xoTES GG7 



Forestry Association, for the promotion and development of public 

 interest in forestry throughout the empire, and also created an interim 

 committee to consider ways and means. The committee appointed has 

 drawn up proposals for circulation to all parts of the empire, for the 

 establishment of a governing council for the association, and for the 

 formation of an interim executive committee. The committee held 

 that in view of the vast area embraced, the association's activities, 

 apart from occasional conferences, must take a literary form. Its prin- 

 cipal medium of communication w^ould probably consist of a journal, 

 issued quarterly. A publication of this kind, dealing wnth the needs, 

 problems and progress of forestry in all parts of the empire, should, 

 it is felt, be of interest and practical value to foresters, students of 

 forestry and owners of woodlands, as well as the architects, engineers 

 and traders interested in the distribution and use of timber. 



Associate Professor Burt P. Kirkland, and Assistant Professor E. T. 

 Clark, of the College of Forestry and Lumbering of the University of 

 Washington, have been promoted, the former to a full professorship 

 and the latter to an associate professorship. 



Prof. James W. Tourney, director of the Yale Forest School, was 

 honored with the degree of Doctor of Science at the commencement 

 of the New- York State College of Forestry at Syracuse. 



Dr. C. C. Adams, director of the Roosevelt Wild Life Forest Ex- 

 periment Station at the College of Forestry, was given the same de- 

 gree at the Illinois Wesleyan University. 



Forestry Training in the Heart of the RocKies 



THE COLORADO SCHOOL OF FORESTRY 



COLORADO SPRINGS. COLORADO 



A Department of Colorado College offers a thorough training in technical 

 forestry in — 



A four-year undergraduate course— degree, Bachelor of Science in Forestry 

 A two-year graduate course — degree, Master of Forestry 



An extremely attractive combination five-year course — degrees, Bachelor of 

 Science at end of fourth year and Master of JForestry at end of course. 



Spring and fall forestry teaching at the College's own forest in the 

 Rocky Mountains. Midwinter and other than forestry work at Colorado 

 Springs. Send kor a Prospkctus. 



