1562 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



BOOKS ON FORESTRY 



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

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

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



FOREST VALUATION— 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— Glfford 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. Britten 



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 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. Jarvis 



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 



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 



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 Unwin 



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 Hand 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 FORES.'S 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 



FOREST MANAGEMENT— By A. B. Recknagel and John Bentley, Jr 



THE FOREST RANGER AND OTHER VERSE— By John Guthrie 



TIMBER, ITS STRENGTH, SEASONING AND GRADING— By H. S. Belts 



31.5* 



2 00 

 200 

 l.io 

 2.10 

 2.5* 

 2.50 

 1.50 



S.N 



1.35 

 1.15 

 2.17 

 7.30 

 1.50 

 1.75 



1.75 



3 00 

 4.00 

 1.61 

 1.10 

 1.50 

 2.00 

 2.00 



6.00 

 7.50 



600 

 1.75 

 5.00 

 1.50 



1.51 

 1.50 



1.91 

 4.00 

 2.5* 

 3.50 

 2.00 

 3.00 

 1.00 

 2.12 

 .57 



2.10 

 2.50 

 1.75 

 1.75 

 .65 

 I.N 

 3.50 

 2.25 

 200 

 1.50 

 2.1* 

 1.5* 

 2.5* 

 1.7* 

 2.N 

 3.0* 



2.50 

 2.50 

 5.35 

 5.00 

 1.5* 

 2.5* 

 2.5* 

 3.10 

 .65 

 2.6* 

 1.60 

 3.1* 



* 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. 



FORESTRY PRIZE ESSAY OFFER 



A PRIZE essay on forestry is being of- 

 fered by the Indiana Division of For- 

 estry, the subject being: Private versus 

 State Forests. 



The contest is open to the pupils of both 

 public and parochial schools. For the 

 best essay from the seventh and eighth 

 grades, respectively, a prize of $5.00 will 

 be given. For the best essay from each 

 of the high school classes a prize of $7.50 



will be given. The offer is made to all 

 schools doing work equivalent to the grade 

 or high schools. The essay must not ex- 

 ceed 2,000 words. It must be mailed not 

 later than May 15, 1920, to the State For- 

 ester at Indianapolis, Indiana, Room 7, 

 State House. Contestants should write the 

 State Forester for particulars and rules 

 governing the contest. 



BOOK REVIEWS 



THRIFT AND CONSERVATION, by 

 J. F. Chamberlain. J. 13. Lippincott, 

 Philadelphia. Price, $1.40. 



Very aptly is the President quoted in 

 this little book, just from the Lippincott 

 presses — "To practice thrift in peace times 

 is a virtue and brings great benefit to the 

 individual at all times." During the last 

 few years, and especially since the begin- 

 ning of the war, the term "thrift" has been 

 much more in the public mind and on the 

 public tongue than heretofore. Men and 

 women are talking thrift and economy ; 

 children are writing essays on thrift and 

 are earning and saving as never before. 

 There are lectures and published plans and 

 outlines telling how to earn and invest and 

 save, and the authors have set forth in this 

 book the needs for this teaching of thrift, 

 together with many practical applications 

 of the thrift principles to the life of the 

 people as made possible through such teach- 

 ing. The causes leading up to the spend 

 thrift practices of our people are set forth 

 and the necessity for rational habits in 

 proper saving and economy are made plain. 

 And the distinction between true and false 

 economy is carefully pointed out all 

 through the book, i. e., thrift does not con- 

 sist in hoarding or in miserly practices. 

 One does not save in order to have simply 

 but in order to have that he may use 

 wisely. He saves against the time of 

 emergency, in his own life and those de- 

 pendent upon him, and that he may do his 

 part in community or state through the 

 channnels of public or private service. So 

 changed is the attitude of the public mind 

 that where formerly a man of thrift and 

 saving tendencies was looked upon with 

 something of contempt and pity, now the 

 man who is not reasonably thrifty or eco- 

 nomical is the object of more or less ad- 

 verse criticism. It has at last become dig- 

 nified to conserve instead of waste — to 

 practice thrift rather than spend foolishly 

 and we predict that this book by the Cham- . 

 berlains will point the way for many who 

 wish sincerely and intelligently to establish 

 the habits of thrift. 



The 1919 Forest Club Annual, of the 

 College of Forestry and Lumbering, at the 

 University of Washington, Seattle, which 

 is just out, is full of interest and value. 

 Its compilation reflects great credit and 

 the organization, and editors of the 

 Annual, are to be congratulated on the 

 publication. A few copies are available 

 to interested foresters and lumbermen, who 

 may procure a copy by writing to the 

 Secretary of the Forest Club, University of 

 Washington, Seattle, Washington. 





