466 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Botanical gazette, April, 1914. A preliminary 

 inquiry into the significance of tracheid- 

 caliber in coniferae, by Percy Groom, p. 

 287-307; Morphological instability, espe- 

 cially in Pinus radiata, by Francis E. 

 Lloyd, p. 314-19. 



Country gentleman, April 18, 1914. Picking 

 out a good package, by James H. Collins, 

 p. 776-7. 



Fire prevention, April, 1914. Senseless origin 

 of some forest fires, p. 21-2. 



Garden magazine, May, 1914. How to prune 

 an elm, by C. L. Meller, p. 256-8. 



Gardeners' chronicle, March 7, 1914. The 

 thirstiness of trees, p. 168; History of 

 Irish woods, by Augustine Henry, p. 

 171-2. 



Gardeners' chronicle, April 11, 1914. A 

 stately tulip tree, by Willian Gardener, 

 p. 255. 



International institute of agriculture. Month- 

 ly bulletin of agricultural intelligence and 

 plant diseases, Dec., 1913. The distribu- 

 tion of forests in the natural regions of 

 Switzerland, by Maurice Decoppet, p. 

 1822-5. 



Journal of the Society of chemical industry, 

 March 16, 1914. Note on Australian pine 

 barks, by F. A. Coombs and A. H. Dett- 

 mann, p. 232-3. 



Scientific American supplement, Jan. 17, 1914. 

 Wooden water, pipes, p. 35. An un- 

 usual case of electrical injury to street 

 trees, by George A. Cromie, p. 36-7. 



Scientific American supplement, March 21, 

 1914. The fossil forest of Arizona, by 

 George P. Merrill, p. 184-5. 



Scientific American supplement, April 4, 1914. 

 Kapok, a buoyant stuffing which makes 

 a mattress into a life-raft, p. 213. 

 Technical world magazine, April, 1914. Do 

 forests hold the floods back, by Benjamin 

 Brooks, p. 198-204. 



United States Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, April, 1914. 

 Longevity of pycnospores of .the chest- 

 nut-blight fungus, by F. D. Heald and 

 M. W. Gardner, p. 67-75. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, April 4. 1914. Minne- 

 sota forestry association annual, p. 48. 



American lumberman, April 18, 1914. The 

 mesquite as a paving wood, p. 45. 



American lumberman, April 25, 1914. Forest 

 products exposition, Chicago, April 30- 

 May 9, p. 29-32; Wood block paving, by 

 A. W. Clark, p. 50; Lumbering in the 

 Fiji Islands, p. 53. 



American lumberman, May 2, 1914. Develop- 

 ment of cutover timberlands, p. 29. 



American lumberman, May 9, 1914. Mexico ; 

 its people and its resources, p. 33; Ad- 

 dresses before Chicago association of 

 commerce and national lumber manufac- 

 turers' association, by J. B. White, p. 37, 

 51; Shingle evolution and uses, p. 38; 



Merchandising of lumber from the stand- 

 point of the scientist, by Howard F. 

 Weiss, p. 49-51. 

 Barrel' and box, April, 1914. Annual use of 



yellow pine box lumber, p. 44-5. 

 Canadian lumberman, April 15, 1914. The 

 commercial importance of spruce, by R. 

 G. Lewis, p. 36-7; Black walnut, p. 50; 

 Estimating and figuring mill waste, by 

 Charles Cloukey, p. 50-2. 



Engineering magazine, April, 1914. Wood 



paving in Europe ; soft wood universally 



used and method of laying, by S. R. 



Church, p. 101-4. 



Hardwood record, April 10, 1914. Value of 



careful lumber piling, p. 25-6. 

 Hardwood record, April 25, 1914. Investi- 

 gating wood utilization, p. 26-8 ; Utilizing 

 veneer waste, by J. C. T.. p. 30-1; The 

 largest timber seller, p. 33. 

 Lumber trade journal, April 15, 1914. A cy- 

 press tree that refused to die even with 

 all its roots removed, p. 15. 

 Lumber world review, April 25, 1914. W'ood 

 durability affected by time of cutting, by 

 Samuel J. Record, p. 19-20. 

 Manufacturers' record, April 23, 1914. For- 

 estry and water resources, by Henry S. 

 Graves, p. 49. 



Paper mill, March 14, 1914. Utilizing waste; 

 the invention of two Maine men which 

 makes slabs, butts, edging, etc.. available 

 for pulp making, p. 14, 356. 

 Paper trade journal, April ]6. 1914. Manu- 

 facture of sulfite pulp from resinous 

 woods, p. 48. 



Pioneer western lumberman, April 15, 1914. 

 L T nited States forester's attitude on "light 

 burning"; considers patrol essential for 

 forest protection, by H. S. Graves, p. 

 23-4. 



Pioneer western lumberman, May 1, 1914. 

 Harvard forestry school, p. 9; California 

 forests before and after the gringo came, 

 by Guy A. Buell, p. 15, 19-25. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1, 1914.- 

 Chemical utilization of southern pine 

 waste, by John S. Bates, p. 64-72. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, March 1. 1914.- 

 Brazilian woods; their utilization for the 

 manufacture of wood-pulp, p. 150-1. 

 Pulp and paper magazine, March 15, 1914.- 

 Pulp and newspaper manufacture, by J. 

 Stadler, p. 162-6. 



Pulp and paper magazine, April 1. 1914. 

 Forest ownership and fire protection, by 

 G. E. Bothwell, p. 198-200; New woods 

 for paper, p. 206. 



St. Louis lumberman, April 15, 1914. The 

 Chinese wood-oil tree, p. 33; Harvard is 

 to have a forestry school, p. 82. 

 St. Louis lumberman, May 1, 1914. Progress 



of wood block paving abroad, p. 28. 

 Savannah naval stores review. April 18, 1914. 

 -The present status of the wood turpen- 

 tine industry, by E. H. French, p. 15. 

 Savannah naval stores review, May 2, 1914. 

 Wood turpentine and rosins, by C. A. 

 Lunn, p. 3-4. 



