CONTENTS. 



Some Notes on Jack Pine (Pinus divaricata) in Western Ontario) i 



By L. M. Ellis. 



Comfortable Camps as a Means of Increasing the Efficiency of 



Woods' Labor i c 



By S. B. Detwiler. 



How Fascines are Made, i8 



By S. B. Detwiler. 



Grain and Texture in Wood, 22 



By Samuel J. Record. 



The Equipment and Operation of a German Seed-extracting Es- 

 tablishment, 26 



Translation by Sidney L. Moore. 



Some Facts on Forestry Conditions in Sweden, 45 



By Max H. Foerster. 



The Swedish Forest Conservation Law 59 



By B. E. Fernow. 



Fixation of the Dunes on the Coast of Jutland, 62 



By W. J. Morrill. 



Supervisors' Meeting at San Francisco, 68 



Forestry and the Lumber Business, 195 



By. J. E- Rhodes, Secretary, Weyerhauser Lumber Company. 



New View Points in Silviculture, 205 



By Raphael Zon. 



The White Pines of Montana and Idaho — Their Distribution, Quality 

 and Uses, 219 



By F. I. Rockwell. 

 Seasonable Variation in the Food Reserves of Trees, 232 



By John F. Preston and Frank J. Phillips. 

 Pith Flecks or Medullary Spots in Wood, 244 



By Samuel J. Record. 

 Silvicultural Treatment of Abandoned Pastures in Southern New 

 England, 253 



By Philip T. Coolidge. 

 Multiple Volume Table, 261 



By Lincoln Crowell. 



Supervisors' Meetings at Boise, Idaho, and Ogden, Utah, 262 



An Appreciation of Dr. Heinrich Mayr, 268 



By Hugh Potter Baker. 

 Consumption of Basket Willows in the United States for 1908, .... 271 



By C. D. Mell. 

 The Need of a Vigorous Policy of Encouraging Cutting on the 



National Forests of the Pacific Coast, 375 



By Burt P. Kirkland. 

 Example of a German Working Plan, 391 



Translated by A. B. Recknagel. 

 A Canadian Forest Survey, 400 



By James W. Sewall. 



