444 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publish each month, for th benefit of those who wish books on forestry, 

 list of titles, authors and prices of such hooka. These mar be ordered through the American Forestry 

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



FOREST VALUATION Fllibert Roth 



FOREST REGULATION-Fllibert Roth 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR By Elbert Peeti 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS By Arthur F. Jones 



FOREST VALUATION-By H. H. Chapman j. 



CHINESE FOREST TREES AND TIMBER SUPPLY By Norman Shaw......... 



TREES, SHRUBS, VINES AND HERBACEOUS PERENNIALS By John Kirkegaard 



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



Per Part 



THE TRAINING OF A FORESTER Glfford Pinchot 



LUMBER AND ITS USES R. S. Kellogg ----~--i;--- 



THE CARE OF TREES IN LAWN, STREET AND PARI B. E. Fernow 



NORTH AMERICAN TREES N. L. Brltton 



KEY TO THE TREES Collins and Preston 



THE FARM WOODLOT E. G. Cheyney and J. P. Wentllng 



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



Record 



PLANE SURVEYING John C. Tracy 



FOREST MENSURATION Henry Solon Gra-es 



FOREST PRODUCTS By Nelson Courtlandt Brown 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY B. E. Fernow 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY Fllibert Roth ; 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY A. S. Fuller 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY Samuel B. Green 



TREES IN WINTER A. S. Blakeslee and C. D. Jaryls 



AMERICAN WOODS Romeyn B. Hough, 14 Volumes, per Volume 



Half Morocco Binding - 



HANDBOOK OF THE TREES OF THE NORTHERN U. S. AND CANADA, EAST OF THE 



ROCKY MOUNTAINS Romeyn B. Hough 



Half Morocco Binding 



GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TREES J. Horace McFarland 



HANDBOOK OF TIMBER PRESERVATION Samuel M. Rowe 



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



TREES, SHRUBS AND VINES OF THE NORTHEASTERN UNITED STATES-H. E. Park- 



hurst 



TREES H. Marshall Ward 



OUR NATIONAL PARKS John Muir 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY John Glfford 



LOGGING Ralph C. Bryant 



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



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



TIE PRINCIPLES OF HANDLING WOODLANDS Henry Solon Graves 



SHADE TREES IN TOWNS AND CITIES William Solotaroff 



THE TREE GUIDE By Julia Ellen Rogers 



MANUAL FOR NORTHERN WOODSMEN Austin Cary 



FARM FORESTRY Alfred Akerman 



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



nagel 



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



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD Samuel J. Record 



STUDIES OF TREES J. J. Levlaon 



TREE PRUNING A. Des Can 



THE PRESERVATION OF STRUCTURAL TIMBER Howard F. Weiss 



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



FUTURE OF FOREST TREES By Dr. Harold Unwln 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN TREES AND SHRUBS F. SchHyler Mathews 



FIELD BOOK OF WILD BIRDS AND THEIR MUSIC By F. Schuyler Mathews 



FIELD BOOK OF AMERICAN WILD FLOWERS By F. Schuyler Mathews 



FARM FORESTRY By John Arden Ferguson 



THE BOOK OF FORESTRY By Frederick F. Moon 



OUR FIELD AND FOREST TREES By Maud Going 



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



THE LAND WE LIVE IN By Overton Price 



WOOD AND FOREST By William Noyes 



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



HANDBOOK OF CLEARING AND ORUBBLNG, METHODS ABD COST By Halbert P. 



Gillette 



FRENCH FORESi'S AND FORESTRY By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS By L. H. Paramel 



WOOD AND OTHER ORGANIC STRUCTURAL MATERIALS Chas. H. Snow 



EXERCISES IN FOREST MENSURATION Wlnkenwerder and Clark 



OUR NATIONAL FORESTS H. D. Boerkcr 



MANUAL OF TREE DISEASES Howard Rankin 



THE BOOK OF THE NATIONAL PARKS By Robert Sterling Yard 



THE STORY OF THE FOREST By J. Gordon Dorrance 



FOREST MANAGEMENT By A. B. Recunagel and John Bentlcy, Jr 



THE FOREST RANGER AND OTHER VERSE-Bv lohn Guthrie 



TIMBER. ITS STRENGTH. SEASONING AND GRADING By H. S. Betts 



THE HISTORIC TREES OF MASSACHUSETTS By J. R. Simmons 



TIMBERS AND THEIR USES By Wrenn Winn 



THE KILN DRYING OF LUMBER By Harry D. Tiemann 



JIM 

 2.M 



2.35 

 2.11 

 2.50 



2.50 

 2.50 



S.N 



1.35 

 2.15 

 2.11 

 7.30 



1.50 

 1.75 



1.75 

 S.N 



4.00 

 3.85 

 1.61 

 1.10 

 1.5* 

 2.00 

 2.00 

 7.50 

 10.00 



1.00 

 10.00 

 1.75 

 5 00 

 1.50 



1.50 

 1.50 

 1.91 

 2.50 

 400 

 2.50 

 3.50 

 2.N 

 3.00 

 1.00 

 2.12 

 SI 



2.10 

 2.50 

 1.75 

 1.75 

 M 

 3.00 

 3.50 

 2.25 

 2.00 

 2.00 

 2 00 

 1.50 

 2.10 

 1.50 

 2.50 

 1.70 

 300 

 3.00 



2.50 

 2.50 

 5.35 

 5.00 

 1.50 

 2.50 

 2.50 

 3.10 

 .05 

 2.60 

 1.60 

 3.10 

 3.65 

 5.15 

 4.65 



* Thla, 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. 



TO SPORTSMEN 



FOR SALE Hunting, fishing and cultivating 

 grounds; containing 200 acres of good and well 

 wooded land, with a beautiful lake thereon 

 abounding with trout. Alo with the exclusive 

 fishing right on lakes Pitre and Rouge, ad- 

 joining above grounds. Being situated in the 

 Valley of Matapedia, P. Q . Canada. 

 Apply to 

 F. X. Fafard, Cremazle St., Quebec. 



J? Y. STUART, forest inspector in 

 charge of the Western Division of 

 Forest Management, U. S. Forest Service, 

 and formerly an assistant district forester 

 in this district, has resigned to accept the 

 position of Deputy State Forester of Penn- 

 sylvania, under Gifford Pinchot. 



BOOK REVIEWS 



"Conservation Reader," by Harold W. Fair 

 banks. Price $1.20, World Book Com 

 pany, Yonkers-on-Hudson, New York. 

 It is necessary that children be traine. 

 in right ways of looking at Nature, other 

 wise the wave of enthusiasm for the con 

 servation of our national resources wil 

 expend much of its force uselessly. Thi 

 present generation not only has the obliga 

 tions to transmit its inheritance of natura 

 wealth as nearly unimpaired as may be ; j 

 must prepare the next generation for ar 

 enlightened stewardship. The need for 

 school text on this subject has been im 

 perative. 



That need is adequately met in Harol 

 W. Fairbank's Conservation Reader. Thi 

 is a real textbook, in which every phase o 

 the subject is treated at such length as it 

 relative value warrants. The author is a 

 authority on conservation, and his book i 

 a unit not a compilation. The subject it 

 self bears an unusual attraction, touching 

 as it does, almost every natural scienc-. 

 except astronomy; and this attraction i: 

 enhanced by the author's simple and inter 

 esting manner of presentation. The bool 

 was written throughout with a view to ust' 

 in the schools and every page appeals t< 

 the pupils' interest. The text is illustratet 

 with a great number of pertinent and mos 

 artistic photographs, including color plate: 

 of the passenger pigeon and the sage hen 

 and it is especially recommended for use b; 

 such organizations as the Campfire Girls 

 Junior Audubon Societies, Agassiz Asso- 

 ciations, Woodcraft Leagues, and Boj 

 Scouts. 



The Adventures of Twinkley Eyes, th 

 Little Black Bear, by Allen Chaffee, il- 

 lustrated with pictures by Peter J. Da Ru 

 Milton Bradley Press, Springfield, Mas- 

 sachusetts, Price $1.25. 

 In these very interesting tales, disguisec 

 in fiction form, the reader gets a tastt 

 of biology, botony, zoology and meteor- 

 ology, woven into the experiences of Twink- 

 ly Eyes, one of the most delightful little 

 characters ever created in animal litera- 

 ture. His adventures with his brothet 

 Woof, and their mother, Black Bear, teach 

 him the vital lessons of life through ex- 

 perience, and their moral emphasis is clear- 

 ly conveyed to the minds of young readers 

 The habits of the bear and other animals 

 introduced in this book are faithfully por- 

 trayed, and the refreshing environment ol 

 green forests and open fields is sensed in 

 every chapter. The book, while primarily 

 written for children, whose taste it was 

 the hope of the author to guide toward a 

 love of nature and the things of out-of- 

 doors, will be read with thorough enjoy- 

 ment by grown-ups as well, and Twinkley 

 Eyes has been made to vividly live in the 

 pictures drawn of him and his friends by 

 Peter J. Da Ru. 



