638 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



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Quality 



Long and Short Leaf Yellow Pine 

 the same today and tomorrow. 

 Quality Service Capacity. 



MISSOURI LUMBER AND 



LAND EXCHANGE 



COMPANY 



R. A. Long Bldg. 



Kansas City. Mo. 



I III III I I mil m r 



U II I UUIU lU U HI III U n IK II H 



forest regiment goes across, by Bristow 

 Adatns, p. 517-18; Widespread activity 

 in home food thrift, by Charles Lathrop 

 Pack, p. 519; Forest fires burn much 

 timber, p. 520; War and the food prob- 

 lem, by Norman C. McCloud, p. 521- 

 530; What about tree surgery, by J. 

 Horace McFarland. p. 531-536; Value 

 of grazing management on the Caribou 

 national forest, by C. H. Shattuck, p. 

 536-38; The Mockingbird family, by 

 A. A. Allen, p. 539-42; Queen Anne's 

 lace; the papaw tree and self-heal, by 

 R. W. Shufeldt, p. 543-4; Turning a 

 desert into fertile soil, by Robert H. 

 Moulton, p. 549-51 ; The Le Conte oaks, 

 p. 551 ; orestrv for boys and girls, by 

 Bristow Adams, p. 552-54; Our snakes 

 a national asset, by Gayne T. Norton, 

 p. 555-58; Forestry and the war. by 

 Charles Lathrop Pack, p. 559; The Blue 

 Mesa forest fire, by Henry L. Spencer, 

 p. 560-2; Fighting the pine blister rust, 

 p. 562-64; Western quails being ex- 

 terminated, by R. W. Shufeldt, p. 565-66. 



California forestry, Aug., 1917. The "big 

 trees" as the forester sees them, by 

 Ernest G. Dudley, p. 25-6; Intensified 

 grazing as a war measure, by J. D. 

 Coffman, p. 27; Utilization of wood 

 waste, by Carl A. Kupfer, p. 28-9, 32. 



Canadian forestry journal, Aug., 1917. 

 The dollar value of our national parks, 

 p. 1233-9; Provincial rights and the 

 western forests, p. 1240-2; How shall 

 planted lands be taxed? p. 1243-4; Dam- 

 aging fires sweep sections of the West, 

 p. 1245-9; What birds are worth to 

 forests, by W. C. J Hall, p. 1252-4; 

 Restoring war-damaged forests, by A. 

 Jolyet, p. 1254-5 ; Forest exhaustion a 

 peril to Candaa, by W. C. Edwards, p. 

 1255-6; Conscripting forests for peace 

 or war, by Robson Black, p. 1257-61 ; 

 Forest management in Morocco, p. 

 1263; Forest management in Formosa, 

 p. 1264; Britain's task of restoring her 

 forests, p. 1268-71. 



Hawaiian forester and agriculturist. May, 

 1917. Candlenut oil as an industry, by 

 J. S. DeSilva, p. 127-9. 



Indian forester, July. 1917. A new .system 

 of forest exploitation, by R. Parnell. 

 p. 297-304; The unsounaness in sal 

 in Chota Nagpur and Orissa, by G. M 

 Cooper, p. .304-6; The unsoundness of 

 sal, by H. H. Haines, p. 306-12; Indian 

 species of Grevia of forest importance, 

 by R. S. Hole, p. 312-17; Some notes on 

 sandal in the Sambalpur division, Bihar 

 and Orissa, by A. P. Mudalicr, p. 318- 

 35 ; Note on the strength of glue, by 

 R. S. Pearson, p. 336-7; Mahua and 

 acetone, p. 338. 



Journal of forestry. May, 1917. Tree 

 growth and climate in the United 

 States, by K. W. Woodward, p. 521-31; 

 Laws of tall-tree growth investigated 

 mathematically, by R. D. Bohannan. p. 

 532-51 ; Site determination, classifica- 



