MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING — CONTINUED. 



2087. GLESINGER, E. A postwar program for North 

 Carolina's forest industries. N. C. Dept. Conserv. & 

 Devlpmt. B. 45, 42 p. 1944. 406 N81B 



2088. GRANTHAM, J. B. Wood-using industries of 

 Virginia. Va. Polytech. Inst. B. 34(1), 129 p., illus. Nov. 

 1940. 99.77 G762 



2089. HAYNES, W. Southern horizons. New York, 

 D. Van Nostrand, 1946. 316 p. 280.002 H33 



Chapters on naval stores, pine, and pulp and paper in- 

 dustries. 



2090. HERRING, H. L. Southern industry and regional 

 development. Chapel Hill, U. N. C, press, 1940. 103 p. 

 280.002 H43 



Lumber and timber products, pulp, paper and converted 

 products, p. 21-24; statistics on labor and wages in 

 tables throughout text. 



2091. HERTZLER, R. A., TODD, A. S., and SMITH, W. 

 R. Opportunities in rural industries, wood. N. C. Dept. 

 Conserv. & Devlpmt., Resource-Indus. Ser. 4, 48 p., 

 illus. 1947. 280.9 N8142 



U. S. Forest Service, Southeastern Forest Experiment 

 Station, cooperating. 



2092. LOUISIANA. FORESTRY COMMISSION. Wood- 

 using industries of Louisiana. Baton Rouge, 1945. 64 p. 

 La. Br. Libr. 



Location, capacity ana kind of operation. 



2093. MANUFACTURERS RECORD. Blue book of 

 Southern progress, 1947. Baltimore, Md. 1947. 188 p., 

 illus. 252 M312 



Industry and employment statistics, issued annually. 



2094. MARTIN, B. F. Southern industrial develop- 

 ment. Harvard Business Rev. 19:159-176. Winter 1940. 

 280.8 H262 



Includes rayon, lumber, furniture, pulp and paper. 



2095. MEGINNIS, H. G. Post-war opportunities for 

 forest industrial development in the Arkansas Valley. 

 South. Lumberman 165(2081):213-217, map. Dec. 15, 

 1942. 99.81 So32 



2096. MILEY, D. G. Commercial agricultural produc- 

 tion and marketing methods and facilities in Mississippi. 

 Miss. Agr. Expt. Sta. B. 394, 94 p., maps. Oct. 1943. 

 100 M69 



Forest products, p. 90-94. 



2097. NEW ORLEANS ASSOCIATION OF COMMERCE. 

 Resources of the New Orleans region available for chem- 

 ical and allied industries. New Orleans, La., 1942. 67 p. 

 280.033 N472 



2098. SMITH, H. F. Trends in the primary forest 

 industries of the lower South. South. Lumberman 161 

 (2033): 110-112. Dec. 15, 1940. 99.81 So82 



Similar to his Primary Wood- products Industries in 

 the Lower South. U. S. Forest Serv. South. Forest Expt. 

 Sta. Forest Survey Release 51, 19 p., illus. Nov. 29, 

 1940. 1.9 F7624F 



2099. SOUTH CAROLINA. RESEARCH, PLANNING 

 AND DEVELOPMENT BOARD. Industrial directory of 

 South Carolina. S. C. Res., Planning & Devlpmt. Bd. B. 

 5, rev., 100 p., maps. Sept. 1947. 280.7 So8292B 



Sections on forest products, paper and allied products, 

 and naval stores industries. 



2100. SOUTH CAROLINA. STATE PLANNING BOARD. 

 New industries of South Carolina, 1923-1942. S. C. 

 State Planning Bd. Pam. 11, 51 p. May 1944. 



280.7 So8292P 



2101. ZIEGLER, E. A. Pine forests in southern 

 economy. Naval Stores Rev. 56(35):18-19, 24-25. Nov. 

 30, 1946. 99.81 N22 



Western States and Alaska 



2102. ANDERSON, I. V. Forest utilization possibil- 

 ities of the Northern Rocky Mountain area. Missoula, 

 Mont., U. S. Forest Serv., North. Rocky Mountain 

 Forest & Range Expt. Sta., 1946. 6 p. 1.9622 N3F762 

 Forest products industries. 



2103. ANDERSON, I. V. How can we improve round 

 timbers? Missoula, Mont., U. S. Forest Serv., North. 

 Rocky Mountain Forest & Range Expt. Sta., 1946. 5 p. 

 1.9622 N3H832 



Industry outlook in the Inland Empire. 



2104. BARRICK, S. J. Economic development and 

 fiscal capacity of the State of Oregon. Oreg. Tax Study 

 Comn. Prelim. Res. Rpt. 3, 98 p. May 1946. 284.59 Or3 



Emphasizes industrial resources. Forest products in- 

 dustries, p. 45-50, include lumber and timber products, 

 pulp and paper, and furniture. 



MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING- -CONTINUED. 



2105. BLACKERBY, A. W. Opportunities for minor 

 wood product industries in Alaska. San Francisco, U. S. 

 Forest Serv., Alaska Region, 1945. 20 p., illus., map. 



1 F76730 



2106. BRUNDAGE, F. H. Northwest woods have gone 

 to war. J. Forestry 41:654-658. Sept. i 943. 99.8 F768 



2107. CHEMICAL consuming industries. Chem. Engin. 

 54(9): 106- 115, illus. Sept. 1947. 381 EL2 



Includes Pacific Coast pulp, paper and plywood indus- 

 tries. 



2108. CRAFTS, E. C. Some economic facts about the 

 California lumber and timber products industry and size 

 of its dependent population. U. S. Forest Serv. Calif. 

 Forest & Range Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 17, 18 p., Sept. 



1941. 1.9 F7626T 



2109. CRAFTS, E. C. Some effects of defense on wood 

 utilization in California. J. Forestry 40:285-290. Apr. 



1942. 99.8 F768 



2110. DECLINE of the forests. Fortune 31(2):169-174, 

 186, 188, 191-192, 195, illus. Feb. 1945. 110 F772 



Industry in the Pacific Northwest. 



2111. HALL, J. A. Possibilities in new forest prod- 

 ucts industries in the Northwest. Northwest Sci. 21: 

 101-108. Aug. 1947. 470 N81 



2112. LANE County, Oregon, leads in lumber produc- 

 tion. West Coast Lumberman 78(2):66-67, 129-131, map. 

 Feb. 1946. 99.81 W52 



Surveys forest industries. 



2113. LODEWICK, J. E. Cellulose industries of the 

 West. Chem. & Engin. News 25:2696-2698, illus. Sept. 

 22, 1947. 381 J825N 



Prospects for pulp and paper, plywood, rayon and 

 cellophane, alcohol, charcoal, and other converted prod- 

 ucts industries. 



2114. MARQUIS, R. W. Full utilization of forest re- 

 sources in the Pacific Northwest. West. Farm Econ. 

 Assoc. Proc. 19:105-108. 1946. 280.9 W527P 



2115. MARQUIS, R. W. The part played by labor, 

 transportation, and market factors. Spokane Chamber 

 Com. Wood Prod. Clinic Proc. 1946:18-26. 99.9 Sp6 



2116. SCHRADER, O. H. Forest industries of Wash- 

 ington, present and future. Arboretum B. 6(4):5-7, 25-26. 

 June 1943. 451 Arl 



2117. TILTON, W. G. The interdependence of the 

 West Coast log family. Paper Indus. & Paper World 22: 

 604-606, 608. Sept. 1940. 302.9 P1923 



Abstract in Paper Trade J. 112(2):29-31. Jan. 9, 1941. 

 302.8 P196 



2118. U. S. NATIONAL RESOURCES PLANNING 

 BOARD. Mountain States region industrial development. 

 Washington, 1942. 62 p., maps. 173.2 N214Ms 



2119. U. S. NATIONAL RESOURCES PLANNING 

 BOARD. Pacific Southwest region; industrial develop- 

 ment. Washington, 1942. 66 p. 173.2 N214Pas 



Includes number of establishments and workers, and 

 value added by production. 



2120. WASHINGTON. SECRETARY OF STATE. The 

 lumber industry in Washington. Olympia, 1941. 114 p., 

 illus. Libr. Cong. 



Partial contents: Economic importance of the industry; 

 What conservation means; Divisions of the lumber indus- 

 try; Plywood and veneer industry; Pulp and paper indus- 

 try; Distribution of lumber; Occupations; Wood and the 

 future; Classification of lumber and its remanufactures. 



2121. WEST COAST LUMBERMAN. West Coast 

 Lumberman's statistical review and directory of the 

 western forest industries, 1945-1946, Seattle, 1945. 

 312 p. 225 W524 



Data for 11 Western States: individual mill location, 

 capacity, and production, 1940-44; total production, 

 1904-44; imports of redcedar shingles, 1931-41; and 

 average prices 1897-1945. 



2122. WEISS, F. J. Opportunities for chemical indus- 

 tries in Alaska. Chem. & Metall. Engin. 48(9): 11 6- 121, 

 illus. Ref. Sept. 1941. 381 EL2 



Forest products, p. 119-120, include pulp and paper and 

 tannin prospects. 



2123. WINTERS, R. K. Need for further wood process- 

 ing in northern Idaho. Idaho Forester 24:7-10. 1942. 

 99.9 Idl 



Canada 



2124. CANADA. BUR. OF STATISTICS. Manufacturing 

 industries of Canada, 1939. Summary report. Ottawa, 

 1942. 131 p. U. S. Dept. Com. Libr. 



