FOREST MANAGEMENT— CONTINUED. 



FOREST MANAGEMENT—CONTINUED. 



MANAGEMENT CHIEFLY FOR TIMBER PRODUCTION 



1192. CAMPBELL, D. Obtaining optimum yields from 

 forest lands. Natl. Farm Chemurg. Council. Chemurg. 

 Papers 607, 8 p. 1947. 381 N213P 



1193. CHAPMAN, H. H. Management of loblolly pine 

 in the pine-hardwood region in Arkansas and Louisiana, 

 west of the Mississippi River. Yale U. School Forestry 

 B. 49, 150 p., illus. Ref. 1942. 99.9 Y1B 



1194. CLARK, R. H. What intensive timber manage- 

 ment will mean to south Arkansas and Oklahoma. J. For- 

 estry 45:875-877. Ref. Dec. 1947. 99.8 F768 



1195. DAVIS, K. P. Economic aspects of managing 

 western white pine forests. Northwest Sci. 14(2):26-32. 

 May 1940. 470 N81 



1196. DAVIS, K. P. Economic management of western 

 white pine forests. U. S. D. A. Tech. B. 830, 78 p., illus. 

 Aug. 1942. 1 Ag84Te 



1197. DILLER, O. D. Managing hardwood forests for 

 continuous production. South. Lumberman 175(2197): 66, 

 68, 70. Oct. 15, 1947. 99.81 So82 



1198. DOUGLAS- FIR SECOND-GROWTH MANAGE- 

 MENT COMMITTEE. Management of second-growth 

 forests of the Douglas-fir region: a progress report. 

 Portland, Oreg., U. S. Forest Serv., Pacific Northwest 

 Forest & Range Expt. Sta., 1947. 151 p. Ref. 



1.9622 P2M31 



1199. GOOD forestry in the South; the qost of growing 

 trees. Pulp & Paper Indus. 19(10):28-30, illus. Oct. 

 1945. 302.8 Pll 



1200. HARPER, V. L., and RETTIE, J. C. The man- 

 agement status of forest lands in the United States. 



U. S. Forest Serv. Reappraisal of the Forest Situation 

 Rpt. 3, 29 p., illus. 1946. 1.962 A2R297 



Discussion by G. A. Pearson, V. L. Harper, and I. J. 

 Mason in J. Forestry 45:908-911. Dec. 1947. 99.8 F768 



Preliminary ed., 1.962 A2M312 Prelim. 



1201. JOSEPHSON, H. R. Factors affecting income 

 from second-growth forests in the western Sierra Nevada 

 Calif. Agr. Expt. Sta. B. 658, 72 p., illus. Dec. 1941. 



100 C12S 



U. S. Forest Service, California Forest and Range Ex- 

 periment Station, and Giannini Foundation cooperating. 



1202. KEARNS, R. S. Rotations. J. Forestry 38:339- 

 340. Apr. 1940. 99.8 F768 



System of clear-cutting and planting with financial re- 

 turns the objective; theory that forest rent and soil rent 

 principles are the same. Comment by H. H. Chapman, 

 J. Forestry 38:790-791. Apr. 1940. 



1203. KIRCHER, J. C. Forestry needs of the South. 

 J. Forestry 40:95-106. Feb. 1942. 99.8 F768 



Discussion, J. B. Toler, p. 99-100; W. M. Oettmeier, 

 p. 100-103; A. G. T. Moore, p. 103; D. E. Lauderburn, 

 p. 103-104; A. S. Houghton, p. 104-106; and E. C. Haff, 

 p. 106. 



1204. KIRKLAND, B. P. Let's grow big timber too! 

 Amer. Forests 52:68-70, 91-92, illus. Feb. 1946. 

 99.8 F762 



1205. KOROLEFF, A. M. The role of forest utiliza- 

 tion in forest management. J. Forestry 39:185-191. 

 Feb. 1941. 99.8 F768 



Also in Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 42:262-266. Mar. 

 1941. 302.8 P96 



1206. LODEWICK, J. E. Western hemlock, past, 

 present and future. Timberman 41(12):36, 38, 40, 42, 

 illus. Oct. 1940. 99.81 T484 



1207. MATTHEWS, D. M. No mystery to forest man- 

 agement; same basic principles as any other business. 

 Canada Lumberman 66(2,i.e.3):42-43. Feb. 1, 1946. 

 99.81 C16 



1208. MORISON, M. B. The small timber holdings in 

 Ontario, (the problem of their management and some 

 suggestions towards its solution). Ontario Dept. Lands & 

 Forests, Tech. C. 91, 4 p. Jan. 8, 1946. 99.9 On83 



1209. SHIRLEY, H. L. The challenge in northeast 

 forests. J. Forestry 44:6-8. Jan. 1946. 99.8 F768 



1210. SIMMONS, J. R. Forest prospects in Massachu- 

 setts. J. Forestry 40:940-944. Dec. 1942. 99.8 F768 



After the New England hurricane of 1938. 



1211. SOCIETY OF AMERICAN FORESTERS. PUGET 

 SOUND SECTION. COMMITTEE ON POSTWAR PLAN- 

 NING IN FORESTRY. Postwar forestry projects planned 

 by forest agencies in the Puget Sound area. J. Forestry 

 42:870-872. Dec. 1944. 99.8 F768 



Similar title by C. S. Martin in West. Forestry & Con- 

 serv. Assoc. Proc. 1943:5-6. 99.9 W522 



1212. WILSON, E. Reviewing 40 years of forest con- 

 servation. Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 43:631-632. July 

 1942. 



Public Forestry 



1213. ANDREWS, H. J. Statistical report on sustained 

 production program, United States Forest Service. West. 

 Forestry & Conserv. Assoc. Proc. 38:10-11. 1947. 



99.9 W522 



1214. BRYAN, P. H. Timber management on the 

 southern National Forests. South. Lumberman 175(2201): 

 217-219, illus. Dec. 15, 1947. 99.81 So82 



1215. BRYDEN, C. M. Developing the Omak-Okanogan 

 cooperative management plan. Wash. U. Forest Club Q. 

 25(3):5-9. Spring 1941-42. 99.9W275Q 



Biles-Coleman Lumber Co., Western Pine Association, 

 U. S. Indian Service, and U. S. Forest Service cooperating. 



1216. BULL, H. Cottonwood— a promising tree for in- 

 tensive management. Chemurg. Digest 4:53-55, illus. 

 Jan. 31, 1945. 381 N213Na 



Information from Delta Experimental Forest. 



1217. COOKE, R. F. A plan for timber management, 

 Wind River Working Circle, Columbia National Forest. 

 Portland Oreg., U. S. Forest Serv. North Pacific Region, 

 1940. 36 p. 1.9621 R6P69 



1218. DAHL, H. A. A socio-economic plan of manage- 

 ment for the Powder River Working Circle. Corvallis, 

 1945. 75 p., illus. Rev. 



Thesis (M.F.) - Oregon State College. 

 Located on Whitman National Forest, Oreg. 



1219. DAVIS, K. P. In defense of controlled burning 

 and similar public forestry undertakings. J. Forestry 38: 

 592-593. July 1940. 99.8 F768 



States that public forestry issues cannot be evaluated by 

 the economic standards of private business. 



1220. DELTA COUNCIL. Delta bottomland hardwoods, 

 a report on bottomland hardwood research and utilization. 

 Stoneville, Miss., 1945. 23 p., illus. 99.61 D382 



Delta Experimental Forest. 



Similar information by L. C. Maisenhelder in South. 

 Lumberman 171(2153):117-121, illus. Dec. 15, 1945. 

 99.81 So82 



1221. GILMOUR, J. D. Preliminary essay on some of 

 the principles involved in making forest working plans 

 for the coast forest district of British Columbia. Van- 

 couver, B. C, H. R. MacMillan Export Co., 1945. 53 p. 

 99.62 G42 



1222. GREELEY, W. B. Trees and jobs for 100 years. 

 Amer. Forests 53:56-59, 88-89, illus. Feb. 1947. 



99.8 F762 



Agreement between U. S. Forest Service and a private 

 companyjuntil Dec. 31, 2046. 



1223. HALL, J. S. Cooperative timber harvesting 

 agreements in the Southwest. J. Forestry 41:596-599. 

 Aug. 1943. 99.8 F768 



Between U. S. Forest Service and States. 



1224. HARBESON, T. C. Thirty-six years of forestry 

 in the Penn State Forest. Pa. Forests & Waters 15:71-74. 

 Sept./Oct. 1944. 99.9 P38S 



1225. HAWES, A. F. State forests from a business 

 standpoint. Conn. Woodlands 5:44-46. Sept. 1940. 



99.8 C76 



1226. HEILMAN, J. M. Forest management for 

 Newark [New Jersey watershed forest]. Amer. Water 

 Works Assoc. J. 39:87-92. Jan. 1947. 292.9 Am32J 



1227. HORNING, W. H. The O. and C. lands-an 

 adjustment and an experiment in forest conservation. 

 Commonwealth Rev. 22:237-252. Jan. 1941. Libr. Cong. 



1228. HORNING, W. H. The O. and C. lands; their 

 role in forest conservation. J. Forestry 38:379-383. 

 May 1940. 99.8 F768 



1229. HORNING, W. H. Planning sustained yield 

 forest management on the O. and C. lands. J. Forestry 

 40:474-476. June 1942. 99.8 F768 



1230. HORNING, W. H. Policies of the Department 



of the Interior. West. Forestry & Conserv. Assoc. Proc. 

 37:32-34. 1946. 99.9 W522 

 Mainly O. & C. grant lands. 



1231. HORNING, W. H. The promised land of managed 

 forests. J. Forestry 45:741-745. Oct. 1947. 99.8 F768 



Public-private cooperation possibilities. 



1232. HORNING, W. H. Role of the O. and C. Admin- 

 istration in cooperative forest management. West. 

 Forestry & Conserv. Assoc. Proc. 1940:38-43. 



99.9 W522 



