374 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



"The first poles were 

 cut on May 21, and the 

 tower was completed 

 and in use on June 20. 

 The time spent in cut- 

 ting and peeling logs 

 and constructing the 

 tower amounted to less 

 than 24 working days 

 of 8 hours each, for a 

 crew which averaged 

 five in number. In ad- 

 dition, atwo-horse 

 team was used 9 days. 



"Four galvanized- 

 wire cables y 2 in. in 

 diameter will be added 

 as guys. A copper 

 cable reaching up and 

 over the center of the 

 tower will follow one 

 leg to the ground and 

 serve as a lightning 

 arrester." 



Apache Forest News 



During 1913, 28,570 

 head of cattle and 

 horses were grazed on 

 the Apache Forest 

 under permit. The av- 

 erage number for each 

 stockman was only 138 

 head. The Forest has 

 a greater number of 

 trout streams than any 

 other National Forest 

 in either Arizona or 

 New Mexico. 



Main poles are spliced .._ 

 here by lapping fhem 

 fog ether fora distance 

 of 10 ff. between the 90ft.% 

 100 ft. be It braces and 

 fastening them with' -- 

 lag- screws 



'^Ladder 



Bandof'12 

 strands of 



Detail of 

 Sph'ce 



Detail of 

 Frame for 

 Floor 

 (Enlarged) 



'''Short 

 Braces 



All timbers fastened 

 together with ''z'lag 

 screws and drift 

 bolts of '4 iron at 

 all points of 

 contact with 

 each other 



t f I r _L_1 LJ T,. _jj..i._j3ii 



FIGURE 3. STRUCTURAL ' DETAILS OF THE PROMONTORY BUTTE LOOKOUT 

 TOWER AND TRIANGULATION STATION. 



Pictures in this article by courtesy of the Engineering News, New York City. 



Reforestation for $7.50 An Acre 



Nearly 4,000 acres were reforested in Montana and northern Idaho during 1913, at an 

 average cost of $7.50 an acre. 



China's Best Forest 



The best forested area of China is in Manchuria. The principal tree varieties are 

 pine, cedar, larch, fir, yew, oak, ash, elm, walnut, and birch. 



Valuable Instruction 



Two forest officers, in Washington and Oregon, are writing popular descriptions of the 

 trees on the Crater and Mt. Rainier national parks, for the use of visitors to the parks. 



Wyoming's Highest Mountain 



Gannett Peak, Wyoming, nearly 14,000 feet in elevation, and the highest mountain in 

 the State, is on the divide between the Bonneville and Bridger national forests. 



