956 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publish each month, for the benefit of those who wish books on forestry, 

 * list of titles, authors and prices of such books. These may be ordered through the American Forestry 

 Association, Washington, D. C. Prices are by mail or express prepaid. 



FOREST VALUATION Filtbert Roth 



FOREST REGULATION Filibert Roth 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR By Elbert Peets 



THE LUMBER INDUSTRY By R. S. Kellogg 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS By Arthur F. Jones 



FOREST VALUATION By H. H. Chapman 



CHINESE FOREST TREES AND TIMBER SUPPLY By Norman Shaw 



TREES, SHRUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS By John Kirkegaard 



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



Per Part 



THE TRAINING OF A FORESTER Gifford Pinchot 



LUMBER AND ITS USES R. S. Kellogg 



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



NORTH AMERICAN TREES N. L. Britton 



KEY TO THE TREES Collins and Preston 



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



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



Record 



PLANE SURVEYING John C. Tracy 



FOREST MENSURATION Henry Solon 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 



TREES IN WINTER A. S. Blakeslee and C. D. Jarvls 



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



Sargent 



AMERICAN WOODS Romeyn B. Hough, 14 Volumes, per Volume 



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



ROCKY MOUNTAINS Romeyn B. Hough 



GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TREES J. Horace McFarland 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD; THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTIES Chas. H. Snow 



HANDBOOK OF TIMBER PRESERVATION Samuel M. Rowe 



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



TREES, SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES H. E. Park- 



hurst 



TREES H. Marshall Ward 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS John Mulr 



LOGGING Ralph C. Bryant 



THE IMPORTANT TIMBER TREES OF THE UNITED STATES S. B. Elliott 



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



THE PRINCIPLES OF HANDLING WOODLANDS Henry Solon Graves 



SHADE TREES IN TOWNS AND CITIES William Solotaroff 



THE TREE GUIDE By Julia Ellen Rogers 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN Austin Cary 



FARM FORESTRY Alfred Akerman 



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



nagel 



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



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD Samuel J. Record 



STUDIES OF TREES J. J. Levison 



TREE PRUNING A. Des Cars 



THE PRESERVATION OF STRUCTURAL TIMBER Howard F. Weiss 



SEEDING AND PLANTING IN THE PRACTICE OF FORESTRY By James W. Tourney... 



FUTURE OF FOREST TREES By Dr. Harold Unwin 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS F. Schuyler Mathews, $2.00 (in full 



leather) 



FARM FORESTRY By John Arden Ferguson 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY By Frederick F. Moon 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES By Maud Going 



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



THE LAND WE LIVE IN By Overton Price 



WOOD AND FOREST By William Noyes 



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



HANDBOOK OF CLEARING AND GRUBBING, METHODS AND COST-^By Halbert P. 



Gillette 



FRENCH FORESTS AND FORESTRY By Theodore S. Woolsey, jr 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS By L. H. Pammel 



WOOD AND OTHER ORGANIC STRUCTURAL MATERIALS Chas. H. Snow 



EXERCISES IN FOREST MENSURATION Winkenwerder and Clark 



OUR NATIONAL FORESTS H. D. Boerker 



MANUAL OF TREE DISEASES Howard Rankin 



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



.5* 

 2.00 

 2.00 

 1.11 

 2.10 

 2.00 

 2.50 

 1.50 



5.H 



LIS 

 1.15 

 2.17 

 7.30 

 1.50 

 1.75 



1.25 

 3*0 

 4.00 



1.61 

 1.10 

 1.50 

 1.50 

 2.00 



6.00 

 7.50 



6.N 



1.75 

 3.50 

 5.N 



1.5* 



1.5* 

 1.5* 

 1.91 

 3.5* 

 2.5* 

 3.50 

 1.50 

 3.00 

 1.00 

 2.12 

 .57 



2.10 

 2.20 

 1.75 

 1.75 

 .65 

 S.tt 

 3.5* 

 2.25 



3.0* 

 1.3* 

 2.10 

 1.50 

 2.50 

 1.70 

 3.00 

 3.00 



2.50 

 2.50 

 5.35 

 5.0* 



1.50 

 2.50 

 2.50 



1.5* 



* 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. 



POSITIONS WANTED 



POSITION wanted by technically trained For- 

 ester. Have had fourteen years experience 

 along forestry lines, over five years oft 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. (13) 



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. (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. 



OUR ADVERTISERS ARE 

 RELIABLE 



Wood-using Industries 



Smith, F. H. Pulpwood consumption anc 



wood-pulp production in 1917. 19 p. 



Wash., D. C, 1919. (U. S. Dept. of 



agriculture. Bulletin 758.) 

 Strachan, J. The recovery and remanu- 



facture of waste paper; a practica 



treatise. 158 p. il. Aberdeen, The 



Albany press, 1918. 

 Technical association of the pulp and paper 



industry. Vocational education in the 



pulp and paper industry. 6 p. N. Y. 



1919. 

 Technical association of the pulp and pape 



industry. Year book, containing lists o 



members arranged alphabetically anc 



geographically, corrected to July, 1918 



40 p. N. Y., 1918. 

 Talley, H. R. Machinery for cutting fire 



wood. 16 p. il. Wash., D. C, 1919 



(U. S. Dept. of agriculture. Farm 



ers' bulletin 1023.) 



WOOD TECHNOLOGY 

 Western Australia Woods and forests 



dept. Quelques apercus sur les bois de 



l'Australie occidentale. 23 p. il., map. 



Perth, 1918. 



WOOD PRESERVATION 



Kynoch, W. and Coderre, J. A. Creosote 

 treatment of jack pine and eastern 

 hemlock for cross-ties. 24 p. il. Ot- 

 tawa, 1919. (Canada Dept. of the in- 

 terior Forestry branch. Bulletin 67.) 

 AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Conservation of natural resources 



Wisconsin State conservation commission. 

 Biennial report for the fiscal years end- 

 ing June 30, 1917, and June 30, 1918. 

 144 p. il. Madison, Wis., 1918. 



Botany 



Palladin, V. I. Plant physiology. 320 p. 

 il. Phila., Pa. Blackiston's son & co., 

 1918. 



Grazing 



Sampson, A. W. Effect of grazing upon 

 aspen reproduction. 29 p. pi. Wash., 

 D. C, 1919. (U. S. Dept. of agri- 

 culture. Bulletin 741.) 



National monuments 



Sieur de Monts national monument. Pub- 

 lication no. 22. 20 p. il. Bar Harbor, 

 Me., 1918. 



Aviation 



Wright-Martin aircraft corporation. His- 

 pano-Suiza aeronautical engines. 148 

 p. il., pi. New Brunswick, N. J., 1918. 

 PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Botanical gazette, Dec, 1918. Limiting fac- 

 tors in relation to specific ranges of 

 tolerance of forest trees, by A. H. 

 Hutchinson, p. 465-93; Notes on North 

 American trees : 3, Tilia, by C. S. Sar- 

 gent, p. 494-511- 



Bulletin of the Pan-American Union, Dec, 

 1918. Fustic wood, by C. D. Mell, p. 

 823-32. 



California fish and game, Jan., 1919. The 

 coyote as a deer killer, by E. V. Jotter, 

 p. 26-29. 



Conservation, Feb., 1919. Reforestation as 

 a post-war policy, by C. Leavitt, p. 8 



