CURRENT LITERATURE 



547 



Overland monthly, May 1912. Conservation 

 and the farmer, by C. B. Lipman. p. 

 473-8. 



Plant world, July 1912. The behavior of 

 the nectar gland in the cacti, by Fran- 

 cis E. Lloyd and Chas. S. Ridgway, p. 

 145-56. 



Quarterly journal of economics, May 1912. 

 Lumber grading in the Pacific northwest, 

 by V. Curtis, p. 538-44. 



Scientific American, May 11, 1912. Zapote 

 tree as a source of chicle, p. 528. 



Scientific American, May 18, 1912. Most ex- 

 pensive wood in the world; cabole, p. 

 444. 



Scientific American, May 25, 1912. Method 

 of making pulp lumber, by M. T. S., p. 

 475. 



Scientific American, June 15, 1912. How we 

 can utilize $250,000,000 worth of wasted 

 timber, p. 537, 547-9. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, June 15, 1912. Inci- 

 dental features of logging operations, p. 

 58-9. 



American lumberman, June 29, 1912. Some 

 construction timbers of the Philippines; 

 tanguile, by H. N. Whitford, p. 37. 



American lumberman, July 6, 1912. Some 

 construction timbers of the Philippines ; 

 apitong, by H. N. Whitford, p. 29 ; Dura- 

 bility of wood, p. 29 ; Merits of wood 

 blocks for street paving, p. 49. 



Canada lumberman, June 15, 1912. Modern 

 methods of timber estimating, by T. 

 Read, p. 48-9. 



Canada lumberman, July 1, 1912. Interesting 

 facts about timber cruisers, p. 50-2. 



Engineering magazine, May 1912. Refrac- 

 tory building material; a new non-com- 

 bustible wood substitute for building 

 purposes, by C. L. Norton, p. 279-81. 



Hardwood record, June 25, 1912. Forests 

 as climate regulations, p. 31; Increasing 

 kiln capacity, p. 32-3; Cell structure of 

 oak and gum, p. 33-4; Forest fires; what 

 they cost, how they start, how to pre- 

 vent them, by Chas. H. Flory, p. 35 ; 

 Wooden pails and shoe pegs, p. 38-9 ; 

 Cherry birch for gunstocks, by S. J. R., 

 p. 39 ; Burls and bird's-eye, by S. J. R., 

 p. 41-2. 



Hardwood record, July 10, 1912. Making 

 wood distillation history, p. 26-8; Yellow 

 poplar and cucumber, p. 33; Splash 

 damming on the Big Sandy, p. 34a-36. 



Lumber world review, June 10, 1912. For- 

 estry work in the state of Massachu- 

 setts, by John M. Woods, p. 19-20; Sugi 

 finish applied to cypress, p. 18-19, 27. 



Naval stores review, June 27, 1912. The 

 naval stores industry of France ; its 

 origin, development, acreage, annual 

 crops, home consumption and exports, 

 p. 3-13 ; The working of the French pine 

 forests; the prices of turpentine; the 

 values of the lands, p. 13-14; What the 

 maritime pine has done for France, p. 

 16-22 ; The maritime pine in the United 



States, p. 26; The naval stores industry 

 in Spain, p. 28-31; The naval stores in- 

 dustry in Greece, p. 33-4; Developing 

 naval stores industry in Japan ; worked 

 in a petty way by numerous small 

 farmers, p. 34; Rosin production in Prus- 

 sia, p. 50. 



Paper, July 3, 1912. Bamboo as papermaking 

 material, by William Raitt, p. 17-18; 

 Forest workers in Germany, p. 19. 



Paper, July 10, 1912. Mechanical pulp from 

 Jack pine and hemlock, p. 15-16 ; Wood- 

 pulp yarn ; its manufacture and uses, by 

 W. P. Dreaper, p. 17-18. 



St. Louis lumberman, June 15, 1912. The 

 Yale forest school in Arkansas, p. 79. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, June 

 1912. Standing timber values; Texas 

 forests and their values, by F. A. Briggs, 

 p. 37. 



Southern lumber journal, June 15, 1912. 

 Wood for car wheels ; timber faults 

 pointed out by odd names to the wheel- 

 wright, p. 35. 



Southern lumberman, July 13, 1912. 

 Methods for utilization of wood waste, 

 by George Walker, p. 41-2. 



Timberman, June 1912. Practical forestry 

 schools have ever broadening field of 

 usefulness, p. 20-1. 



United States daily consular report, June 

 20, 1912. Chinese wood oil, by Roger S. 

 Greene, p. 1226-7. 



United States daily consular report, June 

 30, 1912. Russian state forests, by John 

 H. Grout, p. 1231. 



United States daily consular report, July 12, 

 1912. Chinese lackwood furniture, by 

 George E. Anderson, o. 202-3. 



Wood craft, July 1912. Varying character- 

 istics of the same woods, by Samuel J. 

 Record, p. 108 ; Various tables ; their de- 

 velopment, design and construction, by 

 John Bovingdon, p. 110-13 ; Microphoto- 

 graphs of the structure of wood, p. 114- 

 15; Refractory woods and some substi- 

 tutes for them, by Chas. L. Norton, p. 

 116-18. 



Wood-worker, June 1912. Manufacturing 

 piano sounding boards, by E. E. D., p. 

 27; Relative merits of red and white 

 oak, by George Keller, p. 35-6; The 

 Hawaiian cabinet wood, Acacia koa, by 

 J. S. Bailey, p. 40. 



Forest journals 



Allegemeine forst und jagd-zeitung, May 

 1912. Wald und sturm, by Vogl, p. 145- 

 51 ; Forstliche reisenotizen aus Siidi- 

 talien, by A. Muller, p 151-5 ; Die nor- 

 malertragstefeln im dienste der praxis, 

 by Eberhard, p. 155-62. 



Allegemeine forst und jagd-zeitung, June 

 1912. Die fiirstlich Isenburgischen wal- 

 dungen bei Birstein, by Reiss, p. 181-96. 



Canadian forestry journal, May-June 1912. 

 A forestry students' camp, by R. B. Mil- 

 ler, p. 59-61 ; Les usages du Bouleau a 

 papier, p. 62-3; Quebec Province starts 

 forest planting, p. 63-5; Our forest re- 



