a portion of his 

 time to woodlot work in the state. 



The enrollment of students in Forestry 

 is as follows : Seniors, eight ; Juniors, 

 seven ; Sophomores, twenty-four ; Fresh- 

 men, twenty. 



C. B. Davis, '17, is Forest Assistant to 

 H. G. Schanche, '18, Forester, with the 

 Abitibi Power & Paper Company of Cana- 

 da. L. G. Baltimore, '18, is City Forester of 

 Harrisburg. Charles Claxton, '17, has re- 

 sumed his position in charge of the For- 

 estry Department at the Lincoln Memorial 

 University, Tennessee. H. E. Richards, 

 '16, and O. B. Gipple, '15, are again with 

 the Wheeler & Dusenbury Lumber Com- 

 pany at Endeavor, Pennsylvania, working 

 under the direction of R. R. Chafifee, Har- 

 vard Forest School, 1910, Forest Engineer 

 for the company. ChafTee had charge of 

 the courses in Lumbering at Penn State 

 for several years before engaging in prac- 

 tical work in Lumbering. R. A. Zeller, '15, 

 is Forest Examiner on the Chugach Na- 

 tional Forest, Ketchikan, Alaska. He writes 

 that he finds many foot-prints of G. L. 

 Drake, '12, who formerly held this position. 



STATES RECEIVE GOODLY POR- 

 TION OF NATIONAL FOREST 

 RECEIPTS 



"pHE total receipts of the National For- 

 ests of Arizona for the fiscal year that 

 ended on June 30 last were, $511,380.70, and 

 the receipts of the New Mexico forests 

 for the same period were, $358,735.69. The 

 Arizona forests ranked second of all the 

 states in receipts, being outranked only by 

 California. New Mexico stood sixth from 

 the top. 



Of these receipts the state of Arizona 

 and its counties will receive $171,928.80 for 

 roads and schools, and $45,261,18 in addition 

 will be spent by the Forest Service in build- 

 ing roads within the forests. This latter 

 fund is known as the ten per cent fund and 

 is altogether distinct from the $10,000,000 

 Forest Service road fund provided in last 

 year's post office appropriation bill. 



Of the receipts from the New Mexico 

 forests, the state and counties of New 

 Mexico receive $104,752.54 for roads and 

 schools, and an additional sum of $33,864.42 

 will be spent under the ten per cent provi- 

 sion for roads. 



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