MANAGEMENT OF FOREST-PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING — CONTINUED. 



3047. U. S. FOREST SERV. FOREST PRODUCTS 

 LABORATORY. Briquets from wood waste. U. S. 

 Forest Serv. Forest Prod. Lab. R1666-13, 5 p. June 1947. 

 1.9 F761R 



3048. U. S. FOREST SERV. FOREST PRODUCTS 

 LABORATORY. Briquetting of wood waste. U. S. Forest 

 Serv. Forest Products Lab. R842, rev., 6 p. Ref . May 



1945. 1.9R761R 



Also in South. Lumberman 173(2177):274, 276. Dec. 15, 



1946. 99.81 So82 



3049. U. S. FOREST SERV. LAKE STATES FOREST 

 EXPERIMENT STATION. Michigan not cutting enough 

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

 Sta. Tech. Note 212, 1 p. Sept. 1943. 1.9 F7625T 



Similar information about Wisconsin in Tech. Note 213; 

 about Minnesota in Tech. Note 214. 



CONTAINERS; COOPERAGE 



Additional references about paper and fiber containers 

 may be found under PULP AND PAPER. 



3050. BARREL race. Business Week 842:41-42. Oct. 

 20, 1945. 280.8 Sy8 



Distillers buy cooperage plants as shortage becomes 

 acute. 



3051. BOWMAN, V. V., and PARAMORE, L. R. The 

 prospective fruit and vegetable wooden container situa- 

 tion in the Southern region. Atlanta, U. S. War Food 

 Admin., 1944. Various paging. 1.9422 Fr34P94 



Manufacture and production data. 



3052. BREAUX, C. B. How the war is affectingthe 

 profit margins of the paper container industry. Annalist 

 56:303-304. Sept. 5, 1940. 284.8 N48 



3053. CAMERON, J. L. The present emergency, the 

 basket manufacturers and their relation to the buyer of 

 the basket. East. Fruit Grower 6(3):4-5, 23, illus. May 

 1942. 80 Ea73 



3054. CONRAD, J. L. White oak stave production 

 during 1946 in Orange County, North Carolina. Durham, 

 N. C, 1947. 29 p., illus. Rev. 



Thesis (M.F.) - Duke University. 



3055. COVINGTON, E. G. There'll always be enough 

 box lumber. West. Grower & Shipper 18(12): 130, 174, 

 illus. Nov. 1947. 280.38 W52 



Reports footage from 14 veneer cover plants in Oregon, 

 California, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado. 



3056. COYNE, F. E. American veneer packages. 

 Chicago, Lumber Buyers' Pub. Co., 1941. 127 p., illus. 

 99.77 C83A 



3057. COYNE, F. E. The development of the cooper- 

 age industry in the United States, 1620-1940. Chicago, 

 Lumber Buyers Pub. Co., 1940. 110 p., illus. 



99.77 C83 



3058. DETGEN, E. J. Containers during the war 

 period. Dom. Com. 32(10):9, 36, illus. Oct. 1944. 

 157.54 D713 



Production charts include boxes, tight and slack coop- 

 erage. 



3059. DICKERMAN, M. B. The slack cooperage 

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

 Sta. Econ. Note 15, 10 p. May 1942. 1.9 F7625E 



3060. FRUIT GROWERS SUPPLY COMPANY. Annual 

 report, 1946. Los Angeles, 1947. 47 p. 81 F94 



Statistics and discussion of logging operations and pro- 

 duction of box, packing, and shipping products for citrus 

 crops. Cooperative organization. 



3061. GEVORKIANTZ, S. R., and ZEHNGRAFF, P. 

 More box lumber from small aspen bolts. Miss. Val. 

 Lumberman 75(25):10-12, illus. June 23, 1944. 

 99.81 M69 



3062. HECKMAN, J. H., and BRIGHTMAN, M. H. 

 Container crop. Mktg. Activ. 8(6):12-16. June 1945. 

 1.942 A8M34 



3063. HOWELL, W. F. History of the corrugated 

 shipping container industry in the United States. Camden, 

 N. J., Langston, 1940. 59 p., illus. Ref. 302 H83 



3064. JOHNSON, R. C. The agricultural veneer con- 

 tainer industry in southern Michigan. Mich. Agr. Expt. 

 Sta. Q. B. 27:328-337. Feb. 1945. 100 M58S 



3065. JOHNSON, R. C. The outlook for agricultural 

 veneer containers in southern Michigan— 1944. Mich. 

 Agr. Expt. Sta. Q. B. 26:363-371, illus. May 1944. 

 100 M58S 



Also U. S. Forest Serv. Lake States Forest Expt. Sta. 

 Econ. Note 20, 11 p. May 1944. 1.9 F7625E 



MANAGEMENT OF FORE ST -PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING - -CONTINUED. 



3066. KILLAM, E. R., and GARTLAND, C. C. Con- 

 tainers; a statistical handbook. U. S. Bur. Foreign & 

 Dom. Com. Indus. Ser. 13, 52 p., 1944. 



U. S. Dept. Com. Libr. 



3067. MAGILL, D. G. Fiber cans and containers for 

 post-war. Paper Trade J. 120(TAPPI Sect.):263-365. 

 June 28, 1945. 302.8 P196 



Abridged in Paper Indus. & Paper World 27:602, 604, 

 608. July 1945. 302.8 P1923 



3068. PACKAGE RESEARCH LABORATORY. Wire- 

 bound textbook. Rockaway, N. J., 1945. 11 v., illus. 

 309 P12 



V. 11, cost estimates. 



3069. SANDS, W. M. Aspen for containers. Barrel 

 & Box & Packages 52(9):9-12, illus. Sept. 1947. 

 99.52 B27 



Similar information in Wooden Box & Crate 9(5):27-31. 

 1947. Madison Br. Libr. 



3070. SCHOLZ, H. F. Cheese box manufacture in 

 southwestern Wisconsin. Barrel & Box & Packages 

 51(5):9-11, illus. May 1946. 99.82 B27 



3071. THROCKMORTON, E. A. Economics of pack- 

 aging. Amer. Mangt. Assoc. Mktg. Ser. 41:21-26., 1941. 

 249.09 Am3C 



Includes production of boxes and cooperage. 



3072. U. S. BUR. OF THE CENSUS. Containerboard. 

 Washington, 1944. 2 p. (Facts for Indus. Ser. 38-2) 

 173.409 FllCo 



U. S. War Production Board cooperating. 



Monthly since November 1943; discontinued February 



1944. Gives inventories in fiber box industry plants. 



3073. U. S. BUR. OF THE CENSUS. Corrugated and 

 solid fibre shipping containers. July 1945. Washington, 



1945. 4 p. (Facts for Indus. Ser. 38-3) 173.409 FllSh 

 Issued monthly since 1943 by U. S. War Production 



Board and discontinued with this issue. Title varies, 

 usually Shipping Containers. 



3074. U. S. BUR. OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC 

 COMMERCE. The cooperage industry and national de- 

 fense. U. S. Bur. Foreign & Dom. Com. Indus. Ref. Serv. 

 Pt. 4, Forest Prod. 29, 2 p. May 1941. 157.54 In23 



Adapted from article by Associated Cooperage Indus- 

 tries of America, Inc. 



3075. U. S. WAR FOOD ADMIN. OFF. OF MARKETING 

 SERV. The container situation Washington, 1945. 4 p. 

 1.9422 A34C76 



3076. WHITNALL, R. Apple boxes and pine timber. 

 Timberman 46(12):86, 88, 90, 98-99, illus. Oct. 1945. 

 99.81 T484 



Situation and outlook in pine apple-box industry in 

 Washington. 



3077. VOGEL, F. H. Use of native Michigan timber 

 in the box and crate industry. Mich. Agr. Expt. Sta. 

 Spec. B. 323, 43 p., illus. Ref. Apr. 1943. 100 M58S 



U. S. Forest Service Lake States Forest Experiment 

 Station cooperating. 



FURNITURE 



3078. ANALYZING the 1939 census of furniture man- 

 ufacturers. Furniture Mir. 62(3):6-8, 29, illus. Mar. 

 1941. 300.8 F982 



3079. BENNETT, H. C. Southern furniture leads the 

 nation. Mfrs. Rec. 113(ll):44-45, 76, illus. Nov. 1944. 

 297.8 M31 



3080. BUSS, F. J. The supply of hardwoods for furni- 

 ture. New Haven, 1947. 98 p., illus. Ref. 



Thesis (M.F.) - Yale University. 



3081. GERLINGER, G. T. There will be wood for fur- 

 niture. Furniture Mfr. 59(9): 16, 40. Sept. 1944. 



300.8 F982 



3082. HIGH POINT FURNITURE AND WOODWORKING 

 MANUFACTURERS' ASSOCIATION. Woodworking for 

 war. High Point, N. C, 1943. 108 p. 



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



Data on 34 establishments, employees, equipment and 

 specialties. 



3083. HOSP, C. M. Wartime furniture industry 

 flourishes. Furniture Mfr. 60(1): 18, 43. Jan. 1945. 

 300.8 F982 



Study by U. S. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com- 

 merce. 



3084. KICKLER, D. C. What is your cost system 

 worth to you?. Furniture Mfr. 58(l):23-24, 26, 30;(12):24, 

 27, 30; 59(6):38-39, 42, illus. Feb., Dec. 1943, June 1944 

 300.8 F982 



From lumber yard through furniture factory. 



