HOW TO BUTLD MOR.E BUSTilESS BY HELPING HOME OWIIER,S Defend Their PropertY Againsf Weother!
Celotex Triple-Seqled Shingles qnd R.ock Wool Products in Demond Nowl
\\ffAsHINGToN wants home and farm buildinp kept in repair. W Liberal provision has been made for necessary maintenance in the laws controlling building. celotex national advertising is driving this fact home to millions of Americans-to hundreds of owners right in your neighborhood. Complete stocks of Celotex Rooing Products and'Celotex Rock \[ool can help you build more business-todaY !
Celotex Thiple-Sealed Shingles and Roll Roofing offer your customers a wide choice in color, style, and weight-plus extra years of dependable service, thanks to the famots triple-sealed. manufacturing process. Celotex Rock W'ool, in batts or loose form, is easily installed-means fuel saving next winter and added comfort allyear 'round. urge your cusromers to re-roof and insulate Now!
OA /aao,..
?a ?/etu ?hi/t...
' Wobnanized Lu'nher* is helping wood regain markeb ouce lost to other materials. Wood floors for industrial plants, Ior example. this heated wood adds long lile to the many other advantages that wood offers, and wood floors dgain !s..te first choice for many locations.
lhat's the kind of story we are telling in advertisements like the one reproduced here.'We're pointing out to businessmen, Government and indusbial executives, architects and builders the many advantages Sained by building with wood-long-lived Wolmanized Lumber. American Lu-ber & Treating Company, 164€! McCormick Building, Chicago, Il1.
'r'
Pacific Vire Products Co. --- -------------------12
Pacific Wood Products Corp.-,.---.-------.-----.---27
Penberthy Lumber Co.--------------- ------------------24
Pope & Talbot, fnc., Lumber Division-------- i
Portland Cement Association-.--
Ream Co., George E.---------------------------------------11
Red Cedar Shingle Bureau,-------------
Red River Lumber Co. --------- ------------------------11
Robbins Lumber Co., R. G.---------------------------25
San Pedro Lumber Company-------
Santa Fe Lumber Co.-----.---,.-------------"------------- i
Schafer Broe. Lumber & Shingle Co.-------*
Shevlin Pine Sales Co.-----------------------------------3O
Southwetern Portland Cement Co.,-------------13
Sudden & Christenson, Inc.--------------------------27
Stanton & Son, E. J. --- - -----------------.-------- ----..-13
Tacoma Lumber Sales--------------------------*
Timber Engineering Co. of C.alifornia--------19
Wendling-Nathan Co.----,-- -------.21
Vest Coast Screen C-o.----- --------3O
Vest Oregon Lumbet Co..-----------------
Vesterar Door & Sash Co.--------
Veetern Hardwood L'rmber Co.-------------------- +
Western Mill & Moulding C.o.--------,-
\ffeyerhaeuser Sales Company -----------------16-17
Whito Brothen
Wholesale Building Supply, Inc.-------------------27
Vood Lumber Co., E. K.-------------------------
THE CALIFOR}-IIA LUMBERMERCHANT
,pubhshu
How lrumber l-rooks
Lumber shipments of 457 mills reporting to the National Lumber Trade Barometer exceeded production by 9.9 per cent for the week ended April 24, 1943. rn the same week new orders of these mills were 13.2 per cent greater than production. Unfilled order files in the reporting mills amounted to 95 per cent of stocks. For reporting softwood mills, unfilled orders are equivalent to 38 days' production at the current rate, and gross stocks are equivalent to 37 days' production.
For the year to date, shipments of reporting identical mills exceeded production by 16.6 per cent; orders by 20.3 per cent.
The California Redwood Association reported production of twelve operations ior the month 1943, as 37,343,W0 feet, shipments 51,659,000 orders received 67,66,6,0n feet. Orders on hand of the month totaled 110,895,000 feet.
Redwood of March, feet, and at the end
The Western Pine Association for the week ended April 24,97 mills reporting, gave orders as 81,793,000 feet, shipments 69,786,0N feet, and production 64,820,000 feet. For the week ended April 17 orders were given as 67,037,000 feet shipments 71,219,A00 feet, and shipments &,512.000 feet.
The Southern Pine Association for 1,141 mills reporting, gave orders as ments 27,492,n0 feet, and production
the week ended May 24,826,WO feet, ship24.546,000 feet. Or-
ders on hand at the end of the week totaled 1D,522,ffi0 feet.
The West Coast Lurnbermen's Association for the week ended April 24 reported orders as 133,523,000 feet, shipments 1?E,759,60 feet, and production 120,649,000 feet.
For the week ended May 1, orders were reported as 159'050,000 feet, shipments 120,417,000 feet, and production 120,808,000 ft.
Redwood LoggingConference May 28-29
The annual Redwood Logging Conference will be held in Eureka, May 8-D. The whole purpose of the conference is for the discussion of logging problems. The keynote of the discussion this year will be "Production Bottlenecks'" A field trio to the Holmes Eureka operation will be a feature.
LOS ANGELES VISITOR
Seth L. Butler, Northern California representative of Dant & Russell, Inc., has returned to San Francisco from a 10-day stay in Southern California, where he was visited by his son, Lieut. Jack Butler of the U. S. Navy.
STATIONED IN SAN FRANCISCO
Lieut. Jim Berry, formerly rvith Pope & Talbot, Inc., Lumber Division, San Francisco, is now stationed at the Depot of Supplies, U. S. Marine Corps, 100 Harrison Street, San Francisco.
I.AWRENGE,PHIIIPS TUMBER GO.
wiI pought today, after Yifi,ory
ll there ever wcs q tinre to urge upto-the-hllt buying ol wca Bonds, that time is now! For, by bond purchcses, every Americcrn lcnrily ccn help speed up Viciory, check furlher inllation" build up cr neet egg which can be used to sqtisft' wcnts cnd needs that crre crccunulcdhf duing lhe wcr period.
OI the lqlter, lhe grecrtest cre those inherent fur the love ol hone. This necng ihct crlter viclory, thougqndg cnd thouscurdg of lqmilieE will be in the marLet lor l"''rber qnd other mcrterials to build new homes"
A little bird-dogging on your pcnt will urcoyer nqny ol these potenticl cusloners right in your o\pn comnunity . . . IolkE who not only will buy more Wcn Bonds, but who right now cre plcuning their dterlhe. wcr homes. As crn cuthority on bulldlng nctericrls, your suggesdons will bE welcome, helpfuL cnd should pcrve the wcy to prolitcble gqles as soon qa home building gels the "gocrhecd" stSnal
Awciting Victory, Fordyce cnrd Crossett lunber musl continue going to Uncle Scmr" But every depcrhreut is stcnding by, recrdy to meet your every lunber need qa soon ag lhe grreen llght flcrshesl
4o*D,rcE-e*ossETr .9or* eo.
Fordyce cmd Crossett, Arkqnscs
Dlrblbutorr ior
FOBDYCE I.UMBER COMPAITT '
Fodyce, Arlcnacr
CNOSSETT IT'MBEN COMPAITY
Crorrolt, Arlrouar
Fort Brass Athletic Field to be Memorial to Edward L. Green
In cooperation with the schools of the City of Fort Bragg and the County of Mendocino, California, friends of Edward L. Green have arranged that plans be drawn to improve and modernizethe athletic field which serves all of the Fort Bragg schools, and that the field be named Edward Lowe Green Memorial Athletic Field.
A fund is now being raised to defray the cost of the planning, to build a memorial players' bench at the football field with a suitable plaque, and to carry out such features of the plan as the fund permits.
It is agreed by the schools and the County that when the Memorial Fund is exhausted, any future improvements to the athletic field will be carried out in accordance with the plans provided by the Memorial Fund.
The sponsors' committee is as follows: Otis R. Johnson, Raymond Shannon; Kenneth Monteagle, Don Blessing, Leonard B. Allison, James L. Snell, Superintendent of Fort Bragg Schools and James E. Busch, D'istrict Attorney, Mendocino County.
Those who desire to contribute to this memorial to Ed Green's memory may do so. Checks should be made payable to Edward Lowe Green Memorial Fund, 1010 Crocker Building, San Francisco.
A Brief Career Sketch
Mr. Green passed away in San Francisco on January 19, 1943, after an illness of several weeks. He was a director and vice-president in charge of production of Union Lumber Company. Born in Aberdeen, Washington, October 25, 1901, he graduated from the Aberdeen High School in 1919. At school he was outstanding in athletics and all other activities.
He was employed by the Nemah Logging Co. of Raymond, Wash., where he was engaged in various activities in connection with their logging operations. In 1920 at the age of 19 he was employed by Union Lumber Co' and went to Fort Bragg to live. He worked in the woods on the South Fork of Ten-Mile River for about a year, then worked at the plant for a period of three years and was transferred to Mendocino, where after a short time he became assistant to R. D. Swales, general manager of The Mendocino Lumber Co.
When the Mendocino plant shut down late in 1931 Mr. Green returned to Fort Bragg, where he became superintendent of manufacture of Union Lumber Co., in charge of converting the logs, handling, refining and shipping the resultant products.
In 1932 he married Eleanor Broemmel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Broemmel of San Francisco. Their daughter, Patricia, is now nine years old.
Upon the death of Harold P. Plummer in April, 1935, Mr. Green was transferred to San Francisco to succeed Mr. Plummer as vice-president in charge of sales. He remained in this position until 1941, when he was transferred to Fort Bragg to succeed M. D. Gray, who had retired as general manager. He was given the titleof vice-president in charge of production. This position included the responsibility for all the company's interests in Mendocino County.
In the passing of Ed Green not only the Union Lumber Company but the entire lumber industry lost a friend, who by his exceptional spirit, his cooperative attitude and his loyalty, endeared himself to the hearts of all who knew him.
Fellow Lrumbermen: Mcry 10, 1943
The Committees lor the Eleventh Amucrl Reveille held at the lecmingrton Hotel, OcHcnd, Mcry 7,1943, tcke this mecns oI thcrnking the sponsors lor their generous support.
The detcrils cre nowbeingworked out to elliciently set up cr loanlund lor our woundedboyswho crre temporcrrily stranded while wcriting lor delcyed pcry checks.
Onbehclf oI our fightingr tn€ne thank you-
sPoNsoRs
WH O tES AtE
Arccta Bedwood Co. . Scm Frcrncisco
Atkinson-Stutz Co. .... .Scm Frcrncisco
J. H. Bcxter & Co. ... Scn Frcncisco
E. L. Bruce Co., Ilrc. .Scrn Frcncisco
Ccnrpbelt-Conro Lumber Co. (Phil Gosslin)... .Ockland
Cclifornicr Plywood, [rc.... .Oqklcmd
Cclifornic Builders Suppty Co.... .Ocktcmd
D. H. LeBreton d E. H. Holmberg .Scm Francisco
Dcrnt d Russell, Inc.... .... .Scm Frcrncisco
H. I. De Vries Lumber Co.. .Scm Frcmcisco
Dolbeer 6 Ccrrson Lumber Co.. .. .Scrn Frcncisco
Donovcm Lumber Co.. .. ... .Strn Frcmcisco
Fleishmcrn Lumber Co... . ...Scn Frcrncisco
Gamerslon & Green Lumber Co. . .San Frqncisco
Jcnes L Halt. ..Scm Frcncisco
Hcnrmond Lumber Co.. . .Scrn Frcmcisco
Lloyd Hcuris (Vqncouver Plywood & Veneer Co.) ....OaHcnd
l. E. Higgins Lumber Co.... .Scm Frcncisco
Hill & Morton" Inc. . .OcHcud
Hobbs Wcll Lumber Co. ...Scm Frcmcisco
Holnes Eurelcc Lumber Co. .. . Scn Frcrncisco
Hcrbor Plywood Corp. ol Cclifornicr. .San Frcrncisco
G D. Iotrnson Lumber Corporction ..Scrn Frcncieco
Jones Hcrdwood Co. Scm Frcmcisco
Lamon-Bonnington Co. ... ..Scm Frcncisco
Long-Bell Lunber Co. . .Scn Frcmcisco
Bcy City Lumber Co. . ... OcHand
Bootacur Lurrber Co. . ... Oqklcmd
Builders Emporium
Ccrter Lumber Co. .. ..... Ocklcnd
Econorry Lumber Co. . .. . Oclclcrnd
El Cerrito Lumber Co. .. El Cerrito
Eurekcr Mitl C Lumber Co. . Ocrklcrnd
Hcrywcnd MiU d Lumber Co. .. Hcryurcrrd
R. G. Hiscox Lumber Co. ..... Berkeley
Hogcur Lumber Co. OaHcrnd
Isnnom Bros. Mlg. Co. . ....... .. Ocrklcrad
McrcDoncrld & Hcnrington" Ltd. ...Scrn Frcncisco
MooreMiUd Lumber Co. ...... . ScrrFrcmcisco
NicolciDoorScrlesCo. .... ScnFrcmcisco
The Pacilic Lumber Co. . .. .Scrn Frcrncisco
ParcrminoLumberCo. .. .....ScnrFrancisco
I. E. Peggs .. .. .Scrr Frcurci:sco
Pope & Tcrlbot, Inc., Lumber Division .Scn Frccrcisco
Pyrcmid Lumber Scles Co. .Oaklcmd
Redwood Mcmulccturers Co. ....Pittsburg
Rockport Redwood Co. . .. .Sqn Frtrncirsco
TheRoss-TerrellCo. ..... GrcntsPass,Ore.
Scntcr Cruz Lumber Co. . Scsrtc Cruz
Scrntc Fe Lumber Co. . Scn Frcmcisco
Schqler Bros. Lumber & Shingle Co.... ...Scrn Frcrncisco
Shevlin Pine Scles Co. . Scrn Frcmcisco
Strcble Hcrdwood Co. ...OqHcnrd
Sudden & Christenson, Inc. .Scn Frcmcisco
Union Lumber Compcny Scrn Frtmcisco
Wendling-Ncrthcm Co. Scsr Frcncisco
Western Door d Scsh Co. OqHcrnd
West Oregon Lumber Co. . . Scrn Frcncisco
WeyerhceuserSclesCo... ScmFrcncisco
White Brothers .. ... Oaklcrnd
Wholescle Lumber Distributors, Inc. .....; .OqHcmd
R. O. Wilson Lumber Co. .. Ocklcnd
E. K. Wood Lumber Co. .. . Scm Frcmcisco
RETAIT
Lincoln Lumber Co. .. ... Oqklcmd
Ioop Lumber & Mill Co. . ..Alcrnedcr
Loop Lumber Co. .. Scn Frqncisco
Melrose Lumber Co. .. ... Oclclcmd
Piedmont Lumber & lUill Co. .. Oqklcmd
Scn Lecrndro Mill & Lumber Co. .. .. Scnr lecm&o
Smith Lumber Co. .. Oaklcmd
E. K. Wood Lumber Co. .. . OsHand
Wood Products Oaklcmd
Zeniih MiU C Lumber Co. Ocklcrnd
Very truly yours, NEVEIIJ.E COMMITTIEE
His daddy used to lead him by the hand, Across the meadows in the falling dusk, On little pleasure trips that they had planned, When all the woods were redolent with musk; And when he grew to be a stalwart lad, There was a place that only he could fill. Today a letter brought his daddy word, That he was killed in action, over there. His face paled, and his misty eyes were blurred, The while his lips moved silently in prayer; And then he seemed to feel a hidden joyKnowing God must be lonesome for his boy.
T : B. in Chicago Tribune.
During the first World War the splendid English poet Laurence Binyon, in his poem "For the Fallen," wrote one of the most famous little war heart throbs of history: They shall not grow old, As we that are left, grow old. Age shall not weary them, Nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun, And in the morning, We shall remember them.
Duty makes a yo'ng ^:ii a good soldier or sailor; but faming patriotism makes him an unbeatable and indestructible knight in shining armor, fighting for the land he loves and for the fag that fies above it.
*rl.*
The British tell us now that after DunHrk they had only enough ammunition left in Britain to keep its forces fighting for ONE MINUTE. I'11 bet the regret for that lost opporttrnity is what has brought about whatever it is that has happcned to Hitler. Can't you imagine that egomaniac waking at night and screaming aloud when he thinks of that one minute of ehooting-+nd then SILENCE -that would have been England's lot had he followed them across the channel after Dunkirk? ***
One report I read recently declared that-unable to stand the strain of the past year-Hitler has taken to the bottle;
has become a dipsomaniac. Well, that wasn't so great a change. All he had to do was add the "dipso." He had the rest of it all the time.
tt|lrt
At a time when some thousands of retail lumber yards have gone out of business due to war conditions, we watch with wonderment some men who go at it in just the op posite fashion. I know of a man who rented a disused lumber yard, bought an old rookery of a house across the street, wrecked it, and sold the materials. Bought another and did the same. Then several more. Then he got some new lumber in. Then some sash, doors, and windows. Now he's in the lumber business and doing well, getting biggcr every day.
*!t
In Hollywood, California, they have a phrase in common use: "Gone Hollywood." ft refers to folkb who go there, get the strange Hollywood serum in their blood, and begin acting as they never had before. Now they use that same approach concerning the city of Washington. They say a man has "Gone Washington." Which means that infation of various sorts has hit him, and he acts and talks as he never had been knourn to do. He sort of gets elephantiasis of ideas, if you know what I mean. The mania to talk big, act big, and infate everything he touches, seems to overcome his ordinary calm judgment.
t*!S
Probably no better case of a man "Gone Washington" could be pointed out than that of Elmer Davis, Director of the Office of War Information; they call itOWI. No man ever took a bureau job who was more highly regarded. It was generally conceded that he was a good man, a good journalist, a good writer, and a man of sound judgment. He took a job gathering and distributing from the various agencies of the Federal Government at Washington the essential news, and distributing it to the nation. ff some privately owned news agency had undertaken that same job it would probably have employed a hundrbd or so expert men. Know how many Elmer hired? FOUR TI{OUSAND. No wonder he is having his dog Hcked around Washington, being "derided and denied, belittled and belied." Not to mention investigated. Trying to divide the
\pork of a few score competent people among four thousand would get any man in trouble.
When the investigators asked him why he published millions of copies of books and things that were pure political propaganda, his replies were unconvincing excuses. He could have told them the truth, that he had to find something for that army of writers to do, so he was forced to turn them loose on many things unrelated to the war information he was hired to gather and distribute. He is asHng forty-seven million dollars to finance that army for the ensuing year. Forty-seven million dollars ! He "went Washington" sure nuff t ***
What's become of that good old slogan-"The customer is always right"? Gone are those days. They tell about a cafe that set up a sign: "Don't criticize our waiters. They are a heap harder to get than customers." And that, ladies and gents, is the text of the entire national situation. No one worries about customers-it's the help.
I read about a California restaurant that advertised in the newspapers as follows: "Man wanted to operate dishwashing machine. Six days a week. $30 and meals. Pleasant surroundings. Congenial workers, all Democrats. Birds sing all.during eight hour shift. We know you'll like us, and we hope we'll like you." The ad made a hit, brought them a lot of new business, and won them a prize for clever advertising. BUT IT DIDN'T GET THEM A DISHWASHER.
rf**
That job paid $11 a week just three years back, and they could get all the help they wanted at that price. I clipped an ad the other day offering $360 a month for a type of laborer who was getting about $60 a month for that same work three years ago. No wonder that with so many of the things we buy the price keeps edging up, the quality and quantity keep sliding down. Where will it end? Ah, friend, if I knew !
From England comes a sweet sample of humorous advertising. A Manchester firrniture store got hit by a German bomb, and badly wrecked. The management advised the public about it in their advertising, and added: "BUT YOU OUGHT TO SEE OUR BERLIN BRANCH." Swell sample of gameness.
'l:f*
Those British storekeepers had learned well the philosophy of an old colored man I used to know. He had more than his share of trials and tribulations in life, yet was alwas cheerful, always smiling, always with a good word to say. Someone asked him one day how come he was always that way, and he said: "Well, Cap'n, I'll tell you how come. I jes' learned long ergo to cooperate wif de inevitable."
There has been plenty of reprinting of the story of the rookie soldier on K. P. duty who said he had never been able to learn to cook out of a cook book, because every recipe started with an impossible suggestion-"Take a clean dish." And what, some woman wants to know, can you do with that good old recipe that began: "Take a quart of whipping cream, a dozen eggs, and a pound of butter?" !F**
We have come to a time when you may still hear a man declare that he makes a lot of money, but you'll never hear one say that he "brings home the bacon." Not much, any\pay.
The late Ramsay McDonald, Premier of Great Britain, urras once making a speech on the possibility of creating a lasting peace in the world. A critic interrupted the speech to say: "The desire for peace does not necessarily instrre it." "Quite true," replied the quick witted Premier. "Neither does the desire for food satisfy your hunger; but at least it gets you started towards a restaurant."
Dfiaelfonald & Ilarringtorl: Ltd.
16 Cdifornia Street, San Francisco
GArfield 8393
WHOLDSALDBS OI. ALL }VNST COAST LUMBEN PAODUCTS
Creosoted and Volmanized Lumber and Piling LOS ANGELES
Petrole-- Bldg. PRupect 3127
RAIL and CARGO PORTI.AND PittocL Blocl BRoadway 1217
Use of '\(/'esternPineRestricted bv \(/PB
San Francisco, May 6-The War Production Board today restricted the use of seven species of Western lumber almost entirely to essential military needs. The action was taken through issuance of a limitation order L-M, which becomes effective May 13.
The lumber restricted by the order includes all ponderosa pine, sugar pine, Idaho white pine, white fir, lodgepole pine, Engelmann spruce and western white spruce, except shingles, lath or railroad cross-ties, produced in the states of Washington, Oregon, California, Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Nevada, Utah, Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico and South Dakota.
Demands for military boxing and crating have become so great that it was found necessary to stop unessential and less essential uses of the lumber.
The order affects about 800 producers in the specified states. These producers can sell or deliver the restricted lumber to the central producing agency of the Corps of Engineers, to other designated government agencies, to Lend-Lease countries, and to their contractors and sub contractors.
L-D0 also provides that no person, including the armed services or other government agencies, may purchase certain grades of the affected species for use in construction.
WPB recognizes that certain essential civilian uses must be cared for. To provide for these, the restricted lumber will be released through authorization on form PD-872.
L-nO also provides that the War Production Board may allocate certain quantities or percentages of production or shipments to specified persons for specific uses, without regard to any preference ratings assigned to particular purchase orders or contracts.
Adds To Holdinss
The Placerville Lumber Company, Placerville, Calif., under the management of Harvey E. West recently completed two lumber transactions increasing the timber holdings of the company by over 200 million feet.
The A. J. Rupley timber land east of the American River which comprises approximately 10,000 acres estimated to contain over 100,000,000 feet, recently was purchased by the company. Manager West reports that included in the transaction are the Plum Creek or Shank and Wilbur mill and the Bradbury & Tuman mill. These will be dismantled and the machinery used in other operations.
The Placerville Lumber Company also has signed a contract with the Silver Fork Lumber Company for operations in the Silver Fork area. The Sacramento Box Company, which formerly worked in the area, has dismantled its mill there and is building a new one in the Woodleaf region east of Marysville.
Mr. West says the Placerville company's logging camps at Tahoe Valley, Fresh Pond, Silver Fork and Alder Creek are open and the falling of timber has begun. Sawmills at Tahoe Valley and Fresh Pond are expected to begin operations next week. The manager said the total timber now available to the company exceeds 500,0@,000 feet.
are turning out will aggression! Your work, the bondsyou buy, will keep these plants performing as they should !
VICTORY MATERIAITS
GEORGE E. REAM COMPANY
A mechanized lumber industry wcs crble to meet the sudden demcrnds oI Wcrr without "tooling up," Wood products were needed FIBST belore troops could be housed or new Iactories built.
In spite ol depletedmcnpower and shortcge oI equipment cnd supplies the men oI the woods and mills hcve come through with record-brecking output.
In this effortRed River's men qnd women cre proud to be tckingpqil. *PA['L BT'NYAN'S"
PRODUCTS
aEGTSTERED @ 'RADE MAaf,
MEIUEEN WESTENN PINE ASSOCIA?IOI{ MEMBEB WOOD FON VENEItf,N's f,SSN.
6l@uoaik Sfuul
Bf le Sioaac
Age not guaranteed---Some I have toldfor 20 years---Some Less
Might Look Like a Frame Up
When Grover Cleveland was President, he often sought relaxation in the form of a hunting trip into the Adirondack Mountains, where he always had the services of a famous guide named Chick Bruce. They became quite devoted to one another.
One morning the guide left the President sitting on a log. When he returned from an effort to locate a deer, he found his distinguished employer sitting lazily on the log
IN FORESTRY ENGINEERING DIVISION
B. W. "Bob" Cowbrough, son of P. M. "Pete" Cowbrough, sales manager of Crater Lake Box & Lumber Co', Sprague River, Ore., is now with the 798th Engineering Unit Training Corps, Forestry Engineering Division, Camp Claiborne La.
Bob is a forestry graduate of Oregon State College, Corvallis, Ore.
with the butt of his rife on the ground and the muzzle right against his chest. The enraged guide grabbed the gun from Mr. Cleveland's grasp, and stormed at him:
"Quit that foolishness, dad gum it! What are you tryin' to do with that gun aimed at your chest? Suppose it had gone off and killed you.! What would have happened to me? Everybody round here knows I'm a Republican!"
CALIFORNIA STOCKPILE YARDS RETURN TO FORMER STATUS MAY 29
Letters of intent, establishing twelve Southern California and four Northern California lumber yards as distribution yards for the purpose of filling emergency orders of lumber for the war effort, were cancelled recently, effective May D, by the Office of the Chief of Engineers.
INSECT SCREEN CLOTH
"DUROID' Electro Galvanized
"DURO" BnoNze
UICTl| R High Early Strength PORTTAND
GEMENT
Gucsqnteed to meet or exceed requirements ol Americcsr Society lor Testing Matericrls Specificcrtions tor High Ecrrly Strength Portland Cement qs well qs Federcl Speciliccrtions lor Cement, Port' lcrnd, High-Ecnly-Shength, No. SS-G201.
rIGf, DARI,T STRDTIGTf,
(28 dqy concrete strengths in 2{ hours.)
SUI.PNATD RDSISTATIT
(Besult of compound composition cnd usuclly lound only in apecicl ceurentE designed lor this purPose.)
llIIlIMUlil DXPAIISI(II| and G0tfTRACTI0tf
(Extremely s€vcre cuto-clave test resqlts consistently indiccrte prcrcticclly no expcnsion or contrnction, thus elimincting one oI most dillicult problems in use oI c high ecrly sbength cemenL)
PACKDII Til MOISTURI - PROOI GNIEII PAPER SACT STAIITPED WITH IIATI OT PACKITIG AT MIIT
(Users' cssurqnce ol lresh sloclc unilormity cnrd proper results lor concrete.)
when thic war hrr becn won E. J. Stanton & Son will be back ar c prime supplier ol raw materiah and lumber products for private construc{ion. But right now thcrc ir only one iob this war must 6e won! lt'r up to cll of ug to conkibute our bert
A, 8, Qoopet, o . .
XIarfu fiIftieth lear in Rafinew
erating as M. M. Cooper & Son. purchased his father's interest in assumed full control.
May 13 of this year, not only marked the 70th birthday for W. E,. Cooper, widely known lumberman, but on that date he also observed the 50th anniversary of his ownership and activity in the lumber business. Born on a farm near Madison, Wisconsin, onMay 13, 1873, William E Cooper began his business career at Merrimac, \Misconsin, where in 1893 he was admitted to a partnership in his father's lumber business, opThe following year, he the business and then
This marked the beginning of many organizations which were destined to cover a wide range of enterprises and it is a noteworthy commentary that while he started in business with only a few hundred dollars of his own, Mr. Cooper's business acumen and energy brought him marked success and recognition. Modestly, however, he invariably says that his success is not due to his own hard and earnest efforts but to the help and cooperation of his loyal associates and employees and the good will of those with whom he has done business.
In 1896 he established a branch yard at Dane, \Misconsin, and in 1900 he became associated with T. J. Hughes of lMales, Wisconsin, and opened a lumber yard at that place. ln lX)Z he purchased yards at Dousman and Nashotah, 'Wisconsin, and about that time he and F. W. Graves organized the Cooper & Graves Lumber Company with yards in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan.
Two years later, leaving the Merrimac yard under tlre supervision of his brother, the late Frank A. Cooper, he moved to Milwaukee and engaged in the wholesale lumber business. Mr. Cooper often relates that all of his calls on his various customers and his many trips to the mills had to be negotiated by train with many attendant inconveniences and long stopovers. However, his company as well as many of the firms from whom he purchased lumber,
weathered the depression of those years and are still operating in Wisconsin and Northern Michigan.
Mr. Cooper and Mr. Hughes also became interested in land and real estate and in 1910 and 1911 established the Cooper-Hughes Investment Company and the CooperHughes Land & Lumber Company which corporations still maintain large holdings in the vicinity of Great Falls, Montana.
During these years in Wisconsin, Mr. Cooper became owner or co-owner of many retail lumber yards; among them the Cooper & Utter Lumber Company with yards at Nashotah and Merton, the Delafield Lumber & Fuel Company at Delafield, and the Middleton Lumber Company at Middleton. These yards are now under the supervision of L. E. Utter with the exception of the Middleton yard which is under the direction of A. C. Utter.
In l9I2 Mr. Cooper and his family moved from Milwaukee to California. At that time he was financially interested in fourteen corporations and partnerships, which he had organized, and he had planned to retire from active business. He was much too active, however, and becoming restive started operating in real estate, acquiring extensive holdings, and several of these holdings are still in his possession. In order to have his son, Charles M. Cooper, associated with him in the lumber business. in l9ZO Mr. Cooper organized the W. E. Cooper Lumber Company at 2035 East 15th Street, Los Angeles, specializing in hardwoods and this was one of the largest wholesale yards in Southern California, which company later entered the retail field.
In 1933 the retail and wholesale departments were segregated and the retail yard of W. E. Cooper Lumber Company was moved to 4650 West Pico Boulevard, and placed in charge of his son. The offices of the wholesale division, in June, 1941, were moved to the Richfield Building, in downtown Los Angeles.
Mr. Cooper resides at San Marino and is still active in business, spending a part of each day at his desk. He receives much pleasure in personally calling upon and inspecting the yards of his customers and mill associates. High quality and fair dealing in all transactions have always been his watchword. fn order to furnish his customers with the highest quality lumber, he has always represented only the best mills.
.Possessing a well-rounded personality, always growing in knowledge, in appreciation and in cooperation, Mr. Cooper deservedly is one of the industry's best-known and respected representatives. He is most appreciative and ever ready and willing to give fullest cooperation to his associates and employees, many of whom have organized their
own companies and never fail to remember and show their appreciation for the training and experience gained under "'\ry'. E." as he is better known to his many friends.
Mr. Cooper's wide range of activities tend to keep him interested and youthful. Aside from his many interests, he finds time and opportunity to relax at his ranch in the foothills of Altadena. Here he forgets the cares of the day and spends many enjoyable hours in the great outdoors. He makes a specialty of growing rare fris, Camellias and Azaleas and the small canyon is a bower of beauty with its great variety of flowers, plants and trees.
Besides being a true lover of nature, he is a very publicspirited citizen, giving whole-hearted support to every movement calculated to promote the safety or welfare of society as a whole. He is held in the highest esteem by a host of friends who joined in felicitating him upon his 70th birthday and his 50th business anniversary.
Prefiminary Estimate o( California
Lumber Production for 1942
San Francisco, April30-The lumber production of California sawmills in 1942 was 2,322,170,000 board feet according to a preliminary estimate made by the California Forest and Range Experiment Station of the Forest Service in cooperation with the Bureau of the Census, the U. S. Department of Commerce and the War Production Board.
Although hampered by shortage of manpower and equipment and by adverse weather condiiions in the spring, the lumber industry responded to the unprecedented wartime demands for lumber by producing only a fraction less than was sawed in the record year of 194I.
For the State as a whole, with the exception of redwood, Douglas fir and white fir there was a decrease in the cut of all species ranging lrom 2.7 per cent in incense cedar to 19.3 per cent in Sitka spruce. The most outstanding increases were 16.2 per cent for Douglas fir and 30.1 per cent for white fir. The most significant decreases were 3.7 in ponderosa pine and 12.6 in sugar pine.
In the pine region the estimated lumber production in 1942 was 1,730,931,000 board feet or approximately 3 per cent below the 1941 output, due to declines in the cut of ponderosa pine, sugar pine and incense cedar. In the redwood region the estimated production of 591,238,000 board.feet was approximately 9 per cent greater than in 1941 due mainly to the increase in Douglas fir production.
As this statement is based on the cut of 266 out of. an estimated active 314 sawmills in California the final production statistics issued by the Bureau of the Census will be different. The complete preliminary s.tatement will be ready for distribution by the Experimenr Station, Berkeley. within a week.
Appointed Viceg erent Snark
Carl Warden of Warden Bros. Planing Mill, San Francisco, has been appointed Vicegerent Snark of the Concatenated Order of Hoo-Hoo for the San, Francisco Bay district, by Supreme Jabberwock E. S. McBride of Davis. Calif.
We're "chesfy" oboui CHESTS!
Douglos Fir Plywood is being used to buird millions oI them fior ihe Army !
O We're proud thot Douglos Fir Plywood's light weight. greot strength ond durobility moke it o preferred moteriol for Army chesls. We're oli;o proud thot this Mirocle Wood's mony odvontoges ore enobling it to do hundreds of different wor iobs. For the more woys Douglos Fir Plywood serves now, the more useful it will be to you ofter the wor is won.
O More thon 100,000 of these chesfs for Army Signol CorPt communicofion equipment ore in ur on vorious bottlefronts ond outPost!. These sturdy chesis ore buill ol tl'inch Douilos Fir Plywood foced wirh plostic sheels, (teft, Even the troys which fit in thcse chesB orc plywood.
Lumber
promises c Arecter future for wood
Fon rHr NATtoN's essential construction, the products of the forest were always at hand-and ready for use. Logs built the early cabins and stockades-hewn into timbers, they built bridges and boats-fashioned into dimension and boards, anod bailt America-its homes, churches, schools, factories, stores and farm buildings.
under the mandate of each new necessity, the quality, the form, and the application of lumber improved. rfood constantly serves new uses, both urban and rural, becaase uood is econonical and easily uorhable.
The rush of war needs for coonri.ss materials made demands on all our nation's resources. High on the list was lumber. From timber-line. to laminated arch rafters, and reco trusses for modern factories and airplane hangars, to plywood shells, for air and water craft, wood accomplished in weeks what would otherwise have required months.
The record of wood in rhe war marks still funher advancemenr in the development of lumber. Research freed wood from foimer limitations of the log. New ways of forming and shaping wood, new methods of joining and bonding it have given us such products as laminated wood rafters, various forms of plywood, and many other newer products.
Lumber dealers will find in the furure expanding markets for lumber in their communities-new ways to serve those markets better, because engineering in lumber has more than ever established irs economy, utility, and adaptability.
glrtlNo lN TODAY'! nerxrr-Today, more than in any other period, the home owner and farmer are more fully aware of the imporance of maintenance and repair. Norwithstanding the less than normal flow of lumber for civilian requirements' it is still serving these essential markets. In combination with othermaterials, lumber will help you serve in rnany ways your city and farm customers.
Stickins Mv Neck Out
By Jack DionneMore than two months ago I stuck my neck out in these columns, and expressed the opinion (as a warning to lumber dealers who might be making their plans differently) that lumber would become scarcer before it became more plentiful, and that the opportunity for securing lumber for civilian building was becoming more remote, instead of less.
Those prognostications proved correct. It required no prophet to see what was coming. The Government said it wanted all the lumber the mills could make, so the consequences were obvious.
Right now, if I were in the retail lumber business and. wanted to stay in it rurtil the war ended, I would take it for granted that lumber is going to become even scarcer than it has been at any time yet so far as civilian building is concerned; and I would likewise take it for granted that there would be new and more drastic restrictions issued against civilian building, rather than any relaxation that optimism might suggest. That's the way I'd make my plans and my figures. If it didn't happen, I would be no worse off. If it did, I would be prepared for it.
And I would prepare for eventualities by going deep into the business of changing from peacetime to wartime merchandising. IfI hadn't yet got started substituting new things to sell for the things I used to sell, I wouldn't wait a minute to start. And if, as thousands of dealers have already done, I HAD started looking for new things to
CONTRACT LOGGERS
Contract loggers in Oregon and Washington west of the crest of Cascade Mountains' are authorized by OPA to make specified additions to their maximum prices if they operate 48 hours or more per week (Revised MPR 151, Amendment 3), effective May 5.
sell and selling different things, I would intensify my efforts along that line.
Many thousands of dealers today are selling supplies for new gardeners and new poultry producers in the city; and selling small unit buildings of all descriptions to help the farmer intensify his activities in some measure toward increasing the production of food. In this direction lies one big out for the harassed lumber dealer. But these things require work, hard work and along entirely new lines. A salesman friend of mine who just returned from a trip around his district on which he called on more than two hundred lumber yards, says that every single yard he called on is doing more or less new merchandising; selling things he never sold before. EVERY YARD, mind you. And what is true in his territory is probably reflected in conditions all over the country.
The war emergency has practically said to lumber dealers everywhere: "GET OUT AND SELL AND SUBSTITUTE-or GET OUT."
So get busy and sell all these new garden and farm helps; sell paint, wall paper, roofing, sidewalls, insulation, builtin furniture, cement, gypsum products, available wall boards, etc., etc., etc.In the old days the dealer used to make his living on his lumber sales, and used his side lines for extras. Today he's got to sell what used to be side lines for his main business, and do the best he can about lumber until the emergency recedes. For in that direction lies hope.
CHANGES IN BASING POINTS
Several changes in basing points, used to determine inbound freight charges in computating distribution yard ceilings for some species of softwood lumber, are announced by OPA (MPR 215, Amendment 5), effective May 1.
SouthernPine Boards
Mill ceilings for No. 2 common southern pine boards are increased $1 per 1,000 board feet, and those of No. 2 common dimension are decreased an equivalent amount by OPA. Important changes are also introduced by the regulation in new definition of "distribution yard." Tables of specific prices are established for the first time for some items of car materials and for other materials which were priced until now by special formula (Revised MPR 19), issued April 26.
GUS JOHNSON IN ARMY
Gus Johnson, accountant for Harbor Plywood Corp. of California, San Francisco, was recently inducted into the Army. He is in the finance department at Camp l\IcQuade, Calif.
PAUL PENBERTHY IN EAST
Paul Penberthy of the Penberthy Lumber Company, Los Angeles, left May 9 on a business trip to Eastern cities. He was accompanied by Mrs. Penberthy, and they expect to be gone about two weeks.
The Penberthy Lumber Company specializes in lumber for the aircraft and glider industries.
VISIT NEW YORK AND WASHINGTON
Frank J. Connolly, executive vice-president and general manager, Western Hardwood Lumber Co., Los Angeles, and H.M. Walker of P. J. Walker & Co., Los Angeles, are on a business trip to Nerv York and Washington. They left May 7 and will return about May 21.
CHICKEN VISITS CALIFORNIA
A flat car of lumber arrived not long ago at the Oakland yard of E. K. Wood Lumber Co. with a new kind of passenger aboard-a Plymouth Rock hen, rvhich had laid an egg. No doubt this Oregon chicken had always longed to visit California, and flew aboard when its owner wasn't looking.
Nofthern Redwood Mill Starts
The large sawmill of the Northern Redwood Lumber Co. at Korbel, Humboldt County, Calif., started operation April12. The work of rebuilding the mill has been going on for the past year, and the company has been logging for some time.
Only one side is being operated. With both sides expected to be running soon the cut will be about 150,00O feet per day.
Fentress Hill is presient of the company. Offices are in the Russ Building, San Francisco.
YELLOW POPLAR AIRCRAFT LUMBER
New specifications and grading rules covering yellow poplar aircraft lumber are listed by WPB.
PROOF OF THE PUDDING
The story goes that at the famous training center of Jefferson Barracks, Mo., they have installed a lot of big mirrors near the parade grounds, and they can see for tlremselves how badly they do it. And the Sergeant ju$ stands there and smiles as they do squads right in front of the mirrors and says:
t'Now, you big apes, you can see for yourselves."
DIDN'T DUCK
STRATEGY
Pathfinder tells of the two rabbits that started out on their honeymoon, hopping along over the hills. They had gone but a short distance when they heard the excited bayrng of hounds. They stopped and listened. Desiring to show off, the male rabbit said: "Let's wait right here and I'll lick those babies." The coy rabbit bride dropped her eyes, and said: "Let's wait until tomorrow and we'll outnumber them."
Here lies a Nazi, cold as ice; He only ducked once, when he should have ducked twice. ARMY CHOW
NO WHISTLING ON SHIPBOARD
Whistling on board a navy ship is forbidden. The pipe which the boatswain's mate blows to attract attention and silence before making announcements or giving orders, resemblcs a shrill whistle. To avert mistakes and avoid con' fusion, no whistling is permitted.
SEEMED SO TO HIM
He was only eighteen years old, and he was taking the rnental exam for the army, and when they asked him the quqstion: "What is the term of the President of the United States?" he answered: "Life."
DOLLAR AND CENT
A big silver dollar and a little round cent, Rolling along together they went, Rolling along the smooth sidewalk, When the dollar remarked-for dollars can talk:
"You poor little cent, you cheap little mite, I'm bigger and more than twice as bright; I'm worth more than you, a hundredfold, And written on me in letters boid
Is the motto drawn from the pious creed
'In God we trust,' which all may read."
,,Yes. I know," said the cent,
"I'm a cheap little mite, and I know I'm not big, nor good, nor bright, And yet," said the cent, with a meek little sigh, "You don't go to church as often as f."
ANOTHER
"Sugar Pie," said the dark one to his Susie. 'Did that kiss I jus' gave you make you long fo' anothah?"
"Sho did," said his sugar pie. "But he's outa town."
A rich guy was being inducted into the army via the draft route, and he was none too happy about things. When he sat down to his first meal with Uncle Sam, he looked the food over critically, turned up his nose, and said to the soldier next to him:
"Don't you get any choice around here?"
"Oh sure," the other soldier said. "You get two choices. You can take it or leave it."
STREET SCENE IN BERLIN
The sirens were screaming in Berlin, and everyone was rushing toward the bombproof shelters, when one man stopped quickly. His frightened wife grabbed his arm and urged him to hurry.
"But I've dropped my false teeth," he wailed.
She said: "False teeth? What do you think those British are dropping-ham sandwiches?"
BAREFOOT BOY-LATE MODEL
Blessings on thee, little man, Barefoot boy with cheek of tan; Trudging down a dusty lane, With no thought of future pain; You're our one and only bet To pay off the national debt. Little man with cares so few, We've a lot of faith in you; Guard each merry whistled tune, You are apt to need them soon. Have your fun now while you can; You may be a barefoot man.
1lth Annual Reveille Draws Big Crowd
While the attendance at the 11th Annual Reveille, held at Hotel Leamington, Oakland, May 7, was not up to the record breaking figures of the past several years, it was the biggest get-together meeting of Central and Northern California lumbermen since the last Reveille. As a matter of fact the crowd was just right for the hotel to handle comfortably, and evervbody had a good time. Many reniarked that they were seeing friends they had not met for some time, and that sort of thing is one of the objects of this annual affair.
A large number of lumbermen from towns and cities of Northern and Central California were able to make a busi ness trip coincide with the Reveille date and this made the attendance representative of many districts as in the past.
President George Clayberg of Hoo-Hoo Club No. 39 welcomed the big crowd.
Lewis A. Godard, general chairman for the 1943 Reveille, took a couple of minutes to give a quick sketch of the history of the Reveille and introduced Clem Fraser, originator of the idea. As is well known these affairs have all been handled very efficiently by East Bay Hoo-Hoo Club No. 39. The chairrnan also announced that as a result of the
generous support of the Reveille by wholesale and retail lumbermen a substantial sum of money will be donated to the special fund, connected with the war effort, which was this year's objective.
Among those at the head table was Private Jas. B. Overcast, past president and secretary of Club No. 39, and seated beside him was his guest, Private Hill, also of the armed forces.
A $15.00 door prize was won by C. Lindsay, and the second prize of $5.0O was won by Miland Grant.
A word of praise is due to Host Phil Riley of the Leamington for the hotel's excellent service in spite of difficult conditions.
Benito Moreno was master of ceremonies for the 1943 Reveille Victory Revue. Jack Petty's Band furnished the music.
The general committee consisted of Lewis A. Godard, general chairman; Miland R. Grant, aisistant general chairman; G. W. Sechrist, general secretary-treasurer; George Clayberg, D. Normen Cords, Wm. Chatham, Jr., Carl R. Moore, Tom Branson, Tom Hogan III, Frank H. White, John Helm, Clem Fraser.
URGENT GOVERNMENT NEEIDS
for lumber are all-important today, and we are cooperating wholeheartedly with this program. We likewise share our dealers' problems and are preparing fon greater service in the peacetime of tomorrow.
\(/orld's Largest Hangars Built of \7ood---
tVith Timber Connectors
rc
Under construction at strategic points in the United States are the largest all timber structures in the world.
These mammoth blimp hangars for the U. S. Navy will house the lighter-than-air fleet being assembled to fight the submarine menace. They are 1000 feet long and the curved roof is supported by arched timber trusses with a span of 240 leet and a rise of 185 feet.
Formerly, several of these great hangars were constructed of steel and it is due-solely to Teco connector engineering that they can be successfully built of wood. The large wooden superstructure, containing almost 4,000,000 feet of lumber, results in the saving of over 2,000 tons of structural steel, and with its wooden members chetrically treated to resist fire, provides a building in many respects superior to one of metal.
From the War Production Board comes the statement
that "Such a structure could not have been built of wood by ordinary methods without the use of timber connectors The steel ring timber connector, which is used to increase the strength of joints in wood construction, saved more than 400,000 tons of steel for essential rvar production in 1942."
Navy engineers have achieved a notable success in the design and erection of this vast, multiple truss building, the biggest of scores of large Navy, Armv, and Maritime Commission projects built with Teco timber connectors under the revolutionary Teco system of timber engineering. During the past few years, well over 100,000 heavy duty structures, of over 600 types, have been built using the Teco connector system. They include clear span factories, docks, shipyards, 'warehouses, tanks, towers, trestles, bridges, barges and many others.
Same Car Makes Repeat Trip To Stockton Yard
Occasionally we read an article about a "repeater" meaning that a car v/ent from one mill to a certain destination and then made a repeat trip at a later date between the same point of origin and the same destination.
But here's an instance we believe will remain "uncapped" for some time to come and should be of interest to Ripley. This identical car traveled 1860 miles in the single service of one sawmill and one buyer without any intervening service.
On October L,1942, SP -41153 was loaded at Swisshome, Oregon, shipped to the Santa Fe Lumber Company, Stockton, and arrived there on October 14. The car was unloaded and released at Stockton, October 18.
On October D, L942, the same car, SP-41153 was loaded by the same mill at Swisshome, Oregon, shipped to the Santa Fe Lumber Company; Stockton, arrived there November 7 and was unloaded November 8.
The distance is 620 miles from Swisshome to Stockton.
MOVES OFFICES
E. A. (Ted) Wright California representative for the Washington Veneer Co., has moved his Los Angeles offices from 2L36 Sacramento Street to suite l@2 Lane Mortgage Building. The telphone number is the same, Tllcker 6888.
HEADQUARTERS
Ior
ESSENTIAL MATERIALS ..SINCE I852"
PLYPANE LS-PLYFORM-PLYWALL DOORS-SASH-GLASS
Sold Through LUMBER
DEALERS ONLY
Fffi
MANT'FACTI'RERS, PBODUCENS
A![D DISTRET'TONS
BASIC BI'II.DING MATEru,AIS
BIJUE DIAMOND
PRODUCTS Quality
PLASIER" cll types, ACOUSTICOAT
GYPSUM TILE, CI.AY PRODUCTS
PORIT.AI{D CEMEIfT, cll other types
TRANSIT.MIXED CONCRETE
REINFORCING STEET qnd MESH
BOCK & SAM, crll SPECIFICATIONS
cotonED sTuccos, BRusHcoAT
IIME PUTTY, LIME, crll types
TATHING MATERIALS, all types
PLASTEN, WOOD, METAL LATH
PIASIER BOABD, T & G SHEATTIING
CHANNET IBON, STEET STUDS
STUCCO MESH, TIE WINE
ROOFING, PAPER, NAILSi, qll types INSIIIATION and WATEBPROOFING SPECIALTIES
TIIE CAI,IT'ORNIA DOOR COMPANY
Mctltng Address: Telephone: P. O. Box 126, Vemon Stction lCmball2l4l 4940 District Boulevcrd
LOS ANGELES
"Buy from a Wholesoler"
Redwood Fibre \(/ar Needs
The new fibre developed from the inner bark of thc California Redwoods by The Pacific Lumber Company, San Francisco, now releases vast quantities of cotton required in the war effort, according to C. L. Thompson, head of the company's Research Division. This latest development following closely on the heels of the original discovery that Redwood fibre blends with wool in fabrics and felts, will relieve an impending shortage of cotton linters required in the making of gunpowder and explosives. This newly discovered textile fibre is described as highly resistant to moisture and humidity, thereby imparting its natural springy resilience to the material with which it is mixed.
A new era of sleeping cornfort is prophesied by the developers of this new fibrous filler. Its introduction into mattresses, comforters and pillows greatly prolongs the resilient life and utility of these essential items necessary to human comfort. It is also used with wool in soft fleecy blankets which closely approach the appearance, weight and warmth of all-wool.
Even our nation's fighting forces will benefit from this discovery for under recent studies conducted by the Army, mattresses composed oI 50/o Redwood bark fibre and the balance cotton linters were subiected to tortuous and exhaustive tests.
When the mattresses were opened and the filler carefully examined by government experts it was found that this fibrous material improves the serviceability and quality of cotton mattresses.
For countless centuries the inexhaustible uses which the gigantic Redwoods could serve were comparatively unknown. Today, however, through the untiring efforts of the scientific research on the part of The Pacific Lumber Company numerous other developments will eventually emeige from the test-tube to fill other civilian and military needs.
I T'S HARD TO SAY NO
when old customers wcnt to give us crn order to fill cr demcnd thcrt seems perlectly legitimcrter €v€n iI not rqted "essentictl" to wcr effort. We ccrn cssure you that we crre looking lorwcrrd to the dcy when we ccn qgain advertise ond deliver TTHARDWOODS fOR
YES SIR!
Tlre rocds to Victory qre never smooth. We ccn help smooth these roads cnd remove some oI the iolts by lending more oI our money to purchcse sound Government securities.
ATKIITSoII .Srurz GoMPATY
Appointed San Francisco Manager Earl Bliele is SalesMcnager
Hobcrt llhl in April. He succeeds L. K. from the company staff.
Hobart Uhl, for seven years sales promotion and traffic manager at American Lumber & Treating Company's general offices in Chicago, has been appointed manager of the company's district office in San Francisco. According to a central office announcement, he will continue as adviser on transcontinental traffic problems from the West Coast. Mr.Uhl, whose experience in the lumber industry covers every step from logging to wholesale distribution, took over the new post Andrews, who has resigned
TO MAKE HOME IN PORTLAND
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dollar were recent visitors in San Francisco. Mr. Dollar was prominent in the British Columbia lumber industry as manager of the Canadian Robert Dollar Company, and as a former director of the Western Lumber Manufacturers' Association. They are novv in Portland where they intend to make their home.
For Ingham Lumber Company
Earl Bliele, one of the best known lumber sales managers in Northwest lumber territory, is now sales manager for the Ingham Lumber Company, with mills and offices at Glendale, Oregon. This concern operates a sawmill of 150,000 capacity for an eight-hour shift, and is thoroughly modern in every particular. Their output which is mostly Fir, but also includes some Sugar Pine and Ponderosa, is splendidly manufactured. The Ingham Lumber Company is an old Kansas City outfit, that manufactured Southern Pine for many years.
Mr. Bliele started his lumber experience in the South, working for the Central Coal & Coke Company under Charles Keith, at their once big Pine mill at Carson, Louisiana. When the Keiths started construction of their big Fir mill at Vernonia, Oregon, Mr. Bliele was sent there as timber dock and shipping foreman, where he learned a lot about Fir and the Fir business. When the depression closed Vernonia he moved to Westfir, Oregon, and joined the Westfir Lumber Company, soon being made sales manager for that concern. He held that position for the past seven years, and recently accepted an offer from the Ingham Lumber Company at Glendale. Ward A. Ingham is president and general manager at Glendale.
HARDWOOD LOGS
OPA prohibits the practice of selling lower grade hardwood logs at prices higher than those for prime grades (MPR 348, Amendment2), effective May 1.
R. G. ROBBINS I.UMBER GO.
Distributors of Pacific Coast Forest Products
Tomorrow's Lumber Merchant Will Help Rebuild the \forld
By Henry Humann General Chairman, 1943 Foreign Trade \fleek Committee, Los Angeles Chomber of CommercePriorities, rationirg, shortages and their restrictive rules and regulations imposed upon us by impact of global war, although burdensome to bear, need not prevent contemplation of those conditions which will face us tomorrow.
When ultimate and complbte victory comes and warboom orders cease, the lumber merchant will not have arrived at the end of his usefulness. nor of his opportunity. Who is there foolish enough even to suggest it?
After all, what are we fighting for, if not to remove the shackles from enslaved peoples and to rebuild a whole world-a world of free men, by free men and for free men ?
Tomorrow's lumber merchant must be in the big middle of any appreciable building activity within his community, if he would remain in that community.
Which brings up the reason for emphasis upon the week of May t6 to 22, when this country will observe National Foreign Trade Week. Started in 1927 as a community campaign in Los Angeles, this annual event spread first throughout other Pacific Coast communities and grew to its present national observance. Its purpose is to create wider interest among citizens of every community in the subject of world commerce.
, Tomorrow's lumber merchant looks upon his community as restricted only by the confines of the entire earth. He sees sales opportunity limited solely by the sum total of all the desires of all the peoples of the world, just as today
he looks upon the products handled by him going to war by every air, land and sea route open to transport'
Just as the ravages of this beastly business of war demands that the lumber merchant tomoffow must stand by to help in rebuilding, where now is desolation, so will the blessings of the pursuit of happiness demand that he serve the community of mankind when peace rules.
Tomorrow's lumber merchant of the Pacific Coast looks upon a billion customers residing in those lands which border upon the mighty Pacific Ocean. To fill the possible orders from these billion customers, he will need to look beyond the borders of his own county, state, region or nation, if he would secure the raw materials with which he works.
The 1943 message on World Commerce to the lumber merchant would tell him the sources of timber are within reach. They are without limits. He knows, of course, that North America ofiers a great sour'ce of supply for softwoods, mostly, but does he know that Latin American forests abound mostly in hardwoods? That millions of miles of these forests have not yet been explored? To say nothing of forest resources across the Pacific.
Mahogany is found in Mexico, Honduras and several other countries among our southern neighbors. The same is true of sapodilla, cedar, rosewood, balsa, cocobolo, black balsam, logwood, pine, lignum-vitae, satinwood, divi-divi, balata, quebracho, alerce, luma, cinchona, tolu balsam. As many woods as there are countries, or tomorrows.
W:th Contractors' State License Board
Herbert E,. Weyler of Santa Barbara has taken ofifice as State Registrar of Contractors and Executive Secretary of the Contractors' State License Board, it was announced by Roy M. Butcher of San Jose, chairman of the board, and by Percy C. Heckendorf, member of Governor Warren's cabinet and director of the Department of Professional and Vocational Standards. He succeeds Allen Miller of Los Angeles, who has joined the Army.
Mr. Weyler brings to the job thirty years' experience in mill and contracting operations, and he is well known in California lumber and millwork circles.
TTDEEENSE or WAn REQAIEEIWENTS" Pacific Wood Products GorlDoration
Sash and Door Manufacturers
3600 Tyburn Street, Lros Angeles
Telephone Alrbany 0l0l
coa UP AND DOWN THE STATE ca
Paul V. Eames, president of Shevlin, Carpenter & Clarke A. W. (Lance) Green, Union Lumber Company, San Company, Minneapolis, was a recent visitor at the Shevlin- Francisco, has returned from a business trip to Portland. Hixon Company, Bend, Ore., The McCloud River Lumber Company, McCloud, Calif., and the Los Angeles and San Roy Dailey, Western manager of the National American Francisco offices of the Shevlin Pine Sales Company. Mrs. Wholesale Lumber Association, Seattle, was a recent visiEames accompanied him on the trip. tor in Los Angeles and San Francisco on his way back to Seattle from the Association's annual meeting.
F. A. "Pete" Toste, manager of the Southern California office of Rockport Redwood Co. and Kilpatrick & Co., has A. D. Hoobler, with Raymond Yates & Co., Chicago, returned from a business trip to the Northwest and San commission lumber salesmen for West Coast woods, visited Francisco. He was accompanied by Mrs. Toste. San Francisco recently on his way back to Chicago from the Pacific Northwest.
Guy Male, Globe Lumber Co., Ltd., Los Angeles, was a recent visitor to the Northwest.
Ervin L. Dietel, Dietel Lumber Co., Glendale. has returned from a trip to Oregon.
R. A. Seemann, Seemann Lumber Co., Encinitas, spent a few days in Los Angeles last month.
Walter Koll, A. J. Koll Planing Mill, Ltd., Los Angeles, spent a few days in the San Joaquin Valley territory.
George Howard, Whiting-Mead Co., Los Angeles, has been in the Northwest on business.
\(/est Coast Hemlock
The 1943 version of the Cinderella tale has now been written. This is the story of West Coast hemlock, once considered a step-child by the Douglas fir industry but now proudly displayed as an "up-and-coming" member of the family of West Coast woods.
Thorough investigation of the properties of West Coast hemlock by government technicians and the lumber industry has shown that this is an ideal wood for many purposes when properly manufactured and seasoned' 'West Coast hemlock has long been used interchangeably with Douglas fir in ordinary construction and with spruce for boxes and other shipping containers. When spruce was unable to meet the war demands for aircraft lumber West Coast hemlock was tried and found to be satisfactory in every respect. It is also in much demand for ladder stock, is being used in the manufacture of the popular blondfinish furniture and is making other woods look to their laurels in the fields of flooring, paneling and siding.
We believe that many of our readers will be interested
National-American Annual Meeting
The 51st annual meeting of the National-Americatr Wholesale Lumber Association was held at the Biltmore Hotel, New York, on Monday, April 12. The following were electdd directors for the three-year term: H. F. Beal, Beal Lumber Co., Jacksonville, Fla.; J. Lou DuPlain, Joseph A. DuPlain. Lumber Co., Rockfort, Ill.; John O. Gronen, C. O. Gronen Lumber Co., Inc., Waterloo. Iowa; Glenn M. Harrington, MacDonald & Harrington, Ltd., San Francisco, Calif.; R. T. Jones, Jr., R.T. Jones Lumber Co., Inc., North Tonawanda, N. Y.; Edward F. Magee, Magee-Fine Lumber Co., Philadelphia, Pa.; John S. Mauk, Mauk Seattle Lumber Co., Seattle, Wash.; Otis N. Shepard, Shepard & Morse Lumber Co., New York, N. Y.; Earl V. Smith, Earl V. Smith Lumber Co., Salt Lake City, Utah; Carl tr. Soderberg, Carl Soderberg Lumber Co., Spokane, Wash.
President R. C. Herrmann, Pittsburgh, Pa., and First Vice-President J. Lou DuPlain, Rockford, Ill., were unanimously re-elected. T. W. Hager, Grand Rapids, Mich.,
in this new publication. Individual upon request to the West Coast tion, Seattle, Wash.
copies may be obtained Lumbermen's Associa-
Mrs. Josephine Lacy Higgins
Mrs. Josephine Lacy Higgins, wife of J. E. Higgins, Jr., prominent San Francisco and Oakland lumberman, passed away suddenly at her home in Oakland, April26.
Mrs. Higgins is survived also by four daughters, Mrs. Virginia Higgins Higgins, Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Higgins Grill, Margaret and Barbara Higgins; four brothers, Wil' liam, Walter, Gordon and Roy Lacy, and a sister, Mrs. Charles Madary. She was a native of California.
Funeral services were held on Wednesday, April 28 at the chapel of Albert Brown Co., Oakland.
was elected second vice-president. Treasurer William Schuette, Jr., New York, and Secretary Sid L. Darling, New York, were also re-elected.
The board of directors' meeting followed the meeting of the Association. Twenty directors were in attendance, and the room was filled to capacity with members who had been invited to"sitin" and participate in the discussions.
Holmes EureltaLumber Co. Awarded Salety Trophy
San Francisco, Calif., May 6-For making the best safety record of the California Redwood industry dluring 1942, Holmes Eureka Lumber Company, Eureka, California, has been awarded the coveted C. R. Johnson Memorial Safety Trophy. The Company had established the most favorable Donovan Accident Index for the year. Other companies in the competition were: The Pacific Lumber Company, Scotia; Hammond Lumber Compbny, Samoa; Union Lumber Company, Fort Bragg, and Dolbeer and Carson Lumber Company, Eureka.
Under current war conditions, it was pointed out that the saving of vital man-hours through reduction of accidents is of special significance, faced as the lumber industry is with manpower depleted to bare essentials and production demands at an all-time peak.
At a banquet in Eureka, April 2L, the large bronze safity trophy was presented to Fred V. Holmes, vice-president of Holmes Eureka Lumber Company, by Leonard C. Hammond, president of Hammond Lumber Company, the winning company in 1941. More than one hundred representatives and safety engineers of Redwood operations, civic leaders, and staff members of the state compensation insurance fund attended the presentation ceremonies.
Dedicated to the memory of his father, the late Charles Russell Johnson, founder of the Union Lumber Company at Fort Bragg, Otis R. Johnson several years ago donated the perpetual trophy to be awarded annually to the Redwood lumber company having the best safety experience. The.purpose of the contest for the trophy is to encourage safe working conditions throughout Redwood mills and woods and to spread safety education among the thousands of employees of the industry. Records of the competing companies are judged each year on the basis of the well known and accepted Donovan Accident Index. The winner of the trophy retains possession until such time as one of the other companies turns in a better record.
PINE AUCTION AT SAN FRANCISCO
A total of 25;000,000 feet of lumber was bought at the Pine auction held at the Palace Hotel, San Francisco, April 30. About 38,000,000 feet was the amount offered for bids. About 45 mills and wholesalers were represented among the bidders. Leo Hennessy of the Portland office of the Office of the Chief'of Engineers was in charge of the auction.
VISIT SAN FRANCISCO
Mace Tobin, sales manager of Willamette Valley Lumber Company, Dallas, Ore., was in San Francisco recently on business for his company. He was accompanied on the trip bv Mrs. Tobin.
BACK FROM MILL
Jim Farley, assistant Western sales manager, The Pacific Lumber Co., San Francisco, returned May lO from spending a week at the company's mill at Scotia, Calif.
BACK PANEL COMPANY
WHOLESALE PLYWOODS
310-314 East 32nd Strea
LOS ANGELES
ADamc 4295
Rail Shippers
OUALITY FIR YARD STOCK
llorlbrro C-lllorlla Bclxoroatcllvr
o. L nussr'M
lll Mcrlrt 8r., Sdr Frcadrco, lcloghooo YIILm ll80 Soutloncdtt-oroloB.pr.r.nlqdr.
Bobert S. Orgood
?03 &stl Sfnbg ttr..L Lor Algdoe, Tclopbonr VAtrdlL. GC Adtoo-on.pr.-orort-
T. G. DECTES
D. O. !q 1885, Phoool*. ftbpbom Sllll
L, t. GARR & CO.
&Iifornia Sugor olnd Porrdlerora Pine
Scles Agents For
SACRAMENTO BOX I LUMBER CO.
MOUNT HOUGH LUMBER CO.
Sf,CNAMENTO tOS ANGEI,ES
P. O. Eox 1282 W. D. Dunaing Teletlpe Sc-13 438 Cbqnber ol Connercc Bldg.
HOGA]I tUilIBER GO.
WHOI.ESAIE AITD'OBBING
LUTBERTILLWORX
SASH and D00RS
Sincc 1888
omcE, ullr" YraD AltD DocrS
zlrd & Alice Str, Oclclcnd
GLoncourl 8881
DANT & WHOLESALERS NC, wooDs R OF USSE WEST LL, I COAST
sAN
Digest of New \(/ar Agency Regulations
PULPWOOD
Specific dollars-and-cents ceilings are placecl on pulpwood produced in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. Ceilings f. o. b. car or barge are $6.80 per cord for southern pine, $7.30 per cord for rough southern hardwoods and $10 per cord for peeled southern hardwoods. A 60-day price freeze established March 5 in the whole southeastern district is made permanent without changes for Kentucky, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and Mississippi (Maximum Price Regulations 387 and 388), effective May 5.
LOGS
AND BOLTS
Logs and bolts produced by contract loggers or cut from standing trees owned by log users not subject to exilting price regulations are brought under indirect control (St pplementary Order 47), efrective May 8.
NORTHERN HEMLOCK BOARDS AND DIMENSION
Ceiling prices on northern hemlock boards and dimensions produced in Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota are readjusted widening the differential existing between boards and di'mensions by linking increases in prices of boards with compensatory reductions in prices of dimensions. At the same time, specific prices are established for aspen lumber produced in the three states (Amendment 3 to Maximum Price Regulation 222), efr.ective May 8.
Shevlin Pine
SELLTNG
SPECIES
BfTYDBeS GIIIDE SAN BBANOISOO
LU}IBER
Amta Rodvod C.o. 421 Marlct Strc.t.......,............Yukon An67
Athtm-Stutz Conpaan ff2 Mlrkct Strut ...,...........G4rficH ft|O
Dant & Rugcll, Inc., aa Frut Sb6t ..,.........,...,.GAr6.H 0292
Dolbcr & Cumn llnbc Co.' ult M.retrutr Erchu|r Bldf:.,...Suttcr 7136
Glnrjton & Grul Imbor Co. l6.e Amy Strcct,.....,.... ........ATwatcr l30|
Hall, Jmcr L, lC32 Mlllr BldC. ...................SUtt{ 7521
Hamd Lumba Compuy, at7 Mmtaomcry Strut ..........DOug1u 336t
HoDbr Wall l,nnb6 Co. d05 Montspnsy St. ,.............G&6.t1 ?52
Hdna Eurckr Lunbcr Co.' ' ttG Finmctal Ccnter Bldg.,.....G.Arfield Uzf
C. D. Johnmn Lunbgr. Corporatlon, 280 Califomla Str6t ............GArficld C25E
Cal H. Kuh,l Lumbc C,o.' O, L Rugrum, uz Msket 9trct...YULon llGO
Luon-Bonnington Compuy, td Califomla Str6t .......,...'..'GArfrld flFr
LUMBER
LUIIBER
MacDonald & Hminlton, Ltd, 16 Galifonia St. ..................GArfield t39ll
Orcgm Ilnbcr Salcr (Carl lV, Wattr), 975 Monadnock Bldg. ..............,.YIJLm l59O
Pacific Lunbc Co., Tha l0O Buth StreGt ...................GArfield lltl
Pope & Talbot, Ine, Lmber Divlaion, {61 Mukct Strcrt .........,..,....DOuglu 561
Rod Rivs Lmbc Co. 315 Monadmc.k Bldg. .....,..,,... .GArfteld G22
Santa Fc Lmbcr Ca., 16 Callfomta Str.rt ............... E)(bruk 2071
Schafer Brcr Imbcr & Shinglo Co., I Dm Stret ..................,..Suttq l7ZI
Shcvlin Pire Salee Co., lGlO Monadnock Bldg. .......,....Exbroo& 70|l
Suddcn ll Chrirtensm. Inc., 310 Surcm Stro.t ..............,GArficld 2Elt
Cul W. Wattr (Oregon Lmbcr Sa!aa), 975 Monadnck Bldg. .........,..,..,YULo! $e|
Wendllng-Nathu Coo ll0 Muket Stret ........,.........Suttd 536:l
Wert Orcgcn Lunber Co., 1995 Evae Avs. ..................ATvat "t6il
OAITLANI}
Ewauna Box Co. (Pyramtd Lmbcr Salcr Co,)
Pacltrc Bldg. ..Glacoud t29:f
Guenton & Graco lJnbc Co.,
2tl Llvlngrbn SL...,............KE||og {-lSt4
*Iill & Morton, Inc.
Demlmn Strut Wharf,.........ANdovc 1O?
Hogu Imbcr Compuy, znd .rd Allc Strsctr,...........Gl.aourt Ctal
E. IC Wood Lunbcr Co.
2lll Frcderic,& Strot .........,..l(Elfo4g z-En
Wholsalc Buildlry Sqrpln Inc., fqq, 32q4 Strr.t.........,...,...TEnplebu 690{
Whol,eralc Lmbcr Dlrtributorr, Inc., 9th Avcnus Pts.,,...,.,.......TWlnoakr ZSfs
LUMBER
E. K. Wood llrnbor Co' I Drumn Str6t .................'EXbroL 3?ll
lVcyahacurcr Salu Ca., l{9 Califonia Strat ............'GArfreld 69?a
HARD}\TOODS AND PANELII
Whltc Brcttcr+ Fifth md Bruan Strctr....,....SUtttr lSas
CREOSOTED LUMBER- POLESPILING-TIES
Ancrlru llmba & Trcating Co.' 116 Nry Montgomcry Stret,........SUtt.r liz25
Butcr, J. H. & Co., 33'MontgoDrry Strc.t DOudil 3ttt
Hall, Jucc L., 1032 Milb Blds .....................Suttr Ust Popc & Talbot, lnc., Lunbcr Dlvldon' 4ll Ma*et Strut........,....'.'..DOuder 2561
Vudcr Lau Plllng & Lumbcr Co. 210 Pine Str6t..... ..............,E)Groo& l!a5
Wendling-Nathu Ca. ue Markrt stret............,....,,.Suttlr $ttE
PAII EI.S_DOORS_SASH-SCREENS
Califomla Buiklcrr Supply Co., ?00 6t[ Avenuc ....Hlgatc 6|16
Hogu llmbr Caupun 2nd ud Alie Strcctc...,........Glcn@urt Cttl
Wcstem Door & Sarh Co.' 5th & Cypror Strutr......TEmplebu E{|0 HARDWOODS
Strablc Hrdwood Compuy, Fint and Clay Strctr.,.......TEnple$u 55t{
Whltc Brcthcr' i00 High Stret...,.......,........ANdovcr lt|t
LOS ANGNLBS
Arcata Redwood Co (J. J. Rca) san lVll.hlru Blvd................WEbrtcr ?t2t
^Anglo Calilomb Lumbcr Co. 65t Eut Florcne Avm......TRonwdl 3lll
At&lnron-Stutz Comlmy, ezt Petrclm B!ds...............PRo.p.ct l3ll
Brurh hdurtrlal lanbcr Oo - -slor slc-E-.t-Ad -..::... CEnrgry 2-0[s
Burnr Lunbcr Campany.
9{55 Chrlwlllo Blvd., (BGvrly Hilb)................ BRadrhaw 2-3it6t
Can e Co- L J. (W. D. Dunnh3),
a3t Chambcr of Coamcre Bldl. PRorpct Etl3
Cmpcr, W. E., 606-66 Richicld BtdS...............Mutud A3r
Dut e Rur*ll Inc., n2 E" 59th strut....,...............4Danr tlll
Dolbcr & Caron lambcr 6o
9Cl Fidcllty B!dg.......,.........,.VAndilrc A?92
Ed. Fouteln lanbc C.o.
32t Pctrolcun Bldg.,.......,.,...PRorpact {34f
Hrnnond lmbcr Compuy,
20fC So. Almcda St.,...,........PRcpect 1333
Hobbr rfitall Lunbcr Co:,
@5 Rowu 81dt.....................TRinttt 50tt
Holme Eurcka lmbcr Ca., af-?fz Archttccta Bldg............Mutual gfu
Hovr, rL L.'
5225 Wlhhln B|vd....................YOrL rr$
C. D. Johnron llnbcr Clrpontion, 5la P.trclon Bldg.........,.....,PRorpcct llC5
C.rI H. Kuhl Lrmbr Co. (R. S. Orepod),
70{ S. Sprlng St....................VAndikc EGtlt
Rore C. Larhlcy (R. G. RoDblnr Lnubr Co),
7f{ W. Olvnpic Blvd..,........PRorpct 0721
I:rmsPhllipr Lunbc Cao
Gt3 PGtrolm Blds.......,..,....PRorFct tua
Mad)orald Co., L. W.,
?ll W. Olynpic Bhd..............PRolDGd 7f9l
MrcDoaald & Harrlnfto, Ltd., Pctrolm 81dg.....,..............PRo.Fct 3lA
Peclfrc Lmbcr Co., Thc
5225 \lflhhlrc 81vd.....................YOrh 11t6
LUMBER
Penbcnhy Lumbcr Co.,
20ti5 Eut sl.t St...........,.........Klnblll Srlr
Popc & Talbot, lnc- Imba Dlvirlo, ?U W. (Xynpic Blvd.............PRoepcct tZtl
Rcd Rlvor Lumbcr Co.,
702 E. Shu.on .,CEnlury 29Ot lcll S. Broadway..................PRo.Dcct Glff
Su Pcdre Lunbor Co.
fsfE S. C.ntrrl Avc. ............Rlchrund lUl
rE0GA Wllnlns/to Road (San Pcdrc) .........................!lrl Pcdro ZtO
Smta Fc Imbor Co-
3rr Fbuctal Corcr Bldg.........VAndllrc ll?l
Schafc Bror. IltnbGr & Sblnglc Co., ru U/. 9rh Sb.3t'...................TRhtty lztl
Shcvlln Plnc Salcl Co.,
3i10 Pctrclaur 81d9..........,....PRdFGt $f5
Slmpon lndurtdcr, Inc.,
l6lC E. Washington Blvd.........PRopcd CfEt
Stutonn E. J. e !bn, 205e E. lbt St.............,......CEntrry 29211
Sudda & Ghrirtcoroo, Irc., dta Bord of Tradc Bldt..........TRinity 6t{l
Tama Luuba Salcl &17 Pctrclum Bldg.....,.........PRocpect lllt
Wondling-Nathu Co. 5225 Wtkhlrc 81vd.....................YOrk ll6t
Wcct Orcgon !.'*bc C.o.
4t7 Pctrolcm 81dg............... Rlchnod 02El
W. W. Wilklnrn' 3lt Ut. gtb Strct..................TRintty 1613
E. K. Wood hmba 6., {7ll So. Almcda St.......,.......JEfferm 3lll
Wcyrhaorc Salcc Co., rtrg W. M. Grlud Bldg. ......Mlchlgu 6il5l
CREOSOTED LUMBER-PiOLESPTLTNG_TIES
Amcrlo kmbcr & Trcatln3 Co., r03l S. Brodway.................PRotDGct a3|3
Bilt.r, J. H. & Co. 60l Wcgt sth Strcct.......,....... Mlctrtlao @91
PoD. & Tdbot, lnc, Lunba Dlvlrion, ?ll W. Olynpic Blvd. PRo.p.ct &Bl
HARDW(X)DS
Amclcar Hardwood Co., f900 E. f sth Stret..,.......,..,...PRorp.ct azit
Stanton, E. J. & .So, 2lEf E$t al.t Strr.t ............CEs1|lqt AZfr
lVegrern Hudwood r '.-hcr Gor 2aU E.3t l5th Strot.., r..........PRo.D.c| |laf SASH-DOORS-MIII.u/ORX-SCREENS BLTNDII_PANEI.S AND PLYWq)D- IRONING BOARDS
Bac& Pml Canpany, 310-3la Eilt 32Dd Str..t...........ADanr 1223
Cellfonla Du Conpary, Thc l94C Dirtrict 81vd..................Klabd! Alr Cdlfont! Pucl & Vm Co., 955 S. Alamcda Str..t..............TRinltt F,
Halcv Brcr. (Smta Monica)
1620 uth Stru. ..........,,......4S1h1Gy l-2241
Kochl, Jlo. W. & Son, 55i S. Mym Str-t.........,.....,AN9GIur otl
Orcgon-Ytfuhlngton Plysood Co, 31t Wcst Ninth Strsct........,...Tnhltt Int
Pacific l\fod Produclr Carporatio' 35D Tybum Stct................Aljany tfll
Pacific Mutual Dor 6.'
l6lt0 E. u/a.hinltm Blvd..,......PRosttcd t5a
Rcam Conpuy, Go. 8., 85 S. Alancda Strut .......'Mlclhru ltSl Rcd Rlvr lrnblr Co. 702 S. Slaurn.. .CEnhrry atuf
Smp:on Ca. (Pandcna), 7{5 So Rrynmd Ava.............RYu l-a$, Sinpaon Indurtricr, Inc.' faff F- Warhinrtm 81vd......'..PRorpcct Cllil W6t Coalt Scrm Co. llas Eart 63rd Str;t...............ADan flfaf
Wert.n Mil & Mouldirt Co., 59|1 So. T9cltm Avc....,,....TlVlnoeh lttt
YOIJ',D TAKE THIS VIEW, TOO... IF YoU KT{EW-
Youte perhcrps wondered why you weren't cble to obtcrin certcin shipments of Pclco Redwood or why, crt times, it took so long. If you knew thct much ol your lumber hcd to be diverted, on short notice, to our boys in Alcrskcr, in the South Pccific, and in Africcr, as well cre in the ccrntonments here ct home, you'd consider you were mcking your contribution to the wcrr effort. You'd crlso view it cs your pcttrioticduty to see thctyour lumber ccred lor their needs, FIRST, such cs protecting their food and gupplies, in regions where spoilcrge could seriously impcir their heclth cnd even mecrn their lives. Wa ccn cssure you thcrt the diversion oI shipments occurs, not just occcsionclly, but often, cnd we do crpprecicrte your understcnding, pcrtience qnd considerction.