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E. K. Wood Lumber Go.

All about their placer of burines there are old timen old farhioned homes, lacking convcniences, lacking luxurier, lacking modern irnprovemcntr thai they nisht eerily have. Their owners never know the difference, unlers romeone telh them, and rhows them. And they ofier to the buitding-mcrchant a mute appeal for building rervice. They are the pae- rive prospecta They need building things, are ible !o buy thenr, but the dcrnand ir parive, inactive, becaure they know nothing of the po*ible satisfactory rupply.

It reemr to me that if the reactionery deder didn't want to get out and rell building thinsr. and etock l"ilditS idear, and modernize-and lmprove the homer of hic cornmrmity FOR HIS OWN S.AKE and that of hir burinerr, he would do it for the rakc of the people to whom he ower tfiir renrice.

Every torvn and community needr and dereryer a livc lrrnber rnerchant

It rhould have it.

The town that hern't one ehould in come manner impeach and get rid of its uderirable and dead lumber deders who rtand in tte patrh of progre$. There ought to be romc rort of a tribunal to parr on ruch mattcrq and, where e town ir found to be rrffcring for want of a rquare deal in building afiairr, rupply the need.

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