248 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 







This Big Book Boosts 

 Farm Valoes 



It was written for farmers 

 not engineers; about country 

 roads not city pavements. 

 Its language is plain its 

 pictures convincing. 



It covers the entire subject 

 of roads: location, correc- 

 tion, grading, drainage and 

 upkeep. It explains all 

 modern methods and the 

 use of all up-to-date road 

 building machinery. 



Used now as a text book 

 in over fifty colleges and 

 universities. 



ThUValuabl* Book Ft 



Better roads increase farm values, 

 develop better schools and 

 churches and open up greater 

 business and social advantages. 

 You need this book. Every road 

 commissioner, supervisor or farmer 

 interested in the great National 

 movement for better roads should 

 have a copy. Write for yours 

 today. 



Good Rod Book Ne. 350F 



E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. 



Wilmington, D.lawara 



Miniature Construction 



Landscape and Architectural Models 



Topographical Maps and Paintings 



for 



SCHOOLS COLLEGES MUSEUMS 



Government work a specialty 



MORGAN BROS. CO., Inc. 



Model Makers 



Room 1650 Grand Central Terminal 

 Phone 7720 Murray Hill NEW YORK CITY 



Pioneer western lumberman, Feb. 15, 1916. 

 Big trees of California, p. 15-17. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1, 1916. 

 Report of the committee on forests. 

 Commission of conservation, by Clyde 

 Leavitt, p. 54-8; Silvicultural problems 

 of forest reserves, by B. E. Fernow, p. 

 58-61; Fire protection from the private 

 timber owners' viewpoint, by Elwood 

 Wilson, p. 63-5; Sweden's embargo on 

 chemical pulp; its effect in the United 

 States, by Rowland W. Jolly, p. 67-8. 



Railway review, Feb. 19, 1916. The fungus 

 of decay in railroad ties, by James Scott. 

 p. 265-6; New rule for grading southern 

 pine timbers, by Hermann von Schrenk, 

 p. 266-7. 



Southern lumber journal, March 1, 1916. 

 The best method of kiln-drying inch air 

 seasoned sap and plain gum, by James E. 

 Imrie, p. 31-42. 



Southern lumberman, March 4, 1916. 

 Operating costs in the retailing of lumber, 

 by Julius Seidel, p. 25-6. 



Timberman, Feb., 1916. The lumber indus- 

 try in Ecuador, p. 35; Teak industry in 

 the Malay archipelago, p. 36-7; English 

 market for wood pavement, by H. R. 

 MacMillan, p. 37. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 15, 

 1916. Match manufacture in Puerto 

 Plata district, by Frank Andreson Henry, 

 p. 627; Regulation of nursery stock sales, 

 p. 632-3. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 25, 

 1916. The Swedish timber market dur- 

 ing 1915, p. 770. 



United States daily consular report, March 6, 

 1916. Market in western Greece for 

 wooden hoops, by A. B. Cooke, p. 905. 



United States daily consular report, March 8, 

 1916. Brazil likely to consider man- 

 grave-bark trade, by Alfred L. M. 

 Gottschalk, p. 935. 



United States daily consular report, March 9, 

 1916. Cutch for tanning and dyeing, by 

 George M. Hanson, p. 958-9. 



United States daily consular report, March 

 10, 1916. Forest wealth of Morocco, 

 p. 968. 



United States daily consular report, March 11, 

 1916. Scarcity of wood pulp in Spain, by 

 Carl Bailey Hurst, p. 981; Match ma- 

 chinery and match sticks in Chile, by 

 R. DeF. Boomer, p. 981. 



Veneers, March, 1916. Gum in panel and 

 door construction, by Neal Spoor, p. 9-10. 



West Coast lumberman, Feb. 15, 1916. 

 Pacific northwest box trade for past year, 

 by Joseph B. Knapp, p. 32-5; Teamwork 

 in fire protection, by A. G. Jackson, p. 42-3. 



West Coast lumberman, March 1, 1916. 

 Disinterested engineers recommend the 

 use of fir block pavement, p. 21, 30. 



Wood turning, March, 1916. Ash used more 

 in handle making and wood turning than 

 in any other line of work, p. 15. 



Forest Journals 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, Dec, 

 1915. Die ftlteste schlageinteilung im 

 niederwald- und hackwald-betrieb, by 

 K. Th. Ch. Muller, p. 265-9. 



Makes the 



Cavity 



Waterproof 



T'VE filled 

 * cavities in rot- ^Nc . 



ted trees for years, but this 

 combination beats them all for 

 a first-class job. It keeps the 

 moisture out absolutely, and 

 the tree is saved permanently." 



T0XEMENT 



a #5^2232 



stop decay permanently because they prevent 

 moisture from getting back of the filling and 

 starting decay over again. 



Toxement is added to the cement mortar to 

 make the filling itself absolutely waterproof. 

 It waterproofs the concrete. 



And R. I. W. No. 232 is used for coating the 

 cavity to exclude dampness between the wood 

 and the filling. 



Chas. F. Irish & Co., of Bratenahl, Ohio, say, 

 "The results have been very pleasing." 

 Chas. A. Jackson says "I am convinced." 

 Other big tree men say the same. 



You can stop tree decay permanently with 

 these two Toch products because each of 

 them keeps out moisture, absolutely. 



It's a Toch combination, and "Remember, 

 it's Waterproof." 



Booklet upon request from Department I. 



TOCH BROTHERS 



Established 1848 



Inventors and manufacturers of R. I. W. Preservative 



Paints, Varnishes and Enamels. 



320 Fifth Avenue, New York City 



Works: New York, London, England and Toronto. Canada 



You Can Save That Tree 



By using 



HOYT'S 



TREE REPAIR 



MATERIALS 



The only correct way 

 of filling tree cavities 

 is by the Asphalt 

 Briquette Method 

 and the Use of Anti- 

 septic Tree Varnish. 

 f^Writeforfreefolders 

 on tree repair. 



C. H. HOYT 



410 Citizen* Building Cleveland, Ohio 



