JO 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



July 



1921 



King Mill and Lumber Co. 



PADUCAH, KENTUCKY 



Manufacturers Southern Hardwoods 



Ash, Elm, Oak, Gum 

 Maple, Cypress, Hickory 



Cypress Shingles 



WE SHIP STRAIGHT OR MIXED CAR LOADS 



HARDWOODS and SHINGLES 



WE WANT TO SELL 



250,000 feet No. 3 and Better 1-inch mixed Gum 



$15.00 per 1,000 

 250,000 feet No. 3 and Better 1-inch mixed Oak 



$20.00 per 1,000 



This Stock is located at our mill at Reeves, La., is 



well manufactured, bone dry and in fine condition 



ALSO 



5 cars Gum dog boards, $5.00 per 1,000 



5 cars Oak dog boards, $5.00 per 1,000 



POWELL LUMBER CO. 



LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA 



JACKSON & TINDLE 



INCORPORATED 



Sales Office 

 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. 



Main Office 

 BUFFALO, N. Y. 



Complete stock of 

 Dry Northern Hardwoods 



HARD MAPLE 

 SOFT MAPLE 

 BASSWOOD 



BIRCH 



BEECH 



ELM 



UP-TO-DATE BAND MILLS Now OPERAT- 

 ING at PELLSTON and MUNISING, MICH. 



I N CS 



VENEER 



also 

 Re-drying 



PROCTOR y 

 SCHWARTZ 



PHILADELPHIA. PA. 



WARREN ROSS LUMBER GO. 



BAND MUX AND YARD. JAMESTOWN, N. T. 



We are running our mill continually, manufacturing all kinds 

 of Hardwoods, and maintain a complete stock here. We 

 ship direct from the mills all kinds of Northern & Southern 

 Hardwoods, also Mahogany. 



MISCELLANEOUS 



The Floronct' Table & Lumber Company, Memphis. Tenn., has changed 

 its name to the Florence Table & Manufacturing Company. 



Clarence Klrvcn is now the owner of the Commercial Hardwood Com- 

 pany at Shortleaf, Ala. 



The Elmore County Lumber Company has been incorporatetl at .Mont- 

 gomery. .Via., as has the H. O. Cook Luiiilier Company at Ilattiesburg, 

 Miss. 



C. L. Hitter of the C. L. Ritter Lumber Company and other tluutington, 

 W. Va., lumber companies, is at Battle Creek, Mich., where he recently 

 underwent an operation for appendicitis, and is reported improving satis- 

 factorily. 



The capital stock of the Mark II. Hrown Lumber Company. Memphis, 

 Tenn., has been increased to $200,000, and that of the C. R. Brewer 

 Lumber Company, Battle Ci-eek, Mich., to .$40,000. 



The Talge Mahogany Company of Indianapolis, Ind., has obtained a 

 charter to operate in Kentucky, with headquarters for that state In 

 Louisa, Ky. 



The Love Lumber Company has been incorporated at Hattlesburg, Miss., 

 with a capital of .$75,000. 



CHICAGO 



It. E. Hollowell of Spencer, Ind., was in Chicago a few days ago visiting 

 relatives and Incidentally picking up a few nice orders for northern and 

 southern hardwoods. While here Mr, Hollowell announced the change in 

 the name of his company, the Eel River Falls Lumber Company. Mr. 

 Hollowell and his partner. P. C. Pierson, recently decided to change the 

 name of the firm to Pierson-Hollowell and start an advertising campaign 

 which will put the new name before the trade. 



Edgar P. Allen, publicity director of the National Lumber Manufac- 

 turers' Association, left Chicago on July 23 for Tacoma, where he will 

 attend the board of directors' meeting on July 27. 



The office of the Natalby Lumber Company of Ilammon. La., has been 

 reopened in this city in charge of G. H. Fordham, who for the last two 

 years was manager of the Marathon Lumber Company at Laurel. Miss., and 

 for a number of years was sales manager for the old Mississippi Lumber 

 Company at Quitman, Miss. 



A party of several of the directors of the National Lumber Manufactur- 

 ers' Association left Chicago on July 23 bound for Tacoma, Wash., where 

 they will arrive on July 26 to participate in meetings of National board 

 of directors in Tacoma on July 27 and Seattle July 28 and 29 in connec- 

 tion with the meeting of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association. 



Among those who are expected to attend are: John H. Kirby, president 

 of the National ; Junius H. Browne, of the Pacific Lumber Company of New 

 York ; John L. Kaul. Southern Pine Association ; Charles S. Keith, South- 

 ern Pine Association ; W. L. Klnzel will represent R. B. Goodman, Northern 

 Hemlock and Hardwood Manufacturers' Association : G. E. Mattison, 

 Southern Pine Association ; A. L. Osborn, Northern Hemlock and Hard- 

 wood Manufacturers' Association ; W. L. Saunders. Michigan Hardwood 

 Manufacturers* Association : W. C. Sherman. Georgia-Florida Saw Mill 

 Association, and Frank G. Wisner, Southern Pine Association. 



The Chicago Lumbermen's Association is temporarily minus a hustling 

 president. N. C Mather, the president, being in the south investigating 

 manufacturing conditions. 



After having spent several days in Detroit, Grand Rapids and other 

 Michigan hardwood using centers. J. W. Welsh of the Welsh Lumber Com- 

 pany, Memphis, passed through Chicago en route home last week. He 

 stopped over a couple of days, during which he spread some optimism 

 relative to the demand from the furniture industry in the next few 

 months. This happy opinion was based on information obtained in the 

 north. 



Among the interesting visitors to Chicago last week was J. C. Knox, 

 of Cadillac, Mich., secretary of the Northern Hardwood Manufacturers' 

 Association. Mr. Knox came to Chicago on association business following 

 the successful fifteenth annual meeting in Detroit a few days before. He 

 was well and in an optimistic frame of mind. 



BUFFALO 



Interest iu the development of the Allegany State Park increases rap- 

 idly. It is not only expected to be a great game and outing center, but 

 under the lead of the College of Forestry of Syracuse University every 

 possible effort will be made to develop it as a timber-growing tract. The 

 land Is much more suitable for that than for farming, as the surface is 

 much broken and interspersed with rapid streams. An effort is being 

 made to interest all sorts of people through various civic societies. 



G. Elias & Bro. are continuing the turning out of airplanes for the 

 government and these are being found well suited to its needs. 



Frank T. Sullivan has now ended his vacation, which was spent on his 

 yacht "Flick," in the St. Lawrence River, but which was not far enough 



