INDUSTRIES AND COMMERCE--CONTINUED. 
various mills; crosstie specifications; Southern pine pole 
specifications, a list of forestry cooperatives, value com- 
parison tables for poles, pulpwood, and sawlogs, anda 
list of local forest-products consumers. 
2369. RUDOLPH, W. Woodland co-op. Amer. Forests 
54:504-505. Nov.1948. 99.8 F762 
Also in South. Lumbermaa 178(2227):36-37. Jan.15, 
1949. 99.81 So82; and reported by H. Mendenhall, in 
Forest Leaves 34,i.e.39:20. Jan./Feb.1949. 99.8 F763 
2370. WORSHAM, J. N. Financial operations of coop- 
erative marketing of forest products by the Farmers 
Mutual Inc. in the vicinity of Durham, North Carolina. 
Durham,1949. 101 p. Ref. 
Thesis (M.F.) - Duke University. 
Competing Materials 
2371. LAUESEN, E. J. Giving voice to a tongue-tied 
giant. South. Lumber J. 56(9):16,18,48,50. Sept.1952. 
99.81 So8 
Public-relations approach to selling wood against 
competing materials. 
2372. MULLER, J. L. Wood vs. substitutes. Wood 
Working Digest 54:81-34. Sept.1952. 99.82 W87 
2373. SHARP, P. F. The war of the substitutes; the 
reaction of the forest industries to the competition of 
wood substitutes. Agr. Hist. 23:274-279. Ref. Oct.1949. 
30.98 Ag8 
History of the industries in the first decades of the 20th 
century. 
2374. SYRING, R. H. Plywood facing strong hard- 
board competition. Barron's 31(45):23. Nov.5,1951. 
284.8 B27 j 
2375. WOOD vs. steel costs analyzed for school Ea 
Texas]. Engin. News-Rec. 148(14):35-36. Apr.3,1952. 
290.8 En34 ; 
Prices 
(Forest Products in General) 
2376. BUR. OF NATIONAL AFFAIRS, Federal con- 
trols: Price. Washington,1951-52. Various paging. 
Legal Br. 
Compilation of regulations and rulings from the U. S. 
Office of Price Stabilization, affecting marketing, delivery, 
grading and scaling, and some foreign trade aspects of 
forest products. These regulations also appear in the 
Federal Register and in the Code of Federal Regulations. 
Consists of General Ceiling Price Regulations, Supple- 
mentary Regulations, Ceiling Price Regulations, and 
General Overriding Regulations, granting exemptions. 
Sect. 390, Forest products, includes regulations and 
amendments in the following series: GCPR,SR 17, Sale of 
stumpage; SR 58, Chestnut extract wood; SR 82, Mine 
material, northern area; SR 83, Mine material, Virginia 
and West Virginia; SR87, Ceiling prices for resellers of 
lumber and allied products; SR 101, Hardwood charcoal, 
SR 102, Western lumber, preservatively treated; SR 103, 
Mine materials, West; SR 110, True mahogany logs and 
lumber; SR 112, Fir and hemlock refuse wood, Washing- 
ton and Oregon; SR 115, Potato barrels in Maine; SR 129, 
Suspension of ceilings on hardwood plywood, east of the 
105th meridian. 
CPR 38, Northeastern pulpwood; CPR 49, Wood pulp; 
CPR 52, Gum rosin and gum turpentine; CPR 86, New 
tight cooperage; CPR 90, Eastern and Central wooden 
agricultural containers; CPR 95, Turned, shaped, and 
other wood products; CPR 97, Pacific Northwest logs; 
CPR 102, Pulpwood produced in Pennsylvania and in parts 
of New York, Maryland, Virginia, and West Virginia; 
CPR 104, New hardwood tobacco hogsheads; CPR 107, 
Pulpwood and excelsior bolts, Lake States; CPR 122, . 
Western softwood plywood and veneer; CPR 123, Un- 
treated eastern ties; CPR 126, Pacific Northwest poles 
and piling; CPR 128, Pacific Northwest lumber, and ship 
decking purchased for the U. S. Navy; CPR 132, Southern 
hardwood and yellow cypress lumber; CPR 140, North- 
eastern white pine lumber; CPR 142, Southern California 
used wooden agriculture containers; CPR 149, Southern 
yellow pine lumber; CPR 151, Appalachian hardwood 
lumber; CPR 152, Western white pine and associated 
species; CPR 153, Softwood plywood, hardwood faced; 
CPR 155, Western red cedar and Intermountain poles and 
piling; CPR 157, Eastern wood preserving industry; CPR 
158, California redwood lumber; CPR 165, Imported wood 
products; CPR 168, Alaska Sitka spruce and hemlock; 
70 
INDUSTRIES AND COMMERCE--CONTINUED. 
CPR 170, Western wood preserving industry (pressure 
process); CPR 171, Untreated eastern poles and piling; 
CPR 175, Douglas fir and western hemlock doors; CPR 
176, New England hemlock and other species of New 
England softwoods; CPR 181, Stock millwork; CPR 182, 
Northeastern hardwood lumber. 
2377, CANADA. DOMINION BUR. OF STATISTICS. . 
Prices and price indexes. Jan.1948-Dec.1952. Monthly. 
284.39 C16Pr 
Includes wholesale price indexes for lumber and timber, 
pulp and newsprint. 
2378. CANADA, DOMINION BUR. OF STATISTICS. 
Wholesale price indexes, 1913-1950. Ottawa,1951. 97 p. 
(D. B. S. Reference Paper 24). 284.3 C1614 
Includes index numbers for timber products by species, 
pulp and paper, and derived products; lists commodities 
by grade and species, giving percentage weights by im- 
puted index values. 
2379. COMMERCE CLEARING HOUSE, Emergency 
business control law reports: Prices. Chicago,1951-52. 
Various paging. Legal Br. 
Compilation of regulations and rulings from the U. S. 
Economic Stabilization Agency and U. S. Office of Price 
Stabilization. Includes price regulation, delivery, grading 
and scaling, and some export rulings for forest products 
and pulp and paper products. Listed by number under 
entry 2376 in this bibliography. These regulations also 
appear in the Federal Register. 
2380. U.S. BUR. OF LABOR STATISTICS. New 
weekly index of wholesale prices. Washington,1948. 13 p. 
158.61 N42 
Lists forest products in commodity groupings; and their 
relative importance in the new tabular code. 
2381. U.S. BUR. OF LABOR STATISTICS. Wholesale 
price index, Dec. 1951-Nov.1952. Prices and price 
relatives for individual commodities. 
153.6 W622 
Supersedes monthly publication entitled Average whole- 
sale prices and index numbers of individual commodities, 
Jan.1948-Dec.1951. 158.6 P93A 
Monthly. Some commodity code numbvers which include 
forest products are: 06, Chemicals and allied products; 
08, Lumber and wood products; 09, Pulp, paper, and 
allied products; 12, Furniture. 
Index numbers and prices for these groups, 1947-50, 
appear with the same title, in special issue of Feb.1952. 
158.61 W623 
2382. WISCONSIN UNIVERSITY. COLLEGE OF AGRI- 
CULTURE, EXTENSION FORESTRY OFF. Wisconsin 
forest products price review. Lake States Timber 
Digest, 2-6. Jan.1948-Dec.1952. 99.81 L14 
Issued three times a year, usually in Feb. or Mar., 
July, and Nov. or Dec. Includes general reviews of the 
production, inventory, and requirement situation, and 
gives price quotations for pulpwood, by species; for 
lumber, veneer and sawlogs, box and excelsior bolts, 
stumpage, tie cuts, ties, piling, poles, and posts. 
Stumpage and Log Prices 
2383. FRAUNBERGER, R. C. Forestry fallacies. 1, 
Are lumber prices indicators of timber scarcity? South. 
Lumberman 181(2266):46,48,50,52. Ref. Sept.1,1950. 
99.81 So82 : 
Production cost and stumpage price relationships. 
2334. MCCLAY, T. A. Comparative stumpage prices 
for small pine saw timber and pulpwood. U. S. Forest 
Serv. Soeast. Forest Expt. Sta. Sta. Paper 16,7 p. Apr. 
1952. 1.9622 S4St2 
Similar title in Forest Farmer 10(9):7. June 1951. 
99.8 F7692 
2385. PARKER, J. R. Factors affecting woodlot 
stumpage prices in Fairfield County, South Carolina. 
Durham,1952. 32 p. Ref. 
Thesis (M.F.) - Duke University. 
2336. SCHULTZ TIMBER CO., LTD. Coast log prices. 
Brit. Columbia Lumberman 34(10)-36(12). Oct.1950-Dec. 
1952. 99.81 B77 
Monthly statistics from their Timber Bulletin, appear- 
ing in varying parts of the periodical; often accompanied 
by information about log stocks, and amount of timber 
scaled. 
2337. STEER, H. B. Stumpage and log prices for the 
calendar year 1945. U.S.D.A. Statis. B. 82,52 p. Feb. 
1948. 1 Ag84St 
U. S. Bureau of the Census and U. S. Department of 
Commerce, cooperating. 
Feb.1952-Dec.1952. 
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