CURRENT LITERATURE 



235 



Forest Utilization. 



Lumber Industry. 



Jolyet, Antoine. Le transport des bois dans 



forets coloniales. 2ded. 60 p. il. Paris. 



A. Challamel, 1912. 



Wood-using Industries. 



Dunning, Carroll W. Wood-using industries 

 of Ohio. 133 p. il. Wooster, O., Ex- 

 periment station press, 1912. 



Wood Technology. 



Baker, R. T. Cabinet timbers of Australia. 



186 p. il., pi. Sydney, N. S. W., 1913. 



(N. S. W. Technological museum. 



Technological education series no. 18.) 

 Birdwood, H. M. Indian timbers: the hill 



forests of western India. 12 p. 47 p. 



London, Journal of Indian art, 1910. 

 Hough, R. B. American woods, pt. 13. 



4 p. Plates, wood sections. Lowville, 



N. Y., R. B. Hough, 1913. 



Auxiliary Subjects. 



Conservation of Natural Resources. 



New York Conservation Commission. Third 



annual report, 1913; preliminary edition. 



51 p. Albany, N. Y., 1914. 



Hydrography. 



Brown, Rome G. Improvement of navigable 

 rivers; an address delivered before the 

 National rivers and harbors congress at 

 the 10th annual convention held at Wash- 

 ington, D. C., Dec. 3-5, 1913. 21 p. 

 Washington, D. C., 1913. (U. S. 63d 

 Congress 2d session. Senate document 

 332.) 



Periodical Articles. 



Miscellaneous Periodicals. 



America city, Nov. 1913. Establishment of 

 foresters in towns and cities through state 

 forestry associations, by H. A. Reynolds, 

 p. 412-4. 



American Homes, Dec. 1913. Cedars of Leb- 

 anon, by R. Johns, p. 410-16. 



American Sheep Breeder, Jan. 1914. Improve- 

 ment in range conditions, by A. F. Potter, 

 p. 12-13. 



Botanical Gazette, Jan. 1914. The develop- 

 ment of Magnolia and Liriodendron, by 

 Willis Edgar Maneval, p. 1-31. 



Bulletin of the Pan American Union, Dec. 

 1913. Resources of Dutch Guiana, by J. 

 B. Percival, p. 818-26. 



Cairo Scientific Journal, Oct. 1913. The de- 

 termination of humus in heavy clay soils, 

 by William Beam, p. 219-24. 



Country Gentlemen, Jan. 10, 1914. Making 

 fence posts last, by Ernest A. Sterling, p. 

 80-3. 



Country Gentleman, Jan. 24, 1914. Basket 

 willow by-products, by C. D. Mell, p. 171. 



Country Gentleman, Jan. 31, 1914. Sticking 

 lumber, by W. D. Graves, p. 202; What 

 catalpas will do, by Samuel J. Record, p. 

 218-19. 



Country Life in America, Jan. 1914. A com- 

 munity that appreciates its native trees, 

 by Charles Francis Saunders, p. 54. 



Farm and fireside, Feb. 1914. What are we 

 going to do for fence posts?, by J. A. 

 Ferguson, p. 5. 



Farm Engineering, Feb. 1914. A simple 

 stump puller, by W. H. Rayner, p. 11. 



Gardeners' Chronicle. Nov. 29, 1913. The 

 Paris forest congress and British forestry, 

 by D. E. Hutchins, p. 373. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Dec. 6, 1913. A new 

 American ash, p. 407. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Dec. 13, 1913. Christ- 

 mas trees, p. 423; Forestry at Cambridge, 

 p. 423. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Dec. 27, 1913. Green 

 coloration of wood by fungi, by P. Vuille- 

 man, p. 459; Timber production in Britain, 

 by A. D. Richardson, p. 462. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Jan. 3, 1914. Timber 

 for clog soles, by Angus D. Webster, p. 4-5. 



Gardeners' Chronicle, Jan. 10, 1914. The 

 variegated willow weevil, Cryptorhynchus 

 lapathi, by J. W. Munro, p. 27. 



Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry, 

 Nov. 29, 1913. The fractional distillation 

 of mixed pine woods, by J. H. Paterson, 

 and R. E. Forbester, p. 1053-5. 



Plant World, Feb. 1914. Phytogeographical 

 notes on the coastal plain of Arkansas, by 

 Roland M. Harper, p. 36-48. 



Scientific American, Jan. 3, 1914. New 

 materials for paper making, p. 23; Scarcity 

 of true box wood, p. 25. 



Scientific American, Jan. 24, 1914. The intro- 

 duction of deodar cedar and its uses, p. 80. 



Scientific American supplement, Jan. 10, 1914. 

 -The strength of long-seasoned Douglas 

 fir and redwood, by Arthur C. Alvarez, 

 p. 20. 



United States Department of Agriculture. 

 Journal of Agricultural Research, Jan. 

 1914. Some diseases of pecans, by 

 Frederick V. Rand, p. 303-38; A twig 

 blight of Quercus prinus and related 

 species, by Delia E. Ingram, p. 339-46. 



Trade Journals and Consular Reports. 

 American Lumberman, Jan. 17, 1914. From 



swamp to home; a story of cypress, p. 



32-3; Flood control in the Mississippi 



valley, p. 35. 



American Lumberman, Jan. 24, 1914. More 

 about wood paving specifications, p. 30; 

 Is the price of lumber high, by Chas. S. 

 Keith, p. 52-3; Wood preservers in 10th 

 annual meeting, p. 60. 



American Lumberman, Jan. 31, 1914. Michi- 

 gan forest scouts, p. 54. 



American Lumberman, Feb. 7, 1914. The 

 world's greatest wood-lot, by George S. 

 Long, p. 55-6. 



Barrel & Box, Jan. 1914. Life of the slack 

 barrel, p. 40. 



