116 YALE FOREST SCHOOL 

He prepared at Westtown Boarding School, Westtown, Pa., and 
attended Cornell University for a time before entering Yale. 
He is unmarried. 
Smith entered the Forest Service in 1906 and has served 
in the positions of forest assistant, chief of section of boundaries, 
forest examiner and forest supervisor. He was appointed to 
this last position in October, 1909, and was located in Albu- 
querque, N. Mex., District 3, until January, 1913, when he was 
transferred to District 6, as supervisor of Snoqualmie National 
Forest, being stationed in Seattle, Wash. The district head- 
quarters are in Portland, Ore. 
Non GRADUATES 
James M. Fetherolf 
Business address, Forest Service, Ogden, Utah 
Residence, 2550 Monroe Avenue, Ogden, Utah 
James Milton Fetherolf was born September 27, 1874, in Kempton, Pa., 
the son of James K. Fetherolf and Lydia D. (Kistler) Fetherolf. Both 
parents are of Pennsylvania German or Palatinate descent. They had 
six other children, three sons and three daughters: D. E. Fetherolf, 
Muhlenberg College, Lutheran Theological Seminary; William Philip 
Fetherolf, Muhlenberg College, M.A. Princeton ’04; N. J. Fetherolf, a 
graduate of Keystone State Normal School, forest planting assistant 
at Wasatch Nursery; Anna L. L. Fetherolf, Keystone State Normal 
School; Emma K. Fetherolf and Ella M. Fetherolf. 
He attended the common schools, worked on the farm, taught for a 
number of years, prepared for college at Lynnville Academy, and was 
graduated at Muhlenberg College with the degree of B.A. in 1901. 
Before entering the Yale Forest School he had worked for the Bureau 
of Forestry as a student assistant. 
He was married February 27, 1908, in Washington, D. C., to Miss 
Grace Moser, daughter of James Henry and Martha Scoville Moser. 
They have one son: James Moser Fetherolf, born May 13, 1910, in 
Ogden, Utah. 
Fetherolf served as forest assistant from 1904 to 1906, forest 
inspector, 1906 to 1908, and forest examiner, 1908 to 1912. He 
is now in charge of the reforestation work in District 4. 
He writes: “During the summer of 1904, I made an extensive 
study of planted groves in the two Dakotas and Western Minne- 


