THE USE OF WOOD FOR FUEL. 39 
APPENDIX. 
PUBLICATIONS ON WOOD FUEL. 
Early in 1917 publications began to appear treating wood fuel 
briefly with reference to local conditions. They were issued mostly 
by States, and State foresters were chiefly instrumental in getting 
them out. The first one appeared in June in the shape of a press 
bulletin by K. W. Woodward of the New Hampshire Agricultural 
College, Durham, N. H. This was followed by others until at least 
20 have been published. Canada also published one early in 1918 
modeled on those put out by the States. Future publications should 
go into detail as to the quantity of wood fuel available in the State 
and its distribution, as well as the amount of fuel wood cut and 
used by specific localities within the State. 
RECENT PUBLICATIONS ON WOOD Nl 
Emergency Fuel from the Farm Woodlot, by A. F. Hawes, Circular 79, Office 
of the Secretary, U. S. Department of Agriculture. (Contributed by the 
Forest Service, Washington, D. C., October, 1917.) 
Firewood, by K. W. Woodward, Extension Circular 22, September, 1917, New 
Hampshire Agricultural College, Durham, N. H. 
The Fuel Situation, by K. W. Woodward, Extension Press Bulletin 77, June, 
1917, Agricultural College, Durham, N. H. 
Wood Fuel, by Paul D. Kneeland and F. W. Rane, Massachusetts State For- 
ester’s Office, 1917, Boston, Mass. 
Wood Fuel, by R. D. Forbes, Assistant Forester, Department of Conservation 
and Development of New Jersey, 1917, Trenton, N. J. 
A press bulletin was issued October 13, 1917, by the State fuel administrator 
at Greensboro, N. C., urging the cities and towns of the State to furnish wood 
to consumers at cost aS a war measure. 
Wood as Emergency Fuel, by J. H. Foster and F. H. Millen, bulletin, department 
of forestry, Agricultural and Mechanical College, 3d series, vol. 4, No. 2, 
January 15, 1918, College Station, Tex. 
Cordwood for Fuel, by J. H. Pratt and J. S. Holmes, Press Bulletin 160, North 
Carolina, Geological and Economie Survey, January 30, 1918, Chapel Hill, N. C. 
Wood Fuel, by William G. Howard, assistant superintendent of State forests, 
Bulletin 16, conservation commission of New York, 1918, Albany, N. Y. 
Wood Fuel to Relieve the Coal Shortage in Eastern Canada, by Clyde Leavitt, 
chief forester, commission of conservation, Ottawa, Canada, 1918. 
Municipal Woodyards, by the Federal Fuel Administrator (Wood Fuel Depart- 
ment for Georgia), Commerce, Ga., February, 1918. 
Wood Fuel for Iowa, March, 1918, by Prof. G. B. McDonald, Iowa State College, 
Ames, Iowa (in cooperation with Charles Webster, Federal fuel adminis- 
trator for Iowa.) 
Coal Conservation and Wood Fuel, March, 1918, State fuel administrator for 
Minnesota. 
Tamarack for Fuel, 1918, issued by the publicity department, Minnesota, com- 
mission of public safety, St. Paul, Minn. 
Wood Fuel and Democracy, 1918, State fuel administrator of Minnesota, St. 
Paul, Minn. 
