754 



AMEKICAN FOEESTRY 



ests and growing new ones, from the 

 standpoint of the public and that of the 

 lumberman, with an outline of technical 

 methods. 130 p. Portland, Ore., West- 

 ern forestry and conservation associa- 

 tion, 1911. 



Forest mensuration 



Scribner, J. M. Scribner's enlarged lum- 

 ber and log book, 1911. 190 p. il. 

 Rochester, N. Y., S. E. Fisher, 1911. 



Forest Economics 

 Statistics 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Bureau of statistics. Exports of farm 

 and forest products, 1908-1910, by coun- 

 tries to which consigned. 96 p. Wash., 

 D. C, 1911. (Bulletin 91.) 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Bureau of statistics. Imports of farm 

 and forest products, 1908-1910, by coun- 

 tries from which consigned. 80 p. 

 Wash., D. C, 1911. (Bulletin 90.) 



Wiirttemberg Forstdirektion. Forststatis- 

 tische mitteilungen aus Wurttemberg 

 fur das jahr 1909. 98 p. Stuttgart, 1911. 



Forest Administration 



India Ajmere-Merwara Forest depart- 

 ment. Annual report on forest adminis- 

 tration for 1909-10. 33 p. Mount Abu, 

 1910. 



India Bengal Forest department. Annual 

 progress report on forest administration 

 in the lower provinces of Bengal for the 

 year 1909-1910. 53 p. Calcutta, India, 

 1910. 



New South Wales Department of agricul- 

 tureForestry dept. Report for the 

 year ended 30th June, 1910. 12 p. pi. 

 _ Sydney, Gov't, printer, 1910. 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Forest service. October field program, 

 1911. 27 p. Wash., D. C, 1911. 



National and state forests 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Forest service. National forests; loca- 

 tion, date, and area, Sept. 30, 1911. 4 p. 

 Wash., D. C, 1911. 



Forest Utilization 

 Lumber industry 



United States Department of agriculture. 

 Forest service. Record of wholesale 

 prices of lumber based on actual sales 

 made f. o. b. each market, for July, Aug- 

 ust, and September, 1911. 22 p. Wash., 

 D. C, 1911. 



Wood preservation 



Bateman, E. A visual method for deter- 

 mining the penetration of inorganic salts 

 m treated wood. 5 p. il. Wash., D. C, 



1911. (U. S. Dept. of agriculture- 

 Forest service. Circular 190.) 

 Teesdale, C. H. Volatilization of various 

 fractions of creosote after their injection 

 into wood. 5 p. Wash., D. C, 1911. 

 (U. S. Dept. of agriculture Forest 

 service. Circular 188.) 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Conservation of natural resources 



Price, Overton Westfeldt. The land we live 

 in ; the boys' book of conservation * * * 

 with a foreword by Gifford Pinchot. 242 

 p. il. Boston, Small, Maynard & Co., 

 1911. 



Periodical Articles 

 General 



American city, Sept. 1911. Give the trees a 

 square deal, by L. G. Vair, p. 143-9. 



Bulletin agricole du Congo Beige, Sept., 1911. 

 Les palmiers utiles, by L. Pynaert, p. 

 535-52. 



Cornell rural school leaflet, Sept., 1911. 

 The white pine, by Walter Mulford, p. 

 97-103. 



Farm and ranch, Nov. 4, 1910. The useful 

 mesquite, by J. L. Cowan, p. 1-2. 



Garden magazine, Nov., 1911. Do your trees 

 need doctoring? by J. J. Levison, p. 

 165-6. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Sept. 23, 1911. The 

 weeping varieties of Ulmus montana, by 

 A. D. Richardson, p. 221. 



Nature study review, Sept., 1911. Place of 

 forestry in general education, by Herbert 

 A. Smith, p. 141-5; Forestry from two 

 viewpoints, by J. J. Crumley, p. 146-8; 

 Forestry in nature study, by E. R. Jack- 

 son, p. 149-54; A list of books and 

 periodicals on trees, forestry and con- 

 servation, p. 154-7. 



Outlook, Sept. 23, 1911. Land of silent 

 men, by C. H. Shinn, p. 179-86. 



Overland monthly, Oct., 1911. National for- 

 ests as they appear to the people who 

 live in them, by G. La Follette, p. 284-6. 



Philippine journal of science, C. Botany, 

 Sept., 1911. The palms of the island of 

 Polillo. bv O. Beccari, p. 229-30; Philip- 

 pine dipterocarpaceae, by F. W. Fox- 

 worthy, p. 231-87. 



Science, Sept. 29, 1911. New chestnut bark 

 disease, by I. C. Williams, p. 397-400. 



Scientific American, Sept. 9, 1911. Preserv- 

 ing poles, p. 229. 



Scientific American, Sept. 23, 1911. Utiliza- 

 tion of dead pine wood in the south ; the 

 recovery of turpentine from logs and 

 stumps, p. 197. 



Scientific American, Oct. 14, 1911. An op- 

 portunity for the farmer in the United 

 States ; basket willow culture, p. 357. 



Scientific American, Oct. 28, 1911. A new 

 system of gathering turpentine, p. 383. 



Scientific American, supplement, Sept. 30, 



