500 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



What Our Members Think of American 



Forestry 



" Enclosed is $3.25 to renew my member- 

 ship for 1916. This is one of the subscrip- 

 tions I like to make." 



H. R. Christie, 

 Victoria, B. C. 



" Allow me to congratulate you on the 

 wonderful new dress and features of Ameri- 

 c.\x Forestry, which is now one of the very 

 handsomest of all class or other publica- 

 tions published anywhere, and should surely 

 appeal, not only to your regular clientele, 

 but also to all who are interested in out- 

 door life as well as the special subjects on 

 which it treats." 



J. G. Williams, 

 Boston, Mass. 



" I wish to congratulate you on the very 

 entertaining and valuable Ornamental and 

 Shade Tree Department in the American 

 Forestry. Among my circle of friends I 

 have heard most favorable and high praise." 

 N. M. Goodyear, 

 Carlisle, Pa. 



" I shall take this opportunity to say a 

 word of commendation for your magazine. 

 It has been a great help to me, personally, 

 in keeping me in touch with forestry even 

 though I am not, at present, following the 

 course I studied while in college. The fel- 

 lows who frequent our reading-room appre- 

 ciate the value of the magazine and con- 

 stantly refer to it." 

 F. H. Hoehler, Executive Secretary, 



Y. il/. C. .4., Cincinnati, Ohio. 



" I want to congratulate you upon your 

 admirable number of American Forestry 

 for February and the splendid and timely 

 achievement in getting an article on Pine 

 Rust." 



John B. White, 

 Kansas City, Mo. 



" Your publication is an admirable one- 

 instructive and interesting — and I want to 

 see it succeed." 



W. C. Egan, 

 Highland Park, III 



" The addition of a Department of Arbor- 

 iculture to the magazine enhances its 

 already very great value. The change of 

 form and broadening of scope accomplished 

 last year greatly improved an already excel- 

 lent publication. The spirit and tone of its 

 editing are such as to make every member 

 of the Association feel a pride of owner- 

 ship in and cooperation with it." 



George W. Roskie, 

 Custer, .9. D. 



" We can justly feel proud of tlie Ameri- 

 can Forestry magazine. It surely has made 

 great strides in the last few months. ' 

 Eugene W. Mendenhall, 



Clintunznlle, Ohio. 



" I am delighted with the magazine more 

 and more all the time, and even though I 

 am not doing active Club work this year, I 

 am just as good a forester as ever, and look 

 for the magazine each month." 



Mrs. Foster Elliot, 

 Los Angeles, California. 



" I want to say I greatly appreciate the 

 wonderful improvement in American For- 

 estry in the past few months. It must be- 

 come a wonderful factor in our conserva- 

 tion movement." 



Charles N. Thompson, 

 Buck Hill Falls, Pa. 



" I tind your magazine, American For- 

 estry, very instructive and beautiful." 

 Mary Amory Greene, 

 Croton-on-H udson, N. Y. 



" Please let me take this occasion to com- 

 pliment you on the great improvement both 

 in form and substance which American 

 Forestry has undergone. It has developed 

 into a most excellent magazine of great 

 educational value. I am hearing praises of 

 it on all sides." 



Don Carlos Ellis. 

 San Francisco, Cal. 



" I like the magazine very much indeed 

 and gladly subscribe to what all your other 

 friends have been saying about it all these 

 last months. May it keep on prospering 

 and win more friends both for itself and 

 for the great cause for which it speaks." 

 Rev. Eugene Buechel, S. J., 



Pine Ridge, S. D. 



" I have just had time to look hastily over 

 the magazine for June. It is a beautiful 

 piece of work, and I hope will receive a 

 little of the large amount of appreciation 

 it deserves." 



R. S. Kellogg, 

 Chicago, III. 



" I am a great admirer of your journal, 



and as we grow several of your trees here 



the detailed descriptions — botanical and 



commercial — have interested me very much." 



W. B. Havelock, 



Brocklcsby Park, Lincolnshire, England. 



" I find the Bird Department very useful." 

 Miss M. B. Banks, 

 Westport, Conn. 



" I want to compliment you very highly 

 upon the splendid manner in which you 

 ' made up ' the Douglas Fir article. I feel 

 that it will do much to acquaint the gen- 

 eral public a little more specifically with 

 the characteristics and merits of the North- 

 west's greatest wood." 



J. S. Williams, 

 Seattle, Wash. 



" I enjoy American Forestry greatly and 

 count it very valuable. Have loaned copies 

 to men at our plant which may result in 

 new subscriptions later on." 



E. E. Alexander, 

 Green Spring, W. Va. 



4>r'^'**>*'Ea^( 



wood from warping!" 



"T^HIS hardwood trim 



li^ "This prevents 



won't warp, shrink 

 or twist out of shape because I 

 am protecting it against damp- 

 ness in the plaster wall with a 

 coating that makes protection 

 absolutely sure." 



Ordinary metallic paintscoot, but 

 they can't protect. The alkali 

 in the wall masonry makes them 

 saponify and become useless. 



r^ '•»*'. 



M\.M.Wf. 



TRINBAK 



on the other hand, can't possibly 

 saponify. It remains a perfect 

 protection, permanently. 



Used in a luxurious down-town 

 club, the Woolworth Building, 

 the Metropolitan Tower, the 

 Bankers' Trust Company, and 

 other prominent places. 



Full details upon request from 

 Department I. 



TOCH BROTHERS 



Established 1848 



Inventors and manufacturers of R. I. W. Paints, 

 CoinPounds, Enamels, etc. 



320 Fifth Avenue, New York City 



Works: 

 New York, London, England, and Tcronto, Canada 



