318 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



The Watch that Times the Fast Trains 



Thousands of engineers and conductors carry Hamilton Watches. Tliey know they can rely on 

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amtlton ^JJaf ch 



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Hamilton Watch Company 



Dept. 39 



Lancaster, Pennsylvania 



"Tht Watch of Railroad Accuracy" 



Fireman E. 

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International review of agricultural econ- 

 omics, Jan. 1917. The question of 

 forestry in the Kingdom of Serbia, 

 p. 114-22. 



Munsey's magazine, April 1917. Forest 

 tragedy; the rise and fall of a lum- 

 ber town, by Samuel T. Dana, p. 353- 

 63. 



Outing, Feb. 1917. A tenderfoot in the 

 Sierras, by Don Carlos Ellis, p. 

 582-8. 



Phytopathology, April 1917. Contribu- 

 tions to our knowledge of the white 

 pine blister rust, by W. A. McCub- 

 bin, p. 95-100; Recent cultures of for- 

 est trees rusts, by James R. Weir and 

 Ernest E. Hubert, p. 106-9; Pycnial 

 stages of important forest tree rusts, 

 by James R. Weir and Ernest E. 

 Hubert, p. 135-9. 



Popular science monthly, April 1917. 

 War time uses of wood, by Arlie W. 

 Schorger, p. 590-2. 



Reclamation record, April 1917. The sta- 

 bilizing influence of the national for- 

 ests, p. 196. 



Recreation, April 1917. The ten-million- 

 dollar leak in our meat supply, by 

 Will C. Barnes, p. 157-8. 



Sierra club bulletin, Jan. 1917. The war 

 zone forest of the Kern, by Walter 

 Mulford, p. 155-8. 



Southern homeseeker and investors 

 guide, March 1917. The eastern 

 national forests as public recreation 

 grounds, by John L. Cobbs, Jr., p. 

 18-19. 



Torreya, Dec. 1916. Snow injury to 

 trees, by George B. Rigg, p. 257-60. 



Torreya, Feb. 1917. Self-pruning in the 

 American elm, by Jean Broadhurst, 

 p. 21-4. 



United States Department of agricul- 

 ture. Weekly news letter, March 28, 



1917. The paper outlook; national 

 pulp resources; importance of con- 

 serving forests; utilizing waste wood, 

 by David F. Houston, p. 1-4. 



Wood preserving, Jan.-March 1917. 

 Creosoted wood-block pavement, by 

 F. P. Hamilton, p. 11; Boston ele- 

 vated railway treating plant, by E. 

 W. Bright, p. 12-14; Transmission of 

 air pressure in timber, and its bear- 

 ing on plant operation, by George 

 M. Hunt, p. 14. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, March 17, 1917. 

 The relation of pulp wood supply to 

 forest waste, p. 24; Sawdust wanted 

 for propagating work, p. 25; Hard- 

 wood logging in the Adirondack for- 

 ests, by A. B. Recknagel, p. 34-5. 



American lumberman, March 24, 1917. 

 Use of salt in seasoning lumber, p. 

 29; Graphic diagram of National 

 hardwood rules, p. 29; Famous 

 wooden bridge has served more than 

 a century, p. 34; Creosoted timber 

 and maintenance, by B. L. Grondal, 

 p. 38; Hemlock bark again demanded 

 by tanners, p. 43; Conference marks 

 progress of fire fighters, p. 44; Cut- 

 ting mahogany, by Frances Forres- 

 ter-Brown, p. 50-1. 



American lumberman, March 31, 1917. 

 Creosoted fir stave pipe gains popu- 

 larity, p. 29; Work of Madison labo- 

 ratory proved practical, p. 29; Cut- 

 ting hardwoods with a view to econ- 

 omy, by W. J. Blackmur, p. 30. 



American lumberman, April 7, 1917. 

 War will greatly stimulate wooden 

 ship building, p. 32; Germans devas- 

 tate forests of Russia, p. 38; The 

 possibilities of potash as a by-prod- 

 uct, by George A. Schwabland, p. 

 43; Some facts about the industry, 



particularly on the Pacific coast, by- 

 Lewis Sch wager, p. 58; Laboratory 

 has new director, p. 59; American 

 woods for tea boxes, by K. Krishna- 

 murti Nayudu, p. 59; Managing a 

 national forest, by Herman Work, p. 

 60-1; Logging with motor trucks 

 on the Pacific Coast, p. 66. 

 Barrel and box, March 1917. The life of 

 a barrel, p. 21; Lumber feetage in 

 barrel heads, by N. G. Near, p. 22. 

 Canada lumberman, April 1, 1917. The 

 timber import trade of Australia, by 

 H. R. McMillan, p. 26-9; Conveyors' 

 part in lumber production, p. 42-4. 

 Electric railway journal, Dec. 16, 1916. 

 Timber preservation by pressure and 

 open tank processes, by C. H. Tees- 

 dale, p. 1254. 

 Engineering record, March 31, 1917. 

 New stump burner for logged-off 

 lands requires no blower, by Le Roy 

 W. Allison, p. 495-6. 

 Gulf Coast lumberman, March 15, 1917. 



New uses for wood, p. 28. 

 Hardwood record, March 25, 1917. 

 Colored woods of the United States, 

 by Hu Maxwell, p. 15-17. 

 Hardwood record, April 10, 1917. 

 Growth-ring wood figures, by Hu 

 Maxwell, p. 13-15. 

 Lumber trade journal, March 15, 1917. 

 Recent work of the Forest products 

 laboratory at Madison is thoroughly 

 reviewed, p. 22-3 . 

 Lumber trade journal, April 1, 1917. 

 Louisiana lumber taxation, p. 15-16. 

 Lumber word review, March 25, 1917. 

 Motor trucks in high favor among 

 lumbermen, p. 23~5. 

 Paper, March 14, 1917. Pitch in sulphite 

 pulp, by R. E. Cooper, p. 13-14; 

 Paper resources of the United States, 

 by Carl Vrooman, p. 15. 

 Paper, March 21, 1917. Utilization of 

 bark for felts, p. 15; Uses of wood- 

 pulp, by S. F. Acree, p. 17. 

 Paper, March 28, 1917. Paper conditions 

 in foreign countries, by G. F. Steele, 

 p. 22-24. 

 Paper, April 4, 1917. Cellulose and 

 chemical industry, by Charles F. 

 Cross, p. 17-19; Pulpwood possibili- 

 ties in the south, by Job Taylor, p. 

 19-20. 

 Paper mill, March 3, 1917. Forced cir- 

 culation in cooking sulphite pulp, 

 by Sydney E. Lunak, p. 17, 32. 

 Pioneer western lumberman, March 15, 

 1917. Creosoted wood blocks advo- 

 cated for building permanent roads 

 in Oregon, by O. P. M. Goss, p. 22. 

 Pioneer western lumberman, April 1, 

 1917. Cost of logging in the Pacific 

 northwest, p. 15; The Yosemite val- 

 ley, p. 20-21. 

 Power, Jan. 30, 1917. Utilization of lum- 

 ber mill waste, by R. L. Watts, p. 136. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, March 1, 1917. 

 The sedimentation test of ground 

 wood pulp, p. 217-19; Forestry and 

 forest protection matters, by Ell- 

 wood Wilson, p. 226-8. 

 Railway review, March 31, 1917. Fire 

 protection, inspection and signaling 

 in the Southern Pacific snowshed dis- 

 trict, p. 450-3. 

 St. Louis lumberman, March 15, 1917. 

 An awakened Russia, p. 13; Selling 

 what the logger leaves, by Arthur 

 Koehler, p. 47-8; Modern methods of 

 land clearing by Carl Livingston, p. 

 48-9; Transportation in modern busi- 

 ness, by F. M. Ducker, p. 57-8; Dry- 

 ing car material, p. 58. 

 St. Louis lumberman, April 1, 1917. 

 Secretary Kellogg anent shipbuild- 

 ing, by R. S. Kellogg, p. 17; The 

 big willows of the lower valley, p. 18. 



