CURRENT LITERATURE 



605 



Gulf Coast lumberman, March 1, 1915. 

 Forestry problems of Texas, p. 34. 



Handle trade, Jan. 1915. Canes umbrellas 

 whips; variety of woods used in industry; 

 list of manufactures, p. 7-10; What the 

 toy field offers; European war shifting 

 the center of manufacturing in America, 

 p. 15-16; Good field for wood turners; 

 candle sticks and lamp stands made of 

 wood and tastefully turned, p. 17; Con- 

 tributing to sports ; all kinds of wood used 

 in the industry; list of manufacturers, p. 

 22-6; Making pencils is big industry in 

 America, p. 27-8. 



Hardwood record, Feb. 25, 1915. Sawdust 

 unsuitable for bread, p. 16-17; The sale of 

 wood ashes, p. 18-19. 



Hardwood record, March 10, 1915. Mesquite 

 in semi-arid regions, p. 13; The prospect 

 for walnut supply, p. 15; Possibilities of 

 hardwood distillation, p. 17. 



Lumber world review, Feb. 10, 1915. National 

 lumber manifacturers' association Decem- 

 ber report of production and movement of 

 lumber, p. 32. 



Lumber world review, Feb. 25, 1915. The 

 wood block pavement of London town, 

 by Jack Brooks, p. 30-1. 



Lumber world review, March 10, 1915. The 

 effect of the war upon the lumber trade, 

 by Warren F. Hickernell, p. 25-6. 



Packages, March, 1915. World's box shook 

 industry, p. 16-19. 



Paper, Feb. 17, 1915. Forest conservation in 

 New York state, by Jacob Gould Schur- 

 man, p. 15-16; Pulp and paper periodicals 

 of the world, p. 25. 



Paper, Feb. 24, 1915. Four thousand years of 

 papermaking, by J. Newell Stephenson, 

 p. 34-8; Spruces and firs available for 

 paper pulp, by Nelson C. Brown, p. 46-52; 

 America's pulp and paper school; a new 

 branch of education successfully given at 

 the University of Maine, by J. Newell 

 Stephenson, p. 52-60, 64; Progress in 

 paper-making chemistry, by Ralph H. 

 McKee, p. 62-4; Woodpulp from yellow 

 pine waste, p. 176; Forestry legislation in 

 Maine, p. 182. 



Paper, March 10, 1915. Hemlock as a pulp 

 wood, p. 19. 



Paper trade journal, Feb. 18, 1915. The pulp 

 and paper industry in Newfoundland, by 

 P. T. McGrath, p. 63-6, 75-85; Forest 

 products laboratories of Canada, by John 

 S. Bates, p. 193-5; The hazards of paper 

 and pulp making, by Edward T. Walsh, 

 p. 197-205. 



Paper trade journal, March 4, 1915. Bamboo 

 pulp, p. 48-50. 



Pioneer western lumberman, Feb. 15, 1915. 

 Electricity in the lumber industry, by 

 E. F. Whitney, p. 11-15, 23-4. 



Pulp and paper magazine, Feb. 1, 1915. 

 Conservation commission discusses for- 

 estry problems; address of Sir Clifford 

 Sifton, p. 72-7; The fire situation during 

 1914, p. 77-80; Forestrv situation in 

 Quebec, by G. C. Piche, p. 80-2; The 

 essential features of a successful fire 



protective organization, by H. R. Mac- 

 Millan, p. 82-4; Cooperation in manage- 

 ment of Dominion timber lands and 

 cooperation with Ontario on the Trent 

 watershed survey, by B. E. Fernow, p. 

 84-6. 



Railway review, Feb. 20, 1915. Mixing tar 

 with creosote, by P. C. Reilly, p. 242-7. 



St. Louis lumberman, Feb. 15, 1915. Timber 

 utilization, by O. T. Swan, p. 58-60. 



St. Louis lumberman, March 1, 1915. Dry 

 rot in factory timbers, p. 46-7; Forest 

 products federation meeting in Chicago, 

 Feb. 24th and 25th, p. 59-63. 



Timberman, Feb. 1915. New system for 

 drying larch, by D. T. Mason, p. 43-5; 

 Cable tramways in the Philippine Islands, 

 p. 45; Logging in Alaska, p. 48 L; Con- 

 structing a high pile bridge, by C. R. 

 Pope, p. 49-50. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 24, 

 1915. Arbor day obligatory in Spain, 

 by Carl Bailey Hurst, p. 761. 



United States daily consular report, Feb. 26, 

 1915. New Chinese school of forestry, 

 by Thomas Sammons, p. 791. 



Veneers, March, 1915. Methods for finishing 

 walnut, by Rudolph Kilbourne, p. 15-16; 

 The utilization of waste veneer, p. 17-18. 



West Coast lumberman, March 1, 1915. 

 United States Forest products laboratory 

 on how to dry cedar, by Harry D. Tiemann, 

 p. 35. 



Wood- worker, Feb. 1915. New uses for saw- 

 dust, p. 33; Some hints for sawyers, by 

 C. R. Lake, p. 42. 



Forest journals 



Forest leaves, Feb. 1915. What can be done 

 for forestry, by S. B. Elliott, p. 2-4; 

 Forest conservation in Switzerland, by 

 Marie Widmer, p. 9. 



Naturwissenschaftliche zeitschrift fur forst- 

 und landwirtschaft, Nov.-Dec, 1914. 

 Die bohrmuschel (Genus Teredo Linne), 

 by F. Moll, p. 505-64. 



North woods, Feb. 1915. The grain car door 

 industry, p. 17-21. 



Proceedings of the Society of American for- 

 esters, Jan. 1915. The invasion of a 

 planted prairie grove, by Raymond J. 

 Pool, p. 1-8; Notes on the relation of 

 planting methods to survival, by E. E. 

 Carter, p. 9-17; A formula for normal 

 growing stock in selection system forests, 

 by Thornton T. Munger.. p. 18-21; Land 

 classification rules for an Arizona forest, 

 by John D. Guthrie, p. 22-31; The con- 

 struction of a set of taper curves, by W. B. 

 Barrows, p. 32-40; Sand-dune reclamation 

 on the coast of northern California and 

 southern Oregon, by Frank B. Kellogg, 

 p. 41-64; Reading and replotting curves 

 by the strip method, by W. B. Barrows, 

 p. 65-7; Monterey pine, by Louis T. 

 Larsen, p. 68-74. 



Revue des eaux et forets, Jan. 1, 1915. Les 

 deboisements strategiques et le droit des 

 proprietaires, by G. Geneau, p. 521-7. 



