CURRENT LITERATURE 



761 



r' 



NEW BOOKS FOR 

 THE FORESTER 



SEEDING AND PLANTING 



IN THE PRACTICE 



OF FORESTRY 



By 

 PROFESSOR JAMES W. TOUMEY 



YALE UNIVERSITY 



This book presents the details of prac- 

 tice and the fundamental principles 

 that control success and failure in the 

 economic production of nursery stock 

 and the artificial regeneration of forests. 



476 pages, 6x9, 140 figures. 

 Cloth, $3.50 net. 



FARM FORESTRY 



By 

 PROFESSOR JOHN A. FERGUSON 



PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE 



This book covers the subject of forestry 

 as applied to the farm and woodlot. 

 The subjects included are those of 

 essential interest to the agriculturist. 



249 pages, 5}^ x 8, illustrated. 

 Cloth, $1.25 net. 



MODERN 



PROPAGATION 



OF TREE FRUITS 



By 

 PROFESSOR BLISS S. BROWN 



UNIVERSITY OF MAINE 



This book includes those practices of 

 propagation vifhich are in general use 

 and which are accepted by the or- 

 chardist and nurseryman as being the 

 most important. 



185 pages, 5x7, illustrated. 

 Cloth, $1.25 net. 



VSE THIS couponi 



John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 



432 Fourth Avenue, New York City 

 Gentlemen: Kindly send me for ten days' 

 free examination, the books indicated below: 



Toumey-Seeding 

 Ferguson-Farm Forestry 

 Brown-Tree Fruits 



It is understood that I am to remit the price of 

 these books, or return them, postpaid, within 

 ten days after their receipt. 



Name 



Address 



Member of 



(Indicate here if von are a member of the American 

 Forestry Association. If not. indicate the forestry 

 society with which yon are connected.) 



'■^ 



v„ 



Position; reference 



(Indicate which.) [Not required of Society Members.) 



AF-r2-i6 



J 



Lumber world review, Nov. 10, 1916 — Tim- 

 ber ownership, public and private, by 

 Gifford Pinchot, p. 43-4 ; International 

 cooperation, by . R. MacMillan, p. 47-8; 

 Recent improvement in skidding and 

 loading machinery, by J. H. Dickinson, 

 . p. 56-8; Western forestry and conser- 

 vation association, p. 62-71 ; Annual ses- 

 sion of Pacific logging congress, p. 71- 

 85 ; Annual session of Appalachian log- 

 ging congress, p. 85-9; Annual session 

 Southern logging association, p. 89-93. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, Sept. 15, 

 1916 — Where the forests grew ; farms, 

 orchards and dairies taking the places 

 of the logging camp and the saw mill, 

 p. 31-2. 



Packages, Oct., 1916 — Proper piling of lum- 

 ber, p. 19-20; Four-one boxes and 

 crates, p. 45. 



Paper, Nov. 1, 1916 — Grinding of wood 

 from "old" and "young" trees, by 

 G. C. McNaughton, p. '13-14. 



Paper mill, Oct. 14, 1916 — Quicker pulp 

 cook made possible by new process for 

 extraction of resinous matter from 

 coniferous waste, p. 10; New pulp 

 source ; report of Bureau of science 

 on tests of fibre found in the Philippine 

 Islands, p. 32, 34. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Oct. 15, 1916 

 — Treated wooden silos, p. 19. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Nov. '1, 1916 — 

 Waste tanbark now used to make roof- 

 ing, p. 13 ; Northwest forests conserve 

 water, p. 13 ; Evergreen tree leaf oils, 

 p. 13-14. 



St. Louis lumberman, Oct. 15, 1916 — Illus- 

 trating lumber consumption in dam 

 work, p. 47. 



Southern Industrial and lumber review, 

 Oct., 1916 — Source of wood pulp sup- 

 ply ; statistics for year ending June 

 30, 1916, p. 55. 



Southern lumber journal, Oct. IS, 1916 — 

 Sawdust motor alcoliol from southern 

 saw mills likely to supplant gasoline for 

 driving automobiles, trucks, etc., p. 36 ; 

 An editorial and reply on the subject 

 of wood waste, p. 37 ; Different uses for 

 the various woods, p. 38. 



Southern lumberman, Oct. 14, 1916 — Using 

 tree-planting machines, p. 32. 



Southern lumberman, Nov. 4, 1916 — Review 

 of the hardwood industry, by George 

 C. Ehemann, p. 27-8 ; T'imberland taxa- 

 tion, by S. M. Nickey, p. 28. 



Timber trade journal, Oct. 7, 1916— The 

 forest as an organism, by S. M., p. 

 558-9; The Empire's timber trade, by 

 Percy Groom, p. 565-71. 



Timber trade journal, Oct. 14. '1916— Ameri- 

 can ash, p. 631, 



Tiiiiberman, Oct.. 1916 — Lumber markets in 

 Soutli America, by Roger E. Simmons, 

 p. 34-6. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 

 21, 1916— Hon.g-kong's rattan-furniture 

 sales in America, by George E. Ander- 

 son, p. 274. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 

 23. 1916 — Maple-sugar industry in 

 Canada, p, 298. 



S-W:- 





"This prevents 

 wood from warping!" 



"npHIS hardwood trim 

 ■■■ won't warp, shrink, 

 or twist out of shape because I 

 am protecting it against damp- 

 ness in the plaster wall with a 

 coating that makes protection 

 absolutely sure." 



Ordinary metallic paints coat, 

 but they can't protect. The alkali 

 in the wall masonry makes them 

 saponify and become useless. 





TRINBAK 



on the other hand, can't possibly 

 saponify. It remains a perfect 

 protection, permanently. 



Used in a luxurious down-town 

 club, the Woolworth Building, 

 the Metropolitan Tower, the 

 Bankers' Trust Company and 

 other prominent places. 



Full details upon request from 

 Department I. 



TOCH BROTHERS 



Established 1848 



Inventors and manufacturers of R. I. W, Paints, 

 Compounds, Enatnels, etc. 



320 Fifth Avenue, New York City 



Works: 

 New York. London, England, and Toronto, Cattada 



FO 



1 



RE 



2 



ST 

 3 



RY 

 4 



THE FOREST 



IS THREE-FOURTHS OF 



FORESTRY 



Your opportunities are as unlimited as 

 our forests if you study at 



WYMAN'S SCHOOL OF THE WOODS 



Incorporated Munislng, Michigan 



