1246 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Yale School of 

 Forestry 



Established in 1900 



A Graduate Department of Yale 

 University 



The two years technical course pre- 

 pares for the general practice of for- 

 estry and leads to the degree of 



Master of Forestry. 

 Special opportunities in all branches 

 of forestry for 



Advanced and Research Work. 



For students planning to engage 

 in forestry or lumbering in the 

 Tropics, particularly tropical Amer- 

 ica, a course is offered in 



Tropical Forestry. 

 Lumbermen and others desiring in- 

 struction in special subjects may be 

 enrolled as 



Special Students. 



A field course of eight weeks in the 

 summer is available for those not 

 prepared for, or who do not wish 

 to take the technical courses. 



For further information and cata 

 logue, address : The Director of the 

 School of Forestry, New Haven, Con- 

 necticut, U. S. A. 



Forestry at 



University of 



Michigan 



Ann Arbor, Michigan 



A FOUR - YEAR, undergraduate 

 course that prepares for the 

 practice of Forestry in all its 

 branches and leads to the degree of 



BACHELOR OF SCIENCE 

 IN FORESTRY 



Opportunity is offered for grad- 

 uate work leading to the degree of 

 Master of Science in Forestry. 



The course is designed to give a 

 broad, well-balanced training in the 

 fundamental sciences as well as in 

 technical Forestry, and has, conse- 

 quently, proven useful to men en- 

 gaged in a variety of occupations. 

 This school of Forestry was estab- 

 lished in 1903 and has a large body 

 of alumni engaged in Forestry work. 

 For announcement giving 

 Complete information and list 

 of alumni, address 



FILIBERT ROTH 



lems, p. 1 ; More airplane patrols for 

 national forests, p. 8. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, May 24, 1919. — New 

 piers built of redwood, by C. W. Geiger, 

 p. 50-1 ; First Port Orford cedar price 

 list issued, p. 63. 



American lumberman, May 31, 1919. — Prac- 

 tical accounting system for retail lum- 

 bermen, p. 1, 44-6 ; Canadian forestry- 

 corps in France, by R. Hill, p. 42-3 ; 

 Makes progress in study of woods used, 

 p. 50; Nature both destructive and con- 

 structive, p. 53; "Boat ark," by W. C. 

 Barnes, p. 55 ; Lumbering in the Philip- 

 pines, p. 52-3, 60. 



American lumberman, June 7, 1919. — Sell- 

 ing homes complete instead of raw 

 material, p. 1, 50c. ; Southern pine 

 beetle timber menace, p. 43. 



Barrel and box, May, 1919. — A scientific 

 packing box, by C. P. Winslow, p. 49. 



Canada lumberman, June 1, 1919. — Review 

 of conditions in England, by A. C. 

 Manbert, p. 33-4 ; What vast spruce 

 forests mean to Quebec, by E. Beck, p. 

 41. 



Engineering news-record, May 29, 1919. — 

 "Fire finder" for lookout stations of 

 the Forest service, p. 1055. 



Hardwood record, May 25, 1919. — Syca- 

 more veneers and lumber, p. 24, 26 ; 

 How the ancients cut veneers, p. 26, 30 ; 

 Live oak as source of veneers, p. 30. 



Hardwood record, June 10, 1919.— Kiln- 

 drying specifications for lumber, by H. 

 D. Tiemann, p. 21-6. 



Hub, May, 1919. — The advantages of wood, 

 by A. S. Van Haltern, p. 11. 



Lumber, May 26, 1919. — How to handle ties, 

 by W. E. Hallenbeck, p. 14; Various 

 uses of oak, p. 16. 



Lumber, June 2, 1919. — Wood flooring holds 

 popularity in England, by J. Y. Dun- 

 lop, p. 12; American sawmill builders 

 in France, by J. Woods, p. 13-15; 

 American lumber manufacturers can 

 profit from Scandinavian methods, by 

 A. H. Oxholm, p. 15-16. 



Lumber, June 9, 1919 — Speed, the basis of 

 modern forest fire fighting, by A. L. 

 Dahl, p. 13-14. 



Lumber world review, June 10, 1919. — A 

 talk about a national forest policy and 

 what came of it, by E. A. Sterling, p. 

 24-6. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, May 30, 

 1919. — State foresters meet, p. 23. 



'New York lumber trade journal, June 1, 

 1919. — Lumber facts presented to In- 

 dustrial board by National lumber 

 manufacturers association, p. 19-20. 



Packages, June, 1919. — Increasing the use 

 of wood barrels as containers, by C. C. 

 Berry, p. 42. 



Paper, May 14, 1919.— The chemistry of 

 wood pulp production, by A. Klein, p. 



15-19- 

 Paper, May 28, 1919.— Possibilities of 

 bagasse for papermaking, p. 23-4. 



Paper, June 4, 1919. — Paper research litera- 

 ture: a list of contributions by mem- 

 bers of the U. S. Bureau of chemistry, 

 1904-1918, by E. O. Reed, p. 15-16; The 

 use and abuse of pulp stones, by W. J. 

 Campbell, p. 17-18; Pulp for the whole 

 world in India, by W. Raitt, p. 19, 36. 



Paper, June II, 1919. — The constitution of 

 cellulose, by W. H. Gesell and J. E. 

 Minor, p. 15-17; War uses of pulp and 

 paper, by A. G. Durgin, p. 28-9. 



Paper trade journal, June 5, 1919. — Finnish 

 pulp for the American market, by J. de 

 Julin, p. 34, 36. 



Pioneer western lumberman, May 15, 1919. 

 — Opportunities for free education and 

 special training in forestry, forest en- 

 gineering and the lumber business, p. 

 15-16; The general reconstruction situa- 

 tion in Europe, by J. R. Walker, p. 

 17-23- 



Pioneer western lumberman, June 1, 1919. 

 — Killing a billion dollar industry, by 

 J. A. Kitts, p. 9, 11; Development of 

 heavy timber construction, by C. E. 

 Paul, p. 14-15. 



Pulp and paper magazine, May 8, 1919. — 

 Patronage and the national forest 

 menace, by C. D. Howe, p. 448-9. 



Railway age, May 30, 1919— Recent de- 

 velopments in railroad tie situation, p. 

 1305-8. 



Southern lumberman, May 24, 1919. — 

 Woods used in airplanes, by F. H. Rus- 

 sell, p. 25. 



Southern lumberman, May 31, 1919. — For- 

 esters of 7th district hold three-day 

 conference in Asheville, p. 30; Princi- 

 ples of a program for private forestry, 

 by H. S. Graves, p. 36. 



Southern lumberman, June 7, 1919. — Value 

 and durability of wooden ships clearly 

 demonstrated, p. 22, 24; Argentine Re- 

 public offers splendid market for lum- 

 ber and wood products, by R. S. Bar- 

 rett, p. 26. 



Timber trades journal, May 10, 1919. — The 

 Gabriel raft at Ipswick, p. 734-7 ; Dan- 

 ger of word "inexhaustible;" truth 

 about Canadian timber, by B. E. Fer- 

 now, p. 737. 



Timber trades journal, May 24, 1919. — Dis- 

 abled soldiers and afforestation, p. 847; 

 Tools for forestry work, p. 876. 



U. S. commerce report, May 20, 1919. — 

 Exportation of wood from Brazil, by 

 A. I. Hasskarl, p. 899; Development of 

 trade in Trinidad fustic wood, by H. D. 

 Baker, p. 924-5. 



U. S. commerce report, May 22, 1919. — The 

 Belgian match industry, by C. R. Na- 

 smith, p. 958; Australia objects to boxes 

 showing insect borings, by W. J. Mc- 

 Cafferty, p. 958. 



U. S. commerce report, May 26, 1919. — 

 Great forest fires in Victoria, by A. W. 

 Ferrin, p. 1017. 



U. S. commerce report, May 28, 1919. — 

 The pulp and paper industry in Cana- 

 da, by J. G. Foster, p. 1059-61 ; Siamese 



