Historic, Archive Document

Do not assume content reflects current scientific knowledge, policies, or practices.

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S. Department of Agriculture

FOREST SERVICE

GIFFORD PINCHOT, Forester

CLASSIFIED LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

Available for Distribution July 15, 1908

Application for any of the publications named in the following list, ex- cept those marked (*), may be made to The Forester, United States Depart- ment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C.

A star (*) indicates that there is no supply at the disposal of the Forest Service, and that the document can be obtained only by purchase. Remit- tance should be made by postal money order (stamps not accepted) or New York exchange directly to the Superintendent of Documents, Gov- ernment Printing Office, W ashington, D. C. Coin is sent at the sender’s risk.

GENERAL

* Bulletin 24. A Primer of Forestry, in two parts. Part I— The Forest.

(Price 35 cents.) Part II— Practical Forestry. (Price 30 cents.)

Farmers’ Bulletin 173. A Primer of Forestry (paper). A reprint of Bul- letin 24, Part I.

Farmers’ Bulletin 327. The Conservation of Natural Resources.

Circular 21 (Fifth Revision) . Practical Assistance to Farmers, Lumbermen, and Others in Handling Forest Lands.

Circular 22 (Fifth Revision). Practical Assistance to Tree Planters. Circular 23 (Third Revision). Suggestions to Prospective Forest Students. Circular 35. Forest Preservation and National Prosperity.

Circular 36 (Fourth Edition). The Forest Service: What It Is and How It Deals with Forest Problems.

Circular 96. Arbor Day.

Circular 97. The Timber Supply of the United States.

Circular 116. The Waning Hardwood Supply.

Circular 130. Forestry in the Public Schools.

Circular 140. What Forestry Has Done.

Annual Reports of the Forester for 1892, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1905, and 1907. Extracts from Yearbooks of the Department of Agriculture:

406. Progress of Forestry in 1905 (1905).

434. The National Forests and the Lumber Supply (1906).

439. Progress of Forestry in 1906 U906).

FORESTS AND STREAM FLOW

* Bulletin 44. The Diminished Flow of the Rock River in Wisconsin and Illinois, and Its Relation to the Surrounding Forests. (Price 10 cents.)

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

Extract 329, from the Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture (1903): The Relation of Forests to Stream Flow.

Senate Document 91. Report of the Secretary of Agriculture on the South- ern Appalachian and White Mountain Watersheds.

Circular 143. The Relation of the Southern Appalachian Mountains to Inland Water Navigation.

Circular 144. The Relation of the Southern Appalachian Mountains to the Development of Water Power.

FOREST LAW

* Bulletin 57. Federal and State Forest Laws. (Price 15 cents.)

FOREST FIRES

Circular 79. Control of Forest Fires at McCloud, California.

FORESTRY AND LUMBERING

'♦Bulletin 34. A History of the Lumber Industry in the State of New York. (Price 20 cents.)

Bulletin 36. The Woodsman’s Handbook.

* Bulletin 61. Terms Used in Forestry and Logging. (Price 5 cents.) ♦Bulletin ‘71. Rules and Specifications for the Grading of Lumber. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 73. Grades and Amount of Lumber Sawed from Yellow Pop- lar, Yellow Birch, Sugar Maple, and Beech. (Price 10 cents.)

Circular 25. Forestry and the Lumber Supply.

Circular 127. Forest Tables— Western Yellow Pine.

Extract from Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture :

398. Waste in Logging Southern Yellow Pine (1905).

FOREST MANAGEMENT

♦Bulletin 26. Practical Forestry in the Adirondacks. (Price 15 cents.) ♦Bulletin 32. A Working Plan for Forest Lands near Pine Bluff, Arkansas. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 39. Conservative Lumbering at Sewanee, Tennessee. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 43. A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Hampton and Beaufort Counties, South Carolina. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 56. A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Berkeley County, South Carolina. (Price 10 cents.)

♦Bulletin 60. Report on an Examination of a Forest Tract in Western North Carolina. (Price 5 cents.)

♦Bulletin 68. A Working Plan for Forest Lands in Central Alabama. (Price 10 cents.)

Circular 131. Practical Forestry on a Spruce Tract in Maine.

Circular 118. Management of Second Growth in the Southern Appalachians. Circular 149. Condition of Cut-Over Longleaf Pine Lands in Mississippi. Extract from Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture :

249. A Working Plan for Southern Hardwoods and Its Results (1901).

CARE OF THE WOODLOT Bulletin 42. I’he Woodlot.

Circular 138. Suggestions to Woodlot Owners in the Ohio Valley Region.

FOREST STATISTICS

♦Bulletin 77. Forest Products of the United States: 1906. (Price 15 cents.) Circular 49. Timber Used in the Mines of the United States in 1905. Circular 78. Woods Used for Packing Boxes in New England.

Table. Production of Lumber, Lath, and Shingles, by States and Species, 1906, 1905, and 1904.

Circular 119. Consumption of Tanbark and Tanning Extract in 1906. Consumption of Pulpwood in 1906.

Wood Used for Distillation in 1906.

The Lumber Cut of the United States, 1906.

Production of Slack Cooperage Stock in 1906.

Consumption of Cross-Ties in 1906.

Production of Tight Cooperage Stock in 1906.

The Drain Upon the Forests.

Production of Veneer in 1906.

Consumption of Poles in 1906.

Circular 120. Circular 121. Circular 122. Circular 123. Circular 124. Circular 125. Circular 129. Circular 133. Circular 137.

NATIONAL FORESTS

The Use Book: Regulations and Instructions for the Use of the National Forests.

The Use of the National Forests.

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GRAZING

* 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.) (Price 15 cents.)

* Bulletin 72. Wolves in Relation to Stock, Game, and the National Forest Reserves. (Price 10 cents.)

FOREST PLANTING

* Bulletin 45. The Planting of White Pine in New England. (Price 20 cents.)

* Bulletin 52. Forest Planting in Western Kansas. (Price 10 cents.)

* Bulletin 65. Advice for Forest Planters in Oklahoma and Adjacent Regions. (Price 5 cents.)

Circular 37. Forest Planting in the Sand-Hill Region of Nebraska.

Circular 41. Forest Planting on Coal Lands in Western Pennsylvania. Circular 45. Forest Extension in Eastern Nebraska.

Circular 81. Forest Planting in Illinois.

Circular 96. Arbor Day.

Circular 99. Suggestions for Forest Planting on the Semi-Arid Plains. Circular 100. Suggestions for Forest Planting in the Northeastern and Lake States.

Circular 109. Forest Planting in the North Platte and South Platte Valleys. Circular 145. Forest Planting on the Northern Prairies.

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).

270. Practicability of Forest Planting in the United States (1902).

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 Care for For- est Plantations on the Semi-Arid Plains.

55. How to Pack and

Ship Young For- est Trees.

56. Bur Oak.

57. Jack Pine.

58. Red Oak.

59. Eucalypts. (Re-

vised Edition.)

60. Red Pine. *

61. How to Transplant

Forest Trees.

62. Shagbark Hickory.

63. Basswood.

64. Black Locust. (Re-

vised Edition.)

65. Norway Spruce.

66. White Elm.

67. White Pine.

68. Scotch Pine.

69. Fence-Post Trees.

70. European Larch.

71. Chestnut.

72. Western Yellow

Pine.

73. Red Cedar.

74. Honey Locust.

75. Hackberry.

76. Silver Maple.

77. Cottonwood.

82. Hardy Catalpa.

83. RussianMulberry

(Revised Edi tion.)

84. White Ash.

85. Slippery Elm.

86. Boxelder.

87. White Willow.

88. Black Walnut.

89. Tamarack.

90. Osage Orange.

91. Coffeetree.

92. Green Ash.

93. Yellow Poplar.

94. Black Cherry.

95. Sugar Maple.

106. White Oak.

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 Beits of Western Kansas and Nebraska. (Price 10 cents.)

COMMERCIAL TREE STUDIES

* Bulletin 13. 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.)

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COMMERCIAL TREE STUDIES— Continued

♦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.

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

Circular 102. The Production of Red Cedar for Pencil Wood.

Circular 105. White Oak in the Southern Appalachians.

FOREST, BOTANICAL, AND DENDROLOGICAL STUDIES

Bulletin 17. Check List of the Forest Trees of the United States. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 28. A Short Account of the Big Trees of California. (Price 15 cents.)

Bulletin 40. A New Method of Turpentine Orcharding.

♦Bulletin 46. The Basket Willow. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 59. The Maple Sugar Industry. (Price 5 cents.)

Circular 34. Practical Results of the Cup and Gutter System of Turpen- tining.

Circular 148. Practical Results in Basket Willow Cultivation.

Farmers’ Bulletin 252. Maple Sugar and Sirup.

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES, SEASONING, AND PRESERVATIVE

TREATMENT OF TIMBER

Bulletin 6. Timber Physics, Part I: Preliminary Report. ('Price 10 cents.) ♦Bulletin 8. Timber Physics, Part II: Progress Report. (Price 15 cents.) ♦Bulletin 10. Timber: An Elementary Discussion of the Characteristics

and Properties of Wood. (Price 10 cents.)

Bulletin 41. Seasoning of Timber.

♦Bulletin 50. Cross-Tie Forms and Rail Fastenings, with Special Reference to Treated Timbers. (Price 15 cents.)

♦Bulletin 70. Effect of Moisture on the Strength and Stiffness of Wood. (Price 15 cents.)

Circular 12. Southern Pine: Mechanical and Physical Properties.

Circular 15. Summary of Mechanical Tests on Thirty-two Species of American Woods.

Circular 39. Experiments on the Strength of Treated Timber.

Circular 40. The Utilization of Tupelo,

Circular 46. Holding Force of Railroad Spikes in Wooden Ties.

Circular 48. Kiln-Drying Hardwood Lumber.

Circular 80. Fractional Distillation of Coal-Tar Creosote.

Circular 98. Quantity and Character of Creosote in Well-Preserved Timbers.

Circular 101. The Open-Tank Method for the Treatment of Timber.

Circular 103. Seasoning of Telephone and Telegraph Poles.

Circular 104. Brush and Tank Pole Treatments.

Circular 108. Strength of Wood as Influenced by Moisture.

Circular 111. Prolonging the Life of Mine Timbers.

Circular 112. The Analysis and Grading of Creosotes.

Circular 114. Wood Distillation.

Circular 115. Second Progress Report on the Strength of Structural Timber. Circular 117. The Preservative Treatment of Fence Posts.

Circular 128. Preservation of Piling against Marine Wood Borers.

Circular 132. The Seasoning and Preservative Treatment of Hemlock and Tamarack Cross-Ties.

Circular 134. The Estimation of Moisture in Creosoted Wood.

Circular 136. Seasoning and Preservative Treatment of Arborvitse Poles. Circular 139. A Primer of Wood Preservation.

Circular 141. Wood Paving in the United States.

Circular 142. Tests of Vehicle and Implement Woods.

Circular 146. Experiments with Railway Cross-Ties.

Circular 147. Progress in Chestnut Pole Preservation.

Circular 151. The Preservative Treatment of Loblolly Pine Cross-Arms. Extract from Yearbook of the Department of Agriculture:

395. Prolonging the Life of Telephone Poles (1905).

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