HARDWOOD RECORD 



47 



=•< BRISTOL >.= 



The Kejs-Walkei- Lumber Company has purchased additional tlmljer- 

 land in Wise county, Virginia. The company is cutting about 40,000 feet 

 of hardw.uul luniher daily at its mill at Pardee, Va. 



A I''nii-> I\ .iiii.i -yndicate has purchased a large boundary of timber 

 near Aikin-. Siii\ili r.jimty, east of Bristol, and is preparing to install a 

 large iiilll ;it Mkins. A railroad will bo built at once. 



The \V. E. Ilarklcroad Lumber Company has just purchased a boundary 

 of timber near Stoney Point, Hawkins county, Tenn.. and will shortly 

 begin cutting. The company is now operating three mills near Surgions- 

 ville, Tenn. 



The band mill of the Black Mountain Lumber Company at Bluff City, 

 eleven miles south of Bristol, has resumed operation after being idle 

 several months. It is now well stocked with logs. 



The Lovelady Lumber Company is making extensive improvements in 

 its large mill at Jasper, Va., on the Virginia division of the V. & S. \V. 

 railway. 



W. A. Beveridge of Boveridge & Taylor, spoke and hub manufacturers ot 

 this city, died suddenly last week at the age of sixty-nine. The body 

 was taken to the old home at Appleton, Wis., for burial. He was promi- 

 nently connected with the lumber industry in this section for fifteen 

 years. 



T. C. Adams of the Adams-Hampton Lirmbcr Company of this city has 

 returned from near Petros, Tenn., where he has been looking 'after the 

 installation of a new mill. The company has purchased an additional 

 boundary of timber in that section. 



=-< LOUISVILLE y- 



meetings of late, most of them being held out of doors. The close of 

 the first half of the year has made business discussions seasonable, 

 and while most of the lumbermen found that the VDliiine was not up to 

 last year's figures, an optimistic feeling: i.-:inliii^ ruim. iMi-ire ^-- jin 

 vails. It is noteworthy, however, th:ii . :i. i n : : i ,. ,,,.1 ini 



tion to the building field ha';e h:id r.l.n 1 . n '•,•,, 



which are dependent. on the cabinet-wi Km- n-ni. 1 h. ii:ii.i« 1 m. .i 



have held meetings lately at Devil's Kitehcn. nu tlic Taylorsx ill- 1 u.i 

 and Riverview, a resort in west Louisville overlooking the Obi". I h- 

 program of having sessions in the open will continue throughout ili h ■ 

 weather. The club, incidentally, is one of the few business orgaiiizaiinn - 

 which meets all through the summer without a change, interest in ii- 

 work being amply sufficient to make this worth while. 



.Stuart R. Cecil of the Booker-Cecil Lumber Company, and luesidein 

 of the Louisville Hardwood Club, may now write "Sr," after his name. 

 Tlie stork arrived at his home recently, leaving Stuart Robinson Cecil, .7r. 

 The youngster and his mother are getting along fine. 



The W. P. Brown & Sons Lumber Company, which recently rti^ii i- il 

 of its mill at Dickson, Tenn., to John M. Smith, is concentr:niii:; i^ 

 manufacturing operations at Fayette, Ala., where it has a Uiri;i- i|mu;,l 

 liiind mill. The concern is continuing to operate a mill at I'laiiki"!; . 

 K.V.. on the I'Centucky river, however. 



The (_'. (_'. Mengel & Bro. Company, which recently suffered the hiss 

 of some commissary supplies and cattle when a party of Mexican 

 federals raided its logging camp in Quintana Koo. has received word that 

 the property has been restored. The raid, it was said, was an act of 

 reprisal following the taking of Vera Cruz by the Americans. 



I'riends of H. E. Snyder, oflJce manager for the Louisville Veneer 

 Mills, are much worried regarding his condition. Mr. Snyder has been 

 ill for the past month, after having been relieved only temporarily by 

 an operation some time ago. It is possible that another operation will 

 have to be made in order to bring about permanent improvement. 



Harry IC. Kline, superintendent of the Louisville Veneer Mills, has 

 joined the ranks of the motorists. Mr. Kline now believes that Henry 

 Ford, in spite of the fact that he raises wages without compunction, is 

 one of the greatest men in the world. 



The Louisville & Nashville, which some time ago announced that a 

 spotting charge of $i a car would be put into effect in Louisville, has 

 apparently decided not to enforce the ruling, as none of the lumber- 

 men have been called on to make the payment. It is assumed, also, that 

 the recent decision of the supreme court in the Los Angeles switching 

 case will result in a decision to drop the effort to collect the charge. A 

 peculiar feature of the case was that only a part of the local shippers 

 of the L. & N. received notice of the intention of the road to make a 

 spotting charge, so that apparently the whole idea was experimental 

 with the railroad. 



The Louisville Point Lumber Company has been running its mill fit 

 night of late in order to clean up its log supply. It has been getting iu 

 some fine poplar and oak logs. 



TTie Edward L. Davis Lumber Company is having a run on cotton 

 wood at its new mill at Lottie, La. J. E. Davis, vice-president of tlie 

 Company, is in active charge there. President Davis and Secretary- 

 Treasurer C. M. Sears returned from an inspection trip to Lottie last 



The Glue That Is Applied Cold 



veek. 

 T. .M. Br 



In Flush Veneered Doors 



The chief consideration is uniformly high- 

 grade glue. Manufacturers of this modern 

 type of door realize that its development 

 has been retarded because the unavoid- 

 able lack of uniformity in other types of 

 glue makes it impossible to know how 

 long a door will stay in condition. The 



Use 



Of vegetable glue insures absolute uni- 

 formity because of the very nature of pre- 

 paring it and because every pound of our 

 raw material is rigidly inspected. 



Vegetable Glue 



Is also a rigid and permanent adherent; 

 will not blister in sanding; has no dis- 

 agreeable odor; will not deteriorate in 

 standing — for a week if necessary; and 

 can be applied cold without any heating 

 application of any kind in the glue room. 

 In addition, the average saving over 

 former glue bills has been twenty per cent 

 where vegetable glue is used. 



A DOOR MAKER SAYS: 



vn & 





Perkins Glue Company 



Originators and Patentees 



805 J. M. S. Building, South Bend, Indiana 



The Glue That Rins Absoiuteiy Uiniform 



