390 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Bulletin of the Geographic society of Phila- 

 delphia, Jan., 1914.— New England; her 

 forests and her people, by G. D. Hubbard, 

 p. 27-30. 



Country gentleman, March 21, 1914.— Making 

 over old trees; the science of top graft- 

 ing reduced to its simplest terms, by 

 H. E. Van Deman, p. 586, 622. 



Craftsman, Feb., 1914.— Saving the nation's 

 water supply through our national for- 

 ests, by Bristow Adams, p. 430-6. 



Garden magazine, March, 1914.— Palms in 

 California, by John Y. Beaty, p. 76; 

 Some trees and shrubs for trying sites, 

 p. 98-9. 



Gardeners chronicle, March 14, 1914. — Arbu- 

 tus menziesii at Bayfordbury, by A. 

 Bruce Jackson, p. 182 ; A new source of 

 oak timber, by John R. Jackson, p. 188. 



New Zealand — Dept. of agriculture, indus- 

 tries and commerce. Journal of agricul- 

 ture, Jan. 20, 1914.— The Monterey pine, 

 by A. H. Cockayne, p. 1-26. 



Outdoor world and recreation, April, 1914. — 

 The story of the forester, by James Up- 

 ham, p. 222-4. 



Phytopathology, Feb., 1914.— Notes on Peri- 

 dermium from Pennsylvania, by C. R. 

 Orton and J. F. Adams, p. 23-6. 



Scientific American, Feb. 28, 1914. — Prolong- 

 ing the naval stores industry, by Samuel 

 J. Record, p. 173, 186. 



Scientific American supplement, Feb. 14, 

 1914. — Coloring the wood of growing 

 trees, p. 105. 



Scientific American supplement, Feb. 21, 

 1914. — The commercial uses of bamboo, 

 p. 116-17. 



United States — Dept. of agriculture. Jour- 

 nal of agricultural research, March, 

 1914.— Tyloses ; their occurrence and 

 practical significance in some American 

 woods, by Eloise Gerry, p. 445-70; The 

 cambium miner in river birch, by Charles 

 T. Greene, p. 471-4. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, March 14, 1914. — In- 

 come tax and timber, p. 32 ; Oregon for- 

 est association annual, p. 43-6; Wood for 

 silos, p. 53. 



American lumberman, March 21, 1914. — Lost 

 opportunity in the utilization of waste, p. 

 26-7 ; Conservation of wood by-products, 

 p. 47. 



American lumberman, March 28, 1914. — Fac- 

 tory timber specification, by Arthur T. 

 North, p. 38-9. 



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

 white pine box lumber, p. 46-7. 



Canada lumberman, March 15, 1914. — The 

 commercial importance of beech, by 

 R. G. Lewis, p. 34-5. 



Engineering news, Jan. 15, 1914. — Drainage 

 of the Everglades, p. 146-8. 



Engineering news, Jan. 29, 1914. — A wood- 

 block pavement failure, by Rodney C. 

 Davis, p. 260. 



Engineering news, Feb. 5, 1914. — A teredo- 

 proof wood, by Howard F. Weiss, p. 

 314-15. 



Engineering record, Feb. 7, 1914. — Fireproof- 

 ing wood, by Robert E. Prince, p. 172-3. 



Hardwood record, March 25, 1914. — Wood 

 in relation to heat, by S. J. Record, p. 20; 

 Correcting wood's infirmities, p. 25-6; 

 Utilization of sumach, p. 27 ; The lightest 

 of native woods, p. 29 ; Woods used in 

 turnery, p. 30-1 ; Northern Michigan 

 hardwoods, p. 31; The uses of aspen or 

 popple, p. 32 ; Bethabara an excellent 

 timber tree, p. 32 ; Red gum as door 

 material, p. 34-5. 



Lumber trade journal, March 15, 1914. — For- 

 est service outlines plans for southern 

 pine reforestation, by W. R. Mattoon, p. 

 19-20. 



Lumber world review, March 25, 1914. — Some 

 plans for forest products exposition ; 

 wood preservers to exhibit to public de- 

 tails of treating processes at big show, p. 

 29-30. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, March 27, 

 1914. — Minnesota state forestry conven- 

 tion ; state organization starts campaign 

 for the extension of forestry work, p. 

 42-3. 



Paper, March 25, 1914. — Ancient and modern 

 Chinese papers, p. 15-16 ; Woodpulp man- 

 ufacture in Sweden, p. 16 ; The early 

 English paper-makers, bv F. Ashford 

 White, p. 17-18. 



Paper mill and wood pulp news, Feb. 21, 

 1914. — Forest taxation, by Samuel H. 

 Ordway, p. 76-80 ; The utilization of saw- 

 mill waste in making paper, p. 86-94. 



Pioneer western lumberman, March 15, 1914. 

 — Measuring timber in the Sierra forest, 

 p. 13 ; British Coluniliia timber royalty 

 act, p. 21-25. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 15, 1914. — The 

 utilization of wood pulp in textile manu- 

 facture, by H. A. Carter, p. 102-5. 



St. Louis lumberman, March 15, 1914. — - 

 Things known about logged-ofif pine tim- 

 ber lands, by John E. Williams, p. 59-60. 



St. Louis lumberman, April 1, 1914. — Report 

 on yellow pine for mill timbers, by F. J. 

 Hoxie, p. 70-1 ; Timber in Camaguay 

 province, by E. V. Preston, p. 80; Wood 

 block pavements in Berlin, by Robert P. 

 Skinner, p. 86 B ; State forests urged, by 

 James Girvin Peters, p. 87. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, 

 March, 1914. — Wood block paving popu- 

 lar, p. 26-7. 



Southern lumber journal, March 1, 1914. — 

 American forestry todav, by Herbert 

 Welsh, p. 40. 



Southern lumlicr journal, March 15, 1914. — 

 How to utilize wood waste around saw- 

 mills ; new device for removing bark 

 from waste wood for pulp purposes, 

 p. 41. 



Southern lumberman, April 4. 1914. — Doctor 

 Schenck and graduates of Biltmore for- 

 est school, by Overton W. Price, p. 21. 26. 



