224 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



National and state forests 



North Carolina — Geological and economic 

 survey. Mount Mitchell state forest; 

 opinions of representative men as ex- 

 pressed at the convention of the North 

 Carolina forestry association. 5 p. 

 Chapel Hill, N. C, 1915. (Press bulletin 

 138.) 



Forest Utilization 



Lumber industry 



Lumbermen's credit association. Reference 

 book, Feb. 1915. Chicago and New York, 

 1915. 



National lumber manufacturers' association. 

 Official report, 12th annual convention. 

 190 p. Chicago, 1914. 



Switzerland — L'inspection federale des forSts. 

 Produktion und verbrauch von nutzholz: 

 B — Der verbrauch. 166 p. maps. Zu- 

 rich, 1914. (Schweizerische forstatistik, 4. 

 lieferung.) 



Forest by-products 



Smythies, E. A. The resin industry in 

 Kumaon. 14 p. pi. Calcutta, 1914. 

 (India — Forest dept. Forest bulletin no 

 26.) 



Wood preservation 



Dominion paving and contracting co. Peerless 

 carbolite carbolineum wood preservative. 

 16 p. Toronto, Ont., 1914. 



Weiss, Howard F. The preservation of struc- 

 tural timber. 312 p. il., pi. N. Y., 

 McGraw-Hill book co., 1915. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Natural resources 



Louisiana — Conservation commission. The 

 more important and conspicuous mam- 

 mals, birds and fish of Louisiana, together 

 with a list of the principal trees of the 

 state. 31 p. New Orleans, 1914. 



Botany 



Harper, Roland M. Geography and vegeta- 

 tion of northern Florida. 289 p. pi. 

 Tallahassee, Fla., State geological survey, 

 1914. 



Engineering 



Hatt, W. H. Flood protection in Indiana. 

 51 p., inch maps. Indianapolis, 1914. 

 (Indiana — Bureau of legislative informa- 

 tion. Bulletin no. 4.) 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



American botanist, Nov. 1914. — The mistletoe, 

 by Willard N. Clute, p. 121-4; Eucalyptus 

 vs. sequoia, p. 154-5. 



Bulletin of the Torrey botanical club, Dec. 

 1914. — The correct name for the hemlock 

 spruce, by Oliver A. Farwell, p. 621-9. 



Bulletin of the Torrey botanical club, January, 

 1915. — Phytogeographical notes on the 

 Rocky Mt. region; 4. Forests of the 

 subalpine and montane zones, by P. A. 

 Rydberg, p. 11-25. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 16, 1915. — A dis- 

 appearing tree; how to meet the loss of 

 the chestnut, by P. L. Buttrick, p. 104. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 30, 1915. — Making 

 money out of moss; it appears on the 

 market as Spanish hair, by Samuel f J. 

 Record, p. 192, 194. 



Country life in America, Jan. 1915.- — The 

 forest fire, by Enos A. Mills, p. 42-5. 



Fire prevention news, Jan. 1915. — Bad season 

 for forest fires in the northwest, by Chas. 

 H. Flory, p. 3. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Dec. 19, 1914. — Wood 

 used in the manufacture of gunpowder, 

 p. 401-2. 



Journal of the Washington academy of science, 

 Jan. 19, 1915. — The place of forestry 

 among natural sciences, by Henry S. 

 Graves, p. 41-57. 



Lippincott's, Oct. 1914. — Forestry as a pro- 

 fession, by Gifford Pinchot, p. 501-2. 



Outlook, Jan. 20, 1915. — Red tape in Alaska, 

 by Franklin K. Lane, p. 135-40. 



Plant world, Jan. 1915. — -The relative transpir- 

 ation of white pine seedlings, by George 

 P. Burns, p. 1-6. 



Reclamation record, Jan. 1915. — Tree planting 

 Black feet, Flathead, Fort Peck and 

 Huntley projects, Mont., p. 29-30. 



Resources of Tennessee, Jan. 1915. — West 

 Tennessee gullied lands and their reclama- 

 tion, by R. S. Maddox, p. 8-22. 



Scientific American supplement, Dec. 5, 1914. — 

 Musical woods, p. 355: Marine wood 

 borers ; little known crustaceans of destruc- 

 tive habits, by Clyde H. Truesdale, p. 

 356-7. 



Scientific American supplement, Dec. 12, 

 1914. — Spanish cedar; sources of supply 

 of this substitute for mahogany, p. 369, 

 372-3. 



Technology monthly and Harvard engineering 

 journal, Feb., 1915. — Controlling our 

 streams by forestry, by Allen Chamberlain, 

 p. 5-11. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Jan. 16, 1915. — A novel 

 wood of many uses; the lowly mesquite 

 one of most important Texas trees and 

 widely utilized, by I. M. Lewis, p. 27, 

 Deductions from strength tests of woods, 

 by J. A. Newlin, p. 32-3; Argentina's 

 export and import trade, by Max Roth- 

 kugel, p. 40, 60; Urges branding of struc- 

 tural timbers, by F. E. Davidson, p. 43; 

 Results of investigations of kiln drying, 

 p. 53-4. 



American lumberman, January 23, 1915. — 

 Conserving and developing natural re- 

 sources, by Henry S. Drinker, p. 35. 



American lumberman, Jan. 30, 1915. — Plan 

 to save historic trees; insects that destroy 

 Harvard elms under control; proper 

 irrigation all now needed, p. 27: Cost of 

 carrying timberlands and its relation to 

 lumber market, by C. H. Worcester, 

 p. 34, 63-4. 



