through Farmers Mutual Inc. , of Durham, North Caro- 

 lina. Durham, N. C. , 1953. 



Thesis (D. F. ) - Duke University. 



(Western States and Alaska) 



385. GRAH, R. F. Markets for woodlands products 

 in the Central Sierra region. California. Univ. Agr. 

 Ext. Serv. 1953. 11 p. 



386. SKOK, R. A. , and HALL, O. F. Farm income 

 from sales of cut forest products as compared to sales 

 of stumpage [in Minnesota]. Minn. Forestry Notes 23, 



2 p. 1953. 



Pub. also as Scientific Journ. Ser. Paper 3060, Minn. 

 Agri. Exp. Sta. 



387. THOMSON, W. G. Small forests grow timber 

 crop. West. Conserv. J. ll(4):42,44. July/Aug. 1954. 

 279.8 W526 



Oregon and Washington. 

 Specific aids to farm forestry. 



(Canada) 



388. PACKMAN, D. J. Farm forestry in Ontario. 

 Econ. Annal. 23:5-10. Feb. 1953. 281.8 Ec72 



389. PACKMAN, D. J. Woodlots on Ontario farms. 

 Canada. Dept. of Agr. Publ. 890, 39 p. Refs. 1953. 



Discusses problems of management, production and 

 marketing of wood products; and labor. 



LEGISLATION; CUTTING REGULATION 



390. BELCHER, R. G. Control of cutting practice. 

 NE. Wood Util. Council. B. 40:63-73. Jan. 1953. 99.9 

 N819 



On small private woodlands. 

 Includes discussion. 



391. JOHNSON, R. L. [ Forest] Management Li- 

 cence practice. Brit. Columbia Lumberman 37(5):40- 

 41,68,70,87. May 1953. 99.81 B77 



Sustained yield units. 



392. RANDALL, A. G. Forestry regulation in 

 Maine. Noeast. Logger 1(7, i.e. 8): 10-11, 24. Mar. 

 1953. 99.81 N812 



393. VAN DRESSER, C. Abuses under the mining 

 laws: 1. The great road block; 2. two determined 

 women; 3. profiteering with impunity. Amer. Forests 

 59:18-19,42; 20-22; 9,30-31. Jan., Feb., March 1953. 

 99.8 F762 



RESEARCH (FOREST MANAGEMENT) 



Sampling in timber cruising. 



402. GEVORKIANTZ, S. R. Problems in forest in- 

 ventory from the forester's point of view. In Kempthorne 

 O. , ed. Statistics and mathematics in biology, p. 251- 

 262. Ames, Iowa State Col. Press, 1954. 325 K32 



403. GRAPP, L. O. Procedures for analyzing 

 small woodlands. J. Forestry 51:269-274. Apr. 1953 

 99.8 F768 



404. HASEL, A. A. Problems in forest inventory: 

 from the statistical point of view. In Kempthorne, O. , 

 ed. Statistics and mathematics in biology, p. 263-272. 

 Ames, Iowa State Col. Press, 1954. 325 K32 



405. HOUGH, A. F. The control method of forest 

 management in an age ot aerial photography. J. Forestry 

 52:568-574. Ref. Aug. 1954. 99.8 F768 



406. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES 

 CORP. Continuous forest inventory with IBM mark 

 sensing. Internatl. Bus. Machines Corp. , New York, 

 n. d. 8 p. (Application report 79) 



407. METEER, J. W. Continuous inventory man- 

 agement and growth studies. J. Forestry 51:410-414. 

 June 1953. 99.8 F768 



McBee punched card system discussed. 



408. MEYER, W. H. The periodic inventory in 

 forest management, a specific example. J. Forestry 

 51:283-286. Apr. 1953. 99.8 F768 



409. ROLLER, H. M. Explanation of sampling 

 pulpwood tracts. South. Pulp & Paper Mfg. 16(l0):85-88. 

 Oct. 1, 1953. 302.8 So8 



Procedure devised for Southern Pulpwood Conserva- 

 tion Association in examination of tracts from which 

 pulpwood was cut. 



410. ROTHERHAM, G. A. The use of helicopters 

 in woods operations. Pulp 8c Paper Mag. Canada 55(7): 

 147,149,153,155. June 1954. [Woodlands Sect. Index 

 1374] 302. 8 P96 



411. WRIGHT, J. P. Continuous forest inventory 

 using business machine methods. Soc. Amer. Foresters. 

 Proc. 1954.:182-188. 99.9 Sol3 



Comments by H. W. Kollmeyer and F. T. Frederick- 

 son. 



RECORDS AND ACCOUNTING 



412. WORRELL, A. C. Costs of practicing forestry 

 in the South. South. Lumberman 186(2325):43-44. Feb. 

 15, 1953. 99.81 So82 



Also, under similar title, in Forest Farmer 12(8):5, 

 17. May 1953. 99.8 F7692 



394. DILLER, O. D. A chain of systematically 

 managed forests [in Ohio]. Amer. Forest Cong. Proc. 

 4:247-249. 1953. 99.9 Am3 



395. OSTROM, C. E., and HEIBERG, S. O. 

 Large-scale te«ts in silvicultural research. J Forestry 

 52:563-567. Aug. 1954. 99.8 F768 



396. U. S. FOREST SERV. NORTHEASTERN FOR- 

 EST EXPERIMENT STATION. Forestry demonstration 

 on the Bartlett Experimental Forest. Upper Darby, Pa. , 

 1953. 4 p. 1.9622 N2F7623 



397. WEITZMAN, S. Five years of research onthe 

 Fernow Experimental Forest [West Virginia]. U. S. 

 Forest Serv. NE Forest Expt. Sta. Paper 61, 44 p. 

 1953. 



Research covers compartment studies on integrated 

 timber management, mine timber management, farm 

 forests and watershed management and a wide variety of 

 small-scale studies including testing of hybrid poplars, 

 power saws, skid-road erosion and revegetation, and 

 wildlife. 



TREE REGENERATION 



413. PLAIR, T. B. How the CCC has paid off. 

 Amer. Forests 60(2):28-30, 44-45. Feb. 1954. 99.8 

 F762 



Chiefly results of tree planting programs of Civilian 

 Conservation Corps. 



Northern States 



414. LITTLEFIELD, E. W. For a more stabilized 

 program of reforestation in New York. N. Y. State Con- 

 serv. 8:6-8. Aug. /Sept. 1953. 279.8 N48 



4i5. RECKNAGEL, A. B. Cooperative forestry. 

 Amer. Forest Cong. Proc. 4:258-259. 1953. 99.9 

 Am 3 



St. Regis Paper Company sponsors planting. 



416. SMITH, J. Windbreaks pay their way. Iowa 

 Agr. 51(5):9, 17. Jan. 1953. 6 Io9 



INVENTORIES, SURVEYS, CRUISING 



Southern States 



398. B1CKFORD, C. A. Use of aerial photographs 

 in estimating forest drain. U. S. Forest Serv. Noeast. 

 Forest Expt. Sta. Paper 59, 10 p. 1953. 1.9622 N2St22 



Includes cost comparison. 



399. CONTINUOUS forest inventory. South Lum- 

 berman 186(2331):44-45. May 15, 1953. 99.81 So82 



400. DEMBICKI, H. A recommended regeneration 

 survey system. Brit. Columbia. U. Facul. Forestry. 

 Res. Notes 7, 9 p. Ref. Jan. 1953. 99.8 R31 



401. FURNIVAL, G. M. What per cent cruise ? 

 South. Lumberman 187(2345): 173. Dec. 15, 1953. 

 99.81 So82 



417. HALL, L. D. Intensive free seedling program 

 at Panama City, Florida. South. Pulp & Paper Mfr. 

 17(4):84-85. Apr. 10, 1954. 302.8 So8 



Outline of procedure. So. Kraft Div. of International 

 Paper Co. 



418. LEHOCKY, A. A., and RANDOLPH, B. L. 

 South Carolina sand hills can grow pine timber. J. For- 

 estry 52:280-281. April 1954. 



419. LOTTI, T. Good seed trees pay off. South. 

 Lumberman 187(2336):43-44. Ref. Aug. 1, 1953. 99.81 

 So82 



Pinus taeda. In South Carolina. 



12 



