CURRENT LITERATURE 



767 



"1 



The 



New York State 

 College of 

 Forestry 



at 



Syracuse University, 



Syracuse, N. Y. 



T TNDER-GRADUATE courses in 

 U Technical Forestry, Paper and 

 Pulp Making, Logging and Lum- 

 bering, City Forestry, and Forest 

 Engineering, all leading to degree of 

 Bachelor of Science. Special oppor- 

 tunities offered for post-graduate 

 work leading to degrees of Master of 

 Forestry, Master of City Forestry, 

 and Doctor of Economics. 



A one-year course of practical 

 training at the State Ranger School 

 on the College Forest of 1,800 acres 

 at Wanakena in the Adirondacks. 



State Forest Camp of three months 

 open to any man over 16, held each 

 summer on Cranberry Lake. Men 

 may attend this Camp for from two 

 weeks to the entire summer. 



The State Forest Experiment Sta- 

 tion of 90 acres at Syracuse and an 

 excellent forest library offer unusual 

 opportunities for research work. 



Yale School of 

 Forestry 



>> mi iii ii' ' rttT' *> 



Established in 1900 



A Graduate Depnrtment of Yale 



UnnfrsitM. 

 The two years technical course pre- 

 pares for the general practice of for- 

 estry and leads to the degree of 

 Master of Forestry. 

 Special opportunities in alt branches 

 of forestry for 



Advanced and Research Work. 

 For students planning to engage 

 in lurestry or luinlicring in the 

 Tropics, particularly tropical Amer- 

 ica, a course is offered in 



Tropical Forestry. 

 Lunihermen and others desiring in- 

 struction in special subjects may be 

 enrolled as 



Special Students. 

 A field course of eieht weeks in the 

 summer is available for those not pre- 

 pared for. or who dn not wish to 

 take the technical courses 



For further information and cata- 

 logue, ad<lress: The Direclor of the 

 School of Forestry. New Haven. Con- 

 necticut. U. S. A. 



tain," by Mark Daniels, p. 657-662; The 

 nuthatches and the chickadees, by A. A. 

 Allen, p. 663-667; A trail marker, by 

 Lena B. Hunzicker, p. 667 ; A quaint bit 

 of sentiment, by Gayne T. K. Norton, p. 

 668; Flowers, feathers and fins, by R. 

 W. Shufeldt, p. 669-674; Women help to 

 fight forest fires, p. 671 ; Conservation 

 in autumn leaves, p. 675 ; Tree saved by 

 a governor, by Allen H. Wright, p. 

 675; Urban and suburban food pro- 

 duction, its past and its future, by 

 Charles Lathrop Pack, p. 676-677; 

 "Shoes and ships and sealing wax," by 

 Bristow Adams, p. 678-679; Children's 

 playgrounds in parks and forests, by 

 Smith Riley, p. 680-82; Hybrid oaks, 

 by George B. Sudworth, p. 683-685 ; A 

 tree that produces soap, p. 686; Edible 

 fruits of forest trees, p. 687; Fighting 

 the pine blister disease, p. 688; Our 

 forest resources and the war, by E. A. 

 Sterling, p. 689-690 ; Forestry as a pro- 

 fession for young men in the United 

 States, p. 691-692; Bad forest fire sea- 

 son, p. 692 ; How a successful suburban 

 house is built, by Rawson W. Haddon, 

 p. 693-695. 

 Forest leaves, Oct. 1917 The upper Ohio 

 river drainage basin, by George M. 

 Lehman, p. 66-70; The camp and the 

 camp fire, p. 71-2; Forest fire preven- 

 tion; the old way and the new, by 

 George H. Wirt, p. 72-4 ; Extinction of 

 forest fires, by Leonard G. Barnes, p. 

 75-8; A word on the right use of our 

 land, by Filibert Roth, p. 78-9. 

 Indian forest records, 1917 Statistics com- 

 piled in the office of the silviculturist. 

 Forest research institute, Dehra Dun, 

 during 1915-16, p. 31-96. 

 Indian forester, Aug. 1917 Teak regenera- 

 tion under the uniform system in 

 Mohnyin, by H. R. Blanford, p. 339-62; 

 Note on the galls of Piscacia integer- 

 rima, by Puran Singh, p. 366-7; A fos- 

 sil wood from Burma, by Ruth Holden, 

 p. 372-8; The conifer leaf oil industry, 

 by A. W. Schorger, p. 379-86 ; What is 

 kapok? p. 386-8. 

 Journal of forestry, Oct. 1917 The density 

 of stand and rate of growth of Arizona 

 yellow pine as influenced by climatic 

 conditions, by Forrest Shreve, p. 695- 

 707; Forest service stumpage apprai- 

 sals, by James W. Girard, p. 708-25 ; 

 Forest succession and rate of growth 

 in sphagnum bogs, by George B. Rigg, 

 p. 726-39; Recent forestry propa- 

 ganda in the Philippines, by Wm. For- 

 sythe Sherfesee, p. 740-56 ; Aspen as a 

 permanent forest type, by James M. 

 Fetherolf, p. 757-60; Notes on white 

 pine four-year transplants, by S. N. 

 Spring, p. 761-2; Dying of young pines 

 in circles about anthills, by Ferdinand 

 W. Haasis, p. 763-71. 

 Revue des eaux et forets, Sept. 1, 1917 Le 

 robinier, by A. Jolyet, p. 257-61 ; Asso- 

 ciation de I'epicea au sapin dans les 

 sapinieres des Hautes Vosges, by E. 

 Mer, p. 262-70. 



DEPARTMENT OH 

 FORESTRY 



The Pennsylvania 

 State College 



A PROFESSIONAL course in 

 Forestry, covering four years 

 of college work, leading to the 

 degree of Bachelor of Science in For- 

 estry. 



Thorough and practical training for 

 Government, State, Municipal and 

 private forestry. 



Four months are spent in camp in 

 the woods in forest work. 

 Graduates who wish to specialize 

 along particular lines are admitted 

 to the "graduate forest schools" as 

 candidates for the degree of Master 

 of Forestry on the successful com- 

 pletion of one year's work. 



For further information address 

 Department of Forestry 



Pennsylvania State College 



State College, Pa. 





HARVARD 



UNIVERSITY 



DEPT. OF FORESTRY 

 BUSSEY INSTITUTION 



/^FFERS specialized graduate 

 training leading to the de- 

 gree of Master of Forestry in the 

 following fields : Silviculture 

 and Management, Wood Tech- 

 nology, Forest Entomology, 

 Dendrology, and (in co-opera- 

 tion with the Graduate School 

 of Business Administration) the 

 Lumber Business. 



For further particulars 

 address 



RICHARD T. FISHER 



Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts. 



