32 BULLETIN 863, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE 



Forestry Bulletin 96, Second Growth Hardwoods in Connecticut. Price 15 cents. 



Forestry Bulletin 104, Principles of Drying Lumber. Price 5 cents. 



Forestry Bulletin 117, Forest Fires. Price 10 cents. 



Forestry Circular 65, Norway Spruce (Planting Leaflet) . Price 5 cents. 



Forestry Circular 77, Cottonwood (Planting Leaflet). Price 5 cents. 



Forestry Circular 92, Green Ash (Planting Leaflet). Price 5 cents. 



Forestry Circular 208, Extracting and Cleaning Forest Tree Seed. Price 5 cents. 



Department Bulletin 12, Uses of Commercial Woods of the United States, Beech, 



Birches, Maples. Price 10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 13, White Pine under Forest Management. Price 15 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 55, The Balsam Fir. Price 10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 153, Forest Planting in the Eastern United States. Price 



10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 212, Observations on the Pathology of the Jack Pine. Price 



5 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 247, A Disease of Pines Caused by Cronartium Pyriforme. 



Price 5 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 272, The Southern Cypress. Price 20 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 285, The Northern Hardwood Forest. Price 20 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 299, The Ashes: Their Characteristics and Management. 



Price 25 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 481, Status and Value of Farm Woodlots in the Eastern 



United States. Price 15 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 544, The Red Spruce: Its Growth and Management. 



Price 20 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 605, Lumber Used in the Manufacture of Wooden Products. 



Price 5 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 638, Forestry and Community Development. Price 10 



cents. 

 Department Bulletin 683, Utilization of Elm. Price 10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 718, Small Sawmills. Price 10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 753, Use of Wood for Fuel. Price 10 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 787, Protection from the Locust Borer. Price 5 cents. 

 Department Bulletin 1061, Longleaf Pine. Price 25 cents. 

 Department Circular 64, How Lumber is Graded. Price 5 cents. 

 Yearbook Separate 779, Farm Woodlands and the War. Price 5 cents. 



STATE FORESTRY DEPARTMENTS 



Thirty-three States have departments of forestry, all of which publish more 

 or less material on varied phases of the subject. Applications should be ad- 

 dressed to the State foresters at the following places: 



Alabama, State Commission of Forestry, Montgomery. 



California, State Board of Forestry, Sacramento. 



Colorado, State Board of Forestry, Fort Collins. 



Connecticut, State Forester (under Agricultural Experiment Station), New 

 Haven. 



Idaho, Fire Warden System (under State Board of Land Commissioners), 

 Boise. 



Illinois, State Forester, Urbana. 



Indiana, State Board of Forestry, Indianapolis. 



Iowa, State Forestry Commissioner, Des Moines. 



Kansas, State Agricultural College, Manhattan. 



Kentucky, Commissioner of Agriculture, Frankfort. • 



Louisiana, Department of Conservation, New Orleans. 



Maine, Forest Commissioner, Augusta. 



Maryland, State Board of Forestry, Baltimore. 



Massachusetts, State Forester, Boston. 



Michigan, Public Domain Commission, Roscommon. 



Minnesota, State Forestry Board, St. Paul. 



Montana, State Board of Land Commissioners, Helena. 



New Jersey, Department of Conservation and Development, Trenton. 



New York, Division of Lands and Forests, Albany. 



North Carolina, Geological and Economic Survey, Chapel Hill. 



Ohio, Department of Forestry, Wooster. 



Oregon, State Board of Forestry, Salem. 



Pennsylvania, Department of Forestry, Harrisburg. 



Rhode Island, Commissioner of Forestry, Chepachet. 



