Miiy 10. 1922 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



29 



:%^ 



Southern 

 Hardwoods 





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RED GUM 



SAP GUM 



BLACK GUM 



TUPELO 



WHITE OAK 



RED OAK 



YELLOW POPLAR 



ASH, ELM 



CYPRESS 



HICKORY 



MAGNOLIA 



MAPLE, BEECH 



HOLLY 



BASSWOOD 



OT* the 



^amilacturGr 



THE NATIONALLY KNOWN brand, Long-Bell, 

 is found upon 15 kinds of hardwoods used indus- 

 trially. Two large modern band mills — one at Pine 

 Bluff, Arkansas, and one at Crandall, Mississippi — are 

 engaged exclusively in turning Southern hardwoods into 

 lumber to be used by furniture makers, automobile manu- 

 facturers, and by countless other industrial concerns, both 

 in America and abroad. 



Hardwood manufacturing with Long-Bell is a distinct 

 department. Its hardwoods, not only pass through ex- 

 clusive hardwood mills, through machinery designed es- 

 pecially for hardwood cutting, but these mills are super- 

 vised and manned by men whose entire training and 

 experience has been with hardwoods. 



The Pine Bluff mill cuts Oak, Ash. Elm, Cypress and 

 miscellaneous hardwoods. In conjunction with this mill 

 is the plant that produces the nationally known Long- 

 Bell Forked Leaf Oak Flooring. The Pine Bluff mill 

 operates in the famous Saline River Lowland District 

 where hardwoods are exceptionally fine. The Crandall. 

 Miss., mill operates in the Bucatanna Basin Region, also 

 noted for the high quality of its hardwoods. These hard- 

 wood plants produce more than one-quarter million feet 

 of hardwoods every day. Of this amount 170,000 feet 

 is Gum. 



All hardwoods produced by The Long-Bell Lumber 

 Company are identified with the brand. Long-Bell, which 

 is applied on one end of the lumber as it is manufactured. 



The T pnG-Ren. Lumber r. ompanii 



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K* iBTi hCAJt^&lKS CIT-V. MO 



