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PXGE TWELVE
THE LUMBERLOGUE
MONDAY, ATRHj 20, 102fi
'it
u 9
CAPTAIN HOLLAR
AT FAST
Declares Siberian Timber
iii Decidedly Inferior to
(':.; American Lumber
Captain Robert Dollar, dean of
shipping-Saturday attcmoou gave
to Portland a cheering message
"Wo will put a fast passenger and
cargo steamship line between Port
land and tnu Far East, when there Is
business to. warrant It. so quickly
that all ot you will be surprised,"
he declared. "At present there la
neither the pasenger nor the cargo
' business , to warrant such a step.
This business is going out of Port
land by other routes.
' "I real lie that the steamship must
do the pioneering- 1 have been do
ing it all my life. But you cannot
pioneer on -wind and be successful."
DOLLAR TIRKLKSS
i -Captain Dollar, far-sighted ship
ping genius ot the Pacific coast and
world, famous as a leader In ocean
transportation, has passed the four
score mark, but today he is as keen
ly active as ever. He left the Ben
son, hotel early Saturday morning
when many a third "his age were
ereeptng drowsily down to their of
fices, and started a business day
that, would wear down a man halt
as oM as he. :
j "I may be back by 6," he said as
he left the hotel. . .
He then began a round ot confer-enees,-meetings,
business calls and
.Other matters which he attended at
top speed until late In the after
noon., ; - .
' He lunched at the Arlington club
1 o'clock and with halt a strenu
ous day done, he declared gaily that
fee felt as atrongi aoi active as he
did more than 40' years ago.. He
took 10 minutes for an Interview
tad then hurried a photographer at
high speed to get his picture taken
and have It over. . . : .
' He has spent 10 days on a Inspec
tion: trip along the coast and Is aaow
on his way back to San Francisco.
He Is to leave early today.
FOORKR T1MBKR
'. Reports current In the Northwest
that Siberian lumber is ottering keen
Competition in the Japanese market
with the Pacific coast product wore
discounted " by" Captain Dollar. '.'.'- ,
"I heard these reports in Seattle
and Vancouver," Captain Dollar de
clared. "A lumber man on the
Sound told me about 'this competi
tion and I laughed. He asked me
what I was laughing tor, and I told
.him the reason was that I had had
(three , men , in, Siberia Investigating
this Tery Wty&Ztiizsz.isiiiz. i
... "Siberian stands cannot be placed
in Japan on the same basis with
lunvber from the Northwest. In the
'first place, : their timber does not
compare with that of this country.
-WihMf.would.be cens'dered a very
jpoor stand here would be a good
'one there." .
POA8T TRADE GOOD
Captain Dollar expressed the wish
'that the lumber market would go up
but . Bees little change In the Jap
anese situation, with an unfavorable
balance of trade existing, in Japan.
He declared ho believe! that Tort
land shipping men have the right
hunch Iq their belief that the pre
sent ' situation in the Intercoastal
'1(1 avber market would hold through
out the year, the first time in his
tory." The lines are booking their
lumber at $14 well through May
andi, . some Instances 14.50has
been- Obtained. '.'"'
? '"Captain Dollar's round the world
passenger, service) - which some , of
-Kn&land's foremost and supposedly
wisest shipping men declared would
. crumble tto a grand failure, is prov
I'lng'a success, according to the plo
fnoer p'peratotv '
' "Our ,- ships carry the equal of
' throe' cargoes each complete voyage,"
..Captain Dollar declared. "Our pa3
u senger accommodations from Jap:a
:. around to the Mediterranean are ail
.'taken until through June, and.else
. "Where -this business Is correspond
ingly, gecd- The vessels are now
-making a profit." ,
SPRAGUK RIVKR DOWN
Tho ' ni.'ll of the Sprague River
Lumbor company Is shut down tor
en Indefinite period.' The camp Was
abut down tome time ago, and the
mill rocently sawed up its surplus
t logs and coasod operations for a
, while,. , ,
- M W-llllam Bray;' , manager ot the
' eempany.bj in pshlobsk, Wisconsin,
&! tohferr.'nwth .'official of the Ona
I kiTlmlJcf icemianyKwhlch, ,cois
" lr6Is 'thtfHjptagtie i-lveii.coneern. ..
nitAnULTi LKAVK3 -
Joe Bramball tor some time lath
mill boss ' for the Ewauna
company, has left Ewauna to
Box
do
trucking , for the ' Topsy Lumber
rmpny near- Dorrigj jBiirornin
LONG PINE LUMBER
COMPANY OPERATING
Crew of Forty Six Men Kniploycd
in Knwmlll and LoRtfliitf
Woods
The sawmill of the Long Pino
Lumber company, located flvo miles
north of Bonunsa, started opera
tions last week. The mill is a
double circular, equipped with fifty
two inch saw, and has capacity
of forty thousand feet per day.
A crow of twenty six men Is em
ployed In tlHini!ll, and about twen
ty men are at work In the woods.
E. D. Caruthers is running the mill,
and Tom Campbell is running the
woods crew. IPete Klelber 13 saw
ing. , Long pine shipped the last ot its
box lumber at the Hilderbnnd load
ing dock to the Big Lakes company
last week. This cleans up the Hll
debrand yard, but there Is still
some lumber In the yard at the mill.
Shaw-Bertram Camp
,
Frank Potter ana son. Late, left
tor their home in Eugene last week.
Mosquitos around the "Hog Creek
Hatchery" are getting pretty bad.
Ray Cyr. - holster for Ewauna.
came over from that camp with
Jersey to move his household furni
ture. The roads leading both north and
south of camp have been dragged,
and are In good shape, whereby a
person can gain IS minutes from
camp to ChJIoquin.
The delay caused in loading logs
caused by another two cars getting
derailed enabled some of the fel
lows to go over to the Ewauna camp
and watch the operation ot the new
Jammer.
John Coerse, known as "Dutch
John," came up to camp from town
the other night In a Ford bug. He
had driven the bug clear from Fris
co; having had no trouble until he
arrived within a half mile of camp,
when he ran the bug into a tree
that was off the road thirty yards,
and bent his front axle. He won
ders what he was doing out there.
Frank Works. and Jess Redding
cranked up their coach and went in
to the. Falls on business the latter
part - of " the week, as it was too
stormy to work.
A bunch of fellows, including bead
fisherman Frank Tully. and help
ers Pete Miller, Dutch John, Pat
Collins, and H. White are preparing
to make a trip to the head ot Wil
liamson river, to their old fishing
grounds.
;. JUST TWO LUMBER
COURSES YET OPEN
. Out. of .the. 25 free correspond
ence courses In lumber offered by
The Lumberlogue for April, there
are Just two more open for this
month, S3 the first two to submit
their names this week -will be put on
the April list.
Through arrangements with tho
National Lumber Manufacturers' as
sociation. The Lumberlogue Is per-m'.tte-J
to effer 25 free courses In
.lumber each month. The course is
absolutely free and is open to any
person employed in the lumber In
dustry in this section ot the state.
All that Is needed is to send your
name and address to The Lumber
losue, care of The EvenUg Herald.
LOGGER MAY DIE OF ACCIDENT
pftUTT.ivn Hpd Inlurlea which
, r-i-l woro iroatoritav r-1
ceived by Charles Parks. Kelso
ger, when struck by a choker in a
logging camp. ' .
- He was rushed to Gcod Samaritan
hospital, where it Is feared he has
a fractured skull. Hi slocal address.
Is- 1SS Chamman street.
Arthur H. Smith, 60 year old fire
man at the Western Oregon Lumber
company, living at 25 Trinity place, !
received a broken right leg yester- j
day when he fell from a dock at the
plant. He went .to St. Vincent's.
. 'HERE FROM NORTH BEND
Jack' Vollmer, former Klamath
Fa'.ls building contratcor, and for
sevoral yeaTS an employee of the
Pollcan Bay Lumber company was
in town on business last Tuesday.
Vollmer Is at present working for
the Hammond Lumber company at
North Bend, Oregon. ; .
STRUCK BY CABLE
Marc McQrath, an employee of
John Llnman, was struck Just be
low the eye by the flying end of a
cable which broke in pulling on a
log Thursday afternoon. The wound
although 'painful. Is not expected
to bo very sorloua.
EWAUNA MAN ILL
, R. H. Ridcllffe, who Is In charge
of the Ewauna dry. kilns, has been
til with Influenza for the post week,
and' unable'to work. ; .. 1 '
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-It: LORKNZ IX TOWN' ' ' '
-Pete Lorenz, managbf of the Long
Pine Lumber company made several
visits in Klamath Falls laBt week on
business and buying supplies for the
ml),
C011TTEEIS
APPOINTED OR
E
Governor 'Pierce Appoints
Men to Take Charke of
State Activities
That Oregon may be aroused? to
the urgency of the forest problem
during Amerlcau Forest Week, Gov
ernor Pierce his Just appointed a
statwlda executive committee.
This is mado up of F. A. Elliott.
State Forester, chairman; C. C.
Scott, Oregon Forest Fire Asso
ciation; ' Dean Geo. W. Pcavy, Ore
gon Agricultural Colege; I. E. Vlu
ing, President, Ore-sou State Cham
ber of Commerce; Hal E. IIoss,
'President Oregon Editors Associa
tion; U. H. Chapler, Wostern For
estry and Conservation association;
A. Whlsnant, Pacific Logging Con
gress; .MaJ. Jno. D. Guthrie, U. S.
Forest Service, Secreary.
This week( annually set aside
now for five .years by presidential
proclamation as Forest Protection
Week, will be broadened in soope
this year to American Forest Week
and wll be observed nationally from
April 27 to May 3.
The Oregon State Committee will
cooperate with the national e ecu
tlve committee, ot which ex-Governor
Frank O. Lowden Is chairman.
The American Forestry associa
tion, the General Fedoratlon of Wo
men's clubs, the Isaak Walton Lea
gue, the National Lumber Manufac
turers association, and the U. S.
Forest Service will act with Gover
nor Lowden In forming a general
committee consisting of about one
hundred representatives of a-s many
societies and associations. The
Oregon committee wil also arrange j
tur luiai cuoiiumees luruuguvui uu
state, working through chambers ot
commerce or civic bodies.
SHAW-BERTRAM MEN
ARE PUZZLE FIENDS
Husky Timber Beasts Whilo Away
Sundays with Crossword
Tangles k
K Is a common sight around the
Shaw-Bertram camp these days to
see a group of husky buckors, filler,
etc., gathered around the bunk
-houses', . pencil In Hand, and pour
ing over newspapers.
"Hey, Pote, what's a three letter
word meaning a tool to sever wood,"
and other similar queries are shout
ed from bunk house to bunk house.'
Ill uiuer IHU1U9, auun'oviiiaiu a
Jacks -ire becoming cross word puz-
zle fiends. Particularly on Sundays '
does the carn reverberate with
mental effort and shouted quostloni.
T - . Ok.. T1 .... 1 ..
LUMBER SHIMPENTS
SOUTH DECREASING
Indication of a drop in lumber
prices or a satiation of the market
or both are patent with the roport
today of the S. P. freight depart
ment that lumber shipment south
to -California has decreased consid
erably in volume.
With the opening up of the lumb
er Industry In Klamath this year,
lumber shipments were pirtlcularly
heavy.
Durir. j tio past two weeks,
OR
mm
,og-:f"nber shipments havo been falling
of gradually.
No livestock shipments have left
Klamath county for threo weeks,
the freight office attaches reported.
Nothing unuiual In shipments com
ing into Klamath country Is re
ported. -. . ,
SHAW-BERTRAM R. R.
HAS SLIGHT WRECK
Car Leaves Rails nnd DeniollKliifi
. Threo Hundred Feet
of Track
. A .recent wreck , on the Shaw
Bertram logging road demolished
threo hundred feet of track, and re
quired a half a day to repair it.
The men in th ecamp declare It a
shame that the whistle on the loco
motive was not demolished.
INSTALL BOILER
DoArmond Brothers are installing
a new boiler In their mill beyond
Plnehurst. The mill will start as
soon as the boiler Is installed and
othor repair work completed, which
will probably be In the neighbor
hood of two woeks.
LUMBKRMKN VISIT
6. W. Johnson, president of the
Associated Lumber and Box corn
pan y bft Dorrls.j and , Mr, Seeley, a
box manufacture? of Oakland, Cali
fornia, havo beii (visiting In Klam
alh'Falls "tcf thffjfast few days and
lokrnjr- cWjoHji condition;, as to
lumber, and . box shook, ' "
We understand that 'Ace Jacks'ojri
Is practising aviation nt the din
ing (able these days,
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The iBcst
the lost
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When a woodsmen sets out to buy clothes he is
always confronted with the fact that they must
withstand the' hardest wear
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LUMBER REM
One hur-Jrcd and eighteen mills
reporting to West Coast Lumber
men's Association for the week end
ing April 11th, manufactured 101.
978,762 feot of lumber; sold 109,
874,470 feet; and shipped 104,147,
792 feet.
Now business was eight per cent
above production. Sh'pments were
five per cert below now business.
Forty-four per cent of nil new
business taken during the week
was for future water delivery. This
amounted to 47,856,179 feot, of
which 34,220,321 feet was for do
mestic cargo delivery; a-r...i 13,655,
858 feet export. New business by
rail amounted to 1,853 cars.
Thirty-nine per cent of tho lum
bor shipments moved by 'water.
This amounted to 4 0,179,501 feet,
of which 24,168,578 feet moved
coastwise and Intercostal; and 16,
010,923 feet export. Hull ship
ments totaled 1,918 cars.
Local auto and team deliveries
totaled (1,428,291 feet.
Unfilled -domestic cargo orders
totaled 146,248,280 feet. Unfilled
export orders 93,100,024 feet. Un
filled rail trade orders 5,510 cars.
1.1 tho first fifteen weeks of the
year, production reported to West
Coast Lumbermen's Association has
been 1,467,555,653 feet; new busi
ness 1,466,162,015 feet; nnd ship
ments 1,493,943,714 feot.
WEATHER HAMPERS WORK
' Rain durlnj the past weok has
li.'tjidjcappcd the logging forces of
tlio cfilloojuln fritber ijoutpanysid
kePt.-vAha.. grpoea working 'at' top
sliced when" the"Wcther would per
mit. In order to keep the mill run
OFWEEK
GIVEN
I
.
1
Smigarmani
ain't mad at
TEXT BOOK ON WOOD
FINISHING NOW OUT
Copies ot Hook May bo Secured
Through tho American
Lumberman
"Wood Finishing" Is the title of
a wark of about 170, pages by Har
ry R. Joffrey of tho Kansas Stato
Teachers college, doslgned to sup
ply exactly the Information required
by the amateur or by the manual
training student. Ae preliminary
chepatr In the book Is devoted to
the preparation of the wood for
finishing, and this is succoeded by
chapters on staining, tho uses of
fillers, varnishing and polishing,
wax, oil and Fronrih pallshlng, en
ameling, stenciling, reflnlshlng . old
furniture and a very Interesting
chapter In which the various woods
and their treatment are tnkon up
separately. A later chapter I do
voted to tho finishing of floors and
a final chapter treats of turned
wood. Lumbermen and othors who
ever havo any occasion to uso paint
or other coating, or to finish any
kind of wood, will find (his book an
cxtromoly handy volume to nave
about thel rotftco. The book Is
supplied by the Amoriesn Lumber
man at tho publisher's price ot
$1.50 a copy postpaid.' "
SUSTAINS INJURY
Hurry Walsh, an cmployo of tho
Sawmill Engineering and Construc
tion company, foil from tho top of
the Ewauna pump houno Thursday
afternoon, ' Walsh struck on his
back on two large iron castings
with such force that he was uncon
scious ifor fifteen minutes, .His In
juries, though painful, cnnslstod of
nothing more serious than bruisos
and abrasions, anil he was discharg
ed from the hospital Saturday morn
Ing, "' ,
, TO KIltKl'Oitl)
' "Harry; Moflsnar,:loggliig suporln'
tendont for Dig Lakes, drove 'to
Klrkford Tuesday nfternooh, ,.IIo ro
t.urne( Wednesday, Jt
"K" SAYS, DROP IN ;.!"
and say hello.
J A
Always
s
Economical
The best the market affords in
SHOES
SHIRTS
OVERALLS, etc.
are none too good to withstand wear
and tear of his work-a-day life, but
they will wear him much longer and
give him much better satisfaction
than cheap merchandise. The first
cost may be a trifle less but he will
have to buy so often that by the end
of the season he has spent more
money than he would if he had
bought the best.
Our Loggers Supplies
Are the Best That
7 Can Be Bought
nobody
PA U L
BUNYAN
v
He never could have logged, off North
Dakota in one season if he hadn't
speeded up by hauling his men back' and
forth from work. He used 1100 Star
cars and had a trailer on every one.
YOU
need a Star. Even., if you only handle
lath, the Star will give you the sarrie
faithful service it gave Paul at a frac-
i i.
tion of the cost of any other transports
, tion. ... ;
BUICK and STAR GARAGE
j Prices Here:
Touring, $695 Roadster, $690
Sport Coupe, $965., ; Sedan; $1110
"' ' 1 - . ... . . . ' ''''"J
X '" ''Wt.VAv,..,,, . i( - -
Open Delivery, $695 '
s'-t! !l ,.
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