HARDWOOD RECORD 



The Glue That Is Appued Cold. 



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 stav in condition. The 



Use 



' )i 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: 



Tocoma. Washington, U. S. A.. Sept. 29, 191S. 

 File B. 

 Pcrlins Glue Company, 

 South Bend. Indiana. 

 Gentlemen : The convenience and economy of the 

 use of Perkins vegetable glue, its uniformity and the 

 satisfactory results tee have obtained, together with 

 the courtesy we have been uniformly shown by the 

 officers and representatives of the company, prompt 

 us to express in this way our appreciation of the 

 Perl-ins Glue Company and its products. 

 Tours very truly, 

 THE WHEELES. OSGOOD COMPANY. 

 BHC:S B. n. Clarke, Treasurer. 



Perkins Glue Company 



Originators and Patentees 



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



The Glue That Rins Absolutely Uniform 



vMitil hy till' Holt I.iidiImt t'unipauy and tli<- Uconio l.timlirr <'nropao> 

 Mcl will be Inkm 10 Oconlo to bo nawml. 



rtii- Kcnflcid I^niorraux Compaoy, of WnkbburD. bmi commcocrd work 

 u till- criTllon of n new Inrtr dry kiln which will b* oprratrd la coo- 

 ...clluii wllb ih(< box factory in that city. Tbr kiln U to Im- 22 by ISO- 

 (• <! In ultc and nf fraiiir conilrucllon. Tb»re will Im> tbrrr mlira of at»>n> 

 Itlpm In thp new kiln and pxhnuat iitpam will l>r utllltpd. 



Til. n.'irkcr A Sti-wart Lumber Company bna cloi.f.1 ,l.Hn It-. Knnmlil, 



iiiiufacturrd all II* timber Into lumber. T ' i.c-ra- 



iv yenra niio and for yearn manufactm i of 



■uiiially. W. C. I.jindon, prealdcnt of th. imo 



: with the IVIican Bay Lumber Company, ■ : on 



11.1 plant of the United IlefrlReralor and Ice M.i i. n. i'. ni|.nny. of 



..iinsha, WOH recently cloHed don-n followinit the iiuHpi'n>.lun of the Com 



. rclnl and SaTlnKH Itank in Kaclne. OperatlonN have been renumed In 



:l of its department!!, however, and olllcial* of the company are bopoful' 



h.it they win bp able to make Onancial arranRementH which will make 



: "salblc the continued operatlonii of the plant rcRardlena of the re 



.iKanUatlon of the Racine flnnnclol InKtJtutioD. Creditor* of ibe com- 



puny have been requested to co-operate in arranRlng the buiilneu oo that 



the concern can continue to fill Its large amount of orders. 



C. K. Iloppe, well known gawmlll owner and bUHineu man of Weit 

 Hind, dli'd at his home in that city recently. lie woa a native of Ger 

 inaiiy. .\ widow and live children survive. 



.V. Oscar Jenne, well known retired lumberman of Rhinelander. paiiaed 

 away nt St. Mary's Hospital after an lllncaa of aeven years' duration, 

 lie was born in New York state sixty-nine years ago. He was In cbarRe 

 of thi' Cieorae E. Wood Lumber Company, of Woodboro. for many year* 

 until the mill ceased operations. 



The sawmill of the Kaust Lumber Company nt AnIlKri bus finished Itx 

 season's cut, and the KellogR Lumber Company's mills in that city and 

 I'olar have also been closed. Shipments of lumber have almost ceased 

 and unless the end of the European war briniis about a general buatncss 

 revival, the cut of logs this winter promises to be very ilKht. Some 

 lumbermen are endeavoring to break contracts with loggers. The logging 

 •reason will start late and some camps may not be opened. According to^ 

 Harry lielneman, president of the Helneman Lumber Company, of Wau- 

 ."au. bis concern will soon be ready to start its sawmill. The mill was 

 recently closed down for repairs. 



n. S. Kellogg, secretary of the .Northern Heniloek and Hardwood Manu 

 facturers' Association, has accepted the position of chairman of a commlt- 

 lee of three on forest utilization, under the auspices of the American 

 l.'orestry .Association. The scope of the committee which Mr. Kellogg 

 h. ads is the cutting and use of timber, logging, manufacturing, by- 

 products and wood preserving. 



The exhibit of the Northern Hemlock and Hardwood Manufacturers' 

 .\s90clatlon. which was shown in the county building at the State Fair 

 at Milwaukee recently, was of great Interest to visitors. Literature was 

 distributed explaining the different kinds of woods on exhibition. Over 

 one hundred and fifty architects, contractors and builders filed their names 

 in application for additional information and samples. The same exhibit. 

 in charce ot O. .\. King, was also sent to various county fairs through- 

 out the state. 



-■<, DETROIT y- 



The property of the StandLsh Lumber Company at Standlsh, Mich., 

 has been sold to Thomas Walking and John Castle, of rinconning. 



Tlic Forest Lumber Company will dismantle its mill at Tower, Mich., 

 and will remove it to the upper peninsula where the firm owns large 

 iracts ot virgin timber. 



Wm. Homer of Newberry, manufacturer of hardwood flooring, ha» 

 startc^d the erection of a warehouse 70x200 feet, which will have a storage 

 capacity of more than 2,000,000 feet of finished product. A railroad will 

 U- built through the center of the warehouse to expedite the handling 

 ot the product. 



.\n overheated oven caused a $3,000 lire at the plant ot the Adjustable 

 Tabic Company at Grand Rapids. Much of the damage wos due to water 

 from an automatic sprinkler system. 



Henrietta, an old lumber town, has been destroyed by fire. It wa» 

 the third lumber toWn in that section of Michigan to be destroyed, the 

 others being Yuma and Sherman. 



The Booth Manufacturing Company, operating a furniture plant at 

 Howard City, has filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy. The plant 

 has been idle practically ail summer and the failure Is attributed to un- 

 settled business conditions. 



The Richardson Lumber Company of Alpena, is about to re-open lt» 

 lumber camps for the winter logging season. 



R. H. Bailey & Son is the name of a company organized at Houghton 

 to manufacture motor boats and canoes. 



Weils Higman & Co. of Traverse City has completed one of the largest 

 •ruber deals of the year. The company bought thirty-two square miles of 

 ir','ln timber located on Batchawana Bay, District of .\lgona, Ontario, 

 r..m the Batchawana Timber Land Sales Company. The tract is thlrty- 



V.. miles north of Sault Ste. Marie, Mich., and contains 150,000,000- 

 ■ t of saw timber and 100,000 telegraph poles, in addition to a large 

 I. umber of posts and much pulpwood. 



The barge Mary A. Burke bnmed to the water's edge at the Jamlsoi» 



