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FOREST MANAGEMENT. 
* Bulletin 26: Practical Forestry in the Adirondacks. Price, 15 cents. 
An account of the general conditions which govern forest management in the Adi- 
rondack forest region, and a statement of the work done and the results accomplished 
there up to July, 1899, in cooperation with the Forest Service (then the Division of 
Forestry). The two working plans discussed were, with one exception, the first 
examples of the application of scientific forestry to large holdings i in the United States. 
Bulletin 30: A Forest Working Plan for Township 40, Hamilton County, N. Y. 
The working plan given in this bulletin was made at the request of the forest, fish, 
and game commission of the State of New York, and marks the first instance of coop- 
eration between the Forest Service (then the Division of Forestry) and the government 
of a State. This contains also the first detailed study of a problem in logging by a 
practical lumberman to be published by the Service. Included in the volume is 
‘A discussion of conservative lumbering and the water supply,’’ by Frederick H. 
Newell, now the head of the United States Reclamation Service. 
* Bulletin 32: A Working Plan for Forest Lands near Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Price, 15 
cents. 
Prepared in cooperation with a lumber company owning about 100,000 acres of land, 
about 85 per cent of the total stand on which is loblolly and shortleaf pine: This plan 
was adopted by the company. 
* Bulletin 39: Conienvetive Lumbering at Sewanee, Tennessee. Price, 15 cents. 
Prepared for the management of the forest owned by The University of the South, 
comprising about 7,255 acres of hardwoods. The application of this plan has proved 
highly profitable to the university. 
* Bulletin 43: A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Hampton and Beaufort Counties, 
South Carolina. Price, 15 cents. 
Prepared in cooperation with the Okeetee Gun Club for a tract of about 60,000 acres 
on which the stand is principally longleaf, loblolly, and Cuban pine and cypress. 
* Bulletin 56: A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Berkeley County, South Carolina. 
Price, 10 cents. 
Prepared in cooperation with a lumber company controlling about 44,000 acres of 
loblolly pine, longleaf pine, and cypress forest lands. This plan is now being executed 
by a forester in the employ of the company with extremely satisfactory results. 
Bulletin 60: Report on an Examination of a Forest Tract in Western North Carolina. 
* Bulletin 68: A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Central Alabama. Price, 10 cents. 
This plan, which was adopted by the company for which it was prepared and is now 
in operation, is an example of what forestry promises the owner of longleaf pine, and 
what it involves. It includes studies of the forest and of lumbering methods, a discus- 
sion of the proper diameter limit in cutting, and recommendations for such a treatment 
of the present crop as will lead to the production of future crops. 
Circular 21 (Fifth Revision): Practical Assistance to Farmers, Lumbermen, and 
Other Owners of Forest Lands. 
Circular 113: Use of Dead Timber on the National Forests. 
Extracts from Yearbooks of the Department of Agriculture: 
No. 187: Practice of Forestry by Private Owners (1899). 
No. 249: A Working Plan for Southern Hardwoods and Its Results (1901). 
[Cir. 36] 
