54 Miscellaneous Circular 39, U. S. Dept. of Agriculture
The more common form of the con- such studies now under way at the
struction is seen in the cleated ply- Forest Products Laboratory. The pro-
wood cases. The frame of the box is portionate share of the cost of such
made of fairly heavy lumber with 3- work which properly belongs to the
ply veneer used as sheathing. This 3- unorganized groups in the industry or
ply sheathing is usually about three- to the shipper or to the transportation
sixteenths of an inch thick and substi- interests must be shouldered by the
tutes for inch boards. That in itself Federal Government.
is quite a reduction in lumber. In the Second. We have the problem of
early development of this construction, making known to the unorganized
the several plies were glued together branches of the box-making business
after having been thoroughly dried. and to the shipper and the ecarrier
The best practice to-day is to glue what has been accomplished and what
these several plies together while may be achieved in the future of get-
green from the log, because that saves ting the individual actually responsi-
the 10 per cent shrinkage in the older ble for the boxing and crating of prod-
method. That, too, conserves lumber. ucts in each establishment to under-
All these newer and better practices stand what has already been accom-
in the construction of wood boxes and plished, how and where this knowl-
crates conserve lumber. The amount edge can be practically applied .in
of lumber saved varies from 15 per gervice and that this work should re-
cent to 60 per cent, depending on a ceive effective encouragement. Given
number of factors too numerous to g proper understanding and apprecia-
mention here. tion of what has already been accom-
It can safely be said that these plished, there would result an en-
newer and better designs of wood lightened public opinion which would
boxes and crates for the larger cases do more than anything else to bring
and the heavier loads, and the substi- gphout the solution of one problem in
tution of fiber board containers for the yery near future.
the smaller units and the lighter loads, Third. Publicity is needed. The small
if generally applied, would conserve at hody of organized box manufacturers
least 50 per cent of the lumber that is doing its part, but the task is too
would otherwise be required for packing huge, We suffer to some degree from
cases. The problem to-day is largely that lack of entire confidence in our
one of bringing about a universal ap- claims to which any producer who is
plication of the foregoing principles. marketing his wares falls heir. Au-
If the public is to reap the benefits thentic information emanating from
of the progress already made, the un- ay impartial source, capable of broad-
organized box manufacturer, the ship- casting the message nation-wide,
ping public, and the transportation ghould find it easy to bring about
agencies must be reached. They must {he understanding and application of
be made to realize that their own in- these principles. Witness how the
terests as well as the public good will country was converted by the economic
best be served if these underlying, yajye of the telephone and automobile,
fundamental principles of box and the Domestic Packing Advisory
crate construction are understood and pggrq newly set up by the Transporta-
applied by them. tion Division of the United States De-
How can this best be done? partment of Commerce, and in the de-
First. The research work must con- paytment itself, we trust we have the
tinue. No one, at all qualified to jegdership so necessary to carry the
speak, would contend for a moment truth to all. We thoroughly approve
that all progress possible has been 413 commend the work of the Depart-
made nor that our present knowledge ment of Commerce and all of the
of efficient designs and constructions agencies cooperating with it in that
is complete nor that the fundamental enterprise.
principles on which .they are based Thus through the activities which
are all known or definitely fixed. Fur- pave gone on before and through the
ther studies at the Forest Products results we hope to secure from further
Laboratory and elsewhere are neces. jntensive study. of these problems and
sary. The organized box industry is through the publicity which must in-
supporting research work in its own eyitably follow, the packing-box indus-
laboratories and, in addition, is help- try will do its full part to conserve
ing, as it has in the past, to finance our timber resources.