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AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publish each month, for the benefit of those who wish books 

 on forestry, a list of titles, authors, and prices of such books. These may be ordered through 

 the American Forestry Association, Washington, D.C. Prices are by mail or express prepaid.* 



FOREST VALUATION— FiUbert Roth $1 .50 



FOREST REGULATION— Filibert Roth 2.00 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR— By Elbert Peats 2.00 



THE LUMBER INDUSTRY— By R. S. Kellogg 1.10 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS— By Arthur F. Jones 2.10 



FOREST VALUATION— By H. H. Chapman 2.00 



CHINESE FOREST TREES AND TIMBER SUPPLY— By Norman Shaw 2.50 



TREES, SHRUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS — By John 



Kirkegaard 1.50 



TREES AND SHRUBS— By Charles Sprague Sargent— Vols. I and II, 4 Parts to a 



Volume — per Part 5 . 00 



THE TRAINING OF A FORESTER— GiEFord Pinchot 1.35 



LUMBER AND ITS USES— R. S. Kellogg 1.15 



THE CARE OF TREES IN LAWN, STREET AND PARK— B. E. Femow 2. 17 



NORTH AMERICAN TREES— N. L. Britton 7.30 



KEY TO THE TREES— Collins and Preston 1 .50 



THE FARM WOODLOT— E. G. Cheyney and J. P. Wentling 1 . 70 



IDENTIFICATION OF THE ECONOMIC WOODS OF THE UNITED STATES— 



Samuel J. Record 1.25 



PLANE SURVEYING— John C. Tracy 3.00 



FOREST MENSURATION— Henry Solon Graves 4.00 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY— B. E. Femow 1.61 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY— Filibert Roth 1 . 10 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY— A. S. Fuller 1 .50 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY— Samuel B. Green 1 .50 



MANUAL OF THE TREES OF NORTH AMERICA (exclusive of Me.xico)— Charles 



Sprague Sargent 6 . 00 



AMERICAN WOODS— Romeyn B. Hough, 13 Volumes, per Volume 5,00 



HANDBOOK OF THE TREES OF THE NORTHERN U. S. AND CANADA, E.AST 



OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS— Romeyn B. Hough 6.00 



GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TREES— J. Horace McFarland 1.75 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD: THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTIES— 



Charles Henry Snow 3 . 50 



HANDBOOK OF TIMBER PRESERVATION— Samuel M. Rowe 4.00 



TREES OF NEW ENGLAND— L. L. Dame and Henn,' Brooks 1 .50 



TREES, SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES— 



H. E. Parkhurst 1 .50 



TREES— H. Marshall Ward 1 .50 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS— John Muir 1.91 



LOGGING— Ralph C. Bryant 3.50 



THE IMPORTANT TIMBER TREES OF THE UNITED STATES— S. B. Elliott 2.50 



FORESTRY IN NEW ENGLAND— Ralph C. Hawley and Austin F. Hawes 3.50 



THE PRINCIPLES OF HANDLING WOODLANDS— Henry Solon Graves 1 .50 



SHADE TREES IN TOWNS AND CITIES— William Solotaroflf 3.00 



THE TREE GUIDE— By Julia Ellen Rogers 1 00 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN— Austin Gary 2 12 



FARM FORESTRY— Alfred Akerraan 57 



THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF WORKING PLANS (in forest organization)— 



A. B. Recknagel 2 10 



ELEMENTS OF FORESTRY— F. F. Moon and N C. Brown 2 20 



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD— Samuel J. Record 1 75 



STUDIES OF TREES— J. J. Levison . 175 



TREE PRUNING— A. Des Cars . 65 



THE PRESERVATION OF STRUCTURAL TIMBER— Howard F. Weiss '.'. 3 00 



THE PRACTICAL LUMBERMAN— By Bernard Brereton (third edition) 1 50 



SEEDING AND PLANTING IN THE PRACTICE OF FORESTRY— By James W. 



Tourney, M.S., M.A 3 50 



FUTURE FOREST TREES— By Dr. Harold Unwin . . 2 25 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS— F. Schuyler Mathews.. 2.00 



(In full leather) 3 00 



FARM FORESTRY— Bv John Arden Ferguson 1 ' 30 



LUTHER BURBANK— HIS METHODS AND DISCOVERIES AND THEIR 



PRACTICAL APPLICATION 48.00 



(In twelve volumes, beautifully illustrated in color) 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY— Bv Frederick F. Moon 2 10 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES— By Maud Going ' 1' 50 



HANDBOOK FOR RANGERS AND WOODSMEN— By Jay L. B. Taylor 2 50 



THE STORY OF THE FOREST— By J. Gordon Dorrance 65 



THE LAND WE LIV'E IN— By Overton Price 1 70 



WOOD AND FOREST— By William Noyes 3 00 



THE ESSENTIALS OF AMERICAN TIMBER LAW— By J. P. Kinney 3 00 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS— By L. H. Pammd 5 .35 



• This, of course, is not a complete list, but we shall be glad to add to it any books on 

 forestry or related subjects upon request. — Editor. 



by B. L. Putnam, p. 343-5; Witch's 

 broom on .lapanese cherries, by C. 

 W. H. Douglass, p. 346-8: Foresters 

 in war work, p. 348; The Florida 

 magnolia tree, by J. L. Kyle, p. 349- 

 50; The knot over Washington's 

 tomb, by G. T. K. Norton, p. 351-2; 

 Some historically interesting trees, 

 p^ 352-3; Russia's lumber industry, p. 

 353; Wisconsin's forest playgrounds, 

 p. 353; Redwood trees, p. 354-7; Pri- 

 vate property — no camping. by 

 Smith Riley, p. 35&-60 : Cactus lakes, 

 by F. Coyne, p. 361-2; Pine blister in 

 Michigan, p. 362; School forests es- 

 tablished, p. 362; New York state 

 college of forestry building. 363; The 

 trees and war. by B. .Adams, p. 364- 

 5; Altoona's watershed forested, p. 

 366; Hawaii's effective laws. p. 366; 

 The food garden as a character build- 

 er, p. 367; Procrastination in Indiana, 

 p. 367-8; Need of Smith-Lever exten- 

 sion work in forestry, p. 368; Great 

 forward step by Minn..s p. 368-9; 

 Backward step in Vt., p. 369-70; 

 Stock losses, p. 370. 

 California forestry, May, 1917. — The 

 spirit of the Forest service, by Gif- 

 ford Pinchot, p. 1; Wooden ships 

 and the lumbermen, by C. L. Trab- 

 ert, p. 1-2; Wood for paper pulp in 

 California, by Swift Berry, p. 3; The 

 unit of service, by Coert Dubois, p. 



4, 7; The national forest and wild life, 

 by Harold C. Bryant, p. 5. 7; First 

 commercial use of redwood bark, by 

 U. S. McMillan, p. 6-7. 



Canadian forestry journal. May. 1917. — 

 Scientific investigation and the for- 

 est, p. 1089-92; Protection of birds a 

 farm asset, by C. C. Clute, p. 1093-4; 

 New Brunsw'ick probes its forest 

 contents, p. 1095-6; Forests give B. 

 C. treasur.v over 2 millions, p. 1097; 

 Value of Russian stumpage. p. 1098; 

 Four fire associations now blanket 

 Quebec, p. 1098-9; Strange ways of 

 using wood pulp, p. 1103-5; Impres- 

 sions from India, by H. R. MacMil- 

 lan, p. 1107; Developing the forests of 

 Alaska, by Henry E. Surface, p. 1109- 

 10; Building a camp fire. p. 1111-12; 

 How timber is " cruised," p. 1122. 



Forest leaves, June, 1917. — Pennsyl- 

 vania's potential forest area and land 

 policy, by E. A. Ziegler, p. 34-7; The 

 forest fire problem in its relation to 

 West Virginia forestry, by J. A. Vi- 

 quesney, p. 37-9; A pioneer bird re- 

 serve, by C. E. Ehinger, p. 40-2; Mile- 

 stones in entomological historv, by 

 V. A. E. Daecke, p. 43-8. 



Journal of forestry, .April. 1917. — The 

 present conditions in the lumber in- 

 dustry, by Wilson Compton. p. 387- 

 93; Forest tree planting camps, bv J. 



5. Illick, p. 394-409; The biology of 

 lodgepole pine as revealed by the be- 

 havior of its seed, b.v Carlos G. 

 Bates, p. 410-16; The pack rat as an 

 enemy of natural reproduction on the 

 Angeles nation forest, by Edward N. 

 Munns. p. 417-23; A forest i)oIicy for 

 California, by D. T. Mason, p. 424-30; 

 Computing volumes in period allot- 

 ment, by T. S. Woolsey, Jr.. p. 431- 

 4; By-product mills in the hardwood 

 industry, by P. L. Buttrick, p. 435- 

 7: Determining the quality of stand- 

 ing timber, by Swift Berr.v, p. 438- 

 41; The spread of timbered areas in 

 central Texas, by J. H. Foster, p. 

 442-45; Reproduction of black spruce, 

 by W. H. Kcnety, p. 446-8; A decimal 

 classification for forestry literature, 

 by Clarence F. Korstian, p. 449-62; 

 A second-growth pine mill in Cali- 

 fornia, by Swift Berry, p. 463; Injury 



