Other Current Literature. 119 



Approximate Average Rate of Grozvth for Northern Forests. 

 Vermont Forestry Card No. 8, State Forest Service. Burlington, 

 Vt. 191 1. 



Leaf Key to the Trees of the Northern States and Canada. By 

 R. B. Hough. Lowville, N. Y. 1910. Pp. 63. 



Reforesting. By C. R. Pettis. Bulletin No. 2, Forest, Fish 

 and Game Commission. Albany, N. Y. Pp. 25. 



A bulletin designed to furnish definite, detailed information on 

 how to start a forest, how to secure planting stock, the most 

 desirable kinds to use, when and how to plant, and results that 

 may be expected. 



Forestry. By L. W. Goodrich, Forester of Hartford, (Conn.) 

 Water Department. (Reprint from Journal of New England 

 Water Works Association, Volume XXIV, No. 3, September, 

 1910.) Pp. 345-364. 



A paper setting forth the forest work that has been done by 

 water companies in Connecticut, with several discussions. A 

 volume table for White Pine to a diameter of 26 inches is 

 appended. 



Report of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station 

 igop-io. Part V : Commercial Fertilisers. Connecticut. 1910. 



Pp. 375-454- 



Wood-Using Industries of North Carolina. By R. E. Sim- 

 mons. Economic Paper No. 20, North Carolina Geological and 

 Economic Survey. Raleigh, N. Carolina. 1910. Pp. 74. 



Text Book of Botany for Colleges and Universities. By J. M. 

 Coulter, C. R. Barnes, and H. C. Cowles. Volume I: Morph- 

 ology and Physiology. Chicago, 111. 1910. Pp. 484. 



Morphology of Gymnosperms. By John M. Coulter and 

 Charles J. Chamberlain. Chicago, 111. 1910. Pp. 470. 



The Commercial Woods of the United States and Their Uses. 

 By G. T. Surface. (Reprinted from the Bulletin of the Geo- 



