8S8 



AiMERICAN FORESTRY 



DEPARTMENT OF FORESTRY 



The 

 Pennsylvania State 



College 



APROFESSSIONAL course in For- 

 estry, covering four years of 

 college work, leading to the 

 degree of Bachelor of Science in 

 Forestr>'. 



Thorough and practical training 

 for government, state, municipal and 

 private forestry. 



Four months are spent in camp 

 in the woods in forest work. 



Graduates who wish to specialize 

 along particular lines are admitted 

 to the "graduate forest schools" as 

 candidates for the degree of Master 

 of Forestry on the successful com- 

 pletion of one year's work. 



For further information address 



Department of Forestry 



PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE 



State College, Pa. 



HARVARD 



UNIVERSITY 



SCHOOL OF FORESTRY 



OFFERS specialized gradu- 

 ate training leading to the 

 degree of Master of Forestry in 

 the following fields: — Silvicul- 

 ture and Management, Wood 

 Technology, Forest Entomol- 

 ogy, Dendrology, and (in co- 

 operation with the Graduate 

 School of Business Adminis- 

 tration) the Lumber Business 



For juriher particulars 

 address 



RICHARD T. FISHER 



Chairman 

 Cambridge : : Massachusetts 



Hydrography 



Massachusetts — Board of harbor and land 

 commissioners. Report relative to con- 

 serving the waters and utilizing and 

 equalizing the flow in the rivers and 

 natural streams of the commonwealth. 

 55 p. Boston, Mass., 1915. 



Swain, George Fillmore. Conservation of 

 water by storage. 384 p. il. New- 

 Haven, Yale university press, 1915. 



Soils 



National wood chemical association. Char- 

 coal for improving soil in greenhouses, 

 nurseries, lawns, etc. 4 p. Bradford, 

 Pa., 1915. 



Industries and resources 



Little, Arthur D. The industrial resources 

 and opportunities of the south. 18 p. 

 Boston, Mass., A. D. Little, Inc., 1915. 



Camping 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — Forest 

 service. Handbook for campers in the 

 national forests in California. 48 p. 

 il., map. Wash., D. C, 1915. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Agricultural gazette of Tasmania, April, 

 1915. — Planting trees for shelter on the 

 farm, by J. M. Ward, p. 146-9. 



Country gentleman, June 19, 1915. — Forestr>- 

 for farmers, by W. J. Harsha, p. 1046-7. 



Forest and farm, April, 1915. — Progress in 

 forestry, and the task before us, p. 7-8: 

 A history of the conservation movement, 

 by Mrs. Emmons Crocker, p. 30-1. 



Gardener's chronicle, June 5, 1915. — Cupres- 

 sus arizonica, by A. Bruce Jackson, p. 

 315. 



Gardener's chronicle, June 12, 1915. — Some 

 new arborescent species of American 

 hawthorns, by John Dunbar, p. 321-3; 

 Rhamnus frangula, by E. M. Holmes, 

 p. 332. 



In the open, June, 1915. — How to plant, grow 

 and reap the profit from the red pine, by 

 George H. Wirt, p. 28-31. 



Journal of the Washington academy of 

 science, June 19, 1915. — A new genus of 

 scolytoid beetles, by A. D. Hopkins, 

 p. 429-33. 



Music trades. May 22, 1915.— Wealth of 

 Philippine woods available for piano and 

 player-piano manufacture, by E. E. 

 Schneider, p. 79, 81. 



National wool grower, June, 1915. — The 

 "bedding out" system of handling sheep 

 on the Big Horn forest, Wyoming, by 

 L. H. Douglas, p. 13-16. 



Professional memoirs. Corps of engineers, 

 U. S. army, July-August, 1915. — Wooden 

 and combination highway bridges, by 

 Gien Edg.-:r Edgerton, p. 433-68. 



Reclamation record, July, 191j. — Tr;es and 

 shrubs for private grounds and school 

 yards, p. 317-18; Tree planting for home 

 and farm in South Dakota, p. 318; 

 Shade trees, Strawberry valley project, 

 by J. L. Lytel, p. 319. ' 



Technology monthly, Feb., 1915, — Control- 

 ling our streams by forestrj-, by Allen 

 Chamberlain, p. 5-11. 



Special Courses offered in 



LUMBERING 



and 



Wood Utilization, 



Pulp and Paper 



Making 



Other Special Courses in Forestry 



Men with technical training 

 along the lines of Lumbering 

 and the various branches of 

 Wood Utilization will be needed 

 in the future. 



Four and five year students in 

 these courses will have constant 

 access to the new Eastern 

 Forest Products Laboratory. 



The New York 

 State College of Forestry 



At Syracuse University 

 Syracuse, N. Y. 



Yale University 

 Forest School 



NEW HAVEN. CONN., U. S. A. 



YALE University Forest School is a graduate de- 

 partment of Yale University. It is the oldest 

 existing forest school in the United States and 

 exceeds any other in the number of its alumni. A 

 general two-year course leading to the degree of 

 Master of Forestry is offered to graduates of uiii- 

 versities. colleges and scientific institutions of high 

 standing and. under exceptional conditions, to men 

 who have had three years of collegiate training, 

 including certain prescribed subjects. Men who are 

 not candidates for the degree may enter the School as 

 special students, for work in any of the subjects offered 

 in the regular course, by submitting evidence that will 

 warrant their taking the work to their own advantage 

 and that of the School. Those who have completed 

 a general course in forestry are admitted for research 

 and advanced work in Dendrology, Silviculture. Forest 

 Management, Forest Technology, and Lumbering. 

 The regular two-year course begins the first week tn 

 July at the School camp near Milford, Pennsylvania. 



For juriher information address 

 JAMES W. TOUMEY, Director 



NEW HAVEN. CONN. 



