482 Forestry Quarterly. 



Experimental Plantations at Cooper's Hill. Pp. 228-232. 

 Gives the present condition of 22 plots planted in 1891-2. 



The Botanical Gazette, 1909, — 



A Study of Pinon Pine. Pp. 216-223. 

 A discussion of the silvical characters. 



The St. Louis Lumberman, 1909, — 

 Melted Wood. P. 84. 



Gives the method of preparation, and qualities of the fin- 

 ished article. 



Canada Lumberman and Woodworker, 1909, — 



A Novel Tree Felling Machine. P. 31. 



Canadian Forestry Journal, 1909, — 



The Regina Meeting. Pp. 105-121. 



An account of the proceedings of the Canadian Forestry 

 Association at the special meeting at Regina, Saskatchewan, 

 in September. 



Outlook for the World's Timber Supply. Pp. 123-126. 



A paper read before the British Association for the Ad- 

 vancement of Science pointing out the inevitableness of a 

 timber famine. 



The Forest Trees of Canada. Pp. 130-136. 



This is a very complete enumeration of the arborescent 

 flora of Canada giving the distribution by provinces. We 

 note only one serious omission, namely Quercus acuminata, 

 which ocurs in south-western Ontario. By admitting a num- 

 ber of the many species of Crataegus, given in Sargent's Silva, 

 and recognizing Betula fontinalis, alaskana, Alnus sitchensis, 

 several species of Salix, as well as Acer saccharum var. 

 rugelii, Juniperus scopulorum, Ptelea trifoliata, and also sev- 

 eral others which attain tree form elsewhere, it would be pos- 

 sible to extend the list to over 150 in all. 



The Indian Forester, 1909,— 



Afforesting Waste Lands and Financial Returns There- 

 from. Pp. 247-256; 305-312. 



