14 PRICE LIST 43 GTH EDITION 



FOREST SERVICE CIRCULAR Continued. 



72. Western yellow pine, Pinus ponderosa. Paper, 5c. 



73. Red cedar, Jimiperus virginiana. Paper, 5c. 



74. Honey locust, Gleditsia tracanthos. Paper, 5c. 



75. Hackberry, Celtis occidentalis. Paper, 5c. 



76. Silver maple, Acer saccharinum. Paper, 5c. 



77. Cottonwood, Populus deltoides. Paper, 5c. 

 81. Forest planting in Illinois. Paper, 5c. 



83. Russian mulberry, Morus alba tatarica. Paper, 5c. 



84. White ash, Fraxinus americana. Paper, 5c. 



85. Slippery elm, Ulrnus pubescens. Paper, 5c. 



86. Boxelder, Acer negundo. Paper, f>c. 



87. White willow, Salix alba. Paper, 5c. 



88. Black walnut, Juglans nigra. Paper, 5c. 



89. Tamarack, Larix laricina. Paper, 5c. 



90. Osage orange, Toxylon pomiferum. Paper, 5c. 



91. Coffee tree, Gymnocladus dioicus. Paper, 5c. 



92. Green ash, Fraxinus lanceolata. Paper, 5c. 



93. Yellow popular, Liriodendron tulipifera. Paper, 5c. 



95. Sugar maple, Acer saccharinum. Paper, 5c. 



96. Arbor Day. Paper, 5c. 



97. Timber supply of United States. Paper, 5c. 



98. Quantity and character of creosote in well-preserved timbers. Paper, 5c. 

 .100. Superseded by 195. 



105. White oak in southern Appalachians. Paper, 5c. 



106. White oak, Quercus alba. Paper, 5c. 



109. Forest planting in North Platte and South Platte valleys. Paper, 5c. 



110. Exports and imports of forest products, 1900. Paper, 5c. 



111. Prolonging life of mine timbers. Paper, 5c. 



113. Use of dead timber in national forests. Paper, 5c. 



114. Wood distillation. Paper, 5c. 



115. Second progress report on strength of structural timber. Paper, 5c. 



116. Waning hardwood supply and Appalachian forests. Paper, 5c. 



118. Management of second growth in southern Appalachians. Paper, 5c. 



119. Consumption of tanbark and tanning extract in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



120. Consumption of pulpwood in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



122. Lumber cut of United States, 1906. Paper, lOc. 



123. Production of slack cooperage stock in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



124. Consumption of cross-ties in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



125. Production of tight cooperage stock in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



126. Forest tables, lodgepole pine. Paper, 5c. 



127. Forest tables, western yellow pine. Paper, 5c. 



128. Preservation of piling against marine wood borers. Paper, 5c. 



129. Drain upon forests. Paper, 5c. . 



130. Forestry in public schools. Paper, 5c. 



132. Seasoning and preservative treatment of hemlock and tamarack 



cross-ties. Paper, 5c. 



133. Production of veneer in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



134. Estimation of moisture in creosoted wood. Paper, 5c. 



135. Chestnut oak in the southern Appalachians. Paper, 5c. 



137. Consumption of poles in 1906. Paper, 5c. 



138. Suggestions to woodlot owners in Ohio Valley region. Pnper, 5c. 

 140. What forestry has done. Paper, 5c. 



NOTE. In ordering publications from this List use the words of the title 

 as far as the first period, and all the composite number which follows the price. 



