CURRENT LITERATURE 



55 



United States — Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, Dec. 6, 1915. — A 

 honeycomb heart-rot of oaks caused by 

 Stereum subpileatum, by Wm. H. Long, 

 p. 421-28. 



United States — Weather bureau. Monthly 

 weather review, Sept., 1915. — Influence 

 of a forest on the temperature of an air 

 current, by Michel Lalin, p. 448-9. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Nov. 13, 1915. — 

 Effect of various woods on corrosion of 

 nails, by S. F. Acree, p. 27; Australia 

 offers wide field for American lumber, by 

 Franklin H. Smith, p. 31; Taxation and 

 Forestry, by E. A. Selfridge, p. 36. 



American lumberman, Nov. 20, 1915.- — Wood 

 blocks treated economically, p. 36-7. 



American lumberman, Nov. 27, 1915.— 

 Devises a new process for creosoting fir, 

 by O. P. M. Goss, p. 65. 



American lumberman, Dec. 11, 1915. — 

 Architects hear talks on the use of wood, 

 p. 30-1; Fire tests of wood at the forest 

 products laboratory, by C. H. Teesdale, 

 p. 33-35; wooden poles found best for 

 electric lines, p. 38; Eastern foresters 

 hold annual meeting, p. 45. 



Canada lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915.— The 

 place of logging engineering in forestry, 

 by Judson F. Clark, p. 37. 



Engineering record, Oct. 16, 1915. — Longleaf 

 pine specification should include density 

 test, by Howard F. Weiss, p. 489-90. 



Hardwood record, Nov. 25, 1915. — Philippine 

 standardizing campaign, by L. R. Stadt- 

 miller, p. 27. 



Ha-^dwood record, Dec. 10, 1915. — Uses of 

 wood by shoemakers, p. 23. 



Lumber trade journal, Dec. 1, 1915. — Creo- 

 soted wood block stood the test, p. 11, 13 ; 

 New cypress grading rules that will go 

 into effect on January 1, 1916, by 

 Southern cypress manufacturers' associa- 

 tion, p. 11. 



Lumber world review, Nov. 10, 1915. — Wood 

 preservation; its past, present and future, 

 by F. J. Angier, p. 42-6; Forest industries 

 week at the Panama-Pacific international 

 exposition, p. 47-83; Annual of Southern 

 logging association, p. 83-5; Review of 

 the Federal trade commission's lumber 

 trade inquiry, p. 19-2 1 ; Does the lumber 

 industry need radical reorganization to 

 protect both producer and consumer? 

 by E. B. Hazen, p. 21-4. 



Paper, Dec. 1, 1915. — World's production 

 and trade in paper, by Franz Krawany, 

 p. 13-17. 



Paper mill, Nov. 6, 1915. — Bamboo cellulose, 

 by William Raitt, p. 32, 34. 



Philippine trade review, Oct., 1915. — Produc- 

 tion and improved methods in the 

 manufacture of copra in the Philippine 

 islands, by James F. Boomer, p. 7-8; A 

 new copra dryer that^will revolutionize 

 the production of copra in the Philippine 

 Islands, p. 18-19. 



Pioneer western lumbemian, Nov. 15, 1915. — 

 Course in structural timber for engineer- 

 ing students, p. 15 ; Wood in building con- 

 struction, by E. A. Sterling, p. 22-3. 



Railway review, Nov. 13, 1915. — Tie preser- 

 vation on the Baltimore and Ohio R. R., 

 by F. J. Angier, p. 630-3. 



St. Louis liunberman, Nov. 15, 1915. — State 

 forestry associations, p. 62; List of 

 associations and officers, p. 70. 



St. Louis lumberman, Dec. 1, 1915. — Govern- 

 ment vs. citizen: national forest timber 

 forced upon an overstocked market by 

 congress, by H. D. Langille, p. 48-50; 

 The forests of Kentucky, by J. E. Barton, 

 p. 72. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, Nov., 

 1915. — Forestry and deforestation, by 

 Ira G. Shellabarger, p. 17; Texas state 

 forester begins work, p. 19. 



Southern lumber journal, Nov. 15, 1915. — • 

 Taxation and forestry, by E. A. Selfridge, 

 Jr., p. 41. 



Southern lumberman, Nov. 20, 1915. — Ver- 

 tical cylinders vs. horizontal cylinders 

 for the preservation of wood blocks for 

 floors and pavements, p. 29. 



Timber trades journal, Nov. 27, 1915. — 

 "Witches' broom" on willow, by A. D. 

 Webster, p. 805. 



Timberman, Nov., 1915. — Gasoline engine for 

 logging operations, by W. L. Corson, p. 

 37 ; Overhead logging, by J. S. O'Gorman, 

 p. 37-9; Novel steel spar skidder, by 

 E. A. Gaskill, p. 39^1 ; Lidgerwood steel 

 spar skidder, by M. H. Dickinson, p. 

 48-9; Value of fire protection in pine 

 logging, by Coert DuBois, p. 53-4; Cost 

 accoimtrng methods and operating, by 

 George A. Peck, p. 54-8; Modem camp 

 buildings, by C. S. Martin, p. 58-60. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 24, 

 1915. — Arboriculture in Persia, by Ralph 

 H. Bader, p. 776; Improved copra curing 

 in Philippines, p. 777. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 26, 

 1915. — Russian wood-pulp and paper 

 situation, by John H. Snodgrass, p. 794— 6. 



United States daily consular report, Dec. 1, 

 1915. — Italian market for American 

 lumber, by William F. Kelley, p. 840-1 ; 

 Lumber trade's importance to British 

 Columbia, by G. C. Woodward, p. 85-9. 



V'eneers, Dec, 1915. — Oak logs for quartering, 

 by J. Crow Taylor, p. 9-10; Veneer band 

 inlays, p. 14. 



West Coast lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915. — 

 United States special agent reports on 

 lumber markets of China, by Franklin 

 H. Smith, p. 21, 26-8; This tells you just 

 how much Douglas fir is sold and where it 

 goes, p. 23 ; The preservation of log build- 

 ings, by Bror L. Grondal, p. 32; Com- 

 pulsory forest protection considered at 

 San Francisco conference, by C. S. 

 Chapman, p. 36-7; New relationship 

 between the government and the lumber 

 industry, by H. S. Graves, p. 39-40; Tim- 

 ber trade of Holland, by H. R. MacMil- 

 lan, p. 20; Description of the country's 

 most modern of portable logging camps, 

 p. 21. 



Wood turning, Dec, 1915. — Uses of woods: 



chestnut, yellow poplar, black gum, 



sycamore, p. 8-9. 

 Wooden and willow ware trade review, Nov. 



11, 1915. — Willow culture for Georgia, 



p. 33-4. 

 Wooden and willow ware trade review, Nov. 



25, 1915.— Brush making in Troy, N. Y., 



p. 41-2, 48. 

 Wood-worker, Nov., 1915. — Lumber drying 



and lumber driers, p. 33-4. 



Forest journals 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, May, 

 1915. — Absteckung von einseitigen weg- 

 kurven, by Friedrich Wilhelm Furst, p. 

 105-9; Die gewichtszahlen der forst- 

 lichen rentabilitat, by E. Kreutzer, p. 

 109-12; Ueber die abhangigkeit der er- 

 tragsregelung und bestandespflege vom 

 versuchswesen, by Hemmann, p. 112-16; 

 Lauterungshiebe und jugenddurchforst- 

 ungen, by Jurgens, p. 116-20. 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, June, 

 1915. — Ueber erziehung unserer hol- 

 zarten in lockerem kronenschlusse (starke 

 durchforstung und hochdurchforstung), 

 by Tiemann, p. 133-44. 



Canadian forestry journal, Nov., 1915. — The 

 working plan of the St. Maurice protec- 

 tive association, by Henry Sorgius, p. 

 247-9; Sentiment making and forest pro- 

 tection, by E. T. Allen, p. 252-5; Fire loss 

 for 1915, S10,000,000, in Canada, p. 

 259-61 ; A talk on forestry for children, by 

 James Lawler, p. 262-3; Timber in 

 Canada, by R. H. Campbell, p. 265-8. 



Hawaiian forester and agriculturist, Nov., 

 1915. — Some common woody plants of 

 the Oahu lowlands, by Vaughan Mac- 

 Caughey, p. 290-2. 



Indian forester, Oct., 1915. — The natural 

 reproduction of sal and how it can be im- 

 proved, by R. S. Hole, p. 351-61; A note 

 on the cultivation of Podophyllum emodi, 

 by R. S. Troup, p. 361-5; The uniform 

 system in Burma, by H. R. Blanford, p. 

 366-71; The Myodwin teak plantations, 

 Zig6n division, Lower Burma, by A. 

 Rodger, p. 372-6; Girdlings by bears, by 

 Daya Ram, p. 382; Damage by porcu- 

 pines, by Basti Ram, p. 383-4. 



North woods, Nov., 1915.— The effect of 

 forest destruction upon game, by W. B. 

 Douglas, p. 14-16. 



Proceedings of the Society of American for- 

 esters, Oct., 1915. — Robert Langdon 

 Rogers, p.l; The need of working plans on 

 national forests and the policies which 

 should be embodied in them, by Burt P. 

 Kirkland, p. 341-70; Regional forest 

 plans, by D. T. Mason, p. 371-5; Work- 

 ing plans, by H. H. Chapman, p. 376-82; 

 A new aspect of brush disposal in Arizona^ 

 and New Mexico, by W. H. Long, p. 

 383-98; Brush disposal in lodgepole-pine 

 cuttings, by D. T. Mason, p. 399-404; 

 Some notes on forest ecology and its prob- 

 lems, by Richard H. Boerker, p. 405-22r 

 Five years growth on Douglas fir sample 

 plots, by Thornton T. Munger, p. 423-5; 

 Light burning at Castle Rock, by S. B. 



