JOHN WILEY & SONS, Inc. 



432 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY 



LtBden; CHAPMAN & HALL, Ltd. MoRtreal, Can. : REKOUF PUBLISHINe CO. 



BRYANT— Logging. The Principles and General Methods of Opera- 

 tion in the United States. By Ralph Clement Bryant, F.E., M.A., 

 Manufacturers' Association Professor of Lumbering, Yale University. 

 8vo, xviii-|-S90 pages, 133 figures. Cloth, 3.50 net. 

 The more important features of operation are covered in this book. 

 Discusses at length the chief facilities and metjiods for the movement of 

 timber from the stimip to the manufacturing plant, especially logging rail- 

 roads. 



The greatest emphasis is laid on features about which there is not 

 much written material available. 



RECORD— Identification of the Economic Woods of the United 

 States. By Samuel J. Record, M.A., M.F., Assistant Professor of 

 Forest Products, Forest Service, Yale University. 8vo, vi-f-117 pages, 

 15 figures. Cloth, 1.25 net. 



This volume includes a discussion of the structural and physical prop- 

 erties of wood. Designed primarily as a manual for forestry students, but 

 Yvill also aid others in the study and identification of wood. 



RECKNAGEL— The Theory and Practice of Working Plans (Forest 

 Organization). By A. B. Recknagel, B.A., M.F., Assistant District 

 Forester, Forest Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture. 8v(H-235 

 pages, 6 half-tone plates. Cloth, 2.00 net. 



A book which will assist you in becoming thoroughly conversant with 

 the value and need, scope and sphere of working plans. 



Designed both for the student and the practical forester. In prepar- 

 ing this book the author constantly kept in mind the experience which he 

 gained while doing active work for the forest service in various parts of 

 the United States. 



HAWLEY-HAWES— Foresty in New England. A Handbook of East 

 ern Forest Management. By Ralph Chipman Hawley, M.F., Assistant 

 Professor of Forestry, Yale University, and Austin Foster HawEs, 

 M.F., State Forester of Vermont and Professor of Forestry. Univer- 

 sity of Vermont. Bvo. xv-f479 pages, 140 figures, prmcipally half- 

 tones and 2 colored maps. Cloth, $3.50 net. 



While this book is written with special reference to New England, it 

 has a much wider field of direct application, as forest conditions similar to 

 those in portions of New England prevail over a large part of New York, 

 New Tcrsev, in Pennsylvania, and also in southeastern Canada. 



