CURRENT LITERATURE 



573 



lumber company, Quebec, by Otto 

 Nieuwejaar, p. 134-6, 140-2, 146. 



Engineering and contracting, July 11, 1917. 

 Creosoted wood stave pipe line for 

 irrigation project, p. 40-1. 



Engineering news-record, July 5, 1917. — 

 Lumber man discusses army camp con- 

 struction, by R. S. Kellogg, p. 27-8. 



Engineering news-record, July 12, 1917. — 

 Reforesting water-supply land on Cats- 

 kill system, by Fred F. Moore, p. 59-60. 



Engineering news-record, July 26, 1917. — 

 Open-tank treatment of timber urged 

 for small railroads, liy Claude Gilbert 

 Benham, p. 152. 



Hardwood record, July 25, 1917. — Trees 

 which nature neglected, p. 19-20 ; Cord- 

 wood crop of Odin's wood, by J. B 

 Woods, p. 23. 



Hardwood record, August 10, 1917. — Hard- 

 woods for the war, by H. C. Hallam, 

 p. 17-22; Wood in place of steel, p. 23. 



Lumber trade journal, August 1, 1917. — 

 Forestry and cattle raising on the cut- 

 over pine lands of the southern states, 

 by J. G. Lee, p. 30-1. 



Lumber world review, July 25, 1917. — The 

 British Columbia timber primer, p. 

 21-44; National efficiency and the use 

 of wood, by R. B. Goodman, p. 45-6. 



Lumber world review, August 10, 1917. — 

 Wood and steel car construction, by 

 H. S. Sackett, p. 23-5. 



Manufacturers' record, July 12, 1917. — The 

 problem of the wooden ship, by F. 

 Huntington Clark, p. 58-60. 



Manufacturers' record, July 26, 1917. — 

 Reforestation as a solution of south's 

 cut-over land problem, by Stanley C. 

 Arthur, p. 66 b-c. 



National cooper's journal, August, 1917. — 

 The wooden barrel, past and present, 

 by L. A. Fox, p. 17. 



Paper, July 18, 1917. — Photomicrograpliic 

 study of paper, by Edwin A. Hunger, 

 p. 14-16. 



Paper, July 25, 1917. — Newer details of the 

 sulphate process, by Carl Moe, p. 11-15; 

 The American barking drum, p. 20-1. 



Paper, August 8, 1917. — Sulphate pulp mill 

 problems, by Hugh K. Moore, p. 11-15. 



Paper mill, July 7, 1917. — Beating sulphite 

 pulp, by Otto Kress and G. C. Mc- 

 Naughton, p. 12, 14, 40, 42. 



Paper mill, July 28, 1917.— The treatment 

 of pulp wood; advantages of whole 

 barking, by Gustav Lundberg, p. 2, 45. 



Railway review, July 21, 1917. — Use of red- 

 wood by railroads, by Edwin E. Myers, 

 p. 77-8. 



Southern lumberman, .August 4, 1917. — .Air- 

 craft production program will require 

 much lumber, p. 22, 27. 



Timber trades journal, June 30, 1917. — Vir- 

 ginian red cedar wood, by W. S., p. 1138. 



United States daily consular report, July 

 16, 1917. — Chinese manufacture of 

 wood-oil varnish, by R. C. Mackay, 

 p. 180. 



United States daily consular report, July 

 18, 1917. — Rubber qualities in a Chinese 



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I Are you on the Mailing List for Catalog of | 



Hicks Nurseries? I 



Pine and Oak Help Each Other 



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It will confirm your de- 

 cisions on fitting your 

 selection of trees to your 

 soil and climate. It offers 

 trees for dry and acid 

 soils and moist soils in 

 the same region. Many 

 nurseries on alkaline soils 

 do not specialize on oaks 

 and pines. 



Trees 20 years old can 

 be selected now. They 

 are guaranteed to grow 

 satisfactorily or replaced 

 free. 



Isaac Hicks & Son 



Westbury, Nassau Co., N. Y. 



Half Tones 

 fc! DuLuo -Tones 



Line Plates 



COMBINATION Line .^ 



ND Halftones '! 

 V Color Process Multi- Colors . v: 



-Established 1869- 



Gatchel & Manning 



SrXTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS 

 Opposite Oloe iMOSPENOExct Hall 



PHILADELPHIA 



bark, by George F, Bickford, p. 214. 

 United States daily consular report, July 

 24, 1917. — Foreign purchases of wood- 

 working machinery, by W. Henry Rob- 

 ertson, p. 298-9. 



HILL'S 



Seedlings and Transplants 



ALSO TREE SEEDS 

 FOR REFORESTING 



REST for over half a century. All lead- 

 ing hardy sorts, grown in immense 

 quantities. Prices lowest. Quality 

 highest. Forest Planter's Guide, also 

 price lists are free. Write today and 

 mention this magazine. 



THE D. HILL NURSERY CO. 



Evergreen Specialists 



Largest Growers in America 



BOX 501 DUNDEE, ILL. 



FORESTRY SEEDS 



I OFFER AT SPECIAL PRICES 



Pinus strobus Picea Englemanni 



Pseudo-tsuga Doug- Picea Pungens 



lassi Thuya Occidentalis 



Pinus Ponderosa Pinus taeda 



and many other varieties, all of this 

 season's crop and of good quality. 

 Samples upon request. Send for my 

 catalogue containing full list of varieties. 



THOMAS J. LANE 



TREE SEEDSMAN 



Dresher Pennsylvania 



Orchids we », 



are specialists in Or- 

 chids; we collect, import, 

 grow, sell and export this class of plants 

 exclusively. 



Our illustrated and descriptive catalogue 

 of Orchids n)a.v be had on application. Also 

 special list of freshly imported unestab- 

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LAGER & HURRELL 



Orchid Growers and Importers 



SUMMIT. N. J. 



