236 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Canada Lumberman, Jan. 15, 1914. Foreign 

 veneer and panel .manufacture, by J. _ B. 

 B. Stryker, p. 54-6; Beech becoming im- 

 portant asja, veneer jwood, p. 56. 



Canada Lumberman, Feb. 1, 1914. Lumber 

 trade of Ontario during 1913, p. 28-30; 

 Canada's exports of wood and manufactures 

 of wood to the United States during the 

 last five years, p. 32-3; Trade of Quebec 

 province during 1913, p. 34-5; New Bruns- 

 wick output shows decrease, p. 37-8; Nova 

 Scotia lumber trade during 1913, p. 40-1; 



British Columbia needs curtailment, p. 42-3; 

 United Kingdom increased its imports; 

 statistics for last six years, p. 50-2. 



Engineering Magazine, Dec. 1913. Saccharine 

 timber preservative; Powell seasoning 

 process, by R. E. Neale, p. 437-9. 



Engineering Record, Nov. 15, 1913. To get 

 long life from untreated timber in trestles, 

 p. 542; Suggestions for college course in 

 logging engineering, p. 549-50. 



Furniture Journal, Jan. 26, 1914. Value of 

 ebony, p. 37-8. 



Handle Trade, Feb. 1914. Handle industry 

 of New York State, p. 5-6; Developments 

 in excelsior line, p. 11; Remarkable toy- 

 making machine, p. 13-14; Chance to cut 

 into pipe trade; scrap hickory available 

 for cheap pipes, p. 15. 



Hardwood Record, Jan. 25, 1914. Cabbage 

 palmetto, p. 14; Logging, by James Boyd, 

 p. 24-6; Scientific seasoning of lumber, by 

 Albert Kraetzer, p. 28-9; Manufacture of 

 wood flour, by Robert P. Skinner, p. 31; 

 Ash timbers of commerce, p. 40-1; Future 

 tie materials in the United States, by 

 Henry H. Gibson, p. 48-50; The ebony 

 forests of West Africa, p. 50; Names of 

 woods hard to change, p. 52. 



The Hub, Jan. 1914. Wood for vehicles and 

 parts in New York, p. 327; Birch wood and 

 maple for vehicles, p. 341. 



Journal of Electricity, Power and Gas, Jan. 

 17, 1914. Effect of forests on run-off, by 

 J. C. Stevens, p. 40-51. 



Lumber Trade Journal, Feb. 1, 1914. Pre- 

 liminary experiments show advance in 

 methods of fireproofing wood, by Robert 

 E. Prince, p. 34-5; The proper construc- 

 tion of creosoted wood block pavements 

 for heavy traffic, by R. S. Manley, p. 35; 

 New ideas in creosoting wood block paving 

 are explained to convention, by J. B. 

 Card, p. 35-6; Treatment of piling and 

 timber according to conditions of use and 

 exposure, by E. L. Powell, p. 37. 



Lumber World Review, Jan. 10, 1914. Uni- 

 formity of inspection its aim; Northwest- 

 ern hemlock and hardwood association 

 holds conference, p. 29. 



Lumber World Review, Jan. 25, 1914. Whole 

 sweep of the fire retardant question, by 

 Boiling Arthur Johnson, p. 20-4. 



Mississippi Valley Lumberman, Jan. 30, 1914. 

 Wood for silo construction, by H. R. 

 Isherwood, p. 40-1. 



New York Lumber Trade Journal, Feb. 1, 1914. 



Cableway skidding, by J. H. Dickinson, 

 p. 36d, 36g. 



Paper, Jan. 21, 1914. Paper pulp from 

 Savannah grasses, by William Raitt, p. 

 15-16, 34. 



Paper, Jan. 28, 1914. Views on sources of 

 paper-making material, p. 20-1. 



Paper, Feb. 11, 1914 Woodpulp silk in 

 Germany, p. 21. 



Paper Mill, Dec. 20, 1913. Ash of sulphite 

 wood pulp, p. 24; Forest insects; Henry 

 S. Graves heads new association to study 

 and combat destruction of timber, p. 36. 



Paper Mill, Jan. 10, 1914. Forest fire insur- 

 ance; its financial feasibility in Canada, 

 p. 11. 



Paper Trade Journal, Jan. 8, 1914. Motor 

 drive in pulp and paper mills, by Alvin 

 Schlarbaum, p. 38-44; Production and 

 treatment of mechanical wood pulp, by 

 Anders Nicolay Anderson, p. 46-8; The 

 business end of forestry, by James Up- 

 ham, p. 48; British Columbia timber notes, 

 by G. C. Woodward, p. 50. 



Paper Trade Journal, Jan. 15, 1914. Brazil's 

 forests for wood pulp, p. 48; Straw con- 

 verted into artificial wood, p. 50. 



Paper Trade Journal, Feb. 12, 1914. The use 

 of the cotton stalk to prevent depletion 

 of our forests, p. 40-2; Marram grass for 

 papermaking, p. 52-3. 



Pioneer Western Lumberman, Jan. 15, 1914. 

 An ideal grove for a national park, p. 

 21-3. 



Pioneer Western Lumberman, Feb. 1, 1914. 

 California forest protective association 

 holds annual meeting and banquet, p. 13. 



Pulp and Paper Magazine, Dec. 1, 1913. 

 Micro-photographs of paper-making 

 woods, by H. D. Tiemann, p. 770-3. 



Pulp and Paper Magazine, Dec. 15, 1913. 

 Lignose; a new method to manufacture 

 brown wood-pulp for paper and cardboard 

 industries, by K. Weishan, p. 810-11. 



Pulp and Paper Magazine, Jan. 1, 1914. 

 Power; its use in the manufacture of 

 ground wood, by J. H. Thickens, p. 7-9. 



Railway Review, Jan. 17, 1914. Air seasoning 

 of ties, by Wm. H. Kempfer, p. 106-9. 



Railway Review, Jan. 24, 1914. Air pumps 

 for injecting timber preservatives, by F. 

 J. Angier, p. 140-2; Experiments with 

 treated ties, by J. H. Waterman, p. 152-3. 



Railway Review, Feb. 7, 1914. Protection 

 of ties from mechanical destruction, by 

 Howard F. Weiss, p. 226-8. 



St. Louis Lumberman, Jan. 15, 1914. Char- 

 acter in red cedar, p. 16; Wood block pav- 

 ing in Kansas City, Springfield, Mass., and 

 New Haven, Conn., p. 32-3; Logging by 

 waterways and other ways, p. 58; Par- 

 ticularly concerning cypress and its 

 votaries, by John E. Williams, p. 60-1; 

 Specifications for factory timbers, by F. 

 J. Hoxie, p. 64-8; Hoopless stave crib silo 

 for retail lumbermen, p. 80, 88. 



St. Louis Lumberman, Feb. 1, 1914. Addi- 

 tional light on the factory timber question, 

 by Howard F. Weiss, p. 64-5 ; Excelsior as 

 a mattress material, p. 103. 



