444 





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Game Birds and Game 



Farming 



They tell all about game farm- 

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 be obtained from it. "Game 

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 of the subject as a whole, de- 

 scribes the many game birds, 

 tells of their food and habits, 

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 receipt of 10c. in stamps. It 



is a complete manual on 



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HEI{CULES POWDEI{_ CO. 

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1047 Market Street 

 ii;i(ni Dclaw arc 



PROVINCE OF QUEBEC 



Department of Lands and Forests 



Quebec, 2nd June, 1917. 



Public notice is hereby given that, in 

 conformity with thelaw.on the 2 1st August 

 next, at 11 o'clock a. m., at the office of 

 the Minister of Lands and Forests Dept., 

 Quebec, there will be offered permits to cut 

 timber on lands belonging to the Crown 

 in the Upper-Ottawa, Lower-Ottawa, St. 

 Maurice, Lake St. John, East and West, 

 Saguenay, Rimouski West and Bonaven- 

 ture West agencies, comprising several 

 large blocks in the Abitibi, Upper-Ottawa 

 and headwaters of the St. Maurice and 

 Gatincau and on River Chamouchouan. 



Permits will be adjudged to the highest 

 bidder. 



The price of adjudication is payable in 

 three equal instalments. 



The permit to cut will be subject to the 

 ordinary conditions of the Law and Regu- 

 lation and the grantees of any of the 

 aforesaid territory must, within a delay of 

 three years, manufacture, in the Province 

 of Quebec, with the timlier cut in said 

 territory, either puip or paper in the pro- 

 portion of ten tons per day, or sawn lumber 

 in thi- proportion of ten thousand feet 

 board measure per day, per hundred 

 square miles. 



Further information may be had by 

 applying to the Department of Lands and 

 Forests. 



ELZ.-MIVILLE DECHENE, 



Deputy-Minister, 



Department of Lands and Forests. 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Engineering news-record, June 7, 1917. — 

 Timber structures in Hawaii men- 

 aced by marine borer, p. 489; Build 

 wood training camp city for 5,000 

 officers ill three weeks, p. 506-8. 



Gulf Coast lumberman. May 15. 1917. — 

 The modern retail lumber dealer as 

 the most important factor in commu- 

 nity development, by J. George Fred- 

 erick, p. 27-8; Te,\as forestry work 

 commendable, p. 45. 



Hardwood record. May 10, 1917. — Syca- 

 more in door work, by T. C. J., p. 2i. 



Hardwood record. May 25, 1917. — Honey 

 locust for wagon felloes, p. 17; Fig- 

 ure due to twisted grain, l)y Hu Max- 

 well, p. 18-19; West Virginia logging 

 costs, p. 21a. 



Hardwood record. June 10. 1917. — Fig- 

 ures due to pigments, by Hu Max- 

 well, p. 14-16; Something about fish 

 poles, p. 19. 



Journal of industrial and engineering 

 chemistry, June 1, 1917. — Chemical 

 industry in Canada, by H. E. Howe, 

 p. 548-51; Factors causing variation 

 in the yield of camphor in the Florida 

 camphor tree, by Samuel C. Hood, 

 p. 552-5; The chemistry of wood, by 

 A. W. Schorger, p. 556-66; On the 

 to.xicity to a wood-destroying fungus 

 of maplevvood cresote and of some 

 of its constituents and derivatives, 

 together with a comparison with 

 beechwood creosote, by Ernest J. 

 I-'ieper, and others, p. 566-9. 



Lumber trade journal. May 15, 1917. — 

 Hardwood interests making progress 

 in agricultural development of cut- 

 over lands, by V. H. Schoffelmayer, 

 p. 27; Sliipping board announces 

 lumber and timber specifications for 

 wooden ships, p. 28-9. 



Lumber world review, May 25. 1917. — 

 Second growth pine as a solution of 

 the cut-over lands problem in the 

 south, by H. H. Chapman, p. 21-5; 

 The proper use of yellow pine in tex- 

 tile mills, by Hermann von Schrenk, 

 p. 25-6; Louisiana forestry associa- 

 tion meets, p. 31-5. 



Lumber world review, June 10. 1917. — 

 Wood preservation; its importance 

 to the luml)er industry, by Kurt C. 

 Barth, p. 27-8; Soils of the Louisiana 

 timber belts, by F. V. Emerson, p. 34. 



Paper, May 23, 1917. — Colloidal chemis- 

 try in paper-making, by Judson A. 

 De Cew, p. 13-15. 



Paper, June 6, 1917. — Studies in sulphite 

 cooking; effect of varying cooking 

 conditions in the production of sul- 

 phite pulp from spruce, by S. E. 

 l,unak. p. 13-14. 



Paper mill, ^larch 3, 1917. — Forced circu- 

 lation in cooking sulphite pulp, by 

 Sidney E. Lunak. p. 17. 32. 



Paper trade journal, May 10, 1917. — Pa- 

 per and i)ulp in 1916 in Norway and 

 Sweden, p. 28, 30, 38. 



Pulp and paper magazine. .Xpril 12. 1917. 

 — The Bache-Wiig barking drum, by 

 S. A. Moulton, p. 357-61; .An analysis 

 of the pulp and paper business in 

 .America, p. 370-4. 



Pulp and paper magazine, April 26, 1917. 

 — Fla.x straw as basis for paper mak- 

 ing, by E. B. Biggar, p. 411-12; Bird's- 

 eve view of the world's paper indus- 

 try, p. 413-17. 



Pulp and paper magazine, May 3, 1917. — 

 New uses of pulp and jiapcr. p. 438-9. 



St. I-ouis Lumberman, May 15. 1917. — 

 Resisting the submarine; endless 

 chain of wooden ships for foiling the 

 subsea craft, p. 19, 37-8; Government 

 wood ship building limited by labor 

 supply, p. 44. 



St Louis lumberman, June 1. 1917. — Tin- 

 problem of reforestation, by M. L. 



nP If P lliiiib-proof, chain link ft-rcing. 



l3 IV Li wroughtironandwovenwirefer.ee. 



__,__, iron gates, lamp standards, grille 



rrNi r work, fountains, vases, tennis court 



I J-iilVl-i m,(j poultry yard enclosures. 



J. W. FISKE IRON WORKS 



100-102 Park Place 



New York. N.Y. 



I NurserySlockforForesl Planting 



Seedlings TREE SEEDS Transplants 



•2.25 W,MetorpT,ct>on '^-^O 



per lUUO larue quantitieB per 1000 



THE NORTH-EASTERN FORESTRY CO. 



CHESHIRE. CONN. 



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