CURRENT LITERATURE 



677 



Forest Administration 



Cameron, D. Roy. Dominion forest work in 

 British Columbia. 8 p. Vancouver, B. C, 

 1914 



Whitford. H. N. Agricultural land in British 

 Columbia and its relation to forest policy 

 and forest administration. 4 p. Victoria, 

 B C. 1915. 



Forest Utilization 



Ekman, Wilh. Skogsteknisk handbok. 286 p. 

 il. Stockholm, C. E. Fritzes bokforlags 

 aktiebolag, 1908. 



Lumber industry 



Kellogg, Royal Shaw. Some troubles of the 

 lumber industry. 12 p. Chicago, 111., 

 National lumber manufacturers' associa- 

 tion, 1915. 



Lewis, R. G. Forest products of Canada, 1913: 

 lumber, lath and shingles. 55 p. diagr. 

 Ottawa, 1915. (Canada Dept. of the 

 interior Forestry branch. Bulletin 48.) 



Northern hemlock and hardwood manufac- 

 turers association. Some lumber problems, 

 being the minutes of the 6th annual 

 meeting, 1915. 107 p. Wausau, Wis., 

 1915. 



Smith, Franklin H. Japanese markets for 

 American lumber. 16 p. Wash., D. C, 

 1915. (U. S. Department of commerce 

 Foreign and domestic commerce, Bureau 

 of. Special agents series no. 94.) 



Wood Preservation 



Gardner, Henry A. Fire retardant paints for 

 shingles and other wood structures. 26 p. 

 il. Wash., D. C., 1914. (Paint manufac- 

 turers' association of the U. S. Educa- 

 tional bureau Scientific section. Bul- 

 letin no. 42.) 



Weiss, Howard F., and Teesdale, C. H. Tests 

 of wood preservatives. 20 p. il., pi. 

 Wash., D. C, 1915. (U. S. Dept. of 

 agriculture. Bulletin 145.) 



Periodical Articles 



Miscellaneous periodicals 



American review of reviews, April, 1915 The 



national parks on a business basis, by 



Stephen Tyng Mather, p. 429-31. 

 Botanical gazette, March, 1915. Growth 



studies in forest trees; 2. Pinus strobus, bv 



H. P. Brown, p. 197-241. 

 Breeders' gazette, March 18, 1915. The work 



of Dr. Bessey, by Will C. Barnes, p. 558; 



The duties of forest rangers, by Will C. 



Barnes, p. 588-9. 

 Breeders' gazette, April 8, 1915. Fighting 



predatory animals on the western ranges, 



by Will C. Barnes, p. 705-6. 

 Conservation, April, 1915. Smoke and fume 



nuisance, p. 14; Cooperative fire protec- 

 tion, p. 15. 

 Country gentleman, March 13, 1915. Facts 



about fence posts; the kind of wood to 



use and how to use it, by S. B. Detwiler, 



p. 521-2. 

 Country gentleman, April 3, 1915. Planting 



the place with large trees, by Samuel J. 



Record, p. 644-5. 



Country life in America, March, 1915. John 

 Muir, by Bailey Millard, p. 76-7. 



Gardeners' chronicle, March 20, 1915. North 

 American forest trees in Britain, by A. 

 Henry, p. 145-6. 



In the open, March, 1915. Western catalpa, 

 by George H. Wirt, p. 39-41. 



National wool grower, March 1915. Pastures 

 and sheds in connection with range lamb- 

 ing grounds, by James T. Jardine, p. 17-21. 



Out West, January, 1915. The conservator; 

 a story of the U. S. Forest service, by 

 Grant Goodale, p. 15-19. 



Phytopathology, February, 1915. Storm and 

 drouth injury to foliage of ornamental 

 trees, by Carl Hartley and Theodore C. 

 Merrill, p. 20-9. 



Reclamation record, April, 1915. Tree plant- 

 ing lower Yellowstone and North Dakota 

 pumping projects, p. 164. 



Recreation, February, 1915. Why not federal 

 protection of migratory elk, by Will C 

 Barnes, p. 78-80. 



Science, March 26, 1915. Light and the rate 

 of growth in plants, by D. T. MacDougal, 

 p. 467. 



Scientific American supplement, January 30, 

 1915. Fire resisting wood, p. 69. 



Scientific American supplement, February 6, 

 1915.- The canon ball tree of trophical 

 America, p. 92. 



United States Department of agriculture. 

 Journal of agricultural research, March, 

 1915. Air and wind dissemination of 

 ascopores of the chestnut-blight fungus, 

 by F. D. Heald and others, p. 493-526. 



United States Department of agriculture 

 Office of Information. Weekly news 

 letter to crop correspondents, April 7, 

 1915. Grafting and budding the walnut, 

 p. 2-4. 



Trade journals and consular reports 



American lumberman, March 13, 1915. Pre- 

 servative treatment of wooden silos, by 

 George M. Hunt, p. 28-9; Lumbering in 

 eastern Brazil, by Joao Viterbo de Sam- 

 paio, p. 55. 



American lumberman, March 20, 1915. The 

 economical uses of lumber, p. 30-1; 

 Advocates town forest to provide labor, 

 by Harris A. Reynolds, p. 38. 



American lumberman, March 27, 1915. 

 Piling of lumber to prevent warping, by 

 John W. Young, p. 25; Act as beasts of 

 burden; resourceful Forest service em- 

 ployes accomplish difficult task when 

 mules give out, p. 29 ; Computing strength 

 of southern pine, by Fred J. Hoxie, p. 

 30-2; Some peculiarities of the European 

 tie trade, p. 40-1; Forest products display 

 in schools, p. 43 ; Incense cedar for pencil 

 manufacture, p. 57; Lumber costs as 

 association work; read before North 

 Carolina pine association, Norfolk, Va., 

 March 25, 1915, by R. B. Goodman, p. 

 34-5, 51. 



American lumberman, April 3, 1915. The 

 "cedars" and moth-proof chests and 

 closets, p. 24; More about the kyanizing 

 of wood, p. 25; Sane and practical fire 



