122 



Pennsylvania Water supply commission. 

 Annual report, 1914. 400p. pi. Harris- 

 burg. 1915. 



United States Reclamation service. Cali- 

 fornia cooperative work; report on Pit 

 river basin. 140 p. pi., maps. Sacra- 

 mento, Cal., State printing office, 1915. 



Erosion 



Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis railway. 

 Reclaiming the gullied lands of west 

 Tennessee. 20 p. EL Nashville, Tenn., 

 1915. 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Agricultural gazette of Tasmania, Oct., 1915. 

 The conifer and its uses, by J. M. 

 Ward, p. 371-4. 



Botanical gazette, Dec., 1915. Fertilization 

 in Abies balsamea, by A. H. Hutchinson, 

 p. 457-72. 



Country gentleman, Dec. 4, 1915. Building 

 up the farm wood lot, by F. F. Moon, 

 p. 1822. 



Country life in America, Dec., 1915. Raising 

 willows for baskets, by George E. Walsh, 

 p. 86-8. 



Countryside magazine, Oct., 1915. What 

 woods to use and how best to finish 

 them, by William B. Powell, p. 183-5. 



Garden magazine, Dec., 1915. Why not liv- 

 ing Christmas trees, p. 139-41; The best 

 hardy conifers, by E. H. Wilson, p. 145- 

 50; How to prevent damping off, by 

 P. Nolte, p. 150. 



In the open, Dec., 1915. Forest tree seeds 

 in demand, by George H. Wirt, p. 39-11. 



International institute of agriculture. 

 Monthly bulletin of agricultural intelli- 

 gence and plant diseases, Nov., 1915. 

 The cultivation of cinchona in Java, by 

 J. van Breda de Haan, p. 1419-24. 



Journal of heredity, Jan., 1916. Saving the 

 kokio tree, by Robert A. Young, p. 24-8. 



Journal of Royal horticultural society, Aug., 

 1915. North American forest trees in 

 Britain, by F. R. S. Balfour, p. 21-7. 



Motoroad. Dec., 1915. National forest trails 

 and roads, by Charles H. Flory, p. 9-11. 



National wool grower, Dec., 1915. Range 

 grasses, by Arthur W. Sampson, p. 15-18. 



Outlook, Oct. 27, 1915. Uncle Sam in the 

 Appalachia, by Louise Rand Bascom, 

 p. 483-9. 



Scientific American supplement, Oct. 16, 

 1915. An Indiana desert; a curious 

 region of constantly changing character, 

 by Hu Maxwell, p. 248-50. 



Scientific American supplement, Oct. 30, 1915. 

 The lac insect; the curious insect that 

 is the source of lac varnishes, p. 281-2. 



United States Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, Dec. 20, 1915. 

 Variations in mineral composition of sap, 

 leaves, and stems of the wild-grape vine 

 and sugar-maple tree, by O. M. Shedd, 

 p. 529-42. 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Dec. 18, 1915 Recent 

 reform in forest taxation in the United 

 States, by Wilson Compton, p. 34-5. 



American lumberman, Dec. 25, 1915. The 

 Idaho pines, p. 31; Wood used for excel- 

 sior, r- 31; Wood older than the hills, by 

 Arthur Koehler, p. 71. 



American lumberman, Jan. 1, 1916. Associa- 

 tion progress in 1915, by R. S. Kellogg, 

 p. 43; Economic influences affecting lum- 

 ber, by Isaiah Skeels, p. 52-3. 



American lumberman, Jan. 8, 1916. Sawdust 

 as fertilizer, p. 25; A plea for better 

 wooden posts, by F. A. Good, p. 25. 



Canada lumberman, Dec. 15, 1915 Practical 

 forest fire prevention, by Henry Sorgius, 

 p. 44. 



Canada lumberman, Jan. 1, 1916. Forest 

 fire loss for 1915, ten million dollars in 

 Canada, p. 23-4. 



Electrical world, Nov. 13, 1915. Electricity 

 in the largest lumber mill, by A. H. 

 Onstad, p. 1080-1. 



Engineering news, Oct. 21, 1915. Douglas fir 

 for paving blocks, by O. P. M. Goss, p. 

 774-6. 



Engineering news, Nov. 11, 1915. Laying 

 creosoted wood-block on 5 per cent 

 grades, by J. R. West, p. 924-5. 



Gulf Coast lumberman, Jan. 1, 1916. How 

 fear of law wastes millions, by E. A. 

 Sterling, p. 24. 



Holzwelt, Oct. 29, 1915. Die auslandisehen 

 h61zer in gegenwart und zukunft, by 

 E. Gartner, p. 1-2. 



Journal of electricity, power and gas, Dec. 4, 

 1915. Requirements for applications to 

 use and occupy national forest lands for 

 water power purposes, by Leonard 

 Lundgren, p. 433-5. 



Journal of industrial and engineering chem- 

 istry, Jan., 1916. Polymerization of 

 Chinese wood oil, by Carl Louis Schu- 

 mann, p. 5-15. 



Lumber world review, Dec. 25, 1915. The 

 density rule in southern pine, p. 34-5. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, Dec. 17, 1915. 

 Fire resisting quality of wood, p. 27. 



Packages, Dec, 1915. Uncharted box quali- 

 ties, p. 17; Standardize package, by 

 Charles J. Brand, p. 19. 



Paper, Dec. 15, 1915. Papermaking pro- 

 cesses popularly described, p. 18-19, 22. 



Paper, Dec. 29, 1915. Market conditions 

 affecting pulp and paper; review of the 

 situation in Scandinavia and Holland 

 gleaned from trade papers, p. 11-12. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Dec. 15, 1915. 

 Our giant sequoias, p. 22. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Nov. 15, 1915. 

 Cork trees of Spain, p. 585. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Dec. 1, 1915. 

 Chemical analysis of wood pulps, by 

 Bjarne Johnsen, p. 600-4. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Dec. 15, 1915. 

 Forest products laboratories formally 

 opened; important event in Montreal, 

 p. 621-26. 



St. Louis lumberman, Jan. 1, 1916. Creo- 

 soted wood block floors for railroad 

 buildings, p. 61. 



Southern lumberman, Dec. 18, 1915. Hear- 

 ing before trade commission on lumber 

 industry, p. 23-5. 

 Southern lumberman, Dec. 25, 1915. Trade- 

 marking means easy selling ; a symposium 

 upon the subject of the trademark as 

 applied to lumber, by John Bemer 

 Crosby, p. 83-4; Use of red gum for 

 interior finish, by John M. Pritchard, 

 p. 90; Effect of the war on lumber 

 business, by H. C. Hallam, p. 96-7, 99; 

 The new national forests of the east, by 

 Henry Solon Graves, p. 98-9; Arkansas 

 soft pine and its use, by Robert H. 

 Brooks, p. 100-1; Need for greater 

 efficiency in logging, by Ralph C. Bryant, 

 p. 101-2; Guarding southern forests 

 against fire, by J. E. Barton, p. 109-10; 

 Reclaiming gullied lands in West Tennes- 

 see, by R. S. Maddox, p. 113-14; Articles 

 on utilization of cut-over lands, p. 1 15-19, 

 124; Logging in southern Appalachians, 

 by W. T. Schnaufer, p. 122-3. 



Timberman, Dec., 1915. Strength of creo- 

 soted timbers, by O. P. M. Goss, p. 30; 

 Logging engineering at the University of 

 California, by Walter Mulford, p. 32-3; 

 Timber trade in China, by J. W. Ross, 

 p. 34; Study of forestry in Japan, p. 35; 

 Ancient tree worship, by N. A. Dew, 

 p. 37; New Zealand timber, p. 52-5; 

 California pine and juniper, p. 55. 



United States daily consular report, Dec. 24, 

 1915. Brazilian woods, by Alfred L. 

 Moreau Gottschalk, p. 1174-7. 



United States daily consular report, Dec. 27, 

 1915. The boorow wood of Society 

 Islands, by B. L. Layton, p. 1196-7. 



United States daily consular report.Dec. 29, 

 1915. Embargo on logwood in Jamaica, 

 p. 1217-18; Logwood in Central America, 

 by Garrard Harris, p. 1218. 



United States daily consular report, Jan. 11, 

 1916. Lumber imports into Puerto 

 Plata district, by Frank Anderson Henry, 

 p. 143. 



Veneers, Jan., 1916. A few words about dry- 

 ing veneers, by W. H. Vanderbilt, p. 14; 

 The curly woods, p. 20. 



West Coast lumberman, Dec. 15, 1915. Dry- 

 rot in buildings of mill construction is the 

 result of ignorance, by Howard B. Oak- 

 leaf, p. 20; Fire control in the Olympic 

 forest, by George W. Hutton, p. 32. 



West Coast lumberman, Jan. 1, 1916. Pre- 

 servative treatments, by George E. Rex, 

 p. 38-9. 



Wood preserving, Oct.-Dec, 1915. The 

 Central of Georgia treating plant, 

 p. 57-8; The sampling and analysis of 

 creosote oil, p. 59-62; Saving creosote 

 oil in the treatment of piling, by Clyde 

 H. Teesdale, p. 63; Wood preservation, 

 by F. J. Angier, p. 72-3; Zinc chloride as 

 a preservative, by Alfred H. Clark, p. 74. 



Wood turning, Jan., 1916. Uses of woods; 

 ash, basswood, elm, p. 13-14. 



Wood-worker, Dec, 1915. Handling lumber 

 just from the dry kiln, by McDonald, 

 p. 36-7. 



