28 



Irrigation 



United States Reclamation Service. 5th annual report, 1906. 312 p. Illus. 



Washington, D. C. 

 Forest Sanatoriums 



Pennsylvania forestry and camps for consumptives, by J. T. Rothrock. 1907. 



Illus. In Chautauquan, Chautauqua, N. Y., June. 1907. 

 Periodicals Articles of Special Interest 



The Woodworker, June, 1907. Making veneered doors, p. 22; New process of 

 lumber drying, p." 28. 



The Timber Trades Journal, April 13, 1907. The biggest poplar tree in the 

 kingdom, p. 815. 



American Lumberman, June 15, 1907. How much standing timber is there in 

 British Columbia? p. 36; Pine products of the Atlantic coast, p. 51; Suc- 

 cess in southern flooring manufacture, p. 75: Canada's forest wealth, 

 p. 93; Vancouver's forest reserves, p. 93. 



The New York Lumber Trade Journal, June 15, 1907. Hardwood lumbering 

 in Georgia, p. 12. 



Lumber Trade Journal (New Orleans), June 15, 1907. Southern wood products, 

 p. 18. 



The Lumber World, June 15, 1907. Germans favor wood ties, p. 15. 



American Lumberman, June 8, 1907. Hardwood inspection rules committee's 

 report, p. 42A. 



Southern Lumber Journal, June 1, 1907. Our different supplies of timber, 

 p. 33. 



Southern Lumberman, June 10, 1907. The Yale forest school, by Henry S. 

 Graves, p. 63; Knowledge of standing timber, by Capt. J. B. White, p. 64. 



Hardwood Record, June 10, 1907. American forest trees White cedar, p. 16: 

 Hardwood carpets, p. 17; Hardwood coffins in foreign lands, p. 48. 



National Cooper's Journal, June, 1907. Proper grading of cooperage stock, by 

 C. M. van Aken, p. 9; The Appalachian-White Mountain question, by 

 Thomas E. Will, p. 12; The supply of timber available for the manufac- 

 turers of slack cooperage stocks, by R. S. Kellogg, p. 13. 



Canada Lumberman and Woodworker, June, 1907. History of the British 

 Columbia cedar shingle, p. 13; Old and new ways of getting out lumber, 

 p. 14; Strength of timbers, by Professor Penhallows, McGill University, 

 p. 15; First methods of forestry, by H. R. McMillan, Yale forest school, 

 p. 16. 



The Lumber Review, June, 1907. Noncorroding woods in modern machinery, 

 p. 16. 



Wood Craft, June, 1907. Tie preservation, p. 90. 



International Cooperage News, May 15, 1907. Experiments with waste tur- 

 pentine wood, p. 12. 



West Coast Lumberman, May, 1907. Preventing forest fires, p. 587. 



Hardwood Record, May 25, 1907. American forest trees Chinquapin oak, p. 

 16; Hickory wheels for motor trucks, p. 17; Modern hardwood and 

 cement combinations, p. 18; Firewood consumption in France, p. 19; 

 Peruvian hardwoods, p. 22. 



Dixie Woodworker, May, 1907. Lumber in Peru, p. 23; Lumber trade of Brazil , 

 p. 24. 



The Southern Lumberman, May 25, 1907. The Appalachian Mountains as a 

 hardwood supply, by Wm. L. Hall, p. 41; Woods work of forest students, 

 p. 41E. 



Southern Industrial and Liimber Review, May 20, 1907. Eucalyptus as rail- 

 road ties, p. 48; Historic American trees, p. 49; Central America's timber 

 lands, p. 64; Texas forest distribution, p. 64. 



The Timber Trades Journal, May 18, 1907. A reminiscence of the mahogany 

 trade in 1850, p. 1011. 



American Lumberman, May 25, 1907. Uses of osage orange wood, p. 36; 

 Impregnation of wood with tar oil, p. 44. 



St. Louis Lumberman, May 15, 1907. Canadian wood pulp supply, p. 27; 

 Railroad experiments in timber growing, p. 67; Yale forest students in 

 the Ozark Mountains, by R. C. Bryant, p. 78. 



TheTimberman, May, 1907. Logging successfully with the overhead cable- 

 way system, p. 33; Timber cutting device, p, 70, 



The Pacific Lumber Trade Journal, May, 1907. Forest areas of i ations, p. 24. 



Barrel and Box, May, 1907. Some problems of veneer making, p. 47; Hard- 

 wood ball manufacture, p. 48: Cultivating willows in the United States, 

 p. 49. 



The Woodworker, May, 1907. The care of lumber, p. 22; Practical drying, p. 27. 



