764 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



TREE 

 SEEDS 



THERE is prob- 

 ably nothing 

 that gives so 

 much for so little as 

 does the planting of a 

 tree seed. All you do 

 is plant the seed and 

 for the next half cen- 

 tury , if it' s a fruit tree, 

 you enjoy delicious 

 food prepared by Na- 

 ture's hand. If it is 

 a shade tree you and 

 those who follow you 

 are sheltered from the 

 fierce beating sun and 

 from the dangers of 

 floods, such as are the 

 misfortune of treeless 

 China. 



Thorburn's Tree Seeds 

 are chosen with the ut- 

 most care. They are of 

 exceptionally high stand- 

 ard and their perfection 

 will be apparent to you 

 for generations after you 

 plant them. Thorburn 

 has meant quality for 116 

 years. 



Catalog and information 

 will be sent on request. 

 Write us today. 



J. M. Thorburn & Co. 



Established 1802 



53 Barclay St., through to 



54 Park Place 



New York City 



1337-1339 F STREET.N.W. 

 WASHINGTON,?.*!. 



PeSICaN^lRS 

 flNP 



ILLUSTRATORS 



3 Q>lor Process Work 

 ^lotrotypss 



Superior Qoality 

 & S^ri/ics: 



Phone Main 5Z74 



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 



panel manufacturers' association, p. 11- 

 12. 



Veneers, Nov., 1918. Quarter-sawing "red 

 gum" and "red gum sap no defect," p. 

 24-5. 



West Coast lumberman, Nov. 1, 1918. 

 Motor truck logging develops rapidly, 

 p. 24-5; The seasoning of Pacific Coast 

 woods, by B. L. Grodal, p. 26, 38, 42a. 



Wood turning, Nov., 1918. Factors in 

 bending wood, by L. Prior, p. 5-6; 

 Operations in making of wooden shoe 

 heels, p. 11. 



Wood-worker, Oct., 1918. Importance of 

 proper lumber drying, p. 22; Woods 

 used for saw handles, p. 27-8. 



Forest Journals 



American forestry, Nov., 1918. The holo- 

 caust in Minnesota ; a greater Hinckley, 

 by E. G. Cheyney, p. 643-7; The great 

 Minnesota fire, by J. F. Hayden, p. 

 648-52; Minnesota's forest fire disas- 

 ter, p. 652-5 ; Use but do not abuse farm 

 woodlands, by C. R. Tillotson, p. 656; 

 A maritime pine operation in France, 

 with our forestry engineers, by Capt. 

 J. D. Guthrie, p. 657-64; Donations to 

 the welfare fund for lumbermen and 

 foresters in war service, p. 664 ; Im- 

 prove your woodlot when cutting fuel ; 

 trees to leave and trees to take, p. 

 664 ; The future of war gardening, by 

 C. L. Pack, p. 665-73; Walnut tree 

 planting day, p. 673; Plant trees and 

 save taxes, p. 673; North Carolina's 

 contribution to the winning of the war, 

 by C. Hutchinson, p. 675-8; Cut wood, 

 sell it, burn it; help save coal, p. 678; 

 Woods used in the manufacture of 

 handles, by H. Maxwell, p. 679-87; 

 Another forest regiment for France, p. 

 688-90; Our lumber operations in 

 France, by Capt. G. E. Lammers, p. 

 691-2; Plant black walnut, p. 692; 

 Canadian department, by E. Wilson, p. 

 693-4 ; Black walnut being rounded up. 

 p. 594 ; Wood fuel a farm product, p. 

 694-5 ; How the Forest service helps 

 in war, p. 695; Teaching Italian crip- 

 ples woodcraft, p. 695; What Ameri- 

 ca's answer means, p. 698-9; Wood for 

 stairways and army wagons, p. 699. 



Canadian forestry journal, Sept., 1918. 

 Growing a new forest family at St. 

 Jovite, by A. C. Volkmer, p. 1860-2; 

 Planting the home grounds, by E. B. 

 Luke, p. 1863-4; The race for airplane 

 spruce, by J. H. Hamilton, p. 1865-6 ; 

 War's terrible drain on Europe's for- 

 ests, by H. S. Graves, p. 1871-2; How 

 France's forests .have increased popu- 

 lation, by G. Brown, p. 1872. 



Hawaiian forester and agriculturist, Sept., 

 1918. History of botanical explora- 

 tion in Hawaii, p. 388-96. 



Indian forest records, 1918. Statistics 

 compiled in the office of the silvicul- 

 turist, Forest research institute, Dehra 

 Dun, during 1916-17, p. 259-302. 



Indian forester, July, 1918. Suggestions 

 to introduce special working plans for 



