28 



MISC. PUB. 1003, U.S. DEPT. OF AGRICULTURE 



WHALEY, R. S. 696 



Structure of the sawmill industry in Colorado. The- 

 sis (M.F.) , Colo. State Univ. 1961.* 



Canada 



CANADIAN BUREAU OF STATISTICS, IN- 

 DUSTRY AND MERCHANDISING DIV. 697 



The hardwood flooring industry, 1958. 15 pp. 



Queen's Printer, Ottawa, Ont. 1960. 



CANADIAN BUREAU OF STATISTICS, IN- 

 DUSTRY AND MERCHANDISING DIVISION 698 



The lumber industry 1958. 46 pp. Queen's Printer, 



Ottawa, Ont. Oct. 1960. 



CANADIAN BUREAU OF STATISTICS. IN- 

 DUSTRY AND MERCHANDISING DIVISION 699 



The sash, door and planing mills industry, 1959. 28 

 pp. Queen's Printer, Ottawa, Ont. 1961. 



CANADIAN BUREAU OF STATISTICS, IN- 

 DUSTRY AND MERCHANDISING DIVISION 700 



Sawmills ; formerly the lumber industry ; 1960 An- 

 nual Census of Manufactures. 32 pp. Queen's 

 Printer, Ottawa, Ont. 1962. 



ROOK. S. F. 701 



The future of softwood lumber in Eastern Canada. 

 Forest Prod. Jour. 10(7) : 358-360. July 1960. 



Supply and demand, costs and capital investments, 

 and marketing. 



Production, Consumption, Stocks 



HORN, A. G. 702 



Minnesota produces 161 million board feet of lum- 

 ber— 1960. U.S. Forest Serv. Lake States Forest 

 Expt. Sta. Tech. Note 623, 2 pp. 1962. 



MAY, R. H. 703 



Lumber production in California and Nevada, 1952- 

 1957. U.S. Forest Serv. Pacific Southwest Forest 

 and Range Expt. Sta. Forest Survey Release 37, 

 12 pp. May 1960. 



LUMBERMAN 704 



1959 lumber production of major Western sawmills. 

 Lumberman [San Francisco] 87(4) : 68-73. April 

 1960. 



Includes British Columbia. 



LUMBERMAN 705 



1959 Lumber production of Southern-Eastern mills ; 

 major lumber producers in the Southern, Lake 

 States, major Alaskan and Eastern Canadian saw- 

 mills. Lumberman [San Francisco] S7(5) : S1-S6. 

 May 1960. 



MEAD, W. J. 706 



Changing pattern of cycles in lumber production. 

 Jour. Forestry 59(11) : SOS-813. Nov. 1961. 

 1919-1961. 



NATIONAL LUMBER MANUFACTURERS AS- 

 SOCIATION 707 

 Statistical summary of lumber and hardwood floor- 

 ing, 1957-60. Washington, 14 pp. 1961. 



NATIONAL LUMBER MANUFACTURERS AS- 

 SOCIATION 708 

 Statistical summary of lumber and hardwood floor- 

 ing 1959-62 ; production shipments orders and stocks. 

 Washington, 19 pp. 1902. 



WESTERN PINE ASSOCIATION 709 



Statistical summary for the year 1960. Portland, 

 Oreg., 7 pp. 1961. 



Firms and Their Processes 



CLAPHAM, J. C, and LAMBE, T. A. 710 



The economics of automatic lumber sorting. Forest 

 Prod. Jour. 11(7) : 320-323. July 1961. 



An evaluation of partially and fully mechanized 

 sorters, a comparison of capital expenditures and 

 manpower savings, and an indication of production 

 output and number of sorts required to justify in- 

 stallation costs. 



DOWDLE, B., and BAIN, R. 711 



Lumber or chips? a comparison of small-log utiliza- 

 tion alternatives. U.S. Forest Serv. Northeast. For- 

 est Expt. Sta. Paper 150, 10 pp. 1961. 



GRAY, J. R. 712 



Economics of sawmill operations in New Mexico. 

 N. Mex. Agr. Expt. Sta. Bui. 465, 25 pp. June 1962. 



HOOKER, L. W. 713 



The sawmill in an integrated operation. Forest 

 Prod. Jour. 10(3) : 168-169. March 1960. 



KEPPLER, W. E., and HUXSTER, W. 714 



Costs — a key to sawmill profits. Forest Prod. Jour. 

 11(9) : 435-439. Sept. 1961. 



KEPPLER, W. E., HUXSTER, W. T., SMITH, 

 G. W., and DYSON, P. J. 715 



Three case studies of lumber manufacturing firms 

 in North Carolina. North Carolina State College 

 of Agr. and Engin., Univ. of North Carolina, and U.S. 

 Dept. of Agr., v.p. 1960. 



A circular sawmill in the coastal plain area of the 

 State, a circle-shashgang sawmill in the North Caro- 

 lina Piedmont, and a band sawmill located in the 

 State's upper coastal plain. 



LANE, D. E. 716 



The place of the sawmill, integration in the Pacific 

 Northwest. Forest Prod. Jour. 10(3) : 162-164. 

 March 1960. 



RODENBACH, R. C, and DOYLE, H. J. 717 



Thickness variation of lumber cut in 1959 by circular 

 mills in North Carolina. U.S. Forest Serv. South- 

 east. Forest Expt. Sta. in cooperation with Furniture 

 Plywood and Veneer Council North Carolina Furni- 

 ture Assoc, 9 pp. July 1960. 

 Wood waste. 



SIMMONS. F. C. 718 



Advantages of log barking to the sawmill operator. 

 Timber Prod. IS (2) : 2. Feb. 1962. 



SIMMONS, F. C. 719 



Upgrading the product of hardwood operations. Part 

 I and II. South. Lumberman 200(249S) : 33-34, 36, 

 40. May 1, 1960, and 200(2499) : 31-34, 36, 48. 

 May 15. 1960. 



TIPPLE. N. E. 720 



Contributions of log sorting and production program- 

 ming to lumber marketing. Thesis (M.F.). Univer- 

 sity of Idaho. I960.* 



Raw Material 



FEDKIW, J., and STOUT, N. J. 721 



Timber quality determines white pine lumber grade 

 recovery. Northeast. Logger 8(9) : 14-15, 1S-19. 

 Mar. 1900. 



