CURRENT LITERATURE 



1309 



CURRENT LITERATURE 



MONTHLY LIST FOR JULY, 1919 



(Books and periodicals indexed in the library of the United States Forest Service.) 



FORESTRY AS A WHOLE 



Black, Robson. The child's book of the 

 forests. 15 p. il. Ottawa, Canadian 

 forestry assn., 1919. 



Proceedings and reports of associations, forest 

 officers, etc. 



Indiana — State board of forestry and State 

 park committee. Report for the year 

 1918. 21 p. Indianapolis, 1919. 



Michigan agricultural college— Forestry 

 club. The M. A. C. forester, vol. 4. 

 rj p. il- East Lansing, Mich., 1919. 



Oregon— State board of forestry. Eighth 

 annual report of the State forester for 

 the year ending Dec. 31, 1918. 22 p. 

 Salem, Ore., icacj- 



South Africa— Forest dept. Annual report, 

 1917-18. 43 p. Cape Town, 1918. 



Sweden — Statens skogsforsoksanstalt. 

 Meddelanden, haft. 16, nr. 1-3. 66 p. 

 maps. Stockholm, Sweden, 1919. 



Uganda— Forestry dept. Annual report, 

 1917-18. 11 p. Entebbe, 1918. 



Western Australia — Woods and forests 

 dept. Report for the half-year ended 

 30th June, 1918. 17 P- Perth, 1919. 

 FOREST EDUCATION 



Lincoln memorial university — School of 

 forestry. The story of the need for 

 forest rangers and skilled lumbermen, 

 and of the practical course in forestry 

 at Lincoln memorial university. 4 p. 

 Harrogate, Tenn., 1919. 



Xew York state college of forestry, Syra- 

 cuse university. Announcement of 

 courses. 42 p. il. Syracuse, N. Y., 

 1918. (Circular no. 25.) 



FOREST DESCRIPTION 



Whitford, H. N. & Craig, R. D. Forests 

 of British Columbia. 409 p. pi., maps. 

 Ottawa, Commission on conservation, 



1918. 



FOREST BOTANY 

 Deam, C. C. Trees of Indiana. 299 p. il. 

 Indianapolis, Ind., 1918. (Indiana- 

 State board of forestry. Bulletin no. 



3-) 



SILVICULTURE 



Planting 



Stephen, J. W. Making best use of idle 

 lands in New York. 53 p. il. Syra- 

 cuse, N. Y., 1918. (N. Y. state college 

 of forestry, Syracuse university. Cir- 

 cular no. 19.) 



FOREST PROTECTION 



Insects 



Snyder, T. E. "White ants" as pests in the 

 United States and methods of prevent- 

 ing their damage. 16 p. il. Wash., 

 D. C, 1919. (U. S.— Dept. of agricul- 

 ture. Farmers' bulletin 1037.) 



Fire 



Canadian forestry association. About camp 

 fires. 8 p. il. Ottawa, 1919. 



Southern St. Lawrence forest protective as- 

 sociation. Second annual report. 27 p. 

 Quebec, 1918. 



FOREST POLICY 



Great Britain — Ministry of reconstruction. 

 Reconstruction problems. 11: Com- 

 mercial forestry. 16 p. London, 1919. 

 FOREST ADMINISTRATION 



Roulleau de la Roussiere, R. Le cheptel 

 forestier et le fonds des forets. 23 p. 

 Paris, Association nationale d'expan- 

 sion economique, 191 8. 



National Forests 



U. S. — Dept. of agriculture. Mountain 

 playgrounds of the Pike national for- 

 est. 17 p. il., map. Wash., D. C, 

 1919. (Department circular 41.) 

 FOREST ENGINEERING 



Barns, F. R. With the forest regiments in 

 France; 10th and 20th engineers (for- 

 est). 11 p. il. Chicago, American 

 lumberman, 1919. 



FOREST UTILIZATION 



Lumber industry 



Graves, H. S., Lumber exports and our 

 forests. 15 p. Wash., D. C, 1919. 

 (U. S. — Dept. of agriculture — Office of 

 the secretary. Circular 140.) 



Wood-using industries 



Canada — Dominion bureau of statistics. 

 Census of industry, 1917. Pt. 4, sec. 4: 

 Pulp and paper, 1917. 63 p. Ottawa, 

 1919. 



Johnsen, B. and Hovey, R. W., comp. 

 Utilization of waste sulphite liquor; a 

 review of the literature. 195 p. Ot- 

 tawa, 1919. (Canada — Dept. of the in- 

 terior — Forestry branch. Bulletin 66.) 



Lightfoot, G. Paper pulp ; possibilities of 

 its manufacture in Australia. 39 p. 

 Melbourne, 1919. (Australia — Advis- 

 ory council of science and industry. 

 Bulletin no. II.) 



Technical association of the pulp and paper 

 industry. Papers and addresses pre- 

 sented at the annual meeting, 1918. 

 64 p. N. Y., 1918. 



AUXILIARY SUBJECTS 



Mountaineering 



Associated mountaineering clubs of North 

 America. Bulletin. 30 p. N. Y., 1919. 

 PERIODICAL ARTICLES 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Aerial age, June 23, 1919. — -The general 

 uses and properties of plywood, by B. 

 C. Boulton, p. 724-7. 



Bulletin of the Pan American union, June, 

 1919 — Forests of Brazil, p. 695. 



Conservationist, Jan., 1919. — Fighting fires 

 on Long Island, by W. G. Howard, p. 

 3-6. 



Johns Hopkins alumni magazine, June, 

 1919. — In praise of forestry, by C. H. 

 Shinn, p. 241-4. 



Journal of political economy, Apr., 1919 — 

 Reconstruction and natural resources, 

 by R. Zon, p. 280-99. 



Munsey's magazine, July, 1919. — Replanting 

 the forests, by R. H. Moulton, p. 351-3. 



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- j 

 necticut, U. S. A. 



Forest Engineering 

 Summer School 



University of Georgia 



ATHENS, GEORGIA 



Eight-weeks Summer Camp on 

 large lumbering and milling oper- 

 ation in North Georgia. Field 

 training in Surveying, Timber 

 Estimating, Logging Engineer- 

 ing, Lumber Grading, Milling. 

 Special vocational courses 

 for rehabilitated soldiers. 

 Exceptional opportunity to pre- 

 pare for healthful, pleasant, lucra- 

 tive employment in the open. 



(Special announcement sent upon 

 request.) 



SARGENT'S HANDBOOK OF 

 AMERICAN PRIVATE SCHOOLS 



A Guide Book for Parents 



A Standard Annual of Reference. Describes 

 critically and discriminately the Private 

 Schools of all classifications. 

 Comparative Tables give the relative cost, 

 size, age, special features, etc. 

 Introductory Chapters review interesting de- 

 velopments of the year in education — Modern 

 Schools, War Changes in the Schools, Educa- 

 tional Reconstruction, What the Schools Are 

 Doing, Recent Educational Literature, etc. 

 Our Educational Service Bureau will be glad 

 to advise and write you intimately about any 

 school or class of schools. 



Fifth edition, 1919, revised and enlarged, 

 786 pages, $3.00. Circulars and sample pages. 



PORTER E. SARGENT, 14 Beacon Street, Boston, Mass. 



