572 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Hamilton HJatch 



^-^ "The Watch of Railroad Accuracy" 



^ 



In the picture is Engi- 

 neer Tom Cushmg of 

 the Denver & Rio 

 Grande R.R. He carries 

 a Hamilton Watch. 



A Precision 



Instrument 



\ 



Phenomenal records of accuracy explain why the 

 Hamilton is preferred by scientific men and by rail- 

 road engineers and conductors. 



When you are weary of a faulty watch and want 

 one that keeps really accurate time, ask your jeweler 

 to show you the Hamilton. 



Hamiltnns range in price from $13.(10 ($14.00 in Canada) 

 for movement alone, up to $150.00 for the Hamilton Master- 

 piece in ISk gold case. Thin models at S30.U0, $40.00, 

 555.00 and up. 



Write tor Hamilton Watch Book, " The Timekeeper " 



It pictures and describes all Hamilton models 

 and Kives you interesting watch infomiatinn. 



HAMILTON WATCH COMPANY, Dept. 39. Lanca.ter, Pennsylvania 



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 3 CoiPR PRO.cessWo.RH. 



€L€CTR'aTYPe5 



5K6 -H-th. street, n.W. 

 W/i5iiin.QTon,[7.C. 



"• Phone ns\in 8274 ••• 



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W. & T. SMITH CO. 



Geneva Nursery 



NURSERY STOCK 

 AT WHOLESALE 



SEND FOR CATALOG 

 AND PRICE LIST 



GENEVA, N. Y. 



Don*t Take Chances 

 With Your Trees 



Let UB take can- of them nuu\ 

 We will know what to do and 

 </f» it riV//i/. K.xperts in cavity 

 t'llIinK. blocking, bracing, etc. 

 Hejirei^en tati ve8 available 

 (.■verywhere Send for "Tree 

 Talk" the tree lu\er'b manual. 

 THE F. A. BARTLETT CO 

 544 Main St., Stamford, Conn. 



j^.irojji'v^^VVSrervSSfssgjgipfe'- 



Ml IX CI II TI IRP North. .South, East. 

 1-<H^ 1 ^^LJl^IUIK-i:. ^,^„, AllphaBeB 



diBCussed by experts. THK OFFICIAL JOURNAL. 

 $1.2.5 per year. Sample l^r. 



American Nut Journal '^Oj^he^ster. 



Periodical Articles 

 Miscellaneous periodicals 

 Conservation, August, 1917. — Woodlots and 

 their value, by R. D. C, p. 32. 



Conservationist, April, 1917. — Getting the 

 jump on forest fires, by William G. 

 Howard, p. 56-9. 



Country gentleman, July 14, 1917. — Protec- 

 tion from forest fires, by Walter D. 

 Ludwig, p. 22. 



Fire protection, July, 1917. — The wooden 

 shingle betrays Atlanta, p. 6-7. 



Gardeners' chronicle, July 14, 1917.— The 

 inakinij of Japanese dwarf trees, by 

 Clarenc • Elliott, p. 11. 



Hiniter-trader-trapper, August, 1917. — Uncle 

 Sam's handy man, by John L Cobbs, 

 p. 13-25. 



In the open, June, 1917. — Forest lands and 

 tax problems, by S. B. Elliott, p. 18-23. 



Xew country life, August, 1917. — The use 

 of trees, by Fletcher Steele, p. 19-28; 

 Tree surgery, good and bad, by H. D. 

 House, p. 28-32. 



Plant World, June, 1917 — .An enumeration 

 of the pteridophytes and spermato- 

 phytes of the San Bernardino Mts., 

 California, by S. B. Parish, p. 163-78 ; 

 Redwoods, rainfall and fog, by William 

 S. Cooper, p. 179-89. 



Scientific American supplement, May 19, 

 1917. — Gathering turpentine; sugges- 

 tions for prolonging the naval stores 

 industry, by Samuel J. Record, p. 305, 

 312-13; Timber decay and its growing 

 importance to the engineer and archi- 

 tect, by C. J. Humphrey, p. 314-315 

 Our national meat supply threatened, 

 p. SOI-2. 



.Scientific American supplement. May 26, 

 1917. — Rattan of commerce; varieties, 

 sources and uses of an important trop- 

 ical plant, by C. D. Mell, p. 324-325; 

 First aid to woundra trees, by J. J. 

 Levison, p. 331. 



United States — Dept of agriculture. Jour- 

 nal of agricultural research, July 9, 1917. 

 .A needle blight of Douglas fir, by 

 James R. Weir, p. 99-103. 



Inide journals and consular reports 



.Vnierican lumberman, July 21, 1917. — Ef- 

 fect of insect attack on spruce timber, 

 by Austin Cary, p. 44. 



.\inerican lumberman, .August 11, 1917. — 

 Dry kiln instruments and their uses, 

 by Thomas D. Perry, p. 38. 



Canada lumberman, August 1, 1917. — Re- 

 tailer's interest in wood treatment, by 

 Kurt C. Barth, p. 90-1 ; Logging opera- 

 tions in central Ontario, by R. N. 

 Johnston, p. 92-4; Nova Scotia lumber- 

 ing and shipbuilding, by Elihu Wood- 

 worth, p. 96-7; Newfoundland indus- 

 tries all prosperous, by J. Wilfrid Mc- 

 Grath, p. 97-8; The British Columbia 

 lumber industry, by T. D. Pattullo, p. 

 102; The red cedar shingle industry of 

 B. C, by R. D. Hyde, p. 105 ; The pulp 

 mill's relation to lumbering, by John 

 L. Love, p. 113-14; Logging operations 

 throughout the year, by the Fassett 



