696 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



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 



National parks 



United States Dept. of the interior Na- 

 tional park service. General informa- 

 tion regarding Mesa Verde national 

 park, season of 1918. 55 p. il., maps. 

 Wash., D. C, 1918. 



United States Dept. of the interior Na- 

 tional park service. General informa- 

 tion regarding Rocky Mt. national 

 park, season of 1918. 33 p. maps. 

 Wash., D. C, 1918. 



United States Dept. of the interior Na- 

 tional park service. General informa- 

 tion regarding Wind Cave national 

 park, season of 1918. 23 p. maps. 

 Wash., D. C, 1918. 



United States Dept. of the interior Na- 

 tional park service. General informa- 

 tion regarding Yosemite national park, 

 season of 1918. 47 p. maps. Wash., 

 D. C, 1918. 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES 

 Miscellaneous periodicals 

 American journal of botany, July, 1918. 

 The histology of the phloem in certain 

 woody angiosperms, by L. H. McDan- 

 iels, p. 347-78. 

 Botanical gazette, Aug., 1918. Notes on 

 American willows, by C. Schneider, 

 p. 117-42; Factors determining char- 

 acter and distribution in woody plants, 

 by E. W. Sinnott, p. 162-75. 

 Botanical gazette, Sept., 1918. Suspensor 

 and early embryo of Pinus, by J. T. 

 Buchholz, p. 185-228; Notes on North 

 American trees; 2, Carya, by C. S. 

 Sargent, p. 229-58. 

 Botanical magazine, June, 1918. Nouvel- 

 les recherches sur la fecondation et 

 l'embryogenie du Ginkgo biloba, by S. 

 Hirase, p. 139-43. 

 Bulletin of the Pan American Union, Aug., 

 1918. The Sieur de Monts national 

 monument, p. 244-53. 

 Journal of the New York botanical garden, 

 July, 1918. Injury to evergreens, by 

 G. V. Nash, p. 159-65. 

 Mexican review, July-Aug., 1918. Timber 



in Mexico, p. 4. 

 New Zealand journal of science and tech- 

 nology, July, 1918. Fireproofing and 

 antiseptic treatment of New Zealand 

 timbers, by C. S. Hicks, p. 236-46. 

 Plant world, May, 1918. On the occur- 

 rence of Pinus banksiana in south- 

 eastern Minnesota, by C. O. Rosendahl 

 and F. K. Butters, p. 107-13. 

 Public roads, Aug., 1918. The location and 

 building of roads in the national for- 

 ests, by A. E. Loder, p. 5-18. 

 Science, Oct. 4, 1918. The coefficient of 

 expansion of living tree trunks, by C. 

 C. Trowbridge and M. Weil, p. 348-50. 

 Scientific American, Aug. 17, 1918. Pro- 

 tecting piles from Teredo, p. 128. 

 U. S. Dept. of agriculture. Weekly news 

 letter, Sept. 25, 1918 War's demands 

 are taking black walnut, p. 6. 

 U. S. Dept. of agriculture. Weekly news 

 letter, Oct. 9, 1918 Cut wood, sell it. 

 burn it; help save coal, p. 10-11. 



Wood-preserving, July-Sept., 1918. Fungi, 

 the cause of decomposition of timber, 

 by P. H. Dudley, p. 26-35; Mainte- 

 nance cost of poles, by W. F. Goltra, 

 p. 35-6. 

 Trade journals and consular reports 

 American lumberman, Sept. 28, 1918. Wel- 

 fare work among the soldier-lumber- 

 men in France, by H. A. Templeton, 

 p. 1, 38; Lumber operations under war 

 conditions in France, by F. S. Kellogg, 

 p. 39-40; Power logging, by W. B. 

 Clubine, p. 52-3; Operation of steam 

 log hauler, by S. D. Switzer, p. 53; 

 To prove lumber industry essential; 

 partial list of war uses of northern 

 woods, p. 54-5; The South American 

 walnut, by C. D. Mell, p. 64. 

 American lumberman, Oct. 5, 1918. Sol- 

 dier-forester tells of French forests, 

 by L. W. Bryan, p. 33. 

 American lumberman, Oct. 12, 1918. Some 

 uses and abuses of our forests, by C. 

 E. Chidsey, p. 52-3. 

 American lumberman, Oct. 12, 1918. Wood 

 stave silos vs. the substitute kind, by 

 H. M. Koelbel, p. 57-8. 

 Building age, Aug., 1918. Using second- 

 hand lumber to reduce building costs, 

 by G. E. Walsh, p. 380-1 ; Selling lum- 

 ber by real salesmanship, by F. Kneis- 

 ley, p. 410-12. 

 Canada lumberman, Oct. 1, 1918. Ship 

 knees carved from big tree butts, p. 

 36. 

 Disston crucible, Sept., 1918. A few words 

 about the timbers of Western Aus- 

 tralia, by C. E. Lane-Poole, p. 118-21. 

 Electrical world, Sept. 28, 1918. Eco- 

 nomics of pole timber, by E. F. Hart- 

 man, p. 590-1. 

 Engineering and contracting, Sept. 25, 1918. 

 Why does the government give scant 

 recognition to the structural merits 

 of lumber, p. 293-4. 

 Engineering and contracting, Oct. 2, 1918. 

 Proper method of application of bi- 

 tuminous filler for creosoted wood 

 block pavements and floors, by L. T. 

 Ericson, p. 320-1. 

 Engineering news-record, Sept. 19, 1918. 

 Trails constructed by national Forest 

 service, p. 539-40; Marine wood borers 

 work in deep water, by A. S. Hobby, 

 p. 551-2. 

 Engineering news-record, Sept. 26, 1918. 

 American forestry units are working 

 fifty-three tracts of French timber land, 

 by R. K. Tomlin, p. 566-70. 

 Engineering news-record, Oct. 10, 1918. 

 Machine to dress railroad ties before 

 treatment, p. 679-80. 

 Hardwood record, Sept. 25, 1918 Use of 



mahogany by industries, p. 20. 

 Hardwood record, Oct. 10, 1918. Red gum 

 uses by states and industries, p. 21. 

 Industrial management, Aug., 1918. Time 

 study of variable operations in piling 

 lumber, by C. M. Bigelow, p. 109-12, 



