CURRENT LITERATURE 



829 



cypress lumber and shingles, issued 



Xov. i8, 1918. 133 p. New Orleans, 



La., 1918. 

 U. S. War industries board. Report to 



price fixing committee on market prices 



of lumber, 1913-1918. 242 p. Wash., 



D. C, 1918. 

 Wood-using industries 

 American walnut association. American 



black walnut. 16 p. il. Louisville, Ky., 



I9IS- 



Beyer and Small. Timber, lumber, pulp, 

 paper. 36 p. il., maps. Portland, 

 Me., 1918. 



Estep, H. C. How wooden ships are built ; 

 a practical treatise on modern Ameri- 

 can wood ship construct'on, with a 

 supplement on laying off wooden ves- 

 sels. 101 p. il. Cleveland, O., Penton 

 pub. co., 1918. 



U. S. Shipping board Emergency fleet 

 corporation. The elements of wooden 

 ship construction, pts. 1-5. il. Phila.. 

 Pa., 1918. 



WOOD PRESERVATION 



Hicks, P. R. Service tests of cross ties. 

 83 p. Madison, Wis., American rail- 

 way engineering association, 1918. 

 AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Conservation of natural resources 



Pennsylvania state grange Committee on 

 conservation. Report. 13 p. Tyrone, 

 Pa., 1918. 



Description and travel 



Southern Pacific company. The high 

 Sierra of California. 14 p. il., map 

 San Francisco, Cal., 1917. 



Erosion 



Mosier, J. G. and Gustafson, A. F. Wash- 

 ing of soils and methods of prevention 

 38 p. ii. Urbana, 111., 1918. (Illi- 

 nois Agricultural experiment station 

 Bulletin 207.) 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



American city, town and county edition, 

 Oct., 1918. Fire department for for 

 ests, by G. D. Pratt, p. 255-8. 



American museum journal, Oct., 1918. Our 

 American forest engineers in France, 

 by H. S. Graves, p. 412-25. 



Annals of botany, Oct., 1918. A study in 

 the anatomy of hazelwood with refer- 

 ence to conductivity of water, p. 553-67. 



Botanical gazette, Xov., 1918. Notes o 

 Xorth American trees: 3. Tilia, by 

 C. S. Sargent, p. 421-38; Pine needles. 

 their significance and history, by J. 

 Oufrenoy, p. 439-54. 



Country gentleman, Nov. 9, 1918 The 

 woodlot goes to war, by P. S. Lathrop, 

 p. 11-12, 29. 



Cut-over lands, Nov., 1918. Chemical 

 utilization of southern pine for war 

 purposes, by Southern pine association, 

 p. 8; The lumberman's interest in the 

 future of the south, by A. G. T. Moore, 

 P- 15-16. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Xo. 23, 1918. Inter- 

 esting London trees, by A. D. Webster, 

 p. 203-4 ; European trees in Tasmania, 

 by A. Garnett, p. 206. 



Memorial Trees 



for 



Sailors and Soldiers 



"Shagbark Hickory" A beautiful nut tree that is 

 known as the National Tree of America. 



What more fitting memorial to our hero 

 dead than a living tree growing each year 

 to commemorate by its increasing strength 

 and beauty the deeds of those who made 

 the supreme sacrifice? 



Every city and town will do honor to 

 its sons who died, and to the homes bereft. 

 No monument, no tablet, no memorial of 

 any sort is so appropriate as a living tree 

 for each soldier and sailor who died that 

 liberty, justice and peace might prevail. 



Deep rooted in the soil of their homes, 

 its branches reaching aloft to the skies, 

 its leaves sheltering the nests of happy 

 birds a Tree is most symbolical of the 

 life and deeds of the strong, courageous, 

 clean souled men whose memory will live 

 forever in the hearts of the folks at home. 



We are tree specialists and landscape archi- 

 tects of over fifty years experience. We will be 

 glad to place our services at the disposal of any 

 individual or community interested in nut, shade, 

 fruit trees or evergreens. 



Our 1919 Catalogue and Planting Guide will be 

 sent free at your request. 



GLEN BROS., Inc. 

 (Glenwood Nursery, Established 1K6) 

 1825 Main St., Rochester, N. Y. 



Gardeners' chronicle of America, Nov.- 



Dec, 1918. Forest tree nurseries for 



private estates, by A. Smith, p. 271-2. 

 House and garden, Nov., 1918. Planting 



of deciduous trees and shrubs, by 



E. L. Strang, p. 38-9, 54. 

 Journal of heredity, Oct., 1918. Hybrids of 



the live oak and overcup oak, by H. 



Ness, p. 263-8; China's trees and ours 



strikingly alike, p. 272-81. 

 Missouri botanical garden bulletin, Nov., 



1918. Pruning, p. 107-13. 

 Mi'tisey's magazine, Dec, 1918. War fires 



and fire fighting, by L. C. Everard, p. 



S38-SO. 

 New Zealand journal of agriculture, Oct. 



ANDORRA-GROWN 

 SHADE TREES 



For Street or Lawn 



Our ability to supply trees 

 of the highest quality ib not 

 curtailed by the Btoppage of 

 foreign shipments. 600 

 acres of home grown stock 

 for your selection. 



Andorra 

 Nurseries 



Wm. Warner Harper, Prop. 

 Sueecstions for Effective Box 200 



Planting on request Chestnut Hill 



Phila., Penna. 



FORESTRY SEEDS 



I OFFER AT SPECIAL PRICES 



Finns strobns Plrea Eng-lemannl 



Pseudo-tsug-a Done- Pices Pgatnu 



anal Thuya Occidental!* 



Pinna Ponderosa Pinna taeda 



and many other varieties, all of thla 

 season's crop and of food quality. 

 Samples npon request. Send for my 

 catalogue containing full lint of varieties. 



THOMAS J. LANE 



TREE SEEDSMAN 



Dresher 



Pennsylvania 



HILL'S 



Seedlings and Transplants 



ALSO TREE SEEDS 

 FOR REFORESTING 



ID EST for over half a century. All 

 leading hardy sorts, grown in im- 

 mense quantities. Prices lowest. Quali- 

 ty highest. Forest Planter's Guide, also 

 price lists are free. Write today and 

 mention this magazine. 



THE D. HILL NURSERY CO. 



Evergreen Specialists 



Largest Growers in America 



BOX 601 DUNDEE, ILL. 



Orchids 



We are specialists In Or- 

 cblds; we collect, Import, 



grow, sell and export this class of plants 



eicluslvely. 

 Our Illustrated ajd descriptive catalogue 



of Orcblds may be bad on application. Also 



Hpecial list of fresbly Imported unestsb- 



llshed Orcblds. 



LAGER & HURRELL 



Orchid Growen and Imborkr, 



SUMMIT. N.J. 



POSITION WANTED 

 YOUNG MAN recently discharged from the U. S. 

 Navy, wants employment with wholesale lum- 

 ber manufacturer; college graduate; five year's 

 experience in nursery business; can furnish 

 best of references. Address Box 675, Care 

 American Forestry Magazine, Washington, 

 D - C. (i. 3) 



Please mention American Forestry Magazine when writing advertisers 



