1134 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Botanical gazette, Sept. 1915. — Is the box 

 elder a maple? A study of the compar- 

 ative anatomy of Negundo, by Amon B. 

 Plowman, p. 169-92. 



Botanical gazette, October, 1915. — Vascular 

 anatomy of the megasporophylls of 

 conifers, by Hannah C. Aase, p. 277-313; 

 The index of foliar transpiring power as 

 an indicator of permanent wilting in 

 plants, by A. L. Bakke, p. 314-19. 



Bulletin of the Torrey botanical club, Aug. 

 1915. — A study of pasture trees and 

 shrubbery, by Ernest L. Scott, p. 451-61. 



Cornell rural school leaflet, Sept., 1915. — 

 Forestry in the rural schools, by Prank B. 

 Moody, p. 245-8; The oaks of New York, 

 by John Bentley, Jr., p. 248-54; The 

 pines of New York, by John Bentley, 

 Jr., p. 255-8; Trees to be recognized in 

 1915-1916, by Frank B. Moody, p. 

 258-63. 



Country gentleman, Oct. 23, 1915. — Blighted 

 chestnut and a bank balance; timljer 

 profit from a farm woodlot, by Helen 

 Christine Bennett, p. 1608-9; Coyote 

 madness; how action is being taken to 

 prevent the spread of rabies, by Randall 

 R. Howard, p. 1624. 



Country gentleman, Oct. 30, 1915. — Pine- 

 stump profits, by J. R. Crowe, p. 1663-4. 



Country life in America, Oct., 1915. — The 

 common woods as used in building, by 

 W. H. Butterfield, p. 38-9. 



Garden magazine, Nov. 1915. — The glory of 

 the autumn, by E. H. Wilson, p. 109-11. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Oct. 2, 1915. — Forming 

 new plantations, by A. D. Webster, 

 p. 211. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Oct. 9, 1915. — Larix 

 pendula, by A. Henry, p. 234. 



In the open, Sept., 1915. — A talk on forest 

 fires, their fearful cost and the ease of 

 preventing them, by George H. Wirt, 

 p. 55-7. 



International institute of agriculture 

 Monthly bulletin of agricultural intelli- 

 gence and plant diseases, June, 1915. — ■ 

 Forestry in the United States at the 

 present day, by Jas. W. Toumey, p. 

 779-85. 



International institute of agriculture. 

 Monthly bulletin of economic and social 

 intelligence, Sept., 1915. — Forest school 

 mutual societies, p. 45-7. 



International institute of agriculture. 

 Monthly bulletin of economic and social 

 intelligence, Oct., 1915. — Technical con- 

 ditions of forestry insurance, p. 41-52; 

 The valuation of the timber resources of 

 the forests in the province of Varmland, 

 by Heruik Hesselman, p. 111-15. 



Irish gardening, June, 1915. — Pinus pinaster 

 for sowing on peat bogs in Ireland, by 

 A. MacGregor, p. 86-7. 



Journal of the Board of agriculture, London, 

 May, 1915. — Wood waste from saw mills 

 as a source of potash, by C. T. Giming- 

 ham, p. 146-8. 



Journal of heredity, Nov., 1915. — How the 

 bark breathes, p. 490-3; An unusual 

 persimmon tree. p. 525; The tree that 

 owns itself, by T. H. McHatton, p. 526. 



National wool grower, Oct., 1915. — Deferred 

 and rotation grazing, Hayden forest, 

 Wyo., by L. H. Douglas, p. 11-14; Graz- 

 ing inspector visits Portland, by Will C. 

 Barnes, p. 16. 



Overland monthly, Aug., 1915. — Taking a 

 timber claim, by M. E. McGuire, p. 

 147-56. 



Reclamation record, Nov., 1915. — Tree plant- 

 ing: Klamath project, Oregon-California, 

 p. 514. 



Rhodora, Sept., 1915. — The hemlock spruce, 

 by O. A. Farwell, p. 164. 



Special libraries, Sept., 1915. — Forestry and 

 lumbering in the northwest from the 

 librarian's viewpoint, by Mrs. Georgene 

 L. Miller, p. 109-12. 



United States — Department of agriculture. 

 Weekly news letter, Nov. 10, 1915. — How 

 the farmer can use the facilities of the 

 .Hepartment of agriculture: Forest ser- 

 vice', p. 6. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Oct. 9, 1915. — Lumber 

 tractors, by Archie Chandler, p. 41. 



American lumberman, Oct. 23, 1915. — Advises 

 as to lumber needs of United Kingdom, 

 by H. R. MacMillan, p. 35 ; Proper laying 

 of wood blocks must be taught, p. 52. 



American lumberman, Oct. 30, 1915. — Does 

 the lumber industry need radical reor- 

 ganization? by E. B. Hazen, p. 30-50. 



American lumberman, Nov. 6, 1915. — Forest 

 products featured: Forest service makes 

 unique exhibit at the Portland, Oregon, 

 show, p. 29 ; Wooden water pipe supplants 

 worthless iron, p. 33. 



Canada lumberman, Oct. 15, 1915. — British 

 Columbia red cedar, by Aird Flavelle, 

 p. 30-2. 



Engineering news, July 29, 1915. — Log- 

 handling equipment at Arrowrock dam, 

 by Charles H. Paul, p. 200-1. 



Engineering news, Aug. 26, 1915. — Report on 

 life of wood pipe, by D. C. Henny, 

 p. 400-3. 



Engineering record, Sept. 11, 1915. — Longleaf 

 pine distinguished visually from loblolly 

 or short leaf, by Arthur Koehler, p. 

 319-20. 



Hardwood record, Oct. 25, 1915. — Facts and 

 frauds of witch hazel, p. 23. 



Hardwood record, Nov. 10, 1915. — Conditions 

 in case-hardened wood, by James E. 

 Imrie, p. 24-6. 



Journal of industrial and engineering chem- 

 istry, Oct., 1915.— The hardwood dis- 

 tillation industry in America, by E. H. 

 French, and James R. Withrow, p. 

 899-900. 



Journal of industrial and engineering chem- 

 istry, Nov., 1915. — The chemical engi- 

 neering of the hardwood distillation 

 industry, by James R. Withrow, p. 

 912-13; What chemistry has done to aid 

 the utilization of wood, by S. F. Acree, 



Grade One 

 y^ Liquid y-^.-, 



Creosote Oil 



Cuts wood preserving 

 bills in half — 



For preserving telephone 

 poles, telegraph poles, cross 

 arms, railroad ties, fence 

 posts, mine timbers, under- 

 ground sUls, sleepers, bridge 

 timbers, planking, ice 

 houses, wood tanks, shin- 

 gles, 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 

 Boston 

 Cincinnati 

 Detroit 

 Kansas Citv 

 Salt Lake City Seattle 

 Peona 



p. 913-15; The tannin content of Pacific 

 Coast conifers, by H. K. Benson, and 

 Thos. G. Thompson, p. 915-16; Yield of 

 by-products from destructive distillation 

 of some western conifers, by H. K. Benson 

 ind Marc Darrin, p. 916-18; The use oi 

 ammonium hydroxide for the extraction 

 of rosin from wood, by H. K. Benson and 

 Herbert N. Crites, p. 918-20; Discolora- 

 tion of maple in the kiln, by Roy C. Judd, 

 p. 920; Manufacture of ethyl alcohol from 

 wood waste: 2. The Hydrolysis of white 

 spruce, by F. W. Kressmann, p. 920-2; 

 The manufacture of ethyl alcohol from 

 wood waste: 3. Western larch as a raw 

 material, by F. E. Kressmann, p. 922-3; 

 The application of the Davis spot test 

 in the preUminary examination of 

 creosotes, by Homer Cloukey, p. 923-4; 

 Isoprene from B-pinene, by A. W. 

 Schorger and R. Sayre, p. 924-6; The 

 distillation of Douglas fir at high tem- 

 peratures, by Bailey Tremper, p. 926-7; 

 Waste pine wood utilization, by John E. 

 Teeple, p. 929-30; Contributions of the 

 chemist to the naval stores industn,', 

 by John E. Teeple, p. 931-2; Contribu- 

 tions of the chemist to the hardwood 

 distillation industry, by S. W. Katzen- 

 stein, p. 940-2; A quantitative method 

 for the determination of the adulteration 

 in Chinese wood oil, by J. C. Brier, 

 p. 953-7; Composition of wood turpen- 

 tine, by Maxwell Adams, p. 957-60; 



