374 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



HANNOND 

 LUMBER 

 COMPANY 



Manufacturers 

 of 



Redwood 

 Lumber 



Satisfactory grades and 



prompt shipment 



guaranteed 



Write for advice and 

 information. 



We'll tell you why 

 you should use Red- 

 wood. 



We ship direct by 

 cargo or rail from our 

 big Redwood mills at 

 Eureka, California. 



SAN FRANCISCO OFFICE 

 260 CALIFORNIA STREET 



Engineering record, March 11, 1916. — New 

 process for treating wood patented by 

 the American wood encysting company, 

 p. 373^. 



Gulf Coast lumberman, April 15, 1916. — 

 Texas forestry, J. H. Foster, p. 38-40. 



Hardwood record, April 25, 1916. — Cost of 

 burning sawmill refuse, by Rolf Thelen, 

 p. 18-19; The basis of lumber prices, by 

 C. H. Worcester, p. 20; Proposed inspec- 

 tion rules changes, p. 21-3. 



Hardwood record. May 10, 1916.— Wood 

 flour, by Frederick W. Kressmann, p. 

 16-17; The use of dyes by Indians, p. 21. 



Journal of industrial and engineering chem- 

 istry. May, 1916. — Some notes on sandal- 

 wood, its assay, yield of oil, and changes 

 in the oil during distillation, by C. H. 

 Briggs, p. 428-9. 



Lumber world review, April 25, 1916. — 

 Rebuilding the wood pipe line in Seattle, 

 p. 41. 



Lumber world review. May 10, 1916. — Cir- 

 culation in dry kilns, by Harry D. 

 Tiemann, p. 25-6. 



Packages, April, 1916. — Use of wood flour, 

 p. 21. 



Paper, April 19, 1916. — The paper industry 

 of the Indian empire, by H. R. Mac- 

 Millan, p. 15-18. 



Paper, April 26, 1916. — Woodpulps for paper- 

 making, p. 11-12, 34. 



Paper trade journal, March 30, 1916. — A 

 history of paper manufacturing in the 

 United States, by Lyman Horace Weeks, 

 p. 35-8. 



Railway age gazette, March 17, 1916. — 

 Marine borers from wood preserver's 

 standpoint, by L. F. Shackell, p. 508-10. 



Railway review, Jan. 22, 1916. — Essentials 

 in timber preservation work, by J. W. 

 Kendrick, p. 127-8; Proper oil for creo- 

 soting wood blocks for paving, by P. C. 

 Reilly, p. 139-46. 



St. Louis lumberman, April 1, 1916. — Lumber 

 requirements of the automobile industry, 

 p. 41. 



St. Louis lumberman, April 15, 1916. — The 

 timber trade of France, p. 14; The wood 

 pulp business, p. 39-40; Where, too, 

 promotion of wood products is needed, 

 by Howard F. Weiss, p. 46; Trade exten- 

 sion for the retaU dealer, by H. S. 

 Sackett, p. 64—5; Lumber the chief in- 

 dustry of British Columbia, p. 70 D; 

 List of associations and officers, p. 70 

 G-H. 



St. Louis lumberman. May 1, 1916. — Need of 

 uniform accounting in the limiber in- 

 dustry, by John G. Mcintosh, p. 55. 



Southern lumberman. May 6, 1916. — Learn 

 of conditions in South America, by 

 Roger E. Simmons, p. 25. 



Southern lumberman. May 13, 1916. — Wood 

 block paving, by L. P. Hamilton, p. 27. 



Timber trade journal, March 25, 1916. — 

 Review of the timber trade of 1915, p. 

 541-627; Engineering and wood-working 

 machinery section, p. 637-48. 



Timber trade journal, April 22, 1916.— The 

 manufacture of charcoal, by A. D. 

 Webster, p. 806; Timber in Newfound- 



Forestry 

 Courses 



At the 



University 

 of Idaho 



Two four-year forestry courses 

 are offered. The first is a good 

 all-round course. The second is 

 designed to prepare students as 

 logging engineers and for lumbering. 



A three-year Rangers' Course of 

 five months per year is also offered. 



Idaho has extensive national 

 forests now rapidly being developed 

 and calling on her State Forestry 

 School for men trained to deal with 

 the peculiar forestry and grazing 

 problems of the State. The private 

 timber holdings in Idaho are large 

 and offer much promise for those 

 trained to deal scientifically with 

 the various large lines of operation 

 now opening up. 



Young men contemplating a 

 course in forestry will do well to 

 bear in mind that the location and 

 field of the school they attend is 

 one of the greatest assets contribut- 

 ing to their future success. Idaho 

 is and will remain one of the best 

 fields in which to practue forestry. 

 Its Forestry Department is well 

 manned and well equipped, and 

 its students are paid a salary for 

 practical work in the summer. 



Bulletin and particulars sent on 

 appUcation to 



C. H. SHATTUCK, Dean 

 Moscow, Idaho 



land, p. 807; The forester's profession in 

 Nigeria, by A. H. Unwin, p. 835. 



United States daily consular report, April 26, 

 1916. — Logwood situation in West Indies 

 and Honduras, by Lemuel W. Livingston, 

 p. 342-3. 



United States daily consular report, April 29, 

 1916.^Companies interested in Mexican 

 logwood, by Claude E. Guyant, p. 392. 



United States daily consular report, May 1, 

 1916. — Brazilian tarming and dyeing 

 materials, by Alfred L. Gottschalk, p. 

 410-13. 



