380 



AMERICAN FORESTRY' 



TUIODERN WAR is 

 destruction on a scale 

 beyond precedent; great 

 trees are cut down ana 

 the Worii which nature has 

 spent years in building is 

 blaslea. After the war the 

 dead trees must be re- 

 placed. It is Well for 

 America to start now the 

 planting for the orchards 

 "which will bear fruit jor 

 the generations that are to 

 come. 



Tree Seeds 



are seeds with a splendid 

 lineage. They are carefully 

 selected so that the growth from 

 them may be of high quality. 



Whether you are planting 

 trees for fruit and food, or for 

 shade, beauty euid comfort, you 

 can choose Thorburn's knowing 

 that for over a century these 

 seeds have been famous for 

 their excellence. 



You should have the 1917 

 catalogue containing a wealth 

 of information. Write for your 

 copy today. 



Sent free on request. 



J. M. Thorburn & Co. 



ESTABLISHED 1K02 



53 S. Barclay Street 



, , Through to 



3^^^\l^ A 54 Tark Place 



EW YORK 



end/&i 



*''"Book 



'''!!, ! I II. H-^ 



Nellis, J. C. Production of lumber, latli, 

 and shingles, in 1915, and lumber in 

 1914. 45 p. Wash., U. C, 1917. (U. 

 S. — Dept. of agriculture. Bulletin 

 506.) 



North Carolina pine association. North 

 Carolina pine; its beauty for panelled 

 walls, beamed ceilings and polished 

 floors. 16 p. il. Norfolk, Va., 1917. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



IVood-Hsincj industries 



McCreight, .Arthur M. Crossties purchased 

 and treated in 1915. 8 p. Wash., D. C. 

 1917. (.U. S.— Dept. of agriculture. 

 Bulletin 549.) 



National lumber manufacturers' association 

 — Trade extension dept. Working 

 drawings and photographs showing the 

 construction of farm buildings for use 

 in manual training schools. 15 p. il. 

 Chicago, 111., 1917. (Educational series 

 no. 3.) 



White, F. M., & Griffith, C. I. Ice houses 

 and ice supply. 23 p. il. Chicago, 111., 

 1916. (National lumber manufactu- 

 rers' association — Trade extension dept. 

 Farm bulletin no. 6. ) 



Forest by-products 



Champion fibre company. The story of 



chestnut extract. 24 p. il Canton, 



N. C. 1917. 



Periodical Articles 



Botany 



Robbins, Wilfred W. Native vegetation 

 and climate of Colorado in their rela- 

 tion to agriculture. 56 p. il., maps. 

 Fort Collins, Colo., 1917. (Colorado — 

 -•Agricultural experiment station. Bul- 

 letin 224.) 



Trelease, Sam F., and Livingston, Burton 

 E. The daily march of transpiring 

 power as indicated by the porometer 

 and by standardized hygrometric paper. 

 14 p. Cambridge, University press, 

 1916. 



Hydrography 



California — State water commission. Re- 

 port, 1915-16. 183 p. pi., map. Sacra- 

 mento, Cal., 1917. 



Hall. Benjamin M., and Hall. Maxcy R. 

 Second report on the water powers of 

 .Mabama. 448 p. pi., maps. University. 

 Ala., 1916. (.Alabama — Geological sur 

 vey. Bulletin 17.) 



Public lands 



Michigan — Public domain commission. Pro- 

 ceedings, vol. 7, 1915-16. 747 p. Lan- 

 sing, Mich., 1916. 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



.American architect, .Xpril 11, 1917. — South- 

 ern yellow pine for structural purposes, 

 by Samuel J. Record, p. 223-8. 



Asia, March, 1917. — New homes for China's 

 millions, hv Gertrude Emerson and 

 Flsic F. Weil, p. 25-9. 



California fish and game. April. 1917. — 

 Trinity national forest game refuge, by 

 E. V. Jotter, p. 65-8. 



Conservation, May. 1917. — Pine Mister in 

 Canada, by Gyde Leavitt, p. 18: Rail- 

 way fire protection work. p. 20. 



Country life. March 10, 1917.— The beauty 

 and uses of British timbers, by A. T). 

 Webster, p, 237-8. 



Country life in America, May. 1917. — 

 Growing trees on farm and forest, by 

 Walter D. Ludwig. p. 104-6 : a modern 

 loc cabin, hv Irvine Lee Palmer, p. 148- 

 50, 



Power Spraiiin^ 



Big Jobs take time and 



men — Deming rigs 



save both 



For 



fast, 



thorough spraying, 



covering every leaf in 



record time with a clinging 

 high-powered spray, use 



DOMING 



POWER RIGS 



Hhowtng fverj- 

 ITfclloi 



Cataloe 



thinK froi ..__ 



to tiurket pumps free oa 

 raqaast. 



THE DEMING CO. 



15 J Depot St.. S&J«m. Ohio 

 Pumpi for j// farTi usti 



FORESTRY SEEDS 



I OFFER AT SPECIAL PRICES 



Pinus strobus Picea Englemanni 



Pseudo-tsuga Doug- Picea Pungens 



lassi Thuya Occidentalis 



Pinus ponderosa Pinus taeda 



and many other varieties, all of this season's 

 crop and of good quality. Samples upon re- 

 quest. Send for my catalogue containing full 

 list jf varieties. 



THOMAS J. LANE 



TREE SEKKSMAN 



Dresker Pennsylvania 



HILL'S 



Seedlings and Transplants 



Also Tree Seeds 



FOR REFORESTING 



DEST for over a half century. All leading 

 ■'-' hardy sorts, grown in immense quantities. 

 Prices lowest. Quality highest. Forest 

 Planter's Guide, also price lists are free. 

 Write to-day and mention this magazine. 



THE D. HILL NURSERY CO. 



Evergreen Specialists 



Largest Growers in America 



"OX 501 DTJNDEE. ILL 



FOREST NURSERIES 



PINE 



SPRUCE 



Evergreen trees for forest 

 planting in any quantity, 

 from 100 trees to carload lots. 



WE GROW OUR OWN TREES 

 Write us for catalogue 



KEENE FORESTRY ASSOCIATION 



KEENE, N, H, 



