The California Lumber Merchant - April 1930

Page 10

Dwoted to the welfare of all branches ol the Lunber Industrlr'Millr Yard and IndivtduaL NO. 20 'We also h-rdex to Advertisements, Page 3 Texas, The Gulf Coast Lumberman, America's foremost retail lumber entire Southwest and Middlewest like the sunshine covers California. APRIL I5, I93O journal, publish at Houston, which covers the vol-. 8.

Cabinet Made Doors of Distinetive Deslgn and Character executed in beautif"Uy grained AGAC

Ffere are doors of unusual beauty!

Made of beautiful BAGAC .. the peer of all hardwoods Bagac cabinet made doors offer the lumber dealer a line of stock doors designed by a famous architect . . . and constructed with all the care and skill of the expert cabinetmaker.

Bagac cabinet made doors are not to be confused with the ordinary type of mill-made stock doors. For they are both architecturally correct in design and accurate in workmanship. Hence they enable the dealer to offera door of character and individuality at a moderate price.

Bagac cabinet made doors are available in a wide variety of distinctive designs. Mouldings are interchangeable affording an unlimited opportunity to provide doors to meet specialized requirements.

Bagac cabinet made doors will be a profit maker for hundreds of dealers, everywhere. A postal card will bring a complete catalog of designs and sizes for interior, exterior and French doors.

Bagac, together uith Bataan anil Lamao are produceil bg us on our oan timber concessions in the Philippine Islanils.

TRADEMANKS GATDWALLATDER-GIBSON coilpANT, rne.
REGISTERED 362t Mines Avenue LOS ANGEf,ES,GAL.Telephone ANgelue !l2e7

Goos Bay Lumber Go.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT
PACIFIC COAST LT]MBER General Ofice and Millc MARSHFIELD, OREGON *Advertisement appears in alternate issues. Arkansas Oak Flooring Co. Associated Lumber Mutuals * 15 Barg Lnmber & Shipping Co. .......... 12 Blinn, L. W. Lumber Co. 2A Bookstavff-Burns Lumber Co. . :F Booth-Kelly Lumber Co. ... 'rt Brown, Geo. C. & Co. . * Built-In F'ixture Co. 29 Cedwdlader-Gibson Co. ...I.F.C. Calaveras Cement Co. .. 24 CdiforniaPanel&VeneerCo. 9 Celobx Company, The Central Coke & Cod Co. 'r' Chamberlin & Co., W. R. ...... ........ 35 Consolidated Lumber Co. .. 12 Cooper Lumber Co., W. E,,.,......... 14 Cooe Bay Lumber Co. .. 3 Cowan, H. V., Inc. r Creo-Dipt Company, Inc. ........r.,... 13 Dallas Machine & Locomotive Works ., 't Defiance Lumber Co. Dollar Stoamship Lines t El Rey Products Fageol Motors Company Findlay Miller Timber Co. .. Forsyth Hardwood Co. Gravee, Frank, Sash, Door & Mill Co.. GUU Coast Lumberman Hall, James L. . .. 12 Hammond Lumber Co. .,. ...... 16 HanifyCo.,J.R. ........41 Higgins, J. E., Lumber Co. . '. 35 Hi[-& Morton, Inc. .. 10 Hipolito Co. ... :r Hoffman Co., Earl ' 10 Ilosan T. P.. Co. * golm*-Eure[a Lumber Co. ... * Hoover,A.L.. ........'.34 Johnson, C. D., Lumber Co. . :t Koehl & Son, Jno. W. ... {' Executive Ofice Balfour Building SAN FRANCISCO Southern California Saler Petroleum Securitier Bldg. LOS ANGELES Remanufacturing Ptant end Northern Cdifornia Saler BAY FOINT, CALIFORNIA Paraffine Compa.nies, Inc., The .,......25 Pioncer Paper Co. ....22-23 Port Orford Cedar Products Co. 2l Red River Lumber Co. . .. 33 Reynier Lumber Co. , 16 Thackaberry, M. N. * Truscon Steel Co. ...... 39 Union Lumbet Co. . ..... 31 Union Oil Co. . .... 27 Please address inquiries for Rail Shipments and Finished Stock to Bay Point and Export and Other Cargo Inquiries to M4rshfield. OUR ADVERTISERS 1 ,4 -li -! l Maris, H. B., Panel Co. ... ... 26 McC6ud River Lumber Co. '.. * McCormick, Chas. R., Lbr. Co. ' 18 McKav&Co.. rt Moord Dry Kiln Co. ' .. .' i Murray Jaiobs & Co. . 'r 'E :t ,:* :B :F National Lumber Maufacturers Ass'n-. Norris, W, H., Lumber Co. ... Pacific Coast ilywood Mfrs.,. Inc. Pecific Lumber Co., The 5 t; '* l9

"ffi**i THE CALIFOR).IIA ;:",ffi;ffi

A.M.TH.ACKABERRY v .r.7'r ryi -. -r,-A-Telephoe DArenport t??t Ci*'r"U* M.""S;_-_ LUMBE R ME RCHANT o. ". *-liro* .a,a,"*i.i,g na*"i*

JaCkDiOn1e,prbliShU

3r&re-20 ceglnl Buitdlnjr,'iot lir"it*J*lii 3_ii"!il-6. Angetec, cat., Tetephone, vAndike 1565 Houcton' Texar go\EE Ndtbern calif- Entered u Scmd-cls matter S€ptembar u, Igu, 'at tUi pcfoffte'at md Paetfic Norrlwert LJrg"i"", c"irli"idililJi-.Aca;f M;;[ tite.----:

Incoporated under the laws of Calilomia Southern Officc lt .1. Dl aar. J. C. Dioue' Prer. and Treaa.; J. E, Mudn, Vie-Pres.; A. C. Merryma, Jn, Secv. 2nd Nattonal Bak Bldg. W. T. BLACK Dioue, Vie-pres.; t Publidrcd thc lst and 15th of each mta at -'.y*fr*-.r

subr-cription Price, $Z'lD pc-r Year I os aNctrI trs ..al apFrII | 4 ro?n Advertiring Ratcr St"tb-6;;t",;

Los ANGELES, cAL., APRIL 15, 1930 orApprication

How Lumber Looks

Douglae Fir.-A alight decreare in production of lumber and an increare in new businers received is shorvn in the reports received by the West Coast Lumberrnen's AsEociation from 213 millls in the Dougla^r fir region of Oregon, Washington and Britieh Columbia for the week ending March 29.

Qrders reported by the 213 millr for the week ending March 29 increased approximately 3TOOOTOOO feet over nerv buriness received in the week endingMarch ZZ. Production dercreaeed during the week, beint about lrfr)O,OOO feet' below the output for the previous week.

Production, oiders and shipmcnts at these 213 mills for the-w_eek ending March 29 were reported to the Auociation ar follows: Production 1871917,544 feet; Orderr 1G5r132,961 feet; Shipments 178,766,734 feet. 'Orderr were'12.12 per_ cen! under production and' shipments 4.88 per cent under th9 output. Details of the brders as reported by there milb follor,vs: Rail 60,8001377 terrli Domestic Cargo 6417351119 feet; Export 28,139,679 feet; Local llr4$i,- 786 feet.

The general rituation in the California market d'oes not rhow very much change. There ir a fair volume of burineca and rome improvement in the demand but prices remain about the sarne and continue unprofitable.

_ Cargo arrivalr at San Pedro continues light-arivals at $is port for the month of March totaled 6f,688,000 feet. Unsold stocks at San Pedro on A,pril g totaied 9rO48rOOO feet a decrease of nearly a rnillion feet from the previous week 38 veesels in the California service are tied up and one ve$el is operating off shore.

Redwood. The market has rhown no change in the part thirty days. The demand ic fair and prices are about-the

same. Cargo arrivals at San Pedro for the month of March totaled 4r949,fi)O feet. For the week ending March 29, the California Redwood Asrociation reported production from 14 mills at 7,939,OO0 feet, shipments 6,600,000 fe€t and orders 6,596,OOO feet.

California White and Sugar Pine. Ordera and ehipmentr continue ahead of production. A fair volurne of business ir reported and prices continue rteady. Some itenu at the mills are scarce. For the week ending March 29, the Cali, fornia White and Sugar Pine Manufacturen Arsociation reported production from 17 mills at 9r188r(X)O feet, ahipments 13,972,OOO feet and orders 12,567r(XX) feet.

Los Angeles buildirrg permits for the month of March led $7,045,(XX). while the San Francirco D€rmit! for the totaled $7,045,(X)O, the permitr mont'h amounted to $3,5O2,312.

*8*AAtAAAA*

The current relationship of rhipments and orden to production for the firrt ttirteen weeks of 193O endins March 29 based on reports from the regional asrociatiom to the National Lumber Manufacturers Association, ic as followt:

West Coast Lumberrnen's Aagociatiql-p16,{gsliss tr994,381 M feet; Shipments 1,876,687 M feet; Orderl 1,903,147 M feet.

California White and Sugar Pine Arcocialisra-p1e{6. tion 1O1,906 M feet; Shipments 261,621 M feet; Orden 254,917 M feet.

California Red'wood l3secialien-Production 1031046 M feet; Shipments 871224 M feet; Orders 92,408 M feet

Southern Pine Association-Production 779,210 M feet; Shipments 726,348 M feet; Ordenr 747,432 M feet.

Total Hardwoodr-Production 5511946 M feet;, Shipments 458,286 M feet; Orderr 48Or7lO M feet.

Arizona Lumbermen to Meet Lumbermen's Clubs to Meet at at Douglas May 9-10-11 Sacramento A:pril 26

The thirteenth annual convention of the Lumbermen's Club of Arizona will be held at Douglas, Arizona, on May 9, 10 and 11 with headquarters at the Gadsden Hotel. Arrangements are being completed for an interesting program. Albert W. Sta,cy, vicegerent snark of the Border District, is planning for a concatenation and it is expected that a large class of Kittens will be ini,tiated.

The matter of hotel reservations is of importance and E. H. Wheat, secretary.-treasurer of the Arizona Lumberrnen's Club, states that reservations can be made through his office, 223Home Builders Building, Phoenix, or directly with the Gadsden Hotel.

The meeting of the Northern Counties and Sacramento Valley Lumbermen's Clubs which was scheduled for Saturday, April 19, at Sacramento, has been changed to Saturday, April 26. This ,change was made because the U. of C. Davis Farm annual picnic will be held on April 19 and many of the lumbermen will attend this annual event.

This rvill be the annual meeting of the Northern Counties Club and among the business matters to ,come before the meeting will be the annual election of officers.

The program for the meeting will be as follows: 8:30 a.m., executive committee; 10:00 a.m., Northern Counties Club meeting; L?:30 p.m., Sacramento Valley Club luncheon.

J. E. MARTIN
THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
tii.;;;'.:.[.

of prospects will read '7r!t-7nt,/t' Advertising during Lg3o ' / r

fN nationally known magazines

I the story of grade- and trademarked lumber, Car Card Tally, and the many building services offered by the National Lumber Manufacturers Association will be told to millions of potential lumber buyers during 1930. All who buY or specify lumber will read "Tree Mark" advertising in their favorite publication.

Send for the valuable free handbook, "Taking the Mystery Out of Lumber Buying," which tells completely the whole interesting story which is going to make millions of magazine readers everywhere realize that they should demand and use "Tree Mark" lumber. This book will acquaint you with all the facts

about grade- and trade-marked lum' ber tell why "Tree Mark" lumber can be guaranteed to the buYer explain the use of the Car Card Tally prepare you to answer questions about lumber helP you stock lumber that sells faster. Fill in and mail the coupon todaY.

The National Lumber Manufac-

turers Association will gladly assist local authorities in preparing or revising your building code supply you with attractive consumer booklets at halfactual cost help you to secure practical working plans and construction details for homes, sheds, stores, filling stations, garager-anJrthing made of wood, details of which are not readily available through regular plan services . . grve you expert personal advisory service on large ptojects assistin conductingbuilders' schools. Take advantage ofthese services. Send for the complete information about the merchandising co<iperation we are prepared to give You.

"American Standard Lzmberfrom Amedca's Best ililk."

National Lumbcr Mmufactuers Aseistion. Dcpt. t164, Tramportatioa Eldg.,' Waahington, D. C.

Gcntlcma: Plcage gcad mc

E "Taking the Mystsy Out of Lumbs Buying."

tr Futha infcmation about the actud woking plans, b@klets, and codlratim you o{fcr lumbs delsc. City-Slate-

THE CALIFORNI.{, LUMBER MERCHANT
D, C, Ofrces kNewY ork. Bostoo Pittsburgh Indianapolis
Kansas Gty
NATIONAL LUMBER MANUFACTURERS ASSOCIATION VASHINGTON,
Chicago Minneapolis
Memphis. New Orleans. San Fraocisco Los Aogeles
Tbis uTree Marh" gtarantees ,bat ,be lamber is carefully mamJactzred

Vagabond Editorials

Here's one for the book. "How is business?" I asked a doleful looking lumber friend of mine. "Dull," he answered, "as dull as a day in heaven." Of course, he'd nevm been there. He'd simply read the orthodox descriptio4s.

Every now and then, and here and there, you hear of a competitive s,ituation where some of the bunch get tired of the tactics employed by others in the same gang, get mad, and start out by the famous price-cutting route to "give them a ride." How often have you heard one side say: "We'll cut prices until tbose price cutters get sick'of it." But it never works out, some way or other, with any sort of satisfaction. Time and experience has proven that you can't solve situations that way.

isn't in the cards.

I heard two lumbermen talking that ve'ry subject one day. One of them said: "I'm going to put my prices down so low that these price cutters can't meet them and live, and I'm going to keep them there until I teach those birds a lesson." And the other, who had been places and done things, laconically remarked: "You won't live that long." ***

We see all about us in California today added proof of the well known and experience taught fact that people do not buy or build when materials are low. Any building merchant in any branch of the industry can tell prospective builders today that lumber and all the other building materials can be bought for less money today than, ever before, that they can be bought for far less than their value, that there is every reason why they should increase in price, and that it would not be at all surprising if most of these materials were valued from 50 to 100 per cent higher a year from now than they are now. And that sales talk will avail not at all. * )r ,<

But wait until conditions begin bulging upward. All of a sudden materials begin climbing the hill. Everv day they go higher. And THEN, and not till then, does the building urge seem to come. People rush in to buy and build on a rising market. They always have. They always will. The fact that they can get materials today for far less than their actual value-for far less than those materials have any right to be sold for-makes n9t the least difference. It should, but itdoesn't.

One stout reason why Northwestern lumber keeps pouring into California regardless of local needs, is the great volume of export stock that has been shoved back into other water markets by the tariff against American lumber

that Japan put into effect last year. The Northwest used to ship 500,000,000 feet a year to Japan, and that business steadily increased. The tariff cut off about 400,000,000 feet of that desirable business, and it has to go somewhere else. And, since that business was mostly supplied by the same tidewater mills that supply California, it made pressure to the South a little greater.*

It is understood that Jap business men have secured control of much lumber and timber production in Russia, and the tariff was secured by them to give their. Russian stock a monopoly in Japan. They succeeded. So the tidewater mills of the Pacific Northwest took a terrific thrust below the belt from Russian lumber in that direction.

But that was not the only thrust they are getting from this same source. For the past two years Russia has been invading New York territory with softwood lumber coming across the Atlantic from Baltic ports. This competition has already brought consternation to American lumber producers, and is the chief basis for the proposed lumber tarifr. And, of course, the lumber and timber the Pacific Northwest mills have been shipping around to the New York territory by water, is feeling keenly the competition of this Russian lumber. So Russia is shooting these same mills from two directions.

Russian lumber is sold dirt cheap in New York. And it is splendid manufactured lumber, sawn carefully and exactly to measure. And the timber is Baltic Spruce and Pine, good looking wood. Gi course, Russia can sell it cheap. They sto'le the timber from its ourners, and manufacture the lumber at starvation wages. Most of the cost of the lumber in New York is ocean*freight.

California produced lurnber has felt no direct effects from these two Russian developments that have so hurt the Northwestern mills. Lumber products of this state enjoyed no Japanese export business at any time, nor have they met the Russian competition on the Atlantic Coast as yet. Something for the Redwood and California Pine folks to be grateful for, at any rate.

Here's a thought. Ninety per cent of the lumber that California buys and brings in from other parts of the world is unseasoned. And about 100 per cent of all the lumber that California manufactures and ships out to supply other parts of tlre world is thoroughly seasoned. We ship it dry, but buy and use it green. Funny, isn't it?

(Continued on Page 8)

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCIIANT April 15, 1930
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THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT Don't Say STAINE,D SHINGLE,S say CRE,OIDIPT We Sell'Em SIlITA FE IU}IBER Gl|. Incoracated Fcb. 14, 19OE A. J. ttGug" Rusaellts Outfit Erclurivc Rril Rcprcrcntrtivcr in Gliforair rnd Arizonr for Central Cral & C.oke Co. Oregon-American Lumber Co., Vernonia, Orc. Creo-Dipt C,ompany North Toarvud+ N. Y. So. Calif. Officc LOS ANGELES ' 397 Pacific Electric Btdg. Bruce L. Bulingame Phme VAndike Ctlt General Oftcc SAN FRANCISCO St. Clair BIds. 16 Cdifornia St.

Va$abond Editorials

(Continued from Page 6)

Up to a very few years ago most of the Fir lumber manufactured in the Pacific Northwest was dressed green. Today, with the exception of stock coming to California, very little lumber is treated ir1 that way. The rest of the world won't have it. The mills have learned to season their lumber, than dress it, and ship it bright. They had to do that to meet the competition of other woods, and supply the needs of ,people who have been taught that lumber must be seasoned for practically all building purposes.

O. H. Barr, highly respected retailer of Santa Ana, California, in addressing a meeting of lurnber and building men recently, remarked that if "the lumber industry had followed more closely the merchandising advice of The California Lumber Merchant it would be a great deal better off." Thanks. It sure is hard to get even the mqst intelligent retailers to get out of the rut. But we keep right on trying, always have, always will.

Pays to Own Your Own Real Prominent Retail Lumberman Estate

Twenty-seven years ago, Mr. J. G. Ganahl, then manager of the C. Ganahl Lumber Company, and W.F. Montgomery, who at that time was manag'er of the Montgomery & Mullin Lumber Co., pur,chased three acres of land-I92 feet on Sania lVlonica -Boulevard by 600 feet on Seward Street-for $3,000 and established the Hollywood Lumber Company. They operated the Hollywood Lumber Company under their joint ownership for several years, after which the C. Ganahl Lumber Company disposed of their interest to Montgomery & Mullin who have operated the yard up to the present time.

Dtrring the past sixty days, the Hollywood Lumber Company has sold 100 feet on Seward Street to Gauthier & Hutchins Co. for $30,000 and has leased the Santa Monica frontage on a basis of $600 per front foot and are ere,cting three buildings that will yield upward of $250,000 during a 'term of ten and fifteen years and still retain enough ground to operate the lumber yard.

Attractive Office Decorations

The Union Lumber Company have been giving their friends something new and very attractive in the way of souvenirs, a photograph of their Sawmill and log reserve mill pond at Fort Bragg, California, which is glued to a piece of ,clear Redwood 6 by 24 inches. They make a very attractive office decoration. ,

Buys Inglewood Yard

/ n. p. Wells, formerly general mana€fer of the West Turlock Lumber Co., Turlock, has purchased the business of the Inglewood Lumber Co., Inglewood, and is now operating this yard.

Mr. Wells is one of the best known and most progressive retail lumbermen in California. He was vice-president of the Northern District of the California Retail Lumbermen's Association, and has always taken a most active interest in association afiairs.

Henry C.Sherrard

Henry C. Sherrard, who for the last ten years has been associated with the Fairfax Lumber Co., Fairfax, died suddenly from a heart attack in Healdsburg, March 31.

S. F. March Permits $3,5O2,3I2

Building permits numbering 584 with a valuation of fi3,502,312 were issued in San Francisco during the month of March. These figures were only exceeded in the year 1929 in the months of May, July and August. Of this total frame construction accounted for $695,075, and the largest permit was for a netv marine hospital to be ere,cted at the Funston Avenue entrance to the ?residio at a cost of $1,127,388.

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
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SUDDEN & CHRISTENSON LUMBER AND SHIPPING 7th Floor, Alarka.Comnrercial Blds. LOS ANGELES 3: San Francisco STEAMERS EL. Edna Cbrlrtenon Cmel Jue Chrbtoso Ra:mod Anaie Chrlrtcnro Shrdu Edwin Chriltcn @ Gnyr Harbor Catterina G; Sud&u Barban Catcc Elouc Chrirtenpn Dorcthy Cahill Charlc Chrlrtenro uriticr 31O Sansome Street AGE NTS Abadea lmber & Shiugle Co, Aberdecn, Wash, Amsicu Mlll Cc, Aberdeen. Wash, Hoqulan lrnbcr e Shhglc Co., Hoquiam, Wasb, Prorper MiIl Co. Prcspcr, Orc. nrvnod Lmbcr Co.. Raymond, Wash. Colubta Bc & Lub* Co.. South Bend. Wash. HuDert Mill Go; Aberdeen. Wash. l*wlr MlIb & Tinbcr Cc, South Bend, Wash. J. A- bvt Shhrl,! Co, South Bend, Wash. SEATTLE

Pexrl Srocro,aVrNEER in OAK

QuarQrd white Flain white WalnutBIRCH

Philiooinetrnnogry

MAHOGANY

White ?tu RED GUM

qw,cdF,gftd .untckded

ORE G ON PINE

PTYWOOD and VENEERS

We carry the largest and best assorted stock of Plywood west of Chicago. Our well assorted stocks, our well known dealer policy and our central location guarantee the kind of service you demand. Progressive lumber merchants should carry these quality products. Familiarize Jrour trade of the advantages of using Plywood. For remodeling and modernizing they are real economy.

Also a Complcte Line of Pressed Wood. Mouldings

SEND FOR TIIIS BOOKLET

91j-967 sours ALAMEDA sTREBT

TchpbncTRiniy cr,57

Mzitring''lddnts: P. O. Box96, Arcadc Station

I.OS ANGELES. CALIFORNIA

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT
Interior Decor atitte Panels,
lifornia

The Caterpillar Tractor in Modern Lumber Yard Operation

The steadily growing need and demand for increased efficiency in the handling of lumber in large lumber yards, brings into play continually, new methods and modernized equipment never thought of a few years ago.

Witness this scene in the great lumber yard of The Coos Bay Lumber Company, at Bay Point, Calif. This shows a Caterpillar tractor at work. In this particular instance this Cat is equipped with armored front and is pushing 30 cars of lumber weighing 105 tons, and handling the load with ease, speed and efiiciency.

This is a small Caterpillar "Ten" which does great work in this big Coos Bay yard, this concern having come to depend upon these tractors for the economical and efficient handling and distribution of their great output of lumber. Rubber tracks are used on these tractors, as shown, so as to do no damage to the wooden runways. These are especially adapted and constructed for lumber yard use.

HUGH RIEFF INJURED IN AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT

Hugh Rieff, district sales manager of the Sampson Company, is confined to the Physicians and Surgeons Hospital at Glendale, Calif., as the result of an automobile accident on March 29. He suffered a severe concussion of the brain.

HENRY C. YAWN, JR., LOS ANGELES VTSTTOR

Henry C. Yawn, Jr., of the Pearl River Valley Lumber Company, Canton, Miss., recently spent several rveeks in Los Angeles looking over the hardwood situation here.

F. E. ROBBINS VISITS LOS ANGELES

F. E. Robbins, manager of the retail yards of the White River Lumber Company, Enumclaw, Washington, has returned to his headquarters after spending a fortnight in Los Angeles.

WHITESIDE LUMBER COMPANY CHANGES OFFICE

The office of the Whiteside Lumber Company, Los Angeles, which was formerly located in room 4S5-ot the Petroleum Securities Building, is now in room 331 of the same building.

cEo. JoNES BACK ON JOB

George Jones of the George W. Jones Lumber Co., Walnut Creek, is back at work after a week's illness.

REMOVAL OF OFFICES

The Pacific Rockwood Co. and the Rockwood Sprinkler Co. have announced the removal of their offices to the Builders Exchange Building, Seventh at Los Angeles It-r,egts, Los Angeles. Their telephone number is TRinity 1057.

7O5-7OG Rives-Strong Buildins - Los Angeles Telephone TUcker 8733

l0 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
EARL HOFFMAN CO.
VENEERS LUMBER
"Established in 1919" DOUGLAS FIR DOORS - PANELS and
Car and Cargo Shippers
Our New Address IDennison Street Wharf
&
DRY DIMENSION For Better Seruice HILL E' IIORTON, Oakland. California Inc.
Tel.ephones AlYdooer 1077-1078 We Solicit a Trial Order For Cobbs
Mitchell's
April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT
Little River Redwood Co. May t New Telephone Number GArfteld 2576 REI)WOOD PRODUCTS OF QUALITY Rail And TYater Shtptments Soles Offices: New York City Endeavor, Pa. Havana, Cuba Amsterdam, Holland GENERAL SALES OFFICE: Financial Center Building, SAN FRANCISCO LOS ANGELES: W. R. Chamberlin & Co. Chamber of Commerce Bldg. SAN DIEGO: F. A. Clough, 4778 Panonma Drive Distributing Yards: Mills alz Cranncll, Calif. Fairhaven, Calif. FRIEND & TERRY Sacramento THE LITTLE RIVER RED\UrOOD CO. Madera rBrEEnS---GAI.trOnXrA nEDWOOD AttOGrAllON
The

A nnouncement

FILIPINAS LUMBER Co. Inc.

MANILA, P. I.

Tafte pleasure in announcing the appointment of

BARG TUMBER

& SHIPPING C().

16 CALIFORNIA ST., SAN FRA,NCISCO as their exclurive Sales Agents in the United St"t"t and Canada, to whom all inquiries should be directed.

Mills at: Cabibihan and Caluag

Province of Tayabas

Luzon, P. I.

E. K. Wood Company Using New Sash Pulley on Window Frames

The E. K. Wood Lumber Company at their Los Angeles and Oakland plants are now using a new sash pulley in their window frames that will be of Interest to the Calilornia building trade. The new sash pulley, the Dillon Jam Proof, is a product of The Stanle Works of New Britain, Conn. If is especially adapted fbr use in the construction of California homes rvhere the bull nosed plaster return window frames are specified.

Produeerr of Finert, cloee tcxtured Tanguile, Red Lauan, llfhite Lauan, Apitong and other Philippinc Hardwoode.

_ H, T. Parker, Pacific Coast representative of The Stanley Works, after several months of inveitigation in California devised a window frame for bull noied plaster return construction, which allows the use of weights and cords with the new Dillon Jam Proof Pulley. This type of construction is in ,common use in California houiis, especially in the Southern California territory. To meet these requirements, a sash weight of smaller diameter but of sufficient weight is used as the older type of sash weight was too largJfor this type of window frimes. The smaller sash-weigtrts are now being supplied by California foundries. The Stanley Works have speciai machinery equipment for routing in the sash pulleys which gives the job an accurate and attractive appearance and these machines have been installed and are noW in use at the E. K. Wood Lumber Co., Los Angeles and Oakland plants.

All window frames now being built at.the E. K. Wood Lumber Co., Los Angeles and Oakland plants, are equipped with this new Dillon Jam Proof Sastr- Pulley unle-ss otherwise specified.

H.'W'. Newton Opening Yard

H. W. "Dad" Newton, former manager of the Chas. R. McCormick Lumber Company yard at San Bernardino is starting a yard of his own in that ,city.

JO SHEPARD VTSTTS OPERATTONS OF THE LITTLE RIVER REDWOOD CO.

Jo H. Shepard, general manager of the Friend & Terry Lumber Co. of Sacramento, re,cently spent several days visiting the mills and logging operations of The Little River Redwood Co. at Crannell and Fairhaven. He was accompanied on the trip by R. E. Caldwell, assistant sales manager.

.

LLOYD COLE VISITS TEXAS

T loyd Cole of the Hammond Lumber Company, l,os Angeles, is back at his desk after making a short trip to Texas.

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
Our Own Logging - Milling -lTransportation and Distributing Facilities THAT ISTHE REASON FOR GOOD LUITBER Consolidated Lumber Company Vilrnington - Lor Angeler Dietributorr of Crcoiotcd Lumf,cf Piliag end Poler. JAMES
HALL MaiI, Wire or Phone Your Spccicl Inquiriet for Lumber - Piling - Shingles - Posts Railroad and Car Materials - Mine Poler Prcourc end Opcn Tank Creorotcd LUMBER.PILING-POLES 1Q.22 Mills Bldg. - SUtter- 1.3-qS , - San Francirco A3cntr, Cher. K. Spaulding Logging Co. Speciclists in Mixeil Cars anil Special lists
L.

Have you heard about this book?

A practical plan to help you get the modernizin! business in your community

OU NEED the profits from modernizing and rebeautifying business more today than at any time in the. past five years. And those profits can be gotten. But you do require a work' able plan.

Too much bunk has been written about remodel' ing opportunities. The business is there, but it needs ability and thought and work to get itr just as it requires ability and work to get anything else worth while.

Creo-Dipt was the first to begin promoting the re' beautifying field-seven years ago. The book pictured here is the result of those seven yedrs of hard experience. It gives facts-not pleasant theories.

For instance, do y o u know that it has been

HANDI VOOD for patching and repairing

definitely proved that advertising alone won't get the remodeling busines$1a1 three out of five dealers make only a small part of the progress they could if they knew the first work' ing rules?

This book for the first time gives the result of hu n d r e d s of successful experiencesgives a plan that is a proved business'bringer. It has been written as a confidential help to the Creo' Dipt organization, and the Creo-Dip rePre' sentative will be glad to tell you about it, or write us asking us more in detail.

CREO.DIPT 1 JtamedJhingles

THE SANTA FE LUMBER COMPANY

San Ftancisco, Calif. (Northern Repreeentative) THE HIPOLITO COMPANY

2O2l S. Alameda Stteet, Loo Angeler, Calif. (Southetn Reprerentative)

\TEST.KING.PETERSON LUMBER COMPANY San Diego, California

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT l3 April 15, 1930 r- -i
A HANDBOOK ON MOT}EBNIZING I 0l J.G.GII.ES / C-fl*t;.t fo Cw-Dip
tebtw
HANDI
STAINS
STAINED UNDER PRESSURE Other Creo-Dipt Products
IRONING CABINET all metal board turnr to right or left. No rupportr or bracT
BRUSHCOAT
for coloring and rebeautifying old rhingler
GENUINE CREO.DIPT PRODUCTS ARE SOLD BY LEADING LUMBER DEALERS EVERY\THERB.

Pacific Coast Truck Manufacturer Looks for Sound Business Development During L930

"The economic problem facing the automotive and motor truck manufacturer today is the problem of selling and not production, as was the case several years ago," was the statement made by L. H. Bill, president of the Fageol Motors Company, in a recent interview.

"Expansion during the plst year has reached such a point in all lines of business that profit possibilities were thiorvn to the winds to receive the fickle attention and fatal results of mass selling. Business men inall lines of business reached beyond their natural clistribution areas. Concerns that were operating profitably in certain definite markets branched out and spread their efforts over markets wherein they were unknown and where there was a doubtful need for their services. Business men can be thankful that the recent period -o! !u-si19ss dissipation came to an abrupt end in October ol 1929. This performed the valued service of returning capital to industiy

"Conditions had reached such a Doint last vear." continued Mr. Bill, "that great industriei and businlss all over the country u'ere sending money to \Vall Street to secure 14 p-er cent interest,_while the people were investing in stocks that were paying them a return of 1.3 per ..trI itterest.

"We all knorv that safe and sound investments can always be made at 5rlto 6per cent and it is generally agreed that the entrepreneur, the business man. r,r'ho tak-es a chance, is entitled to get lO or 72 per cent for his gambling in an untried business venture. Norv that the wil"d ,p..u"-

GUS ENGSTROM AND EMIL WEIRHAKE VISIT LOS ANGELES

Gus Engstrom, manag'er, and Emil Weirhake, superin- tendent, Arizona Sash, Door & Glass Co.. Phoenix. Arizona, were Los Angeles visitors around the first part of the month where they spent a few days on compan-y business and calling on their lumbermen friends. Mr. Eng- strom is president of the Gold Spot Hoo Hoo Club No. 72 of Phoenix.

lation is over, capital must again return to the development of sound business enterprises throughout the nation. These industries and businesses are of every type, they are, in the_ final analysis, the safe, secure, sound- place for money and the result will be the return to sound business conditions.

"Sales efforts will, no doubt, be drawn into the areas of concentrated population where profitable sales are most likelv to be present, where they lan be had at a cost that rvill leave a final net profit.

"Manufacturers and distributors of merchandise and products will operate in these restricted areas on a zone plan that will give them an opportunity to pay dividends during 1930. Advertising to h6lp selling wili dndoubtedly play a gr€ater part thiJ year tfian it hls lor many yeari past. Sales and advertising must gear in closely' to the immediate problems and the result witt be a close co-ope- ration and a co-relation of efforts betrveen advertising, silling and production."

Mr. Bill states that Fageol Motors Company is looking forward to 1930 to be one of the most succesiful vears. from an operating and profit standpoint, in the history of the Fageol Motors Company. There is today wider- demand for motor trucks by careful, shrewd purihasers, who are conservative and cautious in their purchases than there has been in manv a dav.

"Sales wili not b. "r.".y, that we appreciate, but with constructive effort, and the offering of sound values, 1930 will reward fighters who think."

R. B. WHITE VISITS CALIFORNIA

R. B. White, president of the Forest Lumber Co., Pine Ridge, Oregon, and of the Exchange Sawmills Sales Co., Kansas City, was a recent visitor to San Francisco while on a business trip to the Pacific Coast.

IMPROVEMENTS AT

Milpitas Lumber Co. has recently and other improvements to its yard

MILPITAS completed a new shed at Milpitas.

WHITE PINESUGAR PINEWHITE CEDAR_ SPRUCE-

t4 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
wE;clglln'dil;IFffil

And the Whole Industry Benefits from Reduced Insurance Rates.

While insurance rates vary according to specific conditions involved, frgures on diflerent classes of lumber risks ghow definitely an average rate today only about 40% of the rate prevailing thirty years ago.

Without presuming to claim all the credit, "that Muttral interect" hag had a very large part in ef' fecting these rate reductions from which the entire lumber induetry has benefited so substantially.

To our policy-holderc, a 40/o dividend is added to the 60/o rate reduction, so that we ofier insurance today at actually only about 25/o of what similar insurance cost in | 900.

Lumber Mutual Insurance was created by lumber' men to furnieh a more cornplete specialized protection for the lumber industry and to provide it at lowest cost. That is exactly what it does.

If you zrwnt the best insurance protection available lor the lumber industry, zttith the saaing of a 4OVo d,iztid.end, with real cooperation in lire preaention, and witk assurance o! prornpt payrnent of losses, write any o! our companies for further information.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT
ASSOOIATDD LUMBDIr MUTI]ALS of Scrttlc' l\trrh. Pmrylvuir Lubcman Mutul Fin luuue Co.' ot Philr&bhfa' Pr. Centrrt Muufutrrarr Mutul Ilre Co. of Vu Wsrt' Ohio Indbu Luubcr.no Muturl lurruce Co.' o[ lndanpollr' Ind. Thc Lunbcr Mutrrl Fln lnsroe Cool Bctm' Mu. Thc Lubmu Mutnl lnlru C;c ol Mulbld, Ohlo

H. T. Didesch Resigns

HABDWOODS from HAMnfONDgS

There is a decided swing towards Wood for the Interior. Architect, contractor and homeowner are showing increased interest in inter.

ior settings enhanced in colorings of hardwoods.

beauty by the rich

Are you taking full

advantage of this preference?

Vith over fifty varieties of foreign and domestic Flardwoods, always in stock at our Los Angeles ytd, the retail lumber dealer has an immediate lumber.

source of supply in this class of These stocks include Philippine hardwoods, mahogany from Central America, teak from Siam, oak from the Southern States . . . neady every variety of Hardwood for home-building or commercial purpose. There is the usual Hammond Service back of these stocks.

Douglas Fir - Redwood - Hardwoods

/ W. T. Dirlesch, for the past six years Managing Director of the Millwork Institute of California, announced his resignation on IVIarch 31, which became efiective on that date. President A. W. Bernhaupr has arranged that Mr. Didesch continue with the organlzation as Acling Manag- ing Director until May 1, 1930,t or thereabouts-so as io permit the completion of several;j rernaining details of the certification program and the disposal of ,ceitain field work and routine administrative mattehs. There will be a spe- cial meeting of the Institute Difectorate within the next several weeks at which time ther matter of Mr. Didesch's successor will be decided upon. I

In announcing his resignation to the lhstitute membership, Mr. Didesch said:

"The present is the seventh year of the Institute's life. Its program is clearly defined and securely established upon constructive and progressive enterprises and its achievements have attained for it an enviable position both in the millwork industry of the Nation and thi association field of the State. With the same measur€ of support accorded the program as during my administration, the future of the Institute is assured. There is ewry promise of expansion, and still greater a,ccomplishment, to amply compensate all members for their sustained and enthusiastic support."

Announcement of Mr. Didesch's future plans, which at the present time are indefinite, will be made later.

L. A. MORRISON WILL SPEND FEW MONTHS IN PORTLAND

L. A. Morrison, California representative of the Eastern & Western Lumber Co., Portland, Ore., left San Francisco April 5 to spend the next three or four months at the company's lome office in Portland, where he will take the place of K. H. I(oehler, manag'er, who has left with his family for a trip to Europe.

Mr. Morrison's brother, E. R. Morrison, who has been in charge of city sales in the Portland office, will take his place in the San Francisco office.

FRED HOLMES IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

Fred V. I{olmes, sales manager of the Holmes-Eureka T umber Co., is on a two weeks' business trip in Southern California. He is accompanied by W. H. Dalton of Eureka, purchasing agent for the company.

J. P. McGOLDRICK IN LOS ANGELES

^ J.- P. McGoldrick of the McGoldrick Lumber Company, Spokane, has been spending the past several weeks iri Los Angeles.

t6 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
.
riAAtftoF{D LIJAIBEQ OCMr)ANY Mills: Samoa, Calif.; Mill City, Ore.; Garibaldi, Ore. Sales Ofrces Portland - Chicago - New York 310 Sansome St. San Francisco, Calif. 2010 So. Alameda St. Los Angeles, Calif. BDYNTNB LUMBBA CO. 112 Market St., San Francirco ANNOUNCE That They Are Norp Exclusive Selling Agents in Northern California lor the HUMBOLDT RED\TOOD CO. Eureka" California' - ManufecturGr. of Rcdwood and Fir Lumber - Shingler - Shakcr - Moulding., Gtc.

aslrellas afr ffidmoM

l\/tORE than 10,000 dealers know that Sisalkraft shuts .,LVI out trouble for the contractor just as it shuts out moisture and air. Rough handling does not.affect it. As a protection for supplies, finished and temporary work, shipments, etc., it is ideal and a big money saver.

A lumber dealer said to us recently, "One of the reasong I like to handle Sisalkraft is because it saves my customers so much grief." A contractor naturally appreciates being told about a paper that stops many complaints from home owners and that save him money on the job. Test a sample for yourself. Wad it up. See if you can tear it. This tearing test distinguishes the real Sisallcraft from all other building papers.

We have developed a sales promotion plan for reaching your customers. Send a list of your contractors with your initial order and start this plan working for you.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT t7 __-.: --:-: -E:J*
THB STSALK'BAI'T CO. 205 w. #-.f"8:t(conol stdtion) 55 New Moutgomery St.; Sau Frauciaco, Calif,
CLM ,f-I5-Gray octt Southcrn
art^r,ttaTt tt attv arat?
ttMore than a building paper''
&EJornia Distributor Hamrnond Lumber Corrpany Iar Angele' Cslif.
(Reg. U. S. Pat. Ofiice)

Carl D. Shufelt New Snark for Los Angeles District

Carl D. Shufelt

Carl D. Shufelt, Los Angeles, sales representative for

1 the E. K. Wood Lumber Co., has been appointed viceger-

I ent snark for the Los Angeles district. The appointment / was made by Supreme Arcanoper A.A. Frost of San Diego.

Mr. Shufelt has been a member of Hoo Hoo since 1915 and was vicegerent snark of the Salt Lake City, Utah, district in 1925. Before coming to Los Angeles, he was connected with the lumber business in Salt Lake City where he operated a retail lumber yard. He sold out his lumber interests in Salt Lake City a few years ag'o to locate in Los Angeles.

Snark Shufelt announces that a concatenation will be held at Los Angeles during the month of May. Announcement of the date will be made later,

$1O,OOO DAMAGE TO PLANING MILL

Fire destroyed part of the planing mill of the E. C. Fisher Lumber Co. at Oroville, April 2. Loss is estimated at $10,000.

Appointed Exclusive Agents for Redwood Manufacturer in Northern California

Reynier Lumber Company, wholesale lumber dealers of San Francisco, announce that they have been appointed exclusive selling agents in Northern California for the Humboldt Redwood Company, operating a modern sawmill, dry kilns and remanufacturing plant at Eureka, and manufacturers of Redwood and Fir lumber, shingles, shakes, mouldings, etc.

Hart-Wood Steamer Beached

The Hart-Wood Lumber Company's steamer Claremont was beached off Crissy Field, San Francisco, March 28, to avoid sinking after'having crashed into a submerged rock in the fog. The steamer was later towed to drydock for repalrs.

4 L BOARD OF DIRECTORS TO MEET

The 23rd semi-annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and the Lumbermen will be held at Portland, Oregon, on May 19.

MOVE TO NEW OFFICES

The Los Angeles offices of the Northwestern Mutual Fire Association are now located in the Builders Exchange Building, 656 South Los Angeles Street, Los Angeles. They moved into their new quarters on April 1. Their telephone number is the same, TRinity 1057.

Mecormick-Faster Serviee

On Creosoted or Untreated Timbers Ties Poles

MERGENCY! That's the thing that introduces many a buyer to the convenience and dependability of the McCormick stock at our tenninal in Witnington.

This distributing yard fills all regular and emergency orders with surprising dispatch. McCormick "straight-Line Service" is like that because McCormick controls every stage of its lumber production as well as its delivery. Three sailings each week from Northwest ports keep locd stock ready for the rush order.

Ask our nearest sales office to guote you on straight or mixed cars.

Lurnber Co.

THE CALIFORNTA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
McGormlelt
f,.So/rt Ofiices: San Francisco,2lS Market Street, Daaentort 35ffi. Los Angeles,ll il 1100 Lane Mortgage BIdg., TRinity 5241. -Phoenii, C. P. Henry, ripre- $ 0[ sentative, 423 Heard BId,g. Mills: Sr. Helens, Oregon; Port Ludlow ]l I a_nd Port Gomble, Washingion. Treating Plant: St'. Helcis,'Oregon. Planing ll flrMills: San Diego. Distri"buting Yardsl San Diego ond Wilmin-gton.-n Douglas Flr Gedar Spruce Hernloek
Ghas. R.

Why Girls Leave Flome

!

No doubt they have to frght with wrnd@ws rn the old homnestead that are hung @n pulleys lrke thrs.

Why notlet your neighbors have Palco Red' wood Frames equipped withDillon Jam-proof Pulleys, and keep the girls in town. Vindows always fit right in Palco Frames and that is an advantage.

THE PACIFIC TUMBER COMPANY

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
Member of the Calilornia Reilvood Association SAN FRANCISCO 311 California St California NORTHERN Red Grioes L. V. (Lew) Blinn' II. R e p r e r e n t a t iver SOUTHERN Gur lloover Geo. Melville LOS ANGELES 7fi) Standard Oil Bldg.

Chas. S. Keith Discusses Duty on Foreign Lumber

On the subject of duty on lumber imported into the United States rvhich will shortly be up before the House:

I wish your indulgence for a few minutes to permit nre to offer a few thoughts for your consideration. I have watched the Congressional Record in the Senate discussions and have been somewhat surprised by statements that have been made. To say the least, many of them were extremely misleading. I wish to present to you ,the facts as we see them, part of which can be confirmed by the Forest Service:

First, the industry is anything but an integrated one. There is a vast number of mills, and no possibility of production or market 'control. No one company actually produces or controls as much as 3 per cent of the national production of lumber. '

Second, the capacity of the mills in the industry is vastly in excess of the country's consumption. '

-Third, if the entire importation of all woods from foreign countries were excluded by embargo, it would not afford sufficient market toabsorb the present unused capacity of the industry to produce.

Fourth, in periods of depression it takes more acres of-timber to support production than in favorable times, for the reason that a substantial proportion of the timber harvested must be left in the woods, because the yield is not sufficient to cover the cost of recovery; i.e., manufacture and transportation.

_ Fifth, fifty-four per cent of the lumber produced in the United States is consumed throu-gh_ channels of exports, railroad uses, box manr.rfacture, building and shipping of automobiles, crating of other products shipped in export, lumber consumed in the manuJacture of :sash and doors, the construction of farm implements and manufacture of caskets. The balance of production is consumed in construc- tion and all other industries, including such as the-furniture industry wh_ich is a large user of wood, etc., and not heretofore enumerated.

-Sixth, only 4l per cent of construction in the United States in 1928 was done on the farms, and only l0 per cent of the construc- Ition in this country- in -the iwenty years fiom 1909 i; lgtd;-i;;d- sive, was done on the farms. Farm construction is constantly declining.

Seventh, in the South, in Southern Pine lumber production alone, approximately 43 per cent of the timber cottru-ed in manufact-uri of-such lumber comes _from farmers, timber or togs proiu".a-a"j 's-old- by -the farmers. This is also true to a more 6r i... extent oi the hardwood. lurnber production, including the sales ;i;"lr;';"; oaK rogs Dy the tarmers to the manufacturers of such lumber in the Middle W.est. Approximately two and one-half times i. ;;;h-iir": Der rs sold by the farmers for the manufacture of lumber as is con_ sumed by all the farmers gf the country in the form "i furnt...---

Ejsh_$,. _consumption of._lumber as repie sentea lv purctras;, ih;r._ of., in 1925, was_38,684 million feet; in'1929, 33,912 miftio" t..i.-""a the purchases of lumber for the first 12 weeks of 1930 declines 1356 million feet as against _the same period iast year. proArrciior,-oi lumber in 1925 w-"s 40.519 *lttior-f".i, "ri'ii., t9Z9 35,081 million

feet. In the fir region, alone, there was four billion feet of capacity unused last year, and probably for the country as a whole the unused capacity amounted to six billio-n feet. If the present rate of decline in demand continues througfro'ut the year, the probabilities are that there will be less than 28 billion feet of consumption of lumber this year as against an undoubted capacity of 40 billion fdet, or, not over 66 per cent of capacity to produce. This has, and is resulting in a large amount of unemployment and under present conditions the unemploynent may increase.

It is our experience, because of short running time, that the payrolls, at our lumber mills, have declined something in excess of $15,- 000 per week. Our wage scales .have not declined and we do not believe it is advisable that any reductions therein should be made'; i.e., that nobody would be especially benefited. Men must live.

Should the lumber imported into the United States from Canada be excluded from this country, it wpuld give labor, employed in production of lumber in the country, an increase in payroll of $20,000,000 annually, but the volume of business would not be sufficiently great to absorb the unused production capacity of the mills in thb United States.

One statement was made that the lumber industry in the United States was prosperous, but only recently, i.e., under date of March 12, 1930, the "Business Week" published the following stafements:

'lEver since 1926 the largest number of failures has occurred in the lumber and woodworking industries. If you want a short business life if not a merry one, however, start a lumber mill, carpenter ,shop or a grocery or meat store. 'fhe chances are I to 5 that you will cash in (or out) within a year."

This would indicate that the condition of the lumber business has not been and is not prosperous.

There is no question as to the unemployment in the industry, nor the necessity for some means of protecting American lumber markets for American production employing American labor.

I hope that you can see your way clear to support a tariff on lum- ber. I only regret that the tariff involved does not amount to more than it doe.q. By reason of the exemptions of. rough lumber and lumber surfaced on one side, practically 70 per cent of the lumber now being imported into the United States from Canada and Mexico will continue to come in free.

I-n 4{ry event, with the, lumber industry's large capacity to produce, and with the consumptive demand of the country so substantially curtailed, competition of productive capacity for markets should assure the public of practically no increase in cost. At least. durinc the period of depression, with consumption declining rapidiy, as i-[ is, we should conserve our markets for the benefit-of our-people. If employments decline and payrolls become less the purihasjns power of the qeople contracts and the farmers suffer thiough cur-tailment of their markets of distribution.

Yours very truly,

20 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
The_follouing is a letter wittcn by Qh"t. S,- K_e_ith, President of the Central Coal & Coke Co., to a number of Re|reseniatioes in the States of Missouri, -Kansas and. Arkiasa.r on tke subjeci ol tne uii6 on lumbcr imported..into the Unit.d, Stares.
HAND-DlCKID DOUGLAS TIQ SANDID FTNTSH Is OUR STANDING OFFER WITHOUT ADDITIONAL COST TO YOU ""BLINN"" ARCHITECTURAL WOODWORK OFFERSi PLEASING DISTINCTION TY. BLTNN LUIIBDR CODIPANY THE L. Dirtributiar Yardr and Wh-arver Foot of McFerlend Avc. Wilnhgton, Cdff. Gcucrel O6ccr 25O1 So. Alaneda St Phone: HUmboh 3770 tos Ansds, Califomia Artolr Rcpracntrtivo R. W. DALTON 2O9 l.lfiltr Blds. Phocldr, Arir.

|THERE'S no limir to rhe uses for Port I Orford Cedar. Every day finds new purposes for which thjs wood is esiecially adaptable.

The soft tones obtained by staining this cream-white cedar makes it exceptionally satisfactory for paneled walls and all interior trim. Exceptionally finegrained, it enamels with i porcelainlike finish-no unusual priming necessary. It machines with clean, sharp edges, giving it countless uses in the novelty Eeld. "Drapery rods, card tables, picturb moulding inade from Port Orford Cedar remain slraight and true. Built-ins do not warD or Dull out. Smooth. fras r antit is mu'ch in demand for linen ilosets.

The wood of countless uses

Non-warping, long-lasting, Port Orford Cedar is ideal for garden furniture, playground equipment and entrances. Beiause of its qreat strength and its resisrance to aiids, soil deiays and damp ness, it is selected for tunnLling, pilin!, bulkheading, dock planking, etc.

In industrv. Port Orford Cedar is ace hish. Toireh of texture, it does not splinter-ind makes long wearing f.ictory floors, loading platforms, etc.

The Specralty Wood with a future €

Mixed cars now available, all grades of clear, shop and common-ind all standard siies of boards, dimensions and timbers. Also Port Orford Cedar plywood in all thicknesses from 1} fnih and sizcs up to 48 x 96 inches.

Port Orford Crdar representatives in California are R. C. Turner, 4O7 C^ll Building, San Francisco and Thomas W. Dant, 606 Petroleum Securities Building, Los Anqeles. Port Orford Cedar plywood distributors in California ari H. B. Maris Panel Co., 735 Third Strcct, San Francisco, and the California Panel & Venecr Co., 955 So. Alameda Street, Los Angeles.

Thc story of Port Orford Crdar, its steding lualities and varied uses, is dramaiicaily told in our 48 page illustrated booklet. The coupon brings your copy. Mail it today.

Pot Oimd Ccdar lincn clonts of the M. A. Hailr honc, ,4thcrton, Calif , Notc thc richncst anil bcatty uith uhich Port A{ord Gtb oaiw. Thc Chatc au Apartmcnts, Brkc lc1, Calit'onia. Paint lulde for 1earc on Port Atford Ccclo trcllius dnd gardcn farnituc.
PORT
Pnt Orforil C,cilaVnctiatt Blinik fu not ckck, tplit or woy.
ORFORD CEDAR PRODUCTS COMPANY
PonroffdnDCnuap Tbe rAristocrat of lYoods Der.rr & Russer., lNc., Prt Orlrd Ccdar ,talc:
Building, Pordand,Otegon I am ntcrested in Pbrt Orford Ccdar. Please icnd
your
" Port
-Ccdar -Its Proocttics and
Company THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MER.CHANT 2l April 15, 1930
lntei.o dccorators faam Port Arford Ccdar *atcn ,lhr bccaruc of thc casc uith uhich ilil '-o1 bt toonclid or pofuchromcd.
Agcntt-Portcr
me frcc,
boo=k
Otford
Uses,"

Are you getting your share PIONEER f[IULS will ta ke you into

IONEER EMULSIFIED ASPHALT isa product you can sell to every job of roof repairing because it will give your customers the utmost in protection and economy!

Here are the reasons why: In the past, the problem of repairing or recoating roofing presented real, serious difficulties. Ordinary roofing plastics and paints made from a coal tar base, soften under heat of the sun. resulting in failure of the roof coating and ultimate disintegration of the roof itself. Hot bituminous applications prove equally inefficient as cracking and checking soon occur, exposing the roof to the dangers of weather erosion and wear. Too, the hazard of firewith serious burns to workmen was an ever present danger during the application of hot materials.

Pioneer Emu lsif ied Aspha I t does away with these highly objectionable characteristics. Pioneer Emulsified Asphalt is a

tl

22 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
PIONEf R pAp ESTABLIS MANUFA( AND AIAMEDA, LOI LAFAYE'] l217 Spal PORT1ANI Atwate
200 Bush Street SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. Sutter 7571 424 Symons Block SPOKANE, WASHINGTON Main 5435 55rh

the roofittg repair business ?

FIED ASP}IALT prof itable market !

pure asphalt that can be applied cold on metal, concrete, composition, or built up roofs. by hand brush or air spray equipment. and it forms a lasting, stable coating which permanently protects the surface to which it is applied. It will not flow under heat... nor wiil it crack or check at low temperatures! Pioneer Emulsified Asphalt bonds perfectly in a continuous, unbroken asphaltic coating that retains all its original life and protective value, indefinitely.

Simple to apply. . lasting in protection. and economical to use-these are the reasons you will be able to sell Pioneer Emulsified Asphalt to every roof i ng repa i r jo b ... industrial plants, warehouses, oflice bui ldings, homes, and for countless other uses. Get your share of this prof itable business !

Write today for samples and complete information. Address Industrial Emulsion Dept.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 23
R COMPAIT{Y D 1888 URERS 2il1 Bldg. 525U. S. Nat. Bank Building DENVER, COLORADO Keystone 7653 859 Dexter
Bldg. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Main 5842 CALIFORNIA
Horton

N. L.M. A. to Hold Annual Meetin$ at Chicrgo, April 24-2,5

The National Lumber Manufacturers Association will holds it annual meeting on the 24th and 25th of. April, and attendant and subsidiary meetings will round out the week and take up part of the preceding week. The meetings will be held at the Congress Hotel, Chicago.

Committee Meetings

The Regional Association will designate representatives to appear at the Technical Advisory Committee meeting, set for April 16 to 19. During the early part of the week of the 21st, other committees will meet, including the National Lumber Manufacturers Inter-Insurance Exchange Committee. The morning of the 23rd has been arranged for the Committee on Nominations and Recommendations.

The Public Meeting

The general meeting on the 24th has been divided into four sessions-af fgn, two, four and seven o'clock. The morning will be given to trade extension. Recommendations of the Trade Extension Committee will be received and the delegates will hear the report of W.F. Shaw, Trade Extension Manager and Theo. M. Knappen, Director of Publicity. There will be short talks in their respective fields by the chairmen-Messrs. Carl Hamilton, A. C. Dixon, W. T. Murray and C. Arthur Bruce, of the Advisory Sub-Committees on Advertising, Publicity, Trade Promotion and Research, respectively; and probably some extemporaneous talks by lumber leaders. The address of the President, E. L. Carpenter, and the report of the Secretary-

Manager, Wilson Compton, in the afternoon, will be followed by the report on Lumber Marketing and Statistical Program, Recommendations on Trade Practices and report of the Committee on Resolutions.

Bureau Reports

Of especial trade extension interest will be reports to the Trade Extension Committee from the joint committees representing cooperative promotion between the Wood Box, Treated Wood, Commercial Furniture Bureaus and the N. L. M. A.

Prominent business leaders and the famous humorist, Strickland Gillilan, will be on the program at the annual dinner, Thursday evening, April 24. Friday will be devoted entirely to a meeting of the Stockholders for election of Directors. The Directors' meeting will .immediately follow for annual election of officers and Committee Chairmen, and consideration will be given to policies and program of work of the industry, finances, reports and iecommendations of Standing Committees and progress of Home Financing plans. During the afternoon there will be a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Credit Corporation.

An informal dinner to the editors and publishers of the Lumber Trade Press will be held on the evening of April 23.

CALAVERAS CEMENT CO.

a Hoo-Hoo Confor delegates and "Alwayt wall above Specifications" Capacity 41500,000 Sackt pet yeal Cataveras Ccment Co. 315 Montgomcry St., San Francisco, Calif. Tclephone Davgnport 0932

24 TI{E CATIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
On the evening of Friday, the 25th, catenation will furnish entertainment g'uests. Manulacturers of BIG TREE BRAND CEMENT DigTreeBrand. Sold through dealcrs

ilOOTHER FORATY MONEY-BACK LI.KE IT- SURFACE- GUARANTEE-

l.Pobco Multi.Service Point is mode by o revolutionizing process occording to o spe. ciol sccret formulo. No other poinf in lhe world is like Pobco.

2, Unlike olhcr points, lhe some Pobco Mulil -Service Point will givc perfecl results on wood, metol, brick stucco, slonc,conclete...qny pointoble surfoce.. ouf. doors or indoors.

3. Pobco Multi-Service Point hos been lhoroughly tested for over nine yeors. With evcry con we give o prinled unconditionol guoron. tee. We outhorize you fo offer your customers unquolifi ed sotisfoclion.

5 big consumer qppeols

With these five big selling points ond our extensive odvertising, it's no wonder Pabco Multi-Service Point, Vornish ond Enomel oJmost sell themselves.

And you profii fu*her by corrying o much smoller stock.. o few populor colors thot con be used on.any surfoce. Thot meons o sim-

plified stock of fost sellers fost turnover. quick, eosy profits. Get in fouch with your iobber or our neorest office todoy.

THE PARAFFINE COMP.ANIES, INC. lor Angrlc Son Froncirco Ooklond Portlond Scottlc Konsos City Ncw York Somerville, N.J. london Sydney

PABCO

Multi-Service PAINT

VARNISH clnd ENAMELS

HRST QUA]ITY

4. Pobco gives your cuslomdr oll the quolity, oll lhe durobility, oll the long life

of more expensive poinls...oll the yslue.. qnd morc.

PRTCE

Pobco Multi-Service Point sells ot much less o gollon. You con emphosize the foct thof in Pobcoyou give more.volue for lron X b X less ond still you moke o fine profiL ,

April 15, 1930 T}IE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 25
rhG "ArlArr.il! eotet|1#
wf 3f ltfvf rr|fnf lt to Bf rrf n palrr ar A il U pnr(r ! 9tero

West Coast Enlar$es Trade Extension

J. C. McCune and C. W. Zimmetrnran Assigned to California.

A material increase in service to lumber dealers, lumber users and specifiers and West Coast mills is represented.by a number of recent developments in the trade extension field work of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association. These include the addition of one man to the field stafi and the assignment of two men from the Seattle office to work in California, with headquarters in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

The new member of the Trade Extension and Field Service staff is Justin T. Kingdon, who for several years has been doing sales promoting work for the lvood preserving companies subscribing to the Association. His headquarters are in Denver, Colo. Mr. Kingdon will continue the work he has been doing, which has been principally with highway engineers in the Middle West in the interest of treated Douglas fir in highway bridges and for other forms of highwav construction.

Mr. Kingdon has had many years of tra.ining- and varied experienceln the engineering field, goitg into this work in I9O2. His experience includes work with railroads, irrigation projects, street construction, sew.er and water-works systems, highway construction, oil field. construction, and preservativJ treaiment of timber. During 1.918 and 1919 he was a Captain of Engineers in the U. S. Army

C. W. Zimmerman, formerly working in the interest of treated wood from the Seattle office, has been assigned to work in California, with headquarters in the San Francisco office of the National Lumber Manufacturers' Association. He has been with the Association since 1928.

Mr. Zimmerman took work in civil engineering at Purdue lJniversity and the University of Washington, graduating from the latter school and later taking post-graduate work there. This work consisted of a special course in strength values and preservative treatment of construction materials, particularly wood.

He later entered the United States Forest Service and for

ten years was an engineer in forest products in charge of the Seattle Timber Testing Laboradory, a branch of the Madison Laboratory, speciJlizing on strength tests ?1d--lhe preservative treatmint^of timber-. During the World War 'he -*s transferred to the United States Signal Corps where he served as an aeronautical mechanical engineer and

worked on sPecifications for wood parts for American-made airplanes. During the entire Period while located at the UniversitY of Washington, he was on the faculty of the College of Forestry as a special lecturer in timber mechanics and timber physics.

Mr. Zimmerman is the author of a number of articles and publications on the strength, Preservative treatment, seasoning and durability of West Coast woods. He will devote Particular attention to the use of treated Douglas fir in highway and marine construction.

C. McCune, who has been with the Association and th6 old Bureau since 1927, is now doing general trade extension work in California. His headquarters are in the Los Angeles office of the National Lumber Manufacturers' Associat-ion. Mr. McCune's work supplements that of A. A. Kayser, Association grades .inspector, who went to Southern California at the time the Association opened its Los Angeles office several months ago.

Mr. McCune was in charge of the Association's exhibit at the Oil Equipment and Engineering Exposition held in Los Angeles lrom March 16 to 23, the exhibit consistitg-of a 136-foot Douglas fir oil derrick built from standard designs developed by the National Lumber Manufacturers' Aisociation and presented to the American Petroleum Institute as tentative standards.

Mr. McCune is contacting groups of dealers, individual dealers and lumber specifiers and users in the interest of proper and more extensive use of West Coast woods, and io promote a greater understanding, on the part of both deaiers and manufacturers, of their closely related problems.

IT. B. MARIS PANET COMPANY

SAN FRANGTSCO P L Y tv O O ID 26 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERgHANT April 15, 1930
Service
C. lil. Zimmerntan I. C. McCune Iustin T. Kingdon
'i"rott

THIS SIGN MEANS 2OO EXTRA MILES OF LUBRICATION at no added cost to you

OTORITE is the new oil that Itrl-1 feature which reduces friction to a mfiumum.

fYlguarante€s you maximtm power fro'! your high compression cars and

trucks.

Seals the Comprerrion In

Having the abiliry to cling exta tigbt to metal (highadhesive power)-it forms a sealinq oil film around the piston that successfully resists the intensi pressure from thi combustion charibcr above.

In this manner MOTORITE sals all tbe power in, and at the same time prevents gasoline panicles from reaching the crankcase to dilute the oil.

Super Ollyl

MOTORITE is also saper oily ot iltp-

Another advanage is its great capaciry for carrying away and dissipating heat.,Onlong drives at sustained high sPeeds rt KeePs yorrf motofs cool.

Too, its viscosity or fluidity, is variable. As the temperatue of the motor changes, the viscosiry alrers in just the pr.oper ratio to assure 100% efficient luDnctuoo.

Also, MoToRITE deposits les carbon. And the small amounf that it does deposit is softand flafri, much unlike the lrard gritty srb6n"ftft by many oils.

And it crnnot corrode yoru moto$.

Through a special purification D(rcessit is cdmpleiely fre'ed from acit-forming propenies.

You BenelitTwoWayrl

These advantagcs mean more eGcieot lubrication for yourhigh compression crr-ycc longcr oil by'. No*, widMotoRrm, y'olr cen drain at 200 miler fenher theo you [rve been ia the habit ofdoing.

95c A OUART

MoToRITE is sold rt ell Union Oil Company service stations, distributing satioos and wherever you sce the MOrOnrTr sicnQuantity production and qqatiql salcs brlng rts cost to only ztc a quarL

Specifi by name-Motonnt.

Use it with Super UMoN En{y1, for merimum efrciencyfrom your high compression cars and rucKs.

UNION OIL COMPANY

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT n
MO T oRo TlIF tb THE UNION MOT OR IL FOR HIGH COMPRESSION CARS

HERE'S A 1930 HOME

that can be built for less than $3500.00. Show this illustration to some of your contractor friends or prospective home builders. There is someone in your town who would like to adopt this idea to build from at once. The plans are available.

Plans for this attractive. home can be furnished by the Lurrbeinentc Sen'ice Ascociation Fay Building, Los Angeles.

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
Ltvrna Roo,ta'20:6'r 1316 Plan No 1405 Lrvrrte Poo,-t lrtrrBtoe.

Alone With Nature

I wandered thru the forest Upon a summer's day, Believing that no other Had ever fared that way. "I'm all alone with Nature !" I cried with heart athrill, And then thru tangled underbrush I climbed the fragrant hill.

I paused upon the summit And felt my heart expand, For peace and silence hovered O'er all the sunlit land. The summer br€ezes passing Sighed softly through the pines, No sounds of toil were wafted From highways, farms, or mines.

And so, alone rvith Nature I sat me down to rest, 'Til sunset's crimson splendor Illumed the cloud-hung west. "f thank Thee, God," I murmured, "Our God, our Father's God, Thou hast planted verdant banners Where 'human foot ne're trod !"

In ecstacy of spirit

I rose to bless the hillsAnd on the ro'ck beside me, Read, "Take Shawn's Liver Pills."

Redwood Manufacturers' and Retailers' Committees Meet atMerced

Committees representing the manufacturers of Redwood and the California Retail Lumbermen's Association met at Merced for discussions of mutual problems, on Saturday, April 5.

First prize in the golf tournament which followed the qeeting w?s won by Henry Faull, sales manager of the Hammond Lumber Co., San Francisco. Mr. Faul-l also won the tournament held at the conclusion of the last meeting at Santa Craz in March.

Louis Heath

Louis Heath, former manager of Lumber Company, Pasadena, died gestion.

h[, tr,t adaertised in tbe

Westts oun home rnagazine Srrnsct

TO MAKE MORE SATES FOR ?eerless Dealers

\V'HEN the April issue of .Saflsct wenr-- on March 20th, into nearly 2OOTOOO homes throughout the'S7'est, it carried into those homes a full-page advertisement, in four colors" telling the advantages of hrnr.uss

Built-in Furniture... how it makes old kitchens new and modern quickly, easily and inexpensively.

This was only the first advertisement in a year's campaign to make more sales for Prrnuss dealers. ..to create consumer demand that will put more Prrnrrss fixtures into kitchens, old and neut!

the Wm. J. Bettingen April 4 of acute indi-

Lumber merchants who are Prrnr^uss dealers will profit from this advertising, gaining m.ore of the bigger ptofits which theprrnrrss line provides. ' Yet this advertising is only one way in which PunREss co-operateswith dealers. Let as s ltout you nouhowthese bigger profits can be yours...this year! A note on your letter head or business card will bring full information.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT
DEERTESS E%wilt-in Fwnitwg ,;f
lv. lv. IVITKINS()N 1222 Insurance Exchange Bldg. Tuckcr f,ttf Los ANGF'I l'rs DOOR!'. PANEIS - I.AMINATED LUMBER FIR AND REDW@D LUMBER PRODUCTS
. . .
Br-lrr-T-rIU FIXTI]R.T C(DIIIPIrNY 26O8 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley, Califomia 82O East 6oth Sceeg Los Angeles, Califoroia

MY FAVORITE STORIES

Age not guaranteed-Some I have told fot 2O years-Some less

Another Al Smith Story

The story goes that after the last presidential election Raskob decided that the criticism of Al Smith's East Side type of English had had much to do with his defeat at the polls, and that if Smith were ever to do anything in national politics he must get his English straightened out, so Raskob eurployed a fine young English professor to spend three months with Al and teach him better English.

LANGFORD W. SMITH IN EAST

Langford W. Smith, sales manager of the Red River Lumber Co., Westwood, is spending a month in the East, his first vacation in some years. He will spend most of the time in Washington, D. C'

At the eqd of a month Raskob sought out the young professo,r, and said to him:

"Professor, how is Mr. Smith's English progressing?"

"Oh, g-reat !" replied the professor, with much enthusiasm and gesture. "After de toid lesson his accent was poifect."

C. C. PATRICK LEAVES FOR PORTI..AND

C. C. Patrick. 'of the Patrick Lumber Co', Portland, spent two days in San Francisco recently on his way back to Portland from Southern California, where he has spent , the last couple of months.

30 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHAN'f April 15, 1930
LUMBER Bverything in Hardwoods Foreign and Domestic Spruce and Cedar c\ I White Pine Dugar anc THEY'RE HERE! I a ALWAYS IN STOCK! QUICK DELMRY! TIMBERS FLOORING VENEERS PANELS ItrrErar WESTERN HARDWOOE LUNfrBER EO. D. J. CAHIL! Prcr. B. W. BYRNE, Scc. Dll Eut lsth St!.Gt Phonc WErtnorc 616l LOS AITGELES

Going and Coming

A. C. HORNER TO ATTEND ANNUAL MEETING OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATION

A. C. Horner, manager of the Western division of the National Lumber Manufacturers' Association, left San Francisco April 12 for Chicago to attend the annual meeting of the association on Aplil 24 and 25. He will also atlgnd the meetings of the technical advisory committee which precede the annual.

N. H. HUEY VISITS SOUTHLAND

N. H. lfuey, Phoenix, Arizona wholesaler, was a recent Los Angeles visitor where he spent several days attending to business matters and calling on the lumber trade. Mrs. Huey accompanied him on the trip.

REDWOOD ASSOCIATION FIELD MAN VISITS

SAN FRANCISCO

W. L. Hook, field engineer of the California Redwood Association, left San Francisco April 5 for the Middle West after spending a wee\ at association headquarters.

A. B. HAMMOND IN LOS

A. B. Hammond of the Hammond San Francisco, recently spent a week business.

ANGELES Lumber Companv, in Los Angeles on

EARL HOFFMAN VISITS BAY CITY

Earl Hoffman, Earl Hoffman Company, Los Angeles, has returned from a trvo rveeks'business trip to San Francsico.

lVendling - Nathan Co.

SAN FRANCISCO

Wholcaalerc of Douglas Fir

Redwood California White & Sugar Pine

If you have never had

P. C. McNEVIN STOPS IN LOS ANGELES

P. C. "Pete" McNevin, general sales manager of the Pacific Lumber Company, San Francisco, rnade a short stay in Los Angeles on his way East. Mrs. McNevin is making the trip with him and they expect to be gone four or five weeks.

PERRY WHITING BACK ON THE JOB

Perry Whiting of the Whiting-Meade Company, Los Angeles, who for the past two years has been inactive in the business and has recently completed atrip around the world, is once more "back in the harness". He has taken charge of all the retail business.

A. B. GRISWOLD SPENDS WEEK IN LOS ANGELES

Let us sell you a car. It can be mixed with any other itemg of Old Growth Yellow Fir worked uppers.

Main Ofice: A. L Hoover, AgL San Francisco Los Angele

I l0 Markct St. Standard Oil Bldg.

_

A. B. Griswold, C. D. Johnson Lumber Company, San Francisco, has returned to his headquarters, aftei splnding a rveek in Los Angeles.

WARREN B. WOOD VISITS NORTHWEST

Warren B. Wood of the E. K. Wood Lumber Compar,ry, f,os Angeles, has returned from an extendedr: trip t6 t6e North'rvest in interest of the company.

E. R. WOODBURY IN LOS

E. R. Woodbury, president of the E. ber Company, Spokane, and owner of in Okanogan County, Washington, is sojourn in Los Angeles.

ANGELES, R. Woodbury Lumseveral retail yards making an extended

Aprit 15, 1930 THE CALTFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 3l
in your orders for
stock nor.
trays are desirable because they are light weight and durable. uNt0ll LUMBER Ctl. OFFICES LOS ANGELES Lane Morgage Bldg. Phone TRiniJy ?252 r"', s,#ll?"uro* M ember Calif ornia Reilwooitr Associatiost cAHF0niltl REItW0olr SAN FRANCISCO Crocker Building Phone SUtter 6170
"Red'l Wood clt Jays; Send
Redvood tray
Rednood

New Fir-Tex Plant at St. Helens Nearing Completion

Prominent Cdifornia Business Men

Interested in New Northwest InduCtry.

Alongside of the Columbia River, at St. Helens, Ore.; the large Fir-Tex plant covering an area of over six acres and containing 149,6L2 square feet of concrete floor, is rapidly nearing completion. Here sarvmill waste will be converted by Jnewly discovered process into insulation board. It is the plant of the Fir-Tex Insulation Board Company in which a number of prominent California business men have been chosen as directors. These are: Herbert Fleishhacker, President, Anglo London-Paris Bank, San Fran-

experimental plant, a board was produced and tests were -ad. itt the nationallv known laboratories of the Robert H. Hunt Company and by Mr. G. F. Gebbardt of the Armour Institute of Technology, Chicago.

Features of the New Plant

Straight-line production is carried ou-t perfectly in the new Fii-Tex plint. Starting at the dock on a- degP water channel where chipped sawmill waste is brought by barge from the sawmills, it is loaded by derrick on to a conveyor which carries it 700 feet to the storage bin in the digestor building. 'A battery of six huge l8-foot diameter rotary globe d"igestors, wi[h a capacity of .3000 cubic feet edch, ire loaddd with raw material, ihen.filled r/ith steam and hot water. After a few hours of softening, the material-is emptied into the conveyor pits, {rom wh-ere it goes by.c9"veyors into a series of shredding machines, o-perated by synchronizing motors. This procEss shreds and reduces it to wood fibri of the finest cbnsistency. From here it is pumped to the mixing tanks where the now pulpous mass is kept in constant agitation.

Board Machine

Next in the manufacturing process is the large board machine, especially designed for insulation board manufacture-166 inches wide. Into this machine the pulp comes at a proper thickness and then by a succession of rolls, it .-.ri.r^ as insulation board, \i f.eet in width and 7/16 inchei in thickness. It produces an endless chain of the finished product at a rate of 20 feet per minute.

Drying Room

cisco; Lee A. Phillips, Executive Vice-President, Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company, Los Angeles; J. A. Jevne, President, H. Jevne Company, Los Angeles; Paul H. Helms, Chairman Executive Committee, First National Corporation, Beverly Hills, Calif.; Stanley !. Anderson, Bev-erly Hills, Calif. i E. G, King, President, King Lumber Compiny, San Francisco, and William B. Dean,.General Maniger, Diamond Match Company, Chico, Calif. : Fir-Tex is the creation of A. E. Millington and son, C. A. Millington, who have been closely associated with the early development of insulation materials in this country' Whln the importance of insulation began to be recognized; A. E. Millington was called upon because of his wide experience as a designer, builder and operator of some of the leading paper, pu-lp and board plants in the United States and Canada. h 1926, accompanied by C. A. Millington, he came West and built an experimental plant, equipping it with miniature machines of his own design. The machinery of this little plant weighed over 20 tons. For three years they cgntinued to work and experiment. The chipped wood and bark were prepared for treatment in many different ways. Processes were constantly tested, revised and improved, and many tests for insulation and sound-deadening values were made. Tensile strength, waterproofing and fire retardant qualities were important factors considered.

At the end of three years of concentrated research in this

The scientific drying of the board contributes much to its strength and insuiation value. In the new Fir-Tex plant, the drier is in 8 decks, 15x360 feet. Finished board as it comes from the drier is inspected, checked for color and weight, cut into standard 4-foot widths and lengths to 12feet. Special sizes will also be made. The board storage is a separate all-steel building, 90x30O feet in size, with railroad tracks through center so that cars may be loaded at door height from both sides.

Other Modern Plant Equipment

Other buildings .at the Fir-Tex plant include separate all-steel boiler house with 2lGfoot 'reinforced concrete stack. Oil burners generate steam used in digestors and for heating purposes. All machines are operated electrically by individual motors. A pumping plant has a capacity of 4000 gallons per minute, with a water tower of 50,000 gallons capacity for the fire sprinkler system with which' the plant is equipped throughout. Two oil tanks have a capacity of 25,000 gallons.

A separate modern two-story office building is also located on the site, the lower floor of which will be occupied by the large laboratory in which processes of manufacture rvill be constantly stirdied.

Ground was broken for the Fir-Tex plant on September 23 last by the J: F. Shea Construction Company, general contractors. All concrete work is nolv practically completed, the machinery is rapidly going into place, steel sash and roof are installed, The pump house, boiler house, board storage building, office building, concrete stack, water and oil storage tanks are all finished.

32 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930
-Brubahet Arial Sumeys, Portlond, Ore. Airplane uieztt of new Fir-Ter Plant at St. Helens, Oregom, shouing doch from wkich raza moterials will be transported.

/s lumber

"bought" or "sold"

"Times are hard," says the Lumber Industry. "No one is buying lumber."

True enough, but how many are selling lumber? And selling is not done by waiting for someone to buy.

Mill output sold to Dealers is actually not sold at all. It is not sold until it is consumed and paid for. In the Dealer's hands it is still in transit to market.

Dealer and Mill man are partners in production and distribution. It is the Mill Man's job to provide material to meet modern merchandising requirements and the Dealer's job to sell it to the consumer. He must sell ideas and the desire for improvement as well as material.

As long as a building remains in need of repair and as long as there are houses without modern built-in utilities and conveniences there is a lumber market. A systematic canvass ofiering practical suggestions is bound to yield profitable returns. The building owner who makes a small improvement today is often stimulated thereby to larger projects tomorrow.

RED RIVER offers the Dealer a modernized line of high quality. It also provides a buying plan designed to meet "hand-to-mouth" buying and the handling of small iobs as economically as large oner.

RED RIVER MIXED CARS supply small quantities at carload prices and carload handling cost. Up-tothe-minute built-ins, shipped K. D., as many or as few as desired, sash, doors, plywood panels, moulding and all yard items. Manufactured and loaded at one point with one handling cost.

ORDER NOW BEFORE PRICES RISE.

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUM,BEB MA&CHANT 33 Johnny Inkslinger
ol remtnds You, "Well bought is half sold"
Johnny Inlslinger Paul Bunyan'l camp clerk, who ra.ved nine berrelr of ink one winter by not crorring thc "t'1" or dotting the ti'r".
Mark
Trade
of
Pine
The RED RIVER LUMBER CO. MILL FACTORIES and SALES, WESTI,VOOD, CALIFORNIA Dirtributing Yardr, CHICAGO and LOS ANGELES 202 Edrt stauron Avcnuc Los ANGELES BR'A'NCH Phonc AXridgc 9ll?l FULL STOCKS, FACTORY FACILITIES FOR SPECIAL JOBS SALES OFFICES ^l!91ed1o9t__B_Ug1 t07 Hcnncpin Avc., 360 N. Micbisen Btvd, ?02 E. Shuron Avc. SAN FRANCTSCO MINNEAPOLTS CNTCICO LOS ANGELES Rcairtcrcd
"Producers
White
for Over HaIf a Century"

MONEY

"It's a good thing to have money and the things that money caq buy, but it is also a good thing to be able to look back and discover that you haven't lost some of the ttings that money can't buy."-George Horace Lorimer.

Supposinl nrr, aor,'t?rtll. 0r",, What are you goin' to do?

Throw down yer pole, chuck out yer bait An' say yer fishin's through?

You bet you arn't, you're goin' to fish, An'fish, an' fish, an' wait, Until you've ketched a basket full, Or else run out of bait.

Suppose yer luck don't come at first, What are you goin' to do?

Throw up the sponge, anl kick yerself, An' growl, an' fret, an' stew?

You bet you won't, you're goin' to fish, An'bait, an' bait agin, Until fish luck takes hold yer hook, Fer grit is sure to win.

BELIEVED IN SIGNS

"Shame on you !" stormed the judge to the colored prisoner. "You come into this court and state that, because you believe in signs, you refuse to go home and live with your wife. I repeat, shame on yotr ! A man living in this age shouldn't let superstition break up his home."

'Jedge," replied the defendant, "tain't superstition Ah's afeared of, but Ah do believe in signs. Fo' de las' three nights, aftuh Ah'd gone to bed, Ah could heah dat 'oman honin' Mah favrit razah."

INDUSTRY

Ten thousand Jews are making booze In endless repetition, To supply the needs of a million Swedes, Who voted for prohibition.

ONE FOR THE BOOK

Questioner: "What do you think of the Ten Commandments?"

Philosopher: "Admi,rably suited to the needs of the savage tribe to whom they were given."

(From a current play.)

WANTED LEGAL ADVICE

Son: "Dad, you don't charge for advice from one of the family, do you?" \ /

Lawyer: "No, son, of course-t don't. Why do you ask?"

Son: "Well, what I wanted to know is, when you were a kid, and wanted a dollar, what did you do?"

LORD BALFOUR SAID:

"The superstition that all our hours of work are a minus quantity in the happinege of life, and all the hours of idleness are plus ones, is /most ludicrous and pernicious doctrine, and its great{/ support comes from our not taking sufficient trouble, not making a real effort, to make our work as near pleasure as it can be."

ECONOMY

JThe clergyman received a note asking him to perform a marriage ceremony, which read as follows: "This is to give you notis that I and Mis Jemima Arabella Brearly is coming to your church on Saturday afternoon next at three o'clock to undergo the operation of matrimony at your hands. Please be prompt as the cab is hired by the hour."

Los Angeles Hoo Hoo Club Alvin D. White Manager to Meet April 24 of San Bernardino Yard

R. S. "Bob" Osgood announces that there will be a meeting of the Los Angeles Hoo Hoo Club Thursday noon, April 24, at the Commercial Club, Los Angeles. Arrangements are being made for an interesting program and all lumbermen are invited to attend the meeting.

Alvin D. White, manager of the Chas. R. McCormick Lumtjer Company yard at Riverside for the past eight years, has been appointed manager of the San Bernardino Lumber Co.

u THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930

Harry McGahey Appointed Manager of the San Diego Lumber Company

Harry McGahey

Harry McGahey, for the past six years sales manager of the San Diego Lumber Company, San Diego, has been appointed manager of the company succeeding A. A. Frost who has resigned. He took over his new duties on April 1.

Mr. lVlcGahey is well known to the lumber trade of Southern California and has been a resident of San Diego since 1919. His father was.formerly a prominent Texas Lumherman. Prior to his joining the San Diego Lumber Company, he was connected with the Benson Lumber Company at San Diego for five years. During the World war he served with the marines.

The San Diego Lumber Company, which is the oldest lumber company in San Diego, was organized in 1869 and has had only three managers since lhat time. Philip Morris, still a resident of San Diego, was the first manager and continued in that position until nine years ago when he resigned and was suiceeded by A. A. Fiost.

A. A. Frost in resigning will be able to devote more time to his personal business affairs. He will retain his interest in the San Diego Lumber Company, and will also maintain his connection with the Frost 'Hardwood Lumber Company. Mr. Frost is prominent in Hoo Hoo activities and is a member of the Supreme Nine. He will continue to make his home in San Diego.

R. W. "Bob" Reid, for seventeen years with the Hillcrest Lumber Company of San Diego, has been named salesmanager of the San Diego Lumber Company to succeed Mr. McGahey.

Charles L. Wheeler Places First Phone Call to Buenos Aires

Charles L. Wheeler, vice-president and general manager of the McCormick Steamship Co., San Francisco, had the interesting experience of placing the first commercial telephone call between San Francisco and Buenos Aires on the afternoon of April 3.

Mr. Wheeler called Warren G. Libbey, the company's representative in the Argentine ,and Mr. Libbey also talked with Charles R. McCormick, chairman of the board; C. E. Helms, first vice-president, and J. A. Lunney, operatormanager.

Association Heads to Attend Annual of N. L. M. A.

We

Carry a

FIR and REDWOOD

tITTtE RIVER REDIY()()D C().

Ht MBOIDT CO.

OFFTCES:

Hcrd OEcc

lll25 Mrtrcn Bld3. SAN FRANCTSCO

W. R. Cbanbcrtin'.h.

Stanwood

Phyllir

Barbera C

LOS.AI{GELES

2t2 CLrnbc of Counocc Bldr.

SEATTLE--{0i

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 35
cornplete
kiln
POBT ORFOnID GEIDAN l*t us take care of your
with our ttspeedy Servlcett
R.F. Hammatt, secretary-manager of the California Redwood Association, San Francisco, and Chester Hogue, manager of the trade extension department of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, Seattle, left San Francisco for Chicago April 12, to attend the meetings of the technical advisory committee of the National Lumber Manufacturers'Association, and also the annual meeting of the association to be held April 24 and.25. f. lll60lNs tuMDtR 00. SAN F'RANCISCO
stock of both
dried and air dried
orders
J.
lY.R.CHAMBERITN&C().
WHOLESAIJ LI'IMBER
THE
SOUTHERN CAIJFORNTA SAITS AGENTS FOR
CRANNELL,
OPERATING STEAMERII:
Ycon Blds.
Whitc Bldg.
PORTLAND-I2I0

Joseph F. Holmes

Joseph F. (Joe" Holmea, of Voodland, California, prerident of the Sacramento Valley Lumberments Oub, was born in Phoenix, Ariz., in 1898. He ic the youngert ron of J. H. Ffolmes, president of the Holmee Eureka Lumber Conpany, and brother of Fred V. Holmeo, of the same company.

F{e is a graduate of the Forestry School .of the Oregon Agricultural College at Corvallie' Oregon. After graduation he proceeded to gain rome practical experience to fit him for a life career in the lumber business, his first experience being logging engineering in the woodr operations of the Ffolmec Eureka Lumber Co. in Humboldt County. From t'here he went to Southern California, where he worked for eeveral dilferent concernr to get experience in the retail end of the business.

Mr. Flolmes is now associated with E. T. Robie, of Auburn, Calif., in the ownerehip of the Voodland Lumber Co., Voodland, of which he is aecretary-treasurer and manager, having taken over the yard of the old Valley Lumber Co. at that point in March, 1926.

He has been active in the affairs of the Sacramento Valley Lunbermen'c Club, for rome years, and was elected president of this organization at the last annud meeting. He b an enthusiastic Rotarian, and hac been secretary of the Woodland Rotary Club for the part three years, ie married and the father of two children, a boy of 9 and a girl of 5.

Peoples Lumber Co. Hold Open , Houseat Fillmore Yard Kenneth Smith Resigns

The Peoples Lumber Co. at Fillmore, Calif., held open house on Saturday, April 12, when an inspection was made of their newly constructed and remodeled office, yards and mill. C. F. Reeder is:manager of their Fillmore vard. |

McCormick Sells Retail Yards

IThe Chas. R. McCormick Lumber Co. retail lumber yards at Ogqagside, Riverside and San Bernardino were recently sold to the Sunkist Lumber Co. of Monrovia. The yard at Oceanside will be operated under the name of the Oceanside Lumber Co. while the San Bernardino yard will be known as the San Bernardino Lumber Co. The Hansen Lumber Co. of Fontana have purchased the Riverside yard from the Sunkist Lumber Co. and will operate this y:ird as the lfansen Lumber Co.

Kenneth Smith, secretary of the Lumber Dealers Association of Los Angeles, resigned on April 5. IIe served as secretary of the Association for over two years during which time he did mu,ch constructive work for the lumber industry in the Los Angeles district. In submitting his resignation, Mr. Smith recommended that the Association office be closed-his recommendation was adopted and the office closed on April 5.

Mr. Smith has been prominent in the lumber industry for many years and before taking over the Association work was connected with the E. K. Wood Lumber Co. of Los Angeles. Prior to that he was with the Long-Bell Lumber Company for many years representing this company in the South, San Francisco and Philadelphia.

JOHN KENDALL VISITS LOS ANGELES

John Kendall, manager of the retail yard interests of the Weyerhaeuser Sales Company, spent several weeks in Los Angeles on business and pleasure.

THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15; 1930
"/\ /lAr\ ^\ t J.-. 'ats ^7^1Better
SERVICE
Personality E. K. llrOOD LUDTBER CODTPAIIT'S ttGoods of the Voodstt 47Ol Santa Fe Ave. Lor Angelec, Calif. King & Fredericl Str" Oakland, Calif.
Business is Just Ahead Be Wise-Buy Now
'We
carry a complete line of best quality Building Materials
With a

John G. Ziel Returns From Trip to Orient

John G. Ziel, partner in Barg Lumber & Shipping Co., San Francisco, has just returned from a six months' trip to the Orient, in the course of which he spent two months in the Philippine Islands, u'here he secured for his firm the agency for United States and Canada for the Filipinas Lumber Co. of Manilla, with several mills in the province of Tayabas, on the Island of Luzon.

Stock produ,ced by this company is of the hard, ,closetextured variety and compares very favorably with the best Philippine hardwoods. Filipinas Lumber Co. is one of the so.called "Big Five" of the Industry, and the stock is well liked on the Pacific Coast.

NIr. Ziel spent several weeks on the Island of Hokkaido, Japan, visiting the Japanese Oak and Birch mill in Otaru, which his concern represents in North America, and also paid a visit to the logging operations in the interior. This mill produces excellent Jap Oak lumber from the choicest logs, and shipments are being made not only to America but also to Europe, Australia and South Africa. Japanese Oak prices are higher this year on account of the strength of the Japanese Yen, which is about 15 per cent higher than at this time last year.

He also spent some time in China, where among other places he visited Shanghai, Hongkong and Canton. General ,conditions in China are poor, he said, owing to the internal troubles, civil war, etc. Business in Japan is only fair. In the Philippines certain industries are curtailing their activities somewhat in the belief that there is a chance that the Islands will be gianted their independence. "My personal opinion, however, is that there is no chance of the Philippines becoming independent for a long time to come, nor would it be to their interest," Mr. Ziel said.

Smith-Lindsay Buys Yard

The Smith-Lindsay Lumber Company, Pasadena, have pur'chased the Abbot & Abbot Lumber Company of that city and are now operating the yard under the name of the Smith-Lindsay Lumber Company.

Organize

New Company IlrHOLESATE

Organizing a new ,company but retaining the old name, several lumber'companies, allied industries and individuals of the Pacific Northwest have purchased the Stetson-Ross Machine Company's plant and business at Seattle, Wash. The organization of the new company was engineered by E. D. Kingsley, president of the West Oregon Lumber Company of Linnton, Ore., and past President of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association

Gerald Frink, president of the Washington Iron Works in Seattle has been elected chairman of the board of directors. The entire board is composed of A. H. Onstad, Chief Engineer, Weyerhaeuser Timber Company of Tacoma; H. C. Hilke, general superintendent of the Seattle Cedar Lumber Manufacturing Company; J. W. Thompson, general manager of the Charles R. McCormick Lumber Company, Port Gamble; A.A. Gardner, Pacific Coast Manager for Ilenry Disston & Sons, Seattle; W. T. Pritchard of Seattle; Mr. Kingsley and Mr. Frink.

Mr. Pritchard is president of the new ,company. Mr. Frink is vice president; M. L. Veatch of Seattle is secretary and Mr. Gardner is treasurer.

WINDOW SCREENS

ONLT

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT g7
SPnING TS TIERE! There isa lot of profitable screen to be had NOW DOOR SCREENS ROLLER SCREENS 745 So. Raymond Avenue Pasadena, Calif. Pasadena Phone Terrace 1096 Los Angeles Phone Elliott 1409 Sampson Screens are Strongestj 'I The trout will soon be rising to the fy-andi speakingof fliesl.Duglness, I How's Your Tackle? We FurnishA t'Rodtt of Co-operation A "Line" of Quality And ttReeltt Service. 3'Nature" Will Furnish the Fliec. Let us help you get lrour 33!lmit.tt
OOMPANY
I 38 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930

Peerless Kitchens Advertised to Consumers

Starting with a four color full page adv'irtisement in the April issue of Sunset, the home magazine which covers the entire country west of the great divide, with a circulation of almost 200,000, the Built-In Fixture Company of Berkeley has launched a consumer advertising campaign which will run for a year in this magazine with the purpose of making more sales of Peerless Built-In Furniture for Peerless dealers in this territory.

The campaign will include several full pages in color, as well as other advertisements in black and white.

The Built-In Fixture Company has worked steadily during the last 6ve years to build up dealer representation in the Pacific Coast and Southern States, and now feels that the time is ripe to spend the money necessary to create in the mind of the consumer the desire to have such a kitchen as the genuine Peerless kitchen depicted in the advertisements, and to make it easy for the women who. read the advertisements to find out how such a kitchen cah be ob. tained.

In the announcement of this campaign which has been sent to the dealers, it is requested that they send the Built- In Fixture Compan.v a list of prospects foi Peerless equip- ment. A copy of the magazine will be sent to these with the dealer's compliments, and copies of the first advertisement will be sent free to dealers on request for distribution. Dealers are also asked to run a "tie-r]p" advertisement in their local paper, and mats are offered free for the advertisement with a similar illustration to the one appearing in Sunset.

The first advertisement contains a beautiful illustration of a complete Peerless kitchen in four colors, with head_ lines destined to create desire to modernize the old home. which read "That Kitchen You've Wanted Can Be yours i -and in the old home you've learned to love',.

San Diego Hoo Hoo To Hold Golf Tournament and Dinner Dance

The San Diego.Hoo Hoo Club is going to hold a golf tournament and dinner dance at the Rancho Santa Fe- on Saturday, April 26. M. P. Bennett, president of the San Diego Hoo Hoo Club, extends an invitation to the Los Angeles Hoo Hoo to take part in the golf tournament and attend the dinner dance in-the evenin{. Many of the Los A^ngeles ltrmbermen are planning to attend this enjoyable affair.

THERE IS A REASON

Why the largert millr are inetalling our IMPROVED AIR COOLED REFUSE BURNERS.

WE ARE ABLE to care for your requirements for air cooled and brick lined refirse burners-..new and ued boileru of all rizes and typec.

SEATTLE BOILER WORKS

Scatttc, WerL.

Greatest Money Saving Improvement in High

Speed Steel Knives

SIMONDS

SAW AND STEEL CO.

har perfected a new knife known ar the PLATED''

STEEL KNIFL

There nsw knives do double tte work of ordinary high cpeed steel kniver. Get your orderr rnailed now for at least one ret of there remarkable new kniver.

SIMONDS SAIV and STEEL C0.

YOU INCREASE your business in two ways by handling Truscon Metal Laths. Firet, you open up a new mar&et for sales. Second, you enlarge your present martet for lumber by providing fireproofing for it. :Truocon Metal Laths are a complete line manqfactured in Califomia an{ etocked in local Truscon warehouses. Write for full information.

TRUSCON STEEL COMPANY

Pacidc Coast Fectory, Lor Angelea

Los Angeles, Calif, - 5480 E. Slauson Ave. San Francisco, Calif. - 74 New Montgomery St. Seattle, Wash. - 3t0-311 Seaboard Bldg, Portland, Ore, - 449-457 Kerby St.

METAL LA]TH

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 39
Wrltc for Catalogue I
40 THE CALIFORNIA LUITBER NIERCHANT A,pril 15. 1930 ARCHITECTVRAL lFtl WoOD[r/wo RK \,/ ff i lr" ;i til .r' Eil ii [il .. $lN ;EI trIillt'ork
of Californiq.
Institute
This charming composition by Robert D. Farquhar, architect, attains its classic tone and distinction through the use of graceful wood forms, all petfectly executed.

Ed. Lewis Bags the Limit

LUMBERMEN'S RECIPROCAL ASSOCTATTON

The above illustration shorvs E. V. (Ed.) Lewis, the handsome and popular secretary of the G. H. Brown Hardwood Companv, Oakland, Calif., after a successful hunting trip r,vhen he bagged the limit. Needless to say, Ed. is an expert shot and when he starts out to get some ducks he does it in a big rvay.

Appointed Hoo Hoo State Counselor for California

J. E. Martin, "The California Lumber Merchant", Los Angeles, has been appointed Hoo Hoo state counselor for California. The appointment was made by Supreme Arcanoper A. A. Frost of Los Angeles. During the past year, Mr. Martin served as vicegerent snark of the Los Angeles district. He is also a past president of the Los Angeles Hoo Hoo Club, and a former secretary-treasurer of the San Francisco lloo Hoo Club.

R. L. REEDY VISITS CALIFCJRNIA

_ R. L. Reedy, sales manager of the Wheeler Osgood Company, Tacoma, Wash., left San Francisco, April 7Z for _Tacoma, after spending two weeks on a business trip to Northern and Southern California.

ED. IVORY VISITS LOS ANGELES

Ed. Ivory, Chas. Nelson Co., San Francisco, spent a few days in Los Angcles around the middle nf the month on company business.

J.

WE SPECIAUZE IN WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION and AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE

A RECORD OF SERVICE ORGANIZED DEC., 1917

Writing practically every form of Casualty Inrurance.

Prernium income organization $l5rqnrOOO.OO.

Losses, adjustments and other expense; cince organization approximately $1l,OOO,O00.(n.

Dividends rince organization, $3,2OO,OOO.OO.

A National 161i1q1i611-l007o protection.

Sales, claim, and service o'ficer conveniently located throughout the United Stater.

CHRISTIE and HOBBY, Inc. MANAGERS

TWO

SAN FRANCISCO

Underwood Bldg.

E. J. Brockman

Telcphone: DOuglar 663l

334 H. W. Hellman Bldg.

R. E. WalLcr

April 15, 1930 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT 4L
BRANCH OFFICES IN CALIFORNI.A
LOS ANGELES
Telephonc: FAbcr 5423 R. HIIIIFY G|l. M anuf aclurers - W holesalers DOUGLAS FIR . REDWOOD - SPRUCE - Rail and Cargo 24 Market Street - San Francirco Lor ^A,ngeler Officc Portland Officc 522 Centr:al Bldg. A,merican Bank Bldg.

(The Clearing Houce)

This Column of "'Wants" and "Don't 'Wants" is fon

The Fellow Who Wants to Buy

The Fellow Who Wants to Sell The Fellow Who Wants to Hire

Rate: 52.s0 pu coturnn inch

The Fellow Who Wantg to Be Hired

' POSITION WANTED WITH SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA LUMBER ORGANIZATION

praning *,,r, t""il,?I;"i,laEs."*. wnr dispose of our entire stock of windows, doors, glass and kilrl dried mill stock; also modern machinery. New 3 years ago. Office equipment. Will sell by unit or as a whole. Property 325 ft. x 150 ft. with Santa Fe trackage. Los Angeles Planing Mill Co., 1800 Industrial St., Los Angeles, Calif. Phone VAndike 8460.

WHOLESALER WANTS CONNECTION

Lumberman with several years' experience in Southern California desires wholesale or mill connection. White and Sugar Pine or Douglas Fir. Knows the retail trade and trade requirements. Can furnish references. Address Box C-326, care California Lumber Merchant.

STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP, IVIANAGEMENT. CIRCULATION, ETC., REOUIRED BY THE ACT OF CONGRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, Of The California Lumber Merchant, published Semi-monthly at Los Angeles, California, for April lst,19J0.

Statc of California )

e6ui'ti-ot-lji'In'gele", lt"'

Bcfore me, a Notary Public in and for the State and county aforcsaid, personally appeared J. E. I\Iartin, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the Managing Editor of The California Lumber Merchant. and that the followine is. to the best of his knowledge and belief,; true statement of thd ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of thc aforcsaid publication for thc date -shown in the above caption, required by thl Act of August U, lgl?: embodied in section 4U, Postal Laws and Rcgulatioas, printed on the reverse of this form, to wit:

l. That the names and addresses of the publisher, editor, managing editor, and business managcrs are: Publisher, J. C, Dionne,3l8 Cenlral Bldg., Los Angelcs; Editol, J, C. Dionne,3l8-Central Bldg,, Los Angeles; Managing Editor, J. E. Martin, 318 Central Bldg., Ips Angeles; Business Managers, None,

2. That the owner is: (If owned by a corooration, its name and addrcas must bc statcd and also immidiatelv -thereunder the names aad addrerser of gtoclholdcrc owning or holdiirr onc Der cent or more of total amount of stock. If not owned bv a-corporation. the names and addrceses of thc individual owncrs muit bc ciien. If'owned by a 6rm, company, or other unincorporatcd concern, its name and addriss, as well as those of each individual member. must be. given,)

J. C. Dionnc, 318 Central Bldg., Los Angeles. Calif.'

!. That thc known bondholders, mortlagees, and other security holders owning or holding I Der ccnt' or mor-e if t6tal amount of bonds-, mortgagca, or othcr securities arc: (If there are none, so state.) None.

4. That thc two paragraphs next above, grving thc namcs of the owncrs, stockholders, and *curity holders, if any. contain not only tbc list of stockholdcrs and security holders as they aooear uoon thb boolg of thc company but also, in cascs where ihe - itockhdlder or lecgrity holdcr appears upon .the books of the company as trustcc or in any other fiduciary relation, thc namc of the person or corDora. tion for whom such trustee is acting, is givcn; also-that the aaid two paragraphs contain statements embracing affiant's full kaowledgc end bclief as to the circumstances and conditions under which stockholdcr! and sccurity_bolderg who do not appear upon the books of the cempany e3 trusteca. bold stock and securities in a caoacity other than that-of a bona f,dc oincr: and this aftiant has no reason to-believe that anv other pcrson, association, or corporation has any interest direct or indirect in thc said stock, boods, or other securities than as so stated by him.

5. That the avelage numbcr of copies of cach issue of this oubli. catioa sold or distributed, through the mails or otheruise. to Daid subscribcrs during thc six monthC preceding the date showa abovl ir (This information is rcquired from daily publications only.) sworn ro and subscribed before me ,il;"":tlllTIT' Manasinr.,€ditor' TSEAL]

(My commission cxpires Aug. 18, 1930.)

FREDA R. PAULSON.

Experienced lumberman in buying, selling, estimating, accounting, corresponderice and credits, wahts position with Southern California lumber company where ability and experience will be recognized. Experience includes eight years with lumber manufacturers where duties began as yard clerk and ended with position of sales and office manager. Six years' experience as assistant manager and auditor with retail building material and lumber yard. At present conhected with yard as assistant manager. Can furnish references. 33 years old, married. Address Box C-320, care California Lumber Merchant.

WANTED

Job-(not position)-by experienced lumberman. Can handle anything from lumber jack to manag'ement of retail yard. Best of references. Will consider going north or out of state. Address Box C-324, California Lumber Merchant.

FOR SALE

Lumber Yard and Complete Building material store. County Seat town of 11,000 in rich, fastest growing agricultural section. in Southern California. Will give long lease on Yard site on 7/o net return. Would like to sell improvements. fnvestment in fixed assets small. Not a "distress" sale but a fine opportunity to take over a well established, profitable business w{rich has been under one management for over 20 years. Address Box C-325, California Lumber Merchant.

WANTED POSITION

Lumber Yard Manager, Los Angeles experience, Paints -IfardwareSalesPlan Book ServiceCollectionsBookkeeping-Sales Promotion-Financing-make yard center of building activities, no profit in selling lumber by thousand feet. Address Box C-327, care California Lumber Merchant.

SALESMAN WANTED

Salesman Wanted. Los Angeles Wholesaler has oBening for salesman thoroughly acquainted with industrial and furniture factory users in Hardwoods. Address Box C-328, California Lumber Merchant.

FOR SALE

One-third interest in an incorporated retail lumber yard situated near two major boulevards. 2O minutes from the center of Los Angeles. Take $2500.00. Must be an experienced job man, operate machinery, drive truck, fill orders, etc. Address Box C-329.'California Lumber l\{erchant.

42 THE CALIFORNIA LUMBER MERCHANT April 15, 1930

IDEPENIDABLE

IDOORS

Two styles with distinctive features, made of Long'Bell California White Pine

I9SAru

A one-panel door; square sticking; outside edges ind corners rbunded; 3-fly rotary c.rfo"n""r panel; veneered stilesVith built uD cores. -Vill not warp, Desisned by C'alifornians. Made in California. Tor Caiifornia. Guaranteed.

J7-* Kinc

A distinctive combinatron of swle. beauw and durability. Attractive flush'moulding. 3-ply rotary cut veneer Danel inset firmlv in stilei and riils will not wbrk loose and raitle. Veneered stiles with built-up cores. The style king of American doors] Guaranteed.

These two doors, made throughout of Long-Bell California 'White Pine, offer the discriminating builder full value for his investment. They are readily adaptable to any finish, will not warp and cost less to fit, mortise and hang than doors of other woods. Available through retail lumber dealers.

Douglas Fir Lumber, Timbere, Door and Window Frames, Trimpak; Weatem Ilemlock Lumber; Westen Red Cedar Siding and Shingles; Southem Pine Lumber and Timben; Southem llardwood Lumber, Timbe$ and Trim. pak; Oak Flooring, 'CELLized Oak Flooring Strips, *CELLized Oak Floor Planks, 'CELLized Oak Floor Blocks. Califomia White Pine Lumber, Sash and Doors, Box Shooks; Creoooted Southem Pine Lumber, Timbers, Postc, Polee, Tiec, Gurd.Rail Poets, Piling.

THE LONG'BELL LUMBER CODIPANY R. A. LONG BUILDING Lambenrer since t875 KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI
ANGELES DISTRICT SALES OFFICE , . ' , 627 PETROLEUM SECURITIES BUILDING Phone Vestmore 8468 H. F. BOIfLES, District
LOS
Maoager

Th" ttRoof-Co,,scio.rr"

I{otrre is the O pportun ity D " rl ""'" f o" P"ofitl

m

Ih"t" a,re various "*."11"ot reasont *hy hr',Jt"d.. of "".Litects, builde"s toJ ho-"owners t.f"" tLeir toofilrg p"obl"-s to 'W'"rt"r-IfenryJ""l"tt. Fot instance: Quick, courteous seryice is ""oJ"t"J. Spe"ifi.ations arte accurate. Prices a,te consistent with q.rolity. Furth€rnior€r 'W'.rt"r-IJenry d."l"rs are equippeJ with toofirrg stocks of ,rlro".tcheJ beautyr Jesign uod. d.ut bility. That is why scores of b"".rtiful ho-", are roof"d. thto.tgh .W'""t""-II"rr"y d""l.t - --loeautiful ho-.s tLat ^t" otoof conscio.r"ro "ffo"dilrg the J"rl"t opportunity for incr."."d. p"ofit.

W-EAVER-ITENRY CORPORATION 327s EAST SLAUSON LOS ANGELES

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Articles inside

I9SAru

0
page 43

Ed. Lewis Bags the Limit LUMBERMEN'S RECIPROCAL ASSOCTATTON

5min
pages 41-42

SIMONDS

0
pages 39-40

Peerless Kitchens Advertised to Consumers

1min
page 39

Organize

0
page 37

John G. Ziel Returns From Trip to Orient

1min
page 37

Peoples Lumber Co. Hold Open , Houseat Fillmore Yard Kenneth Smith Resigns

1min
page 36

Joseph F. Holmes

0
page 36

"bought" or "sold"

4min
pages 33-35

New Fir-Tex Plant at St. Helens Nearing Completion

3min
pages 32-33

lVendling - Nathan Co.

1min
page 31

Going and Coming

0
page 31

Another Al Smith Story

0
page 30

Alone With Nature

1min
page 29

THIS SIGN MEANS 2OO EXTRA MILES OF LUBRICATION at no added cost to you

1min
pages 27-28

West Coast Enlar$es Trade Extension

2min
page 26

ilOOTHER FORATY MONEY-BACK LI.KE IT- SURFACE- GUARANTEE-

0
page 25

N. L.M. A. to Hold Annual Meetin$ at Chicrgo, April 24-2,5

1min
page 24

the roofittg repair business ? FIED ASP}IALT prof itable market !

0
page 23

Are you getting your share PIONEER f[IULS will ta ke you into

0
page 22

The Specralty Wood with a future €

0
page 21

Chas. S. Keith Discusses Duty on Foreign Lumber

5min
pages 20-21

aslrellas afr ffidmoM

2min
pages 17-18

HABDWOODS from HAMnfONDgS

2min
page 16

And the Whole Industry Benefits from Reduced Insurance Rates.

0
pages 15-16

Pacific Coast Truck Manufacturer Looks for Sound Business Development During L930

2min
page 14

Have you heard about this book?

0
page 13

A nnouncement

1min
page 12

The Caterpillar Tractor in Modern Lumber Yard Operation

1min
pages 10-11

Attractive Office Decorations

1min
pages 8-9

Va$abond Editorials

1min
page 8

Vagabond Editorials

3min
pages 6-7

of prospects will read '7r!t-7nt,/t' Advertising during Lg3o ' / r

1min
page 5

"ffi**i THE CALIFOR).IIA ;:",ffi;ffi

3min
page 4

Cabinet Made Doors of Distinetive Deslgn and Character executed in beautif"Uy grained AGAC

0
page 2
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