CURRENT LITERATURE 



?7 



FOREST ADMINISTRATION. 



United States Department of Agriculture- 

 Forest Service. Report of the forester, 

 1012-'13. 56 p. Washington, D. C, 19V.',. 



United States, Department of Agriculture- 

 Forest Service. The use book; a manual 

 for users of the national forests; 19i:!. 

 88 p. Washington, D. C, 1913. 



FOREST UTILIZATION. 



National Conservation Congress — Forestry 

 Committee. Advance copy of paper on 

 the closer utilization of timber, by the 

 sub-committee on forest utilization ; 

 chairman, R. S. Kellogg. 15 p. Wash- 

 ington, D. C, 1913. 



Pearson, R. S. On the economic value of 

 Shorea robusta. 70 p. pi. Calcutta, 1913. 

 (Indian forest memoirs, v. 2, pt. 2.) 



Lumber Industry. 



National Conservation Congress— Forestry 

 Committee. Advance copy of paper on 

 lumbering, by the sub-committee on lum- 

 bering; chairman, R. C. Bryant. 39 p. 

 Washington, D. C, 1913. 



West Coast Lumber Manufacturers' Asso- 

 ciation. Rate book on forest products, 

 compiled by F. G. Donaldson. First 

 edition. Portland, Oreg., 1913. 



JJ'ood-iising Industries. 



Kelly, A. Ashmum. The expert wood finisher ; 

 a complete manual of the art and prac- 

 tice of finishing woods by staining, filling, 

 varnishing, waxing, etc. 339 p. Malvern, 

 Pa., Master Painter Publishing Co., 1912. 



Radford, William A. and others. Practical 

 carpentrv. Vol. 1-2. il. Chicago, 111., 

 The Radford Architectural Co., 1913. 



Wood rrcscrvaiion. 



Bailev. Irving W. The preservative treat- 

 men of wood. 16 p. pi. Ithaca, N. Y., 

 1913. 



AUXILIARY SUBJECTS. 



Water .Supply. 



United States— Congress, Senate— Committee 

 on Public Lands. Hetch Hetchy reser- 

 voir site ; hearings on H. R. 7207, an 

 act granting to the city and country of 

 San Francisco certain rights of way in, 

 over, and through certain public lands. 

 78 p. Washington, D. C, 1913. 



Camp Cookery. 



Oregon Agricultural College — Extension di- 

 vision. A bulletin on camp cookery, 

 for special use of forest rangers, campers 

 and sportsmen, by Ava B. Milan and 

 Ruth McNary Smith. 47 p. Corvallis, 

 1913. 



PERIODICAL ARTICLES. 



Miscellaneous Periodicals. 



Annals of Botany, Oct. 1913. — Deforestation; 

 its effects upon the growth and struc- 

 ture of the wood of Larix, by Alan G. 

 Harper, p. 621-42. 



Beihefte zum Botanischen centralblatt, Oct. 

 1, 1913. — Uber den einfluss von licht und 

 schatten auf sprosse von holzpflanzen, by 

 Hermann Farenholtz, p. 90-118. 



Country Life in America, Dec. 1913. — Making 

 over an old willow, by C. C. Page, p. 

 78, 96, 98. 



Garden Magazine. Nov. 1913. — Why the 

 black walnut is worth growing, by A. 

 Rutledge, p. 140-1. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Nov. 1, 1913.— The ef- 

 fects of summer drought upon tree 

 growth, by A. C. Forbes, p. 299-300; 

 Kapok, p. 321. 



Independent, Nov. 6, 1913. — Community for- 

 ests, p. 261. 



Journal of the Linnean Society, Oct. 6, 1913. 

 — The structure of the wood of East In- 

 dian species of Pinus, by Percy Groom, 

 p. 457-90. 



Popular Science Monthly, Nov. 1913.— The 

 increase of American land values, by 

 Scott Nearing, p. 491-505. 



Popular Science Monthly, Dec. 1913. — The 

 forests and forestry of Germany, by 

 William R. Lazenby, p. 590-8. 



Scientific American, Nov. 22, 1913. — Which 

 end of a post should be up? p. 390. 



Scientific American, Supplement, Nov. 1, 

 1913. — The camphor industry in For- 

 mosa ; an important Japanese monopoly, 

 by F. Wertheimer, p. 288. 



West Indian Bulletin, Sept. 1913.— The 

 Windward and Leeward Islands consid- 

 ered in relation to forestry, by Francis 

 Watts, p. 293-314. 



Trade Journals and Consular Reports. 



American Lumberman. Nov. 15, 1913. — Kiln 

 drying of lumber, scientifically con- 

 sidered, by Harry D. Tiemann, p. 29 : 

 Care of oak flooring, by W. L. Claffey. 

 p. 40 ; Adirondack's ranger forest school, 

 p. 46-7 ; National forests of today, by 

 Franklin H. Smith, p. 66-7. 



American Lumberman, Nov. 22. 1913. — Wood, 

 by Daniel Wells, p. 35 ; Fifth conserva- 

 tion congress ; forestry section meets in 

 advance, p. 45-7, 55-9. 



American Lumberman, Dec. 6, 1913. — ^Forest 

 service timber estimates, p. 29 ; Utilizing 

 forest waste in longleaf pine. p. 29. 



Canada Lumberman, Nov. 15, 1913. — The 

 purpose of the forest products labora- 

 tories, p. 37 ; The endurance of railroad 

 timbers ; valuable report presented by 

 special committee of American railway 

 and bridge association, p. 39. 



Canada Lumberman, Dec. 1, 1913. — Opera- 

 tions at a logging camp in B. C, by C. W. 



