EMPLOYMENT FOR SOLDIERS i8i 



would obtain some return for the money expended, 

 as forestry would provide congenial employment for 

 those who have been fighting the country's battles, 

 both officers and men, a proportion of whom have 

 already expressed an intention of desiring to obtain 

 open-air employment. If the pay and prospects 

 offered under the new afforestation schemes are 

 made sufficiently attractive, there should be no diffi- 

 culty on the score of obtaining and training the staff 

 required. And even if the terms offered were on the 

 liberal side, the nation would only be repaying a 

 part of the debt it owes to these men, and the extra 

 rates offered them need not form a precedent in 

 fixing the scale of salaries to their successors, or 

 those who have not served actively in the war. 



