672 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



School of Forestry 



UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO 



Four Year Course, with oppor- 

 tunity to specialize in General 

 Forestry, Logging Engineer- 

 ing and Forest Grazing. 



Forest Ranger Course, of high 

 school grade, covering two 

 years of five months each. 



Special Short Course, covering 

 twelve weeks desigfned for 

 those who cannot take the time 

 for the fuller courses. 



No tuition is charged for any 

 of the above courses, and other- 

 wise expenses are the lowest. 



Correspondence Course. A 



course in Lumber and Its 

 Uses is given by correspon- 

 dence for which a nominal 

 charge is made. 



For Further Particulars Addrtst 



Dean, School of Forestry 



University of Idaho 



Moscow, Idaho 



ANIMAL INGENUITY OF 

 TODAY 



Bj C A. EALAND, M.A. The author'* 

 loTC of nature ii thown on every page. 

 He describes the skill, clever devices, 

 and itrategem* of birds, reptiles, in- 

 sects, and other forms of animal life 

 how they order their lives, and protect 

 themselves. The world of nature is a 

 real wonderland, and Mr. Ealand the 

 best sort of a guide through it. Pro- 

 fusely illustrated $2.25 



FORESTRY TRAINING 



In the Heart of the Rockies 



* * * 



The Colorado School of Forestry 



A Department of Colorado 

 College 



Colorado Springs, Colorado 



* * * 



Four and five-year undergraduate cojrses 

 and a two-year graduate course in techni- 

 cal forestry, leading to the degrees of 

 Bachelor of Science in Forestry and Mas- 

 ter of Forestry. 



Forestry teaching in spring and fall at 

 Manitou Forest (a 7,000-acre forest belong- 

 ing to the School) and the winter term at 

 Colorado Springs. 



Write for announcement giving fall in- 

 formation. 



4 



ATTENTION, FORESTERS 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will print, free 

 of charge in this column, advertisements 

 of foresters wanting positions, or of per- 

 sons having employment to offer foresters. 

 This privilege is also extended to for- 

 esters, lumbermen and woodsmen, dis- 

 charged or about to be discharged from 

 military service, who want positions, or 

 of persons having employment to offer 

 such foresters, lumbermen or woodsmen. 



POSITIONS WANTED 



E.XSERVICE MAN: age 30; married; two and 

 one-half years in forestry college; experienced 

 in city forestry, nursery work, tree surgery, 

 dynamiting and in handling men; wishes po- 

 sition in city forestry or park department any 

 where in northeastern United States. Now em- 

 ployed. Address Box 3025, care AMERICAN 

 FORESTRY MAGAZINE, Washington, D. C. 



(10-12-21) 



WINTER POSITION wanted with lumber com- 

 pany as time keeper or similar work. Gradu- 

 ate of high school and ranger course, 25 years 

 old, good references from previous employers. 

 Address Box 3030, care AMERICAN FOR- 

 ESTRY MAGAZINE, Washington, D. C. 



(10-12-21) 



POSITION WANTED BY FORESTER. A 

 healthy United States citizen, 30 years old, ac- 

 tively engaged in logging in equatorial America, 

 where he has done considerable practical and 

 scientific pioneer work, now wants to return to 

 work under more civilized and progressive con- 

 ditions. Has 12 years' bush and mill experi- 

 ence. He works best where difficulties and prob- 

 lems are greatest. He is a practical enthusiast 

 for constructive and reconstructive forestry, and 

 desires to make connection with a body recog- 

 nizing said qualities. Address Box 2090, care of 

 American Forestry Magazine, Washington, D. 

 C. (6-8-21). 



EX-SERVICE MAN wishes employment with 

 some Forest Construction Concern or Irrigation 

 Company which can use a young man who is a 

 Technical High School Graduate, and who is a 

 Mechanical iJraftsman with some slight knowl- 

 edge of plane surveying. Willing to work and can 

 do same. Address Box 209S, AMERICAN FOR- 

 ESTRY MAGAZINE, Washington, U. C. (-8-21) 



CAN YOU USE ABILITY ?-Young man, 

 technically trained with master's degree in for- 

 estry desires position of responsibility with 

 some lumber or forest products company. Fif- 

 teen months experience. Address Box 212, Lock- 

 hart, Alabama. (8-10-21). 



POSITION WANTED as City Forester or Park 

 Superintendent. Have had practical experience 

 as Manager of Private Estates and have been 

 14 years in present position as Park Superin- 

 tendent. Desirous of making a change at this 

 , time. Address Box 3005, care of AMERICAN 

 FORESTRY, Washington, D. C. (9-11-21) 



TREE SURGEON Formerly employed by the 

 Davey Tree Expert Company, desires to make 

 connection with some reliable company doing 

 work such as tree surgery, or private work on 

 large estate. Will consider reasonable salary 

 to start if good future offers. Address Box 

 3010, care AMERICAN FORESTRY, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. (9.11-21) 



MARRIED MAN would like position as CITY 

 FORESTER or in charge of large private 

 estate. Any forestry position will be consid- 

 ered as a change in locality is desired. Have 

 had technical training and recently graduated 

 from one of the foremost forestry schools of the 

 country. Ex-service man, having spent three 

 years in the service. Address Box 3020, care 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY Magazine, Washing- 

 ton, D. C. (9-11-21) 



CITY LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT AND FOR- 

 ESTER, thoroughly conversant with Southern 

 conditions, desires to change. Correspondence 

 invited. Address D, care AMERICAN FOR- 

 ESTRY Magazine, Washington, D. C. (911-21) 



POSITION OPEN. 



POSITION of Secretary-Treasurer of Forest Pro- 

 tective Association of Timberland Owners open. 

 Duties will be to conduct correspondence, keep 

 accounts, canvass for new members, work out 

 publicity campaigns, etc. Applicants should 

 state salary desired. Address Box S50, In care 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY, Washington, D. C. 



PLEASANT THINGS 



TAKEN FROM LETTERS 



TO THE EDITOR 



"I especially prize the magazine and am 

 very much interested in the work of the 

 Association." 



JOHN S. KERR. 



"We are much pleased with your maga- 

 rine and it is improving with every issue." 

 W. A. MORROW. 



"I must say that you have made the mag 

 azine very attractive, not only from the 

 viewpoint of forestry, which I naturally 

 would be interested in, being in the lumber 

 business, but also in other scientific re- 

 search information, which is instructive and 

 interesting. I congratulate you upon this 

 forward stride and feel sure that it is ap- 

 preciated by your subscribers." 



ERNEST STEVES. 



"The AMERICAN FORESTRY is high- 

 ly instructive and it should be in every 

 American home." 



E. J. GUTKNECHT. 



"I have for some time been a subscriber 

 to that most enchanting and edifying maga- 

 zine, AMERICAN FORESTRY, and be- 

 lieve it has a great opportunity in shap- 

 ing, as it endeavors to do, public opinion 

 in the right direction in regard to a forestry 

 policy." 



MRS. ALGERNON B. ROBERTS. 



FORESTERS IN PAPER INDUSTRY 

 'F' HAT forestry has advanced in the 

 last fifteen years from a mission to 

 a recognized profession is in no way bet- 

 ter evidenced than by the manner in which 

 the paper industry has provided positions 

 ir its organizations for the technical for- 

 ester," says O. M. Porter, Assistant Sec- 

 retary of the American Paper and Pulp 

 Association. "There are now so many 

 foresters engaged professionally by pa- 

 per companies," he says, "that there is a 

 special department, the Woodlands Sec- 

 tion, in the American Paper and Pulp 

 Association, composed of foresters and 

 woods superintendents of paper com- 

 panies and the executive secretary of the 

 Association itself, Dr. Hugh P. Baker, is. 

 a Yale Forest School alumnus. Thescj 

 foresters are carrying into this great in- 

 dustry, both in the United States andJ 

 Canada, their profession by practicing it,J 

 and I am proud to say that they are rec- 

 ognized as delivering the goods so ef- 

 fectively that their methods- once re- 

 garded by practical woodsmen as fanci- 

 f.il theories, are now recognized as mak-| 

 itifr a profit for their employers." 



