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AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



AMERICAN FORESTRY will publish each month, for the benefit ol those who wish books on forestry, 

 a list of titles, authors and prices of such books. These may be ordered through the American Forestry 

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



FOREST V ALU ATION— Filibert Roth 



FOREST REGULATION— Filibert Roth 



PRACTICAL TREE REPAIR— By Elbert Peets 



THE LUMBER INDUSTRY— By R. S. Kellogg 



LUMBER MANUFACTURING ACCOUNTS— By Arthur F. Jones 



FOREST VALUATION— By H. H. Chapman 



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 to a Volume— 



Per Part 



THE TRAINING OF A FORESTER— Gifford Pinchot 



LUMBER AND ITS USES— R. S. Kellogg 



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



NORTH AMERICAN TREES— N. L. Britton 



KEY TO THE TREES— Collins and Preston 



THE FARM WOODLOT— E. G. Cheyney aad J. P. Wentling 



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



Record 



PLANE SURVEYING— John C. Tracy 



FOREST MENSURATION— Henry Solon Graves 



THE ECONOMICS OF FORESTRY— B. E. Fernow 



FIRST BOOK OF FORESTRY— Filibert Roth 



PRACTICAL FORESTRY— A. S. Fuller 



PRINCIPLES OF AMERICAN FORESTRY— Samuel B. Green 



TREES IN WINTER— A. S. Blakeslee and C. D. Jarvls 



MANUAL OF THE TREES OF NORTH AMERICA (exclusive of Mexico)— Chas. Sprague 



Sargent 



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



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



ROCKY MOUNTAINS— Romeyn B. Hough 



GETTING ACQUAINTED WITH THE TREES— J. Horace McFarland 



PRINCIPAL SPECIES OF WOOD; THEIR CHARACTERISTIC PROPERTIES— Chas. H. Snow 



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 Mulr 



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 



THE 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 organization)— 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. Levison 



TREE PRUNING— A. Des Cars 



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. 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 GRUBBING, METHODS AND COST— By Halbert P. 



Gillette 



FRENCH FORESTS AND FORESTRY— By Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr 



MANUAL OF POISONOUS PLANTS— By L. H. Pammel 



WOOD AND OTHER ORGANIC STRUCTURAL MATERIALS— Chas. H. Snow 



EXERCISES IN FOREST MENSURATION— Winkenwerder and Clark 



OUR NATIONAL FORESTS— H. D. Boerker 



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 



$1.50 

 2.M 



2.00 



1.10 

 XII 



2.00 

 2.50 

 1.50 



5.00 

 1.35 

 1.15 

 2.17 

 7.30 

 1.50 

 1.75 



1.75 

 3.N 



4.00 

 1.61 

 1.11 

 1.5* 

 1.5* 

 2.00 



CM 



7.50 



6.00 

 1.75 

 3.50 



5.00 

 1.5* 



1.5* 

 1.50 

 1.91 

 3.5* 



2.50 

 3.5* 

 1.50 

 3.00 

 1.00 

 2.12 

 .57 



2.10 

 2.20 

 1.75 

 1.75 

 .65 

 3.00 

 3.50 

 2.25 

 2.00 

 1.30 

 2.10 

 1.50 

 2.50 

 1.70 

 3.00 

 3.00 



2.50 

 2.50 

 5.35 

 5.00 

 1.50 

 2.50 

 2.50 

 3.10 

 .65 



* This, 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. 



LINCOLN MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY 



I INCOLN Memorial University, situated 

 in the heart of the Cumberland 

 Mountains, is offering for 1919 a one 

 year course in its School of Forestry 

 which combines practical field work on the 

 University's forest tract of 2,000 acres with 

 theoretical and practical studies. It does 

 not attempt to cover all the technical 

 courses offered at many other schools of 

 Forestry but does hope to combine enough 



practical and technical training in its short 

 intensive course, to develop a well qualified 

 forest workman. This is a co-educational 

 undenominational institution with a total 

 enrollment last year of 493 students. Its 

 policy is to provide at a low cost a practical 

 education for ambitious young people, par- 

 ticularly for the white youth of its own 

 section of the country. 



TABLE OF NATIVE MAINE WOODS 



TVTINETEEN different kinds of native 

 Maine woods are used to make a 

 handsome and unique table for the Direc- 

 tors' and General Conference Room in the 

 offices of the Eastern Forest Products 

 Association at Bangor. The table is eight 

 feet long and three feet wide with five 

 legs. The top is made of six boards six 

 inches wide, of the following woods ; white 

 ash, birdseye rock maple, black cherry, 

 curly yellow birch, beech and quartered 

 white oak. 



The legs are of elm, hickory, chestnut, 

 butternut and mahoganized yellow birch. 

 The ledge boards are of sycamore, white 

 birch, brown ash and cherry birch. Under 

 the margin of the top is a plate to give 

 a thick top effect which is made of white 

 pine, hemlock, white cedar and red spruce. 

 With the exception of the mahoganized 

 leg, each piece is in natural finish and the 

 effect is beautiful. 



The table was the idea of H. G. Wood, 

 Executive Secretary of the Association, 

 and was made by Morse & Company, at 

 Bangor, a member of the Association. The 

 boards of birdseye maple and curly birch 

 are exceptionally choice and are said by 

 many to be the handsomest they have 

 ever seen. 



PLANT MEMORIAL TREES 



FALL IS THE TIME TO PLANT NAR- 

 CISSUS AND TULIP BULBS 



'T'ULIP bulbs should be planted in Octo- 

 ber, preferably about the middle of the 

 month, and narcissus bulbs may be plant- 

 ed up to the middle of October, but prefer- 

 ably about the first of the month, accord- 

 ing to specialists of the United States 

 Department of Agriculture. 



The bulbs should be planted in loose, 

 rich soil, devoid of rank, or unrotted, or 

 poorly incorporated manures. It should 

 be dug to a depth of from 12 to 15 inches. 

 The tulip bulbs should be set 5 inches apart 

 and 4 inches deep and the narcissus bulbs 

 about 10 inches apart and 5 inches deep. 



If they are to be grown in pots or window 

 boxes, light rich soil should be used. 

 Place 1 to 2 inches of cinders or broken 

 pots in the bottom of the pots or boxes 

 to insure good drainage. After planting, 

 place the pots or boxes out of doors and 

 cover them with about 4 inches of ashes 

 or sand ; or they may be placed in a dark 

 cool room or cellar for a few weeks, until 

 the bulbs have formed a quantity of roots. 

 They may then be brought into the light 

 and heat for flowering. Keep the soil well 

 moistened from time of planting, but avoid 

 overmoistening, for if kept too wet the 

 bulbs will decay. 



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