AMERICAN FORESTRY 



883 



United States daily consular report, May 4, 

 1917. Timber situation in United King- 

 dom, by J. F. Butler, p. 459-63. 



United States daily consular report. May 7, 

 1917. Mahogany production in Guate- 

 mala, by Samuel C. Reat, p. 483-4. 



United States daily consular report, May 

 11, 1917. Paper-making materials in 

 Sweden, by Per Torsten Berg, p. 546-7. 



Wood-turning, May, 1917. Value in base- 

 ball bats, p. 16. 



Wood-worker, April, 1917. An up-to-date 

 casket factory, by W. H. Rohr, p. 23-4 ; 

 Correct methods of drying lumber, bv 

 E. U. Kettle, p. 26-7. 



Wooden and willow-ware trade review, 

 April 26, 1917. Willow culture profit- 

 able, p. 25-6. 



) 

 Forest journals 



American forestry, May, 1917. War, lum- 

 ber, and ships, p. 261-2 ; A million and 

 more food gardens, p. 263-8 ; Foresters 

 for national defense, p. 268-9; The 

 fruit trees of Picardy ; a poem, by 

 Alice G. Field, p. 269; Timber cruising 

 in the Pacific northwest, by Herman H. 

 Chapman, p. 270-1 ; The vireos, by A. 

 A. Allen, p. 272-5; A forest ranger 

 course for the southern Appalachians, 

 p. 275 ; The Oahu rain forest, by 

 Vaughan MacCaughey, p. 276-8; Cas- 

 cade Pass, Washington, p. 279; The 

 sugar pine ; identification and charac- 

 teristics, by Samuel B. Detwiler, p. 280- 

 3 ; Commercial uses of sugar pine, p. 

 283-4; Daisies, corn, cockle, bugloss, 

 and other summer flowers, by R. W, 

 Shufeldt, p. 285-9; The forestry guy; 

 a poem by Arthur Chapman, p. 289; 

 Some forest history, by Bristow Adams, 

 p. 290-1 ; Community spirit saved the 

 trees, by Gayne T. K. Norton, p. 292-3 ; 

 An epoch-making conference, by Her- 

 man H. Chapman, p. 293-4; South 

 American forest resources, p. 295-8: 

 Harmonizing lumbering and esthetics, 

 by C. M. Granger, p. 299-302; Pine 

 blister disease quarantines, p. 302-3 ; 

 Cut-over lands a national problem, p. 

 304-5 ; Shall the national forests be 

 made self-supporting, p. 305-6; A vic- 

 tory for efficiency and economy, p. 306; 

 A group of low-cost country houses, by 

 Rawson Woodman Haddon, p. 307-8, 

 312. 



Canadian forestry journal, April, 1917. - 

 The great forests of Russia, p. 1044-5 ; 

 Odd uses of wood in war time, by A. 

 W. Schorger, p. 1058-61; Ridding 

 " slash " from western lands, by R. H. 

 Campbell, p. 1063-4 ; The dawn of for- 

 estry in China, by Joseph Bailie, p. 1065- 

 6 ; How forest reserves help the settler, 

 p. 1067-8; Hitching up wiih public sen- 

 timent, by E. Allen, p. 1071-4. 



Indian forest records, 1917. The life-his- 

 tory of Diapus furtivus, Sampson, by 

 C. F. C. Beeson, p. 1-29. 



Indian forester, Feb.. 1917. The distribu- 

 tion of the sal in the Ramnagar forest 

 division, by S. H. Howard, p. 55-70; 

 The issue of timber licenses in Burma, 

 by H. C. Walker, p. 70-5; Some im- 

 pressions of the Kulu forests, by H. L. 

 Wright, p. 75-80: Forestry in Mesopo- 

 tamia, by M. R. K. Jerram. p. 85-8; A 

 new species of Acacia, by H. H. Haines, 

 p. 88-90; The Burma industrial exhibi- 

 tion, p. 91-3 : International trade in 

 matches, p. 101-5 : Destruction of trees 

 by poison, p. 106-9. 



Indian forester, March. 1917. Commercial 

 vs. quasi-commercial departmental teak 

 extraction in Burma, by Htao Hai, p. 

 111-16: The formation of teak taungva 

 plantations in Burma, by J. D. Clifford, 

 p. 117-21. A note on sal timber opera- 

 tions in Singhbhum, Bihar, and Orissa. 



"QUALITY" 



LONG AND SHORT LEAF 

 YELLOW PINE 



QUALITY SERVICE 



MISSOURI 



LUMBER & LAND 



EXCHANGE COMPANY 



CAPACITY 

 R. A. Long Building Kansas City, Mo. 



THE SAME 

 "TODAY AND TOMORROW" 



