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W. & T. SMITH CO. 



Geneva Nursery 



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GENEVA, N. Y. 



TRKt: NEKDS FILLED 



SprayinK. pruninK. c vity fillinK. 

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NUT CULTURE North South East. 

 ^^__^^^^^^^_^^^__^^^_ Wet-t. All phaBee 

 diecuBBed by experts. THIO OKFICIAI, JOUKNAL 

 $I.ii5 per year. Sample 15c, 



American Nut Journal ""j^jhe^ter. 



tural extension service. E.xtension bul- 

 letin no. 113.) 



Lumber Industry 



rhclen, Rolf. The substitution of other ma- 

 terials for wood ; studies of the lum- 

 ber industry, pt. 11. 78 p. Wash., D. C, 



1!)17--(U. .^. — Dei>t. of agriculture. Re- 

 port 11(1. 117.) 



Wood-using industries 



Hates, John S. f^resent and possible prod- 

 ucts from Canadian woods. 14 p. diagr. 

 Montreal, Canadian society of civil en- 

 gineers, 1917. 



Canada — Uept. of the interior — Forestry 

 branch. Forest products of Canada, 

 liIKi; lumber, lath and shingles. 28 p. 

 Ottawa. 1917. (Bulletin (i2a.) 



Canada — Dept. of the interior— Forestry 

 branch. Forest products, 1916; poles 

 and cross-ties. 8 p. Ottawa, 1917 

 (Bulletin 62.) 



Davidson, J. B. & Stiles, J. E. The con- 

 struction of the wood-hoop silo. 1.5 p. 

 il. Berkeley, Cal., 1917. (California — 

 Agricultural experiment station. Circu- 

 lar 17.3.) 



Forest by-products 



Schorger, A. W., & Pettigrew, R. L. In- 

 creased yield of turpentine and rosin 

 from double chipping. 9 p. pi Wash., 

 D. C, 1917. (U. S. Dept. of agricul- 

 ture. Bulletin .567.) 



WOOD TECHNOLOGY 

 .\c\vlin. J. A.. & Wilson, Thomas R. C, me- 

 chanical properties of woods grown in 

 the United States. 47 p. pi. Wash.. 

 1) C. 1917. (U. S. Dept. of agricul- 

 ture r.ulletin no, 556.) 



AtJXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Agriculture 



Cut-over land conference of the South. Th'b 

 dawn of a new constructive era ; being 

 the full and coinplete report of the cut- 

 over land conference of the South. 244 

 p Xew Orleans, Southern cut-over 

 land association, 1917. 



Forage crops 



Sanrpson. .\rthur W. Important range 

 ])lants : their life history and forage 

 value. 63 p. pi. Wash.', D. C, 1917. 

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

 .545. ) 



Plant diseases 



Harshberger, John William. A text-book 

 of mycology and plant pathology. 779 

 p il Phila., P. Blakiston's Son & Co., 

 1917 



Clearing of land 



Gillette. Halbert Powers. Handbook of 

 clcarin.g and grubbing; methods and 

 cost LMl p il. \. v.. Clark Book Co., 

 1917. 



.Sliattuck. C. II .\U-lbods of clearing 

 logged-off land. .59 p. il. Moscow, Id., 

 1916. (Idaho — .'Vgricultural experiment 

 station. Bulletin no. 91.) 



First aid 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — For- 

 est service. First-aid manual for field 

 parties, by Howard W. Barker. 98 p. 

 il Wash , D. C. 1917. 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Alaska, Aug. 1917 — The national forests of 

 Alaska, by W. G. Weigle, p. 17, 19. 



American economic review, June, 1917. — 

 detenninants of lumber prices, by 

 George A. Stephens, p. 289-.305. 



.American economic review, Sept., 1917 — 

 Price problem in the lumber industry, 

 by Wilson Compton, p. 582-97. 



.■Xmerican review of reviews, Oct.. 1917 — 

 The wings of victory, by Waldemar 

 Kaempffert. p. 386-92; Building ships 

 to beat the submarines, by J. Russell 

 Smith, p. 393-6. 



Bulletin of the Torrey botanical club, Oct. 

 1917 — The structure and development 

 of the plant association, by Henry .Al- 

 len Bleason, p. 463-Sl. 



Conservation, Oct. 1917 — Forestry opera- 

 tions when war is over, by Clyde 

 Leavitt, p. .38 ; .\lcohol made from waste 

 and sawdust, p. .39. 



Country life, June 23, 1917 — The national 

 game reserve of the United States, by 

 Frank Wallace, p. 648-50. 



Country life, July 21, 1917 — The cedar for- 

 ests of Algeria, by Robert Burney, p. 

 67-8. 



Missouri botanical garden bulletin, .Sept 

 1917 — .'\utunm foliage, p. 1.33-6. 



