CURRENT LITERATURE 



55 



United States Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, Dec. 6, 1915. A 

 honeycomb heart-rot of oaks caused by 

 Stereum subpileatum, by Wm. H. Long, 

 p. 421-28. 



United States Weather bureau. Monthly 

 weather review, Sept., 1915. Influence 

 of a forest on the temperature of an air 

 current, by Michel Lalin, p. 448-9. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Nov. 13, 1915. 

 Effect of various woods on corrosion of 

 nails, by S. F. Acree, p. 27; Australia 

 offers wide field for American lumber, by 

 Franklin H. Smith, p. 31; Taxation and 

 Forestry, by E. A. Selfridge, p. 36. 



American lumberman, Nov. 20, 1915. Wood 

 blocks treated economically, p. 36-7. 



American lumberman, Nov. 27, 1915. 

 Devises a new process for creosoting fir, 

 by O. P. M. Goss, p. 65. 



American lumberman, Dec. 11, 1915. 

 Architects hear talks on the use of wood, 

 p. 30-1 ; Fire tests of wood at the forest 

 products laboratory, by C. H. Teesdale, 

 p. 33-35; wooden poles found best for 

 electric lines, p. 38; Eastern foresters 

 hold annual meeting, p. 45. 



Canada lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915. The 

 place of logging engineering in forestry, 

 by Judson F. Clark, p. 37. 



Engineering record, Oct. 16, 1915. Longleaf 

 pine specification should include density 

 test, by Howard F. Weiss, p. 489-90. 



Hardwood record, Nov. 25, 1915. Philippine 

 standardizing campaign, by L. R. Stadt- 

 miller, p. 27. 



Ha J dwood record, Dec. 10, 1915. Uses of 

 wood by shoemakers, p. 23. 



Lumber trade journal, Dec. 1, 1915. Creo- 

 soted wood block stood the test, p. 11, 13 ; 

 New cypress grading rules that will go 

 into effect on January 1, 1916, by 

 Southern cypress manufacturers' associa- 

 tion, p. 11. 



Lumber world review, Nov. 10, 1915. Wood 

 preservation; its past, present and future, 

 by F. J. Angier, p. 42-6; Forest industries 

 week at the Panama-Pacific international 

 exposition, p. 47-83; Annual of Southern 

 logging association, p. 83-5; Review of 

 the Federal trade commission's lumber 

 trade inquiry, p. 19-21; Does the lumber 

 industry need radical reorganization to 

 protect both producer and consumer? 

 by E. B. Hazen, p. 21-4. 



Paper, Dec. 1, 1915. World's production 

 and trade in paper, by Franz Krawany, 

 p. 13-17. 



Paper mill, Nov. 6, 1915. Bamboo cellulose, 

 by William Raitt, p. 32, 34. 



Philippine trade review, Oct., 1915. Produc- 

 tion and improved methods in the 

 manufacture of copra in the Philippine 

 islands, by James F. Boomer, p. 7-8; A 

 new copra dryer that will revolutionize 

 the production of copra in the Philippine 

 Islands, p. 18-19. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915. 

 Course in structural timber for engineer- 

 ing students, p. 15 ; Wood in building con- 

 struction, by E. A. Sterling, p. 22-3. 



Railway review, Nov. 13, 1915. Tie preser- 

 vation on the Baltimore and Ohio R. R., 

 by F. J. Angier, p. 630-3. 



St. Louis lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915. State 

 forestry associations, p. 62; List of 

 associations and officers, p. 70. 



St. Louis lumberman, Dec. 1, 1915. Govern- 

 ment vs. citizen: national forest timber 

 forced upon an overstocked market by 

 congress, by H. D. Langille, p. 48-50; 

 The forests of Kentucky, by J. E. Barton, 

 p. 72. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, Nov., 

 1915. Forestry and deforestation, by 

 Ira G. Shellabarger, p. 17; Texas state 

 forester begins work, p. 19. 



Southern lumber journal, Nov. 15, 1915. 

 Taxation and forestry, by E. A. Selfridge, 

 Jr., p. 41. 



Southern lumberman, Nov. 20, 1915. Ver- 

 tical cylinders vs. horizontal cylinders 

 for the preservation of wood blocks for 

 floors and pavements, p. 29. 



Timber trades journal, Nov. 27, 1915. 

 "Witches' broom" on willow, by A. D. 

 Webster, p. 805. 



Timberman, Nov., 1915. Gasoline engine for 

 logging operations, by W. L. Corson, p. 

 37; Overhead logging, by J. S. O'Gorman, 

 p. 37-9; Novel steel spar skidder, by 

 E. A. Gaskill, p. 39-41; Lidgerwood steel 

 spar skidder, by M. H. Dickinson, p. 

 48-9; Value of fire protection in pine 

 logging, by Coert DuBois, p. 53-4; Cost 

 accounting methods and operating, by 

 George A. Peck, p. 54-8; Modern camp 

 buildings, by C. S. Martin, p. 58-60. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 24, 

 1915. Arboriculture in Persia, by Ralph 

 H. Bader, p. 776; Improved copra curing 

 in Philippines, p. 777. 



United States daily consular report, Nov. 26, 

 1915. Russian wood-pulp and paper 

 situation, by John H. Snodgrass, p.794-6. 



United States daily consular report, Dec. 1, 

 1915. Italian market for American 

 lumber, by William F. Kelley, p. 840-1 ; 

 Lumber trade's importance to British 

 Columbia, by G. C. Woodward, p. 85-9. 



Veneers, Dec, 1915. Oak logs for quartering, 

 by J. Crow Taylor, p. 9-10; Veneer band 

 inlays, p. 14. 



West Coast lumberman, Nov. 15, 1915. 

 United States special agent reports on 

 lumber markets of China, by Franklin 

 H. Smith, p. 21, 26-8; This tells you just 

 how much Douglas fir is sold and where it 

 goes, p. 23 ; The preservation of log build- 

 ings, by Bror L. Grondal, p. 32; Com- 

 pulsory forest protection considered at 

 San Francisco conference, by C. S. 

 Chapman, p. 36-7; New relationship 

 between the government and the lumber 

 industry, by H. S. Graves, p. 39-40; Tim- 

 ber trade of Holland, by H. R. MacMil- 

 lan, p. 20; Description of the country's 

 most modern of portable logging camps, 

 p. 21. 



Wood turning, Dec, 1915. Uses of woods: 



chestnut, yellow poplar, black gum, 



sycamore, p. 8-9. 

 Wooden and willow ware trade review, Nov. 



11, 1915. Willow culture for Georgia, 



p. 33^. 

 Wooden and willow ware trade review, Nov. 



25, 1915. Brush making in Troy, N. Y., 



p. 41-2, 48. 

 Wood-worker, Nov., 1915. -Lumber drying 



and lumber driers, p. 33-4. 



Forest journals 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, May, 

 1915. Absteckung von einseitigen weg- 

 kurven, by Friedrich Wilhelm Furst, p. 

 105-9; Die gewichtszahlen der forst- 

 lichen rentabilitat, by E. Kreutzer, p. 

 109-12; Ueber die abhangigkeit der er- 

 tragsregelung und bestandespflege vom 

 versuchswesen, by Hemmann, p. 112-16; 

 Lauterungshiebe und jugenddurchforst- 

 ungen, by Jiirgens, p. 1 16-20. 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, June, 

 1915. Ueber erziehung unserer hol- 

 zarten in lockerem kronenschlusse (starke 

 durchforstung und hochdurchforstung), 

 by Tiemann, p. 133^4. 



Canadian forestry journal, Nov., 1915. The 

 working plan of the St. Maurice protec- 

 tive association, by Henry Sorgius, p. 

 247-9; Sentiment making and forest pro- 

 tection, by E. T. Allen, p. 252-5 ; Fire loss 

 for 1915, $10,000,000, in Canada, p. 

 259-61 ; A talk on forestry for children, by 

 James Lawler, p. 262-3; Timber in 

 Canada, by R. H. Campbell, p. 265-8. 



Hawaiian forester and agriculturist, Nov., 

 1915. Some common woody plants of 

 the Oahu lowlands, by Vaughan Mac- 

 Caughey, p. 290-2. 



Indian forester, Oct., 1915. The natural 

 reproduction of sal and how it can be im- 

 proved, by R. S. Hole, p. 351-61; A note 

 on the cultivation of Podophyllum emodi, 

 by R. S. Troup, p. 361-5; The uniform 

 system in Burma, by H. R. Blanford, p. 

 366-71; The Myodwin teak plantations, 

 Zig6n division, Lower Burma, by A. 

 Rodger, p. 372-6; Girdlings by bears, by 

 Daya Ram, p. 382; Damage by porcu- 

 pines, by Basti Ram, p. 383-4. 



North woods, Nov., 1915. The effect of 

 forest destruction upon game, by W. B. 

 Douglas, p. 14-16. 



Proceedings of the Society of American for- 

 esters, Oct., 1915. Robert Langdon 

 Rogers, p. 1 ; The need of working plans on 

 national forests and the policies which 

 should be embodied in them, by Burt P. 

 Kirkland, p. 341-70; Regional forest 

 plans, by D. T. Mason, p. 371-5; Work- 

 ing plans, by H. H. Chapman, p. 376-82; 

 A new aspect of brush disposal in Arizona, 

 and New Mexico, by W. H. Long, p. 

 383-98; Brush disposal in lodgepole-pine 

 cuttings, by D. T. Mason, p. 399-404; 

 Some notes on forest ecology and its prob- 

 lems, by Richard H. Boerker, p. 405-22; 

 Five years growth on Douglas fir sample 

 plots, by Thornton T. Munger, p. 423-5; 

 Light burning at Castle Rock, by S. B. 



