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iltY BElllilll TllE sil0[EH0usE, JAGT III(ITIE ?
If you wanted to prophesy a good lumber year in L935 why didn't you look up a McCormick salesman? He would have taken you (through the front door, incidentally) to any of his customers with whom he works. That strange noise you would have heard is a lumber saw. It sings when business is good. And, brother . those saws are set to sing long and loud.
Mr. Lumber Dealer-are you one of those busy dealers who buy good lumber from. the Chas. R. McCormick Lumber Co. and have their salesman in your confidence? Give us a call.
ever .t may be, the lumber industry will probably benefit more from it than any other of the principal building material industries. It is not unlikely that residential neu' building will be 50 per cent larger this year than in 1934' This, however, is not so big as it looks because of the distressingly low levels to which ordinary private residential building has fallen during the past year. The benefits rvhich this expansion of business will bring to the lumber industry will depend upon the 'capacity of the industry for self-control, especially in tl-re adjustment of produclion to consumption."
A- O. THOMPSON LOS ANGELES VISITOR
A. O. Thompson, A. O. Thompson Lumber Co.' Kansas City, Mo., large operators of retail lumber yards in the Middle West, was a recent Los Angeles visitor where he spent several days on business.
Visit Los Angeles Harbor
A. W. (Bates) Smith and Wendell Brown, NlacDonald & Harrington, Ltd., of Los Angeles, were recent visitors at Los Angeles harbor where a cargo of lumber for their firm that arrived on the "Daisy Matthews" from the Colr-.mbia River District was being discharged.
"Red" Wood Says:
BTAND
IT GUARANTEES YOUUNEQUALLED SERVICE_ CORRECT GRADES_QUICK, DEPENDABLE SHIPMENTSINTELLIGENT COOPERATION BY A THOROUGHLY TRAINED ORGANIZATION, INTIMATELY FAMILIAR WITH YOUR PROBLEMS.