262 



FORESTERS ATTENTION 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will gladly print free 

 of charge la this colum advertisements of for- 

 esters, lumbermen and woodsmen, discharged 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 



WANTED Position as City Forester. Technically 

 trained and experienced forester. 30 years old. 

 Have had S years experience in city forestry, 

 tree surgery, landscape work. Box 2010, care 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY MAGAZINE, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. ("-"J 



GRADUATE of a recognized forestry school hay- 

 ing had several years practical experience in 

 all phases of forestry, both public and private, 

 and experienced in portable logging operations, 

 desires to make a change. Will consider any 

 proposition in any part of United States or 

 Canada. Box 2030, care American Forestry 

 Magazine, Washington, D. C. (2-4-21) 



TECHNICAL FORESTRY GRADUATE, B. S. 

 1908, M. S. 1914, desires position as City Fores- 

 ter. Twelve years practical experience in tree 

 surgery, planting, ' transplanting, spraying, 

 orchard care, improvement cuttings and_ land- 

 scaping, including making and execution of 

 plans. Employed at present. References if 

 desired. Married, age 41. Box 2020, care Ameri- 

 can Forestry, Washington, D. C. (2-4-21) 



YOUNG MAN, 30 single, technical training and 

 experienced in forestry and engineering, also 

 first-class knowledge and experience in ac- 

 counting and office work, desires position of- 

 fering opportunity for the future. Address Box 

 2000, care AMERICAN FORESTRY. (2-4) 



BUSINESS MAN with technical forestry 

 training and experience, a specialist in 

 aerial mapping and patrol, experienced in 

 protection, cruising and administration, 

 desires responsible position. Now en- 

 gaged in economic study of paper indus- 

 try. Address Box 980, care American 

 Forestry, Washington, D. C. (2-4) 



YOUNG MAN WITH WOODS EXPERI- 

 ENCE and college and military training, 

 desires position in connection with man- 

 agement of forest lands on large estate. 

 Address Box 990, care American Fores- 

 try Magazine, Washington, D. C. (2-4) 



GRADUATE FORESTER, 31 years old, married, 

 ex-service man, wants position as Forester. 

 Private estate or operating pulp company pre- 

 ferred. Have had 10 years experience in fores- 

 try work and practical lumbering. Address 

 Box 2040, care AMERICAN FORESTRY, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. (3-5-21) 



WANTED Position with lumber company. 

 Graduate of 4-year college forestry course. Ex- 

 perience t in wood technology, and the grading 

 and selling of hardwood and yellow pine lum- 

 ber. Address Box 2050. care of AMERICAN 

 FORESTRY MAGAZINE, Washington, D. C. 



MARRIED MAN 30 years old, energetic, indus- 

 trious and systematic, with two years training 

 in forestry, wishes permanent position with 

 a paper and pulp company. To begin with is 

 willing to do most anything. Address Box 

 2045, care AMERICAN FORESTRY, Washing- 

 ton, D. C. (3-0-21) 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



TECHNICAL FORESTER with considerable ex- 

 perience in various phases of practical forestry 

 and sawmill work, desires position with manu- 

 facturing concern in the East or Middle-West. 

 Dry-kiln work, offering opportunity for devel- 

 opment preferred. Address Box 2000, care 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY, Washington, D. C. 



YOUNG MAN, 36, single, technical trained and 

 practical experience in forestry, tree surgery, 

 landscaping and orchard care, wants to get in 

 business for himself as city forester in an ex- 

 cellent location anywhere in the United States. 

 Will also consider position as rorester on large 

 estate. Employed at present and best of refer- 

 ences. Address Box 2005, care AMERICAN 

 FORESTRY Magazine, Washington, D. C. 



POSITION WANTED by young graduate fores- 

 ter. Six years practical field work in forestry 

 and lumbering Am now employed but desire 

 change. Box 2075, care AMERICAN FORES- 

 TRY, Washington, D. C. (4-7-21) 



FORESTRY GRADUATE, age 30, several years 

 experience in forest work, including city fores- 

 ter, landscape development, portable logging 

 reforestation, knowledge and experience In 

 farming and farm machinery. At present em- 

 ployed along technical and administrative lines. 

 Will be open near future for responsible posi- 

 tion, preferably in development and manage- 

 ment of private forest or estate. Box 2070, care 

 AMERICAN FORESTRY Magazine, Washing- 

 ton, D. C. (4-7-21) 



YOUNG MAN with master's degree in forestry 

 and who also has had experience in city fores- 

 try, tree surgery, and esthetic forest planting 

 desires a position in any phase of forestry 

 logging, lumbering, forest management, or city 

 and esthetic forestry where marked ability will 

 bring advancement. Would also consider a 

 position as part time instructor in botany, the 

 remaining time as city forester. Have taught 

 botany while a graduate student in one of the 

 foremost universities in America. An ex- 

 officer of the World War. Address Box 2080, 

 care AMERICAN FORESTRY MAGAZINE, 

 Washington, D. C. (4-6-21) 



POSITION WANTED by graduate forester, vet- 

 eran 10th Engineers, at present lumber inspector 

 Pennsylvania System, experience in French 

 forests, Southern Pine and Northern Hardwoods. 

 Desire position as forester for private estate or 

 other work. North preferred. Address Box 

 2085, care AMERICAN FORESTRY MAGA- 

 ZINE, Washington, D. C. (4-6-21) 



POSITIONS OPEN 



WANTED Assistant State Forester. State of 

 Maryland. Apply to State Employment com- 

 mission, 22 Light Street, Baltimore, for full in- 

 formation and application blanks. 



WANTED An assistant forester. Good place of- 

 fered for a recent graduate who would like to 

 get in business for himself in an excellent lo- 

 :ation. Address Box 920, American Forestry 

 Magazine. (8-10/20) 



A BOOK ON ANGLING 



By FRANCIS FRANCIS. With an intro- 

 duction by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Bart. 

 A book that cannot fail to quicken the 

 pulse of every fisherman. Angling from 

 every angle, with a vast fund of pisca- 

 torial information and the living spirit 

 of the great outdoors. It will also give 

 the fisherman reader many a thrilling 

 picture during winter nights when he 

 must perforce dream of the days of 

 sport to come. Numerous explanatory 

 plates (8 in color). Octavo $4.50 



way are taken up in the order in which 

 they come into view along the road. The 

 second half of the book entitled "Trails of 

 Yosemite" will be a delight to those who 

 fare forth to do their sightseeing on foot. 

 In all, twenty-five trail trips are described 

 and as with the roads all points of interest 

 are described in the order in which one 

 comes to them on the trail. Items of 

 historical interest and entertaining bits of 

 description will be a delight to the traveler 

 and insure his seeing and knowing some- 

 thing about all the features of the valley 

 while a numbered diagram and an excellent 

 contour map of the region are finishing 

 touches which make the little volume a 

 most useful and readable trail companion. 

 Woodbridge Metcalf. 



THE ANNUAL MEETING 

 'T'HE annual meeting of the American 

 Forestry Association was held in 

 Washington, D. C, on Friday, February 

 25, 1921, over two hundred members at- 

 tending: 



The following were elected officers : Pres- 

 ident, Charles Lathrop Pack, re-elected; 

 treasurer, Charles F. Quincy, re-elected; 

 directors, Standish Chard, re-elected ; Ad- 

 dison S. Pratt, re-elected; W. R. Brown, 

 re-elected ; N. C. Brown, re-elected ; Elbert 

 F. Baldwin and John Hays Hammond. 



The meeting adopted by a vote of 121 to 

 25 the recommendations of the Board of 

 Directors for amendments to the by-laws 

 providing: 



For increasing the subscribing member^ 

 ship dues from $3.00 to $4.00 a year. 



For a Board of Directors consisting of 

 fifteen members, seven of whom W. R. 

 Brown, H. H. Chapman, Dr. Henry S. 

 Drinker, C. W. Lyman, Charles Lathrop 

 Pack, C. F. Quincy and E. A. Sterling 

 shall be permanent members, and eight 

 others, four being elected annually to serve 

 the terms of two years. 



For the nomination by the Board of 

 Directors of elective candidates for the 

 Board and provision for other nominations 

 by members. 



For the election of the elective directors 

 by vote of members present at the annual 

 meeting and by the mail vote of those not 

 present. 



For the election of the president, vice- 

 presidents, treasurer and secretary by the 

 Board of Directors. 



For the amendment of the by-laws, ex- 

 cept as to the selection of permanent direc- 

 tors, either by the Board of Directors or 

 by members. 



For annulment of membership of mem- 

 bers in arrears in dues for one year. 



Reference is made in an editorial on the 

 first page of this issue to the grea? value 

 to the Association of the amendments pro- 

 viding for seven permanent directors and 

 for empowering voting by mail or in per- 

 son for elective directors. 



