Canadian Forestry Journal, July, 1915. 



141 



LIST OF LATEST BOOKS ON 

 FORESTRY. 



Supplied Through The Journal's 

 Book Department. 



Chapman's 



FOREST VALUATION. 



By Herman Haupt Chapman, !M. F. 

 Harriman, Professor of Forest Man- 

 agement, Yale University Forest 

 School. 

 This is the first book in English that 

 treats this subject in a sufficiently clear 

 manner. Includes stumpage, damages, 

 values and costs of forest production. Has 

 been treated in a style that can be readily 

 grasped by the average reader. 284 pages, 

 6x9, cloth, $2.00 net. 



Record's 



MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF WOOD. 



By Samuel J. Eecord, M.A.M.F., As- 

 sistant Professor of Forest Products, 

 Yale University. 

 This book is divided into three parts as 

 follows: 



Part 1. Fundamentals, considerations 

 and definitions, strength and toughness, etc. 

 Part 2. Factors affecting the mechani- 

 cal properties of wood. 



Part 3. Timber testing. The appendix 

 contains sample working plans and tables 

 of strength of various woods. 16.5 pages, 

 6x9, .52 figures, 22 tables; cloth $1.75 net. 



Moon & Brown's 

 ELEMENTS OF FORESTRY. 



By Frederick Franklin Moon, B.A. 

 M.F., Professor of Forest Engineering, 

 New York State College of Forestry, 

 and Nelson Courtlandt Brown, B.A. 

 M.F., Professor of Forest Utilization, 

 New York State College of Forestry. 

 Gives in an elementary manner the gen- 

 eral subject of forestry. Treats all the es- 

 sential details of the subject and will 

 prove to be a good general book of refer- 

 ence. 392 pages, 6x9, illustrated with 

 half-tone plates, reproduced from original 

 photographs and those obtained from the 

 Forest service. Cloth $2.00 net. 



Bryant ' s 

 LOGGING. 



By Ralph Clement Bryant, F.E.M.A., 

 Manufacturers' Association, Professor 

 of Lumbering, Yale University. .590 

 pages, 6x9, 133 figures; cloth, $3.50 

 net. 

 Write for a copy of descriptive cata- 

 logue supplied post paid to your address 

 iipon request. 



BOOK DEPARTMENT, 

 Canadian Forestry Journal, 

 Journal Building, Ottawa, Ontario. 



FORESTERS and Ra^NGERS 



Everything you need can be supplied by us 



Compasses 

 Tapes 

 Scribes 

 Transits 

 &c. 



Aneroids 

 Log Rules 

 Lumber 



Gauges 

 Levels, &c. 



The Ontario Hughes Owens Go. 



529 Sussex St. Ottawa, Ont. 



Ml WMi mm SCHOOL 



NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT, U.S.A- 



YALE University Forest School is> a 

 graduate department of Yale Uni- 

 versity. It is the oldest existing forest 

 school in the United States and exceeds 

 any other in the number of its alumni. 

 A general two-year course leading to the 

 degree of Master of Forestry is offered 

 to graduates of universities, colleges and 

 scientific institutions of high standing, 

 and, under exceptional conditions, to 

 men who have had three years of colleg- 

 iate training including certain prescrib- 

 ed subjects. Men who are not candi- 

 dates for the degree may enter the 

 school as special students, for work in 

 any of the subjects offered in the reg- 

 ular course, by submitting evidence 

 that will warrant their taking the work 

 to their own advantage and that of the 

 School. Those who have completed a 

 general course in forestry are admitted 

 for research and advanced work in 

 Dendrology, Silviculture, Forest Man- 

 agement, Forest Technology and Lum- 

 bering. The regular two-year course 

 begins the first week in July at the 

 School camp, Milford, Pennsylvania. 



For further inforTnation addrist 



JAHES W. TOUnEV, Director 



NEW HAVEN . - . - CONNBCTICUT 



