AMERICAN FORESTRY 



827 



IMPROVEMENT OF FORESTS 



Providence Journal 

 The question of more and better highways in 

 the Adirondack region is of particular interest 

 to the motor fraternity. Touring autoists are 

 especially interested in having the existing roads 

 improved and new ones developed, suggests 

 Eugene M. Travis, New York State Comptroller. 

 The welfare of these travellers is intimately 

 bound up with the increased accessibility for 

 tourists, campers and settlers of the entire Adi- 

 rondacks. j he work of protecting the forests 

 against lire is greatly facilitated by improved 

 roads, enabling the prompt mobilization of men 

 to fight fire. 



OREGON TREES DISEASED 



Portland Oregonian 

 Fir trees along the Columbia River Highway, 

 which are turning brown, as though seared by 

 fire, according to foresters of the United States 

 Forest Service, are not dying, but are merely 

 suffering from a Spring disease something like 

 the grippe, which every spring or two attacks 

 Douglas fir growing where it is subject to the 

 dry, cold east winds, which sweep down the 

 Columbia River Gorge. This rather unique local 

 disease of the Douglas fir was recently named 

 "parch blight" by Thornton T. Munger of the 

 Portland forestry office. 



EFFICIENCY IN FOREST 

 MENSURATION 



can be gained both by the Teacher and 

 the Field Han through 



WINKENWERDER & CLARK'S 



EXERCISES IN FOREST MENSURATION 



Adopted as text by fire forest schools 

 and circulated among the over-seas for- 

 esters through the American Library As- 

 sociation. 



"...it is the nearest approach to a con- 

 densed handbook we have yet seen, and 

 on this account will be useful to the prac- 

 titioner as well as the student " Review 



in Forest Quarterly. 



Price $1.50, postpaid. Address 



E. T. CLARE, University of Washington 



Seattle, Washington 



1337-1339 F STREET.N.W. 

 WflSHINGTON.P.Q. 



flNP 



Illustrators 



3 ^olor Pro^ss Work 

 Superior Qoality 



Phone Main 5274 



PLANT MEMORIAL TREES 



FOR OUR 

 SOLDIERS AND SAILORS 



iNG for the Garden 



is the title of our 1919 catalogue one of the most beautiful 

 and complete horticultural publications of the year really 

 a book of 184 pages, 8 colored plates and over 1000 photo- 

 engravings, showing actual results without exaggeration. 

 It is a mine of information of everything in Gardening, 

 either for pleasure or profit, and embodies the result of 

 over seventy-two years of practical experience. To give 

 this catalogue the largest possible distribution we make 

 the following unusual offer : 

 To every one who will state where this advertisement was 



Every Empty Envelope 

 Counts As Cash 



to every one who will state where this advertisement was 

 seen and who encloses 10 cents we will mail the catalogue 



And Also Send Free Of Charge 

 Our Famous "HENDERSON" COLLECTION OF SEEDS 



containing one pack each of Ponderosa Tomato, Big Boston Lettuce, 

 White Tipped Scarlet Radish, Henderson's Invincible Asters, Hen- 

 derson's Brilliant Mixture Poppies and Giant Waved Spencer Sweet 

 Peas, in a coupon envelope, which when emptied and returned will 

 be accepted as a 25-cent cash payment on any order amounting to 

 $1.M and upward. 



Peter Henderson & Gi 



3b & ,37 

 COPTLANDX ST 



UNIVERSITY OF MAINE 



ORONO, MAINE 

 Maintained by State and Nation 



HPHE FORESTRY DEPART- 

 -*- MENT offers a four years' 

 undergraduate curriculum, lead- 

 ing to the degree of Bachelor of 

 Science in Forestry. 

 ****** 



Opportunities for full techni- 

 cal training, and for specializing 

 in problems of the Northeastern 

 States and Canada. 

 ****** 



John M. Briscoe, 



Professor of Forestry 

 Carleton W. Eaton, 



Associate Professor 

 ****** 



For catalog and further infor- 

 mation, address 



ROBERT J. ALEY, Pres't, 

 Orono, Maine 



School of Forestry 



UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO 



Four Year Course, with op- 

 portunity to specialize in 

 General Forestry, Log- 

 ging Engineering, and 

 Forest Grazing. 



Forest Ranger Course of 

 high school grade, cover- 

 ing three years of five 

 months each. 



Special Short Course cover- 

 ing twelve weeks design- 

 ed for those who cannot 

 take the time for the 

 fuller courses. 



Correspondence Course in 

 Lumber and Its Uses. No 

 tuition, and otherwise ex- 

 penses are the lowest. 



For Further Particulars Address 



Dean, School of Forestry 



University of Idaho 



Moscow, Idaho 



Please mention American Forestry Magazine when writing advertisers 



