1086 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Forestry at 



University of 



Michigan 



Ann Arbor, Michigan 



A FOUR - YEAR, undergraduate 

 course that prepares for the 

 practice of Forestry in all its 

 branches and leads to the degree of 



BACHELOR OF SCIENCE 

 IN FORESTRY 



Opportunity is offered for grad- 

 uate work leading to the degree of 

 Master of Science in Forestry. 



The course is designed to give a 

 broad, well-balanced training in the 

 fundamental sciences as well as in 

 technical Forestry, and has, conse- 

 quently, proven useful to men en- 

 gaged in a variety of occupations. 

 This school of Forestry was estab- 

 lished in 1903 and has a large body 

 of alumni engaged in Forestry work. 

 For announcement giving 

 Complete information and list 

 of alumni, address 



FILIBERT ROTH 



Yale School of 

 Forestry 



Established in 1900 



A Graduate Department of Yale 

 University 



The two years technical course pre- 

 pares for the general practice of for- 

 estry and leads to the degree of 



Master of Forestry. 

 Special opportunities in all branches 

 of forestry for 



Advanced and Research Work. 



For students planning to engage 

 in forestry or lumbering in the 

 Tropics, particularly tropical Amer- 

 ica, a course is offered in 



Tropical Forestry. 

 Lumbermen and others desiring in- 

 struction in special subjects may be 

 enrolled as 



Special Students. 

 A field course of eight weeks in the 

 summer is available for those not 

 prepared for, or who do not wish 

 to take the technical courses. 



For further information and cata 

 logue, address : The Director of the 

 School of Forestry, New Haven, Con- 

 necticut, U. S. A. 



Railway review, .■Xpr. 12, 1919. — Fire con- 

 trol in forests, by J. A. Kitts, p. 550-1. 

 555-6. 



Southern lumberman. Mar. 22, 1919. — 

 Louisiana lumbermen hold conference 

 on prevention of forest (ires, p. 30; 

 Great days ahead for American ' lum- 

 bermen, by N. C. Brown, p. 33; France 

 and her lumber stocks, by J. B. Woods, 

 p. 36. 



Southern lumberman, Apr. 5, 1919. — Santo 

 Domingo is not a lumberman's Para- 

 dise, p. 30. 



Timber trades journal, Mar. 22, 1919. — 

 Australia timber, p. 482. 



Timber trades journal. Mar. 29, 1919. — 

 .'\fforestation by the government, by A. 

 D. Webster, p. 487. 



Timberman, Mar., 1919. — Tie mills protest 

 centralized buying methods, p. 38-9; 

 Fight to keep blister rust out of the 

 west, p. 40-1 ; Manufacture of con- 

 tinuous wood stove pipe, p. 45 ; Euro- 

 pean import duties on lumber, p. 67-8. 



U. S. commerce report Mar. 24, 1919. — 

 White-pine timber resources of New 

 Zealand, p. 1460-1. 



U. S. commerce report. Mar. 31, 1919. — 

 Swedish forests an important resource, 

 p. 1614. 



U. S. commerce report, Apr. 8, 1919. — The 

 paper industry in Japan, p. 164-77 ; 

 Samples of Ecuadorian woods, p. 187. 



U. S. commerce report, .^pr. 9, 1919. — 

 Review of Swedish wood-pulp market 

 during 1918, p. 216-18. 



Veneers, Apr., 1919. — Red gum as a cabinet 

 wood, by I. B. Handy, p. 14-15. 



West Coast lumberman. Mar. 15, 1919. — 

 How to dry western red cedar to avoid 

 collapse, by H. D. Tieman, p. 22, 31. 



West Coast lumberman, Apr. i, 1919. — For- 

 est resources of New South Wales, by 

 B. Millin, p. 35; Average price since 

 1897 on nine leading fir items, p. 37; 

 Crimps, their cause and cure, by A. 

 Smith and N. Jones, p. 42-3; Manual 

 of the western lumber industry, p. 49- 

 64; Pacific Coast water shipments for 

 past quarter century, p. 66-9; Methods 

 of measuring and terms used by Swed- 

 ish lumber exports in the European 

 market, by H. Sylven, p. 70-1 ; Webb 

 law and its relation to the export lum- 

 ber trade, by W. Compton, p. 72; Rig- 

 ging cableway logging systems, by J. 

 T. Worsley, p. 74-5, 78-9, 136, 140; Mill 

 owners throw money away by neglect- 

 ing dry kilns, by V. G. Gilbreath, p. 

 85; Recommendations for the inspec- 

 tion of logging camps, by A. B. Was- 

 tcll, p. 92-4; Japan's shipyards closing, 

 by G. H. Scidmore, p. 96; Sawyers' 

 and setters' signs, p. 97 ; War period 

 trying time for British Columbia lum- 

 bermen, by T. J. McElveen, p. 103-4 1 

 How to easily distinguish Douglas fir 

 from Sitka spruce lumber, p. 108; The 

 human equation in the lumber indus- 

 try, by R. W. Vinnedge, p. 114-15, 123; 

 Cost keeping, by J. P. Robertson, p. 



116, 187; Trade commission expert dis- 

 cusses cost accounting, by L. H. Haney, 

 p. 118, 122; Story of how the govern- 

 ment makes woods more useful, p. 121, 

 144, 198; Overhead skidders in fir tim- 

 ber, p. 154; How to choose a rope for 

 any given purpose, p. 159-60; Will use 

 much native timber, p. 185. 

 Wood- Workers, Mar., 1919. — English meth- 

 ods of lumber driving, by J. Young, 



P- 34- 

 Forest journals 



.•\merican forestry, Apr., 1919. — French 

 forests for our army, by P. S. Rids- 

 dale, p. 963-72; Cascara stumpage ad- 

 vertised on Suislaw, p. 972; Wooden 

 boats and their manufacture, by H. 

 Maxwell, p. 973-82; Forest opportuni- 

 ty on pine lands in the south, by F. W. 

 Besley, p. 983-4; Washington's first 

 memorial tree, p. 984; Forward with 

 tree planting, by C. L. Pack, p. 985-90; 

 Why wood is best, by A. Gaskill, p. 

 991-4; Mandrakes, wild lupine, and 

 notes on the American snapping turtle, 

 by R. W. Shufeldt, p. 995-1000; Rails, 

 gallinules and coots, by A. A. Allen, 

 p. 1001-5; Southwestern forest super- 

 visors hold important conference, p. 

 1005; The pine woods folks, by E. G. 

 Cheyney, p. 1006-7; Digest of opin- 

 ions on forestry, p. 1008; Walks in 

 the woods, by J. O. Swift, p. 1009-n ; 

 Sell fuel wood by weight, p. 1012; 

 Canadian department, by E. Wilson, p. 

 1015-16; Training courses in wood in- 

 spection, p. 1016; Forestry in Louisiana, 

 p. 1018 ; Planting trees in a new way, 

 p. 1918. 



.Mlegemeine forst — und jagdzeitung, July, 

 1918. — Darstellung des verhakens der 

 holzarten zum wasser, by Anderlind, p. 

 125-8; Beobachtungen uber blitzschlage, 

 by Joseph, p. 141-2. 



.'Mlgemeine forst — und jagdzetiung, .\ug., 

 1918. — Zur harznutzung im jahre 1917, 

 by Biehler, p. 149-65. 



.Mlgemeine forst — und jagdzeitung, Sept.- 

 Oct., 1918. — Ueber einsparungen biem 

 pflanzbetriege, by Tiemann, p. 173-81. 



.'\ustralian forestry journal, Feb. 10, 1919. — 

 Putting first-class woods to third-class 

 purposes, p. 43-4; Axe and other 

 handles, p. 44-5; The excessive cost of 

 logging, by F. Nixon, p. 47-8; White 

 ants in cypress pine, by G. Burrow, p. 

 48-9; Forestry in central .Africa, by 

 A. S. Le Souef, p. 49-50; Forestry and 

 land settlement ; a New Zealand view, 

 p. 57-8; Some common fallacies; .Aus- 

 tralian timber resources, by H. R. 

 Mackay. p. 59-62 ; The eternal fire ques- 

 tion, by R. D. H., p. 64, 66. 



Canadian forestry journal. Mar,, 1919.— .A 

 civic plan for street trees, by B. R. 

 Morton, p. 106-8; Photographing for- 

 ests from the air, by Lewis, p. 1 10-12; 

 Lumbermen and the tree supply, by 

 W. G. Power, p. 115-17; Does the 

 west need forests, p. 118-20; The 

 waste of Christmas tree export, by 



