28 



he may expect to saw from trees of each diameier. Thus he may not only avoid 

 cutting at a loss, but may also foretell the quality increment which combines with 

 the quantity increment to make up his future gain. 



Circular 25: Forestry and the Lumber Supply. 



Three addresses on the relation of the problem of lumber supply to applied for- 

 estry. The first address was delivered by the President of the United States before 

 The Society of American Foresters; the second by Mr. R. L. McCormick, president 

 of the Mississippi Valley Lumbermen's Association; and the third by the Forester. 



Extract No. 274, from the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture (1902): The 

 Influence of Forestry upon the Lumber Industry. 



Extract No. 359, from the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture (1904): De- 

 termination of Timber Values. 



Extract No. 398, from the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture (1905) : Waste 

 in Logging Southern Yellow Pine. 



FOREST FIRES. 



Circular 26: Forest Fires in the Adirondacks in 1903. 



A report on the great forest fires in the Adirondack region in 1903, with an estimate 

 of the damage done and suggestions for controlling fires in the future. 



Extract No. 337, from the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture (1904): The 

 Attitude of Lumbermen Toward Forest Fires. 



GRAZING. 



^■Bulletin 15: Forest Giowth and Sheep Grazing in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. 

 Price, 5 cents. 

 A careful study of the grazing question as it was found to exist in 1897. 



Bulletin 62: Grazing on the Public Lands. (Published also in the second partial 

 report of the Public Lands Commission, Senate Document No. 189, 58th Cong., 

 3d sess. ) 

 A history of grazing on the public lands of the United estates, with a comparison 



of the methods of grazing now and formerly in force, and recommendations as to the 



establishment of regulations governing grazing. 



FOREST LAW. 



* Bulletin 57: Federal and State Forest Laws. Price, 15 cents. 



A compilation of all the State and National Jaws relative to forests and forestry, 

 including 1904. 



FORESTS AND STREAJVI FLOW. 



Bulletin 44: The Diminished Flow of the Rock River in Wisconsin and Illinois, and 



its Relation to the Surrounding Forests. 



A discussion of the effect of forests upon stream flow with special reference to the 

 region drained by the Rock River. The discussion is supplemented with practical 

 advice as to the management of woodlands for increasing the water-storing capacity 

 of the soil as well as the profits of the individual owner. 



Bulletin 49: The Timber of the Edwards Plateau of Texas. 



Circular 27: Reclamation of Flood-Damaged Lands in the Kansas River Valley by 

 Forest Planting. 



