AMERICAN FORESTRY 



187 



Pleasant Tkings Taken From Letters to tke Editor 



"A bunch of us here at Stanford Univer- 

 iity are regular readers of AMERICAN 

 FORESTRY, and we enjoy it immensely." 

 Carl Wilhelmson. 



'I have been a subscriber to your maga- 

 zine for only one year but I never expect 

 be without it again. I am now a stu- 

 lent expecting to take up forestry as my 

 ife's work and find this magazine a very 

 valuable help to me." 



Clark R. Meridith. 



I appreciate AMERICAN FORESTRY 

 very much and wish you success in a most 

 worthy cause." F. H. Chambers. 



"Congratulations on the good work you 

 are doing. I believe AMERICAN FOR- 

 ESTRY is going to take hold more and 

 more on the people, and they need it" 

 Rev. J. W. Bachman. 



"The article on the Gannet in AMERI- 

 CAN FORESTRY is excellent; beauti- 

 i fully illustrated, and a good paper all 

 through." 



Norwich, England. J. H. Gurney. 



"I am so delighted with the December 

 Number of AMERICAN FORESTRY 

 magazine with its splendid illustrations of 

 Christmas trees, and cannot help wishing 

 that some of my friends also should pos- 

 sess this number." 

 i Herman Roser. 



"A wonderful magazine. We appreciate 

 it more and more as each number arrives. 

 It will save the forests of America." 



Dr. W. C. Gallagher. 



"I want to congratulate you on the mani- 

 fest improvement in the magazine. You 

 are giving us more real tree talk. The last 

 two numbers were very fine." 



P. E. Alliot. 



"I read AMERICAN FORESTRY from 

 cover to cover. Our National Parks are 

 of deep interest to us and also the great 

 trees on the Pacific Coast." 



Mrs. Geo. H. Thayer. 



'I greatly enjoy AMERICAN FORES- 

 ITRY. The information is very valuable to 

 elementary science teachers. I am reading 

 back numbers with much interest." 



D. D. Dougherty. 



"AMERICAN FORESTRY is great 

 ithe pictures especially and there is so 

 much in a picture. I am going to try and 

 ?et my 41 Deputy Fire Wardens to sub- 

 scribe for it." E. N. Wriston. 



"Ever ready for any service in my power 

 for the benefit of the best interests you 

 and our association stand for." 



George Voigtlander. 



"Your magazine is an important factor 

 in my reading. I take several magazines 

 and yours has steadily improved. It covers 

 important matters in which every man, 

 woman, and child should be interested." 



F. D. Foote. 



"We certainly like the magazine and feel 

 very sure there is not another magazine that 

 covers the ground so thoroughly and ef- 

 fectively as the AMERICCAN FORES- 

 TRY." 



George W. Gurney. 



"I enclose check for $4.00 for dues in 

 the Association. Am glad to help in the 

 great work even though it is very little. 

 Wish you greater success for the coming 

 year." 



Oscar Dinwiddie. 



"I greatly enjoyed Dr. Shufeldt's article 

 on 'cats' in the October numiber and appre- 

 ciate the one in November also. Congrat- 

 ulate you on the publication of these pop- 

 ular articles, which are so much needed." 



Supt. of San Diego Public Schools. 



Carroll De.W. Scott. 



RDEN 

 POK 

 1922 



DRE 



Is a reliable 

 guide to 

 V e g e table 

 and Flower 

 culture that 

 no amateur 

 r profes- 

 sional gard- 

 ener can af- 

 ford to be 

 without. 



The EIGHTY-FOURTH edition Is larger 

 and more complete than ever. It shows in 

 eight color plates some of the DREER 

 SPECIALTIES and its 224 large pages 

 give photographic illustrations of many of 

 the varieties listed, besides complete cul- 

 tural directions for successful growing. 

 It offers the best Vegetable and Flower 

 Seeds; Lawn Grass and Agricultural Seeds; 

 Garden Requisites; Plants of all kinds, 

 including the newest Roses, Dahlias, 

 Hardy Perennials, etc. 



A copy mailed free if you mention 

 this publication. 



HENRY A. DREER 



714-716 Chestnut St. Philadelphia, Pa. 



Nursery Stock for Forest Planting 

 TREE SEEDS 



EHinS WHU fo. prtcu pn TUNSmNTt 



m NORTH-EASTERM FORESIXT 00. 



CHESHIRE, CONN. 



Save Time in Sorting and Routing 

 Mail, Memos, Orders, Etc. 



without changing your present system; Kleradesk sorts 

 and routes papers automatically Instantly. It has sep- 

 arate compartments for all to whom mail is distributed. 



Holds for Reference or Distributes 



It saves time keeps desks clean avoids confusion occupies but 

 one-tenth space of wire baskets eliminates endless shuffling of 

 papers to find the paper you want. A Kleradesk provides a conveni- 

 ent place for holdlirg reference papers where they will be out of the 

 way but immediately at hand when needed. 



Built of Steel Sections 



Each compartment is adjustable from one inch to 1% Inches in 

 width. Any number of compartments can be added as required. In- 

 dexed front and back. Prices quoted under illustrations are for stand- 

 ard olive green finish. Floor sections for 3, 6 and 10-inch compart- 

 ments supplied at extra cost, as well as mahogany and oak finishes. 

 Pays for Itself 



A Kleradesk guarantees time saved in locating papers, Increased 

 etficHncy, personal convenience and the refined appearance of orderly 

 desks, from president to office boy. 



The prices under Illustrations 

 are for standard Kleradesk models 

 In Olive Green. Order one today. 

 Being sectional, you may later 

 add to or alter it. We guaran- 

 tee complete satisfaction. 



Ross-Gould Company 

 2S2 N. 10th St., St. Louis 

 New York, Cleveland 

 Philadelphia 

 Chicago 



pl2S Per Section J 



14 CoMPARTMEJfr*6M II 



Write at once lor free, 

 instructive, illus- 

 trated folder, 

 "How to Get 

 Greater 

 Desk 

 Effici- 

 ency." 



r7C0MPAHTMENT*9ft5l 



IIIOCoMwiniiEiiT'O'g 



