

FORESTRY PAMPHLETS 

 , SILVICULTURE 



VOL. VIII 



Windbreaks 



Windbreaks: Their Influence and Value. By Carlos 

 G. Bates* Bui. 86, U. S. Forest Service* 



Forest Planting and Farm Management. By George L. 

 Clothier. Farmers 1 Bulletin No. 28. U. S. 

 Dept. of Agriculture. 



Windbreaks, Hedges, and Ornamentals for Irrigated 

 Sandy Soils of Eastern Oregon. By R. W. Allen. 

 Station Bulletin 125, Oregon Agricultural Col- 

 lege. 



A Study of Windbreaks in their Relations to Fruit- 

 growing. Cornell Agricultural Experiment Sta- 

 tion. 



s 



Renewing the Shelterbelt. Cir. No. 27, Iowa Agri- 

 cultural Experiment Station. 



Cooperative Shelter-Belt Development in the Nor- 

 thern Great Plains. Bureau of Plant Industry, 

 U. S. Dept. of Agri. 



The Windbreak as a Farm Asset. By Carlos G. Bates. 

 Farmers' Bulletin 788, U. S. Dept. of Agri. 



The North Dakota Farmstead: Its Arrangement and 

 Adornment. By H. 0. Werner. North Dakota 

 Agri. Experiment Station. 



Farm Home GroundsTheir Planting and Care. By 

 S. W. Fletcher. Office of Experiment Sta- 

 tions, Dept. of Agriculture. 



Michigan's Shifting Sands. By F. Hobart Sanford. 

 ^Special Bulletin No. 79, Michigan Agricultural 

 College. 



