AMERICAN FORESTRY 



669 



the Forest Service, and the States, through their for- 

 estry departments, are trying as best they can to meet 

 the situation, but the available resources are only a drop 

 in the bucket compared with what they must be to pre- 

 serve the forests, with their three-fold values, and to 

 start the bare and denuded slopes on the road to 

 recovery. 



To keep pace with the requirements which are being 

 placed upon it, the Southern Appalachian region must 



undergo a deep-seated development along diverse and 

 important lines. Unless all signs fail, this many-sided 

 development is to be a thing of the near future. Under- 

 lying it and fundamental to the success of the whole 

 scheme is the practice of forestry. Attempting to meet 

 impending opportunities for permanent growth and 

 development, without recognition of this fact, will be 

 as expensive and shortsighted as trying to build a 

 great dam on a leaky foundation. 



Important Announcement 



The next issue of AMERICAN FORESTRY MAGAZINE (December, 1922) will 

 be called the "Lake States Number." Among others it will include the following beau- 

 tifully illustrated articles: 



A PICTURE THAT WALKED by Harold Titus 



(Author of "Timber" the most widely read novel on conservation) 



HENRY FORD'S FOREST by Ovid M. Butler 



(Forester of the American Forestry Association) 



MICHIGAN'S FIGHT FOR FORESTS by P. S. Lovejoy 



(Nationally known author of forest and woodland articles) 



THE ROAD TO WISCONSIN'S GREATER OUTDOORS 

 by Henry C. Campbell 



(Assistant Editor of the Milwaukee Journal) 



THE FOREST WHERE THE MISSISSIPPI BEGINS 

 by D. Lange 



(Author of "The Lure of the Mississippi") 



IMPORTING REINDEER TO MICHIGAN by Albert Stoll 



(Popular writer and Secretary Michigan Conservation Commission) 



A BIT OF OLD WISCONSIN by Judge Asa K. Owen 



(President Northern Lakes Park Association) 



THE FIRE CALL OF THE NORTH WOODS by William T. Cox 



(State Forester of Minnesota) 



Governors of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota in personal statements 

 on forestry in their States 



Several Other Splendid Articles 



DON'T MISS THIS ISSUE. Send us a list of your friends to whom you 

 would like a copy sent. Extra copies 40c postpaid. Subscribing member- 

 ship in the American Forestry Association, including Magazine, $4.00 a year, 



American Forestry 



WASHINGTON, D. C. 



(Largest Circulation and Most Widely Quoted Magazine 

 on Forestry, Wood Uses, Lumber and Trees in the World) 



