824 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



WHEN YOU BUY 



PHOTO-ENGRAVINGS 



buy the right kind--That is, the 

 particular style and finish that will 

 best illustrate your thought and 

 print best where they are to be 

 used. Such engravings are the real 

 quality engravings for you, whether 

 they cost much or little. 

 We have a reputation for intelligent- 

 ly co-operating with the buyer to 

 give him the engravings that will 

 best suit his purpose-- 

 Our Utile house organ "Etchings" is 

 full of valuable hints-Send for it. 

 H. A/GATCHEL Fret. C A. STINSON.'.Vict -Pres. 



GATCHEL & MANNING 



PHOTO-ENGRA VERS 



Sixth and Chestnut Streets 



PHILADELPHIA 



PLANT BLACK WALNUT 

 TREES 



^Bagberrtj 



Canhle 



JHeabquarters 



Twelve 3'A inch Bayberry 

 Tapers in green box 60 

 cents. Postpaid. 



Bayberry Wax "Thimbles" 

 for waxing thread, with 

 cluster of bayberries for 

 handle, packed in green box, 

 20 cents each Postpaid. 

 All Seasons of the Year 

 CAPE COD PRODUCTS CO. 

 North Truro. - Cape Cod 



FRAME HOUSES FOR FRANCE AND 



BELGIUM. 

 1YOW is the time to promote sentiment 

 for the frame house in France and 

 Belgium, according to R. S. Whiting, 

 Architectural Engineer of the National 

 Lumber Manufacturers' Association. He 

 points out that the people of these countries 

 for hundreds of years have lived in houses 

 built of stone, and know nothing of the 

 utility and beauty of the frame home as it 

 is known in America. 



Mr. Whiting declares he is doubtful as 

 to whether the French and Belgians will 

 go back to the stone houses and he sees 

 a chance for American lumbermen to in- 

 augurate such a wood building propaganda 

 that the people over there will learn to 

 want the frame house. 



Mr. Whiting suggests that architects in 

 the United States who are favorable to 

 wood construction should be immediately 

 put to work on the task of studying French 

 and Belgian conditions, in order to de- 

 vise the best frame home for them along 

 lines that meet their own ideas of what 

 a home should be. 



LUMBERMEN WILL AID IN RECON- 

 STRUCTION. 



'T 1 HE lumbermen of the United States 

 have pledged themselves to co-operate 

 with all other industries and with the 

 agencies of the Government in the recon- 

 struction work which confronts the nation 

 as the result of the World War. This was 

 the decision reached at the conference held 

 at Chicago under the auspices of the Na- 

 tional Lumber Manufacturers Association. 

 The sessions were participated in by rep- 

 resentative lumber manufacturers from all 

 sections of the United States and by or- 

 ganizations of lumber wholesalers and re- 

 tailers. 



An intimate discussion of the problems 

 which are yet to be solved, before the 

 country returns to normal working con- 

 ditions, was the main feature of the con- 

 ference. All phases of the situation were 

 gone into and the net result was a definite 

 program which is expected to be carried 

 out. 



President John H. Kirby of the National 

 Lumber Manufacturers' Association de- 

 clared that the conference will have far 

 reaching effects upon the industry. The 

 absolute harmony of purpose which pre- 

 vailed and the definite plans which were 

 adopted, he declared, were a guaranty that 

 the industry would be found working along- 

 side of all others in the reconstruction pro- 

 gram for the nation. 



BURN WOOD AND SAVE 

 COAL 







ADVISORY BOARD 



Representing Organizations Affiliated with the 

 American Forestry Association 



National Wholesale Lumber Dealers' Association 



W. CLYDE SYKES, Conifer, N. Y. 

 R. L. SISSON, Potsdam, N. Y. 

 JOHN M. WOODS, Boston, Mass. 



Northern Pine Manufacturers' Association 



C. A. SMITH, Coos Bay, Ore. 



WILLIAM IRVINE, Chippewa Falls, Wis. 



F. E. WEYERHAEUSER, St. Paul, Minn. 



North Carolina Forestry Association 



E. B. WRIGHT. Boardman, N. C 

 HUGH MacRAE, Wilmington, N. C. 

 J. C. SMOOT, North Wilkesboro, N. C 



National Association of Box Manufacturers 



B. W. PORTER, Greenfield, Mass. 

 S. B. ANDKRSON. Memphis, Tenn. 

 ROBT. A. JOHNSON, Minneapolis, Minn. 



Carriage Builders' National Association 



H. C. McLEAR, Wilmington, Del. 



D. T. WILSON, New York. 



C A. LANCASTER, South Bend, Ind. 



Boston Paper Trade Association 

 N. M. JONES. Lincoln, Maine. 

 JOHN E. A. HUSSEY, Boston, Mass. 

 ARTHUR L. HOBSON, Boston, Mass. 



Philadelphia Wholesale Lumber Dealers' Ass'n 

 J. RANDALL WILLIAMS, JR., Philadelphia, Pa. 

 FRED'K S. UNDERHILL, Philadelphia, Pa. 



New Hampshire Tlmberland Owners' Association 

 W. H. BUNDY, Boston, Mass. 

 EVERETT E. AMEY, Portland, Me. 

 F. H. BILLARD, Berlin, N. H. 



Massachusetts Forestry Association 

 NATHANIEL T. KIDDER, Milton, Mass. 

 FREDERIC J. CAULKINS, Boston, Mass. 

 HARRIS A. REYNOLDS, Cambridge, Mass. 



Lumbermen's Exchange 

 J RANDALL WILLIAMS, JR., Philadelphia, Pa. 

 FREDERICK S. UNDERHILL, Philadelphia, Pa. 

 R. B. RAYNER, Philadelphia, Pa. 



Camp Fire Clnh of America 

 WILLIAM B. GREELEY, Washington, D. C. 

 O. H. VAN NORDEN. New York 

 FREDERICK K. VREELAND, New York 



Empire State Forest Products Association 



FERRIS J. MEIGS, New York City 

 RUFUS L. SISSON, Potsdam, N. Y. 

 W. L. SYKES, Utica, N. Y. 



California Forest Protective Association 



MILES STANDISH, San Francisco, Cal. 

 GEO. X. WENDLING, San Francisco, Cal 

 GEO. H. RHODES, San Francisco, Cal. 



Minnesota Forestry Association 



W. T. COX, St. Paul, Minn. 

 PROF. D. LANGE, St. Paul, Minn. 

 MRS. CARRIE BACKUS, St. Paul, Minn 



American Wood Preservers' Association 



M. K. TRUMBULL, Kansas City, Mo. 

 A. R. JOYCE, Chicago, 111. 

 F. J. ANGIER, Baltimore, Md. 



i, 



Southern Pine Association 



B. WHITE, Kansas City, Mo. 

 E. RHODES, New Orleans. La 

 ENRY E. HARDTNER, Uranie, La. 



