574 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



namuimiininiiii i n u 

 u n 



Quality 



Long and Short Leaf Yellow Pine 

 the same today and tomonrow. 

 Quality Service Capacity. 



MISSOURI LUMBER AND 



LAND EXCHANGE 



COMPANY 



I I 

 I I 



R. A. Long Bldg. 



Kansas City. Mo. 



U WHU 



II uu u 



United States daily consular report, August 

 15, 1917. New South Wales hard- 

 woods for shipbuilding, p. 601. 



Veneers, August, 1917. The making of 

 table rims, by J. C. Taylor, p. 15-16; 

 Uniformity a requisite in veneer cut- 

 ting, by L. K. Stark, p. 17-18. 



West Coast lumberman, July 15, 1917. 

 Report on wood stave pipe. Bureau of 

 industrial research, University of Wash- 

 ington, p 24-6. 



Wood turning, August, 1917. Problems in 

 finishing woods, by Arthur Seymour 

 Jennings, p. 27-8. 



Forest journals 



.\merican forestry, August, 1917. Foresters 

 to the front, by Bristow Adams, p. 

 453-7 ; The monarch pine ; a poem, by 

 L. T. Chamberlain, p. 458; Recreation 

 in the federal forest reserves, by Ida 

 A. Baker, p. 459-64 ; Scrappin' fire on the 

 Cherokee ; a poem, by H. L. Johnson, 

 p. 464; The new freedom of food, by 

 N. C. McLoud, p. 465-72; A giant sas- 

 safras tree, p. 472; A wonderful spot 

 in Glacier national park ; an illustra- 

 tion, p. 473 ; Wild flowers that boys and 

 girls should know, by R. W. Shufeldt, 

 p. 474-80; Has the Black Forest gone, 

 by J. B. Woods, p. 481-3; Making 

 friends with the birds, by A. A. Allen, 

 p. 484-8; A tree of lost identity, by 

 J. Foote, p. 488-90; A duel to the 

 death, p. 491 ; Chasms of erosion and 

 forest defense, by C. A. Whittle, p. 

 492-3; Destroying tree pests, p. 493 

 Tree bows its head at night, p. 493 

 Wood for fuel, by B. Adams, p. 494-6 

 National forest receipts increase, p. 

 496; Reflection lake. Rainier national 

 park; an illustration, p. 497; The val- 

 iant hunters of the moth egg cocoons, 

 p. 498; Insuring standing forests, p. 

 499 ; Hawaiian forests, p. 500 ; The new 

 standard of public service, p. 500-1 ; 

 Our national meat supply threatened, 

 p. 501-2. 



California forestry, July, 1917. The na- 

 tional forests the people's playgrounds, 

 by Luther Whiteman, p. 17, 20; The 

 Forest service in war time, by Coert 

 DuBois, p. 19; The relation of forest 

 management to local community wel- 

 fare, by T. D. Woodbury, p. 20, 23-4. 

 Canadian forestry journal, July, 1917. 

 Making use of aspen poplar, by B. E. 

 Fernow, p. 1185-6; New Brunswick's 

 foundation, the forest, p. 1190-2; What 

 Alberta owes to forests, p. 1207-8 ; Farm 

 lands in forest reserves, by D. Roy 

 Camerson, p. 1212-13. 

 Forest leaves, August, 1917. State for- 

 estry, by B. E. Fernow, p. 54-8; What 

 can be done to help western Pennsyl- 

 vania secure forest area, by John M. 

 Phillips, p. 58-60 ; National forests, with 

 particular reference to those in the Ap- 

 palachian and White Mts., by William 

 Logan Hall, p. 61-4. 

 Quarterly journal of forestry, July, 1917. 

 Woodland succession, by Sainthill Eard- 



