46 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



July 2.-,. l(ll!> 





The Name Behind the Lumber 



Bthind even puce of [pnft-BCH 



l.,/t,l»r ll.rr» .» mi.r.- chli. li'C, ,.J'> ol 

 liiiiib<-i rxiwnencc an.l more fhjn J sjuanci 

 ijf 3 ccn.uiv ori..ml>rf niill.nt; l-.tofvcry 

 (Jiocr ol out prikJuit i;oo out entire rcptjia- 

 ttun. lircaiisr »vc brand Ckcry pitxc "itti out^ 

 irjJc MurkiJ nj.nc- 



pany of Eau Claire, Wis., has just returned after a business trip to the 

 different mills in Wisconsin. 



A. C. Quixley and family enjoyed a pleasant automobile trip through 

 southern Wisconsin. 



The Galloway-Pease Company has resumed operations of its mill at 

 Poplar Bluff, Mo. 



Clarence Boyle, Sr., and fandly are enjoying an automobile trip through 

 Indiana. 



Theodore Fathauer has returned from a business trip to Helena, Ark. 

 Numerous improvements have been made in his mill, which has again 

 resumed operations, 



J. B. Dtley and Glenn II. Ilolloway have gone to Clayton, La., where 

 one of their mills is situated. 



S. C. Bennett has returned from a business and pleasure trip to Wis- 

 consin. 



F. M. Baker of the Hardwood Mills Lumber Company has an.swered 

 the call of the Militia Reserve Corps. 



II. F. Arncmann has returned from a business trip to Radford, Va. 



Park Richmond and family are enjoying their summer cottage located at 

 Lake Kejonsa, Wis. 



Charles Gill of the Gill-Andrews Lumber Company and R. W. Fullerton, 

 president of the Bradley Lumber Company, Warren, Ark. ; Scot Chambers, 

 representing the H. E. Worden Lumber Company of Oshkosh, Wis., and 

 J. N. Okeneski, connected with the Pioneer Lund)er Company, Minneapolis, 

 were among the recent visitors in Chicago. 



>j„„lj..Turrr .t 

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X>' I .".L <•'" 



Stivlhrrn Ptnr. Htir4u^nJ, DaL 

 FUtr^nif Crrui'itni l.titHlirr 

 Tia n»(i. ft-'M. PJiiiu at.J 

 .M'uurf HlxU 



n<B=^®M. 



Willi I .^ nulls anJ lumbtT oi.inu- 



faflnniii; pljnt*. nrry ■tnr --.I'lipix-'! 'viiK 

 ihr Ij.i "..f.l .n lumtK. nuk.ni; nu.l.-ncry. 

 <i isoi.t prulc i.ipr.Hliiii J* ncf\^ u pcrtrtt 

 pt(Hll<|l .!> I( 11 )l>ll)1JFllv p<j»iti'r !•> >iijLc 



Wr 3.1.1 1.) .1111 cjiiipTiiiii 1 riiiu) aJhi-fenn- 

 I.. ir'J'I'iii; •■■'^-' •">•' J "■J-'iunjiiic o1 «- 

 (tini. »iji..bfd. u( .»url.<iijn,hi|i 



A>k yoar tit-irr for iPttftACU Brand 



THe T ono-ReLL T umber ComRamj 



R. ^ LONG BLDG KANSAS CITV. MO 



Introducing You to 



the Lumber Users oi Your 



Community 



Here is a reproduction of one of our full page 

 advertisements that appeared recently in maga- 

 zines that circulate in every community in the 

 United States. It has been read by thousands 

 of lumber users — lumber users all living within 

 the trade territory of some retail lumberman. 

 All our advertising carries the line : ASK 

 YOUR DEALER FOR 



T pne-ReLL 



The Itlark on Quality Lumber 



LUMBER 



They carry a message to every reader that all 

 Long-Bell products have outstanding quality. 

 Did you ever stop to think that if you were a 

 dealer in l ono-Reu. lumber that these widely 

 read advertisements would serve as a guide to 

 your lumber yard? The name lJ>n2=B£!A and 

 LUMBER are becoming synonymous. Deal- 

 ers in that brand are coming to have a tre- 

 mendous advantage — an asset that cannot be 

 overestimated. 



THe T onG-ReLi^ T umber C ompanvi 



R. A. Loi^g Bldg., Kansas City, Mo. 



OUR PRODUCTS: 



Southern Pine Lumber, Oak, Oak Flooring, Gum, Creosoted 



Lumber, Creosoted Posts, Poles, Piling, Ties and 



Wood Blocks, California While Pine 



BUFFALO 



The Buffalo Lumber Exchange held its first outing of the season on July 

 22, making a tour of Grand Island and spending an enjoyable day. The 

 start was made at 10 .-30 a. ni. from the dock of the Betts Lumber Com- 

 pany, with luncheon served not long after the trip began. Stops were 

 made at Eagle Park, Edgewater and finally in the Buffalo Launch Club 

 for a beefsteak dinner. The baseball and other games proved as interesting 

 as usual, and the program was enlivened by songs led liy M. S. Burns and 

 C. W. McMahon. 



Taylor & Crate have moved a large amount of lumber from their Missis- 

 sippi plant lately, finding the demand excellent and the car supply very 

 good. They have not run the Mississippi mills this summer, because the 

 tract of timber to be worked up is some distance away and the mills will 

 be moved before starting up. 



Buffalo builders are working away with energy this summer and the 

 number of permits continues to break records. The aggregate costs of 

 buildiuKs arc nun-h ahead of last year and will, in all probability, keep 

 ahead liuring the i-emainder of the year. 



William W. Reilley. who is the globetrotter of the Buffalo hardwood 

 trade, having seen most of the world's interesting places, is spending six 

 weeks in the Yellowstone Park, Glacier National Park ami Alaska. 



A. J. Chestnut has gone to his old summer camping ground at Mount 

 Vernon, N. IL, where he won a silver cup in a golf tournament. 



The Mark Cummings Lumber Company has been organized here and 

 an oflSce has been taken at 388 Ellicott Square. Mr. Cummings has 

 returneil after nine years absence. He was formerly well known to the 

 hardwood trade here, having been connected with the office of the Hugh 

 McLean Lundier Company. He will represent a number of concerns here 

 and will sell on his own account. One of the companies on the list is the 

 Mowbray & Robinson Company, Cincinnati, which he has represented for 

 several years. 



A new thirty-.story office building is projected for this city by W. .7. Con- 

 ners, proprietor of the Buffalo Courier and Buffalo Enquirer. He has 

 obtained permission of the city council for the erection of this structure 

 on the ground now^ occupied by his newspapers. Twenty-one stories will 

 be devoted to oflici's. The cost of the building, which will be the tallest 

 in the city, will be $1.-^00,000 or more. 



Charles N. Perrin is spending most of this month on a vacation in the 

 Temaganii territor.v, Canada, and will do a good deal of fishing. 



Mayor Buck and two other leading citizens have returned from Wash- 

 ington, where they went to promote the taking over of the Curtiss aero- 

 plant plant by the government. The mayor reported that the war depart- 

 ment was quite desirous of this being done. The plant is idle at present, 

 but it is expected to start up actively soon, having taken a large order 

 for planes. It seems likely that the government will decide to take over 

 and operate the plant. 



The mill of the Hugh McLean Lumber Company at Memphis is running 

 again after being closed for a time because of the lack of logs. It has 

 plenty of orders on hand. 



O. E. Yeagcr and Councilman A. W. Kn-inheder have rrtinned from a 

 short fishing trip to the north shore of Lake Erie, from which good success 

 i.s reported. 



PITTSBURGH 



Pennsylvania is arranging to eject all squatters from state forest lands 

 without further delay. The state has offered to the Pennsylvania Game 

 Commission about 10,000 acres of forest tracts, which will likely be 

 accepted this week. 



The Dravo Contracting Company of this city has submitted a bi.l of 



