CURRENT LITERATURE 



377 



CURRENT LITERATURE 



MONTHLY LIST FOR MAY, 1918 



(Books and periodicals indexed in the library of the United States Forest Service.) 



FORESTRY AS A WHOLE 



Ucker, Clement S., and Mitchell, J. A., 

 Forestry : its place in the economic 

 life of the south. Two addresses made 

 at the 8th annual meeting of the N. C. 

 Forestry association. 24 p. Chapel 

 Hill, N. C, 1918. 



Proceedings and reports of associations, forest 

 officers, etc. 



Canada Dept. of the Interior Forestry 

 branch. Report of the Director of 

 forestry for the year 1917. 81 p. il. 

 Ottawa, 1918. 



Indiana Baluchistan Forest dept. Pro- 

 gress report of forest administration 

 for 1916-17. 30 p. Calcutta, 1918. 



India Madras presidency Forest dept. 

 Administration report for the twelve 

 months ending 30th June, 1917. 146 p. 

 Madras, 1918. 



Maryland State board of forestry. Re- 

 port for 1916 and 1917. 86 p. pi. 

 Baltimore, Md., 1918. 



Massachusetts forestry association. Re- 

 port of the national parks and national 

 forest tour. 26 p. il. Boston, Mass., 

 1917. 



Michigan agricultural college -Forestry 

 club. The M. A. C. forester, vol. 3. 

 35 p. il. East Lansing, Mich., 1918. 



New South Wales Dept. of forestry. Re- 

 port of the forestry commission for 

 the year ending 30th June, 1917. 20 p. 

 Sydney, 1918. 



Quebec Dept. of lands and forests. Re- 

 port for the twelve months ending 

 30th June, 1917. 133 p. tables. Que- 

 bec, 1917. 



FOREST AESTHETICS 



Holmes, J. S. Roadside trees in North 

 Carolina. 8 p. Chapel Hill, N. C, 

 1918. (North Carolina-Geological and 

 economic survey. Press bulletin No. 

 162.) 



FOREST EDUCATION 



Forest schools 



India Imperial forest college, Dehra Dun. 

 Calendar, 1916. 110. p. Calcutta, 1917. 

 FOREST BOTANY 



Maiden, J. H. The forest flora of New 

 South Wales, pt. 62. 37 p. pi. Sydney, 

 Govt, printer, 1918. 



Navarro de Andrade, Edmundo and Vecchi, 

 Octavio. Les bois indigenes de Sao 

 Paulo. 376 p. il. S. Paulo, 1916. 



FOREST INFLUENCES 

 Lin, Dau-Yang. Forests and Chihli floods. 

 13 p. Nanking, China, 1918. 

 SILVICULTURE 

 Planting and nursery practice 

 Navarro de Andrade, Edmundo and Vecchi, 

 Octavio. Os eucalyptos, sua culturay 

 exploracao. 228 p. il. S. Paulo, Typo- 

 graphia Brazil de Rothschild and 

 comp., 1918. 



FOREST PROTECTION 

 Diseases 



Committee on the suppression of the pine 

 blister rust in North America. White 

 pine blister rust. comp. by Harris A. 

 Reynolds. 40 p. n. p., 1918. 



Fire 



California State board of forestry. Hand- 

 book of forest protection, 1918. 106 p. 

 map. Sacramento, 1918. 



Kennebec valley protective association. 

 Sixth annual report, 1917. 18 p. Bing- 

 ham, Me., 1917. 



FOREST MANAGEMENT 



Jones, Richard Chapin. Farm forestry in 

 Virginia. 60 p. Charlottesville, Va., 



1917. (Virginia-State forester. Bul- 

 letin no. 12.) 



FOREST ADMINISTRATION 

 U. S. Dept. of agriculture Forest service. 

 April field program, 1918. 31 p. Wash., 

 D. C, 1918. 

 U. S. Dept. of agriculture Forest serv- 

 ice. The use book; a manual of in- 

 formation about the national forests, 



1918. 168 p. Wash., D. C, 1918. 

 FOREST UTILIZATION 



MacKaye, Benton. Suggestions for mar- 

 keting small timber. 32 p. il., map. 



- 



T71QLVC climb 

 F io JVH, PROOF 



ftift FENCING 



tXCak* guards and gamekeepers 

 unnecessary. 



T TNDESIRABLE treaspassers who laugh 

 ^ at sign boards and disregard ordinary 

 wooden and stone fences, find their way 

 hopelessly barred by FISKE-CLIMBPROOF- 

 CHAJN-LINK-FENCING. 

 All parts heavily galvanized by hot spelter 

 process, are rustproof and fireproof posts 

 deep-set-in-concrete, will not rust at the 

 ground line but keep the fence always in 

 alignment. Chain link wire mesh too small 

 to afford toe hold, topped with barbed wire 

 is absolutely climbproof. 



Fitted with gates of same construction FISKE 

 CLIMBPROOF FENCING is a permanent 

 surety again?! trespassing and intrusion. 

 If your grounds are woith fencing they are 

 worth fencing well. 



Send for our Catalog. 



J. W. FISKE IRON WORKS 



100-102 Park Place 

 New York 



You Can Make No Unsafe 



Purchase on the Advice of 



LACEY & CO. 



Why ? Because we will 

 give you our final advice only 

 on known facts. 



If we sell it to you, you 

 can bank on value as represent- 

 ed because when we don't know 

 we find out. 



If you buy it on our ad- 

 vice, it will only be after we 

 know. We shall know because 

 we shall not give our final ad- 

 vice until we have made for 

 you, at your reasonable cost, a 

 LACEY REPORT of such na- 

 ture as we find the case calls 

 for, a "2 run," a '% run," or 

 a tree count. Then both you 

 and we will know what is there, 

 and talk of price will then be 

 in order. 



NEW YORK 

 30 East Forty-Second Street 

 CHICAGO SEATTLE 



1750 McCormick Bldg. 626 Henry Bldg. 



Madison, Wise, 1918. (Wisconsin- 

 State conservation commission. Bul- 

 letin 4.) 



Lumber industry 



Smith, Franklin H. and Pierson, Albert 

 -H. Production of lumber lath and 

 shingles in 1916. 43 p. Wash., D. C, 

 1918. (U. S. Agriculture, Dept. of 

 Bulletin 673.) 



Wood-using industries 



Missouri Fuel administration Wood fuel 

 committee. Burn wood and save coal 

 to win the war. 2 p. Jefferson City, 

 Md., 1918. 



WOOD TECHNOLOGY 



United States War Dept. Signal office. 



