The Philadelphia Weekly Press says this gentleman has 230 acres of forest planting. Part was planted this spring with two or three-year-old plants of White Pine. The land is coarse gravel or pure sand, and forms an arm of land in Narragansett Bay. It was considered totallv unfitted for agricultural uses. The trees are set thickly and it is proposed to thin after a while, and the cost of cutting out paid by the thinnings. White Pine has been found to outgrow the Scotch Pine on this land in time. The Scotch grows faster at first, and hence should be planted with the view of being the kind thinned out. Larch has also been tried. The rows of Larches are four feet apart, and stand "quite thickly in the rows." The' Pines are in every fourth row, and are 16 feet apart in each row, so when Larches and Scotch Pines are all taken out the whole will be a pure White Pine forest with trees sixteen feet apart. The Ailanthus has been but a partial success.