HARDWOOD RECORD 



WISCONSIN 



3 Cars 1" No. 3 Soft Elm 

 5 Cars iVz' No. 3 Soft Elm " 



2 Cars 1" Is and 2s Birch 



3 Cars 2" Is and 2s Hard 

 Maple 



10 Cars 5 4" No. 2 Common 

 and Better Birch 



Gill-Dawley Lumber Co. 



Wausau, Wis. 



BAND SAWED WISCONSIN HARDWOODS 



Dry Stock For Prompt Shipment 



20 M 

 30 M 

 15M 

 25. VI 

 lOM 

 20 M 

 13M 

 15M 

 15M 



lOM 



Our 



BASSWOOD 



4/4 No. 3 common 

 1x4 No. 2 and 3 common 

 5/4 No. 1 com. and better 

 5/4 No. 1 common 

 5/4 No. 2 common 

 5/4 No. 3 common 

 6/4 Ist and 2nd 

 6/4 No. 1 common 

 6/4 No. 3 common 

 WHITE OAK 

 8/4 No. 1 and No. 2 com. 



ItllU'H 



TOM 4/4 No. 1 com. & bet. plain 

 lOOM 4/4 No. 1 com. & bet. red 

 5M 5/4 Ist and 2nd red 

 lOM 5/4 No. 1 common red 

 OM 5/4 No. 1 common plain 

 3M 6/4 1st and 2nd plain 

 13M 6/4 1st and 2nd red 

 4M 8/4 Ist and 2nd plain 

 6M 8/4 1st and 2nd red 

 ROCK ELM 

 50M 8/4 No. 2 com. and better 

 HARD MAPLE 

 40M 8/4 No. 2 common and better 

 1914 rut of well assarted HARDWOODS AND HEMLOCK will 

 soon be iji ghippine condition. 

 ^end us your inquities 



ARPIN HARDWOOD LUMBER COMPANY 



Grand Rapids, Wis. ATLANTA, WIS. 



Saw mills and planing mill at Atlanta. Wisconsin. 



The Tegge Lumber Co. 



High Grade 



Northern and Southern 



Hardwoods and Mahogany 



Specialties 



OAK, MAPLE, CYPRESS, POPLAR 

 Milwaukee, Wisconsin 



at the plant in about a montb. The company's planing mill is operating 

 full time. 



The sawmill and cheese box factory of the Creamery Package Manufac- 

 turing Company at Butternut, Wis., have been purchased by Howland & 

 Waltz of Butternut and Minneapolis. Business men of Butternut are en- 

 couraging the purchasers to open a woodworking plant. 



A- Li Osborn of the Scott & Howe Lumber Company of Oshbosh, Wis., 

 was elected a director of the Wisconsin Manufacturers* Association at the 

 annual meeting held in Milwaukee recently. Many Wisconsin lumber con- 

 cerns are affiliated with the organization. 



--<, DETROIT >= 



W. .T. and K. E. Chesbrougli have bought the sawmill property of the 

 .Vthoiis Hardwood Company at Athens, Mich., and will remore it to tracts 

 of timber near Trout Lake, where they will operate under the name of the 

 Willwin Lumber Company, They own about 100,000,000 feet of hard- 

 wood near Trout I>ake. 



Henry Stephen.*: of Waters, prominent Michigan lumberman, is a can- 

 didate for regent of the University of Michigan. lie is a graduate of the 

 Universities of Michigan and Harvard and a post-graduate of the Uni- 

 versities of Heidelberg and Vienna. One of his hobbies is clean athletics. 



The L Stephenson Company's flooring mills at Wells will suspend opera- 

 tions within a short time. The company has a large stock of flooring on 

 hand and ri'p<trts tlie demand light. Tlie company's big sawmill at Wells 

 has been closed for some time and there is little or no prospect of a re- 

 sumption of operations before spring. 



The stockholders of the Ross Cabinet Company of Otsego, Mich., have 

 appointed a committee to solicit financial support from the citizens of 

 Otsego. If it is not forthcoming, directors /say, the company will have 

 to close its plant or remove to a place where support will lie given. The 

 company has been employing forty men and has plenty of orders to keep 

 the plant busy, but the capital necessary for operation is lacking. 



The Scott & Howe Lumber Company's sawmill at Ironwood has re- 

 sumed operations on a single shift after a shutdown of several weeks for 

 repairs. A night shift will be added later. 



Herman and William Holmes of Crystal Falls arc doing considerable 

 logging on a large tract of timber recently acquired near Michigamme. 



.John C. Scott, Vanderbilt lumberman, has presented the state of Michi- 

 gan with a bill for $2,500, representing damages to his timberlands by 

 hunters licensed by the state. He has taken the stand that the state has 

 no power to license hunters to hunt on lands other than those owned by 

 the state. 



The Baraga Lumber Company has finished the season's cut at its saw- 

 mill at Baraga. More than 9,000,000 feet of lumber were manufactured 

 this season. The run was started early in the spring and has been con- 

 tlnt^ous. President Hillyer of the Baraga company announces the com- 

 pany will cut 6,000,000 feet of logs at two camps near Point -Abbaye this 

 winter. 



U. N. McLeod, Garnet lumberman, announces that be will operate in the 

 woods this winter as extensively as in other seasons. He believes business 

 conditions will improve greatly in the next few months. Labor Is plenti- 

 ful this season, which fact will enable cheaper operations iu the woods. 



In recent shipments the North American Construction Company at Bay 

 <^!ty has received 528,474 feet of lumber on the steamer Prentice and 505,- 

 000 feet on the barge F, M. Knapp, both loaded at Hancock. The Brad- 

 ley-Miller Company, also of Bay City, has received considerable lumber 

 fi'oni Ontario ports. 



I'ullowing the installation of a dry kiln the Dunham stave mill at Leota, ' 

 Mich., has resumed operations. 



Till' llemily LuiiiIht Company is building an addition to its planing 

 mill at White Cloud, Mich, 



The Besinger & Brandel sawmill and handle factory at Shiawassee has 

 resumed operations. 



W. L. Babltt has purchased the retail lumber business of W. F. Phillips 

 at Mies, Mich. 



Through the efforts of the Business Men's .\ssoclation of Ontonagon the 

 Greenwood Lumber Company will continue to operate its sawmill at that 

 place. The mill has been idle, and it Is now expected that operations 

 A'ill be resumed within a short time. 



W. B. Ewing of Chelsea Is removing the Geesey sawmill, a landmark at 

 Dowagiac, Mich., to Wayne county, where he has purchased a tract of 

 Timiier containing about 7.'),000 feet .if oak and 225.000 feet of other tim- 

 i'er. mostly hardwood. 



Edwin T. Corwiu and C. D. Riley of Ontonagon have fotmed a partner- 

 ship and will cut about 1,000,000 feet of hardwood near Norwich Road. 

 Tamps are now being established. 



' ^ Wi':-di>:^>iWK^.y>igWMiMtro;;5WimMi!)^^ 



The Hardwood Market 



< CHICAGO > 



There is not very much more lumber moving now than for several weeks 

 past, nor is there a very strong likelihood that there will be a marked 

 increase in actual shipments to local factories. However, there is unan- 

 imous optimism based on a distinctly more favorable tone among the buy- 



