6 Roosevelt Wild Life Bulletin 



PAGE 



Plate 12. Fig. I. Field party of the Roosevelt Wild Life Station in Yellow- 

 stone Park, summer of 1921. Park Ranger mounted. Photo 



E. R. Warren 38 



Fig. 2. Lodge at Forest and Trail Camp, shared by Roosevelt 

 Wild Life Station field party in the Yellowstone, 1921. Photo 



E. R. Warren 38 



Plate 13. Sir Harry H. Johnston, Member of Honorary Advisory 



Council 42 



Plate 14. George Shiras, 3rd, Member of Honorary Advistory Council.. 45 



P'late 15. Gifford Pinchot, Member of Honorary Advisory Council 46 



Plate 16. George Walbridge Perkins, 1862-1920, late President of the 



Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park 52 



Plate 17. Chauncev J. Hamlin, Member of Honorary Advisory Council.. 61 

 Plate 18. Fie:. 1. Allegany State Park, looking up Quaker Run from 

 Hotchkiss Hill, shooting general character of the topography. 



Photo H. R. Francis 65. 



Fig. 2. Mature forest in the " Big Basin," near the head of 

 Stoddard Creek, Allegany State Park. Photo H. R. Francis. 65 

 Plate 19. Fig. 1. View of Quaker Run, Allegany State Park. Photo 



T. L. Hankinson 66 



Fig. 2. A bayou in Tunungwant Valley, Allegany State Park 



Photo A. A. Saunders 66 



Plate 20. Map showing the location of the Pennsylvania State Game 

 Refuges and Preserves, in relation to the State Forests and 

 the proposed National Forest. Adapted from map by Penn- 

 sylvania Department of Forestry 68 



Plate 21. Frank M. Chapman, Member of Honorary Advisory Council.. 82 

 Plate 22. Viscount Bryce. Member of Honorary Advisory Council. 



Courtesy The Macmillan Company 97 



THE RELATION OF FORESTS AND FORESTRY TO HUMAN 



WELFARE 



" Forests are more than trees. They are rather land areas on which are 

 associated various forms of plant and animal life. The forester must deal 

 with all. Wild life is as essentially and legitimately an object of his care as 

 are water, wood, and forage. Forest administration should be planned with 

 a view to realizing all possible benefits from the land areas handled. It 

 should take account of their indirect value for recreation and health as well as 

 their value for the production of salable material ; and of their value for 

 the production of meat, hides, and furs of all kinds as well as for the 

 production of wood and the protection of water supplies. 



" Unquestionably the working out of a program of wild life protection 

 which will give due weight to all the interests affected is a delicate task. 

 It is impossible to harmonize the differences between the economic, the 

 esthetic, the sporting, and the commercial viewpoint. Nevertheless, the 

 practical difficulties are not so great as they appear on the surface." 



Henry S. Graves, 



Former Chief Forester, U. S. Forest Service. 



Recreation, Vol. 52, p. 236, 1915. 



