254 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publlih ech montk, for the benefit of thoe who wish booki on forestry, a 

 list of titles, authors, and prices of such books. These my be ordered through the American Forestry As- 

 sociation, Washington, D. C. Prices are by mall or express prepaid.' 



FOREST VALUATION Fllibert Roth *'* 



FOREST REGULATION-Fillbert Roth J-JJ 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR-By Elbert Peets 2.00 



THE LUMBER INDUSTRY-By R. S. Kellogg J}J 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS-By Arthur F. Jones J.10 



FOREST VALHATIOH-By H. H. Chapman * 



CHINESE FOREST TREES AND TIMBER SUPPLY By Norman Shaw 2.50 



TREES, SHRUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PERENNI ALS-By John KirkegaArd...... I* 1 



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



per Part J-JJ 



THE TRAINING OF A FORESTER Glfford Plnchot } 



LUMBER AND ITS USES R. S. Kellogg. } 



THE CARE OF TREES IN LAWN, STREET AND PARE B. E. Fernow 2-17 



NORTH AMERICAN TREES N. L. Britton J-g 



KEY TO THE TREES Collins and Preston }* 



THE FARM WOODLOT-E. G. Cheyney and J. P. Wentllng 'i-iuviiiS - V a J 



IDENTIFICATION OF THE ECONOMIC WOODS OF THE UNITED STATES Samuel J. Record 1.25 



PLANE SURVEYING John C. Tracy >* 



FOREST MElfSURATION-Henry Solon Graves * 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY-B. E. Fernow }] 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY-Fllibert Roth JJ! 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY A. S. Fuller } 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY-Samuel B. Green....: ;. -z : JJ* 



MANUAL OF THE TREES OF NORTH AMERICA (exclusive of Mexico) Chas. Sprague Sargent .00 



AMERICAN WOODS Romeyn B. Hough, 14 Volumes, per Volume iii",iiu. 



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 JTS 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD: THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTIES Chas. H. Snow 3.50 



HANDBOOK OF TIMBER PRESERVATION Samuel M. Rowe 5.00 



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



TREES, SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES H. E. Parkhurst 1.50 



TREES H. Marshall Ward } 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS John Mulr J-M 



LOGGING Ralph C. Bryant J-JJ 



THE IMPORTANT TIMBER TREES OF THE UNITED STATES S. B. Elliott 2.50 



FORESTRY IN NEW ENGLAND Ralph C. Hawley and Austin F. Hawes 3.50 



THE PRINCIPLES OF HANDLING WOODLANDS Henry Solon Graves 1.51 



SHADE TREES IN TOWNS AND CITIES William Solotaroff 3.00 



THE TREE GUIDE By Julia Ellen Rogers 1" 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN Austin Cary 2.12 



FARM FORESTRY Alfred Akerman 57 



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



nagel 2.10 



ELEMENTS OF FORESTRY F. F. Moon and N. C. Brown 2.20 



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD Samuel J. Record l.W 



STUDIES OF TREES J. J. Levison 1'5 



TREE PRUNING A. Des Cars 



THE PRESERVATION OF STRUCTURAL TIMBER Howard F. Weiss 3.00 



THE PRACTICAL LUMBERMAN By Bernard Brereton (third edition) 1.50 



SEEDING AND PLANTING IN THE PRACTICE OF FORESTRY By James W. Tourney S.50 



FUTURE OF FOREST TREES By Dr. Harold Unwin 2.25 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS F. Schuyler Mathews, $2.00 (in full leather) 3.00 



FARM FORESTRY By John Arden Ferguson 1.30 



LUTHER BURBANK HIS METHODS AND DISCOVERIES AND THEIR PRACTICAL AP- 

 PLICATION (In twelve volumes, beautifully illustrated in color) 43.00 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY By Frederick F. Moon 2.10 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES By Maud Going 1.50 



HANDBOOK FOR RANGERS AND WOODSMEN By Jay L. B. Taylor 2.50 



THE STORY OF THE FOREST By J. Gordon Dorrance 05 



THE LAND WE LIVE IN By Overton Price 1.70 



WOOD AND FOREST By William Noyes 3.00 



THE ESSENTIALS OF AMERICAN TIMBER LAW By J. P. Kinney 3.00 



HANDBOOK OF CLEARING AND GRUBBING, METHODS AND COST By Halbert P. Gillette 2.50 



FRENCH FORESTS AND FORESTRY By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr 2.50 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS By L. H. Pammel 5.35 



WOOD AND OTHER ORGANIC STRUCTURAL MATERIALS Chas. H. Snow 5.00 



'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. 



1 53583 



Cheapest Way to Clear Land 



One-Man 



No horses needed no extra help required - 



one man alone pulls all kinds of stumps quick I 



and easy .The Kintin holds record for lowest land clear- ; 



tn*ool. New patented fMtvMrf,H WKtrwous Itranit* mnd J 



rKU am M powr.8UppdoetuolaO-dTl*rooTrial-S-Y*orGuranteo I 



n--L BM >%. ABdomootliatoMrpropoaiuoo. Got BW Fr*o Book nd Tory | 



eronOn.kln*ndHoraPuller-klWtMa.J, 



ScndV 

 I for 



I Book 



36SO 



A. J. K1RST1N CO. 

 txtoa St EacotaaW. Mick. 



Southern lumberman, Feb. 23, 1918. Cut- 

 over lands will help solve labor prob- 

 lem after war, by Benton Mackaye, 

 p. 36. 



Timber trade journal, Feb. 16, 1018. 

 Strength of timber and safe loads, by 

 Seymour Walker, p. 233. 



Timber trade journal, Feb. 23, 1918. The 

 chief varieties of softwood, p. 272-3: 

 The preservation of timber in coal 

 mines, by Percy Groom, p. xxiii, xxv. 



Timberman, Feb., 1918. The forest re- 

 sources of Norway described, by J. H. 

 Boe, p. 48 K. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 21, 

 1918. Wood combs now being made 

 in Germany, p. 691. 



United States daily consular report, March 

 7, 1918. Wood pulp substitute for ab- 

 sorbent cotton, p. 867 ; Fuel value of 

 cocoanut shells, by Henry D. Baker, 

 p. 869. 



United States daily consular report, March 

 9, 1918. Manufacture of paper from 

 bamboo in Trinidad, by Henry D. 

 Baker, p. 898. 



United States daily consular report, March 

 13, 1918. Timber trade in Germany 



during the war, p. 949; Ornamental 

 hardwoods of Australia, by Howard A. 

 Treat, p. 950-8. 



Veneers, March, 1918 Red cedar veneers 

 for chests, by H. C. Cain, p. 12. 



West Coast lumberman, March I, 1918. 

 Eleven billion feet of spruce timber in 

 Oregon and Washington, p. 20; Eng- 

 land fears severe shortage of timber 

 supplies in the future, p. 38-9. 



Wood turning, March, 1918. Turning table 

 legs, showing factory operation, by 

 James F. Hobart, p. 7-8; Turning plow 

 handles, by James Francis, p. 20-1. 



Wood-worker, Feb., 1918. Making the air- 

 plane propeller, by L. Maileaux, p. 26; 

 Clothes pegs as a side-line, by A. W. 



W., p. 45-6. 



Forest journals 



American forestry, March, 1918. Flying on 

 wings of spruce, by E. A. Sterling, p. 

 133-139; The abomination of desolation, 

 p. 140; Americans in the French for- 

 ests, by Henry S. Graves, p. 141-143 ; 

 Forest Service man selected as city 

 manager of Albuquerque, p. 144; Blast- 

 ing stumps near buildings, by John N. 

 Lewis, p. 144; Perhaps our greatest 

 national park, by Robert Sterling Yard, 

 p. 145-150; Studies of leaf and tree 

 (Part III), by R. W. Shufeldt, p. 151- 

 159; A tree guessing contest, by J. S. 

 Holmes, p. 159; The humming birds 

 and swifts, by A. A. Allen, p. 160-164; 

 How the Forest Service has helped the 

 stockmen, by Albert F. Potter, p. 165- 

 169; Tree tied in a knot, p. 169; Ship 

 built of mahogany, p. 169; Nuts: a 

 substitute for meat, by A. Mildred 

 Brennan, p. 170-172; New home of for- 

 estry at the University of California, 

 p. 173-176; Donations to the welfare 

 fund for lumbermen and foresters in 

 war service, p. 177, '79; Slacker land 

 and food facts, by Charles Lathrop 

 Pack, p. 178-179 ; American foresters 

 in military service, p. 180-188. 



Biltmorean, March, 1918. Forests of the 

 Coos Bay region, Oregon, by H. D. 

 House, p. 3-7; Lumber prices during 

 the past year, by R. A. Swift, p. 7-8. 



Hawaiian forester and agriculturist, Jan., 

 1918. The Paradise tree, by Vaughan 

 MacCaughey, p. 20-2. 



Journal of forestry, Feb.. 1918 Forestry 

 and the war, by B. E. Fernow, p. 149- 

 54; The technical forester in national 

 forest administration, by L. F. Kneipp 

 and others, p. 155-67; Relation of 

 stimuli to the cone production of west- 

 ern hemlock, by Russell Watson, p. 168- 

 75 ; Valuation of damages to imma- 

 ture timber, by W. N. Sparhawk, p. 

 176-91 ; The white pine weevil and its 

 relation to second growth white pine, 

 by S. A. Graham, p. 192-202 ; Comments 

 on Korstian's classification of fores- 

 try literature, p. 203-9; Some social 

 aspects of forest management, by Ben- 

 ton Mackaye, p. 210-14; Growth and 

 management of pinon in New Mexico, 

 by Herman H. Chapman and C. E. 



