CLASSIFIED LES OF PUBLICATIONS AND GUIDE TO THEIR 
CONTENTS. 
Application for any of the publications named in the following list, except those marked (*), may be 
made to The Forester, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 
A star (*)’indicates that there is no supply at the disposal of the Forest Service and that the docu- 
ment can be obtained only by purchase. Remittance should be made by postal money order (stamps 
not accepted) directly to the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, 
DAC 
GENERAL FOREST SUBJECTS. 
* Bulletin 24: A Primer of Forestry, in two parts. Part I—The Forest. Price, 35 cents. 
Part I1—Practical Forestry. Price, 30 cents. 
The Primer, written by Gifford Pinchot, Forester, deals with the facts on which 
forestry is based. It is designed to place in the hands of the average reader just 
what he ought to know about trees in the forest, systems of forest management, for- 
est influences, and the history of forestry and its status here and abroad. Numerous 
illustrations explain the text. 
Farmers’ Bulletin 173: A Primer of Forestry (paper). 
A reprint of Bulletin 24, Part I. 
Circular 23 (Third Revision): Suggestions to Prospective Forest Students. 
Circular 35: Forest Preservation and National Prosperity. 
Extracts from addresses delivered before the American Forest Congress at Wash- 
ington, D. C., in January, 1905, including the address of the President of the United 
States and that of the Secretary of Agriculture. 
Circular 96: Arbor Day. 
Suggestions for bringing home to children the simpler truths of forestry, emphasiz- 
ing the use and value of the forest tree in the life of the nation. 
Annual Reports of the Forester for 1892, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, and 1906. 
Extracts from Yearbooks of the Department of Agriculture: 
No. 148: Notes on Some Forest Problems (1898). 
No. 406: Progress of Forestry in 1905 (1905). 
No. 4389: Progress of Forestry in 1906 (1906). 
NATIONAL FORESTS. 
The Use of the National Forests. 
A clear exposition of the value and objects of the National Forests, with practical 
directions for their use by the public. 
The Use Book: Regulations and Instructions for the Use of the National Forests. 
An outline of the history of the National Forest policy, followed by the regulations 
issued by the Secretary of Agriculture on July 1, 1907, governing the administration 
of the Forests, with instructions to Forest officers. A compilation of the laws on 
which the regulations are based is appended. 
Bulletin 54: The Luquillo Forest Reserve, Porto Rico. 
An illustrated description of this tropical forest and its most valuable species of trees. 
[Cir. 36] (27) 
