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A.M l-:Rir.\X FORESTRY 







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Quality 



Long and Short Leaf Yellow Pine 

 the same today and tomorrow. 

 Quality — Service — Capacity. 



MISSOURI LUMBER AND 



LAND EXCHANGE 



COMPANY 



R. A. Long Bldg. 



Kansas City. Mo 



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Bulletin agricole du Congo Beige, March- 

 June, 1917 — Note sur le cubage d'une 

 parcelle d'essai dans le foret vierge de 

 Yangainbi, Congo central, by E. Lep- 

 lae, p. 89-98. 



Conservation, Nov. 1917 — Our airplane 

 spruce may win the war. by Clyde 

 Leavitt, p. 41. 



Country gentleman, Oct. 27. 1917— What to 

 do with blighted chestnut, by Gene Day. 

 p. 31. 



Forest and stream, Nov. 1917 — The building 

 of the open log camp, by William .S. 

 Wicks, p. 540, 562. 



House beautiful, Sept. 1917 — Native woods 

 for building, by C. M. Price, p. 189-92; 

 Inside wood finish, by Thomas P. Rob- 

 inson, p. 214-15. 



In the open, Oct. 1917 — Pennsylvania and 

 her forests, by N. R. McNau.ghton, p. 

 32-40. 



Journal of heredity, Nov. 1917 — Choosing 

 the best tree seeds; the influence of 

 parental character and environment 

 upon the progeny of Douglas fir, by 

 Charles J. Kraebel, p. 483-92. 



Nature-study review, Oct. 1917 — Necessity 

 for greater accuracy in describing 

 American trees, by R. W. Shufeldt, o 

 288-94. 



New country life, Nov. 1917 — The trees of 

 Flushing, by Charles H. Murch. p. 88, 

 90. 



New Zealand journal of agriculture, Sept. 

 1917 — Economical afforestation in Nel- 

 son, by H. G. Kingsland, p. 145-50. 



Phytopathology, Oct 1917 — Arthropods and 

 gasteropbds as carriers of Cronartium 

 ribicola in greenhouses, by G. Flippo 

 Gravatt and Rush P. Marshall, p 

 368-73. 



Plant world, Sept. 1917 — The indicator sig- 

 nificance of native vegetation in the 

 determination of forest sites, by Clar- 

 ence F. Korstian, p. 267-87. 



Pleasnreland, Nov. 1917 — Grand Canon of 

 the Colorado, by Enos A. Mills, p. 3-4 

 19; Birds and wild life of Colorado, 

 by Wallace I. Hutchinson, p. 7, 18. 



Scientific American, Sept. 8, 1917 — Chemi- 

 cal products from the forests, by A. W. 

 Schorger, p. 173, 181. 



Scientific American, Sept. 15, 1917 — Length- 

 ening the life of wood; cooking logs 

 in creosote to prevent the inroads of 

 decay, by Ernest Elva Weir. p. 189. 108. 



Scientific American, Sept. 22, 1917— Fi.iiht- 

 in,g with axe and saw ; a regiment of 

 American lumberjacks and foresters 

 for European service, by C. H. Claudy, 

 p. 204, 215; Why trees lose their leaves, 

 by S. Leonard Bastin, p. 211. 



Scientific American supplement, June 16, 

 1917 — The revival of wooden shipbuild- 

 ing, p. 369, 376-7. 



Scientific American supplement. July 28. 

 1917 — True greenheart is not poisonous, 

 by C. D. Mell, p. 55. 



Scientific American supplement, .^ug. 11. 

 1917 — The effect of the weather on for- 

 est fires, by .Andrew H. Palmer, p. 81, 

 88-9. 



