CURRENT LITERATURE 



225 



American lumberman, Feb. 6, 1915. Conserva- 

 tion of natural resources, by J. R. White, 

 p. 29; Income tax and the lumber industry, 

 by Edwin B. Parker, p. 30-1. 



Canada lumberman, Jan. 15, 1915. Specifica- 

 tions for kiln-dried lumber, by Harry D. 

 Tiemann, p. 39; Some new kiln-drying 

 thoughts, by Henry Hunter, p. 48. 



Canada lumberman, Feb. 1, 1915. Ontario 

 production shows a decrease; output of 

 lumber during 1914, p. 36-8; Review of 

 New Brunswick trade in 1914, p. 44-5; 

 Trade of Quebec province during 1914, 

 p. 46-7; Nova Scotia's lumber trade during 

 1914, p. 48-9; Great Britain trade during 

 1914, p. 54-5. 



Hardwood record, Jan. 25, 1915. Problems 

 in southern New England, by S. J. Record, 

 p. 18-19. 



Hardwood record, Feb. 10, 1915. Some wrong 

 uses of wood, p. 21. 



Logging, Jan. 1915. World-wide timber move- 

 ments; a resume of conditions up to the 

 commencement of the European war, by 

 James Adrian Byrne, p. 25-31. 



Lumber trade journal, Jan. 15, 1915.- The 

 preservation of timber by the use of fluoric 

 salts, by Friedrich Moll, p. 23; Texas 

 forestry association will demand state 

 forestry legislation, p. 30. 



Lumber trade journal, Feb. 1, 1915. Dry kiln 

 practice conference, Jan. 20, 1915, p. 

 23-5; Principles of kiln drying lumber, 

 by H. D. Tiemann, p. 30-1; Capt. J. B. 

 White talks to college students on con- 

 servation, p. 52-3. 



Mississippi Valley lumberman, Jan. 29, 1915. - 

 Taxation of timber lands, by W. A. Holt, 

 p. 65. 



Packages, Feb. 1915. World's box shook 

 industry, by J. B. Knapp, p. 28-45. 



Paper, Jan. 13? 1915. Characteristics of paper- 

 making fibers, p. 17-19, 32. 



Paper, Jan. 20, 1915. The Muntzing woodpulp 

 digester; details of the production of 

 chemical woodpulp by the Muntzing 

 method, by J. Gustav V. Lang, p. 15-17; 

 Pulp and paper history from Norway; 

 origins, development and present position 

 of the industry interestingly sketched, 

 p. 18-20; American forestry association 

 in session in New York, p. 24-5. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Jan. 1, 1915. Forest 

 products laboratories of Canada, by John 

 S. Bates, p. 9-11; "Onlva scrap of paper," 

 by J. Grove Smith, p. 11-12. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Jan. 15, 1915. 

 The technology of the common paper- 

 making fibres, by Henry Aldous Bromley, 

 p. 37-41. 



St. Louis lumberman, Feb. 1, 1915. Treated 

 timber for factory construction, by F. J. 

 Hoxie, p. 30-1; How a log is sawed into 

 lumber, p. 70. 



Southern lumber journal, Jan. 15, 1915. 

 Economical use of lumber, by E. W. 

 Bright, p. 46. 



Southern lumberman, Jan. 23, 1915. Cost of 

 production, by F. R. Gadd, p. 39-42; 

 Report on specifications for the purchase 

 and preservation of treatable timber, by the 



American wood preservers' association, 



p. 43-5. 

 Southern lumberman, Jan. 30, 1915. Some 



troubles of the lumber industry, by R. S. 



Kellogg, p. 37-8. 

 Timber trade journal, Jan. 16, 1915. Forestry 



as a business, bv William Dawson, p. 



109-10. 

 Timberman, Jan. 1915. Distributive facilities 



for lumber provided by New York barge 



canal, p. 32 F-G. 

 United States daily consular report, Jan. 23, 



1915. Honduran lumber trade, by Walter 



F. Boyle, p. 328-9. 

 United States daily consular report, Jan. 26, 



1915. Conditions in Bavarian woodwork- 

 ing industry, by Charles S. Winans, p. 361. 

 United States daily consular report, Feb. 1, 



1915. Indian pencil making industry, 



by Henry D. Baker, p. 444. 

 United States daily consular report, Feb. 6, 



1915. Brazilian lumber resources and 



imports, by Robert Frazer, p. 514-18; 



American lumber on London markets, 



p. 523. 

 United States daily consular report, Feb. 13, 



1915. Crisis of the German paper indus- 

 try, by Julius G. Lay, p. 613. 

 West Coast lumberman, Jan. 15, 1915. 



Sawdust flour worth $13 a ton, p. 38; 



Should federal forests underwrite pioneer 



local improvements?, by Henry S. Graves, 



p. 44. 



Forest journals 



Allgemeine forst- und jagd-zeitung, Oct. 1914. 

 Ueber die wichtigsten volkswirtschaft- 

 lichen und rechtlichen grundlagen der 

 waldwertrechnung, by Robert Fischer, 

 p. 309-14; Forstliche und jagdliche ver- 

 haltnisse unserer kolonien, by O. Thyen, 

 p. 314-20; Ueber den streit um die forst- 

 lichen reinertrage, by Th. Glaser, p. 320-2 ; 

 Der plentersaumschlag Wagners im ver- 

 einsgebiet, by Schering, p. 332-4. 



Forestry quarterly, Dec. 1914. A mechanical 

 model of a regulated forest, by O. L. 

 Sponsler and Luebben, p. 511-13; The 

 creation of an ideal, by James B. Berry, 

 p. 514-19; The size of state forests, by 

 J. S. Illick, p. 520-31 ; Notes on germination 

 and reproduction of longleaf pine in 

 southern Mississippi, by P. L. Buttrick, 

 p. 532-7; Forest planting in New England 

 as an investment, by J. W. Tourney, p. 

 538-43; Taxation of forests in Massachu- 

 setts, by Charles J. Bullock, p. 544-5; 

 Forest taxation and the single tax, by 

 Louis S. Murphy, p. 546-7; Pitfalls of 

 timber bond issues, by Montgomery 

 Rollins, p. 548-58; The problem of food 

 movement in trees, by S. B. Elliott, p. 

 559-61; An appreciation of Dr. Schenck,, 

 by Austin Cary, p. 562-6; Notes on forestry- 

 in Russia, by M. Tkatchenko, p. 567-77;; 

 Suggestions for forest administration im 

 China, by P. C. King, p. 578-92. 



Forstwissenschaftliches centralblatt, Oct. 1914. 

 Der weisstanne wesen und verjungungs- 

 weise, by Eberhard, p. 501-8. 



Forstwissenschaftliches centralblatt, Nov. 1914. 

 Zur ausnutzung des chemischen stand- 



