The Kinnears and their kin; a memorial volume of history, biography, and genealogy, with revolutionary and civil and Spanish war records; including manuscript of RevDavid Kinnear (1840) . unter, all of Tidioute, organ-ized the Missouri Lumber & Mining Co. He was generalmanager of the company from its formation and laterpresident. Their offices and mills were at Grandin, CarterCount>% Mo., for more than twenty years, the town itselfbeing the product of the Lumber Companys business. Hewas postmaster at Grandin 1887 to 1892. Mr. White organized the first Lumber ManufacturersAssociation in the


The Kinnears and their kin; a memorial volume of history, biography, and genealogy, with revolutionary and civil and Spanish war records; including manuscript of RevDavid Kinnear (1840) . unter, all of Tidioute, organ-ized the Missouri Lumber & Mining Co. He was generalmanager of the company from its formation and laterpresident. Their offices and mills were at Grandin, CarterCount>% Mo., for more than twenty years, the town itselfbeing the product of the Lumber Companys business. Hewas postmaster at Grandin 1887 to 1892. Mr. White organized the first Lumber ManufacturersAssociation in the southern states, known as the Missouri& Arkansas Lumber Association. He is a member of theBoard of Governors of the National Lumber Manufac-turers Association of the United States; President of theLouisiana Central Lumber Co.; Forest Lumber Companyof Kansas City, Mo.; Reynolds Land Company; Salem,Winona & Southern Railroad Company; Director and Sec-retary of the Louisiana Long Leaf Lumber Company; Sec-retary-Treasurer and General Manager of the MissouriLumber & Land Exchange Company of Kansas City. Alsoa director in the New England National Bank of Kansas ^.:i ASTC. EMMA RUTH WHITE. AND THEIR KIN 17^ City. Was president of the Bank of Poplar Bluff from1886 to 1907. In 1907 he was appointed by President Roosevelt to in-vestigate the affairs of the Cass Lake, Minnesota, IndianReservation, and his recommendations were favorablyacted upon. Mr. White was further honored by PresidentRoosevelt as a member of the Forestry Department in theCommission on the Conservation of National Resourcesand has become one of the most learned and enthusiasticmembers on the subject of Conservation in the countrydevoting much of his time to that very important move-ment, which is an all-absorbing one at the present day. Hewas appointed by the Governor of Missouri in 1909 a mem-ber of the State Board of Forestry, and a delegate to theNational Conservation Congress at Seattle in 1909 and wasPresident of


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidkinnearsthei, bookyear1916