142. Manane. Varietal name used on Oahu. 



143. Mamanu. Varietal name used on Oahu. 



144. Manauea. See Awcowco. 



145. Mana. a large and well-known group of kalo varieties, 

 as follows : 



146. Mana eleele. 



147. Mana haulaul.\. See Ala. 



148. Mana hua. 



149. Mana iea. 



150. Mana kea. 



151. Mana pipika. 



152. Mana ulaula. The petioles of this kalo are decidedly 

 reddish. The interior of the corm is white ; upon cooking" it be- 

 comes bright yellow. 



153. Manaulu. 



154. Mana wai. Resembles Apitwai. Corm is white. 



155. Mana wea. A wild kalo, growing" in the mountains. 

 Perhaps a synonym for Aweozi'eo. 



Contrary to popular belief, forest fires seldom travel more than 

 two or three miles an hour. Even in extreme cases it is ques- 

 tionable whether they burn at a rate of more than six to ten miles 

 an hour. 



Uncle Sam's forest rangers require that permanent camp sites 

 within the forests shall be kept in sanitary condition. The ubiqui- 

 tous tin can must be buried, and waste paper burned when a camp 

 is left. 



Makers of small hickory handles for hammers, chisels, and the 

 like, are now trying to use the waste from mills which make 

 hickory spokes and pick and ax handles. 



Four new state forests have recently been added to those in 

 Hawaii, making' 27 in all, with an aggregate of 683,101 acres. 

 Of this amoimt, 67 per cent, belongs to the territory, the rest 

 being private land administered by the territorial forest ofBcers. — 

 Forest Notes for September. 



At the national conservation congress to be held in Washing- 

 ton, November 18-20, the subject of forestry will be handled by 

 a main committee, with subcommittees which will report on fed- 

 eral and state forest policies, forest taxation, fires, lumbering, 

 planting, utilization, forest schools and scientific forest investi- 

 gations. 



Over twelve thousand dollars, ten per cent, of national forest 

 receipts in Wyoming during the past fiscal year, is available for 

 expenditure by the secretary of agriculture on roads and trails 

 within the state, according to the report of the U. S. forest 

 service. 



