154 



AMERICAN FORESTRY 



Conservation, Jan. 1915. Charcoal burning; 

 wood now destroyed might be profitably 

 converted into charcoal, p. 2. 



Country gentleman, Dec. 12, 1914. Christmas 

 trees; a crop that is harvested once in 16 

 years, at a cent a foot in height, by C. O. 

 Ormsbee, p. 1983. 



Country gentleman, Dec. 26, 1914. The 

 harvest of forest seed, by T. W. Venemann, 

 p. 2050. 



Country gentleman, Jan. 2, 1915. Camphor in 

 Florida, by E. P. Powell, p. 7. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Nov. 21, 1914. The 

 collection and storage of forest seeds, p. 

 335-6. 



Gardeners' chronicle, Dec. 5, 1914. Cupressus 

 goveniana, by A. Bruce Jackson, p. 364-5. 



In the Open, Nov.-Dec. 1914. The forestry 

 series; course of instruction in tree culture, 

 by G. H. Wirt, p. 30-34; West Virginia's 

 important program; forest, fish and game 

 protective association holds annual meet- 

 ing, p. 55-7. 



National electric light association. Bulletin, 

 Dec. 1914. The use of blight-killed 

 chestnut for poles, by Jesse C. Nellis, p. 

 693-5. 



National wool grower, Dec. 1914. Distribu- 

 tion and functions of range plants, by 

 Arthur W. Sampson, p. 20-3. 



Popular mechanics, Jan. 1915. Guarding and 

 developing national forests, by Roy 

 Boothe, p. 110-11. 



Scientific American supplement, Oct. 17, 1914. 

 Climatic influence of forests; results of 

 the destruction of timber on climate and 

 soil, by L. A. Fosbery, p. 246-7. 



United States Dept. of agriculture Office of 

 Information. Weekly news letter to crop 

 correspondents, Jan. 13, 1915. The fuel 

 value of wood, p. 1. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, Dec. 19, 1914. Two 

 views of economic aspects of forestry, by 

 Barrington Moore, p. 23-4; Students of 

 Michigan agricultural college in annual 

 forest show, p. 37. 



American lumberman, Dec. 26, 1914. Impreg- 

 nation of timber to protect it from fire, by 

 Friedrich Moll, p. 32-3; Fighting the 

 gypsy moth in Massachusetts, p. 33; 

 Promoting uses of wood in its various 

 forms, by J. E. Rhodes, p. 34-5 ; Michigan 

 assured dividends from reforestation, p. 

 36-8. 



American lumberman, Jan. 2, 1915. Romance 

 of lumbering on the Saskatchewan, by 

 John S. Woodward, p. 28-9; Stimulating 

 the building of poultry houses; a California 

 lumberman's idea for utilizing low grade 

 lumber, p. 35 ; Fustic a wood of importance, 

 p. 64. 



American lumberman, Jan. 9, 1915. Showing 

 forestry to the world; exhibited at the 

 Panama-California exposition, p. 32; Eco- 

 nomical use of wood; choice of grades 

 housing and use of preservatives are 

 factors, by E. W. Bright, p. 36-7. 



Canada lumberman, Dec. 15, 1914. Forest 



policies of Canadian provinces, by H. R. 

 MacMillan, p. 32-3; Successful fire preven- 

 tion in B. C, p. 37; Interesting facts about 

 Quebec's forests, p. 38. 



Canada lumberman, Jan. 1, 1915. Counting 

 the cost of lumber, by E. H. Newton, p. 

 29-30. 



Engineering record, Oct. 17, 1914. Bleeding 

 and swelling of yellow pine paving blocks, 

 by C. H. Teesdale, p. 444. 



Engineering record, Oct. 31, 1914. Effect of 

 steaming process of creosoting on strength 

 of Oregon fir piling, p. 487-8. 



Gulf coast lumberman, Jan. 1, 1915. Timber 

 in Australia, by W. D. Hornaday, p. 29-30. 



Hardwood record, Dec. 25, 1914. National 

 forest fires in 1914, p. 19; An easy identi- 

 fication of the oaks, by S. J. Record, p. 23. 



Lumber trade journal, Dec. 15, 1914. Meeting 

 of dry kiln users and manufacturers, p. 

 32-7. 



Lumber trade journal, Jan. 1, 1915. Arkansas 

 annual lumber output, p. 23-4. 



Lumber world review, Jan. 10, 1915. National 

 lumber manufacturers' association Novem- 

 ber report of production and movement 

 of lumber, p. 30. 



Municipal journal, Jan. 7, 1915. Selection of 

 paving material; method of determining 

 the relative values under given conditions 

 of stone, brick, wood, asphalt and other 

 bituminous pavements, by George W. 

 Tillson, p. 3-7. 



New York lumber trade journal, Jan. 1, 1915. 

 Water mains of a century ago, p. 38. 



Paper trade journal, Jan. 7, 1915. The manu- 

 facture of papers, by James Scott, p. 

 44, 48. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Dec. 15, 1914. 

 The best type of silo ; redwood recommend- 

 ed by experts, p. 9; British Columbia's 

 lumber business, p. 13; An interesting 

 address to the forest officers in District 

 No. 5, by Coert DuBois, p. 15; Lumbering 

 industry in the Philippines, by John R. 

 Arnold, p. 19. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Jan. 1, 1915. 

 Douglas fir; the best structural timber, 

 p. 20; Average strength values of struc- 

 tural timbers, p. 21. 



St. Louis lumberman, Dec. 15, 1914. Preven- 

 tion of decay in factory timbers, p. 71-2. 



Southern lumberman, Dec. 19, 1914. Red 

 gum; wider recognition of its worth, by 

 John M. Pritchard, p. 48-9; The utilization 

 of saw-mill waste, by Rolf Thelen, p. 53-5 ; 

 Utilization of pine waste by distillation, 

 by H. S. Sackett, p. 55-6; Making paper 

 from long-leaf pine, p. 56-7; Kiln-drying 

 wagon stock, p. 59; Heartwood and sap- 

 wood; the relative value and properties 

 of each, by Samuel J. Record, p. 60-1. 



Southern lumberman, Jan. 9, 1915. Remark- 

 able fire test of treated wooden shingles 

 and composition roofing at Birmingham, 

 p. 40-1. 



Timber trade journal, Dec. 19, 1914. Austrian 

 and other oaks, by Percy Groom, p. 913-14. 



Timberman, Dec. 1914. Western frestry and 

 conservation association holds annual 



