18 ECONOIMIC BOTANY OF ALABAMA 



Hill, C. L. 



Wooa paving in the United States. — U. S. Forest Service, Circular 141. 

 24 pp., 3 figs. 1908. 



Holroyd, H. B. 



Tlie utilization of tupelo [jVvj.?« iiiiiflora]. — U. S. Forest Service, Cir- 

 cular 40. 16 pp., 4 figs. 1907. " 



Hopkins, A. D. 



The dving of pine in the southern states: cause, extent, and remedv. — 

 U. S. Dept. Agric, Farmers' Bull. 476. 15 pp., 4 figs. 1911. 

 (Discusses injury by bark-boring beetles.) 



Jenkins. L. W. (M. D.) 



Report on the botany of Wilcox Countv. — Trans. Med. Assoc. Ala., 

 7:111-116. 1854. 



(Only 12 species listed, all medicinal, some woody.) 



Kellogg, R. S. 



Lumber and its uses. 3d edition, revised by Franklin H. Smith. — 370 

 pp., 98 figs. New York, 1924. 



Leavenworth, M. C. 



List of the rare plants found in Alabama. — Am. Jour. Sci., 9 :74. 1825. 

 (A list of 34 species, with localities given for most of them in one or 

 two words.) 



McAtee, W. L. 



An account of poison sumachs, Rhus poisoning, and remedies therefor. 

 —Medical Record (New York), 97:771-780. May, 1920. 



Marsh, CD. 



A new sheep-poisoning plant of the southern states. — U. S. Dept. Agric, 

 Circular 82. 4 pp. 1920. 



(Refers to Daiibcntonia longifolia, a large woody herby or short-lived 

 shrub, probably introduced from the tropics, and now common near the 

 coast from West Florida to Texas.) 



Mattoon, W. R. 



1. The southern cypress.— U. S. Dept. Agric, Bull. 272. 74 pp., 7 

 figs., 12 plates. 1915. (Reviewed by B. E. F. [ernow] in Forestry Quar- 

 terly, 13:522-524 Jan. 1916.) 



(The author treats our two easily recognized species of Taxodium as 

 one, and makes no reference to publications of the present writer, in which 

 the differences were pointed out more than ten years previously. — See Har- 

 per 1 and 2 in this bibliography.) 



2. Short-leaf pine [Pinus echinata] : its economic importance and for- 

 est management. — U. S. Dept. Agriculture, Bull. 308. pp pp., 4 figs., 10 

 plates. 1915. 



3. Slash pine [Pinus EUiotfii and P. Caribaca]. — U. S. Dept. Agric, 

 Farmers' Bull. 1256. 41 pp., 21 figs. "May" 1922. 



4. Long-leaf pine [Piiiiis pahistris, or aiistralis]. — U. S. Dept. Agric, 

 Bull. 1061. 50 pp., 6 figs., 22 plates. 1922. 



Maxwell, Hu. 



Uses of commercial woods of the United States. Beech, birches and 

 maples.— U. S. Dept. Agric, Bull. 12. 56 pp. 1913. 

 (See also Hall & Maxwell, Harris & Maxwell.) 



