826 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



...., FORESTRY will publish each montk, (or the benefit of those who wish books on forestry, a 

 uJf^f title? TuttorsY.nd prices' ef such books. These may be ordered through the American Forestry As- 

 - C. Prices are by mail or express prepaid.* 



list .. 



soclatlon, Washington 



FOREST VALUATION Filibert Roth J '-jjJ 



FOREST REGULATION-Filibert Roth.-. *" 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR-By Elbert Peets_. ......... * 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS-By Arthur F. Jones 2.11 



FOREST VALUATION By H. H. Chapman *! 



CHINESE FOREST TREES AND TIMBER SUPPLY-By Norman Shaw....;. f50 



TREES SHRUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS-By John Kirkegaard . . . . . . LH 



TREES' AND SHRUBS By Charles Sprague Sargent Vols. I and II, 4 Parts to a Volume ^ 



iFt 



OF A FORESTER Gilford Pinchot }}' 



THE TRAINING ^* ~ _..._- 



LUMBER AND ITS USES-R. S. Kellogg. ;- \], 



THE CARE OF TREES IN LAWN, STREET AND PARK-B. E. Fernow 2.17 



NORTH AMERICAN TREES-N. L. Brltton ' 



KEY TO THE TREES Collins and Preston. ...... *" 



THE FARM WOOD'.OT E. G. Cheyney and J. P. Wentling :'i"A 1 M? 



IDENTIFICATION OF THE ECONOMIC WOODS OF THE UNITED STATES Samuel J. Record 1.25 



PLANE SURVEYING John C. Tracy j-JJ 



FOREST MENSURATION Henry Solou Graves 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY B. E. Fernow } 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY Filibert Roth } 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY-A. S. Fuller........ }' 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY Samuel B. Green ISO 



PRINCIPLES OF FRUIT GROWING L. H. Bailey } 



THREE ACRES AND LIBERTY Bolton Hall J 



TREES IN WINTER A. S. Blakeslee and C. D. Jarvis ".-i uv-"i ,; ; ? 



MANUAL OF THE TREES OF NORTH AMERICA (exclusive of Mexico) Chas. Sprague Sargent 6.00 



AMERICAN WOODS Romeyn B. Hough, 11 Volumes, per Volume i-.i- -.iiili 



HANDB()OK 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 J-JJ 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD: THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTIES Chas. H. Snow 3.50 



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 }* 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS John Mulr J-91 



LOGGING Ralph C. Bryant i- 50 



THE IMPORTANT TIMBER 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 3.00 



THE TREE GUIDE By Julia Ellen Rogers 100 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN Austin Cary 2.12 



FARM FORESTRY Alfred Akerman .57 



THE THEORY AND PRACTICE OF WORKING PLANS (in forest organization) A. B. Reck- 



nagel 2.10 



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



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD Samuel J. Record 1.75 



STUDIES OF TREES J. J. Levlson 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 PLANTING IN THE PRACTICE OF FORESTRY By James W. Tourney 3.50 



FUTURE OF FOREST TREES By Dr. Harold Unwln '. 2.25 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS F. Schuyler Mathews, S2.00 (in full leather) 3.00 



FARM FORESTRY By John Arden Ferguson 1.30 



LUTHER BURBANK HIS METHODS AND DISCOVERIES AND THEIR PRACTICAL AP- 

 PLICATION (In twelve volumes, beautifully illustrated in color) 48.00 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY By Frederick F. Moon 2.10 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES By Maud Going 1.50 



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



THE STORY OF THE FOREST By J. Gordon Dorrance 65 



THE LAND WE LIVE IN By Overton Price 1.70 



WOOD AND FOREST By William Noyes 3.00 



THE ESSENTIALS OF AMERICAN TIMBER LAW By J. P. Kinney 3.00 



HANDBOOK OF CLEARING AND GRUBBING, METHODS AND COST By Halbert P. Gillette 2.50 



FRENCH FORESTS AND FORESTRY By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr 2.50 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS By L. H. Pammel 5.35 



WOOD AND OTHER ORGANIC STRUCTURAL MATERIALS Chas. H. Snow 5.00 



EXERCISE IN FOREST MENSURATION Winkenwerder and Clark 1.50 



OUR NATIONAL FORESTS H. D. Boerker 2.50 



MANUAL OF TREE DISEASES Howard Rankin 2.50 



FRANCE, THE FRANCE I LOVE By Dr. Du Bois Loux. Pauline L. Diver, New York City 1.50 



EXERCISES IN FOREST MENSURATION Winkenwerder and Clark 1.50 



'This, of course, is not a complete list, but we shall be glad to add to It any books on forestry or 

 related subjects upon request. EDITOR. 



WOOD FOR THOUSANDS OF USES. 



'T'WO of the outstanding results of the 

 * recent Lumber Congress in Chicago 

 are the renewal of peace time activity in 

 the lumber industry, and the apparent de- 

 termination of manufacturers of this pro- 

 duct that wood as a construction material 

 shall become known in all quarters of the 

 earth. 



Not that wood is not now known for 

 it is. But it is proposed that it shall be- 

 come known in a new way. Its utility for 

 countless building purposes and in the 

 manufacture of countless articles of use 

 that is the goal for which those who turn 



the products of the forest to account for 

 mankind are striving. 



Plans are being materialized in lumber 

 organizations the object of which is the 

 dissemination of information about wood. 

 It is proposed that no possible question on 

 the point of wood utility shall be left un- 

 answered. And all of this information 

 is to go to the remote corners of the earth, 

 not only in the United States, but on other 

 continents. 



In this connection, it is announced, the 

 National Lumber Manufacturers Associa- 

 tion has had compiled by experts pam- 

 phlets containing valuable data about all 

 branches of the lumber industry. 



BOOK REVIEWS! 



France, the France I Love, by Dr. Dul 

 Bois Loux. Pauline L. Diver, New YorkM 

 City. Price, $1.50. This is the first of theB 

 series My Tribute to France to be pub-l 

 lished by Miss Diver, and the little book! 

 greets the world most attractively bound in 

 broad bands of red, white and blue simu-1 

 lating the tri-color of France, that flag 

 which is the triumphant emblem of a proud 

 and simple people. In his introduction 

 called "The Significance of France," Dr. 

 Frank Crane says : 



"France is perhaps the most significant 

 nation in the world. 



"We little realize her tremendous mean- 

 ing in history. 



"She is the center of Democracy in Eu- 

 rope. 



"Right in the nest of kings, right amidst 

 the toughest and bloodiest traditions of 

 Autocracy, she has stood erect for over a 

 hundred years, proclaiming the inalienable 

 rights of man. It was in keeping with the 

 fitness of things that Germany should at- 

 tack her, for she stands for everything that 

 Germany would trample under feet. Hers 

 are the highest ideals of honor, the keenest 

 sense of sportsmanship, the finest qualities 

 of mercy and gentleness and all the things 

 that lend brilliancy and dignity to the 

 human soul. 



"Superficial observers before this war- 

 thought that she was going down the pur- 

 ple path of dalliance to disintegration. 

 They little know the depths of her re-- 

 sources. She has rallied magnificently. 



"She flew at the throat of the attacking 

 Prussian wolf with all the heedless courage 

 of a thoroughbred hound. Hers will al- 

 ways be the central position in this great 

 war. 



"The other nations of the world are glad 

 and proud to be her allies. 



"Every man has two countries : his own 

 and France. 



"From now on forever the plains of 

 Picardy will be the high point of the 

 world's pilgrimage, and unborn generations 

 shall visit there and tell to one another the 

 glorious deeds of France, and of how the 

 whole world rushed to her defense. 



"Our feeling toward France is more 

 than admiration ; it is an abiding passion." 



POSITIONS WANTED 



POSITION wanted by technically trained For- 

 ester. Have had fourteen years experience 

 along forestry lines, over five years on the 

 National Forests in timber sale, silvicultural 

 and administrative work; three years experi- 

 ence in city forestry, tree surgery and landscape 

 work. Forester for the North Shore Park Dis- 

 trict of Chicago. City forestry and landscape 

 work preferred, but will be glad to consider 

 other lines. Can furnish the best of reference. 

 Address Box 600, Care American Forestry 

 Magazine, Washington, D. C. (1-3) 



FOREST ENGINEER, 30 years of age; married; 

 eight (8) years experience in South and North- 

 east, in field and administration, desires to 

 make a change. References upon request. Ad- 

 dress Box No. 510 Care American Forestry 

 Magazine, Washington, D. C. 



