100 



don. This is an abridgment of a work in six volumes, by 

 the same author. It gives descriptions of species and is 

 fully illustrated. 



" Michaux's North American S//lva,'' three vols, and 

 supplement to the same, by Nuttall, gives descriptions and 

 finely colored plates of the forest trees. 



" Trees and Shrubs of Massachusetts,''^ by George B. 

 Emerson. First edition printed as a state report, 1846, 

 one vol., octavo. Last edition, with colored illustrations, 

 two vol., Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1875. 



" Practical Forestrij,'' by Andrew S. Fuller, octavo, 299 

 pages, New York, Orange Judd & Co., 1884, illustrated. 



'' The Elements of Forestry'' by Franklin B. Hough, 

 octavo, 381 pages, Chicago, Robert Clark & Co., illustrated- 

 " The Forester," by James Brown, octavo, 835 pages^ 

 London, illustrated. 



" Book of Evergreens," by Josiali Hoopes, small oc- 

 tavo, 435 pages, New York, Orange Judd & Co. 



" A Treatise on Pruning- Forest and Ornatiiental 

 Trees," by A. Des Cars, introduction by Prof. Charles S. 

 Sargent, small octavo, 67 pages, illustrated. Published by 

 A. Williams <fe Co., for Mass. Society for the Promotion of 

 Agriculture. This little volume should be in the hands of 

 everyone who has occasion to prune trees. 



'' The London Journal of Forestry," which is taken at 

 some of our libraries, contains much valuable information 

 for American tree planters. The Mass. State Agricultural 

 Reports contain papers of importance by Sargent, Clarke, 

 and others, and portions of nearly all of the horticultural 

 publications are now devoted to forestry. 



For information in relation to strength of timber, the 

 reader may consult " Timber and Timber Trees," by 

 Thomas Haslett, London, Macmillan & Co., 1875, octavo, 

 362 pages, illustrated. 



The forthcoming Forestry report, a publication of the 



