254 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



^hrPomcro^ 



PLANT 



^Btaii5h]uaj.]uj NUT TREES 



NOW 



$141 yielded last year 

 by one of our trees 



Hardy Pomeroy English 

 Walnut trees are famous 

 for hardiness, rich yiolds 

 and quality. Beautiful luwn 

 shade trees, profitable for 

 orchards. 



Send address now for 

 well- illustrated facts and 

 prices. 



Daniel N. Pomeroy & Son 



English Walnut Orchards 

 Lockporl BoxA.F. New York 

 Get oar oiler ol free trees for public planting for Arbor Day 



BUSINESS FOR SALE 



AN OPPORTUNITYfor some rich man's son, in a 

 profitable out of doors occupation. I will give three 

 months of my time to teach the purchaser — renovat- 

 ing old orchards, tree surgery, spraying and moving 

 large trees. Lots of orders on hand. Present owner 

 is classed as one of the most expert in Massachusetts- 

 Situated near 300.000 people. Included in the sale 

 will be automobile and sprayers, tools and a great 

 many books on forestry, etc. For further information 

 address Box 400. care of American Forestry. 



Did You Get 

 Your Copy ? 



Every one who seeks to improve the 

 appearance of or protect public buildings, 

 forestry tracts, private residences, parks, 

 etc., should be interested in the informa- 

 tion given and handsome designs illus- 

 trated in this book. 



The large quantities of Fiske Fencing, 

 Gates, Lamp Standards, Tree Guards, 

 Vases, Fountains, etc., furnished to public 

 and private institutions enable us to offer 

 valuable advice and a wide variety of 

 standard designs. 



If youT requirements are special we will 

 build to order, and where desired will erect 

 cOTnpletr mid assume nil rcsinittsihi' ity. 



J.W.nSKE IRON WORKS 



Established 1858 



lOO-UH PARK PLACE NEW YORK 



BRITISH COLUMBIA TIMBER 



Our knowledge of the timber resources of the Coast 

 is based on 20 years' experience in the woods of 

 British Columbia. We have never lost a dollar for 

 a client on an investment. We will be pleased to 

 hear from you if you are interested in British Colum- 

 bia stumpage. 



W. L. KEATE 



441 SEYMOUR ST. VANCOUVER. B. C. 



Michigan to plant 4500 acres annually, 

 p. 140 ; Save us from invading pests, 

 by J. G. Sanders, p. 147-53; Flatheaded 

 borers on forest trees, p. 153; Birds 

 and the camera, by A. A. Allen, p. 154- 

 7; The slash pine, by Wilbur K. Mat- 

 loon, p. 158-9; State forests' valuation, 

 p. 160; One of the undreamt-of things, 

 by Lewis E. Thciss, p. 160; Michigan in 

 the pine blister fight, p. 160; Early 

 spring and summer flowers, by R. \V. 

 Shufeldt, p. 161-5; Forest road under 

 federal aid act, p. 165 ; Boy scouts bat- 

 tle moths, p. 165; Maples, a poem by 

 Richard Butler Glaenzer, p. 165 ; The 

 wind and the trees, by Bristow Adams, 

 p. 166-7; $300,000 for pine blister dis- 

 ease ; an effective quarantine law, p. 

 168; A feathered dog in the manger, by 

 Lewis E. Tlieiss, p. 168; Collecting tree 

 and flower specimens, by R. VV. Shu- 

 feldt, p. 169-70; National forests given i 

 Dermanence, p. 170; That tent in the 

 tree, p. 171-2; India's forest manage- 

 ment, p. 172; Lowest forest tire loss, p. 

 172; Planting suggestions for April, by 

 J. J. Levison, p. 173-5 ; Efficiency and 

 economy in Oregon, p. 176; Increasing 

 the grazing fees on national forests, 

 p. 177; Canadian department, by Ell- 

 wood Wilson, p. 180 ; Four colonial 

 houses, by Rawson Woodman Haddon, 

 p. 181-3; Blasting tree holes, p. 183. 

 Canadian forestry journal, Feb., 1917. — Im- 

 proving the farmer's trees, by B. R. 

 Morton, p. 945-6; A children's school 

 in the forest, by W. E. Struthers, p. 

 947-50; New light on tropical forests, 

 p. 954-5 ; Stock taking on the public 

 domain; New Brunswick is developing 

 plans to guide settlement and devise 

 future timber policies, by P. Z. Caver- 

 hill, p. 959-60; Tree-felling by ma- 

 chine, p. 965 ; Better equipment to cope 

 with fires, by T. McNaughton. p. 969; 

 How menace to white pine may be 

 controlled, p. 970-2. 

 Hawaiian forester and agriculturist, Nov., 

 1916. — Progress of forestry during 1916. 

 by C. S. Judd, p. 410-15; Tree investi- 

 gation ; working plan, p. 416-18. I 

 Indian forester, Jan., 1917. — Extraction of 

 blue pine and fir beams from Kulu for- 

 ests, by C. G. Trevor, p. 1-2 ; Fuel and | 

 bamboo plantations in the Sittang delta 1 

 of the Pegu district. Lower Burma, by 

 J. M. D. Mackenzie, p. 2-9; Some prob- i 

 lems in connection with grazing in the 

 Central Provinces, by C. A. Malcolm, 

 p. 10-15; Progress of silyicultural j 

 works in North Kanara division, by J. 

 Dodgson, p. 15-17; Possible use of [ 

 phenyle in nurseries, by H. H. Haines, i 

 p. 17-18; Growth of Soymida febri- 

 fuga in trichinopoly, by M. Rama Rao, | 

 p. 19-20; Sundri, Heritiera minor, by 

 Bijay Kumar Bhattacharji. p. 21-5; The 

 system of marking in the South Canada 

 division, by G. M. Willfprd. p. 25-7; 

 Butea frondosa evolving simple leaf, by 

 S. S. Shivapuri, p. 28-9; Development 

 of Indian forests, p. 30-4; Distillation 

 of sandal-wood oil, p. 50-2. 

 Journal of forestry, Jan., 1917.— The situa- 

 tion, by B. E. Fernow. p. 3-14; Con- 

 tinuous forest production of privately 

 owned timberlands as a solution of the 

 economic difiiculties of the lumber in- 

 dustry, by Burt P. Kirkland. p. 15-64; 

 What of the future of the eastern for- 

 ests of the United States, by S. B. 

 Elliott, p. 65-7; Forest terminology; 

 report of committee, p. 68-101 ; Site and 

 site classes, by Samuel N. Spring and 

 E. J. Hanzlik, p. 102-4; Sandy Ridge 

 improvement cutting, by J. S. lUick, p. 

 104-5 ; The moisture withholding power 

 of soils, by Barrington Moore, p. 110- 

 17; A glimpse of the Siberian forests, 

 bv Theodore S. Woolscy, p. 120-1. 



Forestry at 



University of 



Michigan 



Ann Arbor, Michigan 



A FOUR- YEAR .undergraduate 

 course that prepares for the 

 practice of Forestiy in all its 

 branches and leads to the degreeof 



BACHELOR OF SCIENCE 

 IN FORESTRY 



Opportmiity is offered for grad" 

 uate work leading to the degree 

 of Master of Science in Forestry. 



The course is designed to give 

 a broad, well-balanced training in 

 the fundamental sciences as well 

 as in technical Forestry, and has, 

 consequently, proven useful to men 

 engaged in a variety of occupations. 



This school of Forestry was es- 

 tablished in 1903 and has a large 

 body of alumni engaged in 

 Forestry work. 



For announcement giving 



complete information and list 



of alumni, address 



FILIBERT ROTH 



TIMBER SALES, KLAMATH RESERVATION, 

 OREGON 



SEALED BIDS TMLL BE RECEIVED T NTIL 

 twelve o'clock noon, Pacific time, Thursday, May 31st, 

 1917, for the purchase of the timber upon three large tracts 

 on the Klamath Indian Reservation in southern Orecon. 

 Upon one tract containing two hundred and sixty niillion 

 feet and upon another containing one hundred and seventy 

 million feet, a minimum price of §3.25 per thousand has been 

 placed upon yellow ana sugar pine, and upon the third 

 tract of two hundred million feet, the minimum price for 

 sugar and ytUow pine has been made $3.00 per tnousand 

 feet. The minimum for red 6r is $.75 and for white fir $.50, 

 hut the cutting of these species is optional with the purchaser. 

 The timber is nearly all yellow and sugar pine. The right to 

 reject any and all bids is reserved. Eull information may 

 be obtained from the Superintendent of the Klamatii 

 Indian School. Klamath Agency, Oregon. 



Washington. D. C., March 24th, 1917. CATO SELLS. 

 Commissioner of Indian Affairs. 



PHILIP T. COOLIDGE 

 FORESTER 



Stetson Bldg.. 31 Central Street. Bangor, Me. 



Management and Protection of Woodland) 

 Improvement Cuttings, Planting, Timber 

 Eslimatea atid Maps. Survejfing 



Ohio forester, Oct., 1916.— White pine rust, 

 by D. C. Babcock, p. 44-5 ; Some press- 

 ing needs in the study of forestry, by 

 A'. D. Selby, p. 45-6. 



Schvveizerische zeitschrift fiir forstwesen, 

 Jan., 1917. — KuUurvcrsuch mit aus- 

 landischen holzarten in der waldung 

 des Schlosses Marschlins, Genieinde- 

 gebiet von Igis, in Graubiinden. by J. 

 Coaz, p. 1-14; Forslliches aus dem Bin- 

 nental, by A. Pillichody, p. 14-40; Ueber 

 die aufiosende wirkung von baumwur- 

 zcln bci der zersctzung von gesteinen, 

 by Flury, p. 23-4. 



Tree life, March, 1917.— A talk on natural- 

 istic planting, by Theodore F. Borst, 

 p. 3-5 ; Tlie evergreen note in the land- 

 scape, p. 6-7. 



