May 10, 1919 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



39 



Dry Stock Ready for Immeciiate SKip- 

 ment. Straight Grades Guaranteed 



30.302' 

 13.313' 

 45.594' 

 14,165' 

 33.915 

 75.216' 

 90.492' 

 14.263' 

 300' 

 11.300 

 2I.07S' 

 12.147 

 49.478' 



GUM 



1x13—17" Sap Gum Box 

 1x9—12" Sap Gum Box 

 1" PAS. Red 

 1" No. 1 Com. & Sol., Bed 

 1" No. 2 Com. Red 

 5/4" FAS. Bed 

 5/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel., Bed 

 6/4" FAS. Qtd. Bed 

 8/4" No. 1 Com.. Qtd. Red 

 4/4" No. 1 C. & Sel. Qtd. Rod 

 6/4" No. 1 C. & Sel.. Qtd. Bed 

 1x13" & up FAS. Sap 

 1" FAS. Sap 



1" No. 1 Com. & Sel.. Sap 

 1" No. 2 Com.. Sap 

 1" No. 3 Cora.. S'ap 

 5/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel.. Sap 

 5/4" No. 2 Com., Sap 

 6/4" No. 2 Com., Sap 

 6/4" No. 3 Com.. Sap 

 YELLOW CVTRESS 

 4/4" FAS 

 4/4" Sel. 

 4/4" Shop 

 4/4" No. 1 Com. 

 4/4" No. 2 Com. 

 5/4" Shop 

 5/4" No. 1 Cor^ 

 5/4" No. 2 Com. 

 6/4" No. 1 Com. 

 C/4" No. 2 Com. 

 J/4" FAS 

 8/4" Shop 

 8/4" No. 1 Com. 



37.493' 8/4" No. 2 Com. 

 11.019' 10/4" Shop 

 15,012' 10/4" No. 1 Com. 

 4.516' 10/4" No. 2 Com. 

 7.350' 12/4" FAS 

 16,770' 12/4" Sel. 



COTTONWOOD 

 32.425' 1x9-12" Box Bds.. 40% 11", 12" 

 49.354' 1x6—12" FAS 

 13.400' 5/8" No. 1 Com. & Btr. 



3.800' 5/4" FAS 

 13.520' 4/4" No. 3 Com. 



HACKBERRT 

 73.370' 1" Nos. 2 & 3 Com 

 8,250'S/4" Log Kun. largely No. 2 C. 



HONEY LOCUST 

 27.400' 6/4" Lob Bun 

 TUPELO 

 110.350' 1" No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 17.240' 1" No. 2 Com. & Sel. 

 12.800' 1" No. 3 Com. & Sel. 



FIGURED RED GUM 

 26,241' 1" No. 1 Cora. & Sel. Plain 



•BED OAK 

 73.126 ft. 1" FAS 

 121,062 ft I" No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 119.007 ft 1" No. 2 Com. 

 266.149 ft. 1" No. 3 Cora. 

 132.147 tu 8/4 No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 26.092 ft. 8/4 No. 2 Com. 

 87.987 ft. 10/4 FAS 

 92,096 ft. 10/4 No. 1 Com. & Sel 



PECAN HICKOBY 

 26.300 ft. 1" Log Bun 



144.190 ft. 8/4 Log Bun 

 11.650 ft. 10/4 Log Run 

 10,143 ft. 12/4 Log Kun 



MISSISSIPPI ELM 

 57.116 ft. 6/4 Log Run 

 39.142 ft. 6/4 No. 2 Com. 

 46,992 ft. 8/4 Log Run 

 34,414 ft. 12/4 Log Run 



QUARTER SAWN BLACK GUM 

 11,421 ft. 8/4 FAS 

 19.140 ft 8/4 No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 13.291 ft. 8/4 No. 2 Com. 

 12.146 ft. 1" Log Run. Plain 

 WHITE CANE ASH 



8.141 ft. 1" Log Bun 

 55.142 ft 1" No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 54,296 ft. 1" No. 2 Com. 

 14,283 ft 1" No. 3 Com. 



8/4 DOG BOARDS— SMALL % 6/4 

 11,261 ft Cypress 



7.440 ft Elm 

 23.280 ft Sap Gum 

 33.860 ft. Sycamore 

 23.040 ft. Hackberry 



3,840 ft. Ash 

 12,196 ft. Tupelo 



SYCAMOBE 

 59.403 ft. 6/4 FAS 

 104.937 ft. 6/4 No. 1 Com. & Sel. 

 60.528 ft 1" No. 2 Com. 

 19.249 ft. 5/4 No. 2 Com. 

 48.104 ft 6/4 No. 2 Com. 

 12.146 ft 6/4 No. 3 Com. 

 13.107 ft. 4/4 No. 3 Com. 



Clean Dealing 

 is Our Business 

 Policy. 



Aberdeen Lumber Co. 



MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALERS 



PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA 



FIVE MILLS: Ten Million Feet on Sticks, Oak, Gum, Cypress, Cottonwood, Sycamore, Elm 



The A. G. Sharp Lumber Company, Youngstown, has been incorporated 

 ■with a capital of $250,000 by A. G. Sharp, Philip Vogelberger, G. J. Frank, 

 A. K. Kepner and E. A. Jones. 



The strike of mill workers at about a half dozen establishments In 

 Columbus April 26 has not yet been settled. Negotiations between the 

 strikers and their employers carried on during the past week failed to 

 produce an agreement. The men are demanding 60 cents per hour, instead 

 of 45 cents, and a reduction from 54 to 48 hours per week. 



The report of the city building department for April shows that there 

 were 402 permits issued, haying a valuation of $585,305, as compared 

 with 272 permits and a valuation of $442,060 in April, 1918. For the 

 first four months of the year the department issued 959 permits, having a 

 valuation of $1,561,705, as compared with 638 permits and a valuation of 

 $1,057,895 in the corresponding period in 1918. 



CINCINNATI 



The public is beginning to realize that It is futile to wait longer for 

 prices on building material to decline. After receiving a report from the 

 committee appointed to ascertain the probability of a reduction in the 

 cost of material and labor so that building might be stimulated. Mayor 

 Galvin said : "The time to build is now. The cost of material and of 

 labor seems to be as low as it is likely to be for several years. Wages 

 probably will go up, and consequently there is little chance of a material 

 reduction below the present price of building." 



May 5 suit was filed in the United States District Court by the Balti- 

 more & Ohio Railroad Company against the W. E. Hayes Lumber Com- 

 pany, Cincinnati, for recovery of $3,039 with interest from August 3, 1918, 

 alleged to be due as demurrage on cars of lumber. 



At the meeting of the Lumbermen's Club of Cincinnati on May 5 the 

 following oflicers were elected for the ensuing year : President, Miles J. 

 Byms ; first vice-president, J. R. O'Neill ; second vice-president, George 

 Hand ; secretary, E. J. Thoman, and treasurer, J. W. Graham. The Pine 

 Plume Lumber Company and Dibert, Stark & Brown Cypress Company have 

 been elected to membership in the club. 



INDIANAPOLIS 



A fire of unknown origin destroyed the entire stock room and part of 

 the crating room of the South Bend Toy Works, South Bend, Ind. The 

 loss is placed at $10,000. 



A new $350,000 kitchen cabinet factory is to be built for the Showers 

 Brothers Company, Bloomington, Ind. Ground is being staked off at the 

 new location, and as soon as the blue prints and general plans are finally 



passed on the Showers company will proceed with the building. This will 

 make another large addition to its already mammoth plant. 



J. Victor Pinnell, owner of the Home Lumber Company of Kokomo, has 

 recently become the owner of the Galveston and Walton plants of the 

 Indiana Lumber Company. The acquisition of these new plants makes 

 Mr. Pinnell the proprietor of five separate lumber yards in this vicinity. 

 As soon as the work of taking the inventory is completed the yards will 

 be taken over by the new management. 



Among Indianapolis manufacturing concerns which are beginning to 

 feel a reawakening of business activity is the Aetna Cabinet Company, the 

 largest local manufacturer of office, store and bank fixtures. The manager 

 of the company, V. H. Rothley, states that the factory is running prac- 

 tically at capacity, and that the demand for its product is steadily on the 

 incline. The firms needing the commodity made by the Aetna company 

 are now coming on the market for goods, and the business which was slack 

 during the war period is showing a marked improvement. 



According to James A. Daugherty, president and general manager of 

 Irvln Robbins & Co., Indianapolis, the revival of the closed body business 

 In the automobile Industry has made unusual progress since the signing 

 of the armistice. Mr. Daugherty has recently returned from Detroit and 

 Cleveland and reports that in the last sixty days he has contracted for 

 more than $800,000 worth of sedan and coupe bodies. The plant is now 

 operating at near capacity and within the next month production will 

 reach its maximum, with sufficient orders to operate at that rate until next 

 February. 



EVANSVILLE 



At the May 13 meeting of the Bvansville Lumbermen's Club plans for 

 the annual summer outing of the club on the Ohio river will be mapped 

 out by the entertainment committee. This will be the last regular business 

 meeting of the club until next September, as adjournment for the summer 

 will be taken after the June outing. 



The Blount Plow Company announced recently that it had purchased 

 and will operate the plant ot the Hartman Manufacturing Company at 

 Vlncennes. The Blount company and the Hartman company have had a 

 working agreement for some time. The Vlncennes plant makes cultivators, 

 plows and other agricultural Implements. 



Carl Wolflin, son of Charles A. Wolflin, manager of the Wolflin West 

 Side Lumber Company, has received his discharge from the United States 

 army and is now connected with the government aviation plant at Niles, 

 O., holding a most promising position with every promise of an early 

 promotion. 



The Union Building Company, Gary, with a capital stock of $50,000, has 



