M ANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PR^C"ESSING --CONTINUED. 



3200. MARRIOTT, F. G. Canada balsam, its prep- 

 aration and uses. Canada. Forest Serv. Mimeog. 123, 

 rev., 7 p. Ref. May 1947. 99.9 C16B 



Revised by C. Greaves. 



An oleoresin product. Includes market aspects. 



3201. MARRIOTT, F. G., and GREAVES, C. Spruce 

 gum. Rev. ed. Ottawa, Canada Forest Prod. Labs., 

 1940. 6 p. Ref. 309 C164 



3202. MARSHALL, E. D. Oil and byproducts from 

 cedar and mesquite. Natl. Farm Chemurg. Council 

 Chemurg. Papers 575, 7 p. 1947. 381 N213P 



Also issued as Tex. Forest Serv. Forest Products Note 

 4, 5 p. Feb. 1947. 99.9 T312 



3203. RITTER, E. The distillation of birch oil. J. 

 Forestry 38:517-518. June 1940. 99.8 F768 



3204. ROSS, C. R. Sweet gum [storax] from the 

 sweetgum. Amer. Forests 53:404-405, 432, illus. Sept. 

 1947. 99.8 F62 



3205. STENERSON, H. Use of pine oil in disinfectant 

 manufacture increasing. Chem. & Engin. News 24:993. 

 Apr. 10, 1946. 381 J825 



1912-19 production data from Gamble's International 

 Naval Stores Yearbook; 1920-1943 data supplied by Her- 

 cules Powder Company. 



3206. THE VOGUE in pine. Soap & Sanit. Chem. 17(6): 

 36-39. June 1941. 307.8 Sol2 



Possibilities in production and marketing of pine oils 

 for toilet articles. 



COMMODITIES FROM 

 DESTRUCTIVE DISTILLATION 



3207. ARIES, R. S. Continuous wood distillation gives 

 better, cheaper charcoal. Chem. Indus. 60:968-969, 

 illus. June 1947. 381 C426 



Also in Chemurg. Digest 6:173, 175-179. June 15, 1947. 

 381 N213Na; Timber Canada 8(1):75, 148, 150, 153-154, 

 157-158, illus. Sept. 1947. 99.81 T487 



3208. ARIES, R. S. Recent developments in the pro- 

 duction of charcoal and its by-products. Northeast. 

 Wood Util. Council B. 15:25-43, illus. Apr., 1947. 



99 9 N819 



'3209. BASORE, C. A., and MOORE, O. C. The pro- 

 duction of lump charcoal from pine sawdust without a 

 binder. Ala. Polytech. Inst. Engin. Expt. Sta. B. 14, 33 p., 

 illus. Ref. Nov. 1942. 290.9 AL12 



3210. BAUER, J. Wood distillation; an industrial 

 possibility for the Douglas fir area. Timberman 44(7): 

 66, 68. May 1943. 99.81 T484 



Data on waste in Douglas-fir growing area. 



3211. BEGLINGER, E. Charcoal production. U.S. 

 Forest Serv. Forest Prod. Lab. R1666-11, 6 p. June 

 1947. 1.9 F761R 



3212. CANADA. BUR. OF STATISTICS. MINING, 

 METALLURGICAL AND CHEMICAL BR. The hardwood 

 distillation industry, 1944. Ottawa, 1945. 4 p. 



301.9 C16 

 Annual. 



3213. GOOS, A. W., and REITER, A. A. New products 

 from wood carbonization. Indus. & Engin. Chem., Indus. 

 Ed. 38(2): 132-135, illus. Feb. 15,1946. 381 J825 



Compounds obtainable from wood tars and oils. 



3214. HEERMANCE, E. L. Charcoal production. Chem- 

 urg. Digest 5:188-190, illus. May 31, 1946. 381N213Na 



Also in Northeast. Wood Util. Council B. 10, 3 p., illus. 

 1946. 99.9 N819; Timber Canada 7(1):116-118, illus. 

 Sept. 1946. 99.81 T487 



3215. MACON, J. W. The contribution of the Lake 

 States hardwood distillation industry to our war effort. 

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

 Note 16, 14 p., map. May 1942. 1.9 F7625E 



3216. SCHWARTZ, H., and GREAVES, C. Production 

 of pine tar by the destructive distillation of Canadian 

 softwoods. Ottawa, Canada Forest Prod. Labs., 1944. 

 20 p. 99.75 Sch9 



For use in rubber tire industry. 



3217. TWINING, R. H. Activated carbon as a wood 

 product. Northeast. Wood Util. Council B. 15:45-60. 

 Apr. 1947. 99.9 N819 



3218. TWINING, R. H. Modernization of hardwood 

 distillation. Northeast. Wood Util. Council. B. 15:5-19. 

 Apr. 1947. 99.9 N819 



MANAGEMENT OF FOREST- PRODUCT HARVESTING 

 AND PROCESSING —CONTINUED. 



3219. U. S. BUR. OF FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC 

 COMMERCE. Naval stores and charcoal production in 

 the United States. U. S. Bur. Foreign & Dom. Com. 

 Indus. Ref. Serv. Pt. 1, Chem. & Allied Prod. 23, 4 p. 

 Mar. 1941. 157.54 In23 



Includes other distillation products. 



3220. WOOD chemicals. Chem. & Metall. Engin. 

 48(2):102-103. Feb. 1941. 381 EL2 



1940 production, including charcoal. 



OTHER NON-WOOD COMMODITIES 



3221. ALDRICH, C. C, DE BLIEUX, M. W., and 

 KNIFFEN, F. B. The Spanish moss industry of Louisiana 

 Econ. Geog. 19:347-357, illus. Oct. 1943. 278.8 Ec7 



3222. ARNST, A. Cascara-a crop from West Coast 

 tree farms. J. Forestry 43:805-811, illus. Ref. Nov. 

 1945. 99.8 F768 



3223. BISHOP, C. H. Added income from the woods. 

 Forest Farmers Assoc. Coop., South. Forestry Conf. 

 1944:69-71. 99.9 F769 



Non-wood products; returns. 



3224. DUNN, L. Cascara. Oreg. Agr. Col. School 

 Forestry Leaflet 3, 10 p. 1942. Oreg. State Col. Libr. 



Includes expected returns and industry status in 

 Oregon. 



3225. DUNN, L. C. The role of subsidiary forest 

 crops in Douglas-fir forests. Corvallis, 1942. 106 p. 

 Ref. 



Thesis (M.F.) - Oregon State College. 



3226. ELLIOTT State Forest cascara harvest sold. 

 Forest Log 11(3):6. Oct. 1946. 99.8 F7631 



3227. FAUBEL, A. L. Cork and the American cork 

 industry. Rev. ed. New York, Cork Inst. Amer., 1941. 

 151 p., illus. Ref. 99.77 F27 



Sources, production, marketing, users, and uses. 



3228. GREENAN, G. D. Cork resources of California; 

 a study of present and potential cork production in 

 California. Crown 32(5):14-15, 20, 29, illus. May 1943. 

 39.8 C88 



3229. HEINTZLEMAN, S. W. The cork oak: past, 

 present and future on the Pacific coast. Corvallis, Oreg., 

 1940. 33 p., maps. Ref. 99.35 H362 



3230. ISAAC, L. A. Sustained yield of swordfern. 

 U. S. Forest Serv. Pacific Northwest Forest Expt. Sta. 

 Res. Notes 33:8-9. Jan. 24, 1945. 1.9 F7629Fr 



3231. LUNT, H. A. The value of wood ashes as fer- 

 tilizer. Northeast Wood Util. Council B. 7:14-20. Oct. 



1945. 99.9 N819 



Comparative value of fuel waste with other alkaline 

 fertilizers. 



Similar title in Conn. Woodlands 10:18-20. May 1945. 

 99.8 C76 



3232. MEAGHER, G. S. Estimates of the 1947 pinyon 

 nut crop in Arizona and New Mexico. U. S. Forest Serv. 

 Southwest. Forest Expt. Sta. Res. Note 114, 2 p. Sept. 



1946. 1.9 F7621R 



Annual estimates issued by various authors since 1940, 

 in Research Notes 87, 92, 103, 108, 109 and 112. 



3233. RANDOLPH, E. E. Suitability of North Carolina 

 trees for chemical conversion products and for certain 

 other uses. N. C. Agr. Col. Engin. Expt. Sta. B. 26, 48 p. 

 Ref . June 1943. 290.9 N81 



For pulp and paper, converted fiber and cellulose prod- 

 ucts, and oils. 



3234. REINEKE, L. H., and BRATTON, A. W. Pro- 

 ducer gas as an outlet for low-grade hardwoods. U. S. 

 Forest Serv. Northeast. Forest Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 36, 

 2 p. 1940. 1.9 F7622T 



Fuelwood cost is primary obstacle to economical pro- 

 duction. 



3235. U. S. BUR. OF THE CENSUS. Cork. Washing- 

 ton, 1946. 4 p. (Facts for Indus. Ser. 11-3) 



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

 U.S. Civilian Production Administration cooperating. 

 Statistics of production and consumption, 1942-44. 



3236. U. S. FOREST SERV. DIV. OF COOPERATIVE 

 FOREST MANAGEMENT. Commercial sources of 

 forest tree seed or seedlings. Washington, 1947. 10 p. 

 1.962 C5C73 



List of available species appended. Revised from time 

 to time. 



3237. U. S. SOIL CONSERVATION SERV. PACIFIC 

 NORTHWEST REGION. Cascara bark as a farm crop. 

 U. S. Soil Conserv. Serv. Pacific Northwest Region 

 Woodland Note 120, 6 p. 1941. U. S. Soil Conserv. Serv. 

 Forestry Div. 



Includes costs and returns, prices. 



