572 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



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"The Watch of Railroad Accuracy" 



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In the picture is Engi- 

 neer Tom Gushing of 

 the Denver & Rio 

 Grande R.R. He carries 

 a Hamilton Watch. 



A Precision 



Instrument 



Phenomenal records of accuracy explain why the 

 Hamilton is preferred by scientific men and by rail- 

 road engineers and conductors. 



When you are weary of a faulty watch and want 

 one that keeps really accurate time, ask your jeweler 

 to show you the Hamilton. 



Hamiltons range in price from $13.00 ($14.00 in Canada) 

 for movement alone, up to $150.00 for the Hamilton Master- 

 piece in 18k gold case. Thin models at $30.00, $40.00, 

 $55.00 and up. 



Write for Hamilton Watch Book, "The Timekeeper" 



It pictures and describes all Hamilton models 

 and Rives you interesting watch information. 



HAMILTON WATCH COMPANY, Dept. 39, Lancaster, Peimsjlvania 



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 3 CaiPR. PRc>ces5W(2RK. 



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Phone nain 8274 



W. & T. SMITH CO. 



Geneva Nursery 



NURSERY STOCK 

 AT WHOLESALE 



SEND FOR CATALOG 

 AND PRICE LIST 



GENEVA, N. Y. 



Don't Take Chances 

 With Your Trees 



Let us takf care of them now. 

 We will know what to do and 

 do it riuht. Experts in cavity 

 filling, blocking, bracing, etc. 

 Keprenentatives available 

 everywhere Send for "Tree 

 Talk" the tree lover's manual. 

 THE F. A. BARTLETT CO. 

 544 Main St.. Stamford, Conn. 



North, South, Eaet, 

 West. AH phases 



NUT CULTURE 



discunaed by experts. THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL. 

 $1.25 per year. Sample 15c. 



American Nut Journal i^h^ter. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Conservation, August, 1917. Woodlots and 

 their value, by R. D. C, p. 32. 



Conservationist, April, 1917. Getting the 

 jump on forest fires, by William G. 

 Howard, p. 56-9. 



Country gentleman, July 14, 1917. Protec- 

 tion from forest fires, by Walter D. 

 Ludwig, p. 22. 



Fire protection, July, 1917. The wooden 

 shingle betrays Atlanta, p. 6-7. 



Gardeners' chronicle, July 14, 1917. The 

 making of Japanese dwarf trees, by 

 Clarenc! Elliott, p. 11. 



Hunter-trader-trapper, August, 1917. Uncle 

 Sam's handy man, by John L Cobbs, 

 p. 13-25. 



In the open, June, 1917. Forest lands and 

 ta.x problems, by S. B. Elliott, p. 18-23. 



\'ew country life, August, 1917. The use 

 of trees, by Fletcher Steele, p. 19-28; 

 Tree surgery, good and bad, by H. D. 

 House, p. 28-32. 



Plant World, June, 1917 .\n enumeration 

 of the pteridophytes and spermato- 

 phytes of the San Bernardino Mts., 

 California, by S. B. Parish, p. 163-78; 

 Redwoods, rainfall and fog, by William 

 S. Cooper, p. 179-89. 



Scientific American supplement. May 19, 

 1917. Gathering turpentine; sugges- 

 tions for prolonging the naval stores 

 industry, by Samuel J. Record, p. 305, 

 312-13; Timber decay and its growing 

 importance to the engineer and archi- 

 tect, by C. J. Humphrey, p. 314-315. 

 Our national meat supply threatened, 

 p. 501-2. 



Scientific American supplement, May 26, 

 1917. Rattan of commerce; varieties, 

 sources and uses of an important trop- 

 ical plant, by C. D. Mell, p. 324-325; 

 First aid to wounded trees, by J. J. 

 Levison, p. 331. 



United States Dept of agriculture. Jour- 

 nal of agricultural research, July 9, 1917. 

 A needle blight of Douglas fir, by 

 James R. Weir, p. 99-103. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, July 21, 1917. Ef- 

 fect of insect attack on spruce timber, 

 by Austin Cary, p. 44. 



.American lumberinan, .'\ugust 11, 1917. 

 Dry kiln instruments and their uses, 

 by Thomas D. Perry, p. 38. 



Canada lumberman, August 1, 1917. Re- 

 tailer's interest in wood treatment, by 

 Kurt C. Barth, p. 90-1 ; Logging opera- 

 tions in central Ontario, by R. N. 

 Johnston, p. 92-4; Nova Scotia lumber- 

 ing and shipbuilding, by Elihu Wood- 

 worth, p. 96-7; Newfoundland indus- 

 tries all prosperous, by J. Wilfrid Mc- 

 Grath, p. 97-8; The British Columbia 

 lumber industry, by T. D. Pattullo, p. 

 102; The red cedar shingle industry of 

 B. C, by R. D. Hyde, p. 105 ; The pulp 

 mill's relation to lumbering, by John 

 L. Love, p. 113-14; Logging operations 

 throughout the year, by the Fassett 



