754 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



ests and growing new ones, from the 

 standpoint of the public and that of the 

 lumberman, with an outline of technical 

 methods. 130 p. Portland, Ore., West- 

 ern forestry and conservation associa- 

 tion, 1911. 



Forest mensuration 



Scribner, J. M. Scribner's enlarged lum- 

 ber and log book, 1911. 190 p. it. 

 Rochester, N. Y., S. E. Fisher, 1911. 



Forest Economics 



Statistics 



United States — Department of agriculture — 

 Bureau of statistics. Exports of farm 

 and forest products, 1908-1910, by coun- 

 tries to which consigned. 96 p. Wash., 

 D. C, 1911. (Bulletin 91.) 



United States — Department of agriculture — 

 Bureau of statistics. Imports of farm 

 and forest products, 190S-1910, by coun- 

 tries from which consigned. 80 p. 

 Wash., D. C, 1911. (Bulletin 90.) 



Wiirttemberg — Korstdirektion. Forststatis- 

 tische mitteilungen aus Wiirttemberg 

 fiir das jahr 1909. 98 p. Stuttgart, 1911. 



Forest Administration 



India — Ajmere-Merwara — Forest depart- 

 ment. Annual report on forest adminis- 

 tration for 1909-10. 32 p. Mount Abu, 

 1910. 



India — Bengal — Forest department. Annual 

 progress report on forest administration 

 in the lower provinces of Bengal for the 

 year 1909-1910. 53 p. Calcutta, India, 

 1910. 



New South Wales — Department of agricul- 

 ture — Forestry dept. Report for the 

 year ended 30th June, 1910. 12 p. pi. 

 Sydney, Gov't, printer, 1910. 



United States — Department of agriculture — 

 Forest service. October field program, 

 1911. 27 p. Wash., D. C, 1911. 



National and state forests 



United States — Department of agriculture — 

 Forest service. National forests ; loca- 

 tion, date, and area, Sept. 30, 1911. 4 p. 

 Wash., D. C, 1911. 



Forest Utilization 



Lumber industry 



United States — Department of agriculture. — 

 Forest service. Record of wholesale 

 prices of lumber based on actual sales 

 made f. o. b. each market, for July, Aug- 

 ust, and September, 1911. 22 p. Wash., 

 D. C, 1911. 



Wood preservation 



Bateman, E. A visual method for deter- 

 mining the penetration of inorganic salts 

 in treated wood. 5 p. il. Wash., D. C, 



1911. (U. S.— Dept. of agriculture- 

 Forest service. Circular 190.) 

 Teesdale, C. H. Volatilization of various 

 fractions of creosote after their injection 

 into wood. 5 p. Wash., D. C, 1911. 

 (U. S. — Dept. of agriculture — Forest 

 service. Circular 188.) 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Conservation of natural resources 



Price, Overton Westfeldt. The land we live 

 in; the boys' book of conservation * * * 

 with a foreword by Gifford Pinchot. 242 

 p. il. Boston, Small, Maynard & Co., 

 1911. 



Periodical Articles 



General 



American city, Sept. 1911. — Give the trees a 

 square deal, by L. G. Vair, p. 143-9. 



Bulletin agricole du Congo Beige, Sept., 1911. 

 — Les palmiers utiles, by L. Pynaert, p. 

 535-52. 



Cornell rural school leaflet, Sept., 1911. — 

 The white pine, by Walter Mulford, p. 

 97-103. 



Farm and ranch, Nov. 4, 1910. — The useful 

 mesquite, by J. L. Cowan, p. 1-2. 



Garden magazine, Nov., 1911. — Do your trees 

 need doctoring? by J. J. Levison, p. 

 165-6. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Sept. 23, 1911. — The 

 weeping varieties of Ulmus montana, by 

 A. D. Richardson, p. 221. 



Nature study review, Sept., 1911. — Place of 

 forestry in general education, by Herbert 

 A. Smith, p. 141-5 ; Forestry from two 

 viewpoints, by J. J. Crumley, p. 146-8 ; 

 Forestry in nature study, by E. R. Jack- 

 son, p. 149-54 ; A list of books and 

 periodicals on trees, forestry and con- 

 servation, p. 154-7. 



Outlook, Sept. 23, 1911.— Land of silent 

 men, by C. H. Shinn, p. 179-86. 



Overland monthly, Oct., 1911. — National for- 

 ests as they appear to the people who 

 live in them, by G. La Follette, p. 284-6. 



Philippine journal of science, C. Botany, 

 Sept., 1911.— The palms of the island of 

 Polillo, bv O. Beccari, p. 229-30; Philip- 

 pine dipterocarpaceae, by F. W. Fox- 

 worthy, p. 231-87. 



Science, Sept. 29, 1911.— New chestnut bark 

 disease, by I. C. Williams, p. 397-400. 



Scientific American, Sept. 9, 1911. — Preserv- 

 ing poles, p. 229. 



Scientific American, Sept. 23, 1911. — Utiliza- 

 tion of dead pine wood in the south ; the 

 recovery of turpentine from logs and 

 stumps, p. 197. 



Scientific American, Oct. 14, 1911. — An op- 

 portunity for the farmer in the United 

 States ; basket willow culture, p. 357. 



Scientific American, Oct. 28. 1911. — A new 

 system of gathering turpentine, p. 383. 



Scientific American, supplement, Sept. 30, 



