886 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Current 



Literature Expert 



Service 



jt^BaBMII 1 II II II I II I 11 M l i l h iW 



MONTHLY LIST FOR JULT, 1915 



(Books and periodicals indexed in the Library 

 of the United States Forest Service.; 



Forestry as a Whole 



Proceedings and reports of associations, forest 

 officers, etc. 



Connecticut forestry association. Proceed- 

 ings, 1912-1914. 36 p. \ew Haven, 

 Conn., 1914. 



Hawaii — Board of agriculture and forestry. 

 Report of the Division of forestry for 

 the biennial period ending December 31, 

 1914. 52 p. Honolulu, 1915. 



India — Madras presidency — Forest dept. 

 Annual administration report for the 

 12 months ending June 30, 1914. 247 p. 

 Madras, 1915. 



Iowa state college — Forestry club. The 

 Ames forester, vol. 3. 141 p. il., pi. 

 Ames, la., 1915. 



Michigan — Public domain commission. Re- 

 port for the fiscal year ending June 30, 

 1914. 181 p. il. Lansing, Mich.. 1915. 



Nebraska, University of — Forest club. The 

 forest club annual, v. 6. 137 p. pi. Lin- 

 coln, Neb., 1915. 



New York — Conservation commission. 

 Fourth annual report, 1914; Divisions of 

 lands and forests and fish and game. 

 367 p. pi. Albany, 1915. 



Washington, University of — Forest clul^. 

 Forest club annual, v. 3. 73 p. il. 

 Seattle, Wash., 1915. 



Forest Aesthetics 



Francis, Henry R. Suggestions for proper 

 procedure in systematic street tree 

 planting for towns and cities of New York. 

 56 p. il. Syracuse, N. Y., 1915. (New 

 York state college of forestiy, Syracuse 

 university. Bulletin, v. 15, no. 4.) 



Forest Education 



Forest schools 



New York state college of forestry. Syracuse 

 university. State forest camp in the 

 Adirondacks; announcement for 1915. 

 16 p. il. Syracuse, N. Y., 1915. 



Forest Description 



Brown, Wm. H. and Mathews, Donald M. 

 Philippine dipterocai-pus forests. 149 p. 

 pi., map. Manila, P. I., Philippine 

 journal of science, 1914. 



North Carolina — Geological and economic 

 survey. Timber resources of Wakem 

 Chatham and Lee counties. Chapel 

 Hill, N. C, 1915. (Press bulletins 144-6.) 



Forest Botany 



Plant physiology 



Jaccard, Paul. Structure anatomique de 



racines hypertendues. 16 p. il. Ne- 



motu-s, Henri Bouloy, 1914. 



Is Demanded 



by Modern 



Business 



Methods 



E. A. Sterling 



FOREST ENGINEER 



Commercial Trust Bldg. 

 PHILADELPHIA, PA. 



Forest Engineering 



is expert semce in the application of scientific 

 and economic engineering knowledge and ex- 

 perience to forests and their products. It is 

 essential to modem timberland ovraership 

 and operation, and equally important to the 

 distributor and constuner of wood. 



The Field Covers 



Technical Advice and Practical Service 



in acquiring, estimating and mapping timber; in 

 making valuations; in management; in selling 

 either the stumpage or manufactured product ; 

 in selecting grades or kinds to meet your ser- 

 \-ice requirements; and in preservative treat- 

 ment to prevent decay. 



Trees: classification and description 

 Jaccard, Paul. Les Wellingtonias de I'Ecole 

 forestiere de Zurich. 12 p. il. Berne, 

 Impr. Buchler & Co., 1914. 

 Forest Influences 

 Descombes, Paul. Encouragements au.x in- 

 itiatives privees ou collectives, speciale- 

 ment en matiere de reboisement et de 

 retenue des eauc. 25 p. Saint-Cloud, 

 Impr. Belin freres, 1911. 



Forest Protection 

 Insects 



Craighead, F. C. Contributions toward a 

 classification and biology of the North 

 American Cerambycidae; larvae of the 

 Prioninae. 24 p. pi. Wash., D. C, 

 1915. (U. S. — Dept. of agriculture 

 Report no. 107.) 

 Swaine, J. M. Forest insect conditions in 

 British Columbia; a preliminary survey 

 41 p. il., map. Ottawa, Canada, 1914. 

 Canada — Dept. of agriculture — Experi- 

 mental farms — Division of entomology. 

 Entomological bulletin no. 7.) 

 Thompson, Millett Taylor. \n illustrated 

 catalogue of American insect galls. 

 116 p. il. Nassau, N. Y., 1915. 

 Turner, W. F. The oak scale and its control. 

 8 p. il. Auburn, Ala., 1914. (.-Ma- 

 bama — Agricultural experiment station. 

 Circular 28.) 

 Diseases 



Korstian, Clarence F. Pathogenicity of the 

 chestnut bark disease. 22 p. pi. Lin- 

 coln. Ncbr., University of Nebraska, 

 1915. 

 Selby, A. D. Tree fillings and woimd 

 dressings for orchard and shadetrees. 

 3 p. Wooster, O., 1915. (Ohio— Agri- 

 cultural experiment station. Circular 

 150.1 



JAMES W. SEWALL 



Timber Estimates 



Topographic and Boundary Surveys, Plant- 

 ing, Logging Maps, Portable Mill Operations 



Technical Training Tfioroughness Experience 

 CENTRE STREET OLD TOWN'. MAINE 



Timber Estimates 



FireProtectionPlans 

 Maps.LoggingReports 

 EmpireStateForesters 



156 FiftmAve.NewYorkCity 



TIMBER ESTIMATES, FOREST 

 SURVEYS and MAPS 



D. E. LAUDERBURN 



Forest Engineer 

 6030 Metropolitan Building, New York City 



Wanted— Trained Forester 



With TROPICAL Experience 



for work for American interests in Dutch 

 East Indies. State experience and salary ex- 

 pected and when services would be available. 

 Address Box 50, Care of American Forestry 



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