American Forestry 



The Magazine of the American Forestry Association 



EDWIN A. START, Editor 



March CONTENTS 1911 



:;OVER DESIGN— By Charles Cartwright. 



WHITE PINE IN NEW HAMPSHIRE Three Pictures 



From photographs loaned by the Society for the Protection of New 

 Hampshire Forests. 



THE PEOPLE'S POSSESSIONS IN THE APPALACHIAN FOREST— By Thomas 



Nelson Page ISS 



HARVESTING THE ANNUAL SEED CROP— By Sidney Moore 145 



GROWING TREES FROM SEED— By C. R. Pettis 155 



REFORESTATION IN MASSACHUSETTS— By F. W. Rane 160 



THE PASSAGE OF THE APPALACHIAN BILL 164 



Text of the Bill as Enacted 166 



EDITORIAL— 



The Appalachian Bill 168 The Ownership of Timber Lands 171 



Its Constitutional Aspect 169 American Conservation 171 



Professor Glenn's Report 170 



CURRENT LITERATURE— 



Reviews. — Glenn, Denudation and Erosion in the Southern Appalachian Region and the Monon- 



gahela Basin 172 



Monthly List for February, 1911 173 



NATIONAL FOREST WORK— 



The Resignation of District Forester Chapman 177 An Eucalyptus Experiment 177 



Grazing Examiners 177 The Experimental Wood Pulp Mill 178 



National Forest Fire Losses and Range Use. . 177 Boundary Changes 178 



STATE WORK— 



The Year's Forest Legislation in Vermont . . 170 Northern Forest Protective Association 180 



Nebraska 180 Ohio State Forestry Society 181 



North Carolina Forestry Association 180 Forest Fire Losses in California 182 



New York 182 



THE LUMBER INDUSTRY— 



Commissioner Smith's Report on Standing Northern Hemlock and Hardwood Manufac- 



Timber 182 turers 186 



Hardwood Manufacturers' Association 18.5 Pennsylvania Lumbermen's Association 187 



AMERICAN FORESTRY is published monthly by the American Forestry Association. 



Subscription price, two dollars per year; single copies, twenty cents. 



Manusckipts submitted for publication should be addressed to the Editor, at the office of 



publication. 1410 H Street N. W., Washington, D. C. 



Indexes tor Vol. XV (1909) are ready and may be had on application 



Application pending for entry as second-class mail matter at the Post-office at Wastiington, D. C. 7f 



