312 Forestry Quarterly. 



Forest Planting on Coal Lands in Western Pennsylvania. By 

 S. N. Spring. Forest Service Circular No. 41. \Q pp. 



Consumption of Tanbark in 1905. By H. M. Hale. Forest 

 Service Circular No. 42. 4 pp. 



Cross-ties Purchased by the Steam Railroads of the United States 

 in 1905. By H. M. Hale. Forest Service Circular No. 43. 6 pp. 



Wood Used for Pidp, 1905. By H. M. Hale. Forest Service 

 Circular No. 44. 1 1 pp. 



Prolonging the Life of Telephone Poles. By Henry GrinnelL 

 Reprint from Yearbook of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1905. 



10 pp. 



Waste in Logging Southern Yellow Pine. By J. Girvin Peters, 

 Reprint from Yearbook of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1905, 



11 pp. 



How to Grow Young Trees for Forest Planting. By A. E. 

 Sterling. Reprint from Yearbook of the U. S. Dept. of Agricul- 

 ture, 1905. 10 pp. 



Federal Game Protection. . A Five Years' Retrospect. By T. S. 

 Palmer. Reprint from Yearbook of the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. 

 1905. 20 pp. 



Some Insects Injurious to Forests. The Western Pine-Destroy- 

 ing Barkbeetle. By J. L. Webb. Bull. No. 58, pt. 2, Bureau of 

 Entomology, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture. 13 pp. 



Annual Report of the State Geologist for the Year 1905, with^ 

 Map. Geological Survey of New Jersey. MacCrellish & Quigley, 

 State Printers, Trenton, N. J. 1906. '358 pp. 



Contains interesting articles entitled "A Brief Sketch of Fossil 

 Plants" and "The Flora of the ClifFwood Clays." 



Alkali Soils of the United States. A Review of Literature and 

 Summary of Present Information. By Clarence W. Dorsey. Bull. 

 No. 35, Bureau of Soils, Washington, D. C. 1906. 



The Brown-tail Moth and How to Control It. By L. O. How 

 ard. Farmers' Bulletin No. 264, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Wash- 

 ington, 1906. 



