CURRENT LITERATURE 



741 



Lumber trade journal, Nov. I, 1916.— County 

 fairs show cutover land possibilities, p. 

 1.S-16. 

 Mississippi valley lumberman, Oct 21, 1910. 

 — Taxation of timber land, by E. T. Al- 

 len, p. 39-40. 

 Mississippi valley lumberman, Oct. 28, 1910. 

 — The most effective measures for re- 

 ducing timber fire hazard, p. 26-7; The 

 fire hazard in standing timber, p. 30. 

 Municipal engineer, Oct., 1910. — Wooden 

 block pavement tests in Minneapolis, 

 Minn., by D. M. Avey, p. 265-70. 

 Pacific lumber trade journal, Oct., 1910. — 

 Commercial possibilities of western 

 hemlock bark, p. 30-1. 

 Paper trade journal, Sept. 29, 1910. — Suc- 

 cessful cotton hull fibres, p. 36; An es- 

 say on paper fibres, by C. R. Dodge, p. 

 44-6. 

 Paper trade journal, Oct. 6. 1910.— Forest 



products laboratory, p. 38, 40, 44. 

 Paper trade journal, Oct. 13, 1910.— Forest 

 blaze sweeps northern Minnesota, p. 8-9. 

 Paper trade journal, Nov. 3, 1910.— Wood 

 pulp situation in the province of Que- 

 bec, p. 8-9. 

 Pioneer western lumberman, Oct. 15, 1910.— 

 Logging situation in British Columbia, 

 by J. S. Emerson, p. 11, 13; Conserva- 

 tion questions, by E. G. Griggs, p. 15; 

 Merits of Pacific Coast woods for doOr 

 and finishing purposes, by T. E. Ripley, 

 p. 21, 23. 

 Pioneer western lumberman, Nov. i, 1910. — 

 Timber conservation from a western 

 point of view, by G. H. Emerson, n. 19, 

 21, 23. 

 Railway and engineering review, Oct. IS, 

 1910. — The tendency in tie preservation, 

 p. 966-7. 

 St. Louis lumberman, Oct. 15, 1910. — Our 

 latest forest conflagration and fire pre- 

 vention, p. 52-3; An experiment in wood 

 block paving, p. 53. 

 Southern industrial and lumber review, Oct., 

 1910. — The timbers of western Arkansas 

 and eastern Oklahoma, by F. M. Alex- 

 ander, p. 35 ; New government grading 

 rules for yellow pine, p. 52; Texas tur- 

 pentine, p. 52; Prevention of forest fires 

 in Saxony, by C. B. Hurst, p. 59; Log 

 loader as railroad track builder, p. 64. 

 Southern lumber journal, Oct. IS, 1910. — 

 Forest and soil conservation, by W. W. 

 Finley, p. 41-2. 

 Southern lumberman, Oct. 8, 1910.— Turpen- 

 tine men witness experiment, p. 27. 

 Southern lumberman, Oct. IS, 1910.— South- 

 ern conservation congress; meeting at 

 Atlanta, p. 31-2. 

 Timber trade journal, Oct. 22, 1910.— Af- 

 forestation in Scotland, by J. S. Max- 

 well, p. 613. 

 Timberman, Oct., 1910. — Scientific taxation 

 of timber, by F. G. Miller, p. 19; 

 Chances for timber investment in the 

 national forests, by C. DuBois, p. 50-2. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 19, 

 1910. — Crosstie industry in United States, 

 p. 247; Prevention of forest fires, by D. 

 L Murphy, p. 252. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 

 26, 1910. — Supply of pulp wood and 

 wood pulp; Canada, etc., by G. WiD- 

 brigh and others, p. 337. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 4, 

 1910. — Rubbe*- culture in southern Asia, 

 by J. T. DuBois and others, p. 460-2. 



Wood-worker, Oct., 1910. — Tree-felling by 

 machinery, p. 36-7; The walnut burl, by 

 J. V. Hamilton, p. 47-8. 



Forest journals 



American forestry, Nov., 1910. — Fundamen- 

 tals of the fire problem, by H. S. Graves, 

 p. 629-30; How the fires were fought, 

 by F. A. Silcox, p. 631-9; What protec- 

 tive cooperation did, by E. T. Allen, p. 

 641-3; Forest fires in Washington and 

 Oregon, by C. S. Chapman, p. 644-7; 

 How telephones saved lives, by C. J. 

 Buck, p. 648-51 ; Forest fires in Washing- 

 ton, by J. Shomaker, p. 652-4; Two 

 million dollars worth burned in one day, 

 by C. C. Andrews, p. 655-6; Fires on the 

 Flathead forest in Montana, by H. H. 

 Chapman, p. 657-8; Random talk on 

 forest fires, p. 667-9; The southern con- 

 servation congress, p. 673-5. 



Forestry quarterly, Sept., 1910. — Survey 

 methods and costs for a large area, by E. 

 Wilson, p. 287-93 ; Logging operations in 

 the province of Quebec, by B. Winegar,^ 

 p. 294-8; Woods surveying, by J. W. 

 Sewall, p. 299-301 ; Report of supervis- 

 ors' meeting at Missoula, Mont., by W, 

 B. Greeley, p. 302-25; Some sugges- 

 tions on predicting growth for short per- 

 iods, by J. G. Stetson, p. 326-31 ; Method 

 of calculating yield in working plans in 

 India, by A. D. Blascheck, p. 332-4- 



Forstwissenschaftliches centralblatt, Oct., 

 1910. — Einige betrachtungen iiber den 

 holzverkauf aus dem walde, by Stephani, 

 P- 517-35; Reproduktion forstlicher ly^- 

 standesicarten, by Dihm, p. 536-40; Der 

 wildschaden und dessen ersatz im Gross- 

 herzogtum Baden, by Gretsch, p. 541-56. 



Indian forester, Oct., 1910.— Forestry educa- 

 tion in India, p. 557-9; Root infection of 

 Trametes nini, by A. H. Khan, o. 559-62 ; 

 Conference of forest officers on fire-pro- 

 tection held at Poona on July 15th and 

 i6th, 1909, p. 562-6; Notes on works of 

 improvement in the F. M. S. forests, by 

 A. M. Burn-Murdoch, p. 566-71; De- 

 termination of the volume of amorphous 

 pieces of wood, by R. S. Troup, p. S7I-3 ; 

 Rate of growth of palmyras, by C. M. 

 McCrie, p. 575-8; Carallia integerrima 

 and its Assamese names, by R. S. Troup 

 and others, p. 578-81; The world's tim- 

 ber resources, p. 610-19; Dry rot in tim- 

 ber, p. 620-2. 



