

RED CROSS 



FARM 

 POWDER 



+ 



The Original and Largest Selling 

 Farm Explosive 



Why use expensive high speed dynamites 

 when this slower, safer farm powder will 

 save you from $3 to 35 per hundred 

 pounds and for most farm uses do better 

 work f 



BIG BOOK FREE 



As pioneers and leaders in developing 

 farming with explosives our booklet gives 

 the latest, most reliable and best illus- 

 trated instructions. Write for HAND 

 BOOK OF EXPLOSIVES No. 350 



DEALERS WANTED 



We want live dealers in towns still open. 

 Get the orders resulting from our con- 

 tinuous heavy advertising. You need not 

 carry nor handle stock. State jobber's 

 name or bank reference when writing. 



E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company 



Established 1802 



World! s largest makers of ) 'arm explosives 



Wilmington, Delaware 



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 



FO 



1 



RE 



2 



ST 



3 



RY 



4 



THE FOREST 



IS THREE-FOURTHS OF 



FORESTRY 



Your opportunities are as unlimited as 

 our forests if you study at 



WYMAN'S SCHOOL OF THE WOODS 



Incorporated Munlsing, Michigan 



CURRENT LITERATURE 



Hardwood record, Sept. 10, 1916 Mes- 

 quite trees in Hawaii, p. 22; Ash for 

 automobile frames, p. 23. 

 Lumber trade journal, Aug. IS, 1916 

 Results of conservation in Louisiana, 

 by Henry E. Hardtner, p. 17-18. 

 Paper, Aug. 2, 1916 A means of accu- 

 rately matching colors, by Otto Kress 

 and G. C. McNaughton, p. 13-17. 

 Paper, Aug. 23, 1916 An American hand- 

 made paper mill, p. 11-13. 



Paper, Sept. 6, 1916 Enge and other forms 



of groundwood, p. 13-16. 

 Paper trade journal, Aug. 31, 1916 Pulp 

 wood opportunities on national forests, 

 by H. S. Graves, p. 8-9, 30. 



St. Louis lumberman, Aug. IS, 1916 

 Studies in the extraction of rosin from 

 wood, by R. C. Palmer, p. 14-16. 



St. Louis lumberman, Sept. 1, 1916 New 

 wood preservative brought out, p. 47. 



Savannah naval stores review, Aug. 26, 

 1916 The naval stores industry, by 

 Philip Devlin, p. 4, 13, 18, 24. 



Savannah naval stores review, Sept. 9, 1916 

 May make turpentine cups out of 

 pine tree waste, p. 4. 



Southern lumberman, Sept. 9, 1916 Petri- 

 fied forests explained, p. 45. 



Timber trade journal, Aug. 26, 1916 

 Measuring of round timber, p. 322. 



Timberman, Aug., 1916 Timber trade of 

 Ceylon, p. 34; Logging mahogany in 

 Guatemala, by F. F. Brown, p. 34-5 ; 

 Logging in Appalachian Mountains, by 

 P. C. Thede, p. 47-8. 



United States daily consular report, Aug. 

 15, 1916 Trade promotion by Canadian 

 forestry branch, by R. M. Newcomh, 

 p. 604-5. 



United States daily consular report, Aug. 

 26, 1916 British Columbia timber 

 notes, p. 747; Brazil an important 

 source of hardwoods, by A. L. M. 

 Gottschalk, p. 754-8. 



United States daily consular report, Sept. 9, 

 1916 Woodpulp situation in Sweden, 

 by Ernest L. Harris, p. 938-9. 



United States daily consular report, Sept. 

 14, 1916 Siamese hardwoods, p. 994. 



West coast lumberman, Aug. 15, 1916 

 Douglas fir dominates all other woods 

 in the republic of Peru, by Roger E. 

 Simmons, p. 30-1, 34. 



West Coast lumberman, Sept. 1, 1916 The 

 American lumber industry with a spe- 

 cial reference to the tariff, by Noel 

 Sargent, p. 20-1 ; Shingles and shingle 

 roofs, by B. J. Boorman, p. 28-9. 



Wood-preserving, July-Sept., 1916 A 

 Pacific Coast timber-treating plant, by 

 H. E. Horrocks, p. 51-3; The relation 

 between the specific gravity of zinc 

 chloride solutions and their concentra- 

 tions, by E. Batemen, p. 54-6 ; Creosoted 

 wood block paving, by Walter Buehler, 

 p. 57-8; The treatment of white oak 

 ties, p. 60-1 ; Experiments in treating 

 ties in India, by Ralph S. Pearson, p. 62 ; 

 Penetration of preservatives, by Lowry 

 Smith, p. 66-8. 



cm 



"This prevents 

 wood from warping!" 

 ,,r pHIS hardwood trim 

 - 1 won't warp, shrink, 

 or twist out of shape because I 

 am protecting it against damp- 

 ness in the plaster wall with a 

 coating that makes protection 

 absolutely sure." 



Ordinary metallic paints coat, 

 but they can't protect. The alkali 

 in the wall masonry makes them 

 saponify and become useless. 



\*i~iMtl ,7s w TriUfuSosI 



TRIMBAK 



on the other hand, can't possibly 

 saponify. It remains a perfect 

 protection, permanently. 



Used in a luxurious down-town 

 club, the Woolworth Building, 

 the Metropolitan Tower, the 

 Bankers' Trust Company and 

 other prominent places. 



Full details upon request from 

 Department I. 



TOCH BROTHERS 



Established 1848 



Intentors and manufacturers of R. I. W. Paints, 

 Compounds, Enamels, etc, 



320 Fifth Avenue, New York City 



Works: 

 New York, London, England, and Toronto, Canada 



THE ELITE POCKET 

 EMERGENCY CASE 



Brother Sportsman , you need it to complete your outfit. 

 Black Spanish Leather; contains salve, cold creme, lini- 

 ment, ointment and liquid court plaster in tubes, will 

 not break, spill or leak; bandages, surgeon's plaster. 

 compressed cotton, safety pins, dressing forceps, 

 scissors, first aid booklet, etc. 

 Price, post paid In V, S. A. $3.00 Write for circular. 



ELITE SPECIALTY CO., Brocton, N. Y. 



