ic.1 .** jnagag.l na March- JJ^.JLSOS* Timber situation; 

 its relation to the -v^elilale- trade , by If. S. Curtis, p. 

 17-18. 



Pacific builder and engineer, Feb. 29, 1908. The manufacture 

 of wood pipe, by C. M. Lewis, p. 82-85; Some wooden tank 

 history, by B. C. Seydel, p. 85-6. 



Pacific builder and engineer, March 7, 1908. Avenarius carbol- 

 ineum, p. 96-7. 



Packages, March 1908. Timber census of the United States, by 

 R. S. Kellogg, p. 60-1. 



Paper mill, March 14, 1908. Peat in paper making, by Argus, 

 p. 14. 



Paper trade journal, Feb. 27, 1908. Taxing timberlands as 



barren; Senator Cobb's bill in the New York legislature, 

 p . 54 . 



Paper trade journal, March 19, 1908. Forests will last but 

 twenty years, by Y/hipple, p. 6; A vast forest reserve 

 for Canada, p. 34. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Jan. 1908. "What the lumberman wastes, 

 by J. A. De Cew, p. 27-8; A Swedish maker on kraft paper, 

 p, 29 -30, 



3 ulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1908. Economic reforestation, 

 by B. E. Fernow, p. 50-5; Norway f s pulp resources, by 

 F. S. S. Johnson, p. 56-7. 



Railway age, March 20, 1908. Railway forest work, by R. C. 



Bryant, p. 382-4; Forest work of the Pennsylvania rail- 

 road, by E. A. Sterling, p. 384-5; Yfooden bridges and 

 trestles; abstract of report presented at the 9th annual 

 meeting of the American railway engineering and mainte- 

 nance of way association, Chicago, March 17-19, 1908, 

 p. 414-19. 



St. Louis lumberman, March 1, 1908. The moderate dry kiln, by 

 C. Cloukey, p. 21. 



St. Louis lumberman, March 15, 1908. The states and the tim- 

 ber supply, by G. S. Gardiner, p. 27; Tie testing in 

 Texas, p. 30. 



Southern industrial and lumber review, Feb. 1908. Mahogany, 



p. 33; How the forest ranger fights fire, by G. G. Lincoln, 

 p. 63; The logwood tree, p. 66. 



Southern lumberman, March 7, 1908. Tupelo for spools and other 

 things, p. 20-21; Interests in Arkansas forests; activity 

 in lumber circles, p. 28. 



Southern lumberman, March 14, 1908, A problem of spring; how 

 does sap rise in trees? p. 22-3. 



Southern lumberman, March 21, 19C8. Resins, gums and other 

 products of the sap of trees, p. 20; More aoout new 

 uses for tupelo, p. 21; Cypress gets the California 

 award as the best substitute for oak in croperr.ge, p. 23-4. 



Tiniberman, Feb. 1908. The lumber industry in Mexico, p. 24. 



U. S. daily consular report, llarch 3, 1908. --Lumber ing on the 

 Amazon, by C. C. Sberhardt , p. 1-3; Turned v/oodware 

 opening in England, p. 7. 



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