44 



HARDWOOD RECORD 



January 10, 1018 



KILN DRIED 



1 & 2s Plain 

 RED or WHITE OAK 



No. 1 Common Plain 4/4 



INSPECTION AND MEASUREMENT AFTER 

 STOCK HAS BEEN THROUGH THE KILN 



Prompt shipment as lumber is now stored 

 in our tight kiln dried lumber warehouse 



Tennessee Oak Flooring Company 



NASHVILLE, TENN. 



WE FOUND A WAY TO SHIP 



/sternerX Our knowledge of supply, grades and 



c 



LUMBER CO 



shipping possibilities has enabled us to 

 supply some of our customers who feared 

 they could not get any. What are YOUR 

 needs in HARDWOODS? 



WE MANUFACTURE bandsawed, plain and quartar uwad 



WHITE AND RED OAK AND YELLOW POPLAR 



We mtke a specialty of Oak and Hickory Imple- 

 ment, Wagon and Vehicle Stock in the touch. 



-Yaur Inqulrlaa cotloltad- 



ARLINGTON LUMBER CO., Arliii«toii, Kentacky 



LENOX LUMBER 



Ready for immediate shipment, subject to prior 

 sale and government regulation 



Kentucky Soft Quartered White Oak 



5,000 ft 4/4 FAS. 



23,000 ft 4/4 No. 2 Common 



35,000 ft ZVi" to S'/a" Cleeu- Face Strips 



Kentucky Soft Plain White Oak 



50,000 ft 4/4 FAS. 



24,000 ft 4/4 Selects 



135,000 ft 4/4 No. 1 Common 



75,000 ft 4/4 No. 2 Common 



25,000 ft 4/4 Core Stock 



Kentucky Soft Plain Red Oak 



15,000 ft 4/4 FAS. 



10,000 ft 4/4 Selects 



30,000 ft 4/4 No. 2 Common 



Kentucky Chestnut 



12,000 ft 4/4 No. 1 Common 



30,000 ft 4/4 Sound Wormy 



Kentucky Miscellaneous 



50,000 ft 4/4 Log Run Beech 



25,000 ft 4/4 Log Run Gum 



25,000 ft 4/4 Log Run Maple 



Wire or write for delivered prices 



American Lumber & Mfg. Co. 



PITTSBURGH, PA. 



Mnjor Stave Company at Ashdown, have Joined the forest regiment for 

 service In France. 



Every officer and employe of the Fee-Crayton Hardwood Lumber Com- 

 pany, Dermott, has purchased a membership in the Red Cross, and some 

 of thoni bought more than one. 



The finishing plant of the Mount Olive Stave Company at BatesvlUe was 

 destroyed by fire on the night of December 24. The loss Is estimated at 

 $10,000, partially covered by Insurance, .\bout $2,000 worth of finished 

 material In the plant was also destroyed. More than 200 men employed 

 by the company will be thrown out of work until the plant can be rebuilt. 

 However, new machinery will be ordered at once, and the plant rebuilt 

 with as little delay as possible. 



=-< WISCONSIN >.= 



B. J. Glllouly, Mellen, Wis., has been commissioned a captain In the 

 Twentieth Engineers (Forestry) and is expected to be In France shortly 

 with a company of 250 men. Other Mellen men who are enlisted In this 

 service are Peter Trojahn, Archie McAllister, Hans Hanson and Archie 

 .Meredith. 



A son, the first-born, arrived at the home of Plerson Kneeland, treasurer 

 of the Kneeland-McLurg Lumber Company, Phillips, Wis., just before 

 Christmas. 



Capt. Leo Schoenhofen, formerly sales manager of the Langlade Lumber 

 Company, Antigo, Wis., and later a member of the Bissell Lumber Com- 

 pany, Marshfield, Wis., has returned from Camp MacArthur, Waco, Tex, 

 Capt. Schoenhofen was honorably discharged for physical disability. At 

 the entrance of the United States into the war he organized a company of 

 infantry in the northern part of Wisconsin and was given command. 



Lieut. Carlton Smith, vice-president of the Mcnasha Woodenware Com- 

 pany, Menasha, Wis., and son of the late Charles A. Smith, founder of the 

 company, has arrived in France, according to word just received bv cable. 

 Lieut. Smith was awarded his commission at the second officers' training 

 camp at Fort Sheridan, III., on November 15. 



Maj. Edward Scofleld, former governor of Wisconsin, has entered a 

 sanitarium at Milwaukee to take a long rest. M.aJ. Scofield's home is in 

 Oconto, Wis., but he has made his residence in Milwaukee for several 

 years. 



C. P. Mohr, president of the Mohr Lumber Company, Portage and Toma- 

 hawk, Wis., on December 31 celebrated his seventy-second birthday anni- 

 versary at his present home in Tomahawk. He still is hale and hearty and 

 is found at his ofl5ce at the mill every working day. 



John W. Clifford, a pioneer logger and lumberman of central Wisconsin, 

 died at his home in Stevens Point, Wis., on December 24, at the age of 

 fifty-eight years. He has been a sufferer from stomach trouble for several 

 months. 



Donald J. Murray, Jr., has resigned as superintendent of the Curtis & 

 Tale Company, Wausau, Wis., and on January 1 became associated with 

 .T. D. Mylrea in the foundry and machine shop business at Antigo, Wis. 

 lie is succeeded by Roscoe B. Young. Mr. Mylrea is secretary of the Lang- 

 lade Lumber Company, Antigo, and formerly was a leading citizen of 

 Wausau. 



Madison, Wis., is looking forward to the construction of from 400 to 

 500 homes for workmen during 1918, these being the minimum number 

 needed to accommodate the working forces In the industrial plants of the 

 capital city. Two large ordnance plants are being added and several other 

 Industries have recently located there, reQUiring hundreds of additional 

 workmen. 



The Mosinee Land, Log and Timber Company, Moslnee, Wis., started its 

 winter cut at the close of December, when the sawmill resumed operation 

 after a suspension of about six weeks, during which repairs were made and 

 the log supply replenished. 



The Northern Wood Products Company, Glldden, Wis., is erecting a 

 factory addition, which will be equipped to utilize every bit of material 

 formerly regarded as waste, in the manufacture of toys, knobs, etc. 



The Charles W. Fish Lumber Company, Elcho, Blrnamwood and Antigo, 

 Wis., has purchased two steam tractors of the creeper type for its logging 

 operations at Elcho and Blrnamwood. The three mills will do winter saw- 

 ing as log supplies become ample for continuous operations. 



The Mellen Lumlier Company, Mellen, Wis., has undertaken extensive 

 logging operations in the vicinity of Glldden, Wis. Four or five camps are 

 now kept busy maintaining an average input of 2,000,000 feet per month. 

 Most of the hardwood will go to the Northern Wood Products Company, 

 Glldden, and the Paine Lumber Company, Oshkosh, Wis. 



The Elk River Land & Lumber Company, Ladysmith, Wis., has been 

 organized by L. C. Streator, Glenn H. Williams and L. E. McGIlI to operate 

 In Sawyer, Rusk and Price counties. Wis. 



The Mandt Wagon Works, Stoughton, Wis., which recently completed 

 twenty new dry kilns, has started work on another battery of twenty kilns 

 to provide much-needed capacity for executing government and private 

 contracts for heavy wagons. The plant is part of the Moline Plow Com- 

 pany group. 



The T. F. Pagel Lumber Company. 3001 Fond du Lac avenue, Milwaukee, 

 has taken the contract for furnishing the maple flooring required for the 

 new twelve-story Milwaukee Athletic Club building, being erected at Mason 

 street and Broadway at a cost of $1,000,000. 



All Three of Us Will Be Benefited if You Mention HARDWOOD RECORD 



