189 
vol. xviii. No. 4, July, 1911, pp. — Creosote is the prin- 
cipal gi dealt with 4 in this — 
‘A 
the Banibe, Beetle or Shot Borer,”’ by P. Stabbitie, F.L.S., 
Forest Pamphlet 15, pp. 1-18, Imperial Forest Service, India, 
Various experim ents are etal and as a result it is recom- 
= Lox ity of Various "Wood Pisses atives, by. Ces sphees 
and Ruth M. Fleming, report in the J ournal of Industrial and 
28. i i 
Engineering Chemistry, vol. vi., This article deals 
with the properties and killin int of various preservatives 
and is the result of es conducted in the Forest 
Labratory, Madison, Wisco The aap dealt with 
include:—Wood tar (akedwood), wood tar (Douglas fir), 
spiritine wood preserver, water gas tar creosote, coal ‘ar creosote, 
avenarlus carbolineum, P. F. carbolineum, C. A. wood 
preserver, Holzhelfer, No. 2097, copperized oil, fuel oil, kerosene, 
eresol-calcium, none-such specia 
fluoride, zinc chloride, zine sul ha te. Another article on the 
same subject by E. P. Schoch, bee oy of Texas, Austin, is 
to va oe at p. 603 of the same volume. 
he Value of the Higher Phinssie 4 in Wood-preserving Oils,’ 
" ‘Sonne Cabot, Journ. of Indust. and Engin. Chem., vol. iv., 
p- 206, and “¢ Phenomenon of the Apparent Disepponrasics of 
a6 igh Boiling Phenols in Creosoted No ee and its Explana- 
tion ”” by the same author in the same vyolum 
‘Coal Tar Creosote Distillation and Individual ee a ge sh 
Comparative bigs ) eosote for the Marine Bor 
. L. Schackell, inabieas Wood Prisorven 
) wing three papers were read at a ae of t 
Cliemiste” Club in New York, on November 25th, 1910, her 
appear in Journ. Soc. Chaise Industry, 1911, p. 1 
** The Actions of Oils and Tars in Preventing Mould Growth,”’ 
by J ohn Morris Weiss. 
“Some Recent Publications on Grooante Oils,’ by 
s. of sodium choi) et tre. The 
the sleepers absorbing 
