958 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



HARVARD 



UNIVERSITY 



DEPT. OF FORESTRY 

 BUSSEY INSTITUTION 



/"OFFERS 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 







The 



New York State 



College of 



Forestry 



at 



Syracuse University, 



Syracuse, N. Y. 



UNDERGRADUATE courses in 

 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. 



Trade journals and consular reports 

 American lumberman, Jan. 25, 1919. Tim- 

 ber cargo to be its own vessel, p. 35. 

 American lumberman, Feb. I, 1919 Dam- 

 age to French forests, by T. S. Wool- 

 sey, Jr., p. 46-7 ; Federal rules for cross- 

 tie production, p. 47; The geared loco- 

 motive in lumbering, p. 51 ; Russian 

 lumber industry demoralized, by R. E. 

 Simmons, p. 53. 



American lumberman, Feb. 8, 1919. British 

 timber trade during 1918, p. 7i" 2 - 



Automotive industries, Dec. 19, 1918 De- 

 velopment of the aircraft spruce in- 

 dustry, by L. K. Hodges, p. 1037-40. 



Coal age, Dec. 5, 1918 Preservative treat- 

 ment of mine timbers, by K. C. Garth, 

 p. 1025-7. 



DuPont magazine, Feb., 1919. The destruc- 

 tive distillation of wood, by C. T. 1 

 Clark, p. 15-18. 



Engineering and contracting, Feb. 5, 1919 ! 

 Results of 12 year service tests of ex- 

 perimental wood block pavement at 

 Minneapolis, p. 146-7. 



Engineering news-record, Jan. '30, 1919. 

 Progress reported on wood block ex- 

 periments in Minneapolis, by C. H. 

 Teesdale and J. D. MacLean, p. 233-4; 

 Rainfall influence on durability of zinc 

 treated cross-ties, by C. H. Teesdale 

 and S. W. Allen, p. 234-5; Non-pres- 

 sure treatment of wood for buildings, 

 p. 237-8. 



Hardwood record, Jan. 25, 1919. Woods 

 used in making violin bows, p. 39-4; 

 Cloth made of wood, p. 40. 



Lumber, Feb. 3, 1919 Lumber trade in 

 Great Britain, by J. Y. Dunlop, p. 46-7. 



Lumber, Feb. 10, 1919. War service of 

 west coast mills recounted, p. 13; Cy- 

 press conditions seen at short range, 

 by J. E. Williams, p. 15-16; Forestry 

 as a rural community project, by R. S. 

 Hosmer, p. 48-50. 



Lumber, Feb. 17, 1919. Tractors revolu- 

 tionize lumber operations on the Pa- 

 cific coast, p. 43. 



Lumber trade journal, Feb. I, 1919. Suc- 

 cess of wood constructed ships, by J. 

 O. Heyworth, p. 17 ; Prospects for lum- 

 ber in Italy, by N. C. Brown, p. 21-2. 



Lumber world review, Jan. 25, 1919. Wood- 

 en shipbuilding on the Pacific coast, p. 

 19-24; Creosoted southern pine rail- 

 road tanks, p. 26-7. 



Manufacturers' record, Oct. 17, 1918 The 

 wooden ship, by E. T. Hollingsworth, 



P- 74-5- 



Packages, Feb., 1919. History of pail in- 

 dustry, p. 32. 



Paper, Jan. 29, 1919. Paper section of the 

 U. S. Bureau of standards, p. 11-13; 

 Papermaking in Japan, p. 14-17. 



Paper, Feb. 5, 1919. Woodpulp manufac- 

 ture in France, by P. Rochon, p. 11-15. 



Paper mill, Jan. 25, 1919. Japan's paper 

 requirements, by F. R. Rutter, p. 16. 



Paper mill, Feb. 8, 1919. The art of paper- 



making, by C. T. Hamill and S. F. i 

 Acre, p. 97-8. 

 Paper trade journal, Jan. 13, 1919. Utili- 

 zation of eucalyptus as a raw material ' 

 of paper, p. 42, 52. 

 Paper trade journal, Feb. 6, 1919. Paper 

 and pulp in France in 1918, by E. Bar- 

 det, p. 35, 39; Pulp mills in the United 

 States, by H. E. Surface and F. H. 

 Smith, p. 109, in, 113, "5. 121; Pulp j 

 and paper investigations of the For- 1 

 est products laboratory in 1918, by V. j 

 P. Edwardes, p. 123-4; Forest planting 

 work of Laurentide co., ltd., by E. I 

 Wilson, p. 133, 135 ; Work of the U. S. ' 

 paper laboratory, p. 275, 277, 279. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Feb. 15, 1919. 

 Conserving the bark, by U. S. McMil- 

 lan, p. 9. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Jan. 2, 1919. 

 The manufacture of groundwood pulp, 

 by G. W. Dickson, p. 3-6. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Jan. 30, 1919.-^- 

 Indirect cooking by forced circulation, 

 by A. E. Nielsen, p. 105-10. 



Railway age, Jan. 31, 1919. Use of treated 

 timber in car construction, p. 295-8. 



Railway age, Feb. 7, 1919. Tie producers 

 discuss conditions in industry, p. 343-8. 



Railway review, Feb. 15, 1919. Compari- 

 son of methods for purchasing ties, by 

 J. W. Fristoe, p. 242-4; Timber con- 

 servation in the tie business, p. 255-6. 



Southern lumberman, Jan. 25, 1919. Quar- 

 ter-sawing in a nutshell, p. 39. 



Southern lumberman, Feb. 1, 1919. New 

 type of wooden ship developed during 

 the war, p. 33. 



Southern lumberman, Feb. 8, 1919. The 

 inexhaustible supply of wood for 

 wheels, p. 32-3. 



Timber trades journal, Jan. 11, 1919. 

 Rafting across the Atlantic, p. 43. 



Timber trades journal, Jan. 18, 1919. 

 Rafting in British Columbia, p. 81. 



Timber trades journal, Feb. 1, 1919.- The 

 forest wealth of Burma, by A. S. Judge, 

 p. 184; China's trade in imported tim- 

 ber, p. 188. 



Timberman, Jan. 1919. British Columbia's 

 drive for airplane spruce, p. 36-7 ; Aus- 

 tralia discovering her timber resources, 

 p. 39; Second annual red cedar shingle 

 congress, p. 43-6; Utilization of wood 

 in Sweden, H. Sylven, p. 81. 



Timberman, Feb., 1919. Mediterranean 

 countries in need of lumber, by N. C. 

 Brown, p. 35; Some wood lessons of 

 the war, by H. B. Oakleaf, p. 36, 86-9; 

 West coast lumber in the Brazilian 

 markets, by E. F. Horn, p. 38-9, 67; 

 Standardized timber bridge for logging 

 railroads, by W. W. Amburn, p. 46; 

 Development of lumber industry in 

 Sweden, by H. Sylven, p. 56. 



U. S. commerce report, Jan. 24, 1919. Ex- 

 tracting kauri-gum oil in New Zealand, 

 by A. A. Winslow, p. 376. 



U. S. commerce report, Feb. 3, 1919. 

 British purchases of Canadian lumber, 



