40
P of Selected urnal Articles Pertaining to the Forest Products Industries W. I. West Oregon State University

Forest Products Industries

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    3

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Forest Products Industries

P of

Selected urnal Articles

Pertaining to the

Forest Products Industries

W. I. West

Oregon State University

Page 2: Forest Products Industries
Page 3: Forest Products Industries

INDEX OF SELECTED JOURNAL ARTICLESPERTAiNING TO THE FOREST PRODUCTS

INDUSTRIES1963 - 1964

by

W. I. WestProfessor and Head of Forest Products

School of ForestryOregon State Universjy

Corvaili5, Oregon

Published bySchool of Forestry

andForest Research Laboratory

Oregon State UniversityCorva11js Oregon

1965

Page 4: Forest Products Industries

Preface

Sc1T.oh,

This index is the fourth in a series published by the School ofForestry and the Forest Research Laboratory, Oregon State University.The hundreds of requests received for past and current issues, togetherwith favorable comments, indicate the index is proving to be of value inassisting industry, research, and educational institutions as a referenceguide to the journals covered.

Prior issues of the index, 1963, 1960, 1957, included journals pub-lished over preceding three year periods. This has resulted in consid-erable delay to those using the index. The 1965 issue is being releasedto cover journals for 1963-1964. Limited requests for copies of the 1963and 1960 issues can be filled from a small remaining supply. The 1957issue has been exhausted.

A table of contents serves as a subject matter index to assist theuser in searching for articles. A code system indicates the journalscited. Journal editors and publishers should be recognized for theirsincere efforts to report developments of current and timely importance.

It is unfortunate neither time nor space permits including severalother journals of value in the forest products field. It should be notedthe "Forest Products Journal", "Journal of Forestry", and "Woodwork-ing Digest" each include an annual index in their December issues. Anindex covering 18 years of the Forest Products Journal and earlier pub-lications is available from the Forest Products Research Society.

Attention is directed to a listing of "Forestry Theses Accepted byColleges and Universities in the United States" compiled by Oregon StateUniversity and published annually with author and subject indices in theSeptember issue of Forest Service.

11

Page 5: Forest Products Industries

PREFACE

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page11

CODE TO JOURNALS CITED iv1.0 GENERAL 12.0 ACCOUNTING, BUDGETING, COSTS, FINANCING, TAXES 33.0 GRADING AND STANDARDS 54.0 PERSONNEL .....5.0 PLANT DESCRIPTIONS 6

01 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) . . 65.02 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING, OVER-LAYING 65.03 LUMBER .........................65.04 REMANUFACTURE AND SECONDARY PRODUCTS. . 75.05 VENEER AND PLYWOOD 7

6.0 PLANT EUIPMENT 76.01 GENERAL 76.02 CHIPPING AND CHIP HANDLING - See 13.02 86.03 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) -

See 13.04 86.04 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING; OVER-LAYING

See 13.05 86.05 LOG BUCKING, DEBARKING, HANDLING, INVENTORY,

SORTING, STORAGE 96.06 LUMBER MANUFACTURING 9

6.061 ROUGH LUMBER PRODUCTION 96.062 LUMBER HANDLING, SORTING, STACKING 96.063 PLANING AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT 10

07 SAWS AND KNIVES (Care, Operation, Selection) 106.08 VENEER AND PLYWOOD 10

k 6.09 WOODWORKING 116. 10 MISCELLANEOUS 12

7.0 PRODUCTION PRACTICES, MODERNIZATION, STUDIES 138.0 PROMOTION, SELLING, DISTRIBUTION 149.0 QUALITY CONTROL 16

10.0 SAFETY 1611.0 SEASONING 1612. 0 STORAGE, PACKAGING, SHIPPING, TRANSPORTATION 17.3.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS 18

13.01 GENERAL 1813.02 CHIP BUSINESS 1913.03 COMPONENTS AND CONSTRUCTION 1913. 04 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) 2013.05 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING, OVER-LAYING 2213. 06 FINISHES AND FINISHING 2213.07 GLUES AND GLUING 2413.08 LOGGING AND ROUGH FOREST PRODUCTS 2413.09 PULP AND PAPER, WOOD AND BARK CHEMISTRY 2613.10 RESEARCH 2613.11 VENEER AND PLYWOOD 3013.12 WOOD PRESERVATION 31

lii

Page 6: Forest Products Industries

CODE TO JOURNALS CITED

(Fl) "Forest Industries"; published by Miller Freeman Publications.731 S. W. Oak Street, Portland, Oregon 97205.

(FPJ) "Forest Products Journal"; published by the Forest ProductsResearch Society, 417 N. Walnut Street, Madison,Wisconsin 53705.

(FS) "Forest Science"; published by the Society of AmericanForesters, 1010 - 16th Street N. W., Washington, D.C.Z0036.

(JF) "Journal of Forestry"; published by the Society of AmericanForesters.

(SL) "Southern Lunberman"; published by J. H. Baird PublishingCompany, 2916 Sidco Drive, Nashville 4, Tennessee.

(W) "Wood and Wood Products"; published by Vance PublishingCorp., 59 East Monroe St., Chicago 3, Illinois.

(WD) "Woodworking Digest"; published by Hitchcock Publishing Co.,Hitchcock Building, Wheaton, 11inois.

iv

Page 7: Forest Products Industries

1

1. 0 GENERAL

The Current Situation (became In The Industry, Feb.1964) each issue; short notes on Woods, Business,Safety, Research, New Products, Marketing

Northwest News, each issue32nd Annual Plywood Review

State of the IndustryIndustry ReportsHere Are Plywood's Problems &

Recommended ActionIn The Case of PlywoodDirectory of Plywood & Veneer Producers

NLMA Seeks to Unify PurposeEconomic Review of the Small Forest Owner SituationLumbermen Take A Hard Look at the Next 10 YearsEconomist Reports on Construction Industry's OutlookIndustry Presents Seven Major Points to CongressWhat It Takes To Compete52nd Annual Meeting WCLA - chop hard at problemsLoggers, Lawyers, and Legislators1963 Yearbook & Buyers Guide

1962 - Another Year of Decision for theIndustry (lumber)

AFPI Make Gains on All FrontsRegional reports

Western PineSouthern Pine and West CoastOak Flooring and British ColumbiaRedwood

U.S.F.S. Cut in '62 Hits 9 Billion - regional reports1962 Lumber Production of Major MillsDirectory of federal, state & private ass'ns.,

officials, and forestry schoolsSPA Annual Meeting - trade promotion, distribution,

standardization, researchNWWTPC Meeting cites problems, need for researchLumber's Time for Reappraisal1962 Board Review

StatisticsAssociation reportsDirectory of board producers

Trends in the Consumption of Exterior-GradeForest Products by the Building Part IIndustry in the U.S. Part II

1963 Annual Meeting of DFPA - exports& grade simplification

WPA Market Study HighlightsThe Future of Wood in a Competitive Market1964 - Marketing Is The ProblemYour Stake in Politics33rd Annual Plywood Review

The Plywood Industry: Where It Is - Where ItIs Going

One Billion Sq. Ft. Always Available (warehousejobber)

Changes in DFPA Increase StrengthHardwood Plywood Production Up 12%

(Fl)(Fl)(Fl) Jan.. 1963

p. 34p. 36

p. 38p. 39p. ill

(Fl) Jan. 63:41(Fl) Feb. 63:32(Fl) Mar. 63:38(Fl) Mar. 63:39(Fl) Mar. 63:42(Fl) Mar. 63:44(Fl) May 63:42(Fl) May 63:44(Fl) May 29, 1963

p. 4p. 9

p. Up. 12p. 14p. 19p. 28p. 60

p.102(Fl) June 63:37(SL) Apr. 15, 63:22(Fl) June 63:42(Fl) July 63:9(Fl) July, 1963

p. 37p. 108p. 130

(Fl) July 640Aug. 63:37

(Fl) July 63:42(Fl) Oct. 63:39(Fl) Oct. 63:40(Fl) Dec. 63:34(Fl) Dec. 63:38(Fl) Jan. 1964

p. 35

p. 39p. 40p. 42

Page 8: Forest Products Industries

7

1. 0 GENERAL

The Markets for PlywoodA Glossary of Terms for Softwood PlywoodPlywood Business Booms - foreign markets report

Effective Communications--Key to Industry ProgressHousing Market - S Areas in U.S. to gain most peopleFacts About the 'FACTS' ProgramForesters Look Ahead at Land UseForester Questions Need for More Federal

Recreation LandIncreased Home Ownership Is Main Industry Goal

Says Economic CouncilShould You Merge - Or Go It Aloue?Association Consolidation- -economical essential53rd Annual Meeting of WCLA. --moves for quick

consolidation1964 Yearbook & Buyers Guide

1963 - Year of Progress, Decision & ChangeBLM Cut Higher for 1963Tree Farm ReportU.S.F.S. Cut 10 Billion in 1963--regional reports1963 Lumber Production of Major Mills1964 Buyers Guide to Equipment &z SuppliesDirectory of federal, state & private forestry

organizations, officials, and forestry schoolsin the U.S. & Canada

Action Takefl to Consolidate WPA & WCLANLMA Presents 3 Programs: Project Home; Congress

of Forest Industries; Nat'l Public AffairsConference

Industry Trends in the SouthSPA Annual Meeting Urges Product Quality, Inter-

regional CooperationThe Case for 1-1/2 inch Dry Lumber1963 Board Review

State of the Board Industries - 1963These Factors Affect Board - capital, growth,

raw materialHardboard Industry's Future Depends on

Product ChangeAssociation's Report - 19631964 Directory of Board Producers

Buyer Turnover Harmful Note in Timber Economy'Ability to Change' Established in APAMore Products Gained from Less TimberSawtimber - A Contrary OpinionYour Place in Research

Part I Marketing ResearchPart II Product Research & DevelopmentPart III Product Research & DevelopmentPart IV Product Research & Development

Lumber Industry Outlook for 1963 & Review of 1962

After Lumber---What Other Products--Why?Economic Importance of Timber in the U.S.Constitution and Bylaws of the Forest Products

Research Society

p. 54p. 114p. 118

(Fl) Jan. 64:200(Fl) Feb. 64:36(Fl) Feb. 64:44(Fl) Feb. 64:60

(Fl) Feb. 64:70(Fl) Mar. 64:38(W) Mar. 64:30(Fl) Mar. 64:40(Fl) Apr. 64:38

(FI) May 64:40I) May 29, 1964(F

p. 6

p. 8p. 10p. 12p. 62p. 78

p. 125(Fl) June 64:5

(Fl) June 64:7(Fl) June 64:35

(Fl) June 64:36(Fl) June 64:38(Fl) July 1964

p. 38

p. 40

p. 101p. 102p. 112

(FL) July 64:62(Fl) Aug. 64:36(Fl) Aug. 64:42(FL) Sept. 64:40(Fl)

Nov. 64:36Dec. 64:38Jan. 65:196Feb. 65:38

(FPJ) Apr. 63:l5A(SL) Mar. 15, 63:26(FPJ) May 63:180(FPJ)Sept. 63:355

(FPJ) Nov. 63:9A

Page 9: Forest Products Industries

3

1. 0 GENERAL

Subject and Author Indices - Vol. XIII, 1963Modernization of Wood ProcessingSubject and Author Indices - Vol. XIV, 1964The Nation's Income from Timber ProductsForestry Education in AmericaIndex Volume 61, 1963Index Volume 62, 1964Marketing, Mechanization, Research, Keynote

SPA MeetingLumbermen TeU Troubles to Committee of SenatorsAlabama's Changing Lumber IndustryBright Outlook for Southern Lumber - USFS ReportNLMA 1963 Annual Meeting - stepped up promotion,

federal timber policies, free enterpriseChanging Hardwood Lumber IndustryHardwood Plywood Institute 1963 ReportSouthern Pine: Its Faith And Its FutureChanging Complexion of South's Lumber EconomyThe Year in Review and a Look Ahead - NLMAThe Glowing Promise of Research with Southern PineHPMA Member Outlook and Association WorkTrends in the News - Markets, Developments,

Futures; each issueWashington News - each issueEconomic Council Probes 4 Major Industry ProblemsReference Data & Buying Guide: Management1963 Wood Industry Progress Report issue

1964 PlansManagementMarketingLayout - HandlingMechanization - MachiningGluing - Laminating - AssemblySanding - FinishingVeneer - Plywood - Board ProductsDry - TreatingUtilization

Reference Data & Buying Guide: Management1964 Wood Industry Progress Reports: same topics

as 1963Memo to Management: each issueModernization Is A Functional Concept1963 Cumulative IndexAPPALACHIA: Poverty or Prosperity1964 Cumulative Index

2.0 ACCOUNTING, BUIXIETING, COSTS, FINANCING, TAXES

Cost-Price Relation Analyzed (Fl) Jan. 63:40How To Avoid Getting In A Tax Trap Under New Rules (Fl) Apr. 63:36Capital Gains - proposed changes (Fl)

WPA Blast Apr. 63:32Must We Face It Again? Cut Out, Get Out, Move On? May 63:38

Woods-Mill Pay Cost Analyzed (Fl) June 63:38Problems in Northeast Lumber Production (Fl) Sept. 63:60

(FPJ) Dec. 63:565(FPJ) Dec. 64:577(FPJ) Dec. 64:591(JF) Mar. 63:185(JF) July 63:483(JF) Dec. 1963(JF) Dec. 1964(SL) Apr. 15, 63:22(Fl) June 63:37(SL) May 15, 63:22(SL) May 15, 63:28(SL) Nov. 1, 6 3:12

(SL) Nov. 15, 63:11(SL) Dec.15,63:83(SL) Dec. 15, 63:110(SL) Jan.15,64:15(SL) May 15, 64:11(SL) Dec.l5,64:82(SLy Dec. 15, 64:129(SL) Dec. 15, 64:147

(W)(W)(W) Feb. 63:28(W) Oct. 63:153(W) Dec. 1963

p. 24p. 26p. 27p. 29p. 31p. 38p. 42p. 46p. 52p. 54

(W) Oct. 64:181

(W) Dec. 1964(WD)(WD) May 63:50(WD) Dec. 63:29(WD) July 64:33(WD) Dec. 64:37

Page 10: Forest Products Industries

How Methods Engineering Helps TrimMachining Costs Apr. 64:34

How Methods Engineering Reduces Assembly Costs May 64:35How Jigs & Tools Reduce Production Costs June 64:29How Methods Engineering Aids Good Plant Layout July 64:33

vm. Pre-engineering for Tighter Cost Control Aug. 64:27How to Develop Standards for Assembly Operations Sept. 64:323-Way Control System Trims Production Costs Oct. 64:27How Accounting Methods Determine Labor Costs Nov. 64:42The Operating Budget--Key to Controlling Costs Dec. 64:66

How A Veneer Producer Controls Four Mills withData Processing (W) May 64:54

Lease or Buy? (trucks) (WD) Jan. 63:23Investment Credit (applies to equipment purchases) (WD) Mar. 63:34U.S. Plywood Reveals Plans, New Products (WD) Apr. 63:42Guide to Modernization - Mechanization - Automation (WD) May 63:40Put Your Credit to Work - accounts receivable (WD) Nov. 63:42The Bank: Your Supermarket for Financial Services (WILl) Nov. 63:431963 Cumulative Index (WILl) Dec. 63:29Cost Accounting--series of articles (WD)

How to Make Money by Really Trying Jan. 64:27True Behavior of Costs: Fixed & Variable Mar. 64:38

Ill. How Do You Measure Your Ability to Make Money Apr. 64:451964 Cumulative Index (WD) Dec. 64:37

2.0 ACCOUNTING, BUDGETING, COSTS, FINANCING,

Government's Budget in Canada Severely AffectsIndustry

Replacing Lift Trucks by Formula is Good BusinessGuidelines for Investment Deáisions in The Industry

Communications, Data Net (MSO) Links Customersand Company - Weyerhaeuser

Private Bills--One Way to Relief of N.F. TimberPurchasers

Compound Interest and Tree FarmingProblems of Logging CostsSix Benefits in Supplying Plant Supervision with

Cost InformationChart Your Way to the Right PriceIncentives---000d or Bad?Work Measurement---Key to Incentive PlansHow Value Analysis Saved $50, 000 in First Year--

Berkline Corp.Shortcuts to a Better Return on Your Plant &

Equipment InvestmentReference Data Buying Guide: Management

Management- -Wood Industry Progress Report (W)Cost Control Guide for Plant Managers (W)

Three Steps to Material Cost ReductionCost Reduction in Action

ifi. When Does It Pay to Buy or Make Your Own Parts?

4

(Fl)(Fl)(Fl)

Part IPart UPart III

(Fl)(SL)

(Fl)(Fl)(SL)

(W)(W)(W)(W)

(W)

(W)(W)

TAXES

Sept. 63:120Dec. 63:78

May 64:38Sept. 64:36Dec. 64:42

May 64:42Dec.15, 64:120

May 64:80July 64:39July 1, 6 3:17

Jan. 63:30Mar. 63:34Apr. 63:58June 63:27

July 63:22

Aug. 63:58Oct. 63:153Oct. 64:181Dec. 63:26

Jan. 64:26Feb. 64:33Mar. 64:38

Page 11: Forest Products Industries

5

3.0 GRADING AND STANDARDS

ALS Dimension--i-lIZ" at 19% M. C. (San Francisco) (Fl) June 3:9The Standardization Battle - current status (Fl) Aug. 63:32Machine Stress Grading Fits Lumber to Better Do

Its Job (Fl) Aug. 63:38Two StressGrading Machines in Action (Fl) Aug. 63:86Act Now on Lumber Sizes (Fl) Oct. 63:44Industry Shoots for Quality (DFPA Q. C. program) (Fl) Jan. 64:84Inland Species Will Not Be Hurt By New Standard (FL) May 64:44The Case for 1-1/2" Dry Lumber (Fl) June 64:38Commercial Standards and Free Enterprise (Fl)

Part I - Commercial Standards are Essentialto Free Enterprise July 64:46

Part II - How Good is Plywood's CS 45-60? Aug. 64:40Standards, Quality Control Essential in Particleboard (Fl) Aug. 64:100Mechanical, Visual Grading Offer Combined Advantages (FL) Sept. 64:97Standards In An Uproar (Fl) Oct. 64:42After Lumber--What Other Products - Why? (FPJ) May 63:180Machine Graded Lumber--out of the laboratory (FPJ) Jan. 64:41Machine Grading of Lumber in Britain (FPJ) Apr. 64:155Correlation of Bending Strength and Stiffness of

Southern Pine (FPJ) Oct. 64:495ALS Sub-Committee Meets In Chicago (SL) Feb. 15, 63:22Continuous Lumber Tester, CLT-1 (SL) Apr. 1, 63:95

May 15, 63:38Urges Adoption of New Standards (lumber) (SL) July 1,63:10Plans For Vote On Standards Praised (SL) Oct. 1, 63:13'Crook Reducer" Works Wonders (SL) Dec. 1, 6 3:26

Smoothing the Hardwood Sales Path (SL) Dec. 15, 63:106Computer Rated Lumber (PFI) (W) June 63:28New Method (vac. -pressure) Speeds Plywood

Glueline Testing (W) Mar. 64:51New Lumber Size Standards Promise Cost Reduction

and Quality Improvement (WD) Aug. 63:15Grading Rules Are Killing Us (WD) June 64:29

4.0 PERSONNEL

Training Program Outlined - Red Lake IndianMill, Redhy, MInn. (Fl) Nov. 63:114

How To Prevent Labor Trouble in Forest ProductsIndustries (Fl) Apr. 64:42

Workmen's Compensation Laws, Their Applicationto Forest Workers and Potential Influence onPrimary Wood-Using Mills (JF) Mar. 64:154

Six Benefits in Supplying Plant Supervision withCost Information (W) Jan. 63:30

Flow to Staff a Growing Mill (W) Feb. 63:38How to Make Sure You hire the Right Man (W) Sept. 63:30Are Your Supervisors as Modern as Your Machines? (WD) Feb. 63:39Wanted: A Woodworking Engineer (WD) June 63:11No One Knows What He Wants (WD) Aug. 63:11Do Maintenance Standards Pay? (WD) May 64:46

Page 12: Forest Products Industries

6

5.0 PLANT DESCRIPTIONS

5. 01 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) - See 13. 04

5.02 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING, OVER-LAYING - See 13.05

5.03 LUMBER

Montana Operator Handles Small Logs - For. Prod.Co., (85M - band, gang) Layout, photos

Scragxnill - Weyerhaeuser Co., (15-2GM, 2 men).Photos present key features

Gurdon Lbr. Co. Automates Hardwood Production(5GM-Band). Photos

Chip-N-Saw Converts Small Logs to Lumber andChips - Idaho Sawmills Inc. (40M)

Southern Pine Mill Dries 100% - Reynolds Lbr. Co.(65M-Band). Layout, photos

Pope & Talbot, Inc., St. Helens, Ore. - 'OutdatedMill Is Being Modernized.' Layout

Edward Hines Lbr. Co. Scragg Mill (35M)Red Lake Indian Mill Cuts 40M a Shift. LayoutTree Conversion Plant - Herron Lbr. Co. LayoutB. C. Hemlock Sawmill Plans 60 Million Output -

Empire Mills Div. of Canadian Collieries Res.,Ltd. Layout (Fl)

Tremont Lbr. Co. - 'Modernization IncreasesProduction 82%' (l6OM-Band). Layout, photos (Fl)

Burkland Studs, Inc., Two Jackladders for 85MCircular & Scragg Mill. Layout, photos (Fl)

Elk Studs Co. - 'No Lost Motion' (SOM-Scrag).Layout, photos (Fl)

Exeter Lbr. Co. Utilizes two trimmers in high-speed, stud planing mill (Fl)

Oregon-American Studs Remodels Mill(10GM-Band). Layout, photos (Fl)

Teton Tie & Lbr. Co. Increases Stud Productionby Adding Barker & Chipper (150M-Circ.Scrag). Layout, photos (Fl)

Hardwood & Pine Cut Together - Roy 0. MartinLbr. Co. (lOOM-Band). Layout, photos (Fl)

Flexibility Key to New Redwood Mill - Miller Lbr.Co. (9GM-Band). Layout, photos (Fl)

Scrag Mill Gulps 9 Cores per Minute - W. W. Lbr.Co. (lOOM). Layout, photos (Fl)

Efficient Stud Mill Built for Spruce - ColoradoStuds (7GM) (Fl)

Wilson Lbr. Co. (1GM/hr. -Band). Layout (Fl)J. M. Jones Lbr. Co. (7M/hr. -Band). Layout (Fl)Latest Equipment & Methods in Carolina Scrag

Mill; Flack-Jones Co. (8GM, gang & band resaws) (SL)$140, 000 Mill Modernization Cuts Costs $4. 50/M

and Raises Output 25% - Casswood Industries,Inc. (W)

New 7 Man Sawmill Features Twin Carriages -McCracken & McCall, Inc. (40M-Circ.)Layout (W)

(F I) Jan. 63:81

(Fl) Mar. 63:90

(Fl) June 63:90

(Fl) June 63:96

(Fl) Aug. 63:82

(Fl) Sept. 63:96(Fl) Oct. 63:82(Fl) Nov. 63:98(Fl) Nov. 63:100

Dec. 63:72

Jan. 64:222

Jan. 64:228

Feb. 64:86

Feb. 64:88

May 64:104

June 64:88

June 64:90

Aug. 64:96

Aug. 64:102

Sept. 64:92Oct. 64:%Oct. 64:104

July 15, 63:25

Mar. 63:38

Aug. 63:28

Page 13: Forest Products Industries

$250. 000 Modernization Boosts Man-Hour Output45% - Anson & Gilkey Co. Layout

Four-Way Customer Service - So. Plaswood Corp.Layout. Panels to components

New $2 Million Plant of Southern Desk Co. LayoutMechanized Production Builds Reel Leadership -

Bridge Mfg. Co.

5. 03 LUMBER Continued

7-Step Modernization Ups Lumber Mill Potential80% - Anaconda Forest Products. Layout (W) Nov. 63:24

5.04 REMANUFACTURE AND SECONDARY PRODUCTS

5.0 PLANT DESCRIPTIONS

Remodeling Spurs 25% Rise in Custom CabinetOutput, Wood-Mode Kitchens Div. of Wood-Metal Industries

5.05 VENEER AND PLYWOOD

B. C. Plywood Plant Modernizes - WesternPlywood Co., Ltd.

New 8,12-ft. Green End Lines - U. S. PlywoodNew Veneer Plant Is Central Supply - Simpson

Tbr. Co.

Continuous-flow Sanding Line Eliminates MostRehandling - McMillan, Bloedel & PowellRiv., Ltd. Layout (Fl) Sept. 64:98

Larch Plywood & By-Products - J. Neils Lbr. Co. (W) Mar. 63:44New Two-in-One Mill Near Timber Doubles

Plywood Capacity - Southern Plywood Corp.Layout, photos (W) Apr. 63:84

Plywood from Small Logs; Van-Evans Co. (W) Jan. 64:44New Plywood Plant Geared for Speed, Economy -

13.5. Plywood. Photos (W) June 64:43Southern Pine Plywood Co. Layout (W) Oct. 64:24Latest Pine Plywood Operation - Kirby Lbr. Co.

Layout (W) Nov. 64:56

6. 0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6.01 GENERAL

Equipment News - each issue1963 Buyers Guide of Equipment & Suppliers

Section 1, Products & ServicesSection 2, Suppliers

1964 Buyers Guide of Equipment & SuppliersSection 1, Alphabetical listing of products,

equipment & services and namesof firms offering

Section 2, Alphabetical listing of supplying firmsSection 3, Dealers in California, Oregon &

Washington

(W) Feb. 63:30

(W) Feb. 63:43(W) Apr. 63:48

(W) July 63:26

(W) June 64:36

(Fl) Oct. 63:88(Fl) July 64:88

(Fl) Sept. 64:88(W) Sept. 64:50

(F!)(Fl) May 29, 1963

p. 73p. 83

(Fl) May 29, 1964

p. 78p. 94

p.114

Page 14: Forest Products Industries

8

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6.01 GENERAL Continued

Nuclear Measuring Devices Demonstrate Potential (Fl) July 64: 5Machinery Maker Reports on Advances in

Southern Mills (Fl) Sept. 64:112New Products and Literature, each issue (FPJ)Trends in the News - Markets. Developments,

Futures, each issue (W)

Production Ideas - Men, Materials, Methods,Machines; also, Products - New & Improved,each issue (W)

97 New Products Featured at Greensboro Show (W) July 63:28Suppliers & Customers Swap Ideas at Machinery

Show (W) Aug. 63:44Reference Data and Buying Guide (W) Oct. 1963

Plant Layout, Materials, Handling p. 9

Lumber, Wood Parts p. 23

Veneer. Plywood, Board Products p. 33

Wood Drying, Treating p. 63

Milling, Machining p. 71

Gluing, Laminating p. 103Assembly Operations p. 121Sanding, Finishing p. 131Classified Buying Guide p. 161Manufacturers' Names & Addresses p. 176Woodworking & Mill Machinery Equipment Dealers p. 182

1963 Wood Industry Progress Report (W) Dec. 19631964 Plans p. 24

Layout, Handling p. 29

Mechanization. Machining p. 31

Gluing. Laminating. Assembly p. 38

Sanding, Finishing p. 42

Veneers, Plywood, Board Products p. 46

Drying, Treating p. 52

How One Man Looks at Machine Replacement (W) May 64:44Reference Data and Buying Guide, sections as 1963 (W) Oct. 19641964 Wood Industry Progress Report; sections

as 1963 (W) Dec. 1964Equipment and Supplies, each issue, changed to

Progress in Products in May, 1964 (WD)Guide to Modernization - Mechanization -

Automation (WD) May 63:40Modernization Is A Functional Concept (WD) May 63:50Before You Buy, Bicker (WD) May 63:72How to Shop for New Equipment (WD) May 63:821963 Cumulative Index (WD) Dec. 63:291964 Cumulative Index (WD) Dec. 64:37

6.02 CHIPPING AND CHIP HANDLING - See 13.02

6. 03 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) - See 13. 04

6.04 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING, OVER-LAYING -See 13.05

Page 15: Forest Products Industries

9

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6.05 LOG BUCKING, DEBARKING, HANDLING, INVENTORY,rING, STORAcIE

Air Keeps Log Pond Ice-FreeBarge Is Mechanical Floating Log SorterLog Handling Centralized - Roseburg Lbr. Co.Tractors Peel Redwood Bark (log splitter included)Carrier Is Straddle GrappleLogs Automatically Measured for BuckingMovable Light Bar to Mark Log Bucking LengthsNew Log Processing Center - Temple IndustriesSprinkling With Water Protects Hardwood Logs

in StorageAutomatic Block Handling System Features Unique

Log Turner

6.06 LUMBER MANUFACTURE

6.061 ROUGH LUMBER PRODUCTION

Why Not Shadow Lines at the Head Rig?Skragmill - Weyerhaeuser Co., Snoqualmie

Fails, Wa. Photos of key equipment for2 man operation

J. Neils Lbr. Co. Libby, Mont. UpdatesStud Mill

Guide Line Light at Headrig Aids SawyerChip-N-Saw Converts Small Logs to Lumber

and ChipsHow An Outdated Mill Is Being Modernized -

Pope & Talbot, Inc.Woods Unit Saws Dimension - 'The Timber

Champ'Double-Arbor Edgers Proving Ability to

Increase Overrun'Beaver' (Mill Equip., Inc.) Designed to

Process Small Logs

Chipper Heads Replace Outside Saws on EdgerMechanism for Feeding Lumber Into a Multiple-

Saw Lumber TrimmerSquare Cants from Round Bolts Without Slabs

or Sawdust

6.062 LUMBER HANDLING, SORTING, STACKING

One Man Sorts Big TimbersAutomatic Sorting System Affects Many Mill

Operations. PhotosSorting 'Memorized' in Trimmers. Irvac

Memory Control System; GeorgiaPacific Corp.

'Unscrambler' Speeds Inspection of LumberNew Lumber Sorting System Saves 7 Men and

Increases Output 33-1/3% - So. Desk Co.

(Fl) May 63:108(Fl) May 63:109(Fl) July 63:86(Fl) Sept. 63:74(Fl) Sept. 63:103(Fl) Sept. 63:104(Fl) Dec. 63:76(Fl) Dec. 64:84(SL) Aug. 1, 63:25(SL) Dec.15, 64:198

(W) Sept. 64:45

(Fl) Feb. 63:81

(Fl) Mar. 63:90

(Fl) Mar. 63:94(Fl) May 63:109

(Fl) June 63:96

(Fl) Sept. 63:96

(SL) Mar. 15, 64:26

(Fl) Feb. 64:82(Fl) Feb. 64:84(SL) Feb. 1, 64:32(SL) July 1, 64:17(Fl) June 64:93

(FPJ) Mar. 64:141

(FPJ) Aug. 64:332

(Fl) Jan. 63:84

(Fl) Apr. 64:108

(Fl) May 64:109(SL) Dec. 15, 64:206

(W) Feb. 63:40

Page 16: Forest Products Industries

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6.06 LUMBER MANUFACTURE Continued

6.062 LUMBER HANDLING, SORTING, STACKING Continued

7-Step Modernization Ups Lumber Mill Potential80% - Anaconda Forest Products. Layout

New Lumber Handling System Reduces Cost 60%Materials Handling: Unitized Handling

6.063 PLANING AND ASSOCIATED EQUIPMENT

Two Stress Grading Machines in ActionLumber Tally Read in the Mill OfficeAnaconda Forest Products 'Automatic'

Planing Mill. Layout and photosNew Machine Reduces CrookTwo Stud Trimmers in Exeter Lbr. Co.

planing millCounters Wired to Trimmer Tally Beveled

Siding by Length and Grade - WeyerhaeuserCo.

End Trimmer Is Simple, Fast; Ore. -Am.Stud Co.

"Crook Reducer" Works Wonders

Reference Data and Buying Guide: Milling,Machine

Are Your Planers Doing Their Part 1Best Work? Part U

Abrasive Planing Challenges Knife CuttingTechniques

6. 07 SAWS AND KNIVES (Care, Operation, Selection)

Improvement of Sawmill Cutting Tool Sharp Lifeby Surface Hardening

Pros & Cons of Saw Types Used in Pulp ChipProduction

Factors Affecting Saw CapacityCircular Saw StabilityChemical Attack as a Factor in the Wear of

Woodworking CuttersResearch Uncovers New Sawing TechniquesReference Data and Buying Guide: Milling,

MachiningCutters: Your Key to VersatilityYour Saws Can Make or Break You,

How to Maintain Carbide Cutters

6. 08 VENEER AND PLYWOOD

Multiple Patcher Cuts Costs - MedIord Corp.Hot Press to Loading - Santiam Lbr. Co. LayoutAutomatic Sanding, Patching & Sorting Lines (3)

10

Part IPart U

(W) Nov. 63:24(W) May 64:42(WD) Dec. 63:17

(Fl) Aug. 63:86(Fl) Oct. 63:85(Fl) Nov. 63:94(W) Nov. 63:24(Fl) Jan. 64:227(Fl) Feb. 64:88(SL) Dec. 1, 64:26

(Fl) June 64:95

(Fl) July 64:90(SL) Dec. 1,63:26(Fl) Jan. 64:227(W) Oct. 63:71

Oct. 64:81(WD) Sept. 63:30

Oct. 63:34

(WD) Nov. 63:29

(FPJ) Mar. 63:108

(FPJ) Apr. 64:152(FPJ) June 64:235(FPJ) June 64:244

(FPJ) July 64:310(SL) Dec. 15, 64:116(W) Oct. 63:71

Oct. 64:8 1(WD) Mar. 63:37(WD) June 63:27

July 63:32(WD) Nov. 64:45

(Fl) Jan. 63:106(Fl) Jan. 63:107(Fl) Jan. 63:108

Page 17: Forest Products Industries

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6.08 VENEER AND PLYWOOD Continued

Core Saw (cire.) Has Adjustable Bed -Brookings Ply.

New Plywood Plant Features Automatic Layup -Weyerhaeuser Co.

Boise-Cascade Corp., Independence, Ore. featuresAutomatic Cold Press, Sizing and Sorting (F

Plywood's Manufacturing Processes - changes andmodifications; jet veneer dryers, paper glue-1inautomatic stenciler, closed circuit TV, etc. (F

New Wide Belt Sanding Concept Announced -Yates American

U.S. Plywood Adds Lay-Up Installation atReedsport sheathing plant. Photos

Presses Automatically Cycled - Canadian CollieriesSingle Mixer (glue) Replaces FourBevel Effect by Canted SawsContinuous -flow Sanding Line Eliminates Most

Rehandling - McMillan, Bloedel & PowellRiv. Ltd. Layout

Agnew Plywood Upgrades to Match MarketPrepressing Reduces Operating Costs; Ore. -Wash.

Plywood Co. (WDrill 48 Holes Per Stroke in Sound-Insulating Panels (WSanding Your Way to Top Quality - plywood & doors (WPlywood Press Smooths Out Problem of Buckled

VeneerPlywood Component Fabrication Requires Small

InvestmentWide Belts Revitalize Plywood Industry, Part I

Part IIPart III

How to Prevent Blue-Black Stain ir Wet Wood

6.09 WOODWORKING

New Ripsaw Setworks (Selectric)Plant Layout- -Four Layouts for Smoother Work

FlowAutomated Cut Stock Sorting SystemSwitch In Lacquer Process Cuts Finishing Cycle

50% - McGraw Box Co., Layouts97 New Products Featured at Greensboro ShowSuppliers & Customers Swap Ideas at Machinery

ShowReference Data and Buying Guide: Plant Layout,

Materials, HandlingLumber, Wood PartsMilling, MachiningAssembly OperationsSanding, Finishing

Multi-Purpose Machine Sparks Door Maker's GrowthPlans - Jessup Wood Prod. Co., Dowagiac.Mich.

How One Man Looks at Machine Replacement

11

(W)

I)

I)

D) June 63:37D) July 63:21

Aug. 63:30Sept. 63:28

D) Feb. 64:60

(SL) Jan. 1, 6 3:28

(W Jan. 63:28(W Mar. 63:26

(W July 63:24(W July 63:28

(W Aug. 63:44

(W Oct. 63:9p. 23p. 71p. 121p. 131

(W) Nov. 63:27(W) May 64:44

(Fl)

(Fl)

(Fl)

(Fl)(Fl)(Fl)(Fl)

(Fl)(Fl)

Mar. 63:93

Sept. 63:100

Nov. 63: 102

Jan. 64:109

Jan. 64:235

Feb. 64:90Mar. 64:105June 64:97July 64:90

Sept. 64:98Oct. 64:98

June 63:37Aug. 63:50Sept. 63:28

Feb. 64:43

(W(W

(W

Page 18: Forest Products Industries

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6. 09 WOODWORKING Continued

Reference Data & Buying Guide: Plant Layout,Materials, HandlingLumber, Wood PartsMilling, MachineryAssembly OperationsSanding, Finishing

Around the Shop--questions & answers, eachissue thru

Equipment and Supplies: each issue, changed toProgress in Products in May, 1964

The igtroversy:Part I. What's Wrong with Modern Woodworking

Machinery?Part U. What's Wrong with Modern Woodworkers

Secrecy May Mean Ignorance machine designBefore You Buy, BickerHow To Shop for New EquipmentWhy Automatic Turning?Are Your Planers Doing Their Best Work? Part I

Part UEngineering Your Choice of Wood ScrewsAbrasive Planing Challenges Knife Cutting

Techniques1963 Cumulative IndexSpecial Screws Solve Special SituationsPortable Power Tools: Cordless Concept

Introduces New Flexibility & SafetyShapers and Routers:

Dangers & Features of ShapersMany Faces of Shapers & Routers

Furniture Men: Sand 2000 Square Feet ofPanel Face per Hour

1964 Cumulative Index

6. 10 MISCELLANEOUS

Electric Motor Fires Halted and Old SawdustBlown Out - high velocity dry chemicalextinguishers

New Wide Belt Sanding Concept Announced- -Yates American

Whiting Land & Tbr. Co. Buys Charcoal Converte(Lantz)

Automatic Boilers, Condensate System IncreaseProduction of Veneer Dryer

Boiler Has Fuel Pre-Dryer10 Ways to Up-Date Preventative Maintenance

Roller Chain Installation, Lubrication andMaintenance

[2

(W) Oct. 64:7p. 25p. 81p. 143p. 155

(WD) Sept. 1963

(WD)(WD)

Oct. 62:15? Nov. 62:27

Dec. 62:21Jan. 63:35Feb. 63:37

(WD) Feb. 63:19(WD) May 63:72(WD) May 63:82(WD) Aug. 63:33(WD) Sept. 63:30

Oct. 63:34(WD) Oct. 63:31

(WD) Nov. 63:29(WD) Dec. 63:29(WD) Jan. 64:34

(WD) Feb. 64:35(WD)

Feb. 64:39Mar. 64:42

(WD) June 64:37(WD) Dec. 64:37

(Fl) Sept. 63:99

(Fl), Jan. 64:235rs

(Fl) Jan. 64:235

(Fl) Mar. 64:140(Fl) Oct. 64:106(FPJ) Apr. 63:139(W) Apr. 63:39

(SL) Aug. 15, 63:33

Page 19: Forest Products Industries

Factors Affecting Saw CapacityModernization of Wood ProcessingLoose Dollars at Pine Sawmills (Q. C.)Tongueing & Grooving at the MolderMr. Furniture Manufacturer - Youre Killing YourselfWARP - Research. Milling Practices, and ProfitsPlant Layouts--Four Layouts for Smoother Work Floor

6.0 PLANT EQUIPMENT

6. 10 MISCELLANEOUS Continued

Magnetic DetectorSanding Your Way to Quality--plywood & doorsAir Makeup - What's In It For You?Standard or Special Lift TrucksPut Your Couplings to WorkProper Insulation Solves Heat Cost (steam piping)Guard Against Tower Decay--cooling towersIs 'Keeping Cool" Worth The Price?

mill room, machining, assembly, finishingSix Benefits in Supplying Plant Supervision with

Cost InformationHow to Control Moisture Content Changes in

Furniture Parts - Part IPart LIPart IIIPart IV

$250, 000 Modernization Boosts Man-Hour Output 45% -Anson & Gilkey Co., Merrill, Wisc. Layout (W)

'our-Way Customer Service - So. Plaswood Corp.,Hope, Ark. Layout. Panels to components (W)

Green Veneer Residue - Source of Profit(hardwood, chippable) (W)

Work Measurement--Key to Incentive Plans (W)How Value Analysis Saved $50, 000 in First Year

Berkline Corp. (W)Reference Data & Buying Guide: Plant Layout,

Materials Handling (W)Management

Cost Control Guides for Plant Managers (W)Three Steps to Material Cost ReductionCost Reduction in ActionWhen Does It Pay to Buy or Make Your Own PartsHow Methods Engineering Helps Trim

Machining CostsHow Methods Engineering Reduces Assembly Costs

Resource Allocation in the Wood IndustryAn Analysis of the Productive Capacity of Sawmill

HeadrigsLumber Recovery from Second-Growth Douglas-fir

in British ColumbiaKerf Width and Lumber YieldPros & Cons of Saw Types Used in Pulp Chip

Production

7.0 PRODUCTION PRACTICES, MODERNIZATION, STUDIES

13

(SL) Jan. 1, 63:29(W) Sept. 63:28(W) May 64:30(WD) July 63:29(WD) July 63:37(WD) Oct. 63:46(WD) Jan. 64:38(WD) Mar. 64:45

July 63:22

Oct. 63:9p. 153

Jan. 64:26Feb. 64:33Mar. 64:38

Apr. 64:34May 64:35

(W) Jan. 63:28

(W) Jan. 63:30

(W) Jan. 63:36Mar. 63:56Apr. 63:104May 63:70

Feb. 63:30

Feb. 63:43

May 63:49June 63:27

(FPJ) Aug. 63: 337

(FP.T) Nov. 63:499

(FPJ) Feb. 64:55(FPJ) Feb. 64:80

(FPJ) Apr. 64:152(FPJ) June 64:235(FPJ) Dec. 64:577(SL) Feb. 15, 63:35(SL) Sept. 15, 6 3:40(SL) Dec. 15,. 6 3:142(SL) Dec. 15, 64:131

Page 20: Forest Products Industries

How Jigs & Tools Reduce Production Costs (W) June 64:29How Methods Engineering Aids Good Plant

Layout July 64:33Preengirteering for Tighter Cost Control Aug. 64:27How to Develop Standards for Assembly

Operations Sept. 64:323-Way Control System Trims Production Costs Oct. 64:2 7How Accounting Methods Determine Labor Costs Nov. 64:42The Operating Budget--Key to Controlling Costs Dec. 64:66

New Management Philosophy Doubles Plywood Produc-tion

(W) Apr. 64:40How a Veneer Producer Controls Four Mills with

Data Processing (W) May 64:54

Why Dry Wood? Part I (WD) Dec. 62:25Part II, Air Drying Helps Make Your Product

SalableMar. 63:40

Around the Shop, answers to everyday problems:each issue thru (W) Sept. 1963

Guide to Modernization-Mechanization-Automation (WD) May 63:40Modernization Is A Functional Concept (WD) May 63:50

7.0 PRODUCTION PRACTICES, MODERNIZATION, STUDIES

Before You Buy, Bicker WD) May 63:72How to Shop for New Equipment (WD) May 63:82Engineering Your Choice of Wood Screws (WD) Oct. 63:31Materials Handling: Unitized Handling Saves $ (WD) Dec. 63:171963 Cumulative Index (WD) Dec. 63:29Special Screws Solve Sticky Situations (WD) Jan. 63:34How to Prevent Blue-Black Stains in Wood (WD) Feb. 64:60Engineers Show Basic-Witz How to Move (5 articles) (WD) May 64:36Do Maintenance Standards Pay? (WD) May 64:46How to Avoid Costly Degrading in High Humidity Areas (WD) May 64:58Controlled Humidity: an essential in quality production (WD) Dec. 64:341964 Cumulative Index (WD) Dec. 64:37

8.0 PROMOTION, SELLING, DISTRIBUTION

Marketing Concept Applied - Abitibi Corp. (Fl) Feb. 63:36Georgia-Pacific Corp. Using National Television

to Sell (Fl) Feb. 63:37Plywood Promotional Book--made a company's

promotion largely self-subsidizing (Fl) Apr. 63:38Trends in the Consumption of Exterior-Grade Forest

Products by the Building Industry in the U. S.Part I (Fl) July 63:40Part ii Aug. 63:37

Plywood Men Study Exports & Grade Simplification (Fl) July 63:42Simpson Used Gimmick to Dramatize Pyrotect Tile (Fl) July 63:112Trade Mission to Europe - WCLA report (Fl) Sept. 63:42WPA Market Study Highlights (Fl) Oct. 63:39The Future of Wood in a Competitive Market (Fl) Oct. 63:40Facts on Wholesaling - the billion dollar link (Fl) Oct. 63:4233rd Annual Plywood Review (Fl) Jan. 1964

One Billion Sq. Ft. Always Available(wholesale jobbers) p. 39

The Markets for Plywood p. 5Industry Expands Interest in Plywood Export Program p. 56

14

Page 21: Forest Products Industries

8.0 PROMOTION, SELLING, DISTRIBUTION

A Look At What's Happened p. 57Plywood Business Booms - foreign markets report p. 118Directory of Plywood & Veneer Producers p. 121

Housing Market - S areas to gain most people (Fl) Feb. 64:36Industry Tells Administration Situation on Tariffs,

Quotas (Fl) Feb. 64:92Increased Home Ownership is Main Industry Goal,

says Economic Council (Fl) Mar. 64:38(W) Mar. 64:30

Wholesaler's Place in Marketing Lumber (Fl) Mar. 64:44Communications, data net (MSO) links customers

and company - Weyerhaeuser (Fl) May 64:42(SL) Dec. 15, 64: 120

The Case for 1-1/2' Dry Lumber (Fl) June 64:38At NAWLA Meeting, Marketing Receives Spotlight (Fl) July 64:41Total Marketing Program - Temple Industries, Inc. (Fl) July 64:42Regional Quarterly Report of Western Lumber and

Plywood Production (Fl) Sept. 64:38Wood Merchandising in A Competitive Market (FPJ) Jan. 63:12AThe National Wood Promotion Program__Three Steps

to Progress (FPJ) Jan. 64:18Estimated Interregional Flows of Hardwood and

Softwood Lumber (JF) July 63:488Seasonal Variation in Lumber Prices (JF) Feb. 64:89West Coast & United Kingdom Market Reports,

each issue (SL)Selling Parade, alternate issues (SL)Merchandising Council makes key recommendations (SL) Feb. 1, 6 3:22U.S. -Canadian Cooperation Urged (SL) June 1, 63:50Retail Ass'n 1963 Meeting - learning to compete (SL) Nov. 15, 63:14Problems in Promoting New Wood Products (SL) Dec. 15,63:91U.K. Market in 1963 (SL) Dec. 15, 63:148Objectives & Program of the U.S. Forest Service's

Forest Products Marketing Laboratory -Princeton, W. V. (SL)

Computer System Aid to Modern Selling - Weyerhaeuser(SL)(F I)

Shifting Markets Increase Wholesaler's Importance (SL)U.K. Market in 1964 (SL)Lumber & Plywood Markets - each is sue (W)Furniture's 1. 5% Share of Dollar Spent by Consumer

is Constant (W) Feb. 63:33How to Sell Today's New Furniture Consumer (W) Mar. 63:24Chart Your Way to the Right Price (W) Mar. 63:34DFPA Survey Underscores Tremendous Factory-

Finished Plywood Potential (W) June 63:33Three-Point Program to Build Wood Business (W) Sept. 63:26Reference Data & Buying Guide: Lumber, Wood Parts (W) Oct. 63:23

Veneer, Plywood, Board Products p. 33Marketing - Wood Industry Progress Report (W) Dec. 63:27Award-Winning Promotion Jumps Customer Volume 50%(W) Oct. 64:37Reference Data & Buying Guide: Lumber, Wood Parts (W) Oct. 64:25

Veneer, Plywood, Board Products p. 41Can We Label to Protect the Public? (WD) Apr. 63:9U.S. Tariff Commission Rules Canadian Softwood

Imports Not Causing "Major Injury" (WD) Apr. 63:14

15

Dec. 15., 64:102Dec.15, 64:120May 64:42Dec.15, 64:156Dec. 15, 64:180

Page 22: Forest Products Industries

8.0 PROMOTION, SELLING, DISTRIBUTION

Wood Labelling Is Protection Without BurdenArchitectural Woodworkers Stop Hoping--

Start HoppingWood Battles for Kitchen Privileges

9.0 QUALITY CONTROL

Rapid Evaluation of Glue Joints in Laminated TimbersWARP - Research, Milling Practices, & ProfitsHow to Control Moisture Content Changes in

Furniture PartsHow Humidity Testing Helps Control Product Quality,

easy-to-build control roomsNew Method (vacuum-pressure) Sharply Speeds

Plywood Glueline TestingClose Tolerances Keep Laminating Plant on Beam -

Weyerhaeuser Co."Built-In" Q.C. Control Keeps Standards High, Pro-

duction Smooth - Collins Pine Co. ParticleboardHow to Prevent Blue-Black Stain in Wet WoodIt's Either Too Wet or Too DryEngineer the Species to Fit the JobHow to Avoid Costly Degrading in High Humidity AreasMoisture Tests: They're Worth Their Weight

in Profits

10.0 SAFETY

Ear Protectors Do the JobLong-Range Effort Proposed to Cut Compensation

ExpensesSafety Regulations for Fallers & BuckersReduce Your Logging Costs Through Accident Control

11.0 SEASONING

J. Neils, Libby, Mont. Adds High Temp. Pole KilnUnion Lbr. Co., Ft. Bragg, Calif., Installs

Low-Temp. KilnHigh-Frequency Dryer Takes Sawn Lumber and

Small C antsKiln Temperatures Elevated - MacMillan, Bloedell

& Powell Rjv. Ltd.How the Small Mill Operator Can Set Up Fan Air-

Drying; costs analysis presentedDevelopments in Wood Drying, 1962High Speed Drying of Western Softwoods for

Exterior PlywoodBibliography on Developments in Wood DryingRole of Temperature in the Relief of Drying StressesAccelerated Drying of Lodgepole & West. Larch PolesA Small Dry Kiln

16

(WD) June 63:32

(WD) Aug. 63:36(WD) Oct. 63:48

(FPJ) Aug. 64:361(SL) Dec.15, 64:131

(W) Jan. 63:36

(W) Mar. 64:45

(W) Mar. 64:51

(W) Sept. 64:58

(WD) June 63:34(WD) Feb. 64:60(WD) Apr. 64:51(WD) Apr. 64:54(WD) May 64:58

(WD) July 64:44

(Fl) Feb. 63:79

(Fl) Mar. 64:43(Fl) Apr. 64:84(FPJ) Dec. 64:590

(Fl) Mar. 63:95

(Fl) Oct. 63:92

(Fl) Apr. 64:113

(Fl) May 64:100

(Fl) May 64:106(FPJ) Jan. 63:1

(FPJ) Jan. 63:23(FPJ) Jan. 63:43(FPJ) Mar. 63:124(FPJ) June 63:221(FPJ) Sept. 63:417

Page 23: Forest Products Industries

11.0 SEASONING

Studies on Predrying & Polyethylene GlycolTreatment of Green Oak

Ventilating Veneer DryersSurface Checking of White Oak As Related to

Mechanical ProcessingDrying in Russia: Research & PracticeDevelopments in Wood Drying, 1963Schedules for Kiln-Drying White Fir & Hemlock

to the Proposed New StandardsDevelopment of Drying Stresses During High_

Temperature Kiln-DryingChecking of Planed & Rough Red Oak During

Kiln DryingTensile, Compressive, & Shearing Stresses

Developed in Red Oak as It DriesPrinciples of Moisture Movement in WoodDrying Yellow-Poplar at Temperatures Above 100°CDrying of Veneers in a Fluid BedDrying Problems Associated With High Pressure

Preservation Treatment of Karri CrossarmsProblems in Drying Chilean CoigüeTechniques for Drying Thick Southern Pine VeneerA Statistical Analysis of the Variability in the

Drying Rate of RedwoodAnother Method of Part-Time Kiln OperationModern Dry Kiln ControlsWood Drying - Techniques and EconomicsWARP - Research, Milling Practices, & ProfitsKiln-Dry Dimension Parts Instead of Boards &

Save MoneyHow to Control Moisture Content Changes in

Furniture PartsReference Data & Buying Guide: Wood Drying

Why Dry Wood, Part IPart U, Air Drying Helps to Make Your

Product SalableSeason Your Wood- -air drying proceduresLearn Profitable Lumber Stacking_-air dryingIt's Either Too Wet or Too DryDry Wood Parts in Minutes - RF Dielectric Heating

Part IPart U

Drying Costs Saved by Sampling

Line Packages Specialty ItemsPackaged Lbr. Wrapped in 6-Ply Paper; Color-Coded:

Frank Lbr. Co. PhotosNew Design (A-frame) for Flat Cars Used for

Lumber ShipmentPackaging Pays Off - Modoc Lbr. Co.Freight Rate Change Scored, West Coast

Reduction Urged

17

(FPJ) Oct. 63:439(FPJ) Oct. 63:449

(FPJ) Dec. 63:529(FPJ) Dec. 63:562(FPJ) Jan. 64:1

(FPJ) Jan. 64:10

(FPJ) Feb. 64:69

(FPJ) Mar. 64:103

(FPJ) Mar. 64:113(FPJ) May 64:207(FPJ) May 64:2 15(FPJ) June 64:251

(FPJ) June 64:265(FPJ) Aug. 64:359(FPJ) Sept. 64:382

(FPJ) Sept. 64:430(SL) Apr. 15, 63:33(SL) Mayl,63:41(SL) Feb. 15, 64:25(SL) Dec.15, 64:131

(SL) Dec.15, 64:141

(W) Jan. 63:36(W) Oct. 63:63

Oct. 64:71(WD) Dec. 62:25

Mar. 63:40(WD) Dec. 63:21(WD) Feb. 64:44(WD) Apr. 64:51

(WD) Aug. 64:23Sept. 64:45

(WD) Oct. 64:44

12.0 STORAGE, PACKAGING, SHIPPING, TRANSPORTATION

(Fl) Jan. 63:75

(Fl) June 63:94

(Fl) Aug. 63:92(Fl) Nov. 63:104

(Fl) June 64: 123

Page 24: Forest Products Industries

12.0 STORAGE, PACKAGING, SHIPPING, TRANSPORTATION

3-Man Packaging Unit - 1 MM A Day; DiamondLbr. Co. Photos

Non-Metallic Strapping Material AvailableOutdoor Lumber Covers Give All-Weather ProtectionDeciding When to Buy a New TruckOverhauls Fleet System for Better MaintenanceHow to Save Costly Errors in Packaging, Part I

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13.01 GENERAL

Plant Converts Pine Logs Directly Into Log Houses (Fl) Jan. 63:78Aspen Stuthed for Pallets (Fl) June 6 3:93

Apr. 64:114Western Hardwood (tanoak) Used in Newest

'Doweloc' Opration - Union Lbr. Co..Ft. Bragg, Calif.

What to Do With Lowest Grades of Ponderosa Pine?

More Products Gained from Less TimberSplit Products Use Redwood LeftoversHardwood Is Proving Worth as Sawlog, PulpwoodNew Products and Literature, each issueNew Horizons in Bowl TurningAfter Lumber--What Other Products - Why?Fortified Bark for Mulching & Soil ConditioningTomorrow's Houses from Trees of TodayEconomic Importance of Timber in the U. S.Impact of Naval Stores on Utilization of Longleaf

and Slash Pine TimberCharcoal Production by a Fluid-Bed ProcessProgress in Logging, 1962-1963: reference to

utilization improvementsSubject and Author Indices - Vol. XIII, 1963Charcoal Production in the United StatesPressure Treating Broadens Wood's Market

PotentialPrinciples & Potential of Wood PlasticizationModernization of WoQd ProcessingSubject and Author Indices - Vol. XIV, 1964The Nation's Income from Timber ProductsPallet Industry Sets All-time Record in 1962Life of Wooden Boxes Increased by Improved

Nailing ProceduresChanging Hardwood Lumber IndustryFactors Affecting the Future of HardwoodsFour Years of Gum Production on Pole TimberMr. Furniture Manufacturer - You're Killing

YourselfThe Glowing Promise of Research with Southern

PineLab Sees New Products from Low-Grade

Ponderosa Pine

18

(Fl) July 64:82(SL) Jan.15,63:36(SL) May 15, 63:48(SL) Feb. 15, 64:36(W) Jan. 64:31(WD) Nov. 64:41

(Fl) July 63:90(Fl) July 63:92(W) Mar. 63:54(Fl) Aug. 64:42(Fl) Aug. 64:104(Fl) Oct. 64:78(FPJ)(FPJ) Feb. 63:48(FPJ) May 63:180(FPJ) June 63:209(FPJ) June 63:252(FPJ) Sept. 63:355

(FPJ) Sept. 63:361(FPJ) Oct. 63:427

(FPJ) Nov. 63:463(FPJ) Dec. 63:565(FPJ) Feb. 64:63

(FPJ) May 64:189(FPJ) Sept. 64:377(FPJ) Dec. 64:577(FPJ) Dec. 64:591(Jfl Mar. 63:185(SL) May 1,63:40

(SL) June 15, 63:30(SL) Dec. 15, 63:83(31,) Dec. 15,63:87(SL) Dec. 15, 63:131

(SL) Dec. 15, 63:142

(SL) Dec. 15, 64:129

(W) Mar. 63:54(Fl) July 63:92

Page 25: Forest Products Industries

13.01 GENERAL Continued

1963 Wood Industry Progress ReportGluing - Laminating - AssemblySanding - FinishingVeneers - Plywood - Board Prod!uctsUtilization

Round Dimension Stock Rolls Into Production

New Charcoal Plant Uses Fuel Gas As Fuel1964 Wood Industry Progress Report;

sections as 1963U.S. Plywood Reveals Plans, New Products1963 Cumulative IndexFurniture Hardwoods: s HappeningProgress in Products--each issue beginning1964 Cumulative Index

13.02 CHIP BUSINESS

How the 'Utilizer' Has Worked - CrownZellerbach Corp.

Hardwoods Bigger Pulpwood Factor - - statisticsChipping and Chip Transport System - Al Pierce

Lbr. Co.Selectric Beaver (Mill Equip. Inc.) Processes

Small Logs - lumber and chipsChipper Heads replace outside saws on edgerWoods Operating Barker - Chipper Self-ContainedSome Engineering Considerations of a

Wood-Chip PipelineFully Automated Chip Mill Built in Florida

Chip Mill & Wood Products, Inc.Name Your Selling Price for Chips

13.03 COMPONENTS AND CONSTRUCTION

Plant Converts Pine Logs Directly Into Log HousesComponents Move Toward StandardizationEffects of the Plywood Component on

Architectural DesignU.S. Plywood on the Move With ComponentsMulti-component Plywood BuildingNew Developments Produce New Markets

for PlywoodEconomist Reports on Construction Industry's

OutlookAuto-Nails Beef ComponentsRockport Redwood Co., Cloverdale, Calif.

Makes Small HomesTrends in the Consumption of Exterior-Grade

Forest Products by the Building IndustryintheU.S. Partl

Part IlComponent Sales Continue Advance

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

19

(W) Dec. 1963p. 38p. 42p.46p. 54

(W) July 6432(SL) July 1, 64:22(WD) July 64:61(W) Sept. 64:35

(W) Dec. 1964(WD) Apr. 63:42(WD) Dec. 63:29(WD) Apr. 64:41(WD) May. 1964(WD) Dec. 64:37

(Fl) Jan. 63:78(Fl) Jan. 63:95

(Fl) Jan. 63:96(Fl) Jan. 63:100(Fl) Jan. 63:104

(Fl) Jan. 63:105

(Fl) Mar. 63:39(Fl) Mar. 63:93

(Fl) Mar. 63:99

(Fl) July 63:40Aug. 63:37

(Fl) Jan. 64:58

(Fl) Feb. 63. 50(FL) May 29, 6320

(Fl) Sept. 63:94

(Fl) Feb. 64:84(Fl) June 64:93(Fl) Aug. 64:108

(FPJ) Sept. 63:365

(SL) June 1, 64:25(WD) July 64:40

Page 26: Forest Products Industries

Review of FPL Studies on Stressed-Skin &Sandwich-Panel Units (FPJ) May 64:192

Hex House--Weathering Test for Siding Products (FPJ) July 64:313Sound Conditioning - The New Horizon (FPJ) Aug. 64:4AAnnual Review in Wood Engineering (FPJ) Sept. 64:3 93Problems & Possibilities of a Tensioned Wood Panel (FPJ) Sept. 64:398

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13.03 COMPONENTS AND CONSTRUCTION Continued

Structural, Fire Safety Rules Spelled Out byBuilding Codes

B. C. Firm Provides Non-Corn Treatmentof Plywood

Effect of Moisture Content on Strength of BoltedTimber Connectors

Design of Plywood Folded PlatesStatus of Structural Design for Light Frame

ConstructionProduction & Marketing of Plywood Structural

ComponentsBright Future for Wood EngineeringTesting Decay Resistance of Vapor-Retarding

Ground CoversSnow Loads & Strength of Small Roofs in Canada

Increases in Deflection & Stresses Caused byPonding of Water on Roofs.

Performance and Use of Notch-Type Truss JointsNew Style of Wall PanelingFirst Prefinished Wood Siding Test - Marketed

by WeyerhaeuserChemical Treatment Lengthens Siding LifeTests Prove Double-Glaaed Wood Windows Best

for Saving HeatBuilders View New Wood ProductsDFPA Survey Underscores Tremendous Factory-

Finished Plywood Potential (W)Component System Builds Profits - Panel Structures (W)Look for Your Share in Wood Component

FabricationPlywood Component Fabrication Requires Small

Investment

13. 04 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle)

Short-Cycle Board Press - lowers costHardwood Fractions Molded in 4 Press-Line

System; Werzalit Process, Weyerhaeuser Co.

Cascade Fiber Starts UpBoard - Overseas Reports1963 Directory of Board ProducersInternational Plywood & Panel Experts Meet

in RomeSecond Particleboard Line Added - Dura.flake1964 Annual Board Review

State of the Board Industries - 1963

20

(Fl) Jan. 64:86

(Fl) July 64:87

(FPJ) Mar. 63:104(FPJ) Apr. 63:131

(FPJ) July 63:260

(FPJ) Aug. 63:319(FPJ) Aug. 63:323

(FPJ) Aug. 63:330(FPJ) Mar. 64:129

(FPJ) Sept. 64:42 1(FPJ) Dec. 64:543(SL) Jan. 15, 63:3 1

(SL) Aug. 15, 63:20(SL) Feb. 1, 64:26

(SL) Dec. 15, 64:85(W) Feb. 63:58

June 63:33Aug. 63:47

(WD) Apr. 63:25

(WD) June 63:37

(Fl) Jan. 63:76

(Fl) June 63:88(W) May 63:38(FI July 63:104(Fl) July 63:116(Fl) July 63:130

(Fl) Sept. 63:44(Fl) Mar. 64:106(Fl) July, 1964

p. 38

Page 27: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 04 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) Continued

Factors Affecting Board Industry - developments,pressures, raw material, capital p. 40

Hardboard Industry's Future Depends OnProduct Change p. 101

Mixed Species Suitable for Particleboard Process p. 104Vinyl Overlays On Hardboard - Evans Products p. 107New Filler Solves Problems On Hardboard

and Particleboard p. 108Paint Line Is Flexible - Forest Fiber Products Co p. 108Board Panels Prime Coated On Simple Line -

Forest Industries p. 1101964 Directory of Board Producers p. 112

Phenolic Resin Surpasses Urea Bond in Board Tests (Fl) Sept. 64:42Molded Wood Plugs from Fir & Hemlock Sawdust (Fl) Oct. 64:100Efficiency of Urea- and Phenol-Formaldehyde in

Particleboard (FPJ) Mar. 63:113Wafer Dimension Control: No. 1 Design Criterion

for Plant Producing Particleboard forBuilding Construction Uses (FPJ) Apr. 63:163

How Durable Is Particleboard?Part LI Effect of Temperature and Humidity (FPJ) May 63:169

Some Observations on the Development of ALaboratory Flake Board Process (FPJ) Nov. 63:483

Fire-Retardant Partjcleboard from Treated Flakes (FPJ) Jan. 64:33Variables in Specimen Preparation Influence

Results of lB Tests on Particleboard (FPJ) June 64:26 1Flame -Retardant Particleboard (FPJ) June 64:273Effect of Exposure Cycles on Stability of

Commercial Particleboards (FPJ) July 64:277Hex House--Weathering Test for Siding Products (FPJ) July 64:313Drying Stresses in Hardboard & the Introduction

of Cross-Linking Stresses by a Heat Treatment (FPJ) Sept. 64:425Particleboard Quality as Affected by Planer

Shaving Geometry (FPJ) Oct. 64:486Effect of Wood on Setting of Portland Cement (FPJ) Dec. 64:567Seven Steps Save 50% in Hardboard Processing

Time - Forest Fiber Products Co.Forest Grove, Ore.

Forecast for '63: Hardboard Up 5%, ParticleBoard 10%

New Plant Converts Aspen Logs to Molded ParticleProducts - Werzalit Process, Weyerhaeuser Co.

New Flakeboard Plant Features Twin ProductionLines - Flakebord Corp. Layout

Charting Particle Board's Road to ProsperityReference Data & Buying Guide: Board ProductsHow One User Views Value of Board Products

(Drexel)Hardboard Plant Revamping Hikes Annual 20% -

Abitjbi Corp.Hardboard Output to Jump 10% in '64; '63 Particle-

board Production Up 21%Apply 10-year' Finish in New Siding Plant

21

(W) Jan. 63:43

(W) Mar. 63:43

(W) May 63:38(Fl) June 63:88

(W) July 63:44(W) Sept. 63:41(W) Oct. 63:33

(W) Nov. 63:35

(W) Nov. 63:36

(W) Aug. 64:39(W) Sept. 64:46

Page 28: Forest Products Industries

Joints Cut Waste - vertical fingers replacescarfing of glulam stock (Fl) Jan. 64:226

Continuous Lamination of Lurnbe r (FPJ) Feb. 63:68Roll-Gluing of Exterior Overlays (FPJ) May 63:175Improved Tips for Finger Joints (FPJ) June 63:250Asymmetrical Permeability of Composite Laminates (FPJ) Aug. 63:318Effect of Joint Geometry on Tensile Strength of

Finger Joints (FPJ) Sept. 63:390Historic Notes on Wood-Laminating in the

United StatesCurvature-Stress Factor in Laminated Wood BeamsElastic Deflection of Wood-Fiberglass Composite

BeamsBeams from Boltwood: A Feasibility StudyStudies in Laminated Beam Design for Four

Western SoftwoodsStrength of Beams with Larninae Located

According to StiffnessEnd & Edge Glued Panels Come to the Northwest -

Grafton Lumber Co. PhotosReference Data & Buying Guide: Gluing &

Laminating

Combines Veneer & Plastic to Open New Markets -Nu-Veneer Plastics, Inc.

Laminator's Second Plant Meets GrowingDemand (panels)

Why We Decided to Laminate Our Own TopsNew Roll Laminating System UnveiledClose Tolerances Keep Laminating Plant on

Beam - Weyerhaeuser Co.High Pressure Laminates: more bond for the buckCause and Cure of Flush Door Gluing Problems

Skins or Face Sheet MaterialNo-Clamp Adhesives

13.06 FINISHES AND FINISHING

Pre-finishing Test Line Is Full Production UnitLargest Plywood Priming & Prefinishing Plant -

Carlyn Panel Co.How Grain Printing Is Done at Plywall' 8 Plant

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 04 COMPOSITION PRODUCTS (Fiber, Flake, Particle) Continued

Hardboard: What Can You Do With It? (WD) Feb. 63:25Particleboard Is An Engineered Product (WD) Sept. 63:25

13.05 END AND EDGE GLUING, LAMINATING, OVER-LAYING

Jointing Line Does Dual Job - Kaibab Lbr. Co. (Fl) Jan. 63:82Redwood Laminated Beams Made Up of One

Inch Stock - Union Lbr. Co. (Fl) Aug. 63:88Floor Panel (Plylumber) Gains Markets -

Potlatch Forests, Inc. (Fl) Oct. 63:84Cedar Laminated Into Decking - Laminar Tbrs. ,Inc. (Fl) Oct. 63:86

22

(FPJ) Jan. 64:40(FPJ) Jan. 64:44

(FPJ) June 64:256(FPJ) Aug. 64:333

(FPJ) Oct. 64:45 1

(FPJ) Oct. 64:456

(W) Apr. 63:34

(W) Oct. 63:103Oct. 64:121

(W) Feb. 64:45

(W) May 64:33(W) May 64:46(W) May 64:88

(W) Sept. 64:58(WD) Dec. 63:26(WD) -

Aug. 64:32Oct. 64:37

(Fl) Jan. 63:189

(Fl) Feb. 63:82(Fl) Apr. 63:72

Page 29: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 06 FINISHES AND FINISHING Continued

Plywood Producers Look Close at Coatings 8z (Fl) May 63:40Finishings (W) May 63:64

Auto Industry Type Finishing Line for Cabinets& Panels - International Paper Co. (Fl) May 63:106

In-Transit Panels Prefinished; Oregon Prefinish Co. (Fl) Aug. 63:90Factory Surfacing, Finishing Production Increase

Foretold (plywood) (Fl) Jan. 64:82Versatility Marks Prefinish Operation at

U.S. Plywood (Fl) Jan. 64:113Prefinish, Prime Coat Lines at Evan's Harbor

Products Co. (Fl) Mar. 64:98Factory Prime Cost Offers Advantages for Cedar

Siding - Seattle Cedar Mfg. Co. (Fl) May 64:102New Filler Solves Problems On Hardboard &

Particleboard (Fl) July 64:108Paint Line Is Flexible - Forest Fiber Products (Fl) July 64:108Board Panels Prime Coated On Simple Line -

Forestlndustries, Inc. (Fl) July 64:110Finish Line for Board Flooring Items - Forrest

Industries, Inc. (Fl) Oct. 64:102Prefinish Applied to Redwood Siding (Fl) Nov. 64:106Weathering Resistance of Plywood Bonded &

Coated with Phenol Formaldehyde (FPJ) Dec. 63:557Prefinishing by Electron Irradiation (FPJ) Feb. 64:5 1Exposure Test of Painted, Pressure-Treated

Millwork (FF3) Feb. 64:87Vinyl Laminates for Plywood (FPJ) Mar. 64:139FPRS Annual Review--Treatments & Coatings (FPJ) Apr. 64:143Microscale Changes in Cell Structure at Softwood

Surfaces During Weathering (FPJ) Dec. 64:571Chemical Treatment Lengthens Siding Life (SL) Feb. 1, 64:2 6

(WD) Feb. 64:61How To Build 'Natural Beauty' Into Solid Wood

Paneling - Townsend Lbr. Co. (W) Jan. 63:31Trend to Lighten Finishes Shown in Survey (W) Feb. 63:86Switch in Lacquer Cuts Finishing Cycle 50% -

McGraw Box Co. Layouts (W) July 63:24Reference Data & Buying Guide: Sanding, Finishing (W) Oct. 63:131New Finishing System Ups Production 40% -

Heywood-Wakefield. Layout (W) Mar. 64:36Prefinishing Operation Keyed to 8, 000 Panels

Daily - Jefferson City Cabinet Co. Layout (W) Apr. 64:28Conveyorization Shortens Furniture Finishing

Cycle - H. T. Cushman Mfg. Co. Layout (W) June 64:26New Hardboard Finishing Line Paints & Overprints

Panels - Abitibi (W) July 64:44Apply "10-yeart' Finish in New Siding Plant (W) Sept. 64:46Reference Data & Buying Guide: Sanding, Finishing (W) Oct. 64:155What is Videne? - uses, costs, application,

engineering data (WD) Jan. 63:30Conventional Spraying: full control for

fine finishes (WD) Feb. 63:32Now Possible: Natural Finishes Electrostatically (WD) Mar. 63:29The Trouble with Spraying is Outdated Methods (WD) Apr. 63:43

23

Page 30: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 06 FINISHES AND FINISHING Continued

Modern Synthetic Finishes Expand Fine WoodPotential

Paint Pumping: production profitsSpray Booths: Better Quality, Less Risk. Part I

Part IIPolyester System Slashes Panel Finishing CostsSpray Booths: Know Your Needs Before You BuyWhat's New In Color Matching?Fire Retardant Paints: two faces for the price

of oneWhat About Wood Bleaching?Chemical Seal Lengthens Life of Wood Siding

What Makes Roller Coating Pay?

13.07 GLUES AND GLUING

Glue Lines Improve (Fl) Jan. 63:37Price Drop Affects Adhesive Industry (Fl) Jan. 64:89Phenolic Resin Surpasses Urea Bond in

Board 'rests (Fl) Sept. 64:42Consolidation--Refinement Mark Progress in

Glues & Gluing (FF3) Feb. 63:45Casein-Dialdehyde Starch Adhesive for Wood (FPJ) Feb. 63:51Durability of R.F. Cured Urea Bonds (FPJ) May 63:187A New Method for Selecting Glues for R. F. Heating (FPJ) May 63:190Gluability of Fire-Retardant Treated Wood (FPJ) Dec. 63:549Weathering Resistance of Plywood Bonded & Coated

with Phenol Formaldehyde (FPJ) Dec. 63:557FPRS Annual Rev-jew--Economics Main Concern

in Gluing (FPJ) Feb. 64:61Selected Bibliography on Glues & Gluing (FPJ) May 64:229Durability of Urea-Resin Glues Modified with

Polyvinyl Acetate & Blood (FPJ) Aug. 64:343Rapid Evaluation of Glue Joints in Laminated

Timbers (FPJ) Aug. 64:361Durability of Fortified Urea-Resin Glues Exposed

to Exterior Weathering (FPJ) Oct. 64:461Influence of Surface Aging Prior to Gluing On Bond

Strength of Douglas-Fir and Redwood (FPJ) Dec. 64:582Reference Data & Buying Guide: Gluing & (W) Oct. 63:103

Laminating Oct. 64:121"Thinking Out Loud"--On Gluing Problems (W) Apr. 64:26Waterproof Glueline Shaping Up for Construction

Grade Plywood W) Aug. 64:40Sticky Joe - gluing problems answered: most issues (WD)Synthetics Expand Adhesive Functions (WD) Aug. 63:23Epoxy Adhesives Invade Wood Glue Market (WD) Nov. 64:33

13. 08 LOGGING AND ROUGH FOREST PRODUCTS

Pulpwood Machine Clips TreesAppraisals Need Attention

(WD) July 63:24(WD) Aug. 63:26(WD) Sept. 63:34

Oct. 63:39(WD) Oct. 63:42(WD) Nov. 63:34(WD) Nov. 63:40

(WD) Dec. 63:24(WD) Jan. 64:52(WD) Feb. 64:61(SL) Feb. 1,64:26(WD) Dec. 64:27

(Fl) Jan. 63:55(Fl) Jan. 63:56

Page 31: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13.08 LOGGING AND ROUGH FOREST PRODUCTS Continued

Do National Forest Appraisers Use ProfitRatios or Fudge Factors?

Tree Length Logging System Doubles Outputper Man-Hour

More Balloon LoggingLatest Timber Contract Draft (USFS) Under ReviewBuyer Turnover Harmful Note in Timber EconomyOregon State Forester Details 1963 HarvestCompound Interest and Tree FarmingFine Hardwood Veneer Log Supply Picture

Not BrightHow to Understand Vehicle HP RatingsSawtimber - A Contrary OpInionBushcombine Puts Meaning Into Engineered

Production (pulpwood)Pulpwood Producers - Increased Earnings Possible

by Efficient Equipment Use (cost examples)Successful Test Underscores Feasibility of

Balloon LoggingEvaluating Log & Tree Quality for Wood ProductsWheel Tractor LoggingProgress in Logging. 1962-1963: Mechanization

Increases ProductionSelective Marketing of Hardwood LogsThe Plight of Southern Hardwood ResourcesAerial Logging ResearchSample Scaling for Timber SalesMerchantable Stem Skidding & Damage (costs

compared)Mechanized Logging System - Swedish lirnbing

machineWhat Happened to Helicopter Logging?Southern Yellow Pine Log GradesThe Log Concentration Yard - A Market for

Multiple ProductsVeneer Log Situation Points Up Walnut DrainWill Hardwood Supplies Meet Tomorrow's Demands

25

May 63:74May 29, 63:28June 63:39

June 63:40Aug. 63:34Aug. 63:39

Aug. 63:65Sept. 63:32Oct. 63:70Dec. 63:52Jan. 64:214Jan. 64:218Feb. 1,64:12

Comparative Yarding Costs: tractor vs. high-lead (Fl)U.S.F.S. Cut in '62 Hits 9 Billion - regional reports (Fl)Industry Men Show Up USFS Inequities (Fl)National Forest Timber Sales: alternate approaches

to problems of today & tomorrow (Fl)U.S. F. S. Position in Today's Market Examined (Fl)New Regulation on Appeals Offered (Fl)Present Administered Timber Rates Mean

Low Profits (Fl)To Sell Timber or To Build Roads (F')The Capital-Labor Ratio & Multi-Logging (Fl)Business of Logging Examined (Fl)Pre-Loading: System Keeps Rigs Busy (Fl)Balloons Handle 4-ton Load (Fl)

(SL)

(Fl) Feb. 64:40

(Fl) Feb. 64:63(Fl) May 64:84(Fl) June 64:66(Fl) July 64:62(Fl) July 64:154(Fl) Aug. 64:39

(Fl) Aug. 64:43(Fl) Aug. 64:70(Fl) Sept. 64:40

(Fl) Sept. 64:64

(Fl) Sept. 64:72

(Fl) Nov. 64:66(FPJ) Mar. 63:89(FPJ) Aug. 63:313

(FPJ) Nov. 63:463(FPJ) Apr. 64:187(FPJ) July 64:319(FPJ) Oct. 64:446(SF) May 63:360

(JF) Nov. 63:846

(SL) Jan. 1,64:23(SL) May 1, 64:2 9(SL) Aug. 1,64:28

(SL) Dec. 15, 64:150(W) May 64:82

? (WD) Apr. 63:31

Page 32: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13.09 PULP AND PAPER, WOOD AND BARK CHEMISTRY

Dimensional Stabilization with Poly-rnerizableVapor of Ethylene Oxide

Aspen Bark as a Source of Organic ChemicalsCharacteristics of a Phlobaphene from Western

Red Cedar BarkFortified Bark for Mulching & Soil ConditioningColor Percursors in Douglas-FirProgress in Chemical ConversionConidendrin in Floccosoids of Western HemlockAnnual Review of Lignin ChemistryReactions of Ethyleneirnine With Alkali LigninsCharcoal Production by a Fluid-Bed ProcessInvestigation of Solvent Extractives from NSSC

Black LiquorCharcoal Production in the United StatesChemical Factors in the Wear of Woodworking

CuttersFuture for Pulp and PaperFeed Molasses from the Masonite ProcessChemical Attack as a Factor in The Wear of

Woodworking Cutters2, 6-Dimethoxyphenol in Aspen Spent Sulphite

Liquor Oxidation MixturesPrinciples & Potential of Wood PlasticizationEffect of Stress Applied During Drying on Some

Properties of Individual Pulp FibersAnnual Review of Lignin ChemistryEffect of Wood on Setting of Portland CementWood Extractives & Their Significance to the

Pulp and Paper Industries (book review)

13.10 RESEARCH

Tree Growth MeasuredMarketing Lab. Sets Sights on Low-Grade Hardwood

Problems- U.S.F.S., Princeton, W. Va.Your Place in Research

Part I Marketing ResearchPart 11 Product Research & DevelopmentPart Ill Product Research & DevelopmentPart IV Product Research & Development

Machining Wood With Light

Abnormal Wood in Yellow-PoplarSpecific Heat & Conductivity of Particle Board

As Functions of TemperatureDimensional Stabilization with Polymerizable

Vapor of Ethylene OxideCharacteristics of Tracheids Produced in a Gamma

and Gamma-Neutron EnvironmentA Dual-Linear Micrometer

26

(FPJ) Feb. 63:56(FPJ) Mar. 63:112

(FPJ) May 63:195(FPJ) June 63:209(FPJ) June 63:216(FPJ) July 63:276(FPJ) July 63:304(FPJ) Sept. 63:373(FPJ) Sept. 63:413(FPJ) Oct. 63:427

(FPJ) Oct. 63:433(FPJ) Feb. 64:63

(FPJ) Apr. 64:166(FPJ) May 64:232(FPJ) July 64:282

(FPJ) July 64:310

(FPJ) July 64:316(FPJ) Sept. 64:377

(FPJ) Sept. 64:387(FPJ) Sept. 64:435(FPJ) Dec. 64:567

(SF) Apr. 63:306

(Fl) June 63:114

(Fl) Feb. 64:41(Fl)

Nov. 64:36Dec. 64:38Jan. 65:196Feb. 65:38

(FPJ) Jan. 63:14(Fl) May 63:112(W) Jan. 63:26(FPJ) Jan. 63:16

(FPJ) Jan. 63:31

(FPJ) Feb. 63:56

(FPJ) Feb. 63:62(FPJ) Feb. 63:70

Page 33: Forest Products Industries

13. 10 RESEARCH Continued

Improving Preparation of Glass Knives forUltra-Microtomy

Moisture Diffusion Coefficients in Wood asCalculated from Adsorption, De sorption,and Steady State Data

Cutting Wood With Water Jets

Cell-Wall Crystallinity as a Function ofTensile Strength

Cell Wail ModelExperimental Analysis of Wood Cutting Tool

StressesTime-Related Flexural Behavior of Small

Douglas-Fir Beams Under Prolonged LoadingSelected Wood Characteristics of Young Yellow-

PoplarPart I Specific Gravity & ToughnessPart II Shrinkage of Normal & Abnormal

WoodInternal Moisture Stress & Wood Formation

in ConifersEffect of Water Storage on Electrical Resistance

of WoodEffect of Mold, Trichodendron Viride, on Decay

in Birch by Four Storage - Rot FungiSpiral Grain in Trees--A ReviewEffect of Organic Liquids on Collapse & Shrinkage

of Wood:Effect of Degrees of ReplacementEffect of Drying Temperatures

Surface Texture Measurement MethodsHigh Energy (Liquid) Jets As A New Concept

in Wood Machining

Quality & Strength Properties of Douglas-FirDried at High Temperatures

Effect of Treating Conditions on DimensionalBehavior

Siliceous Skeletons of Wood FibersThe Tratsverse Shrinkage of WoodEffect of Joint Geometry on Tensile Strength

of Finger JointsEffect of Organic Liquids on Collapse & Shrinkage

of Wood. Part LU. Chemical InfluencesThermal Properties of BarkPeculiarity of Compression of Conifers in

Radial DirectionMechanism of Electrical Conduction in WoodMechanism of Check FormationMoisture Content Determination for Wood with

Highly Volatile ConstituentsMovement of Moisture Through a Softwood

in the Hygroscopic Range

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

27

(FPJ) Feb. 63:80

(FPJ) Mar. 63:97(FPJ) Mar. 63:121(SL) Mar. 1, 63:35(WD) Apr. 63:41

(FPJ) Apr. 63:151(FPJ) Apr. 63:168

(FPJ) May 63:203

(FF3) June 63:227

(FPJ) June 63:233

Oct. 63:443

(FPJ) June 63:240

(FPJ) July 63:255

(FPJ) July 63:262(FPJ) July 63:266

(FP.T) July 63:291Aug. 63:350

(FPJ) July 63:299

(FF3) Aug. 63:305(W) Sept. 63:38

(FF3) Aug. 63:339

(FPJ) Aug. 63:345(FPJ) Sept. 63:368(FF3) Sept. 63:386

(FPJ) Sept. 63:390

(FPJ) Sept. 63:401(FPJ) Oct. 63:419

(FPJ) Oct. 63:428(FPJ) Oct. 63:455(FF3) Nov. 63:475

(FPJ) Nov. 63:481

(FPJ) Nov. 63:489

Page 34: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 10 RESEARCH Continued

Permeability of Wood to Fluids (FPJ) Nov. 63:503Wood Aluminum Beams Within and Beyond

the Elastic Range (FPJ) Nov. 63:508Piezoelectric Effect in Wood (FPJ) Dec. 63:517Two Views of Research: Which Way Is Up?

Research & Management (FPJ) Dec. 63:527Surface Checking of White Oak As Related

to Mechanical Processing (FPJ) Dec. 63:529The Significance of Microshrinkage During

the Initial Stages of Drying (FPJ) Dec. 63:53 3Influence of Certain Variables on Veneer-

Cutting Behavior (FF3) Dec. 63:538Subject and Author Indices - Vol. XIII, 1963 (FF3) Dec. 63:565Specific Gravity & Fiber Length in Crown-

Formed & Stem-Formed Wood (FPJ) Jan. 64:13Theoretical Effect of Gross Anatomy Upon

Conductivity of Wood (FPJ) Jan. 64:25Curvature-Stress Factor in Laminated Wood Beams (FPJ) Jan. 64:44Mechanical Properties of Acetylated Wood (FPJ) Feb. 64:66Measuring Wood Color with Precision (FPJ) Feb. 64:85Air Permeability & Creosote Retention of

Douglas-Fir (FPJ) Apr. 64:159Determination of Lumen Size Distribution in

Softwood by the Mercury Injection Method (FPJ) Apr. 64:167Effect of Tolerance on Selection Efficiency of

Nordestructive Strength T&sts of Wood (FPJ) Apt. 64:179Interaction of Wood with Polymeric Materials (FPJ) Apr. 64:184Thermal Conductivity & Diffusivity of Partially

Charred Wood (FPJ) May 64:195Permeability of Wood--Exemplified by

Measurements on Redwood (FPJ) May 64:199Principles of Moisture Movement in Wood (FPJ) May 64:207Drying Yellow-Poplar at Temperatures

Above 100°C (FF3) May 64:2 15Status Report--Nondestructive Testing of Wood (FPJ) May 64:221Factors Affecting Saw Capacity (FPJ) June 64:235Some Factors Involved in the Electrical

Determination of Moisture Gradients in Wood (FPJ) June 64:239Circular Saw Stability (FPJ) June 64:244Drying of Veneers in a Fluid Bed (FPJ) June 64:251Elastic Deflection of Wood-Fiberglass

Composite Beams (FPJ) June 64:256Annual Layers Affect Resistance of Wood

to Impact (FPJ) July 64:285Radiography as a Tool of Nondestructive Testing (FF3) July 64:290Liquid Flow Paths Into Wood Using Polymerization

Techniques--Douglas-Fir and Styrene (FPJ) July 64:293Research Needed on Tensile Strength of Wood (FPJ) July 64:300Mechanics of Fracture in Wood (FPJ) Aug. 64:325Some Aspects of Viscoelastic Behavior of

Hardboard (FF3) Aug. 64:337Influence of Thermal Treatments of Short Duration

on the Toughness & Chemical Compositionof Wood (FFJ) Aug. 64:350

28

Page 35: Forest Products Industries

13. 10 RESEARCH Continued

Moisture Content Changes & Creep of WoodTensile Strength Behavior as a Function of

Cellulose in WoodAnnual Review in Wood EngineeringFactors Affecting the Bulking & Dimensional

Stabilization of Wood with Polyethylene GlycolsVibration, Static Strength & Elastic Properties

of Clear Douglas-Fir at Various Levels ofMoisture Content

Determining Local Density of Wood by the Beta-.Ray Method

Increases in Deflection & Stresses Caused byPonding of Water on Roofs

Recent Advances in Wood Anatomy: The CellWall in Secondary Xylem

Correlation of Bending Strength and Stiffnessof Southern Pine

Brittleheart in Eucalyptus Robusta Grownin Hawaii

Basic Aspects of Inclined or Oblique Wood CuttingSubject and Author Indices - Vol. XIV, 1964Determining Fiber Length. Fibrillar Angle, and

Springwood-Summerwood Ratio in Slash PineForestry Theses Accepted by Colleges &

Universities in the U.S.Some Causes and Effects of Horizontal Density

Variation in Tree StemsThe Developing Architecture of Secondary

Xylem in ConifersBase Lines for Judging Wood Quality of

Loblolly PineEarlywood-Latewood Features of Red Pine Grown

Under Simulated Drought & IrrigationForestry Theses Accepted by Colleges &

Universities in the U.S.Basic & Applied Forestry ResearchGum Spots in Black CherryGrowth Characteristics of Forest TreesIncrement Borer Starting DeviceMotor -Driven Cutter for Extracting

Large Wood SamplesIndex Volume 61. 1963Comparison of Methods for Determining

Volume of Increment CoresEstimating Size of Fibril Angle in Late Wood

Tracheids of Slash PineVariation in Virginia Pine. Part I. Natural

Variation in Wood PropertiesModification of the Ampliscope for Measuring

Hardwood FibersCore (increment) Examination KitIndex Volume 62, 1964Some Methods of Improving the Basic Cutting

Action in Wood

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

29

(FPJ) Aug. 64:357

(FPJ) Aug. 64:366(FPJ) Sept. 64:393

(FPJ) Sept. 64:403

(FPJ) Sept. 64:409

(FPJ) Sept. 64:414

(FPJ) Sept. 64:421

(FPJ) Oct. 64:467

(FPJ) Oct. 64:495

(FPJ) Dec. 64:549(FPJ) Dec. 64:555(FPJ) Dec. 64:591

(FS) June 63:181

(FS) Sept. 63: 373

(FS) Mar. 64:24

(FS) Mar. 64:89

(FS) June 64:165

(FS) Sept. 64:361

(FS) Sept. 64:371(JF) Jan. 63:20(JF) Aug. 63:572(JF) Sept. 63:655(JF) Sept. 63:678

(JF) Nov. 63:865(JF) Dec. 1963

(JF) Mar. 64:172

(JF) Apr. 64:249

(JF) Apr. 64:259

(JF) Aug. 64:581(JF) Sept. 64:635(JF) Dec. 1964

(SL) Feb. 1,63:33

Page 36: Forest Products Industries

13. 10 RESEARCH Continued

Time Affects the Strength of Timber DeadLoads & Speed of Testing

Improved Wood Quality in Eastern Cottonwood byBreeding & Selecting for Straight, Vertical Stems

The Glowing Promise of Research withSouthern Pine

13. 11 VENEER AND PLYWOOD

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

32nd Annual Plywood ReviewState of the Industry - statisticsIndustry ReportsPlywood's Problems & Recommended ActionIn the Case of PlywoodPlywood components - several articlesDirectory of Plywood & Veneer Producers

International Plywood & Panel Experts Meetin Rome

33rd Annual Plywoo4 ReviewThe Plywood Industry, Where It Is -

Where It Is GoingHardwood Plywood Production Up 12%The Markets for PlywoodPlywood's Growing Markets &z ProductsOut of Research: Products, Applications

& ProcessesFactory Surfacing, Finishing Production

Increase ForetoldIndustry Shoots for Quality (DFPA Q. C. program)Structural, Fire Safety Rules Spelled Out

by Building CodesGlossary of Terms for Softwood PlywoodDirectory of Plywobd & Veneer Producers

Considerations for Manufacturing SouthernPine Plywood

Compressibility & Bond Quality of WesternSoftwood Veneers

Effect of Heat Treatment on the Surface ofDouglas-Fir Veneer

To Succeed, We Must Sell FunctionalAdvantages (plywood)

Beetle Scars in Philippine MahoganyPrecompressing Flitches to Improve the

Quality of SlicewoodInfluence of Certain Variables on Veneer -

Cutting BehaviorWeathering Resistance of Plywood Bonded &

Coated with Phenol FormaldehydeFuture of the New Southern Pine Plywood IndustryHow Growth Rate Affects Properties of

Softwood VeneerEffect of Preservative Salts on the Properties

of Hardwood Veneer

30

(SL) Dec. 15, 63: 167

(SL) Dec. 15, 64:115

(SL) Dec. 15,64:129

(Fl) Jan. 1963p. 34p. 36p. 38p. 39p. 96p. lii

(Fl) Sept. 63:44(Fl) Jan. 1964

p. 35p. 42p. 54p. 60

p. 78

p. 82p. 84

p. - 86p. 114p. 118

(FF3) Jan. 63:39(W) Jan. 63:26

(FPJ) Feb. 63:71

(FPJ) Feb. 63:81

(FPJ) Mar. 63:16A(FF3) Apr. 63:149

(FPJ) June 63:248

(FPJ) Dec. 63:538

(FPJ) Dec. 63:557(FPJ) Jan. 64:23

(FPJ) Mar. 64:97

(FPJ) Mar. 64:124

Page 37: Forest Products Industries

13. 11 VENEER AND PLYWOOD

P nietrability of Glue Lines in Douglas-FirPlywood by Preservative Solutions

Surface Checking in Veneered PanelsHardwood Plywood Institute 1963 ReportPredict New '63 Record for Softwood PlywoodReference Data & Buying Guide: Veneer, PlywoodA Look at the Future of Southern Pine PlywoodNew Method (vacuum-pressure) Speeds Plywood

Glueline TestingThe 1/36 in. Walnut Veneer Problem--What to

Do About ItWaterproof Glueline Shaping Up for Construction

Grade PlywoodReference Data & Buying Guide: Veneer, PlywoodU. S. Plywood Reveals Plans, New ProductsHow to Prevent Blue-Black Stain in Wet WoodHow to Live with 1/36 (Walnut Veneer)

13. 12 WOOD PRESERVATION

Flexible Fork Handles PolesJ. Neils, Libby, Mont., Adds High Temp.

Pole KilnsHonolulu Wood Treating Co. Doubles

Treating CapacityB. C. Firm Provides Non-Corn Treatment--plywoodOn-Site Preservation Treatments (millwork)Overtreatment of Millwork--Is Control at the

Log Pond Feasible?Analysis of Creosote by Infrared SpectroscopyAccelerated Drying of Lodgepole Pine & West.

Larch Poles - checking, treatability, strengthA Tensile Strength Test for Comparative

Evaluation of Wood PreservativesWater-Repellant Preservatives on Exterior

Woodwork of BuildingsFumigation May End Oak EmbargoesFire-Retardant Particleboard from Treated FlakesObservations on Wood Protection Research

in EuropeTolerance of Poria Species to Copper-Based

Wood PreservativesCreosote Analysis by the TEG-F, Chrornatographic

& Spectrographic MethodsEffect of Preservative Salts on Properties of

Hardwood Veneer -

FPRS Annual Review--Treatments & CoatingsA Technique for Observing the Penetration of

Preservatives Into Wood During TreatmentAir Permeability and Creosote Retention

of Douglas -FirDouble-Diffusion Method of Treating Wood:

A Review of Studies

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

31

(FPJ) July 64:303(FPJ) Oct. 64:481(SL) Dec. 15, 63:110(W) Apr. 63:83(W) Oct. 63:33(W) Jan. 64:39

(W) Mar. 64:51

(W) June 64:24

(W) Aug. 64:40(W) Oct. 64:41(WD) Apr. 63:42(WD) Feb. 64:60(WD) Aug. 64:28

(Fl) Feb. 63:77

(F!) Mar. 63:95

(Fl) May 64:101(Fl) July 64:87(FPJ) Jan. 63:7

(FPJ) Apr. 63:142(FPJ) Apr. 63:156

(FPJ) June 63:22 1

(FPJ) Sept. 63:405

(FPJ) Oct. 63:460(FPJ) Dec. 63:564(FPJ) Jan. 64:33

(FPJ) Feb. 64:95

(FPJ) Mar. 64:106

(FPJ) Mar. 64:119

(FPJ) Mar. 64:124(FPJ) Apr. 64:143

(FPJ) Apr. 64:149

(FPJ) Apr. 64:159

(FPJ) Apr. 64:171

Page 38: Forest Products Industries

13.0 UTILIZATION ADVANCEMENTS

13. 12 WOOD PRESERVATION

Pressure-Treating Broadens Wood'sMarket Potential (FPJ) May 64:187

Agar Plug Inocu.Ia Affect Accuracy of CulturalTests of Inhibition of Fungi by Chemicals (FPJ) June 64:254

Flame-Retardant Particleboard (FPJ) June 64:273Penetrability of Glue Lines in Douglas -Fir

Plywood by Preservative Solutions (FPJ) July 64:303Retention of Pentachiorophenol in Lumber

Dipped in Water Solutions (FPJ) Aug. 64:373Effectiveness Following Kiln-Drying of

Insecticides Applied to Green Lumber toControl Lyctus Powder-Post Beetle Attack (FPJ) Oct. 64:477

Weather Protective Treatments for Finished.Dry Lumber (SL) July 15, 64:32

New Preserving Plant Finds Ready Market -3. A. Biewer Co., St. Clair, Mich. (W) Sept. 63:48

Reference Data & Buying Guide: Wood Treating (W) Oct. 63:63Fire Retardant Paints (WD) Dec. 63:24

32

Page 39: Forest Products Industries

Forestry is Oregon's largest industry. Nearlytwenty-seven million acres of forest land pro-vide raw material to an industrial complexcontributing over $1, 227, 000, 000 annually tothe state's economy. The forest-based indus-tries provide direct employment for 78, 000people with an annual payroll of $455. 000, 000,and supports employment of thousands of othersin related industries. Keeping Oregon's forestland in maximum production and maintaining ahealthy, progressive industry is in the interestof all Oregonians. Oregon State University'sSchool of Forestry and Forest Research Labor-atory are dedicated to this objective.

Page 40: Forest Products Industries