Current literature 



251 



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| Are you on the Mailing List for Catalog of 



Pine and Oak Help Each Other 



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1 Hicks Nurseries? 



It will confirm your de- 

 cisions on fitting your 

 selection of trees to your 

 soil and climate. It offers 

 trees for dry and acid 

 soils and moist soils in 

 the same region. Many 

 nurseries on alkaline soils 

 do not specialize on oaks 

 and pines. 



Trees 20 years old can 

 be selected now. They 

 are guaranteed to grow 

 satisfactorily or replaced 

 free. 



Isaac Hicks & Son | 



Westbury, Nassau Co., N. Y. | 



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HILL'S 



Seedlings and Transplants 



ALSO TREE SEEDS 

 FOR REFORESTING 



REST for over half a century. All lead- 

 ing hardy sorts, grown in immense 

 quantities. Prices lowest. Quality 

 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 501 DUNDEE. ILL. 



Trees For Forest Planting 



Millions of Spruce and Pine in our 

 nurseries. Let us supply your wants. 



Write for our descriptive price list. 



KEENE FORESTRY ASSOCIATION 



KEENE, N. H. 



Cavities Filled and Filled Right 



Decayed wood thoroughly scraped out. Cavity 

 properly braced. Cement applied In sections, 

 SCIENTIFICALLY. That's The Bartlett Way. It 

 means safe, suit results, til tree ailments e 

 cure LASTINGLY. Representatives |i eiery 

 where. Send lor "Tree Talk". 

 The F. A. BARTLETT CO. 



544 Main St.. Stanford, Conn. 



DO YOUR BIT 



Olant Hardy Pomeroy English Walnut 



Trees Ornamental and Useful. 



Send For Booklet 



D. W. Pomeroy & Son 



Lockport - N. Y. 



NUT CULTURE North. South. East. 



West. All phases 



discussed by experts. THE OFFICIAL JOURNAL 

 $1.26 per year. Sample 16c. 



American Nut Journal R f h " ter 



W. & T. SMITH CO. 



Geneva Nursery 



NURSERY STOCK 

 AT WHOLESALE 



SEND FOR CATALOG 

 AND PRICE LIST 



GENEVA, N. Y. 



save coal. 4 p. il. Wash., D. C, 1918. 



Forest by-products 



Chandler, Bernard Albert. Maple sirup 

 and sugar production. 7 p. il. Al- 

 bany, N. Y., State food commission, 

 1918. 



United States Bureau of the census. Cen- 

 sus of manufactures, 1914: turpen- 

 tine and rosin. 10 p. Wash., D. C, 

 1917. 



AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Conservation of natural resources 



Canada Commission of conservation. Re- 

 port of the eighth annual meeting held 

 at Ottawa, Jan. 16-17, 1917. 344 p. pi. 

 Ottawa, 1917. 



Maryland Conservation commission. Bul- 

 letins 1-2. Baltimore, Md., 1917. 



Botany 



Rydberg, P. A. Flora of the Rocky Mts. 

 and adjacent plains, mo p. N. Y., 

 Pub. by the author, 1917. 



Agriculture 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Office of farm management. Geog- 

 raphy of the world's agriculture, by 

 V. C. Finch and O. E. Baker. 149 p. 

 maps. Wash., D. C, 1917. 



Poisonous plants 



United States Dept. of agriculture Bu- 

 reau of animal industry. White 

 snakeroot or rich weed (Eupatorium 

 urticaefolium) as a stock-poisoning 

 plant, by C. Dwight Marsh and A. B. 

 Clawson. 7 p. il. Wash., D*. C, 1918. 



Hygiene 



United States Treasury dept. Public 

 health service. Prevention of disease 

 and care of the sick; how to keep 

 well and what to do in case of sudden 

 illness, 1917, by W. G. Stimpson; with 

 a supplement on first aid to the injured, 

 by R. M. Woodward. 247 p. il., pi. 

 Wash., D. C, 1917. 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



American city, Jan., 1918. Importance of 

 well-shaded city streets, by J. G. Ben- 

 nem, p. 69-75. 



American florist, Jan. 19, 1918. The Arnold 

 arboretum, by Edward I. Farrington, 

 p. 4-6. 



Aviation, March 1, 1918. The artificial sea- 

 soning of wood, by Percy Groom, p. 

 164-8. 



Colorado manufacturer and consumer, Feb., 

 1918. Summer home sites in the Colo- 

 rado national forest, by Steele, p. 16-17. 



Country gentleman, Feb. 23, 1918. In a 

 northern sugar forest, p. 33. 



Field and stream, March, 1918. On chop- 

 ping wood, by Warren H. Miller, p. 

 932-4- 



Forest and stream, March, 1918. Sheep or 

 elk in our forest reserves? Their 

 natural range threatened by the en- 

 croachment of sheep ; quick action alone 

 will save the elk herd of Yellowstone 



