ANNUAL FORESTRY CONFERENCE 



501 



Chaffee Leaves State College 

 Professor R. R. Cliiiffee, who has been 

 for five years Professor of Lumbering in 

 the Department of Forestry at the Penn- 

 sylvania State College, leaves September 

 1st to take a position as Forest Engineer 

 with Wheeler & Dusenberry Lumber Com- 

 pany, Endeavor, Pennsylvania. 



Mr. Chaffee graduated from the Har- 

 vard Forest School in 1910. He was in 

 United States Forest Service in District 6 

 from 1910 to 1911 and since that time has 

 been connected with the Forest School at 

 the Pennsylvania State College. He has 

 had charge of the work in lumbering and 

 has specialized in forest utilization, logging 

 and milling methods and products. At En- 

 deavor he will devote considerable time to 

 forest utilization, laying out of future 

 operations, analysis of production costs, etc. 

 While at State College he has been in 

 charge of the trips which are made by the 

 senior class. These logging trips have car- 

 ried him into the Lake State region, South- 

 ern Pine region, the Cypress region, the 

 Adirondacks and the Appalachian hard- 

 wood region. He is a member of the So- 

 ciety of American Foresters and of the 

 American Forestry Association. 



H. J. Kaestner Resigns 



H. J. Kaestner, who for the past couple 

 of years has been the forester for the De- 

 partment of Forestry, Game and Fish of 

 West Virginia, has resigned and accepted a 

 position with the Wm. M. Lloyd Lumber 

 Company of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 

 He reports the work there as particularly 

 pleasant, as he is back in his home city after 

 an absence of six years. 



Credit to Dr. Purdue 



Dr. A. H. Purdue, state geologist of Ten- 

 nessee, was inadvertently not given credit 

 for taking the excellent photograph in the 

 first part of the article by W. R. Mattoon in 

 the May issue of American Forestry. 



Forest School Personals 



Dr. H. P. Baker of the State College 

 of Forestry at Syracuse addressed the 

 members of the Conservation Department 

 of the Federated Women's Clubs of 

 America at the Conservation Conference 

 held in New York City. The subject of 

 Dr. Baker's address was " State Forestry." 

 About 600 women were in attendance at 

 this conference. 



At the recent meeting of the Southern 

 Forestry Congress held at Asheville, North 

 Carolina, Dr. Baker, of the Forestry College 

 at Syracuse, gave the response from the 

 North. Two films of motion pictures, show- 

 ing the activities of the College in instruc- 

 tional and extension work through the 

 State, were also exhibited at the Convention. 



Professor F. F. Moon of the College of 

 Forestry at Syracuse attended the recent 

 meeting of the Pennsylvania Forestry .Asso- 

 ciation held at Reading, Pennsylvania. 



The Heal Nursery 



In honor of Dr. William James Beal, pro- 

 fessor emeritus of botany at the Michigan 

 .Agricultural College, the forestry nursery 

 maintained by the Forest Service at Tawas, 

 Michigan, has been given the name of the 

 " Beal Nursery." Dr. Beal was the first man 

 to make forest plantations in Michigan and 

 for over forty years has been closely identi- 

 fied with the subjects of botany and forestry. 

 He is a widely known writer on these topics 

 and is a member of a number of scientific 

 associations. In 1910 he retired from 

 active work and now makes his home at 

 Amherst, Massachusetts. 



The Beal Nursery supplies planting stock 

 for the Michigan national forest. It has a 

 present annual capacity of about 100,000 

 seedlings and transplants, which will be in- 

 creased to 500.000. The trees will lie used 

 for reforesting denuded areas. 



Annual Forestry Conference 



The annual forestry conference in the 

 White Mountains will occur at the Craw- 

 ford House in the Crawford Notch, New 

 Hampshire, September 5th to 7th, 1916. 



This conference, under the auspices of 

 the Society for Protection of New Hamp- 

 shire Forests and the New Hampshire State 

 Forestry Commission, held at a central New 

 England point, has come to be a gathering 

 place for New England Forestry mterests. 

 This year the program will be no less 

 interesting and varied. Dr. Fernow, Direc- 

 tor of the School of Forestry at the Uni- 

 versity of Toronto and President of the 

 Society of American Foresters, will be pres- 

 ent, as will Professor Filibert Roth, Direc- 

 tor of the Department of Forestry, Uni- 

 versity of Michigan, and William L. Hall 

 of the Forest Service. 



The keynote of the meeting will be 

 national forest administration in view of 

 the fact that the Government has lately 

 acquired 305,000 acres or 477 square miles 

 in the White Mountain region. 



There will be addresses illustrated with 

 lantern slides showing the situation in the 

 National Forest in the West and the new 

 National Forest in the Southern .Appa- 

 lachians and in the White Mountains. Ex- 

 cursions will be made to different parts of 

 the National Forest near the Crawford 

 House and into the magnificent primeval 

 spruce timber that stands nearby upon the 

 6000 acres of forest land in the Crawford 

 Notch recently acquired by the State of 

 New Hampshire. 



A New Seedman 



Thomas J. Lane, of Dresher, Pennsyl- 

 vania, for the last fourteen years with 

 Thomas Meehan and Son, of Dresher, Penn- 

 sylvania, who have recently discontinued 

 the seed business, which they had conducted 

 for fifty years, has taken up the seed busi- 

 ness in his own behalf and his thorough 

 knowledge of the business makes him feel 

 confident that he will do well. 



Cedar Land and 

 Sawmill 



IN 



ARGENTINA, S. A. 



AND 



PARAGUAY, S. A. 



GUARANTEED lumber proposi- 

 tion; Woodland bordering on 

 the Parana River, 337,421 

 acres; sawmill and adjoining land of 

 1,571 acres on the same river: cli- 

 mate exceedingly healthy, watered 

 by rivers now used chiefly as a 

 means of conveyance; fertility of soil 

 unexcelled; rivers offer numerous 

 falls that can be easily harnessed; 

 land abounds in cabinet woods that 

 command high prices at Buenos Aires, 

 city of nearly 2,000,000 inhabitants 

 and one of the biggest cedar markets 

 in the world; land also includes 

 about 123,000 acres of Yerba Mate 

 trees, from which the famous Para- 

 guayan Mate Tea is manufactured. 

 Write for full details; to reliable 

 parties interested if proposition is 

 not found to be as represented 

 expenses for trip of expert to the 

 property will be refunded. 



ALDAO. CAMPOS & GIL 

 55 Wall Street, New York City 



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