336 



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 designed 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 Address 



Dean, School of Forestry 



University of Idaho 



Moscow, Idaho 



ANIMAL INGENUITY OF 

 TODAY 



By C A. EALAND, M.A. The author's 

 love of nature is shown on every page. 

 He describes the skill, clever devices, 

 and strategems 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 

 fuscly 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 courses 

 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 full in- 

 formation. 



school grade, while the others are in We 

 industrial schools. The realization of the 

 great need for more technically trained 

 foresters is leading to the establishment 

 of two new colleges, one in the Kyoto 

 Imperial University and the other in the 

 Kyushu Imperial University. 



In the latter school the effect of Yale 

 will be very materially felt, since the Pro- 

 fessor in charge will be Dr. Shoitsu Hotta, 

 who graduated from the Yale Forest 

 School in 1918. It is intended to model 

 the new school on the general lines fol- 

 lowed at Yale. Accordingly, Professor 

 Fujioka is making a special study of the 

 curriculum, the library, equipment and 

 other matters of concern to the new college. 

 He. is also especially interested in forest 

 products, wood utilization and tropical 

 forestry. Yale is the only school in Amer- 

 ica giving a course in tropical forestry. 



A LECTURE on "The Price of Lumber" 



was delivered at Yale University, 



January 20, 1921, by Mr. R. B. Goodman, 



chairman of the Committee on Economics, 



National Lumber Manufacturers' Asso- 

 ciation, under the 20th Engineers, Memo- 

 rial Fund. 



Mr. Goodman gave in this lecture a 

 comprehensive, scholarly and timely sur- 

 vey of the lumber industry's situation. 

 "A real contribution and a lasting one to 

 forestry economics," is one of many com- 

 ments made upon the lecture by those who 

 have read or heard it and are in a position 

 to speak authoritatively. 



WISCONSIN FORESTRY ASSOCIA- 

 TION 



"DLANS have recently been perfected for 

 the organization of the Wisconsin For- 

 estry Association. 



H. C. Camjpbell, of Milwaukee, was 

 named chairman of the temporary organi- 

 zation ; J. W. Jones, Rhinelander, vice- 

 chairman ; C. L. Harrington, Milwaukee, 

 secretary, and George D. Bartell, Mil- 

 waukee, treasurer. The association will 

 again meet in Milwaukee to form a perma- 

 nent organization and lay plans for a 

 junior association. 



LITTLE FORESTERS 



UNDER the direction of the head there- 

 of, the boys in the manual training de- 

 partment of the Bonham High School, 

 have made a survey of the trees in that 

 city. It shows that there are 15,338 trees 

 of forty varieties, and that of this num- 

 ber 3,907 need pruning, 1,085 have cavities 

 and 673 are diseased. This work is both 

 useful and commendable. It ought to pro- 

 mote better care of the trees and it surely 

 will beget a lively interest within the ris- 

 ing generation for these great friends of 

 man. Dallas ( Texas) Journal. 



87,500,000 FEET 



National Forest 

 Timber 



FOR SALE 



Location and Amount. All the 



merchantable dead timber 

 standing or down and all the 

 live timber marked or desig- 

 nated for cutting on an area 

 embracing about 6,280 acres 

 in Twp. 35 S., R. 4 E., sur- 

 veyed, and Twp. 36 S., R. 4 

 E. W. M., unsurveyed, Four 

 Bit Creek watershed, Crater 

 National Forest, Oregon, esti- 

 mated to be 87,500,000 feet 

 B. M., more or less, of west- 

 ern yellow pine, Douglas fir, 

 white fir, sugar pine and in- 

 cense cedar timber, approxi- 

 mately 81 per cent western 

 yellow pine. 



Stumpage Prices. Lowest rates 

 considered, $3.75 per M for 

 western yellow pine, white 

 pine and sugar pine, and $0.75 

 per M for the other species. 

 For material unmerchantable 

 under the terms of the con- 

 tract to be removed at the 

 option of the purchaser, for 

 which payment is required by 

 the Forest Service, 25 cents 

 per M feet. Rates to be re- 

 adjusted in 1925 and 1928. 



Deposit. With bid $10,000, to 

 apply on purchase price if bid 

 is accepted, or refunded if re- 

 jected. 



Final Date for Bid. Sealed bids 

 will be received by the Dis- 

 trict Forester, Portland, Ore- 

 gon, up to and including 

 May 25, 1921. 



The right to reject any and 

 all bids is reserved. 



Before bids are submitted full 

 information concerning the 

 character of the timber, condi- 

 tions of sale, deposits, and the 

 submission lof bids should be 

 obtained from the District For- 

 ester, Portland, Oregon, or the 

 Forest Supervisor, Medford, 

 Oregon. 



