U Haig, I. T. • ■ 



Short cuts in measuring tree height's. Jour. For. 23(11) : 941-944. 

 . 1925. - . : 



U 



Stand tables for second-growth v/estem white pine. Northwest 

 Sci. 5(4):94-98. 1931.- 



U 



Comparative timber yields. Jour. Forestry 30(5) : 575-578. 1932. 



L 



Second-growth yield, stand and volume tables for the western 

 white pine tyoe. U. S. Dept. Agr. Tech. Bui., 323, b8 pp. 

 1932. • • 



A Huey, Ben II. 



The profit in pinining western white and ponderosa pine. 

 Research Ttote '85.. 6 pp., processed. July 1950. 



A Kemp, P. D. and Metcalf, M. E. 



Tables for approximating volume growth of individual trees. 

 Station Paper 11, 14 pp., tables. Stenalithed. March 1948. 



U Larsen, J. A. 



Growth of western white pine and associated species in ^northern 

 Idaho, Jour. Forestry 16( 7) : 83 9-840. 1918. 



U ' 



Forest taxation in Sweden. Jour. Forestry .20(3) :313-31 5. - -1922. 



U . and Haig , I, T. . 



Growth and yield of western white pine. Unpub. ms. 9 pp. 1924. 



U Rapraeger, E, F. . 



V/hat percent of tree voliime is in each log of a western (Idaho) 

 white pine? IJest Coast Lumberman 63(8) :30, Applied Forestry 

 Note 75, 2pp. I-Iimeo. 1936. . • 



A 



Effect of repeated ground fires upon stumpage returns in 

 western vv^nite pine. Jour. Forestry 34(7) :715-718, 1936. 



A . . 



Isn't cubic measure logical? Univ, Washington Forest Club 

 Quarterly ll(2):22-24. March 1938. 



A 



The cubic foot as a national log-scaling standard. Mimeo. 

 Jan. 1940. (Reissued as Station Paper 24, June 1950) 



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