20 



THE HARDWOOD RECORD. 



CHATTANOOGA 



GEORGE L.HUNT 



713 E. 4th Street 



CHATTANOOGA. TENN. 



Wholesale Dealer In 



HARDWOOD LUMBER 



CASE LUMBER CO. 



CHATTANOOGA, TENN 



Manufacturers 

 and dealers In 



HARDWOOD LUMBER 



High Grade Band Sawed Quartered Oak and 

 Poplar our Specialty. 



Write us, We Have the Lumber. 



THE FERD BRENNER 

 LUMBER CO. 



CHATTANOOGA, • TENN. 



Manufacturers and WholesBlers of 



HARDWOOD 

 LUHBER 



For Home and Export 

 Trade. 



f'e are in the market to buy 

 all Southern Hardwoods. Cor- 

 respondence solicited. 



son says that ttie outlook for next year is 

 very encouraging and that he, in fact, an- 

 ticipates one of the best years in the lum- 

 ber business. 



* * * 



Dissension among the stockholders in 

 the furniture manufacturing firm of Zan- 

 gerle & Peterson is responsible for the fil- 

 ing of a bill for a receivership for that in- 

 stitution and two suits for $50,000 dam- 

 ages each against the stockholders of 

 the concern. George Peterson and Joseph 

 Zangerle are working together against 

 Charles S. Theal and Frederick Koropp, 

 whom they charge with conspiring to take 

 control of their business. The company's 

 assets are beyond ?100,000, with very 



nominal liabilities. 



It * * 



llr. .James Richardson, of the firm of 

 Wm. Mallinson & Co., timber and veneer 

 merchants and importers of American 

 hardwoods of London, England, was in 

 the city last week, homeward bound. Ac- 

 cording to Mr. Richardson, the outlook is 

 some better in the English market, but 

 still plenty of room for improvement. 



GOTHAM GLEAin'NGS. 



(Special Correspondence.) 



New York, Dec. 5, 1904. 

 The following out-of-town hardwood 

 lumbermen were visitors during the fort- 

 ni.ght: Lewis Doster, secretary, Harwood 

 Manufacturers" Association of the United 

 States, Columbus, O.; R. L. Walkley, 

 Crosby & Beckley Company. New Haven, 

 Conn.; .T. S. Hoskins, J. S. Hoskins Lum- 

 ber Company, Baltimore. Md.; Hamilton 

 Love, Love, Boyd & Co., Nashville, Tenn.: 

 \V. H. .Mabie, McClure-Mabie Lumber Com- 

 liany, Mabie, W. Va.; W. Woodbury, 

 Cooper & Woodhury. Murphy, N. C; M. C. 

 Burns, Palen & Burns, Buffalo, N. Y.: 

 A. .1. Bond, Bradford, Pa.; Richard T. 

 Price, Price & Heald, Baltimore, Md.; 

 H. V. Curll, Curll & Evans Lumber Com- 

 i;any, Pittsburg, Pa.; Max Kosse, K. & P. 

 Lumber Company. Cincinnati. O.; George 

 .1. Barker, Wood, Barker Company, Boston, 

 .Mass.; F. W. Lawrence, Lawrence & Wig- 

 gin. Boston, Mass.; L. M. Morgan, Inter- 

 national Mahogany Company, Mobile, Ala.; 

 Hugh McLean, Hugh McLean Lumber 

 Company, Buffalo, N. Y.; Charles H. Bond, 

 E. W. Rathbun & Co., Oswego, N. Y.; 

 .1. M. Hastings, .T. M. Hastings Lumber 



J. M. CARD, Pre.-ildent 



S. H. CARD, Vice-President 



FRED ARN, Sec'y and Treas. 



J. M. CARD LUMBER CO. 



WHOLESALERS and EXPORTERS OF 

 HARDWOODS and YELLOW PINE 



Alembers o( 



National Lumber Exporters' Association 

 National Hardwood Lumber Association 



Chattanooga, Tenn. 



Company, Pittsburg, Pa.; F. C. Rice, Rice 

 & Lockwood Lumber Company, Spring- 

 field, Mass. 



* * * 



It has been announced that the annual 

 meeting and banquet of the National 

 Wholesale Lumber Dealers' Association 

 will occur at Philadelphia. Pa., on March 

 1 and 2 next, with headquarters in the new 

 Bellevue-Stratford Hotel, one of the hand- 

 somest and most modern hotels in the 

 country. The Quaker City having been 

 chosen, it is needless to say that that 

 good spirit and fellowship which has been 

 a strong feature of the Philadelphia trade 

 for many years will be much in evidence 

 in the entertainment of guests on that oc- 

 casion. 



* * » 



The large hardwood interests repre- 

 sented in the H. Herrmann Lumber Com- 

 pany, headquarters 254 Canal street, city, 

 and yards foot of Delancy street, have an- 

 nounced the leasing of a large piece of 

 property at 125th street and Harlem River, 

 to which they will remove one of their 

 down-town yards February 1. They will 

 also erect on this new property a modern 

 plant and dry kilns for the manufacture of 

 hardwood dimension stock, wood work, 

 etc., and will carry a full line of hardwood 

 lumber, which, together with the several 

 million feet constantly carried in their 

 down-town yard, will give them one of the 

 most complete lines of hardwood in the 



city. 



* * * 



Floyd E. Longvvell, lumber purchasing 

 agent of the National Casket Company, 

 Hoboken, N. J., has just been appointed 

 vicegerent snark for the Eastern District 

 of New York, to succeed A. R. Carr. The 

 position which Mr. Longwell occupies as 

 one of the largest lumber buyers In the 

 eastern states guarantees him a large and 

 enthusiastic following in local Hoo-Hoo 

 circles during the incumoency, and that 

 there will be something doing before the 

 good old summer time goes without say- 

 ing. 



* * * 



Much interest is already being mani- 

 fested in the annual banquet of the New 

 York Lumber Trade Association, which is 

 scheduled to take place at the Waldorf- 

 Astoria, this city, on the evening of Janu- 

 ary 18. A big attendance is assured, 

 which will include many out-of-town lum- 

 bermen, and as it is always one of the 

 most important happenings in association 

 circles each year, the evening in question 

 bids fair to witness a great time. 



* * * 



The Barr & Mills Company, large whole- 

 salers of Zanesville, O., have opened a 

 local ofllce in the Flat Iron Building, with 

 Samuel E. Barr in charge. They will 

 handle here a full line of stock with that 

 handled West, namely a full assortment 

 of all grades of spruce, hardwoods and 

 hemlock. They have secured the ex- 

 clusive sales agency for the United States 

 Spruce Lumber Company at Marion. Va., 



