28 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



June 25. 1921 



E. SONDHEIMER COMPANY 



MEMPHIS TENNESSEE 



Band mills at 

 BATON ROUGE, LA.; SONDHEIMER, LA.; TALLULAH, LA. 



Office and Distributing Y'ard 



MEMPHIS, TENN. 



Manufacturers of Southern Hardwoods 



Dry Stock, Ready for Shipment. Ask us for prices. We may be able to save you some money. 

 We specialize in genuine Tensas Basin Red Gum — best in the world. 



WHITE ASH 



I" to 4" FAS 10 cars 



I" No. I Common ..10 cars 



I '/a" No. I Common Scars 



j'/a" No. I Common 5 cars 



2" No. I Com. &. Btr 8 cars 



I", C/i", V/z" No. 2 Com.. 5 cars 



WrLLOW 



1x13" to (7" Box Bds I car 



1" FAS 10 cars 



I" No. I Common 10 cars 



I" No. 2 Common 10 cars 



\Va" No. 2 Com. &. Btr 10 cars 



I'/s" No. 2 Com. & Btr 10 cars 



2" No. 2 Com. & Btr....... 10 cars 



CYPRESS 



I" FAS I car 



I" Select I car 



1X4. 6. 8. 10, 12" No. I 0. 8 cars 

 1x4" to 12" No. 2 Common.. 5 cars 



V/i" Select & Shop 8 cars 



2" Pecky 2 cars 



2x6" No. I & No. 2 Com 2 cars 



2" FAS 2 cars 



10/4" Select & Btr 2 cars 



3" Select 4 Btr I car 



4" Select & Btr I car 



10/4" No. I Com. & Btr 2 cars 



8/4" Log Run Scars 



3" Log Run 2 cars 



QTD. FIG. RED GUM 



("No. 1 Common I car 



aUARTERED WHITE OAK 



5/8" No. I Common I car 



I" No. I Common 5 cars 



PLAIN RED GUM 



5/8" No. I Com. & Btr 8 cars 



3/4" No. I Com. & Btr 5 cars 



I" FAS 3 cars 



I" No. I Common 8 cars 



I" No. 2 Common 5 cars 



5/4" FAS 5 cars 



5/4" No. I Common 10 cars 



QUARTERED SAP GUM 



I" No. ) Com. & Btr 15 cars 



2" No. I Com. & Btr 8 cars 



3" No. I Com. & Btr 2 cars 



QUARTERED RED OAK 



I" FAS 3 cars 



I" No. I Common 5 cars 



I" No. 2 Common 5 cars 



5/4" No. I Com. & Btr 5 cars 



QUARTERED RED GUM 

 I " FAS 5 cars 



I" No. I Common 10 



MA" & t'V No. I C. & B. 3 

 2Vi" 4. 3" No. I C. 4 B . 4 



PLAIN RED OAK 



I" FAS 3 



I" No. I Common 15 



I" Sound Wormy 5 



\" No. 2 4 3 Common 10 



5/4" No. I Com. & Btr. . , 3 



PLAIN WHITE OAK 



5/8" No. I Common I 



5/8" No. 2 Common I 



3/4" No. ( Common 1 



I" No. I Common 10 



I" No. 2 Common 5 



PLAIN SAP GUM 



5/8" No. I Com. 4 Btr 12 



3/4" No. I Com. 4 Btr 5 



4/4" FAS 10 



4/4" No. I Common 15 



4/4" No. 2 Common 10 



5/4" FAS 10 



5/4" No. I Common 15 



5/4" No. 2 Common 5 



MAGNOLIA 

 I" No. I & No. 2 3 



cars 

 cars 

 cars 



cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 



car 



car 



car 



cars 



cars 



cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 

 cars 



past year or more he has been in business tor himself handling southern 

 hardwoods on commission, representing some of the most substantial firms 

 In the South. Mr. Utiey is well known in Chicago and assumed his new 

 duties with the good wishes of many friends. 



The Chicago olBce of the Chicago Lumber & Coal Company is at 427 

 Marquette building. 



DeCamp Joins J. C. West Sales Force 



The large industrial 

 and consuming trade 

 in the middle west 

 will no doubt be inter- 

 ested in the announce- 

 ment that E. W. De- 

 Camp, who has been 

 with such large manu- 

 facturing firms as M. 

 B. Farrin Lumber 

 Company, Cincinnati ; 

 the .-Vmerican Column 

 & Lumber Company, 

 Columbus, Ohio, and 

 the Thos. Hall Lum- 

 ber Company. Charles- 

 ton, W. Va., has 

 Joined the sales force 

 of J. C. West Lumber 

 Company, with exten- 

 sive mill connections 

 in West Virginia and 

 the South, and with 

 their principal sales 

 office in the Union 

 Central building, Cin- 

 cinnati. Ohio. 



Mr. DeCamp needs 

 no introduction to the 

 trade on account of 

 his wide acquaintance and high standing among the largest consumers of 

 lumber in the middle west. Mr. DeCamp started In the lumber business 

 back in 1905 and is thoroughly familiar with all phases of the business 

 from the stump to the consumer. He will continue to make his head- 

 quarters at 419 West NaVarre street. South Bend, Ind., from which point 

 he will cover the middle west territory. 



E. W. DeCamp 



.Vt iht.' present time Mr. DeCamp is spending ten days or two weeks with 

 .Mr. West at their different West Virginia mill connections, and after July 

 4 will be making a bid for his share of the business in the trade mentioned. 



J. C. West Lumber Company, unlike a great many other manufacturers 

 and wholesalers, have enjoyed a reasonable amount of success, even dur- 

 ing the lean months of 1921, and are sufficiently optimistic on the future 

 to add to its sales force rather than curtail expenses or sit still and wait 

 for the tide to turn. 



Robert T. Cooper Succiunbs to Operations 



Robert T. Cooper, president and treasurer of the West Memphis Lum- 

 ber Company, was buried in Calvary Cemetery June 17. Funeral services 

 were conducted from the residence on Poplar avenue. 



Mr. Cooper died ^\^lnesday, June 15, following operations for appendi- 

 citis and stomach trouble. He had been ill for a number of weeks. It was 

 decided several days ago to operate for appendicitis and, owing to failure 

 of the first operation to furnish relief, another was decided on after a 

 hasty consultation. He did not rally from this. 



Mr. Cooper was forty years old and bad been engaged in the lumber 

 business at Memphis for seventeen years. He came to this city from Grand 

 Rapids. Mich., with the old Memphis Band Mill Company, and remained 

 with this company practically all the years he was in Memphis except a 

 brief period spent in the employ of the Kennedy Heading Company, and 

 the last two years during which he was at the head of the West Memphis 

 Lumber Company, which he organized. 



Mr. Cooper, although comparatively a young man. was one of the most 

 active members of lumber organizations in Memphis. He was a former 

 secretary and director of the Lumbermen's Club of Memphis and he was 

 one of the leading spirits in the formation of the Southern Hardwood 

 Tratfic .\ssociation. He was very popular with the lumber fraternity, as 

 well as in business and social circles generally, and his death is deplored 

 by all. 



Mr. Cooper is survived by his wife, Mrs. Eva Fopiana Cooper ; by his 

 parents. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Cooper. Spring Lake, Mich., and by three 

 brothers, Peter and Sabe Cooper of Grand Rapids and George Cooper of 

 Memphis. 



The following is a list of the active and honorar.v pall-bearers selected 

 from among the personal friends of the deceased : Active — Ben H. Carr, 

 W. L. Wilcoxen, Will Pollard, J. D. Brown. George McSweyn, F. T. 

 Dooley, Eugene Wade and C. E. Van Camp. Honorary — J. M. Pritchard, 

 W. M. Kenne<ly. J. F. McSweyn. J. R. McFadden, Ralph May, Paul Rush, 

 J. H. Townshend and H. M. Spain. 



Founder of Ganahl Company Dies 



Word has been received in St. Louis, Mo., telling of the death in Corona, 



