698 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



pil'M 11 r 



ill 



ANDORRA 



NURSERIES 



l\lorwaij jljaplcs 



SPLENDID trees for 

 street, park and 

 cemetery planting. 

 Quick growing. Broad 

 headed and very 

 hardy. Approved by 

 Tree Cofnmissioi s 

 everywhere. An- 

 dorra Maples are lift 

 with splendid fibrous 

 roots. 



Siie Ebcll Ten Hand ei 



10 ft. 11.50 iio e} 



12 ft. 1.50 m tl65 



14 ft. 3.5J 125 1225 



ANDORRA NURSERIES 



H'm. H'amer Ilariter, J'rvjK 



Chestnut H'll. Phila., Pa. 



Box 2J0 



this month. This dam will form a lake of 

 400 square miles in area and will equalize 

 the flow of water which supplies power 

 for the many varied industries situated 

 along the river. The St. Maurice Valley 

 is rapidly growing to be the most important 

 industrial section of the Province outside 

 of Montreal, and its development has only 

 just begun. From the falls on the river 

 power is supplied to Montreal, Quebec, 

 Sherbrooke, Three Rivers and the asbestos 

 mines at Thetford, and among the products 

 of the factories are pulp and paper, alumi- 

 num, magnesium, carbide, acetone, aloxite 

 and various other chemical products. 



Material progress has been made by the 

 Ontario Forestry Branch in the organiza- 

 tion of fire protection work on crown tim- 

 ber lands in that province. There are 15,712 

 square miles under license to cut timber, 

 from which the Province derives a direct 

 revenue of upwards of $1,500,000 per an- 

 num in normal times. In addition, a fire 

 tax of $6.40 per square mile per year is im- 

 posed on license holders. This amount is 

 largely supplemented by the Province, since 

 the fire ranging organization covers very 

 large areas of lands, much of which have 

 been cut over and burned over, but contain 

 a great deal of young forest growth. The 

 total appropriation for all the lines of 

 work with which the Forestry Branch is 

 charged is in the neighborhood of $375,000. 

 The bulk of this goes for fire protection, but 

 provision is made also for nursery and 



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HEI{pULES POWDEI^ CO. 



1047 Market Street 

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planting work, eradication of the pine 

 blister disease, etc. 



E. J. Zavitz is Provincial Forester; J. H. 

 White Assistant Provincial Forester and 

 L. E. Bliss is General Superintendent of 

 fire protection. The Province is divided 

 into 34 districts, with a chief ranger in 

 each district. There are 31 sub-chief rang- 

 ers, and 986 rangers. For the most part, 

 the rangers work in pairs and travel by 

 canoe. Some are on railway patrol, while 

 others utilize the various other methods of 

 transportation suitable to the local condi- 

 tions in each case. 



Five automobile trucks, with fire-fighting 

 equipment, have been provided for dis- 

 tricts where roads to the settlers exist. 

 Some 625 miles of old trails and portages 

 have been cleared out, and 60 miles of new 

 trails and portages constructed. Of look- 

 out towers, 22 have been built, and 19 more 

 are under construction. About 45 miles of 

 telephone line has been erected. 



The permit system of regulating settlers 

 clearing fires is in eflfect in the clay belt of 

 Northern Ontario, and is working well. 



It will necessarily require time to get 

 the new organization in thoroughly satis- 

 factory running order, but the progress 

 made thus far gives promise of continued 

 improvement. This work was placed under 

 the Forestry Branch only this year, and 

 many serious obstacles have had to be 

 overcome. The improvement already made 

 is really notable. 



A saving in Lumber of 

 $17,178,000 Annually is 

 Possible by Kiln Drying 

 Instead of Preliminary Air 

 Drying 



THE 



KILN DRYING 



OF LUMBER 



Is a new and authoritative 



work covering the entire 



subject 



By Harry Donald Tiemann, M.E.,M.F. 



In charge, Section of Timber Physics and 

 Kiln Drying Experiments of the U. S. Forest 

 Service. Special Lecturer in Wood Technol- 

 ogy and Forestry, University of Wisconsin. 

 Forest Products Laboratory, Madison, Wis- 

 consin. 



16 Tables. 55 Illustrations. Octavo. Net $4.00 



The value of technical knowledge of KILN 

 DRYING is self evident. this book, as does 

 no other upon the market, gives the reader 

 the most rectnt and most clearly expressed 

 information. The United States is taking a 

 lead in th^; adoption of the KILN DRYING 

 method anl this volume will increase our 

 lead. It is a pnictical as well as a theoreti- 

 cal treatise. The text and illustrations guide 

 the way to the most efficient methods of 

 work. 



KILN DRYING improves the condition of 

 the wood for the purpose for which it is used; 

 it reduces losses from warping, checking, 

 case-hardening and honey-combing that occur 

 in Air Drying; it reduces the interest charge, 

 the fire risk, the weather attacks by reducing 

 the period necessary to carry wood from the 

 time it is cut to that when it is fit for use; 

 it reduces the weight and thus facilitates 

 handling and shipping. 



The present losses in preliminary Air Dry- 

 ing can be reduced by KILN DRYING from 

 12 per cent, for Hard Woods and 5 per cent, 

 for Soft Woods to 2 per cent. There is a 

 possible annual saving of $17,178,000. 



J. B. Lippincott Company 



Publisher* 



Philadelphia 



FO 

 1 



RE 



2 



ST 

 3 



RY 



4 



THE FOREST 



IS THREE-FOURTHS OF 



FORESTRY 



Your opportunities are as unlimitfed 



as our forests if j'ou study at 

 WYMAN'S SCHOOL OF THE WOODS 

 IncorporaUd Munising, Michigan 



Wealthy Men 

 Axle Greaae Mfjre. 

 Auto Owners 

 Tin Can Mfrs. 

 Farmers, Etc* 



Do Business by Mail 



It'B profitable, with accurate lists of pro*- 



pects. Our catalogue contains vital informa- 



tioD on Mail Advertising. Also prices and 



quantity on 6,000 national mailing lists, 99% 



guaranteed. Such as: 



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Cheese Box Mfrs. 



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Write for this valuable reference book; also J 



m pieces and samples of fac-simile letters. 



IM^ Have us write or reviseyour Sales Letter*. 



vf^L Ross-Gould, I OOQC Olive St. 



Ross-Gould 



S-t-. Louis 



