CURRENT LITERATURE 



947 



Forest by-products 



Schorger, A. W., & Belts, H. S. The naval 

 stores industrj'. 58 p. il., pi. Wash., 

 D. C, 1915. (U. S.— Dept. of agricul- 

 ture. Bulletin 229.) 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Botany 



X'ermont botanical club. Flora of Vermont ; 

 list of ferns and seed plants growing 

 without cultivation. 120 p. Burling- 

 ton, Vt., 1915. (Vermont — Agricultural 

 e.xperiment station. Bulletin no. 187.) 



Geology 



Cobb, Collier. Pocket dictionary of common 

 rocks and rock minerals. 59 p. Chapel 

 Hill, N. C, University of X. C, 1915. 



National parks 



Department of the interior. The Crater 

 Lake national park, season of 1915; 

 general information. 17 p. maps. 

 Wash., D. C, 1915. 



United States — Dept. of the interior. The 

 Sequoia and General Grant national 

 parks, season of 1915; general informa- 

 tion. 40 p. maps. Wash., D. C, 

 1915. 



Voyages and travels 



Lee, Willis T. & others. Guidebook of the 

 western United States, part B : The Over- 

 land route, with a side trip to Yellow- 

 stone park. 24-t p. pi., maps. Wash., 

 D. C, 1915. (U. S.— Geological survey. 

 Bulletin 612.) 

 Washington — Bureau of statistics and immi- 

 gration. The beauties of the state of 

 Washington; a book for tourists. 112 p. 

 il., pi. map. Olympia, 1912. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Boy's life, Aug. 1915. — How to be a forest 

 ranger — now, by Henry Solon Graves, 

 p. 7. 



Country gentleman, July 10, 1915. — Fire- 

 proofing the wood lot; clean up your 

 woods and prevent loss, by Samuel J. 

 Record, p. 1 138-9. 



Garden magazine, Aug. 1915. — Midseason 

 flowering trees and shrubs, by E. H. 

 Wilson, p. 5-9; Why not plant evergreens 

 now, by Leonard Barron, p. 9-10. 



In the open, July 1915. — Cottonwood: 

 Populus deltoides, by George H. Wirt, 

 p. 28-9; The Pennsylvania forestry 

 association, p. 47-52. 



National wool grower, July, 19 k5. — Handling 

 sheep on timber and brush ranges of 

 Idaho, by Bryant S. Martineau, p. 7-11. 



Popular science monthly, Aug., 1915. — Some 

 economic factors influencing the forestry 

 situation, by A. F. Hawes, p. 181-6. 



Reclamation record, Aug., 1915. — Life of 

 wood pipe, by D. C. Henny, p. 354-8; 

 Tree planting: Hondo project, p. 365-6. 



Scientific American, July 31, 1915.— Burrow- 

 ing animals; borers that wend their way 

 even through rock, by Percy Collins, 

 p. 99, 103. 



United States — Dept. of agriculture. De- 

 partmental circular, July 10, 1915. — 



Recreation in forests, p. 8-9; Farm lands 

 in forests, p. 13-16; Exchange of forest 

 lands, p. 14. 

 United States — Dept. of agriculture. Weekly- 

 news letter, Aug. 11, 1915. — Willows in 

 demand, p. 3-4. 

 Trade journals and consular reports 

 .American lumberman, July 17, 1915. — Wood 

 preservation, by H. E. Horrocks, p. 43. 

 American lumberman, July 31, 1915. — How 

 lumber is supplied for Chicago buildings, 

 p. 30-1. 

 American lumberman, Aug. 7, 1915. — Con- 

 serv-ation that failed to conserve, by 

 Robert FuUerton, p. 1,'37; Teak a useful 

 oriental wood, p. 21; Conditions in 

 northern lumber trade, by O. T. Swan, 

 p. 30; Kiln drying upper grades of 

 Pacific Coast woods, by Howard Jayne, 

 p. 31; Wood block paving grows in 

 popularity, p. 49; How strength of 

 woods are tested at the Forest products 

 laboratory', p. 51. 

 Canada lumberman, July 15, 1915. — Com- 

 mercial importance of Jack pine, by 

 A. H. D. Ross, p. 34-5. 

 Canada lumberman, Aug. 1, 1915. — Com- 

 mercial importance of tamarack, by 

 A. H. D. Ross, p. 36-7; Progress in 

 fireproofing wood, p. 39. 

 Hardwood record, July 25, 1915. — White 



birch for paving blocks, p. 24. 

 Hardwood record, Aug. 10, 1915. — Mill scale 

 study of maple logs, p. 26 a; Do tree 

 roots seek water? p. 26 a; Poison oak 

 and its kindred, p. 26 c-d. 

 Holzwelt, March 26, 1915.— Holz zur bereit- 

 ung von nahrungs- und futtermitteln, 

 p. 1-2. 

 Journal of electricity, power and gas, July 24, 

 1915. — The control of water powers, by 

 Leonard Lvmdgren, p. 59-62. 

 Lumber trade journal, July 15, 1915. — Wood 

 block versus asphalt in the south, p. 

 11-12. 

 Lumber trade journal, Aug. 1, 1915. — The 

 perpetuation of Louisiana's forests; 

 methods adopted by the Conservation 

 commission of Louisiana on the Urania 

 forest preser\'e, p. 19-22. 

 Lumber world review, July 25, 1915 — What 

 is the matter with the lumber industry, 

 by Boiling Arthur Johnson, p. 21-6. 

 Lumber world review, Aug. 10, 1915. — Na- 

 tional fire protection association on the 

 uses of wood, p. 21-4. 

 Packages, July, 1915. — Wood used in baskets, 



p. 66. 

 Paper, July 1, 1915. — Some uses of electricity' 

 in paper-making, by J. P. Mallett, 

 p. 15-18. 

 Paper, July 14, 1915. — The chemistry of 

 paper-making fibers, by John S. Bates, 

 p. 11-13; Microscopical characteristics 

 of rosin, p. 13-14. 

 Paper trade journal, Aug. 5, 1915. — The 



forests of Siberia, p. 22. 

 Philippine trade review, April, 1915. — The 

 Bureau of forestry and the lumber 

 industry', by W. F. Sherfesee, p. 5; 

 Economical use of wood, by E. W. Bright 

 p. 14. 



Grade One 



Creosote Oil 



Cuts wood preserving 

 bills in half — 



For preserving telephone 

 poles, telegraph poles, cross 

 arms, railroad ties, fence 

 posts, mine timbers, under- 

 ground sills, sleepers, bridge 

 timbers, planking, ice 

 houses, wood tanks, shing- 

 les, poultry houses, silos, 

 boat timbers or any exposed 

 woodwork. 



Especially adapted for brush 

 and open tank treatment of 

 structural timbers of all 

 kinds. 



Booklet on request. 



Barrett Manufacturing Co. 



New York Chicago 



BoRton St. Louis 



Cincinnati Pittsburgh 



Detroit Birmingham 



Kansas City Minneapolis 



Salt Lake City Seattle 



Pioneer western lumberman, July 15, 1915. — 



How long will wood pipe last? p. 27-8. 

 Pioneer western lumberman, Aug. 1, 1915. — 

 Wood block paving in the northwest, by 

 Lewis Schwager, p. 6-7: Association 

 grading rules; the need of a revision, by 

 JuHus Seidel, p. 13-15. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, July 1, 1915. — 

 Structure of wood and some other fibers 

 as related to pulp and paper, by H. N. 

 Lee, p. 361-7; Wood room procedure and 

 its treatment of pulpwood in connection 

 with newsprint manufacture, by H. S. 

 Taylor, p. 370-3. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, July 15, I9I5. — 

 A description of the courses in paper 

 manufacture at the Uuiversity of Mich- 

 igan, by John D. Rue, p. 389-90. 

 St. Louis lumberman, July 15, 1915. — Strong 



for wood block paving, p. 8. 

 St. Louis lumberman, Aug. 1, 1915. — Federal 

 trade commission hears needs of the 

 industry as presented by lumbermen, 

 p. 50-69. 

 Southern lumber journal, July 15, 1915. — 

 Creosoted paving blocks and their rela- 

 tion to the lumber business, by Joseph 

 G. G. Morgan, p. 42-3. 

 Southern lumberman, July 17, 1915. — Com- 

 position paving block; Florida lumber- 

 men perfect brick made of sawdust and 

 asphalt product, p. 36. 

 Southern lumberman, July 31, 1915. — The- 

 future of cutover lands under protection, 

 by W. W. Ashe, p. 31. 



