CURRENT LITERATURE 



507 



Write for These Books 



They tell all about game farmirg— ihe 

 profit and pleasure to be obtained from 

 it. "Game Farming for Profit and 

 Pleasure" is sent free on request It 

 treats of the subject asa whole; describes 

 the many game birds, tells of their food 

 and habits, etc. "American Pheasant 

 Breeding and Shooting" is sent on re- 

 ceipt of 10c in stamps. It is a com- 

 plete manual on the subject. 



BEtipULES POWDBIl CO. 



Market Street 



Wilmington 



Delav/are 





r I C If C Climb-proof, chain 



FENCE 



^ link fencing. 



wrought iron and woven wire fence 

 iron gates, lamp standards, grille 

 work, fountains, vases, tennis court 

 ;md poultry yard enclosures. 



J. W. FISKE IRON WORKS 



100-102 Park Place New York. N. Y. 



The Care of Your Trees 



Let us take it right off your 

 shoulders. "The Bartlett Way" 

 of Tree Surgery is sa fr a n <l sn n-. 

 None but >•*;«/ c.^■;>cr^s employed. 

 Endorsed by forestry schools. 

 Representatives go every- 

 where. Send for "Tree Talk." 

 It's alive with tree helps. 

 THE F. A. BARTLETT CO. 

 544 Main St., Stamford, Conn. 



^l 



Do Business by Mail 



It's profitable, with accurate liste of pros* 

 pects- Our catalogue contaiuB vital iiifoniia> 

 tioD OD Mail AdvertisiDg. Also prices and 

 quautity on 6,000 national mailing lists, 99% 



Sguaranleed. Such as: 

 I War Material Mfrs. Wealthy Men 



I Cheese Box Mfrs. Axle Grease Mfrs. 



I Shoe Retailers Auto Owners 



1 Contractors Tin Can Mfrs. 



M Druggists Farmers, Etc. 



Write for this valuable reference book; 

 prices and samples of fac-simile letters. 

 k Have us write or reviseyour Sales Letters. 

 ^ Rois-Gould, I nnoc Olive St 



Ross-Gould 



_ Mcailing 



^ ■ S-r. Louis 



akoff 



teilungen, no. 24. 375 p. il., pi- 

 Wendisch-Wilmersdorf, 1915. 



Rogers, Julia Ellen. Trees worth knowing. 

 291 p. pi. Garden City, N. Y., Double- 

 day, Page and Co., 1917. 



.Standley, Paul C. The Mexican and Cen- 

 tral .'American species of Ficus. 35 p. 

 Wash., D. C. 1917, (Smithsonian inst. 

 — U. S. national museum. Contribu- 

 tions from U. S. national herbarium, 

 vol. 20, pi. 1.) 



Forest Mensuration 



California — State board of forestry. Table 

 showing board feet contained in lumber 

 of various dimensions. 4 p. Sacra- 

 mento, Cal., 1917. 



Silviculture 



I'lanting and nursery prcictiic 



Nebraska forestation commission. Second 

 biennial report, 1915-16. 19 p. Lin- 

 coln. Nebr., 1916. 



Forest Protection 



Insects 



Minnesota — State entipniulogist. Entomolo- 

 gist's report on inspection of Minnesota 

 nurseries and imported nursery stock 

 for the year 1916; further report on 

 white pine blister work in Minnesota, 

 1916-17. 16 p. map. St. Anthony 

 Park, Minn, 1917. (Circular no. 41.) 



Sanborn, C. E. & Painter, H. R. The locust 

 borer. 8 p. il. Stillwater, Okla., 1917. 

 (Oklahoma — Agricultural experiment 

 station. Bulletin No. 113.) 



Worthley, L. H. Solid-stream spraying 

 against tin- gipsy moth and the brown- 

 tail moth in New England. IS p, pi. 

 Wash., D. C, 1917. (U. S.— Dept. of 

 agriculture. Bulletin 480.) 



Fire 



Clearwater timber protection association 

 Ninth-tenth annual reports, 1915-1916. 

 Orofino, Idaho, 1915-16. 



Kothkugel, Ma.x. Los incendios en los 

 Andes Patagonicos. 32 p. Buenos 

 Aires n. d. 



Forest Management 



S ott. Charles t\ Tiie noodlot. i7 p. il. 

 Manhattan, Kans , 1917. (Kansas — 

 -Agricultural experiment station. Cir 

 cular no. 58.) 



Forest Legislation 



.Arcentine Republic — Ministcrio de agri- 

 cultura. Ley de bosques y yerbales. 

 90 p. maps. Buenos .Aires, 1915. 



Forest Administration 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — Forest 

 service. Instructions for making tim- 

 ber surveys in the national forests. 

 53 p. Wash., D. C. 1917. 



Forest Utilization 



Sterrett, W. D. Utilization of ash. 52 p. 

 il., pi. Wash. D. C, 1917. (U. S.— 

 Dept. of agriculture. Bulletin 523). 



ll'ood-using industries 



Cross, Charles Frederick. & Bevan, E. f. 



American-Grown Trees 

 and Evergreens 



Our ability to supply plants 

 of the highest quality is not 

 curtailed by the stoppage of 

 foreign shipments. Buy 

 nursery stock grown at 

 Andorra. 



Andorra 

 Nurseries 



ir»(. tVanif/r Tlar/jrr, Prop, 

 *' Suggestions (or Effective 

 Planting" on request 



Box 200, 

 Chestnut Hill 

 Phila.,Penna. 



A saving in Lumber of 

 $17,178,000 Annually is 

 Possible by Kiln Drying 

 Instead of Preliminary Air 

 Drying 



THE 



KILN DRYING 



OF LUMBER 



Is a new and authoritative 



work covering the entire 



subject 



By Harry Donald Tiemann. M.E.,M.F. 



Ill cbargp, Section of Timber Physics and 

 Kiln Drying Experiments of tbe U. S. Forest 

 Service. Special Lecturer in Wood Technol- 

 ogy and Forestry, University of Wisconsin. 

 I-nrest PriKlucts Laboratory, Madison. Wis- 



■ ■nlisill. 



16 Tables. 55 Illustrations. Odtavo. Net $4.00 



Tbe value of technical linowledge of KILX 

 DRYING is self evident, — this book, as does 

 lie other upon the market, gives the reader 

 t be most recent and most clearly expressed 

 information. Tbe United States is taking a 

 b-ad in the adoption of the KILN DRYING 

 method and this volume will increase our 

 lead. It is a practical as well as a theoreli- 

 rai treatise. The text and illustrations guide 

 tin- \v:iy to the most efficient methods of 

 work. 



KIIA" DRYING improves the condition of 

 Tlie wood for the purpose for which it is used; 

 it reduces losses from warping, checking, 

 case-hardening and honey -combing that occur 

 in Air Drying; it reduces the interest charge, 

 the lire risk, the weather attacks by reducing 

 Ibe period necessary to carry wood from the 

 linif it is cut to that when it is fit for use; 

 it reduces the weight and thus facilitates 

 handling and shipping. 



Tile present losses in preliminary Air Dry- 

 ing can be reduced by KILN DRYING from 

 \2 per cent, for Hard Woods and 5 per cent, 

 lor Soft Woods to 2 per cent. There is a 

 possible annual saving of $17,178,000. 



J. B. Lippincott Company 



Publishers 



Philadelphia 



FO 



1 



RE 

 2 



ST 

 3 



RY 



4 



THE FOREST 



IS THREE-FOURTHS OF 



FORESTRY 



Your opportunities are as unlimited 



as our forests if you study at 



WYMAN'S SCHOOL OF THE WOODS 



Incorporated Munising, Michigan 



