262 Forestry Quarterly. 



OTHER CURRENT LITERATURE. 



Hearing before the Committee on Agriculture, House of Rep- 

 resentatives, Sixty-third Congress, Second Session, on the Esti- 

 mate of Appropriations for the Fiscal Year ending June so, 1915- 

 Forest Service. Washington, D. C. 1913. No. 75. 



This contains the substance of the hearings before the Com- 

 mittee on Agriculture of the House of Representatives on the 

 Appropriation bill for the Forest Service. 



Society for the Promotion of Agricultural Science: Proceed- 

 ings of the Thirty-fourth Annual Meeting, November, 1913. 

 Washington, D. C. 1914. Pp. 115. 



The Birds of North and Middle America. By R. Ridgway. 

 Bulletin 50, Part VI. U. S. National Museum. Washington, 

 D. C. 1914. Pp. 882. 



Forest Fire Protection in Maine Forestry District, 1913. By 

 B. S. Viles. Bullf^tin Department of State Lands and Forestry. 

 Augusta, Me. 1914. Pp. 11. 



Forestry in New Hampshire : Twelfth Report of the Society 

 for Protection of Forests, 1913. 1914- Pp- 96. 



Fifth Annual Report of the State Forester of Vermont. By 

 A. F. Hawes. Burlington, Vt. 1913. Pp. 43. 



Connecticut Forest Fire Manual, ipi4-ipi§. Issued by the 

 State Forest Fire Warden. New Haven, Conn. 1914. Pp. 39. 



Includes the Connecticut forest fire laws and full instructions 

 to all persons concerned with the execution of these laws. 



The Brozvn-tail Moth. By W. E. Britton. Bulletin 182, Agri- 

 cultural Experiment Station. New Haven, Conn. 1914. Pp. 26. 



The brown-tail moth is now present throughout the north- 

 eastern portion of Connecticut, about one-third of the area of the 

 state being infested. Though not yet sufficiently abundant to 

 cause noticeable injury, the pest is spreading gradually and will 



