. Canadian forest industries July-December 1912. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. CANADA LUMBERMAN AND WOODWORKER 59 tents destroyed. The damage amounts to $12,000, with insurance of only $1,500. Sir Rodolphe Forget i> credited with a scheme to merge the Wayagamac Pulp & Paper Company, the Eastern Canada P'ulp & Paper Company, the Spanish River and Ontario Pulp Companies and possibly one or two of the older established mills. H. Boulay. Sayabec. is arranging to erect a small spruce and shingle mill about eight m


. Canadian forest industries July-December 1912. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. CANADA LUMBERMAN AND WOODWORKER 59 tents destroyed. The damage amounts to $12,000, with insurance of only $1,500. Sir Rodolphe Forget i> credited with a scheme to merge the Wayagamac Pulp & Paper Company, the Eastern Canada P'ulp & Paper Company, the Spanish River and Ontario Pulp Companies and possibly one or two of the older established mills. H. Boulay. Sayabec. is arranging to erect a small spruce and shingle mill about eight miles from Sayabec. where he already operates a small mill. The new mill will contain one shingle machine and will cut about feet of spruce annually. Mr. William Rutherford, of William Rutherford Sons Company, Limited: Mr. Geo. E>plin. of G. & J. Esplin; and Mr. W. J. Sadler, of Sadler & Ha- wurth. have been elected members of the executive committee of the Montreal branch of the Canadian Manufacturers' Association. The management of the Wood Products Company of Canada has been removed from Toronto to Montreal. The following board have been elected: Messrs. J. W. McConnell. president; Thomas Hodgson, vice-president; Na- thaniel Curry, Colonel Burland, Arthur Lyman, Dr. Milton Hersey. and F. J. Knox. Between sixty and seventy million feet of logs were jammed last month within a distance of three-quarter* of a mile on the Miramichi River in New Brunswick. In some places the logs were piled twenty feet above the level of the water. The approximate value of the timber in the jam was $60,000. Dynamite and heavy rains broke the jam eventually. In an official statement of the East Canada Pulp & Paper Company, of Nairns Falls, it is said that the plant, which has just commenced work- ing, has been turning out between 10o and 110 tons of pulp daily. The out- put has been sold for a year ahead. The statement is also made that they have just refused a United St


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectforests, bookyear1912