604 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Forest Utilization 



Wood-using industries 



Great Britain — Board of agriculture and 

 fisheries. Report on supplies of home- 

 grown pit-wood in England and Wales. 

 13 p. London, 1914. 



Forest by-products 



Vermont maple sugar makers' association. 

 Proceedings of the 20th annual meeting, 



1913. 59 p. St. Albans, Vt., 1913. 



Wood technology 



Janka, Gabriel. Die harte der holzer. 114 p. 

 pi. Wien, 1915. (Mitteilungen aus dem 

 forstlichen versuchswesen Oesterreichs, 

 heft 39.) 



Philippine Islands— Bureau of forestry. Ex- 

 port timbers of the Philippines. 12 p. 

 Manila, P. I., 1914. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Conservation of jiatural resources 



California— Dept. of public instruction. Con- 

 servation of natural resources. 2d ed. 

 Ill p. il. Sacramento, 1915. 



National parks 



Campbell, Marius R. The Glacier national 

 park; a popular guide to its geology and 

 scenery. 54p.pl., maps. Wash., D. C, 



1914. (U. S. — Geological survey. Bull- 

 etin 600.) 



Yellowstone national park. Report of the act- 

 ing superintendent, 1914. 29 p. map. 

 Wash., D. C, Govt, printing office, 1914. 



Hydrology 



Pennsylvania — Water supply commission. An- 

 nual report, 1913. 396 p. pi. Harris- 

 burg, Pa., 1914. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous articles 



Country gentleman, Feb. 6,^^1915. — The sugar 

 tree, by C. O. Ormsbee, p. 217-18; Wood 

 for the work-shop, by Samuel J. Record, 

 p. 250, 252. 



Country gentleman, Feb. 13, 1915. — White or 

 red oak — which? How to distinguish the 

 woods, by Samuel J- Record, p. 311. 



Country gentleman, Feb. 20, 1915.— The 

 inside of a graft, by F. A. Waugh, p. 328-9. 



Country gentleman, Feb. 27, 1915. — Forests 

 for waste land, by Samuel J. Record, p. 

 418-19. 



Fire prevention news, Feb. 1915. — Fire retard- 

 ing process for wood tested, p. 15. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Jan. 30, 1915. — Notes on 

 conifers: Cupressus macrocarpa, by A. 

 Bruce Jackson, p. 53. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Feb. 13, 1915. — Cupres- 

 sus macrocarpa, by William Somerville, 

 p. 76-7; Cupressus sempervirens, by A. 

 Bruce Jackson, p. 78. 



International institute of agriculture. Monthly 

 bulletin of agricultural intelligence and 

 plant diseases, Nov. 1914. — The present 

 condition of forestry in Hungary, by 

 Kdroly Schmidt, p. 1391-1400. 



International institute of agriculture. Monthly 

 bulletin of agricultural intelligence and 

 plant diseases, Dec. 1914. — The forests of 

 Chile, by Federico Albert, p. 1535-41. 



Journal of heredity, Jan. 1915. — A new walnut; 

 mutant somewhat similar to live oak 



appears in California in four different 

 locaHties, by Ernest B. Babcock, p. 40-5. 



Modem woodman magazine, March, 1915. — 

 Modem wood craft and forest fires, by 

 T. B. Wyman, p. 6-8. 



National wool grower, Feb. 1915. — How the 

 Forest service is developing the range, 

 p. 9-11, 19; The killing of coyotes, by 

 Moroni A. Smith, p. 27-8. 



Plant world, Feb. 1915. — Natural reforestation 

 in the mountains of northern Idaho, by 

 Harry B. Humphrey and John Ernst 

 Weaver, p. 31-47. 



Popular mechanics, March 1915. — Ocean-going 

 lumber rafts of the Pacific, p. 398-9. 



Popular science monthly, March, 1915. — The 

 volcanic activity of Lassen Peak, Cali- 

 fornia, by Ruliff S. Holway, 290-305. 



The PubHc, Feb. 26, 1915.— The single tax in 

 relation to forestry, by Louis S. Murphy, 

 p. 217-24. 



Reclamation record, Feb. 1915.— Tree planting; 

 Mills river and Sun river projects, Mon-" 

 tana, p. 81. 



Science, Feb. 26, 1915.— Effect of cyanide of 

 potassium on trees, by C. H. Shattuck, 

 p. 324. 



Tree talk, Feb. 1915.— Transplantmg large 

 trees, by C. E. Hunn, p. 15-19. 



United States — Dept. of agriculture — Office of 

 information. Weekly news letter to crop 

 correspondents, March 3, 1915. — Remedies 

 for keeping the white ant from damaging 

 timber, p. 4. 



Wood-preserving, Jan.-March, 1915. — The B. 

 & O. timber preserving plan. p. 8-9. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Feb. 13, 1915. — Pre- 

 serving timber by Kyan's process, by 

 Friedrich Moll, p. 40; Solving timber 

 taxation problems; how lumbermen and 

 farmers of the far northwest have cooper- 

 ated, p. 40-1. 



American lumberman, Feb. 20, 1915.— Timber 

 utilization, by O. T. Swan, p. 46-8; 

 Evolution of American forestry, by Frank 

 W. Rane, p. 48. 



American lumberman, Feb. 27, 1915. — Engi- 

 neers discuss long-leaf problem, p. 27-9. 



American lumberman, March 6, 1915. — 

 Kyanized spruce, p. 23; Forestry work for 

 unemployed; improving the woodlands in 

 Massachusetts gives employment to 1,600 

 men, p. 26; Combating dry rot in factory 

 timbers, by Fred J. Hoxie, p. 30-3. 



Canada lumberman, Feb. 15, 1915. — The 

 merits of Austrian and British oak, by 

 Percy Groom, p. 46-8; Some problems in 

 kiln dr>dng lumber, by Malcolm E. Miller, 

 p. 48. 



Engineering record, Dec. 26, 1914. — Lumber 

 mattresses for bank protection in Louisi- 

 ana, p. 686. 



Engineering record, Jan. 2, 1915. — Costly 

 highway clearing in dense forests, p. 21. 



Engineering record, Jan. 9, 1915. — Wood block 

 pavement without cushion layer of sand, 

 p. 52-3; Wood block pavement after six 

 years' service, p. 53. 



Furniture journal, Feb. 25, 1915. — Developing 

 a market for porch furniture, by Waldon 

 Fawcett, p. 37-41. 



