CONTENTS. 



Method of Taking Impressions of Year-rings in Conifers i 



By L. S. Higgs. 

 New Tools for Transplanting Conifers 3 



By W. H. Mast. 

 Scientific Management and the Lumber Business. A Possible Field 

 for Foresters 9 



By Edward A. Braniff. 

 Boom Areas, I5 



By Augustus M. Carter, Surveyor for Berlin Mills Company, 

 N. H. 

 Reproduction of Lodgepole Pine in Relation to its Management, ... 17 



By Nelson C. Brown. 

 Progress in Sales of Fire-killed Timber in Idaho and Montana 24 



By W. B. Greeley. 

 Results of Direct Seeding in the Black Hills, 27 



By John Murdock, Jr. 

 Permanent Sample Plots 38 



By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr. 

 Some Needs in Forestry Education, 45 



By Hugh P. Baker, Ph.D. 

 Nomenclature 5® 



By A. B. Recknagel. 

 Management of Western Yellow Pine in the Southwest, 51 



By Barrington Moore. 

 National Forest Timber Sale Contract Clauses, ^ 139 



By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr. 

 Light Burning vs. Forest Management in Northern California, 184 



By Richard H. Boerker. 

 The Effect of Forest Fires on Trees and Reproduction in Southern 



New England 195 



By P. L. Buttrick. 

 How the Insect Control Problem compares with the Fire Problem 

 on National Forests in District 5, 208 



By John M. Miller. 



A New Method of Constructing Volume Tables, 215 



By Donald Bruce. 

 Rainfall, a Factor of Tree Increment, 222 



By Chandler Davis. 

 Equipment and Operation of a Prussian Seed-extracting Estab- 

 lishment 229 



By A. B. Recknagel. 

 North American Species in Hungary, 235 



By Karl Petrascheck. 

 Girdled Trees 237 



By W. B. Barrows. 

 Two Minor Wood Industries, 238 



By C. S. Judd. 

 Standardization of Instruction in Forestry, 340 



