740 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Williams, Asa S. Logging by steam, pi. 

 Ithaca, N. Y., Forestry .quarterly, 1908. 



Wood using industries 



Maxwell, Hu. The wood-using industries of 

 Maryland, with a chapter on Maryland's 

 lumber and timber cut and the timber 

 supply by F. W. Besley. 58 p. Balti- 

 more, Md., Maryland state board of for- 

 estry, 1910. 



Simmons, Roger E. Wood-using industries 

 of North Carolina. 74 p. 6 plates. 

 Raleigh, N. C, E. M. Uzzell & Co., state 

 printers, 1910. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Conservation of natural resources 



Colorado conservation commission. Official 

 proceedings, March 1909 — April 1910. 191 

 p. Denver, Colo., 1910. 



Maryland conservation commission. Report, 

 1908-1909. 204 p. plates. Baltimore, 

 Md., 1909. 



White, J. B. Conservation in relation to 

 lumbering, an address delivered before 

 the Southern conservation congress at 

 Atlanta, Oct. 8, 1910. Conservation, its 

 purposes and its application to the coun- 

 try's natural resources, an address de- 

 livered at the 2d National conservation 

 congress at St. Paul Sept. 6, 1910. 21 

 p. St. Louis, Mo., St. Louis lumberman, 

 1910. 



Botany 



Hitchcock, A. S. and Chase, Agnes. _ The 

 North American species of Panicum. 

 396 p. illus. Wash., D. C, 1910. (Smith- 

 sonial institution — U. S. national mu- 

 seum. Contributions from the U. S. na- 

 tional herbarium, vol. 15.) 



Pammel, Louis Hermann. A manual of poi- 

 sonous plants, chiefly of eastern North 

 America, pt. ' i. 150 p. illus., plates. 

 Cedar Rapids, la.. The Torch press, 1910. 



Standley, Paul C. The type localities of plants 

 first described from New Mexico; a 

 bibliography of New Mexican botafty. 

 104 p. maps. Wash., D. C, 1910. 

 (Smithsonian institution — U. S. national 

 museum. Contributions from the U. S. 

 national herbarium, vol. 13, pt. 6.) 



Periodical Articles 



General 



American homes, Oct., 1910. — Topiary art, by 



A. J. Brown, p. 387-9; To limit our for- 

 est fires, supplement 5. 



Collier's weekly, Sept. 24, 1910.— Idaho's thir- 

 ty days' war against forest fires, by E. 



B. Fussell, p. 16. 



Country life in America, Nov., 1910. — Racing 

 an avalanche, by E. A. Mills, p. 39-42. 



Journal of the Franklin institute, Nov., 191a, 

 — Cellulose, by C. G. Schwabe, p. 371-84. 



Naturwissenschaftliche wochenschrift, Oct, 

 30, 1910. — Waldbrande in Nordamerika, 

 by E. Deckert, p. 689-94. 



North American review, Oct., iqio. — The 

 public and the conservation pohcy, by J. 

 R. McKee, p. 493-503.. 



Philippine agricultural review, Sept., 1910. — 

 Arbor day in the Philippines, by J. S. 

 Potter, p. 536-41- 



Philippine journal of science, series C, Sept., 

 1910. — The bamboos of the Philippine 

 Islands, by J. S. Gamble, p. 267-81. 



Plant world, Oct., 1910. — The rate of estab- 

 lishment of the giant cactus, by F. 

 Shreve, p. 235-40; Mistletoe in the south- 

 west, by J. C. Plumer, p. 24.0-6. 



Scientific American, Sept. 3, 1910. — How to 

 double the life of standing poles, by. J. 

 C. Morin, p. 179. 



Scientific American, Sept. 17, 1910. — How the 

 government fights forest fires, by C. A. 

 Sidman, p. 213, 225. 



World's work, Nov., 1910. — The fight for 

 conservation; the rousing ^congress at St. 

 Paul and the emphasis it gave to an ag- 

 gressive national policy, by A. W. Page, 

 p. 1 3607-1 1. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Oct. 15, 1910. — Con- 

 servation from the viewpoint of 

 a former president of the United 

 States, by T. Roosevelt, p. 53 ; 

 Conservation in relation to lumbering, by 

 J. B. White, p. 534; Work of the Forest 

 service in the south, by J. G. Peters, p. 



54-5- 



American lumberman, Oct. 29, 1910. — Skid- 

 ding, p. 41. 



American lumberman, Nov. S, 1910. — Identity 

 and characteristics of cabinet woods of 

 the future, by C. D. Mell, p. 40-1. 



American lumberman, Nov. 12, 1910. — Prop- 

 erties, preparation and increasing utili- 

 zation of lodgepole pine, p. 39: Charac- 

 ter, extent and manufacture of the white 

 cedar of New Jersey, p. 40-1 ; Oregon's 

 logged off lands, p. 42 ; Protecting the 

 forests of the northern states against 

 losses by fires ; timber owners of the 

 lake states effect an association for 

 — asures of conservation, p. 44-5. 



Barrel and Box, Oct., 1910. — White gum 

 wood ; tupelo and its value as a box- 

 making material, p. 47-8. 



Hardwood record, Oct. 25, 1910. — True and 

 spurious mahogany, by C. D. Mell, p. 31- 

 2; Woodworking machinery in Russia, 

 by John H. Snodgrass. o. 33-'?4. 



Journal of electricity, power and gas, Oct. 

 29, 1910. — Creosote treatment of poles, 

 bv G. R. Ogier, p. 383-5. 



Lumber review, Nov. i, 1910. — Lumber and 

 tie industry of Hokkaido, by T. Sam- 

 mons, p. 17. 



