400 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Botanical gazette, April, 1914. — -A preliminary 

 inquiry into the significance of tracheid- 

 caliber in coniferae, by Percy Groom, p. 

 287-307; Morphological instability, espe- 

 cially in Pinus radiata, by Francis E. 

 Lloyd, p. 314-19. 



Country gentleman. April 18, 1914. — Picking 

 out a good package, by James H. Collins, 

 p. 776-7. 



Fire prevention, April, 1914. — Senseless origin 

 of some forest fires, p. 21-2. 



Garden magazine. May, 1914. — How to prune 

 an elm, by C. L. Meller, p. 256-8. 



Gardeners' chronicle, March 7, 1914. — The 

 thirstiness of trees, p. 168; History of 

 Irish woods, by Augustine Henry, p. 

 171-2. 



Gardeners' chronicle, April 11, 1914. — .\ 

 stately tulip tree, by Willian Gardener, 

 p. 25.5. 



International institute of agriculture. Month- 

 ly bulletin of agricultural intelligence and 

 plant diseases, Dec, 1913. — The distribu- 

 tion of forests in the natural regions of 

 Switzerland, bv Maurice Decoppet, p. 

 1822-5. 



Journal of the Society of chemical industry, 

 March 16, 1914. — Note on Australian pine 

 barks, by F. A. Coombs and A. H. Dett- 

 mann, p. 232-3. 



Scientific American supplement, Jan. 17, 1914. 

 — Wooden water pipes, p. 35. An un- 

 usual case of electrical injury to street 

 trees, by George A. Cromie, p. 36-7. 



Scientific American supplement, March 21, 

 1914. — The fossil forest of Arizona, by 

 George P. Merrill, p. 184-5. 



Scientific American supplement, April 4, 1914. 

 — Kapok, a buoyant stuffing which makes 

 a mattress into a life-raft, p. 213. 



Technical world magazine, April, 1914. — Do 

 forests hold the floods back, by Benjamin 

 Brooks, p. 198-204. 



United States — Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, April, 1914. — 

 Longevity of pycnospores of the chest- 

 nut-blight fungus, by F. D. Heald and 

 M. W.' Gardner, p. 67-75. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, April 4, 1914. — Minne- 

 sota forestry association annual, p. 48. 



American lumberman, April 18, 1914. — The 

 mesquite as a paving wood, p. 45. 



American lumberman, April 25, 1914. — Forest 

 products exposition, Chicago, April 30- 

 May 9, p. 29-32; Wood block paving, by 

 A. W. Clark, p. 50; Lumbering in the 

 Fiji Islands, p. 53. 



American lumberman. May 2, 1914. — Develop- 

 ment of cutover timberlands, p. 29. 



American lumberman, May 9, 1914. — Mexico; 

 its people and its resources, p. 33 ; Ad- 

 dresses before Chicago association of 

 commerce and national lumber manufac- 

 turers' association, by J. B. White, p. 37, 

 51 ; Shingle evolution and uses, p. 38 ; 



Merchandising of lumber from the stand- 

 point of the scientist, by Howard F. 

 Weiss, p. 49-51. 



Barrel and box, April, 1914. — Annual use of 

 yellow pine box lumber, p. 44-5. 



Canadian lumberman, April 15, 1914. — The 

 commercial importance of spruce, bj* R. 

 G. Lewis, p. 36-7; Black walnut, p. 50; 

 Estimating and figuring mill waste, by 

 Charles Cloukey, p. 50-2. 



Engineering magazine, April, 1914. — Wood 

 paving in Europe ; soft wood universally 

 used and method of laying, by S. R. 

 Church, p. 101-4. 



Hardwood record, April 10, 1914. — Value of 

 careful lumber piling, p. 25-6. 



Hardwood record, April 25, 1914. — Investi- 

 gating wood utilization, p. 26-8; Utilizing 

 veneer waste, by J. C. T., p. 30-1 ; The 

 largest timber seller, p. 33. 



Lumber trade journal, April 15, 1914. — A cy- 

 press tree that refused to die even with 

 all its roots removed, p. 15. 



Lumber world review, April 25, 1914. — Wood 

 durability afifected by time of cutting, by 

 Samuel J. Record, p. 19-20. 



Manufacturers' record, April 23, 1914.— For- 

 estry and water resources, by Henry S. 

 Graves, p. 49. 



Paper mill, March 14, 1914. — Utilizing waste; 

 the invention of two Maine men which 

 makes slabs, butts, edging, etc.. available 

 for pulp making, p. 14. 356. 



Paper trade journal, April 16, 1^)14. — Manu- 

 facture of sulfite pulp from resinous 

 woods, p. 48. 



Pioneer western lumberman, April 15. 1914. — 

 United States forester's attitude en "light 

 burning"; considers patrol essential for 

 forest protection, by H. S. Graves, p. 

 23-4. 



Pioneer western lumberman. May 1, 1914. — 

 Harvard forestry school, p. 9; California 

 forests before and after the gringo came, 

 by Guy A. Buell, p. 15, 19-25. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1, 1914. — 

 Chemical utilization of southern pine 

 waste, by John S. Bates, p. 64-72. 



Pulp and paper magazine, March 1, 1914. — 

 Brazilian woods; their utilization for the 

 manufacture of wood-pulp, p. 150-1. 



Pulp and paper magazine, March 15, 1914. — 

 Pulp and newspaper manufacture, by J. 

 Stadler, p. 162-6. 



Pulp and paper magazine, April 1, 1914. — 

 Forest ownership and fire protection, by 

 G. E. Bothwell, p. 198-200; Xew woods 

 ffir paper, p. 206. 



St. Louis lumberman, .\pril 15, 1914. — The 

 Chinese wood-oil tree, p. 33 ; Harvard is 

 to have a forestry school, p. 82. 



St. Louis lumberman. May 1. 1914. — Progress 

 of wood block paving abroad, p. 28. 



Savannah naval stores review. April 18, 1914. 

 — The present status of the wood turpen- 

 tine industry, by E. H. French, p. 15. 



Savannah naval stores review. May 2, 1914. 

 — Wfiod turpentine and rosins, by C. A. 

 Lunn, p. 3-4. 



