CURRENT LITERATURE 



569 



Jones. Richard Chapin. A plan of forest 

 fire protection for Virginia. 4 p. 

 Charlottesville, Va., 1918. (Virginia- 

 State forester. Forestry leaflet no. 3.) 



New Hampshire Forestry commission. 

 Personnel of the forest fire service. 

 63 p. Concord, N. H., 1918. (Circu- 

 lar no. 8, revised.) 



Western forestry and conservation asso- 

 ciation. The western fire fighters' 

 manual, chap. 2-4, 6. Portland. Ore., 

 1918. 



FOREST ADMINISTRATION 



United States Forest Service. July field 

 program, 1918. 35 p. Wash., D. C, 

 1918. 



FOREST UTILIZATION 



Canada Dept of the interior Forestry 

 branch. Forest products of Canada, 

 1916. 64 p. Ottawa, 1918. (Bulletin 

 no. 62.) 



Lumber industry 



Jones, Richard Chapin. How the forests 

 and the lumber industry in Virginia 

 can both be preserved. 32 p. il. Char- 

 lottesville, 1916. (Virginia State 

 forester. Forestry leaflet no. 8.) 



Wood-using industries 



Lewis, R. G. and Doucet, J. A., comp. 

 Wood-using industries of Quebec. 

 89 p. il. Ottawa, 1918. (Canada 

 Dept. of the interior Forestry branch. 

 Bulletin no. 63.) 



Rhode Island Wood fuel committee. 

 Wood as a substitute fuel. 3 p. 

 Providence, R. I., 1918. 



Taylor, A. E. Woodlot improvement and 

 the production of firewood. 7 p. il. 

 Wooster, O, Agricultural experiment 

 station, 1918. 



United States Dept. of commerce Bu- 

 reau of foreign and domestic com- 

 merce. Paper, paper products and 

 printing machinery in Argentina. 

 Uruguay and Paraguay, by Robt. S. 

 Barrett. 166 p. pi. Wash., D. C, 1918. 

 (Special agents series 163.) 

 WOOD PRESERVATION 



Pearson, Ralph S. A further note on the 

 antiseptic treatment of timber, record- 

 ing results obtained from past experi- 

 ments. 128 p. pi., tables. Calcutta, 

 1918. (Indian forest records, v. 6, pt. 

 4.) 



AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Aeronautics 



United States National advisory commit- 

 tee for aeronautics. Third annual re- 

 port, 1917. 495 p. il., pi., diagrs. 

 Wash., D. C, 1918. 



Clearing of land 



Mattern, J. Randall. Clearing land of 

 stumps. 75 p. il. N. Y., Institute of 

 makers of explosives, 1917. 



Poisonous plants 



Marsh, C. D. Stock-poisoning plants of the 

 range. 24 p. pi. Wash., D. C, 1918. 

 (U. S. Dept. of agriculture. Bulle- 

 tin 575.) 



Marsh, C. D. and Clawson, A. B. Notes 

 on larkspur eradication on stock 

 ranges. 6 p. Wash., D. C, 1918. (U. 

 S. Dept. of agriculture Animal in- 

 dustry bureau. Publication.) 



School of Forestry 



UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO 



Four Year Course, with op- 

 portunity to specialize in 

 General Forestry, Log- 

 ging Engineering, and 

 Forest Grazing. 



Forest Ranger Course of 

 high school grade, cover- 

 ing three years of five 

 months each. 



Special Short Course cover- 

 ing twelve weeks design- 

 ed for those who cannot 

 take the time for the 

 fuller courses. 



Correspondence Course in 



Lumber and Its Uses. No 

 tuition, and otherwise ex- 

 penses are the lowest. 



For Further Particulars Address 



Dean, School of Forestry 



University of Idaho 



Moscow, Idaho 



THE 



1337-1339 F STREET.N.W. 

 WflSHINGTON.P.C. 



ILLUSTRATORS 



3 ^olor Process Work 

 ^.lotrotypss 



Superior Qoality 



Phone Main 8274 



AMERICA N-GRO WN 

 EVERGREENS 



For September Planting 



Our ability to supply plants 

 of the highest quality is not 

 curtailed by the stoppage of 

 foreign shipments. Buy 

 nursery stock grown at 

 Andorra. 

 Andorra 

 Nurseries 



Wm. Warner Harper, Prop. 

 "Suggestions for Box 200 



Elective Plant- Chestnut Hill 



ing" on request. Phila., Penna. 



54,200,000 FEET 



NATIONAL 

 FOREST 



TIMBER 



FOR SALE 



Location and Amount. All the merchant- 

 able dead timber standing or down 

 and all the live timber marked or 

 designated for cutting on an area em- 

 bracing about 10,000 acres in Town- 

 ships 2 and 3 N., Ranges 44 and 45 E., 

 W. M., Swamp Creek watershed, Wal- 

 lowa National Forest, Oregon, esti- 

 mated to be 54,200,000 feet B. M. more 

 or less of western yellow pine, lodge- 

 pole pine, Douglas fir, western larch, 

 and white fir timber, approximately 81 

 per cent western yellow pine. 



Stumpage Prices. Lowest rates consid- 

 ered, $3.30 per M feet B. M. for west- 

 ern yellow pine and lodgepole pine, 

 and $.50 per M feet B. M. for Douglas 

 fir, western larch and other species. 



Deposit. With bid $10,000, to apply on 

 purchase price if bid accepted, or re- 

 funded if rejected. 



Final Date for Bids. Sealed bids will be 

 received by the District Forester, Port- 

 land, Oregon, up to and including 

 September 26, 1918. 



The right to reject any and all bids is 

 reserved. 



Before bids are submitted full informa- 

 tion concerning the character of the tim- 

 ber, conditions of sale, deposits, and the 

 submission of bids should be obtained 

 from the 



District Forester 

 Portland, Oregon 



or the Forest Supervisor, Wallowa, Oregon. 



