BIBLIOGRAPHY 



THE following is not intended to be a complete list of forestry pub- 

 lications. It includes only important works that proved most helpful in 

 preparing this book. For a more detailed treatment of the various phases 

 of forestry the reader is referred to these. 



BERRY, E. W. Tree Ancestors: A Glimpse Into the Past. 



BROWN, N. C. The American Lumber Industry. 



CAMERON, J. Development of Governmental Forest Control in the United 

 States. 



CHAMBERLIN, W. J. "The Army of Silent Tree Killers." American For- 

 ests and Forest Life. 



DANA, S. Putting Wood Waste to Wor\. 



DEFEBAUGH, J. E. History of the Lumber Industry of America, Vols. 

 1-2, Chicago. "The American Lumberman, 1906-1907." 



FERNOW, B. E. A Brief History of Forestry in Europe, the United States 

 and Other Countries. 



GRAVES, H. S. Principles of Handling Woodlands. 



GREELEY, W. B. Some Public and Economic Aspects of the Lumber In- 

 dustry. U. S. Department of Agriculture Report Number 114. 



HAWLEY, R. C. The Practice of Silviculture. 



MATTOON, W. R. Forestry and Farm Income. 



MOON, F. F., and BROWN, N. C. Elements of Forestry, 2d edition. 



PACK, A. N. Our Vanishing Forests. 



PINCHOT, G. A Primer of Forestry, pts. 1-2. 



ROGERS, J. E. The Tree Boo%. 



SHOW, S. B., and KOTOK, E. I. Forest fires in California, 1911-1920: An 

 analytical study, Washington, D. C., 1923. U. S. Department of 

 Agriculture Circular 243. 



SMITH, H. A. How the Public Forests Are Handled. 



SMITH, H. A. Forests and Forestry in the United States. 



249 



