576 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



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 



. 4 



iiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiimimitiiiiiiiiiinnmi 



Forestry Training 

 in tne Heart of tne Rockies 



The Colorado School qf 

 * * Forestry * * 



A Department of Colorado College 

 Colorado Springs. Colorado. 



Professional Courses in Technical For- 

 estry, leading to degrees of Bachelor of 

 Science in Forestry and Master of Forestry. 



Spring and Fall Forestry teaching at 

 Manitou Forest (a 7,000. acre forest belong- 

 ing to the College) and the winter term at 

 Colorado Springs. 



Write for announcement, giving full in- 

 formation. 



( :-r;:i!iiiih;r:jmiiiiii;i;i:i:'i:ii!iin,lill!ii!i.i::ililllll'ilii;i!lii:iMtiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii:],i!iiinnlliiiiiiiiin. 



SARGENT'S HANDBOOK OF 



American Private Schools 



An annual Survey and Review describing 

 private schools of all classifications and 

 summer camps for boys and girls. 



A Compendium for Educators. 



A Guide Book for Parents, supplying, in- 

 timate information, which makes possible 

 a discriminating choice. 



Comparative Tables give the relative Cost, 

 Size, Age, Special features, etc. 



Introductory Chapters review interesting 

 Developments of the Year in education. 



Educational Service Bureau will be glad 

 to advise and write you intimately about 

 any school or camp in which you are 

 interested. Write full particulars. 



Consultation by appointment 



Circulars and Sample Pages on Request. 



PORTER E. SARGENT 



14 Beacon Street Boston, Mass. 



forest in Tennessee, another to the Forest 

 Service at Lander, Wyoming, while an- 

 other, is assistant manager of the Mam- 

 moth Hot Springs Camp on the Yellow- 

 stone National Park. Another alumnus of 

 the college will be camp director this year 

 for the Syracuse Boy Scout council, which 

 maintains a permanent camp for two 

 months on Crooked Lake, near Syracuse. 



The wide scattering of foresters shows 

 that the industries are realizing the need 

 for forest trained men in manufacturing 

 concerns and industries using wood. In 

 addition to this list of men in field fores- 

 try, another long list could be given of men 

 who have gone to saw mill and similar con 

 cerns for the summer work. 



Prospects for next fall are that thera 

 will be a record-breaking class, indications 

 being that there will be 150 accepted for 

 entrance into the new class, as against 120 

 last fall, that being a record to that time. 



The students at the State Ranger School 

 at Wanakena, a department of the New 

 York State College of Forestry at Syra- 

 cuse, have planted 50,000 trees this spring 

 on the school forest, making a total of 

 150,000 trees now planted and under ob- 

 servation. The school also made surveys 

 and plans for the reforesting of a 1,700-acre 

 tract for the National Paper Products Com- 

 pany at Streeter, New York, on which a 

 start was made this year with 60,000 trans- 

 plants. 



A. E. Fivaz, a senior, will be president 

 of the Forestry Club next fall, with G. E. 

 French as secretary. Ralph E. Frobisher 

 was made the school representative in the 

 International Association of Forestry 

 Clubs. 



Six foresters were included on the Syra- 

 cuse University lacrosse team which won 

 the northern intercollegiate championship 

 this spring, and of these three seniors were 

 given the university Block "S" as a trophy, 

 the same honor given to players on the 

 football and oher major sports teams. 



YOUNfi MAN recently discharged from the U. S 

 Navy, wants employment with wholesale lum- 

 ber manufacturer; college graduate; five year's 

 experience in nursery business; can furnish 

 best of references. Address Box 075, Care 

 American Forestry Magazine, Washington. 

 D. C 



RECENTLY discharged from U. S. Army, youne 

 man wants position with a firm who has use for 

 a lumber tallyman and inspector. Has a pooil 

 education, 11 years' practical experience in lum- 

 ber - and can furnish good references. Athlrrss 

 Box 880, care of American Forestry Magazine. 

 Washington, D. C 



ARBORICULTURIST is open to an engagement 

 to take charge of, or as assistant in City For- 

 estry work. Experience and training, ten years, 

 covering the entire arboricultural field from 

 planting to expert tree surgery including nur- 

 sery practice, and supervision in the care and 

 detailed management of city shade trees. For 

 further information, address Box 700, care of 

 American Forestry. 



PHILIPPINE FOREST SCHOOL 

 THHE graduation exercises of the Class of 

 A 1920, of the Philippine Forest School, 

 at Los Banos, were held in the Malaruhat 

 Plantation, hereafter to be known as the 

 Commencement Grove. 



The class marched to seats under the 

 trees where the Juniors and visitors were 

 assembled. Forester Zschokke gave a 

 short talk on "Put Yourself in His Place," 

 emphasizing the need of understanding 

 the point of view of the men with whom 

 the graduating class would soon have to 

 deal. 



The diplomas were then handed out, and 

 the honor graduates were as follows : 

 Highest scholarship, Tin Me Hai, Ling 

 Gien Ying; winner of the Ahcrn Medal, 

 Luis Adona; first honor man, Juan Fon- 

 tanoza ; second honor man, Amando Cur- 

 aming. 



Professor Harold C. Cuzner, Dean of the 

 College of Agriculture, made a few re- 

 marks. He said he was delighted to be 

 present and while he had no special mes- 

 sage to give, still he felt that it would 

 not come amiss to emphasize the need of 

 understanding the other man, saying, "No 

 one can do his best work if he creates 

 friction and animosity and the only way 

 to avoid unnecessary misunderstandings 

 and opposition is to put yourself in the 

 other man's place and when you understand 

 him you can prevent friction." 



Mr. Harry T. Edwards, former Director 

 of Agriculture, gave them some good ad- 

 vice and ended by saying, "Concentration 

 of your energies upon the essentials means 

 success upon this new trail that you are 

 today starting upon." 



The Forest School orchestra furnished 

 music during the exercises. After the ex- 

 ercises were over, Director Fischer talked 

 with the students and bade them farewell. 



PUNT MEMORIAL TREES 



WISCONSIN REGISTERS FARM 

 NAMES 

 TTNDER a new Wisconsin law, effective 

 for the past two years, farmers arc 

 now in a position to register names for 

 their farms, a system that appeals both to 

 the senses of beauty and utility. The name 

 may well become a trademark for the 

 farmer's products. A large number of 

 farmers in Marinette County have taken 

 advantage of the law and the love of trees 

 is as much reflected in the names as is 

 any other sentiment. Such names as "The 

 Oaks," "The Poplars," "The Pine?," arc 

 common. The name "Oak Ridge Farm," ..t 

 once calls up the picture of a long hill 

 surmounted probably by a ,single oak 

 "Maple View Farm" may have a grove cf 

 maples in the prospect that the farmhouse 

 faces. "Forest View" offers a similar sug- 

 gestion. "Twin Oaks Farm" or "Twin I 

 Maples Farm" hardly need additional 

 directions to guide the seeker. Various 

 groves have given names to farms and the' 

 tree motif is also seen in "Beechwood, 1 

 "Cedar View" and "Elmhurst." 



