766 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publish each monlh, for the benefit of those who wish books 

 on forestry, a list of lilies, authors, and prices of such books. These may be ordered ihrough 

 the American Forestry Association, Washington, D. C. Prices are by mail or e xpress prepaid.* 



fUKKST V.AI.UATIU.^ l-ilihert Koth $1 50 



FOKKST KEGUL.-XTIO.^ l-ilibcrt Koth 2.00 



FK.\lTICAL TKKli KEI'.MU liy Elbert Peets 2.00 



THE LUMIJEK l.NUUSTKY Uy K. S. Kell.iiii 1.10 



LUMUEU MA.\UF.ACTUI<1.\G ACCOU.STS By Arthur F. Jones 2 10 



FOKEST VALUATIO.N I'.y H. II. CImpman 2.00 



CHINESE FOKEST TKEES A.\D TI.MUEK SUPPLY Bv Norman Shaw 2.50 



TKEES. SHKUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PEKENNIALS By John 



KirkeKaard 1-50 



TREES ANU SHRUBS By Charles Sprague Sargent Vols. I and II, 4 Parts 



to a Volume per Part 5.00 



THE TRAI.M.VG OF A FORESTER Gifford Pinchot 135 



LUMBER A.\U ITS USES R. S. Kellogg 1.15 



THE CARE OF TKEES IN LAWN. STREET AND PARK B. E. Fernow 2.17 



NORTH AMERICAN TREES N. L. Britton 7.30 



KEY TO THE TREES Collins and Preston 1.50 



THE FARM WOODLOT E G. Cheyney and J. P Wentling 1.70 



IDENTIFICATION OF THE ECONOMIC WOODS OF THE UNITED 



STATES Samuel J. Record 1.25 



PLANE SURVEYING John C. Tracy 300 



FOREST MENSURATIO.V Henry Solon Graves 4.00 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY B. E. Fernow 161 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY Filibert Roth 1.10 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY A. S. Fuller 1.50 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY Samuel B. Green 1.50 



MANUAL OF THE TREES OF NORTH AMERICA (exclusive of Mexico) 



Charles Spragjue Sargent 6.00 



AMERICAN WOODS Romevn B. Hough, 13 Volumes, per Volume b.OO 



HANDBOOK OF THE TREES OF THE NORTHERN U. S. AND CANADA, 



EAST OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS Romeyn B. Hough 6.00 



GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TREES J. Horace McFarland 1.75 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD: THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROP- 

 ERTIES Charles Henry Snow 3.S0 



HANDBOOK OF TIMBER PRESERVATION Samuel M. Rowe 5.00 



TREES OF NEW ENGLAND L. L. Dame and Henry Brooks 1.50 



TREES. SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED 



STATES H. E. Parkhurst 1.50 



TREES H Marshall Ward 1.50 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS John Muir 1.91 



LOGGING Ralph C. Brvant 3.50 



THE IMPORTANT TI.MBER TREES OF THE UNITED STATES S. B. Elliott 2.50 



FORESTRY IN NEW ENGLAND Ralph C. Hawley and Austin F. Hawes 3.50 



THE PRINCIPLES OF HANDLING WOODLANDS Henry Solon Graves.... 1.50 



SHADE TREES IN TOWNS AND CITIES William Solotaroff 300 



THE TREE GUIDE Bv Iiilia Ellen Rogers 1.00 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN Austin Gary 2.12 



FARM FOR F..STRY' Alfred Akerman 57 



THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF WORKING PLANS (in forest organiza- 

 tion) A. R. Rerknaeel 210 



ELEMENTS OF FORESTRY- F. F Moon and N. C Brown 2.20 



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD Samuel J. Record 1.7S 



STUDIES OF TREES J J. Levison 1.75 



TREE PRUNING A Des Cars 65 



THE PRESERVATION OF STRUCTURAL TIMBER Howard F. Weiss 3.00 



THE PRACTICAL LUMBERMAN By Bernard Brereton (third edition) 1.50 



SEEDING AND PI.A.VTING IN THE PRACTICE OF FORESTRY By James 



W Toumev. M.S.. MA 3.50 



FL'TURE FOREST TRFF.S By Dr. Harold Unwin 2 25 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS F. Schuvler Mathews 2 00 



(In full leather) 3.00 



FARM FORESTRY- By Tohn Arden Ferguson 1.30 



LUTHER nURRANK-HIS METHODS AND DISCOVERIES AND THEIR 



PRACTICAL APPLICATION 48.00 



(\n twelve volumes, beautifully illustrated in color) 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY Bv Frederick F. Moon 2.10 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES- Bv Maud Going ISO 



HANDBOOK FOR RANGERS AND WOODSMEN By Jay L. B. Taylor.. 2.50 



THE STORY OF THE FOREST Bv J. Gordon Dorrance 65 



THF LAND WE LIVE IN Rv Overton Price 170 



WOOD AND FOREST-Bv William Noves 3 00 



THE ESSENTIALS OF AMERICAN TIMBER LAW Rv L P KinnPv 300 



HANDBOOK OF CLEARING AND GRUBBING. METHODS AND COST 



Bv Halhert P. CMIrtte 2 50 



FRENCH FORESTS AND FORESTRY By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr 2..';0 



MANUAL OF POISONOI'S PLANTS- Bv T.. TL Pntntnol SI."; 



This, of rniirsp. i not a romptetp list. hii> we shall be glad to add to it any books on 

 ff.rrcfv or n^lnfd iihe'"t ir^on rrnii'<:t Etittop, 



Power, Oct. 16, 1917 Fuel from wood 

 wastes, by W. Thomas, p. 538. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Oct. 18, 1917 

 Paper clothes in Germany, p. 981. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Oct. 25, 1917 

 Pulp wood resources of northern Mani- 

 toba, by J. A. Campbell, p. 1007-8. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Nov. 1, 1917 

 The determination of sulphur in pa- 

 per, by E. Sutermeister, p. 1021-2. 



St. Louis lumberman, Oct. 15, 1917 The 

 two forest regiments, 10th and 20th 

 engineers, p. 51-2. 



St. Louis lumberman, Nov. 1, 1917 Oak 

 flooring, by Arthur Bruce, p. 50 D. 



Southern lumberman, Nov. 3, 1917 Second 

 forestry regiment getting ready for 

 foreign service, p. 21-5; Indian summer 

 and forest fires, by R. S. Maddox, p. 26 

 D; forest service exhibit features Texas 

 fair, p. 35. 



Timber trades journal, Oct. 6, 1917 The 

 Weymouth pine as a timber tree, by A. 

 D. Webster, p. 479. 



Timber trades journal, Oct. 13, 1917 Air- 

 plane timbers, p. 514-15. 



Timber trades journal, Oct. 20, 1917 Doug- 

 las fir and chalky soil, by Wm. Som- 

 erville, p. 579-80 ; Replanting of cleared 

 woodlands, by W. Goldring, p. 583-4. 



Timberman, Oct., 1917 Tests of holding 

 power of nails in Douglas fir and west- 

 ern hemlock, p. 37-41; Seeking me- 

 chanical tree felling device, p. 48 C. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 

 20, 1917 Supply of boxwood in Japan, 

 by Henry B. Hitchcock, p. 278. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 



24, 1917 Woodworking machinery in 

 foreign countries, by E. Haldeman 

 Dennison and others, p. 327-34. 



United States daily consular report, Nov 

 1, 1917 National regulation of for- 

 ests in Italy, by Quincy F. Roberts, p. 

 437; Manufacture of wintergreen oil in 

 India, by Puran Singh, p. 440. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 

 6, 1917 South Africa's wattle-bark 

 trade, p. 508-10. 



West Coast lumberman, Oct. 1, 1917 Seat- 

 tle lumber buyer tells best method of 

 piling railroad material, by J. F. Roth- 

 schild, p. 26 A. 



West Coast lumberman, Oct. 15, 1917 How 

 best can the universities co-operate 

 with the logging industry, by Hugo 

 Winkenwerder and C. H. Shattuck, p. 



25, 35. 



Woodworker, Oct. 1917 Proper finish of 

 the woodwork, by G. D. Grain, Jr., p. 

 29-30; Piling for drying in yard, kiln 

 and factory, by John Hazen, p. 32-3. 



Forest Journals 



American forestry, Nov., 1917 Relief fund 

 for the forestry regiments, p. 643 ; For- 

 esters in world's largest regiment, p. 

 644-652; American foresters in military 

 service, p. 652-654 ; Forestry at Bates 

 college, p. 655; Changes in the Georgia 

 state forest school, p. 655; Tree's long 

 journey on truck, p. 655; The pine, by 

 Mabel Powers, p. 656; "Doctor Moun- 



