1020 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



1 



Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts 





HARVARD 



UNIVERSITY! 



DEPT. OF FORESTRY I 

 BUSSEY INSTITUTION } 



/^FFERS specialized graduate 

 training leading to the de- 

 gree of Master of Forestry in the 

 following fields : — Silviculture 

 and Management, Wood Tech- 

 nology, Forest Entomology 

 Dendrology, and (in co-opera- 

 tion with the Graduate School 

 of Business Administration) the 

 Lumber Business. 



For further particulars 

 address 



Richard t. fisher 



The 



New York State 



College of 



Forestry 



at 



Syracuse University, 



Syracuse, N. Y. 



UNDERGRADUATE courses in 

 Technical Forestry, Paper and 

 Pulp Making, Logging and Lum- 

 bering, City Forestry, and Forest 

 Engineering, all leading to degree of 

 Bachelor of Science. Special oppor- 

 tunities offered for post-graduate 

 t work leading to degrees of Master of 

 Forestry, Master of City Forestry. 

 and Doctor of Economics. 



A one-year course of practical 

 training at the State Ranger School 

 on the College Forest of i,8oo acres 

 at Wanakena in the Adirondacks. 



State Forest Camp of three months 

 open to any man over i6, held each 

 summer on Cranberry Lake. Men 

 may attend this Camp for from two 

 weeks to the entire summer. 



The State Forest Experiment Sta- 

 tion of 90 acres at Syracuse and an 

 excellent forest library ofTer unusual 

 opportunities for research work. 



OPPORTUNITY 



THK rkOMOTER oi- .\ R.MLWAV SYSTEM WITHIX MIXXESOT.A. 

 AND DAKOTA IS COMPILING A LIST OF 



PROSPECTIVE RAILROAD SYNDICATE MEMBERS 



I'lpi' the luirpiise of fstahlisliiiin a Kail\\a\ .Syndicate whose object will he of 

 floatinfi a Railway I'onipany and further developing said projected Railway 

 System. The DAT.\ offered free will be forwarded to applicants when the 

 financial and supplies markets are re established favorable to such construction 

 propositions. If you find yourself in a position to join such SYNDICATE, we 

 predict that the offered D.ATA will show satisfactory advantages. 



Address: P. O. Box 271 - - Ottawa, Canada 



111 industrial investif^ations. 10 p. pi. 

 Wash., D, C, 1919. (Bulletin 753.) 

 AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Climatology 



Trimble. Robert E. Colorado climatology. 

 G4 p. Fort Collins, Colo., 1918. (Colo- 

 rado — .'Agricultural experiment station. 

 Bulletin 24.5.) 



Hydrography 



Switzer, J. A. The larger undeveloped 

 water-powers of Tennessee. 35 p. 

 maps, diagrs., tables. Nashville, 1918. 

 (Tennessee — Geological survey. Bul- 

 letin 20.) 



Erosion 



Eastman, E. E. and Glass. J. S. Soil erosion 

 in Iowa. 391 p. il., map. .'\nies, 1919. 

 (Iowa — Agricultural e.xperiinent sta- 

 tion. Bulletin 183.) 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



.'\erial a.ne. .Mar. 3, 1919. — The manufacture 

 of veneer and plywood, by B. C. Boul- 

 ton, p. 1240-1272, 1285. 



.American city, town and county edition, 

 Jan., 1919. — Memorial trees for our 

 soldiers and sailors, p. 11-12. , 



Breeder's gazette, Mar. 6, 1919. — Live stock 

 on forest ranges, by W. C. Barnes, p. 

 .529-30. 



Bulletin of the Pan American union, Jan., 

 1919. — Palisades interstate park, p. 

 79-91. 



Colorado highways bulletin, Mar., 1919.— 

 Tree planting along concrete highways, 

 by S. R. DeBoer, p. 15-16, 20. 



Commonwealth review. University of Ore- 

 gon, July. 1918. — Reconstruction and 

 natural resources, by B. Mackaye, p. 

 48-51 ; First steps for bringing into use 

 tlie idle lands of Oregon, by T. T. 

 Munger, p. 52-62; Continuous forest 

 I>roduction in the Pacific northwest, by 

 B. P. Kirkland, p, 63-78. 



Geographical review, Feb., 1919. — The 

 southern longleaf pine belt, by F. V. 

 Emerson, p. 81-90. 



Journal of industrial and engineering chem- 

 istry. Mar., 1919. — The recovery of 

 waste paraffined paper by extraction 

 with volatile solvens, by O. Kress and 

 L. F. Hawley, p. 227-9. 



Monthly bulletin, Ohio agricultural experi- 

 ment station, Feb., 1919. — Tree memor- 

 ials for fallen heroes, by E. Secrest, p. 

 .52-4. 



Monthly luilletin, Ohio agricultural experi- 



ment station, Mar., 1919. — Tamarack 

 for fence posts, by J. J. Crumley, p. 

 83-5. 



Official U. S. bulletin. Mar. 10, 1919.— New 

 gas mask absorbent from wood, p. 17. 



Outing magazine, Jan., 1919. — Bringing in 

 the breeds, by J. L. Cobbs, p. 177-80. 



Resources of Tennessee, Jan., 1919. — For- 

 ests, gullies and reconstruction, by It. 

 S. Maddox, p. 23-31. 



Scientific American, Jan. 4, 1919.— Molded 

 airplane propellers, p. 11. 



Scientific American supplement, Jan. 25, 

 1919. — How matches are made, p. 56-7. 



U. S. — Dept. of agriculture. Monthly crop 

 reporter. Mar., 1919. — Farm firewood 

 crop, p. 32. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman. Mar. 8, 1919. — Cheap 

 wood silo for Arkansas, p. 40; Fac- 

 tors affecting the fluctuations of lum- 

 ber prices, by H. Hoyt, p. 46. 



American lumberman, Mar. 15, 1919. — Phy- 

 sical characteristics of jarrah, p. 35; 

 The real status of the Loyal legion, by 

 J. J. Donovan, p. 41; Work of 10th and 

 20th engineers (forest) in France, by 

 I'". R. Barns, p. 48-9; Economic use of 

 wood refuse as fuel by C. M. Garland, 

 p. 70; Wooden gutters, by R. S Whit- 

 ing, p. 71. 



Canada lumliernum, Mar. 1, 1919.— Getting 

 more lumber from tapered logs, p. 62. 



Canada lumberman. Mar. 15, 1919. — Why 

 lumber output fell during past year, p. 

 28-35 ; B. C. owns half of Canada's 

 timber, by R. D. Craig, p. 36. 



Hardwood record, Mar. 10, 1919. — The uses 

 of birch veneer, p. 23; Very small saw- 

 milling, by J. B. Woods, p. 30, i-j. 



Lumber, l"cb. 24, 1919. — Walnut important 

 factor in great war program, by H. 

 Hoyt, p. 10. 



Lumber, Mar. 10, 1919— What England 

 needs in the way of timber, by J. Y. 

 Dunlop, p. 9-10. 



Lumber, Mar. 17, 1919. — Piling for the army 

 in France, by J. B. Woods, p. 9-10. 



Lumber trade journal. Mar. 15, 1919. — The 

 lumberman's attitude toward forcstiy, 

 by H. T. Kendall, p. 22. 



Municipal journal, Jan. 25, 1919. — Water- 

 works operation reservoir maintenance, 

 p. 65-7. 



Paper, Feb. 12, 1919. — The ."American aspen 

 cellulose, by V. Litchauer, p. 46, 48, 



