3N2 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



UNIVERSITY OF MAINE 



ORONO, MAINE 



Maintained by State and Nation 



THE FORESTRY DEPART- 

 MENT offers a four years' 

 undergraduate curriculum, lead- 

 ing to the degree of Bachelor of 

 Science in Forestry. 



****** 

 Opportunities for full techni- 

 cal training, and for specializing 

 in problems of the Northeastern 

 States and Canada. 



****** 



John M. Briscoe, 



Professor of Forestry 



Carleton W. Eaton, 



Associate Professor 

 ****** 

 For catalog and further infor- 

 mation, address 



ROBERT J. ALEY, Pres't, 

 Orono, Maine 



DEPARTMENT OF 

 FORESTRY 



The Pennsylvania 

 State College 



A PROFESSIONAL course in 

 Forestry, covering four years 

 of college work, leading to the 

 degree of Bachelor of Science in For- 

 estry. 



Thorough and practical training for 

 Government, State, Municipal and 

 private forestry. 



Four months are spent in camp in 

 the woods in forest work. 

 Graduates who wish to specialize 

 along particular lines are admitted 

 to the "graduate forest schools" as 

 candidates for the degree of Master 

 of Forestry on the successful com- 

 pletion of one year's work. 



For further information address 

 Department of Forestry 



Pennsylvania State College 



State College, Pa. 



tree for planting in Wales, by A. P., 

 p. 454 ; The acoustic properties of for- 

 estry, by Herbert Stone, p. 455-6; 

 Remedies for neglected forestry, by 

 Tom Bruce Jones, p. 478-9. 



Timber trade journal, April 20, 1918 

 Wood distillation, p. 571-2. 



Timber trade journal, April 27, 1918 -Pitch 

 pine and its substitutes, by W. S., 

 p. 579. 



Timberman, April, 1918 Revised specifi- 

 cations for aircraft material, p. 33; 

 Work of forest regiments, by H. S. 

 Graves, p. 36-7; Manufacturing fir 

 masts and spars by machinery, p. 42; 

 An object lesson in forest fire preven- 

 tion, by A. G. Jackson, p. 43; El cedra 

 Colorado, p. 44. El pinabete Sitka, p. 

 44; Donkey engines in Bermuda, by 

 F. A. Leete, p. 63; Motor truck in log- 

 ging industry, by H. H. Harwood, 

 p. 74, 76; Douglas fir; advantages and 

 handicaps, by G. M. Duncan, p. 87-8. 



Timberman, May, 1918 Sawn spruce dis- 

 places rived aircraft stock, p. 36-7; 

 Kauri gum industry of New Zeland, 

 by R. P. Grenville and others, p. 38. 



United States daily consular report, April 

 20, 1918 Demand for lumber in the 

 Azores, by John Q. Wood, p. 275-7. 



United States daily consular report, May 



2, 1918 Spanish market for paper and 

 paper pulp, by Ely E. Palmer, p. 436-7. 



United States daily consular report, May 



3, 1918 Exports of dyewoods from 

 Jamaica, by Ross Hazeltine, p. 454-5 ; 

 Brazil to encourage the planting of 

 eucalyptus, by Richard P. Momsen, p. 

 456-7; Italy's after-war lumber needs, 

 by F. T. F. Dumont, p. 460-1. 



United States daily consular report, May 

 15, 1918 Value of wood ash as a fer- 

 tilizer, by Joseph Emerson Haven, p. 

 613. 



United States daily consular report, May 



17, 1918 The match industry in Brazil, 

 by Richard P. Momsen, p. 645. 



United States daily consular report, May 



18, 1918 Cultivation of balsa timber 

 in Costa Rica, by Stewart E. McMillan, 

 p. 669-71. 



United States daily consular report, May 



20, 1918 Quebracho extract in Argen- 

 tina and Paraguay, by Robert S. Bar- 

 rett, p. 682-3.' 



United States daily consular report, May 



21, 1918 Victorian hardwoods, p. 691. 

 Veneers, May, 1918 Finishing natural 



wood surfaces, by A. Ashmun Kelly, p. 

 15-16 ; The economies of veneering, 

 by L. K. Stark, p. 19-20. 



West Coast lumberman, May 1, 1918 

 Seattle shoe factory utilizes red alder, 

 by Bror L. Grondal, p. 21, 32. 



Wood turning, May, 1918 Wood fasten- 

 ings and handles, p. 20-1. 



Wood-warker, April, 1918 The building 

 of wooden ships by William Jackson, 



p. 26-9; Conserving wood by preserva- 

 tives, by Lee. Prior, p. 44. 



Wood-worker, May, 1918 The world's 

 largest airplane spruce mill, by J. F. T., 

 p. 45. 



Forest Journals 



American Forestry, May, 1918 Making 

 the fir fly, by James A. Preston, p. 261- 

 265 ; The war mystery, p. 266 ; With 

 the forest regiments in the field., p. 

 267-271 ; The development of logging 

 operations, by Hu Maxwell, p. 272-279; 

 Trees from Pennsylvania for desolated 

 France, p. 279; Heroic women in 

 France by Dr. Alonzo Taylor, p. 280; 

 The diurnal birds of prey-Hawks, 

 eagles and vultures, by A. A. Allen, 

 p. 281-284; Minnesota State forests, by 

 W. T. Cox, p. 285-288 ; Flowers of late 

 spring and early summer, by R. W. 

 Shufeldt, p. 289-294 ; The way of Japan- 

 ese Nimrods, by Gayne T. K. Norton, 

 p. 295-296; Use of the range expands 

 to meet war conditions, p. 296; The 

 man with the thousand-year tree gar- 

 den, by Frank A. Arnold, p. 297-298; 

 Louisiana forestry law goes into effect, 

 p. 298; The roselle plant, by H. E. 

 Zimmerman, p. 299; New York state 

 encourages planting, p. 299; Restoring 

 a colonial house, by Rawson W. Had- 

 don, p. 300-303; American foresters in 

 military service, p. 305-310. 



Australian forestry journal, April, 1918 

 Wooden ships to save England, p. 18- 

 19; Notes on forest tree planting, by 

 Walter Gill, p. 36-7; Forest trees of 

 Queensland; red cedar, p. 38-9; Euca- 

 lyptus oil, p. 39-40. 



Canadian forestry journal, April, 1918 

 New silver from old stumps, by James 

 Lawler, p. 1627-9; Logging by ele- 

 phants in Burma, p. 1630-1; The fuel 

 value of wood, by W. B. Campbell, p. 

 1632-3; The practical application of 

 scientific forestry, by R. O. Sweezey, 

 p. 1638-40 ; The forests of Alberta and 

 the public welfare, p. 1643-4; Forests 

 and civilization, by Ellwood Wilson, 

 p. 1647-8. 



Indian forester, February, 1918 A study 

 of labour conditions in a U. P. plains 

 division, p. 45-52; Rate of growth of 

 bamboos, by B. B. Osmaston, p. 52-57; 

 Field investigation of spike disease in 

 sandal on the Kollimalai hills, by M. 

 Rama Rao, p. 58-65; Spiked sandal- 

 wood, by C. M. Hodgson, p. 66-71; 

 Artificial propagation of sandal, by L. 

 P. Mascarenhas, p. 72-4; Jap lumber 

 resources, by T. Sington, p. 79-85. 



Ohio Forester, April, 1918 The wood fuel 

 campaign in Ohio, by A. E. Taylor, p. 

 19-21 ; Wood fuel notes, by J. W. Cal- 

 land, p. 21-3; The fuel situation, by 

 Edmund Secrest, p. 24-7; The produc- 

 tion and use of fuel wood, by Edmund 

 Secrest, p. 27-30; Comparative fuel 

 value of wood and coal, p. 30. 





