MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING —CONTINUED. 



3003. HORN, A. G. Smaller saw mills produce most 

 ties in Lake States. Cross Tie B. 27(5):18. May 1946. 

 99.82 C87 



3004. JOHNSON, B. N. Factors that enter into the 

 cost of a cross tie. Cross Tie B. 28(10):79-82. Oct. 

 1947. 99.82 C87 



3005 MANN, A. C. Roads face critical situation due 

 to acute tie shortage. Cross Tie B. 26(6):7-8. June 1945. 

 99.82 C87 



Reasons for cross tie shortage. 



3006. PERSHALL, E. E. Story of the production of 

 cross ties in Missouri. Cross Tie B. 26(2): 10, 12, 14, 

 32 Feb 1945 99 82 C87 



3007. RAILWAY TIE ASSOCIATION. MANUFACTUR- 

 ING PRACTICE COMMITTEE. Report. Cross Tie B. 

 26(5):54-58. May 1945. 99.82 C87 



The most efficient methods of manufacturing cross ties 

 and switch ties. 



3008. SCHOLZ, H. F. Oak is the favorite tie species 

 in southern Wisconsin. U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States 

 Forest Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 227, 1 p. 1945. 



1.9 F7625T 



Preferred species indicated in production figures from 

 3 concerns. 



3009. SCHOLZ, H. F. Tie grades produced in south- 

 ern Wisconsin. Cross TieB. 25(12):8, 10, 12. Dec. 1944. 

 99.82 C87 



3010. SCHOLZ, H. F. Tie production important in 

 southwestern Wisconsin. U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States 

 Forest Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 232, 1 p. Apr. 1945. 



1.9 F7625T 



3011. TILLER, W. E. Causes that have made cross 

 tie shortage critical. Cross Tie B. 26(3):7-8, 26. Mar. 

 1945 99 82 C87 



3012. TURLEY, T. J. Trend of production of cross 

 ties. Cross Tie B. 28(10):28, 30, 32, 34. Oct. 1947. 

 99.82 C87 



3013. WHAT price cross ties? Cross Tie B. 28:7-14; 

 (8):7-18; (9):9-14, illus. July-Sept. 1947. 99.82 C87 



Costs factors in production, with wage and compensa- 

 tion analysis, and price data. 



SHINGLES 



3014. BURNETT, E. C. Shingle making on the lesser 

 waters of the Big Creek of the French Broad River. Agr. 

 Hist. 20:225-235. Oct. 1946. 30.98 Ag8 



History of industry. 



3015. A SHINGLE man looks at his own industry. 

 Timberman 43(5): 11, 32, illus. Mar. 1942. 99.81 T484 



3016. U. S. BUREAU OF THE CENSUS. Red cedar 

 shingles, October 1947. Washington, 1947. 1 p. (Facts 

 for Indus. Ser. M13C) 157.41 F1126 



Monthly production and industry statistics since 1946. 

 Preceded by similar title in Monthly Industrial & Bus- 

 iness Statistics series; information reprinted in Survey 

 of Current Business (157.7 C76Ds). 



3017. U. S. OFF. OF DOMESTIC COMMERCE. IN- 

 DUSTRY DIV. Red cedar shingles. U. S. Off. Dom. Com. 

 Indus. Ref. Serv. Pt. 12, Commod. Ref . Ser. 4, (4), 4 p. 

 Nov. 1946. 157.54 In2312 



3018. U. S. TARIFF COMMISSION. Red cedar shin- 

 gles. U. S. Tariff Comn. War Changes in Indus. Ser. 

 Rpt. 8, 47 p. Jan. 1945. 173 T17Wai 



3019. U. S. TARIFF COMMISSION. Report to the 

 United States Senate on red- cedar shingles. U. S. Tariff 

 Comn. Rpt. 149, ser. 2, 140 p., illus. 1942. 173 T17Rs 



3020. WEATHERBY, H. Shingles from "dead" cedar. 

 Timber Canada 7(3): 5-6, illus. Nov. 1946. 99.81 T487 



POLES AND PILING 



3021. ANDERSON, I. V. The merits of lodgepole pine 

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

 & Range Expt. Sta. Paper 10, 6 p. Nov. 1947. 



1.9622 N3Stl 

 Resources and the industry, especially in Montana. 



3022. ANDERSON, I. V. Prospectus of lodgepole pine 

 telephone and power poles in Montana. U. S. Forest Serv, 

 Missoula, Mont., 8 p. 1945. 1.9621 R1P94 



Lodgepole pine in a pole extraction enterprise. 

 Includes some marketing and transportation statistics. 



3023. BENNETT, W. A. Pole operations. West. 

 Forestry & Conserv. Assoc. Proc. 37:12-13. 1946. 

 99.9 W522 



'3024. DICKERMAN, M. B. 1946-a peak year in pole 

 production. U. S. Forest Serv. North. Rocky Mountain 

 Forest & Range Expt. Sta. Res. Note 54, 5 p. Aug. 1947. 

 1.9622 N3R31 



MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING —CONTINUED. 



3025. FRITZ, E. Piling utilization in California coast 

 second-growth forests, present and future, n. p., 1941. 



4 p. 99.79 F91 



3026. GRANTHAM, J. B. The production of poles 

 from lodgepole pine in Oregon. West Coast Lumberman 

 72(9):99-100, 102, 104. Ref. Sept. 1945. 99.81 W52 



3027. KERNAN, H. S., and ROSS, C. R. Report on 

 supply and production of wood poles in the United States 

 of America. New York, Edison Elect. Inst., 1946. 36 p., 

 maps. Amer. Forestry Assoc. 



American Forestry Association cooperating. Includes 

 requirements estimates. 



3028. REYNOLDS, R. V., and PIERSON, A. H. Poles; 

 number standing, preservative treatment, requirements 

 and drain. Washington, U. S. Forest Serv., 7 p. 1940. 

 1.962 A2P752 



3029. ZASADA, Z. A. Jack pine pole supply in 

 Minnesota. U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States Forest Expt. 

 Sta. Tech. Note 260, 1 p. July 1946. 1.9 F7625T 



FUEL 



3030. ARIES, R. S. Wood waste makes fuel briquets. 

 Amer. Lumberman 3256:26-27, illus. May 15, 1943. 

 99.81 Am3 



3031. BALDWIN, H. I. Experiments in marketing 

 fuelwood. Fox Forest Notes 20, 1 p. June 1940. 

 99.9 N454F 



Costs of packaging and piling. 



3032. BELYEA, H. C. Wood for fuel. Rural New 

 Yorker 101(5536):442-444, illus. Aug. 22, 1942. 6 R88 



3033. BRATTON, A. W. The production of hogged 

 wood from Connecticut hardwoods. U. S. Forest Serv. 

 Northeast. Forest Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 41, 4 p. Mar. 31, 

 1941. 1.9F7622T 



Part of Connecticut Farm Forestry Research Project. 



3034. CONSUMERS' RESEARCH, INC. Wood as fuel. 

 Consumers' Res. B. 14(5):20-22, illus. Nov. 1944. 

 321.8 C76 



Values for purchasers to note; prices of wood-burning 

 stoves. 



3035. FITZWATER, J. A. The national fuelwood 

 situation. J. Forestry 42:925-926. Dec. 1944. 

 99.8 F768 



3036. HALL, R. T., and DICKERMAN, M. B. Wood 

 fuel in wartime. U. S. D. A. Farmers' B. 1912, 22 p., 

 illus. July 1942. 1 Ag84F 



U. S. Forest Service Northeastern Forest Experiment 

 Station, Lake States Forest Experiment Station, and 

 Forest Products Laboratory cooperating. 



3037. HAWES, A. F. The fuelwood situation fin 

 Connecticut]. Conn. Woodlands 7:56-57. Mar. 1942. 

 99.8 C76 



3038. HUFFMAN, R. The development and uses of 

 Pres-to-logs. Natl. Farm Chemurg. Council Chemurg. 

 Papers 392, 4 p. 1945. 381 N213P 



3039. KLUENDER, W. A. Fuelwood production lags in 

 Wisconsin. U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States Forest Expt. 

 Sta. Tech. Note 239, 2 p., maps. July 1945. 1.9 F7625T 



3040. MOORE, F. I., and HUEY, B. M. The fuel-wood 

 outlook in Minnesota— 1943. U. S. Forest Serv. Lake 

 States Forest Expt. Sta. Econ. Note 19, 16 p. Mar. 1943. 

 1.9 F7625E 



3041. NOVA SCOTIA ECONOMIC COUNCIL. The 

 utilization of wood for fuel. Nova Scotia Econ. Council 

 Rpts. 6(59): 134- 142, illus. 1942. 280.9 N85 



3042. PARMELEE, S. R. Studies in the production of 

 fuelwood from cull hardwoods. Syracuse, 1942. 2 p. 

 241.8 N48 



Abstract of thesis (M.F.) - New York State College of 

 Forestry. 



3043. REINEKE, L. H. Wood fuel preparation. U. S. 

 Forest Serv. Forest Prod. Lab. R1666-19, 11 p. Dec. 

 1947. 1.9 F761R 



Wood waste as fuel. 



3044. RUEDY..R. Wood and charcoal as fuel for ve- 

 hicles. Ed. 2, rev. Ottawa, Natl. Res. Council Canada, 

 1942. 106 p., illus. Ref. (N.R.C. 1074) 401 R83 



Based chiefly on European and British Empire informa- 

 tion. 



3045. U. S. FOREST SERV. Comments and sugges- 

 tions from fuel wood questionnaires. Washington, 1945. 

 4 p. 1.962 A2C73 



Summarized by States. 



3046. U. S. FOREST SERV. Estimated U. S. produc- 

 tion and requirements for fuel wood by regions... July 

 1945. Washington, 1945. 2 p. 1.962 A2Es822 



Appended notes from regional reports. 



