September 25, 1919 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



51 



DRY STOCK Ready for Immediate 



Snipment. Straigkt Grades Guaranteed 



GUM 



4/4" 1st & 2d3 Red 85,437' 



4/4" 1st & 2ds Sap 2.'>8,784' 



4/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel. Red. 142,859' 

 4/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel. Sap. 289,144' 



4/4" No. 2 Com. Sap 223,222' 



5/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel. Red 7,35U' 



5/4" No. 3 Com. Sap 11,006' 



1x9-12" Box Boards 22,800' 



1x13-17" Box Boards 21,305' 



4/4" No. 2 Com. Red 27,428' 



5/4" No. 2 Com. Sap 74,049' 



6/4" 1st & 2ds Sap 2,347' 



6/4" No. 1 Com. Sap 2.512' 



6/4" No. 2 Com. Sap 2.375' 



LOUISIANA CYPRESS 



4/4" 1st & 2ds 21,429' 



4/4" Select 61,428' 



4/4" No. 1 Shop 132,428' 



4/4" No. 1 Com 96.246' 



6/4" 1st & 2ds 23,241 ' 



6/4" Select 21,708 ' 



6/4" No. 1 Shop 20,401' 



6/4" No. 1 Com 15,300' 



6/4" No. 2 Com 10,300' 



8/4" No. 2 Com 22,493 ' 



8/4" No. 1 Shop 10.512' 



MISSISSIPPI ELM 



8/4" Log Run 12.428 ' 



12/4" Log Run 4,580' 



6/4" Log Run 37,116' 



BED OAK 



4/4" No. 1 C. & Sel. Mxd.. .147,462' 



4/4" 1st & 2ds 123,424' 



4/4" No. 2 Com 41.003' 



8/4" 1st & 2ds 1,500' 



10/4" FAS & 30% No. 1 Com. 



& Sel 36,987' 



3/4" No. 3 Com 13,425 ' 



6/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel. Plain. 



30% PAS, 707o White. 10.000' 



4/4" No. 2 Com. & Btr., 8' Tie 



Siding 24,196' 



5/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel 11.249' 



5/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel. Wh. 11,041' 



LOUISIANA WHITE ASH 



5/4" No. 2 Com 15,330' 



6/4" No. 2 Com 7.741 ' 



8/4" No. 2 Com 3,773' 



5/4" No. 3 Com 34,724' 



8/4" No. 3 Com 3,850' 



COTTONWOOD 



4/4" No. 1 Com. & Sel 12,000' 



1x7-17" Box Boards 780' 



4/4" No. 2 Com 5,320' 



8/4" Dog Boards 500' 



6/4" & 8/4" Dog Boards 



CYPRESS 46,200' 



ELM 7.440' 



GUM 11,328' 



Clean Dealing 

 is Our Business 

 Policy. 



Aberdeen Lumber Co. 



MANUFACTURERS AND WHOLESALERS 



PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA 



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



of the circular tvpe. Mr. McCammon has been engaged in the ship build- 

 ing business since the beginning of the war, but will complete his contract 

 with the Emergenc.v Fleet Corporation early in October when he launches 

 two barges converted from Ferris type hulls. 



The Sabine Tram Lumber Company has increased its capital stock from 

 $10,000 to $100,000 and will devote a large part of its time to hardwood. 

 The company, which was the wholesale end of the Sabine Tram Company 

 before the sale of that property to the Peavy-Moore Lumber Company 

 of Shreveport, La., has a contract to handle the output of the Beaumont 

 Shingle & Lumber Company and a number of small mills in the Texas- 

 Louisiana belt. C. E. Walden. who will have direct management of the 

 company, stated that it would be the company's object to push southern 

 hardwoods. Mr. Walden says that due largely to the fact that northern 

 consumers were first .supplied with hardwood from Tennessee and Ken- 

 tucky, more southern hardwoods had been discounted in certain sections 

 without any reason. The erection of new hardwood mills in many sections 

 where pine has been cut should greatly increa.se the output and cause an 

 effort to be made to find new markets. 



The Sabine Tram Company has announced that it will not offer for 

 sale any part of its 107,000 acres of land in Jasper, Newton and Orange 

 counties which was retained when it disposed of its timber holdings to the 

 Peavy-Moore company. The company will stock it with cattle and sheep 

 until' it has had sufficient time to exploit the mineral resources. The 

 Peavy-IMoore company has fifteen years in which to remove the timber. 



A. C. McFarlane & Co., Orange, have been awarded the contract for the 

 construction of new wharf and dock facilities which have been designed 

 with the view of accommodating lumber exporters. The consideration of the 

 contract awarded was $51,946. 



II. G. Pattee, for several years traffic manager for the Sabine Tram Com- 

 pany, has accepted a similar position with the Peav.v-Moore Lumber Com- 

 pany of Shreveport and will move to that city. Mr. Pattee has been 

 president of the Beaumont Traffic Club for the past year. 



W. H. Stark has returned to his home in Orange after an extended trip 

 to the northern part of the United States and southern Canada. 



Ben S. Woodhead and family have returned from a month's outing in 

 California. 



B. B. Hall, sa;es manager of the Sabine Tram Lumber Company, is spend- 

 ing two weeks in the north Texas oil fields. 



WISCONSIN 



Lee Brothers, operating a mill at Rhinelander, have resumed operations 

 after having been at a standstill for the past six weeks due to the in- 



ability of obtaining sufficient lumber. They are hopeful of running stead- 

 ily, full force, throughout the winter and well into next summer, as they 

 have the assurance of a daily delivery of logs, mostly hardwood and 

 hemlock. 



At the annual meeting of the Central Wisconsin Loggers' Association, 

 held at Wausau, recently, J. D. Mylrea, Wausau, was elected president ; 

 Ray McQuillan, Antigo, vice-president ; H. C. Smith, Rhinelander, secre- 

 tary, and G. B. Heinemann, Wausau, treasurer. Considerable discussion 

 was devoted to the question as to the amount of logging that should be 

 done the coming winter, due to scarcity of labor and the high cost of 

 labor. A great difference of opinion was manifest, but it is expected that 

 the cut will be an average one. 



The display and exhibit of "Old Faithful" hemlock timber of the North- 

 ern Hemlock and Hardwood Manufacturers' Association, at the Wisconsin 

 State Fair, held at Milwaukee, September 8-13, attracted wide attention 

 among local and visiting home owners, architects, contractors and farm- 

 ers. Well finished samples of the wood, appealing to the very classes of 

 buyers sought to be reached, were on display. 



The Langlade Lumber Company, Antigo, foreseeing the possibilities of a 

 well-planned and distinctive trade-mark, has adopted one in the shape 

 of a monogram. The company plans to use it hereafter in all its adver- 

 tising, on its letterheads, circulars, price lists and other printed matter. 

 The land department of the Langlade Lumber Company was recently 

 awarded first prize tor having on display the largest head of cabbage at 

 the county fair. The cabbage was the product of land recently sold by 

 the company to a farmer in that vicinity. 



The Riverside Fibre & Paper Company of Appleton, at receiver's sale, 

 bought the property of the Montreal River Lumber Company, which In- 

 cluded the saw mill, planing mill, yard and railroad belonging to the com- 

 pany at Saxon, Wis., and its timber holdings in Gogebic county, Mich., 

 for a consideration of $160,000. 



The Wisconsin Textile Manufacturing Company, Two Rivers, will erect 

 a large factory addition at Main and Bridge streets. 



The Badger Wood Products Company, Shawano, has recently been or- 

 ganized and incorporated with a capital stock of $10,000 to engage in the 

 manufacture of chairs, tables, etc. The incorporators of the new com- 

 pany are R. V. Steele, L. F. Huddman and A. S. Humphrey. 



The Priestley Lumber Company, Milwaukee, wholesale lumber dealer, 

 has filed amendments to articles of incorporation, increasing the capital 

 from $10,000 to $'20,000. 



The Wind River Lumber Company, La Crosse, has filed amendments to 



