32 



STATUS OF FORESTRY 11^ THE UNITED STATES, 



Farmers' Bulletin 134. Tree Planting on Rural School Grounds. 

 Farmers' Bulletin 228. Forest Planting and Farm Management. 

 Extracts from Yearbooks of the Department of Agriculture: 



212. Forest Extension in the Middle West (1900). 



376. How to Grow Young Trees for Forest Planting (1905). 



Forest Planting Leaflets (Circulars 54-77, 82-95, and 106). 



54. 



How to Cultivate and 



64. 



Black Locust. (Re- 



83. 



Russian Mulberry 





Care for Forest Plan- 





vised Edition.) 





(Revised Edition.) 





tations on the Semi- 



65. 



Norway Spruce, 



84. 



White Ash. 





Arid Plains. 



66. 



White Elm. 



85. 



Slippery Elm. 



55. 



How to Pack and Ship 



67. 



White Pine. 



86. 



Boxelder. 





Young Forest Trees. 



68. 



Scotch Pine. 



87. 



White Willow. 



56. 



Bur Oak. 



69. 



Fence-Post Trees. 



88. 



Black Walnut. 



57. 



Jack Pine. 



70. 



European Larch. 



89. 



Tamarack. 



58. 



Pved Oak. 



71. 



Chestnut. 



90. 



Osage Orange. 



59. 



Eucalypts. (Revised 



72. 



Western Yellow Pme. 



91. 



Coffeetree. 





Edition.) 



73. 



Red Cedar. 



92. 



Green Ash. 



60. 



Red Pine. 



74. 



Honey Locust. 



93. 



Yellow Poplar. 



61. 



How to Transplant For- 



75. 



Hackberry. 



94. 



Black Cherry. 





est Trees. 



76. 



Silver Maple. 



95. 



Sugar Maple. 



62. 



Shagbark Hickory. 



77. 



Cottonwood. 



106. 



White Oak. 



63. 



Basswood. 



82. 



Hardy Catalpa. 







FOREST STUDIES. 



*Bulletin 47. Forest Resources of Texas. (Price 15 cents.) 

 *Bulletin 48. The Forests of the Hawaiian Islands. (Price 10 cents.) 

 *Bulletin 49. The Timber of the Edwards Plateau of Texas. (Price 10 cents.) 

 *Bulletin 55. Forest Conditions of Northern New Hampshire. (Price 25 cents.) 

 *Bulletin 63. The Natural Replacement of White Pine on Old Fields in New England. 



(Price 10 cents.) 

 *Bulletin 66. Forest Belts of Western Kansas and Nebraska. Price 10 cents.) 



COMMERCIAL TREE STUDIES. 



^Bulletin 13. The Timber Pines of the Southern United States. (Price 35 cents.) 



*Bulletin 31. Notes on the Red Cedar. (Price 10 cents.) 



*Bulletin 33. The Western Hemlock. (Price 20 cents.) 



*Bulletin 35. Eucalypts Cultivated in the United States. (Price $1.) 



*Bulletin 37. The Hardy Catalpa. (Price 25 cents.) 



*Bulletin 38. The Redwood. (Price 20 cents.) 



^Bulletin 53. Chestnut in Southern Maryland. (Price 10 cents.) 



^Bulletin 58. The Red Gum (Revised Edition). (Price 5 cents.) 



*Bulletin 64. Loblolly Pine in Eastern Texas. (Price 5 cents.) 



*Bulletin 69. Sugar Pine and Western Yellow Pine in California. (Price 10 cents.) 



Circular 102. Production of Red Cedar for Pencil Wood. 



Circular 105. White Oak in the Southern Appalachians. 



Circular 135. Chestnut Oak in the Southern Appalachians. 



Circular 150. Douglas Fir. 



Circular 163. Paper Birch in the Northeast. 



Circular 164. The Properties and Uses of Southern Pines. 



Circular 168. The Commercial Importance of the White Mountain Forests. 



i 



[Cir. 167] 



I 



