180 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Georgia state forest school. Announcements, 

 1916-17. 16 p. il. Athens, Ga., 1916. 



Ohio state university — College of agriculture 

 ■ — Dept. of forestry. Suggestions to 

 prospective students. 12 p. il. Colum- 

 bus, Ohio, 1915. 



Arbor day 



North Carolina — Geological and economic 

 survey. Arbor and bird day manual for 

 North Carolina. 36 p. il. Raleigh, 

 N. C, 1915. 



Forest Description 



Moody, F. B. and Bentley, John, Jr. Wood- 

 lot conditions in Broome county, N. Y. 

 20 p. il. Ithaca, N. Y., 1915. (Cornell 

 university — Agricultural experiment 

 station. Bulletin 366.) 



Moody, F. B. and Bentley, John, Jr. Wood- 

 lot conditions in Dutchess county. New 

 York. 22 p. il. Ithaca, N. Y., 1915. 

 (Cornell university — Agricultural experi- 

 ment station. Bulletin 368.) 



Forest Botany 



Maiden, J. H. The forest flora of New South 

 Wales, pt. 56. 28 p. pl.^ Sydney, 

 Government printer, 1914. 



SUvical Studies of Species 



Breton-Bonnard, L. Creation d'une fortune 

 par le peuplier. 92 p. il. Paris, 

 Librairie J. B. Baillicre et fils, 1916. 



Silvicultxxre 



Tree planting and nursery practice 



Hacker, Rudolf. Reform sammtlicher ver- 



schularbeiten. 20 p. il. Koniggratz, 



n.d. 



Forest Mensuration 



McKenzie, Herman E. A mill scale study 

 of western yellow pine. 171 p. diagrs. 

 Sacramento, Cal., 1915. (California — 

 State board of forestry. Bulletin 6.) 



Forest Protection 



Insects 



Howard, L. O., & Chittenden, F. H. The 

 bagworm, an injurious shade-tree insect. 

 12 p. il. Wash., D. C, 1916. (U. S.— 

 Dept. of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin 

 701). 



Diseases 



Weir, James R. Larch mistletoe; some 

 economic considerations of its injurious 

 effects. 27 p. il. Wash., D. C, 1916. 

 (U. S. — Dept. of agriculture. Bulletin 

 317.) 



Fire 



New Hampshire — Forestry commission. The 

 fire wardens' manual; laws relating to 

 forest protection and instruction to 

 forest fire wardens. 88 p. Concord, N. 

 H., 1915-16. (Bulletin 5, revised.) 



Washington forest fire association. Eighth 

 annual report, 1915. 20 p. Seattle, 

 Wash., 1916. 



Forest Legislation 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — OflSce 

 of solicitor. Laws, decisions, and opin- 

 ions applicable to the national forests. 

 151 p. Wash., D. C, 1916. 



Forest Administration 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — Forest 

 service. January field program, 1916. 

 29 p. Wash., D. C, 1916. 

 Forest Utilization 



Lumber industry 



Hardwood manufacturers of the United 

 States. Report of actual sales of hard- 

 wood lumber for the month of December, 

 1915. 44 p. map. Cincinnati, O., 1916. 



Wood industries 



Baer, A. A. Woodworking exercises for 

 home and school. 20 p. il. Lincoln, 

 Nebr., 1915. (Nebraska, University of — 

 School of agriculture — Extension service 

 Extension bulletin 35.) 



Wood Technology 



Bullock, William. Timber, from the forest to 

 its use in commerce. 149 p. il. London, 

 Sir Isaac Pitman and sons, Ltd., n. d. 



Gerry, Eloise. The structure of wood and 

 some of its properties and uses. 12 p. il. 

 Oshkosh, Wis., 1916. (Northern hem- 

 lock and hardwood manufacturers' as- 

 sociation. Bulletin 1.) 



Wood Preservation 



Weiss, Howard F., and Teesdale, Clyde H. 

 Preservative treatment of timber. 45 p. 

 Madison, Wis., 1915. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Conservation of natural resources 



Pan-American scientific congress, 2d. Pro- 

 gram of Section 3, Conservation of 

 natural resources, and the papers pre- 

 sented, in English and Spanish. 200 p. 

 Wash., D. C, 1915-16. 



National parks 



United States — Dept. of the interior. The 

 Mount Rainier national park, season of 

 1915; general information. 38 p. maps. 

 Wash., D. C, 1915. 



Landscape gardening 



Davis, E. G., & Curtis, R. W. The home 

 grounds. 144 p. il. Ithaca, N. Y., 1915. 

 (Cornell university — Agricultural experi- 

 ment station. Bulletin 361.) 



Miller, Wilhelm. The prairie spirit in land- 

 scape gardening. 32 p. il. Urbana, Ilh, 

 1915. (Illinois — Agriculcural experiment 

 station. Circular 184.) 



Nut culture 



Reed, C. A. Pecan culture, with special 

 reference to propagation and varieties. 

 32 p. il. Wash., D. C, 1916. (U. S.— 

 Dept. of agriculture. Farmers' bulletin 

 700.) 



Soils 



Averitt, S. D. The soils of Kentucky. 36 p. 

 map. Lexington, Ky., 1915. (Kentucky 

 Agricultural experiment station. Bul- 

 letin 193.) 



Engineering 



Los Angeles county, Cal. — Board of engineers, 

 flood control. Reports to the Board of 

 supervisors, Los Angeles county, Cal., 

 submitted July 27, 1915. 400 p. il., 

 diagrs., maps. Los Angeles, Cal., 1915. 



A rchitecture 



Kellogg, R. S. Teachers cottages. 58 p. 

 U. Chicago, 111., National lumber manu- 

 facturers' association, 1916. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



American city, Jan., 1916. — The Columbia 

 river highway, p. 1-3; Organized tree 

 planting in a small town, by Hubert J. 

 Poppelman, p. 7; Insuring street trees 

 against the leopard moth, by Alfred 

 MacDonald, p. 34-5. 



Annals of American academy of political and 

 social science, Jan., 1916. — Water-power 

 development on the national forests and 

 proposed new legislation, by O. C. 

 Merrill, p. 1-11. 



Botanical gazette, Jan., 1916. — Notes on 

 succession from pine to oak, by Barring- 

 ton Moore, p. 59-66. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 1, 1916. — From gray 

 birches to barrel staves, by Warden A. 

 Curtis, p. 12-13. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 8, 1916. — Shade 

 trees that bear nuts, by J. Russell Smith, 

 p. 44. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 15, 1916.^Making 

 maple luxuries, by Samuel J. Record, p. 

 101. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 29, 1916. — Grafting 

 walnuts and hickories; nut growers are 

 now doing what used to be called im- 

 possible, by J. Russell Smith, p. 195-6; 

 Forest planting, by S. J. Record, p. 196. 



Countryside magazine, Nov., 1915. — Trans- 

 planting large trees, by James McLaugh- 

 lin, p. 273, 280. 



Garden magazine, Jan., 1916. — New Chinese 

 trees and shrubs for the Pacific slope and 

 other favored regions, by E. H. Wilson, 

 p. 197-200. 



Geographical review, Jan., 1916. — The oak 

 tree and man's environment, by J. 

 RusseU Smith, p. 3-19. 



In the open, Jan., 1916. — Red oak, by George 

 H. Wirt, p. 38-40. 



Intemationalinstituteof agriculture. Monthly 

 bulletin of economic and social intelli- 

 gence, Jan., 1916. — The settlement of 

 public lands in the United States, by 

 Benjamin H. Hibbard, p. 97-117. 



Journal of the Washington academy of 

 science, Jan. 19, 1916. — The systematic 

 position of the "rain tree, Pithecolobium 

 saman, by E. D. Merrill, pa. 42-8. 



Nation's business, Jan., 1916. — What we owe 

 to our national parks, by Enos Mills, p. 5. 



Plant world, Feb., 1916.— Parch blight on 

 Douglas fir in the Pacific northwest, by 

 Thornton T. Munger, p. 46-7. 



Reclamation record, Jan., 1916. — Tree plant- 

 ing. Strawberry valley project, Utah, p. 

 32. 



Reclamation record, Feb.. 1916. — Tree plant- 

 ing on the Okanogan project. Wash., p. 

 80. 



Science, Jan. 28, 1916. — Insects in their rela- 

 tion to the chestnut bark disease, by F. C. 

 Craighead, p. 133-5. 



