694 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Wood-using industries 



Brandt, P. M. How to build a Gurler silo. 

 11 p. il. Columbia, Mo., 1914. (Mis- 

 souri Agricultural experiment station. 

 Circular 67.) 



Campbell, W. B. Chemical methods for 

 utilizing wood wastes. 6 p. Ottawa, 

 1914. (Canada Dept. of the interior- 

 Forestry branch. Circular 9.) 



Lewis, R. G., comp. Wood-using industries 

 of the maritime provinces. 100 p. il. 

 Ottawa, 1914. (Canada Dept. of the in- 

 terior Forestry branch. Bulletin 44.) 



Rabild, Helmer, and others. Homemade 

 silos. 47 p. il. Wash., D. C., 1914. (U. 

 S. Dept. of agriculture Farmers' bul- 

 letin 589.) 



Wood technology 



Kellog, Royal Shaw. Lumber and its uses. 

 352 p. il., pi. Chicago, 111., Radford archi- 

 tectural co., 1914. 



Auxiliary Subjects 



Botany 



Piper, Charles Vancouver, and Beattie, R. 

 Kent. Flora of southwestern Washing- 

 ton and adjacent Idaho. 296 p. map. 

 Lancaster, Pa., 1914. 



Agriculture 



Hibbard, B. H. Agricultural cooperation. 32 

 p. Madison, Wis., 1914. (Wisconsin- 

 Agricultural experiment station. Bulle- 

 tin 238.) 



Clearing of land 



Thompson, Harry. An outfit for boring 

 taprooted stumps for blasting. 5 p. il. 

 Wash., D. C., 1914. (U. S. Dept. of 

 agriculture Farmers' bulletin 600.) 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



Country gentleman, June 27, 1914. Trees for 

 the farmers ; has the farm an overlooked 

 possibility in its tannin supply? by 

 Dwight Carter, p. 1164. 



Plant world, Aug. 1914. The sand dunes of 

 Coos Bay, Oregon, by H. D. House, p. 

 238-43. 



Torreya, Aug., 1914. A possible habit mu- 

 tant of the sugar maple, by A. F. Blakes- 

 lee, p. 140-4. 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Office of information. Weekly news let- 

 ter to crop correspondents, July 29, 1914. 

 Government cooperating with states to 

 prevent forest fires, p. 2. 



United States Department of agriculture- 

 Office of information. Weekly news let- 

 ter to crop correspondents, Aug. 5, 1914. 

 Surgery for sick trees, p. 3-4. 



United States Weather bureau. Monthly 

 weather review, April, 1914. Meteoro- 

 logical observations in connection with 

 botanical geography, agriculture, and 

 forestry, by Raphael Zon, p. 217-23. 



Washington academy of sciences. Journal, 

 July 19, 1914. Acacia cornigera and its 

 allies, by Wm. Edwin Safford, p. 336-68. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, July 4, 1914. Historic 

 trees of America, p. 45. 



American lumberman, July 18, 1914. Proper 

 'method of laying wood block pavement, 

 p. 42; Forestry and lumber manufactur- 

 ing in Japan, p. 46 ; Largest tree trunk in 

 the world, p. 59 ; A stump extracting 

 device, p. 61; Uses of redwood, p. 65. 



Barrel and box, July, 1914. Barrels for in- 

 flammable articles, p. 35; Cottonwoods 

 for cooperage and boxes, p. 37 ; Wooden 

 box specifications for the transportation 

 of explosives, p. 46-9. 



Canada lumberman, July 15, 1914. Commer- 

 cial importance of Douglas fir, by R. G. 

 Lewis, p. 34-5. 



Engineering news, May 21, 1914. Laying a 

 wood-block pavement with cement-grout 

 filler, Cambridge, Massachusetts, by L. 

 L. Hastings, p. 1130-1 ; More about 

 teredo-proof wood piles, by F. H. Frank- 

 land, p. 1140. 



Handle trade, August, 1914. Determining 

 handle grades ; work of "Industrial In- 

 vestigation" office of government to 

 bring about single set of rules, p. 3-5. 



Hardwood record, July 10, 1914. Use of 

 red gum for fixtures, p. 24 5 ; A new 

 method of piling and unpiling lumber, 

 p. 34-5. 



Hardwood record, July 25, 1914. Wood in 

 musical instruments, by J. V. Hamilton, 

 p. 20-21 ; The sawed veneer industry, by 

 C. R. O., p. 24. 



Hardwood record August 10, 1914. Wood- 

 inlay, p. 30. 



Lumber trade journal, July 15, 1914. Con- 

 fer on structural timber grading, p. 

 15-6 ; Timberland tax valuations are too 

 high as compared with other lines, p. 22; 

 World's oldest known tree proves to be 

 of cypress variety, p. 27 ; Yellow pine 

 mill prices in six states, p. 36. 



Lumber world review, July 25, 1914. The 

 lumberman and forest conservation, by 

 J. B. White, p. 28-9 ; Birch for interior 

 finish by R. S. Kellogg, p. 31-2. 



Lumber world review, August 10, 1914. 

 The interesting story of "nupro-gum," 

 by Boiling Arthur Johnson, p. 22-5. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, July 17, 

 1914. Forest management : address at 

 Chautauqua, by E. T. Allen, p. 41. 



Paper, August 12, 1914. The chemical pulp 

 industry in Germany, p. 15-16. 



Paper trade journal, July 9 1914. Explor- 

 ing new pulp lands in northern Quebec, 

 by Nelson C. Brown, p. 38-40. 



Paper trade journal, July 16, 1914. Paper 

 making raw materials of the southern 

 states, by Vasco E. Nunez, p. 42-4. 



Paper trade journal, July 30, 1914. The 

 chemical evaluation of wood for pulp, 

 by Martin L. Griffin, p. 42-4. 



