CURRENT LITERATURE 



309' 



Overland monthly, Dec, 1916. Monterey 



cypress, by L. Kothe, p. 469-73. 

 Overland monthly, Jan., 1916. Giant trees 



of Sequoia, by H. Rankin, p. 75-80. 

 Overland monthly, Feb., 1916. In a Forest 

 service camp, by C. E. O'Brien, p. 146-52. 

 Plant world, March, 1916. The weight of 

 physical factors in the study of plant dis- 

 tribution, by Forrest Shreve, p. 53-67; 

 Notes on the ancestry of the beech, by 

 Edward W. Berry, p. 68-77. 

 Proceedings of the Pan-American road con- 

 gress, 1915. Road-building in the na- 

 tional forests, by Henry Solon Graves, 

 p. 43-50. 

 Reclamation record, March, 1916. Tree 

 planting: Yakama project, Wash., p. 125. 

 Reclamation record, April, 1916. How na- 

 tional forest administration benefits 

 water users, p. 170-1; A cooperative 

 sawmill, by H. L. Hull, p. 173-5. 

 Rhodora, Feb., 1916. The name of the red 



oak, by C. S. Sargent, p. 45-8. 

 Scientific American, March 25, 1916. Our 

 vanishing export trade in the products of 

 American forests, p. 319, 334. 

 United States Dept. of agriculture, Journal 

 of agricultural research, April 10, 1916. 

 Oviposition of Megastigmus spermo- 

 trophus in the seed of Douglas fir, by 

 J. M. Miller, p. 65-8. 

 United States Dept. of agriculture. Weekly 

 news letter. March 29, 1916. Wood 

 ashes and bone meal contain all the 

 necessary constituents of a complete fer- 

 tilizer, p. 2. 

 United States Dept. of agriculture. Year- 

 book, 1915. Pointers on marketing 

 woodlot products, by Stanley L. Wolfe, 

 p. 121-30; Osage orange waste as a 

 substitute for fustic dyewood, by F. W. 

 Kressman, p. 201-4. 

 World's work, April, 1916. A new west: the 

 attempts to open up the natural treasures 

 of the western states; utilization and con- 

 servation vs. monopolistic greed; the 

 Dept. of the interior, by James Middle- 

 ton, p. 669-80. 

 Trade journals and consular reports 

 American lumberman, March 18, 1916. 

 Authorities say wood block is best paving, 

 p. 32; How to build and operate a saw- 

 mill, by L. L. Shertzer, p. 33-36. 

 American lumberman, March 25, 1916. Rail- 

 way engineers discuss utility of wood, 

 p. 40-1. 

 American lumberman, April 1, 1916. Rail- 

 road aids reforestation, p. 32 ; Forest ex- 

 hibits comprehensive; government has 

 good showing at California fair, p. 33; 

 Making by-products investigation: For- 

 est products laboratory giving special at- 

 tention to new manufactures of wood,p.33. 

 American lumberman, April 8, 1916. Utiliz- 

 ing osage orange for dye, p. 31; South 

 Africa needs lumber: most of native prod- 

 uct unfit to be sawed, p. 42; Nova Scotia 

 forests decrease: have timber supply 

 for only sixty years, p. 42 ; How war has 

 affected Italy's lumber supply, p. 43; 

 Timber importations by France are light, 

 p. 51 ; Britain pays high for lumber, p. 56. 



Barrel and box, March, 1916. Butter pack- 

 ing in Ireland, p. 75-6; Statistics of the 

 American veneer industry, p. 93; The 

 wooden handle trade, p. 94; The shoe peg 

 business, p. 94; Manufacture of wooden- 

 ware and novelties, p. 95; Excelsior 

 industry, p. 96; Manufacture of matches, 

 p. 96; Manufacture of tobacco pipes, 

 p. 96; Woods used for specialties; Amer- 

 ican wooden toys, p. 97; The toothpick 

 business, p. 97. 

 Canada lumberman, Feb. 15, 1916. Struc- 

 tural qualities of British Columbia fir, by 

 H. R. MacMillan, p. 28-30; Variation in 

 weight and strength of timber, by J. A. 

 Newlin, p. 34-5; Central British Colum- 

 bia forests, p. 35. 

 Canada lumberman, March 15, 1916. 

 Market for Canadian timber in France, 

 by H. R. MacMillan, p. 28-9 ; Briquetting 

 of sawdust on a commercial basis, by R. 

 Thelan, p. 39-40; Utilizing wood waste in 

 the paper industry, by E. B. Biggar, 

 p. 50. 

 Canada lumberman, April 1, 1916. Canadian 

 timber trade in South Africa, by H. R. 

 MacMillan, p. 28-31; Increasing use of 

 treated wood block, by W. G. Mitchell, 

 p. 34-5; Opportunities for Canadian 

 lumber in France, p. 38; Wooden goods 

 for South Africa, p. 38; British Colum- 

 bia's fine finish materials, p. 38-9; 

 Making bungs and faucets, p. 40-1; The 

 shoe peg business, p. 52. 

 Engineering news, Dec. 23, 1915. Continu- 

 ous wire winding for wood-stave pipes, 

 p. 1210-11; Monumental timber building 

 endangered by rot, p. 1221. 

 Engineering news, Feb. 3, 1916. Causes of 

 failure in creosoted wood-block pave- 

 ment, p. 204-6; Why the Seattle wood- 

 stave water pipe failed, by R. H. Ober, 

 p. 242-4. 

 Engineering record, April 8, 1916. Test 

 Douglas fir stringers; new method of 

 creosoting, p. 479 ; How the Forest service . 

 bridges the more remote stream crossings, 

 p. 485. 

 Hardwood record, April 10, 1916. SteamT 

 specialties in saw mills, by Anthony S. 

 Hill, p. 16-17; English and French timber 

 trade, p. 18; Wood for tobacco pipes, 

 p. 18; Practical mahogany planting, p. 

 19-20; Saving waste by using it, p. 22-3; 

 Oil of wintergreen, p. 23. 

 Holzwelt, Dec. 10, 1915. Von den eigen- 

 schaften des holzes, by P. Martell, p. 5. 

 Holzwelt, Jan. 7, 1916. Trocknungsanlagen 

 fur die holzbearbeitung, by Fred Hampe, 

 p. 15. 

 Holzwelt, Feb. 4, 1916. Ueber das verblauen 

 des kiefernholzes, by A. Schwappach, 

 p. 1-2. 

 New York lumber trade journal, March 15, 

 1916. -National canners and national 

 grocers specify lumber for boxes, p. 20. 

 Paper, March 15, 1916. The manufacture of 



paper pulp from straw, p. 18-19. 

 Paper, March 22, 1916. Modern develop- 

 ments in pulp and paper, p. 11-15. 

 Paper, March 29, 1916. The Swedish wood- 

 pulp industry, p. 11-17. 



Paper, April 12, 1916. Woodpulp manu- 

 facturing processes, by Allan Smith, p. 

 11-16; The paper pulp of the future: 

 lumber shortage leads to speculation con- 

 cerning new sources of raw material, by 

 P. Ebbinghaus, p. 17. 

 Paper mill, Feb. 19, 1916. Planting forests 

 for profit in Canada, by Ellwood Wilson, 

 p. 164-6; How paper is made by hand 

 in the Orient, p. 170-2. 

 Paper mill, March 25, 1916. American trees 



in Norway, p. 34. 

 Paper trade journal, March 9, 1916. The 

 origin and development of paper making 

 in the old world, by Albert Komp, p. 35, 

 38, 44, 46. 

 Philippine trade review, Dec, 1915. Timber 



market in China, p. 6-8. 

 Philippine trade review, Feb., 1916. Uses of 



Philippine woods, p. 7-10. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 15, 1916. 

 Some valuable conditions affecting the 

 manufacture of ground wood, by G. W. 

 Dickson, p. 83-4. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, March 1, 1916. 

 Review of the paper textile industry, 

 p. 103-6; Proper reforestation, by 

 Ralph H. McKee, p. 106-7; Important 

 points in the manufacture of ground 

 wood, by A. O. Bowness, p. 107-9. 

 St. Louis lumberman, March 1, 1916. Mount 

 Mitchell forest to be opened to the public, 

 p. 16; Cost economics, by Robert B. 

 Goodman, p. 70-1. 

 St. Louis lumberman, March 15, 1916. 

 Lumber trade conditions; the average 

 F. O. B. mill prices for eleven months, 

 or from April, 1915, to Feb., 1916, inclu- 

 sive, p. 42-4; List of associations and 

 officers, p. 62-3. 

 Southern lumberman, April 1, 1916. Sani- 

 tary handling of timber, by C. J. Humph- 

 rey, p. 39-40. 

 Timber trade journal, March 4, 1916. Pre- 

 vention of breakage in felling, p. XIII. 

 Timberman, March, 1916. New principle in 

 spark arrester, p. 32M; Average cost of 

 manufacturing fir lumber, by Austin 

 Cary, p. 46-7. 

 United States daily consular report, March 21, 

 1916. Canadian offer benefits American 

 lumber company, by R. M. Newcomb, 

 p. 1122-3. 

 United States daily consular report, March 



23, 1916. Need of lumber in Italy, p. 

 1155. 



United States daily consular report, March 



24, 1916. The timber trade of France, 

 p. 1178-80. 



United States daily consular report, March 



27, 1916. Conditions in the French 

 lumber trade, p. 1188; Lumber market 

 of South Africa, p. 1209-12; Imports of 

 chicle for chewing-gum manufacture, 

 p. 1213. 



United States daily consular report, March 



28, 1916. Rattan-furniture industry at 

 Hongkong, by Leroy R. Sawyer, p. 

 1222-3. 



United States daily consular report, March 

 30, 1916. Norwegian pulp situation, 

 by A. G. Schmedeman, p. 1249; Dye- 



