
GRADUATES CLASS OF 1909 227 

public schools and then went to Winchester Normal College, where he 
received the degree of B.A. in 1900. He graduated from Yale College in 
1907, having received scholarships, a prize in Latin and an oration Junior 
and Senior appointment. His society was Alpha Delta Phi. 
He was married January 3, 1912, in New York City, to Miss Marie 
Janet Morrow of New York City, daughter of Cornelius Wartendyke 
Morrow and Rosalie Caroline (Lippmann) Morrow. 
Before entering the United States Forest Service Maddox 
served for a time as a technical forester in private forestry. His 
present appointment is that of forest assistant, a position he has 
held since entering the Government Service on February 1, 1910. 
Concerning his travels, Maddox says: “Since leaving Yale in 
1909 my travels have been chiefly in New York State, Pennsyl- 
vania, Massachusetts and Connecticut in the East. I have been 
across the United States three times in connection with my pro- 
fession and vacations. My experiences have been chiefly business 
ones in contact with lumbermen and technical men of the Forest 
Service.” 
Maddox is a ““Democrat, Progressive in spirit.” He is a mem- 
ber of the Society of American Foresters. 
He has published an article, Timbersales on the Plumas 
National Forest, March, 1912. 
Frederick F. Moon 
Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. 
Frederick Franklin Moon was born July 3, 1880, in Easton, Pa., the 
son of William W. Moon, a Quaker, and Ophelia F. (Nightingale) Moon. 
He has a sister, Emelie N. Miller. 
He was prepared at the Easton High School, Easton, Pa., and in 
1901 received the degree of B.A. from Amherst, where he was a member 
of Zeta Psi. He spent two years at the Harvard Medical School and 
four years in business and contracting work. 
He was married June 1, 1912, in New York City, to Miss Pearl Brown- 
ing Stetson of Columbus, Ohio, daughter of Matthew Wilson Stetson 
and Mary (Browning) Stetson. 
During the summer of 1909 Moon was employed in the United 
States Forest Service and in 1909-10 held the position of state 
forester of the Forest, Fish and Game Commission. From 1910 
to 1912 he was professor of forestry at the Massachusetts Agri- 
