« 1939 



1939 



* 1939 



1940 



* 1941 



1941 



1941 



1941 

 1942 

 1946 



1910 

 1910 



* 1918 

 1925 



* 1928 



RAPRAEGER, E. F. 



Tag ends of the logging and milling study at the White Pine 

 Lumber Company operation at Orofino, Idaho. Unpub* msi, 

 35 pp. June. 



Matches from Idaho's white pine. Amer. Forests, 45(3) :112. Mar* 



The Christmas tree industry of western Montana. Forest 

 Industries of the Inland Empire, no. 1, 4 pp. Mult. Oct. 



Employment per unit of forest product. Research Note no. 11, 

 2 pp. Mimeo. Oct. 



Did you know that ? Intermountain Logger (Third Inter- 

 mountain Logging Conference), p. 11. Apr. (Lewiston, Idaho) 



Characteristics of some important commercial woods which are 

 native to the northern rocky mountain region. 1 p. Mult. May. 



Possibilities of wood-pulp production in the northern rocky 

 mountain region. Station Paper no. 4* 43 pp. Mimeo. Mar. 



Christmas tree industry in Montana. The Timberman, 4l(2): 54-55. 

 Dec « 



Timber and metals. The Timberman, 43(4): 19-20. Feb. 

 TIMM, JOHN L. 



Conversion of standard pole classes to tree diameters in 

 lodgepole pine. Research Note no. 39, 2 pp. Mimeo. Mar. 



WHITNEY, C. N. 



Preparation of yield tables, Deerlodge N. F. Unpub. ms., 7 pp. 



Discussion of the larch butt proposition with relation to the 

 merchantability of the timber in the butts, and the possibility 

 of utilizing the butts for other purposes than lumber. 

 Unpub. ms., 14 pp. Feb. 



A most remarkable story of pine lumber. West Coast Lumberman, 

 33(395) :73-77. Mar. 



Do you treat your fence posts? The Montana Farmer, Dec. 15, 

 p. 4. Revision in The Utah Farmer, April 25, 1926. 



Fence-post treatment economizes timber from Custer Forest. 

 U. S. Yearbook of Agric, pp. 288-289. 



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