836 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Country gentleman, Sept. 12, 1914. New 

 forests for New England barrens; trees 

 will grow on land that is worn out for 

 regular farm crops, by Samuel J. Record, 

 p. 1515, 1536. 



Country life in America, Oct., 1914. The tree 

 crop; a profitable by-product, by F. F. 

 Moon and Chas J. Lisle, p. 73. 



Journal of botany, Sept., 1914. Three conifers, 

 by R. A. Dummer, p. 236-41. 



Plant 'world, Sept., 1914. The role of aspen 

 in the reforestation of mountain burns in 

 Arizona and New Mexico, by G. A. 

 Pearson, p. 249-60. 



Popular science monthly, Oct., 1914. The 

 coniferous forests of eastern North Amer- 

 ica, by Roland M. Harper, p. 338-61. 



Science, Oct. 9, 1914. An experiment on 

 killing tree scale by poisoning the sap of 

 the tree, by Fernando Sanford, p. 519-20. 



Scientific American, Aug. 29, 1914. Remark- 

 able wood preservation, by S. F. Maxwell, 

 p. 151. 



Scientific American supplement, Aug. 15, 1914. 

 Alcohol from wood, by R. Ditmar, p. 

 103. 



United States Dept. of agriculture. Journal 

 of agricultural research, Sept., 1914. 

 Birds as carriers of the chestnut blight 

 fungus, by F. D. Heald and R. A. Stud- 

 halter, p. 405-22; Density of wood sub- 

 stance and porosity of wood, by Frederick 

 Dunlap, p. 423-8. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Sept. 12, 1914. Timber 

 resources of the Isle of Pines, p. 41-3; 

 Australian timber resources and trade, p. 

 53-4; The lumber business in the Swiss 

 Alps, by George Cecil, p. 55. 



American lumberman, Sept. 19, 1914. 

 Utilization of yellow pine sawmill refuse, 

 p. 34; Fire prevention through creation of 

 public sentiment, by E. T. Allen, p. 46-7. 



American lumberman, Sept. 26, 1914. How 

 wood preserving industry can avoid injury 

 from war, by Clyde H. Teesdale, p. 39-40; 

 Potash from wood, p. 44. 



American lumberman, Oct. 3, 1914. A study 

 of decay in wood bleachers at Wisconsin 

 university, by C. H. Teesdale, p. 27; 

 Government stumpage prices in British 

 Columbia, by H. R. MacMillan, p. 44. 



American lumberman, Oct. 10, 1914. Dis- 

 cusses proper use of wood, by Hermann 

 von Schrenk, p. 29; The business of con- 

 structive forestry, by Wilson Compton, 

 p. 38-40; Yellow poplar a forest king, p. 48. 



Engineering record, June 13, 1914. Restrain- 

 ing effect of forests on sudden melting of 

 snow, by J. E. Church, p. 674. 



Engineering record, July 25, 1914. Stump 

 burning to reclaim "logged-off" lands, by 

 Le Roy W. Allison,- p. 95-6. 



Engineering record, Aug. 1, 1914. Resistance 

 of timber joints; compression tests of 

 splices made with wood and iron keys 

 for the Panama- Pacific exposition build- 

 ings at San Francisco, by Arthur C. 

 Alvarez, p. 132-4. 



Hardwood record, Sept. 25, 1914. Birch com- 

 ing into its own, p. 23; Progress in wood 

 bending, p. 23; The hand truck in business, 

 p. 31; Ohio as a woodlot state, p. 32-3. 



Hardwood record, Oct. 10, 1914. Woods used 

 for foundry patterns, p. 25-6; Grain of 

 wood and its meaning, p. 26; Ebony and 

 its imitations, p. 29; Gum trees of the 

 United States, p. 29-30; Danger in certain 

 woods, p. 31; Realizing on rough logs, p. 

 32; Probable new source of resin; Cereus 

 thurberi, p. 42. 



Lumber trade journal, Sept. 15, 1914. Change 

 in government lumber specifications; 

 new rules laid down by Navy department 

 for yellow pine of all kinds, cypress for 

 boat building and creosoted pine block, 

 p. 19-20. 



Lumber trade journal, Oct. 1, 1914. Advan- 

 tages of Louisiana state forest, p. 19-20; 

 Benefits of state owned forests are de- 

 scribed by a government expert, by J. 

 Girvin Peters, p. 21-2. 



Lumber world review, Oct. 10, 1914. Meas- 

 uring moisture in green or dry lumber, by 

 B. D. Curtis, p. 24-5. 



Manufacturers' record, Aug. 20, 1914. Steam 

 land-clearing machine, p. 52. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, Sept. 11, 1914. 

 Practical buildnig construction; building 

 materials and their uses, by Whitson and 

 Bull, p. 36-7. 



Paper, Sept. 16, 1914. The cause of rosin 

 blemishes in paper, by Carl G. Schwalbe, 

 p. 15-17. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Sept. 15, 1914. 

 Sugar pine; a dependable wood for sash 

 doors and fittings, p. 11; Wood-block pav- 

 ing; why are Pacific Coast lumbermen 

 neglecting this important business?, p. 23; 

 Charpitting method of removing stumps, 

 by H. W. Sparks, p. 30-2. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Oct. 1, 1914. 

 Redwood, the wood everlasting, p. 11-13; 

 Pulp and paper manufacture in California, 

 p. 22-3. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, Sept., 

 1914. The building of silos in Texas, p. 

 19-20. 



Southern lumber journal, Oct. 1, 1914. Sum- 

 mary of the amount of wood used by each 

 of the wood manufacturing industries of 

 the United States, p. 37; Uses everything 

 but the bark; description of a big southern 

 sawmill plant whose slogan is "eliminate 

 the waste," p. 45. 



Southern lumberman, Oct. 10, 1914. .Spine- 

 less cactus proving remarkable forage 

 crop on cut-over lands, p. 43. 



Timber trade journal, Sept. 12, 1914. The 

 timber industry of Queensland, p. 426. 



Timber trade journal, Sept. 19, 1914. Why 

 should Germany make our toys and small 

 wood ware?, p. 436. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 1, 

 1914. British Columbia timber and lum- 

 ber trade, by R. E. Mansfield, p. 11-13. 



United States daily consular report, Oct. 13. 

 1914. British Columbia shingle and lum- 

 ber industry, by R. E. Mansfield, p. 216-17. 



