178 Forestry Quarterly 



Greenboro. It has camp grounds in the woods of North and South Georgia, 

 and the students are exercised in working out actual problems. 



3. Central United States 



E. A. Sterling is head of the Trade Extension Department of the National 

 Lumber Manufacturers' Association, with headquarters at Chicago. 



G. Harris Collingwood, for some time a ranger on the Apache National 

 Forest, has resigned from the Forest Service and has returned to his home in 

 Lansing, Mich. Collingwood graduated in forestry at Michigan Agricultural 

 College and later spent a year and a half studying forestry at the University 

 of Munich. 



4. Northern Rockies 



C. A. Lagerstrom, formerly with the C. A. Smith Timber Company at 

 Marshfield, Ore., is conducting cruising and appraisal work for the Union 

 Pacific Railroad at Evanston, Wyo. 



5. Southwest, Including Mexico 



John D. Guthrie has been elected Vice-President of the Arizona Yale Alumni 

 Association. 



J. D. Lamont, who graduated from Cornell as Master in Forestry in 1915, 

 is in charge of a large timber sale to the New Mexico Lumber Company on the 

 Jicarilla Apache Indian Reservation. His address is El Vado, New Mexico. 



6. Pacific Coast, Including Western Canada 



Walter B. Hadley has been elected Secretary-Treasurer of the Southern 

 California Arboricultural Association. 



Prof. Mason, of the University of California , plans an eastern trip for early 

 February. He will visit the leading Eastern forest Schools. 



Thornton T. Mtmger will give this year's course in National Forest Admin- 

 istration at the Yale Forest School. 



H. B. Murray has been appointed District Forester at Cranbrook, B. C. 



G. T. Robb, Acting District Inspector of Forest Reserves at Prince Albert, 

 died recently during an operation for appendicitis. 



7. Hawaii, the Philippines and the Orient 



W. F. Sherfesee, Director of the Philippine Forest Service, has recently been 

 ofifered the position of Co- Director of the newly organized Bureau of Forestry 

 of China. 



Pan Chen King, who received his Master's Degree in Forestry at Cornell 

 in 1914, has been appointed forester for Anhui Province, China. His assistant 

 in this work is D. Y. Lin, who graduated from Yale Forest School in 1914. 



Theodore C. Zschokke has left his post with the Southern Pacific Company 

 at San Francisco and accepted an appointment with the Bureau of Forestry 

 at Manila, P. I. 



Foreman T. McLean has accepted an appointment with the Philippine 

 Bureau of Forestry, as has also Roscoe B. Weaver. 



