CURRENT LITERATURE 



481 



on Economics; Mr. H. B. Hudson on Law 

 for Lumberman; Mr. Franklin Sherman on 

 Entomology and Mr. C. S. Brimley on Gen- 

 eral Zoology. The entomological and zoo- 

 logical lectures were going hand in hand 

 with the field work. 



From its Southern spring camps, the Bilt- 

 more Forest School is about to move to its 

 Summer camps at Cadilkc, Mich. En route 

 to Michigan, the School visits the giant 

 paper plant of the Champion Coated Paper 

 Co., with which the Champion Lumber Co. 

 and the Champion Fibre Co. are affiliated) 

 at Hamilton, Ohio. The three steps in the 

 manufacture of paper are thus studied, 

 from the stump of the tree to the con- 

 sumer. Thus it happens that the students 

 become acquainted, in the course of their 

 travels, with the various steps of the con- 

 version of the trees into the necessaries of 

 life. 



In August, the Biltmore Forest School 

 moves for its fall camps at Marshfield, Ore- 

 gon. In October, the School sails for its 

 winter quarters in the German forests. 



Mr. Spring 1 Goes to Cornell. 



The trustees of Cornell University have 

 appointed Mr. Samuel N. Spring, of New 

 Haven, Connecticut, professor of forestry at 

 Cornell University, and he will begin his 

 work at Ithaca, at the opening of the next 

 college year. Mr. Spring will teach the 

 courses in forest planting and the forest 

 nursery, forest protection, forest policy, and 

 a general introductory course. 



Mr. Spring graduated from Yale College 

 with the degree of B. A. in 1898. For the 



next three years he was engaged in a whole- 

 sale dry goods business in Chicago, after 

 which he returned to the Yale Forest School, 

 graduating from that institution in 1903, 

 with the degree of Master of Forestry. The 

 next two years were spent at the University 

 of Maine, where he was professor of fores- 

 try in charge of the department. He spent 

 the summers of 1902, 1903 and 1904 in work 

 in New England for the U. S. Forest 

 Service. 



From June, 1905, until January, 1909. Mr. 

 Spring was constantly in the employ of the 

 U. S. Forest Service, holding successively 

 the positions of forest assistant, assistant 

 forest inspector, chief of the section of co- 

 operation in the Office of Extension, and 

 chief of the Office of Extension. He was 

 engaged in private forestry work from Janu- 

 ary, 1909, until the fall of that year. Since 

 the fall of 1909, he has been State forester 

 of Connecticut, forester to the Connecticut 

 Experiment Station at New Haven and spe- 

 cial lecturer in the Yale Forest School and 

 at the Connecticut Agricultural College all 

 of these positions have been held continu- 

 ously since the fall of 1909. 



Mr. Spring is a director of the American 

 Forestry Association. 



His publications include two articles on 

 "Forest Fires" and "White Pine," in the re- 

 ports of the Maine Forestry Commission for 

 1904-'06; Bulletin 63, U. S. Forest Service, 

 "Natural Replacement of White Pine in New 

 England" ; Circular 41, U. S. Forest Service, 

 "Forest Planting on Coal Lands in Western 

 Pennsylvania"; "Forest Fire Manual," pub- 

 lished by the State of Connecticut; "Report 

 of the State Forester of Connecticut for 

 1910." 



CURRENT LITERATURE 



MONTHLY LIST FOR JUNE, 1912. 



(Books and periodicals indexed in the 

 Library of the United States Forest 



Service.) 

 Forestry as a Whole 



Proceedings and Reports of Associations, 

 Commissions, etc. 



Annuaire des saux et forets pour, 1912, vol. 

 51. 379 p. Paris, L- Laveur, 1912. 



British Columbia Game and forest warden. 

 Report, 7th, 1911. 19 p. Vancouver, 

 B. C, 1912. 



India Baluchistan Forest dept. Progress 

 report of forest administration for 1910- 

 11. 34 p. Calcutta, India, 1911. 



India Madras presidency Forest depart- 

 ment. Annual administration report, 

 1910-1911. 192 p. Madras, 1912. 



India United Provinces Forest dept. An- 

 nual progress report of forest administra- 

 tion in the western and eastern circles 

 for the forest year 1910-1911. 119 p. 

 Allahabad, India, 1911. 



Indiana State board of forestry. Eleventh 

 annual report, 1911. 372 p. il. Indianap- 

 olis, 1912. 



Mexico Fomento, Secretaria de-Bosques, 

 Departamento de Cartilla forestal, no. 

 1-3. pi. Mexico, 1909-11. 



St. Petersburg Lyesnoi institut. Izvyestiya 

 (Contributions), vol. 22. 329 p. pi., tables. 

 St. Petersburg, 1912. 



Switzerland Eidg. departement des innern 

 Inspektion fur forstwesen, jagd und 

 fischerei. Etat dcr schweizerischen 

 forstbeamten, mit wissenschaftlicher bil- 

 dung, Jan. 1912. 21 p. Bern, 1912. 



Switzerland Eidg. departement des innern 

 Inspektion fur forstwesen, jagd und 

 fischerei. Rapport, 1911. 20 p. Bern, 

 1912. 



University of Nebraska Forest club. The 

 Forest club annual, vol. 4, 1912. 160 p. 

 pi. Lincoln, Nebr., 1912. 



