238 Forestry Quarterly 



Bibliography of the Chestnut Tree Blight Fungus. By R. K. 

 Beattie. The Commission for the Investigation and Control of 

 the Chestnut Tree Blight Disease. Harrisburg, Pa. 1914. Pp. 32. 



Official hispection Rules of the North Carolina Pine Associ- 

 ation, Inc. Issued by the North Carolina Pine Association, Inc. 

 Norfolk, Va. 1914. Pp. 24. 



Wood-Using Industries of Georgia. By Ofhce of Industrial 

 Investigations, U. S. Forest Service. Reprint from Lumber 

 Trade Journal, New Orleans, La. March 15, 1915. Pp. 19-29. 



Manufacturers of wooden products in Georgia used 557,000,000 

 board feet of lumber in 1911. Although 34 species are included 

 in the list, Longleaf pine comprised 52 per cent and Shortleaf 

 34.5 per cent of the total. The average cost per thousand f.o.b. 

 factory for all woods was $14.33 ; total cost nearly $8,000,000. 

 Planing mill products make up over 71 per cent of the entire 

 quantity of wood reported manufactured ; sash, doors, blinds and 

 general millwork, 13 per cent; boxes and crates, 3.9 per cent; 

 furniture, 2.9 per cent ; ten others, less than 1 per cent each. 



Tree Fillings and Wound Dressings for Orchard and Shade 

 Trees. By A. D. Selby. Circular 150, Ohio Agricultural Experi- 

 ment Station. Wooster, Ohio. 1915. Pp. 3. 



Discusses a method of making fillings out of asphaltum and 

 sawdust, and of dressing wounds with gas tar and forms of 

 liquid asphaltum. 



The Preservation of Ties, Poles and Timbers by Antiseptic 

 Treatment. By W. F. Goltra. Cleveland, Ohio, 1914. Pp. 11. 



The writer makes the following recommendations: (1) The 

 material should be thoroughly seasoned, either naturally or arti- 

 ficially, before treatment; (2) Ties should be adzed and bored 

 just before injection of preservative; (3) All material should 

 receive a thorough and full impregnation with whatever pre- 

 servative is used. 



. Alabama Bird Day Book, 19 15. Issued by Department of 

 Game and Fish. Montgomery, Ala. Pp. 96. 



