FOREST MANAGEMENT —CONTINUED. 



Policy, practices, problems, and principles of Weyer- 

 haeuser Timber Co., Longview, Wash. 



1314. EHRHART, E. O. What cost to grow pulpwood 

 from planted spruce? J. Forestry 38:327-329. Apr. 

 1940. 99.8 F768 



Experiment by Armstrong Forest Co., Northwestern 

 Pennsylvania. 



1315. FLEISHEL, M. L. Tree farming in Florida. 

 South. Lumberman 175(2194):32-34. Sept. 1, 1947. 

 99.81 So82 



Private industry's plan. 



1316. FRITZ, E. Changes in utilization practices in 

 California redwood region. Timberman 45(4);59-60, 62. 

 Feb. 1944. 99.81 T484 



Also in West Coast Lumberman 71(4): 100, 102. Apr. 

 1944. 99.81 W52 



1317. GIBSON, J. M. Forests and sulphite mills: 

 forest management and the more complete utilization of 

 forest resources and possible effects on the sulphite 

 industry in Canada. Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 48(10): 

 81-84. Sept. 1947. 302.8 P96 



1318. GIRARD, J. W. Actual accomplishments in 

 sustained yield forestry. West. Forestry & Conserv. 

 Assoc. Proc. 37:29-30. 1946. 99.9 W522 



Emphasizes industrial management. 



1319. GOODMAN, R. B. Volume of production. Idaho 

 Forester 22:11, 65, 72. 1940. 99.9 Idl 



Considerations involved in changing from liquidation 

 basis to sustained-yield basis. 



1320. GREELEY, W. B. Men of vision must spearhead 

 forestry as profession gains in industrial acceptance. 

 Brit. Columbia Lumberman 31(ll):63-64. Nov. 1947. 

 99.81 B77 



Summarizes forestry transitions in Pacific Northwest. 



1321. GREELEY, W. B. Twenty-five years: cut-over 

 lands come into their own. Pacific Logging Cong. 

 Loggers Handb. (1945) 5:73-77, illus. 1946. 99.76 P112La 



1322. HAGENSTEIN, W. D. The balance wheel of in- 

 dustrial forestry in the Douglas fir region. Forestry 

 Chron. 19:79-86. June 1943. 99.8 F7623 



Reproduced wholly or in part in West Coast Lumberman 

 70(3):35-36, 59. Mar. 1943. 99.81 W52; Amer. Lumber- 

 man 3247:30-31, illus. Jan. 9, 1943. 99.81 Am3; Miss. 

 Val. Lumberman 74(4):36-38, illus. Jan. 22, 1943. 



99.81 M69 



1323. HENDERSON, J. Economic ripples from 25 

 cords of wood. Forest & Outdoors, Nov. 1947:375. 

 99.8 C16 



Value after paper manufacture. 



1324. INTERNATIONAL PAPER COMPANY. 

 SOUTHERN KRAFT DIV. Report to the people of the 

 South on tree farming operations during 1946. New York, 

 1947? 24 p., illus. 99.9 In822 



1325. JOHNSON, V. E. Post-war forestry problems of 

 the pulp and paper industry. Forestry Chron. 20:46-57. 

 May 1944. 99.8 F7623 



Also in The Canadian Forestry Situation, 1944, p. 35- 

 46. 99.9 C167 



1326. JOINT COMMITTEE ON FOREST CONSERVA- 

 TION. West Coast tree farms; the next step in timber 

 growing in the Douglas fir Region. Seattle, Joint Com. 

 on Forest Conserv., West Coast Lumbermen's Assoc. 



& Pacific Northwest Loggers Assoc, 1943. 23 p., illus. 

 99.55 J66 



1327. KELLETER, P. D. What shall the harvest be? 

 Cross Tie B. 14(5): 18, 20, 22, 24, 26. May 1943. 



99.82 C87 



Management policy for industry. 



1328. KENNEY, E. T. Closer association between 

 forestry and industry. Brit. Columbia Lumberman 29(11): 

 37-38, 42. Nov. 1945. 99.81 B77 



Adoption of good management practices by government 

 and industry are advocated to assure continuous opera- 

 tions of British Columbia's forest industries. 



1329. KOROLEFF, A. Our future wood supply. Pulp 

 & Paper Mag. Canada 45:221, 223, 225, 227, 299. Ref. 

 Convention Issue, 1944. 302.8 P96 



Management in relation to future pulpwood supplies. 



1330. LEACH, M. C. What sound forest management 

 means to an Alabama lumber company. In U. S. Forest 

 Serv., Southern Region. Forestry in relation to agricul- 

 ture, p. 36-39. Atlanta, Ga., 1940. 1.9 F7669FO 



Policies of Alger-Sullivan Co. 



Also in N. Y. State Col. Forestry Ranger School Alumni 

 News, 1940, p. 34-36. 99.9 N487 



FOREST MANAGEMENT --CONTINTrer) 



1331. LENTZ, G. H. This is forestry. Amer. Forests 

 47:330-332, illus. July 1941. 99.8 F762 



Armstrong Forest Co., Pa. 



1332. LIERSCH, J. E. Progress of private forest 

 management in British Columbia. West. Forestry & 

 Conserv. Assoc. Proc. 38:33-34. 1947. 99.9 W522 



Progressive harvest methods by private companies. 



1333. LYMAN, R. R., and OSTROM, C. E. Keep them 

 growing; save time and timber while harvesting chemical 

 wood. Forest Leaves 33(2/3):3, 10-13, 16, illus. Mar./ 

 June 1943. 99.8 F763 



Study by Gray Chemical Co. and U. S. Forest Service on 

 the Company's land near Sweden Valley, Pa. 



1334. LYONS, R. W. Forestry and pulpwood forests. 

 Forestry Chron. 18:75-81. June 1942. 99.8 F7623 



1335. MCCARDELL, W. H. What is happening to 

 British Columbia's forests? Forest & Outdoors Oct. 

 1945:255-256, 275, illus. 99.8 C16 



Private industry programs for determining best 

 management practices. 



1336. MCGOWIN, J. F., and others. Pine growers. 

 Amer. Forests 50:222-226. May 1944. 99.8 F762 



E. Kurth, E. Porter, and E. A. Hall, joint authors. 

 Industrial forestry in the South. 



1337. MARTIN, C. S. Industrial self-regulation-its 

 place in a National forestry program. J. Forestry 38:88- 

 91. Feb. 1940. 99.8 F768 



Discussion, p. 94-100. 



1338. MARTIN, C. S. What can truck loggers do about 

 reforestation? Brit. Columbia Lumberman 30(1):60, 62, 

 102, 104. Jan. 1946. 99.81 B77 



Logger's contribution to economic forest management. 



1339. MASON, D. T. What is sustained yield to a 

 logmaniac? Pacific Logging Cong. Loggers Handb. (1945) 

 5:68-71, illus. 1946. 99.76 P112La 



1340. MERRILL, F. B. More forestry wood for pulp 

 mills. South. Pulp & Paper Mfr. 10(12):48, 50, 56. Dec. 

 15, 1947. 302.8 So8 



Implementation of proper cutting practices by pricing 

 system which pays more for "forestry cut wood." 



1341. MEYER, W. H. Problems of sustained yield from 

 forest areas of mixed ownership. Yale Forest School 

 News 31:58-59. Oct. 1943. 99.8 Yl 



Owner -operator problems. 



1342. MOORE, A. G. T. Forestry in the lumber indus- 

 try. New Orleans, La., South. Pine Assoc, 1941. 15 p. 

 99.61 M78F 



1343. MOORE, R. R. Tree farms, an industrial 

 approach to forestry. New Haven, Conn., 1946. 128 p. 

 Ref. 



Thesis (M. F.)— Yale University. 



1344. NELSON, R. K. Development of forest manage- 

 ment on the Crossett Lumber Company properties. New 

 Haven, Conn., 1942. 69 p. Ref. 



Thesis (M. F.)— Yale University. 



1345. NIX, L. A. Analysis of woods overhead expense. 

 Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 41:615-618. Aug. 1940. 

 302.8 P96 



1346. OLSON, H. Forest management in action: the 

 forty-year program of the Collins Pennsylvania forest. 

 Amer. Forests 51:390-391, 405, 407-408, illus. Aug. 

 1945. 99.8 F762 



Private forest property. 



1347. PATTERSON, A. E. After the war ? 



South. Lumberman 168(2111):31-32. Mar. 15, 1944. 

 99.81 So82 



Continuous production versus liquidation as a policy for 

 southern forest operators. 



1348. PRICE, W. H. Planning for future forest crops. 

 J. Forestry 38:101-108. Feb. 1940. 99.8 F768 



Past, current, and future policy of Weyerhaeuser Tim- 

 ber Co. Discussion by B. E. Hoffman, p. 106-108. 



1349. REYNOLDS, R. R. Business opportunities in 

 growing timber. J. Forestry 45:81-84. Feb. 1947. 

 99.8 F768 



Information for industrial operators, based on results 

 obtained in Crossett Experimental Forest. 



1350. RICHEN, C. W. A complete picture of a selected 

 tree farm. J. Forestry 44:923-926. Nov. 1946. 



99.8 F768 



Contains sustained-yield production table for Clatsop 

 Tree Farm of Crown Zellerbach Corp., Or eg. 



1351. ROBERTS, E. H. Factors which govern the 

 selection of practical sustained yield working circles in 

 Saskatchewan. Forestry Chron. 17:30-33. Mar. 1941 

 99.8 F7623 



35 



