MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING —CONTINUED. 



2775. U. S. FOREST SERV. Timber supply in relation 

 to increased production of newsprint. Washington, 1947. 

 25 p. 1.962 A2T484 



Prepared at request of U. S. Congress, Senate Special 

 Committee on Small Business. 



2776. U. S. OFF. OF PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT. 

 Analysis of maintenance, repairs and operating supplies 

 requirements of the pulp, paper, printing and publishing 

 industries. Washington, 1941. 67 p. 



U. S. Natl. Security Resources Bd. Libr. 



Similar report, issued by Priorities Committee, en- 

 titled Pulp, Paper, Paperboard and Converted Paper 

 Products Industries, 1941. 



2777. U. S. TARIFF COMMISSION. Cigarette paper. 

 U. S. Tariff Comn. War Changes in Indus. Ser. Rpt. 11, 

 16 p. 1945. 173 T17Wai 



2778. U. S. TARIFF COMMISSION. Newsprint. U. S. 

 Tariff Comn. War Changes in Indus. Ser. Rpt. 22, 37 p., 

 map. 1947. 173 T17Wai 



2779. UNITED STATES PULP PRODUCERS ASSOCIA- 

 TION. Wood pulp; a basic American industry. New York, 

 1944. 35 p., illus. 302 Un36W 



2780. VINCENT, R. The sulphite process-its position 

 in chemical and paper fields today. Paper Trade J. 

 122(9):136, 138, 140, 142. Feb. 28. 1946. 302.8 P196 



Also in Pulp & Paper Indus. 20(3 : 50, 52. Mar. 1946. 

 302.8 Pll 



2781. WALLACE, W. D. United States newsprint 

 situation. Com. Intel. J. 71:126-128. Aug. 12, 1944. 

 286.8 C16 



Similar summaries in previous issues, including pulp 

 and paper situation. Title varies. Information derived 

 from U. S. Bureau of the Census and U. S. War Production 

 Board sources. 



2782. WARE, G. A. Newsprint paper in 1946. Paper 

 Trade J. 124(9):64, 66, 68. Feb. 27, 1947. 302.8 P196 



A similar summary by this author appeared in the 

 Feb. 28, 1946, issue and was reprinted in other journals 

 of the trade. Previous summaries by R. S. Kellog. 



2783. WESTON, H. E. Materials handled in the pulp 

 and paper industry. Paper Indus. & Paper World 27:533- 

 536, illus. July 1945. 302.8 P1923 



2784. WHITING. G; The paperboard industry in 1946. 

 Paper Trade J. 124(9):50, 53, 56, 58. Feb. 27, 1947. 

 302.8 P196 



Annual summary. Titles vary. 



Also in Fibre Containers 32(2):22, 24, 29-30. Feb. 1947. 

 286.8 F44 



2785. WOLF, R. B. Utilization problems of pulp and 

 paper industry. J. Forestry 38:703-711. Sept. 1940. 

 99.8 F768 



Statistics on United States and world consumption, 

 imports, production, and exports of sulphate and sulphite 

 pulp. 



Discussion, p. 715-716. 



(Northern States) 



2786. AMIDON, G. B. Timber utilization studies. 

 Conserv. Volunteer 3(18):36-41, illus. Mar. 1942. 



279.8 C765 



Spruce pulpwood in Minnesota. 



2787. ARIES, R. S. Outlook of the pulping industry in 

 the Northeast. Vt. Wood Prod. Conf. Rpt. 4:6-18. 1944. 

 99 9 V594 



2788. CATHERWOOD, M. P. Economic conditions of 

 the pulp and paper industry of New York State. Paper 

 Mill News 69(49):12, 14. Dec. 7, 1946. 302.8 P195 



2789. DEMMON, E. L. Available pulp timber stands in 

 the Lake States. TAPPI Monog. Ser. 4:40-51. 1947. 



302.9 T22T 



Also in Paper Mill News 69(40):72. Oct. 5, 1946. 

 302.8 P195; Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 48(7):92, 94, 96, 

 98, 100. June 1947. 302.8 P96; abstract in Paper Indus. 

 & Paper World 28:1032, 1034, 1036. Oct. 1946. 

 302.8 P1923; with title Lake States Forests and the Pulp 

 and Paper Industry in U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States 

 Forest Expt. Sta. Sta. Paper 5, 10 p. 1946. 1.9622 L2St2; 

 Lake States Timber Digest 2(2):3-4; (3):6, 12. Oct. 23- 

 Nov. 6, 1947. 99.81 L14 



2790. HARPER, V. L. Hardwood pulp resources in the 

 Northeast. Northeast. Wood Util. Council B. 14:7-16. 

 1947. 99.9 N819 



2791. HARPER, V. L. Timber resources of New Eng- 

 land and New York with special reference to pulpwood 

 supplies. TAPPI Monog. Ser. 4:31-39. 1947. 302.9 T22T 



MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING --CONTINUED. 



Also in U. S. Forest Serv. Northeast. Forest Expt. Sta. 

 Paper 5, 8 p. June 1947. 1.9622 N2St22; Paper Mill 

 News 69(40):128-129. Oct. 5, 1946. 302.8 P195 



2792. ILLICK, J. Cooperative research in wood pro- 

 ducts. Paper Mill News 70(7):42, 44, 46, 48. Feb. 15, 

 1947. 302.8 P195 



New York State College of Forestry and pulp and paper 

 companies of New York State cooperate. 



2793. MCGREGOR, G. H. Pulpwood. Paper Mill News 

 68(44):91-92. Nov. 3, 1945. 302.8 P195 



Deals chiefly with program of Minnesota and Ontario 

 Paper Company. 



2794. NEW YORK (STATE). DIV. OF COMMERCE. 

 The paper and pulp industries of New York; an economic 

 analysis. N. Y. Div. Com. P. 2, 111 p., maps. 1942. 

 302 N48 



2795. RAMSEN, H. E. The paper industry in the Miami 

 Valley fOhiol. Miami Business Rev. 13(4):4 p. 1942. 

 280.8 M58 



2796. SPILLERS, A. R. The pulpwood industry of the 

 Northeastern Forest Region. Washington, U. S. Forest 

 Serv., 1941? 13 p. 1.9621 R7P96 



2797. TINKER, E. W. The pulp and paper industry and 

 pulpwood in the Lake States. Pulp & Paper Mag. Canada 

 48(10):130, 132. Sept. 1947. 302.8 P96 



Also in Paper Mill News 70(30): 18, 24. Aug. 16, 1947. 

 302.8 P195 



(Southern States) 



2798. ALLEN, J. H. New wealth in South's pulp and 

 paper. Mfrs. Rec. 110:32-33, 70, illus. Nov. 1941. 

 297.8 M31 



2799. BRANDIS, B. Pine, pulp, and paper [in the 6th 

 district]. Fed. Reserve Bank Atlanta Monthly Rev. 29: 

 73-76, map. Sept. 1944. 284.8 F31A 



2800. COMPTON, W. Are we headed back to the 

 woods? Current Hist. n.s. 5:314-319. Dec. 1943. 

 Libr. Cong. 



Forest utilization in the South, especially pulp and paper 

 industry. 



2801. CRUIKSHANK, J. W. Southern forests as a 

 source of pulpwood. U. S. Forest Serv. Southeast. Forest 

 Expt. Sta. Forest Survey Release 22, 12 p., maps. Sept. 



I, 1947. 1.9622 A3F76 



Also in TAPPI Monog. Ser. 4:52-62. 1947. 302.9 T22T; 

 abstract in Paper Indus. & Paper World 28:1028, 1030, 

 1032. Oct. 1946. 302.8 P1923 



2802. DEMMON, E. L. The Southern forests and the 

 pulp and paper industry. South. Pulp & Paper J. 4(5):40, 

 42, 44, 46, 72. Oct. 1941. 302.8 So8 



Similar title in Mich. Forester 22:14-15, 62-64, illus. 

 1941. 99.9 M588 



2803. EVANS, C. F. A saga of southern pine. Amer. 

 Forests 48:403-406, 428, illus. Sept. 1942. 99.8 F762 



2804. FOLWEILER, A. D. Cotton, wood pulp, and the 

 man-land ratio of the deep South. South. Econ. J. 7:518- 

 528. Apr. 1941. 280.8 So84 



Suggests decreasing the intensity of population pressure 

 by expanding the pulp and paper industry. Man-days re- 

 quired to convert pulpwood to pulp, and costs and returns 

 are given. 



2805. GRANTHAM, J. B. Texas pulpwood, $15,000,000 

 industry is now employing 5,000 men. Tex. Prog. 2(8): 



II, 24, illus. Aug. 1943. 280.8 T313 



2806. HICKS, W. T. Recent expansion in the southern 

 pulp and paper industry. South. Econ. J. 6:440-448, illus. 

 Apr. 1940. 280.8 So84 



From the U. S. Forest Service, Appalachian Forest 

 Experiment Station. 



2807. JOHNSON, E. H. Some economic aspects of our 

 forest resources. Tex. Business Rev. 17(2):4-11. Mar. 

 1943. 280.8 T312 



Emphasis on pulp and paper industry. 



2808. MARTIN, B. F. The Cellulose South. Harvard 

 Business Rev. 20(l):43-52. Sept. 1941. 280.8 H262 



The opportunity of pulp and paper and rayon to take the 

 place of cotton fiber in Southern economy. 



2809. MOON, D. G. The pulp and paper industry in the 

 South. Paper Mill News 70(47):84-85, 126. Nov. 22, 

 1947. 302.8 P195 



2810. *MOUZON, O. T. The social and economic im- 

 plications of recent developments within the wood pulp 

 and paper industry in the South. Chapel Hill, 1940. 



Thesis (Ph.D.)-University of North Carolina. 



►Not examined. 



