AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOK SERVICE SECTION 



-50 



Qifford 'Pinchot says of 



"TIMBER" 



By Harold Titus 



" Not only a capital story, but 

 it stcinds by itself cimong 

 all the stories 1 have ever 

 read about the forests of 

 America. It is not only 

 full of human nature and 

 vivid action, but it is also 

 full of forestry and the 

 true spirit of conserva- 

 tion. It tells the story 

 aind tells the truth. I 

 hope it v^U have an im- 

 mense circulation, for 

 wherever it goes it will 

 carry a message that our 

 people greatly need to 

 lejum. " 



Net $1.75 



RANGY PETE 



By 



GUY MORTON 



A Western story of a 

 character as individ- 

 ual as anything in 

 recent fiction. 



Net $1.75 



SMALL, MAYNARD & CO. 



Stokes' Nature Books 

 A GUIDE 



TO THE TREES 



By- ALICE LOUNSBERRY 



A complete, authoritative 

 guide to nearly two hundred 

 trees. Family, shape, height, 

 range and time of bloom are 

 given and a full analysis of 

 each kind. IVith colored plates, 

 100 black-and-white plates, 64 

 engravings of entire trees and 

 55 diagrams. $3.00 



THE 



TREE BOOK 



Br INEZ McFEE 



.\ popular, comprehensive 

 book on the common trees 

 ideal for beginners in tree 

 study and of great interest to 

 experts. Fully illustrated. $2.00. 



THE MAKING 



OF A 



FLOWER 

 GARDEN 



By- IDA D. BENNETT 



.\ practical handbook for 

 the flower lover who wants to 

 plan and make a successful 

 small garden from the begin- 

 ning or revivify an old one. 

 With 16 halftones. 14 diagrams 

 and planting tables. $2.00 



TROUT LORE 



By- O. WARREN SMITH 



The angling editor of Out- 

 door Life gives countless sug- 

 gestions for anglers, telling the 

 best methods of using dry-fly. 

 wet-fly, bait and lure. IVith 24 

 illustrations from photographs. 

 %2.7S 

 THE 



HUMAN SIDE 



OF 



By- ROYAL DIXON 



.\bsoIute fact made as in- 

 teresting as fiction. Chapters 

 on trees that keep diaries, trees 

 that build cities, musical trees 

 a host of unusual things 

 about tree life. With 4 illus- 

 trations in color and i2 in 

 black-and-u-hitc. $2.50 



THE 



HUMAN SIDE 

 OF PLANTS 



Br ROYAL DIXON 



-Accurate natural history that 

 will delight the reader by its 

 wealth of curious information. 

 How plant -habits resemble 

 human habits how plants go 

 to sleep, swim, dance, etc. Pro- 

 fusely illustrated. $2.50 



F. A. STOKES COMPANY 

 443 4th Avenue New York 



WILD FOLK 



By Samuel ScoTille, Jr. 



As a skilful interpreter of the 

 outdoor world of animals and 

 birds, Mr. Scoville, author of 

 Everyday Adventures, needs no 

 introduction to lovers of nature 

 stories. This new book of true 

 stories about the wild folk is 

 written in the same engaging 

 manner, and contains a wealth 

 of unusual adventures, full of 

 the suppressed excitement of the 

 woods, where drama is always 

 going about on padded feet. 



Illustrated by Charles Living- 

 ston Bull and Carton Moore- 

 parke. $2.00. 



EVERYDAY 

 ADVENTURES 



By Samuel Scoville, Jr. 



"By all means, read this book 

 if you love birds, flowers, or the 

 woods. The chill of winter and 

 the heat of summer are in it. The 

 joy of sitting at home and com- 

 ing unexpectedly upon a wood- 

 land treasure is a joy not lightly 

 to be forgone, and a joy that 

 comes to you over and over in 

 these pages." Chicago Evening 

 Post. $3.00. 



WILD BROTHER 



strangest of True Stories from the 

 North Wcids 



By William Lyman Underwood 



"Of all bear stories ever told, 

 that told by William Lyman Un- 

 derwood, lecturer in biology for 

 twenty years at the Massachu- 

 setts Institute of Technology, is 

 probably the most amazing. It 

 is the story of the Maine woods, 

 near the Canadian border. The 

 bear that is its hero was the 

 tiniest kind of a baby cub when 

 found in a hollow tree by liuti- 

 bermen who had killed its moth- 

 er. We see him grow, in Maine 

 and Massachusetts, to a 400- 

 pounder before we leave him in 

 the last chapter." The Boston 

 Herald. S2.00. 



The Atlantic Monthly 

 Press, Inc. 



8 Arlington Street 

 Boston 



