CURRENT LITERATURE 



509 





U. S. daily consular re- 

 port, June 22, 1918. 

 Hardwoods in the 

 Dominican Repub- 

 lic, by A. McLean, 

 p. 1123. 



U. S. daily consular re- 

 port, June 24, 1918. 

 Demand for Amer- 

 ican lumber in 

 China, by T. Sam- 

 mons, p. 1147. 



U. S. daily consular 

 report, June 29, 

 1918. Making pa- 

 per from sawdust, 

 by G. M. Wells, p. 

 1229. 



U. S. daily consular re- 

 port, July 1, 1918. 

 Consumption and 

 cost of railway ties 

 in Canada, by E. V. 

 Richardson, p. 4 ; 

 Production of tur- 

 pentine oil and rosin 

 in India, p. 7-11 ; 

 Curacao trade in 

 woods, p. 15. 



U. S. daily consular re- 

 port, July 2, 1918. 

 Commission to con- 

 trol New Bruns- 

 wick forests, by E. 

 V. Richardson, p. 

 22-3. 



U. S. daily consular re- 

 port, July 3, 1918. 

 Norway builds 

 wooden ship's, p. 

 40-1. 



U. S. daily consular 

 report, July 11, 

 1918. Norwegian 

 demand for tanning 

 materials, p. 138-9. 



West Coast lumberman, 

 June 15, 1918. 

 Great care necessary 

 to obtain best re- 

 sults in finishing 

 woods, by B. Gron- 

 dal, p. 37, 40. 



Wood turning, July, 

 1918. Woodwork in 

 aeroplane construc- 

 tion, p. 7-10; air- 

 plane propellers, by J. C. Taylor, p. 11. 



Wood-worker, June, 1918. Brazilian woods 

 suitable for gun-stocks, by E. F. Horn, 

 p. 24-5; The treating of exposed wood- 

 work, by B. Mills, p. 36. 



Forest journals 



American forestry, July, 1918. With the 

 American lumberjacks in France, by 

 W. B. Greeley, p. 387-92 ; War lumber- 

 ing in France, by R. H. Faulkner, p. 

 392-4 ; The forestry troops in France ; 

 by F. Kiefer, p. 394-7; Donations to 

 the welfare fund for lumbermen and 

 foresters in war service, p. 397; Work 



The Mighty WADE Outeaws 10 Men! 



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__ ._ Are You Short-Handed? 



f&itf&$&r. time! The WADE Gasoline 

 /^'HS^a/talr ' n S logs, cutting bolts or wood 

 '.'{:lyi \ t ,i>4-jj^ odd jobs of a cross-cut saw at a fr 



Read This Proof of Wade Superiority 



Speed up production to war demands lower your costs at the same 

 time! The WADE Gasoline Drag Saw will replace several men in buck- 



for your donkey. In fact, it will do all the 

 raction of the cost for man-power. 



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Gentlemen: Jackson, Tenn., April 23, 1918. 



As to results derived from the tests of various makes of drag saws in the woods for cutting bolts 



and logs, I wish to advise that after a thorough trial by cutters, testing each machine under the 



same conditions, I find that the WADE is the simplest and most practical, and has given us more 



satisfaction than other makes. J. W. BRANSON, 



Gen. Supt. Harlan-Morris Co 



A FEW MILLS USING FROM ONE TO FIVE WADES 



Puget Sound Mill & Lumber Co., Samish Bay Logging Co., Samish, Wn. 



Seattle, Wash. Western Logging Co., Winlock, Wash. 



South Bend Mills & Lumber Co., Florence Logging Co., Silvana, Wash. 



South Bend, Wash. Lake Riley Mill Co., Hazel, Wash. 



PROMPT DELIVERIES ARE MADE FROM THE FOLLOWING POINTS W^f^TuOfc 



Portland, Ore. Ashland, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. BW 



Little Rock, Ark. Los Angeles, Cal. , Boston, Mass. uL c.gjH$ 



New Orleans, La. Greenwood, Miss. Baltimore, Md. v.-.A\ w 



San Francisco, Cal. Vancouver, B. C. Chicago, 111. 



Tacoma, Wash. Jackson, Tenn. Minneapolis, Minn. 



Norfolk, Va. Louisville, Ky. 



Ross) 

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R. M. WADE & CO. 



SINCE 1865 

 331 HAWTHORNE AVENUE, PORTLAND, OREGON 



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A 53 YEAR REPUTATION BACKS THE WADE 



of the welfare fund commended, p. 397 ; 

 A new use for Douglas fir, p. 397; 

 England's future forests, p. 398; The 

 forest patriots ; a poem, by W. Her- 

 schell, p. 399; A monument to sea gulls, 

 by H. E. Zimmerman, p. 400; Con- 

 serving our food supply, by C. L. Pack, 

 p. 401-7; Three war scythes now hang 

 in one tree, by H. E. Zimmerman, p. 

 408; New purchases of land for the 

 eastern national forests, p. 408; The 

 Hawaiian lehua, by V. MacCaughey, 

 p. 409-18; The uses of wood, by H. 

 Maxwell, p. 419-27; Two good things 



in a small package, p. 427; General 

 federation indorses pine blister legis- 

 lation, p. 427; The pigeons and doves, 

 by A. A. Allen, p. 428-32; Italy's need 

 for wood, p. 432; Flower and other 

 studies for the summer of 1918, by R. 

 W. Shufeldt, p. 433-8; Splendid pro- 

 gress of wooden ship building, p. 438; 

 Forest research and the war, by E. 

 H. Clapp, p. 439; Conservative cutting 

 furnishes fuel for town, p. 439; Fed- 

 eral horticultural board urged to ex- 

 ercise decisive powers, p. 441. 

 Indian forester, Mar., 1918. Effect of 



