CURRENT LITERATURE 



695 



IMOW READY 



MODERN 

 PROPAGATION 



OF 



TREE FRUITS 



By 



B. S. BROWN, M.S. 



PROFESSOR OF HORTICULTURE, UNIVERSITY 

 OF MAINE 



This book includes those portions 

 of propagation which are in gen- 

 eral use. It covers the following 

 subjects: Seed for propagation; 

 Growing for Seedlings; The Nurs- 

 ery; The Different Budding 

 Operations; Grafting Operations; 

 Propagation by Cutting; The 

 After Treatment of Nursery 

 Stock; Some General Considera- 

 tions. 

 i8s pages, 5x7}^, illustrated. 

 Cloth, $1.25 net. 



Just Published 



FARM 

 FORESTRY 



By 



JOHN ARDEN FERGUSON, 



A.M., M.F. 



PROFESSOR OF FORESTRY. THE PENNSYLVANIA 

 STATE COLLEGE 



This book covers the subject of 

 forestry as applied to the farm 

 and woodlot. The subjects in- 

 cluded are those of essential 

 interest to the agriculturist. The 

 establishment of the woodlot, 

 both by seeding or planting, and 

 by natural methods, is discussed, 

 with hints as to the best trees to 

 plant in different sections. 

 249 pages, 5}4: X 8, Ulustrated. 

 Cloth, $1.25 net. 



USE THIS COUPON 



John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 



432 Fourth Avenue, New York City 

 Gentlemen: Kindly send me for ten days' 

 free examination, the books indicated below: 



Brown-Tree Fruits 

 Ferguson-Farm Forestry 



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 you are a member of the American 

 I-orestry Association. If not. indicate the forestry 

 society with which you are connected.) 



Position; reference 



(Indicate which.) (Not required of Society Members 



V AP. 



mbers.) I 



zo-\6 3 



Poisonous plants and stock poisoning 

 on the ranges of Montana. 23 p. il. 

 Bozeman, Mont., 1916. (Montana — 

 Agricultural experiment station. Cir- 

 cular 51.) 

 Hunting 



Palmer, T. S., and others. Game laws for 

 1916. 64 p. Wash., D. C, 1916. (U. 

 S. — Department of agriculture. Farm- 

 ers' bulletin 774.) 



Periodical Articles 

 Miscellaneous periodicals 

 American journal of botany, July 1916.^ 

 The growth of forest tree roots, by 

 W. B. McDougall, p. 384-92. 

 Botanical gazette, Sept. 1916. — Aeriferous 

 tissue in willow galls, by A. Cosens and 

 T. A. Sinclair, p. 210-25. 

 Conservation, Sept. 1916. — Northern On- 

 tario fires, p. 33-4; regulation of set- 

 tlers' fires, by Clyde Leavitt, p. 35. 

 Country gentleman, Sept. 30, 1916. — 

 Japanese dwarf trees, by Joseph H. 

 Sperry, p. 1766. 

 Countryside magazine, Aug., 1916. — Tree 

 planting for season effects, by Garret 

 M. Stack, p. 75-7, 92-3. 

 Fire protection, Sept. 1916. — Abolition of 

 the wood shingle roof a necessity, by 

 Thomas W. Haney, p. 3. 

 House and garden, Aug., 1916. — Trees for 

 all time : permanent planting and its 

 bearing on future effects, by Robert 

 S. Lemmon, p. 38-9. 

 Journal of ecology, June, 1916. — The oak- 

 hornbeam woods of Hertfordshire, by 

 E. J. Salisbury, p. 83-117. 

 Journal of the Washington academy of 

 sciences, Sept. 19, 1916. — Morphology 

 and evolution of leaves, by O. F. Cook, 

 p. 537-47. 

 National wool grower, Sept., 1916. — The 

 grama grasses, by Arthur W. Samp- 

 son, p. 27-8, 35. 

 Outing, Aug., 1916. — Hitting the high 

 spots, by W. J. Hutchinson, p. 477-88. 

 Phytopathology, Aug., 1916. — Keithia thu- 

 jina, the cause of a serious leaf disease 

 of the western red cedar, by James R. 

 Weir, p. 360-3. 

 Reclamation record, Oct., 1916. — What re- 

 forestation does for the water user, 

 p. 461-2. 

 Rhodora, Oct., 1916. — Some historical data 

 regarding the sweet bay and its sta- 

 tion on Cape Ann, by George G. Ken- 

 nedy, p. 205-12. 

 Science, Sept. 8, 1916. — The interdepend- 

 ence of forest conservation and 

 forestry education, by J. W. Toumey, 

 p. 2,27-i7. 

 Science, Sept. 15, 1916. — Animal life as an 

 asset of national parks, by Joseph Grin- 

 nell and Tracy I. Storer, p. 375-80. 



TIMBER CRUISING BOOKLETS 



Biltmore Timber Tables. Including solution of 

 problems in forest finance. 



Southern Timber Tables. How to estimate Southern 

 Pine. Southern White Cedar, and Southern Appala- 

 chian Timber — Spruce pulpwood. Hemlock bark. 

 Chestnut oak bark. Chestnut tannic acid wood. 

 Postpaid, 25 cents each 



HOWARD R. KRINBILL 



Forest Engineer Newbern, N. C. 



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