. Canadian forest industries July-December 1912. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. accumulating as the weeks go by. and are of such a nature as to pre- clude filing with the bills. About the only practical method I know of is to follow the same plan as in filing bills by the vertical alpha- betical system, except that the index and folders should be much larger than for the cutting bills, and then it would be necessary to fold up the larger details into a compact compass, which would be neatly contained in the folder without obscuring


. Canadian forest industries July-December 1912. Lumbering; Forests and forestry; Forest products; Wood-pulp industry; Wood-using industries. accumulating as the weeks go by. and are of such a nature as to pre- clude filing with the bills. About the only practical method I know of is to follow the same plan as in filing bills by the vertical alpha- betical system, except that the index and folders should be much larger than for the cutting bills, and then it would be necessary to fold up the larger details into a compact compass, which would be neatly contained in the folder without obscuring the index. Of course, all details should be marked with the name of the customer, the serial number of the order and the sheet number of the cutting bill. This will at once identify them and enable one to find the details from the cutting bill or to find the cutting bill from for a frame building. The details tell this and all the other informa- tion necessary, except the size of the window and the class of ma- terial from which the frame is to be cut. It will be noted that the inside trim is given a different shading than that of the frame proper, and is not billed out at the time of making the frame. The idea of drawing it in with the frame is to show the opening as a whole and the relation each piece bears to its neighbors, as well as the way the frame members into the wall of the building. This is a great help in billing out the interior finish and in matching up the work at any future time. As in the example of Fig. 1. the detail shows the parts exposed, so that the pieces re- quired need come up to the specified grade only on the exposed parts. Fig. 6 shows one of a class of details in which it is good practice/ to number or letter the different members. These are really ' sub- details" or the detailed details, and occur where it is necessary to make up the detail proper with a set of separate members. The same class includes veneered doors, windows, and all kinds of


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectforests, bookyear1912