The California Lumber Merchant - July 1945

Page 26

COU tD 1{OT HAVE BUITT A Roddiscrcfl

DuNcaN Puvpr, the master craftsman, wor.rld have appreciated and approvecl the fine quality of workmanship, the structural strength and rhe endLrring beauty that distinguish rhe Roddis Soiid Core Flush Harduoorl Door. But modern materials rind m,rnufircturrng methods have adcle.l features that skill and artistry rkrne could not equal. Controlled mass procluction brings the Roddiscraft door u'irhin the merus of the modest budg'et makes permanence, econ()m.\' irnd cust()m qtr,rlity :r necessity rrrther than :r luxury. Modern designers find a u'ealth of clecorative possibrlities in the Roddiscraft door, particularly when planned in coniunction with Veriply hardwood plywoods.

'Swqlh:ng la

PROFITS FROM PRIVACY

Here's the way to get them

One thing that people will want in their posrwar homes is prioacy-and plenty of it! They are tired of wartime conditions-faced with the problem of growing families. YOU, as a dealer, can profit from this desire-because providing greater privacy is a job for woodwork made of Ponderosa Pine. This is pointed out in the new, 3z-page idea book, "Today's Idea House"-which can help putpostwar business on your books right now. help you to sell a bigger volume of stock design Ponderosa Pine doors, windows and frames. Here are a few ideas gleaned from "Today's Idea House".

PRIVACY IN DEN OR L|!}RARY

-lt could baae been an open arcbua1, b u t tb i s b e eu tiftr I I1 pr opor tion ed door oJ Ponclerosa Phte proddes secluion Jor qiliet rest or stad1,. l{6ss also tbe u,ell designed Ponderosa Phte stock design u,indou. htclt tuindotas can be made u,eatber-tig/tt.

PRIVACY IN THE DINING ROOM

-Note bout tbe lozuered doors o/ Ponderosa Pine increase tbe effect oJ restJalness and quiet, yet utitbout sacrifice oJ oentilatiott. Stock ciesign doors and uitdotus oJ Ponderosa Pine u'ill be auailable in designsJor eoerJr need and ptrse,

CREATE CUSTOMERS WITH THIS IDEA BOOK-

"fodoy's ldeo House" is full of suggeslions which will inspire your cuslomers lo complete lheir home plonning NOW. This book shows how doors, windows ond fromes of Ponderosc Pine cqn provide more comfortoble qnd more livqble inleriors. Use "Todoy's ldeo House" lo build o bigger bocklog of business-send todoy for your free copy, lhen order copies in quontities for cuslomers. Moil fhe coupon!

a o a a a a a a a a a a a a a a o a aa aa a a a a a a a aaa aa a a a a a a a a a o a Ponderosa Pine Voodwork : Dept. trICL-7, I11 West \\rashinstcn Street Cnrcago 2, Illinois a Pleasc send me a free copy of "Today's Idea House.,, a Nailte... o 1 ))--.. a a Cil1........,,,, .,............Zne........\tate.......... : o o o a o c a a a a a a a aa a a a a aaaaa a al o aoa a a a aaoa a a a a a aa

Mailing Address: "since 1852"

O. Box 126, VernoP Stcrtion 4940 District Boulevcrd

Pitcher Co.. E. C.---Ponderose ifine Voodwork----------------------I.F.C.

Pope & Talbot, Inc., Lumber Divieion-----------*

Porttand C,ement Arsociation----

Precision Kiln Drying Co.---,----.----- ---..-- ----.----29

Ream C,o., Creotge B.--------------------

Red Cedar Stringle Bureau------------------------------lt

Robbins Lumber Co., R. G.------------------- ----2:2

Ross Carrier Co.------------ --.--

Ross-Terrell Co., The-------- -------2,

San Pedro Lumber Company---------------------29

Santa Fe Lumber Co.------------------------------O.B.C.

Schafer Bros. Lumber & Shingle Co.------------ 7

Schumacher Vall Board Corporation---------- t

Shevlin-Cords Lumber Co. ---------------------------- t

Shevlin Pine Salee Co.------------------------------------2t

Sisalkraft Co., The------- ------------19

Smith. Stuart C.------------------- --------------------------25

Southwestern Portland Cemetrt Co.---.- ---------*

Stanton & Son, B. J.---t-^----

Sudden & Chrittenson' Inc.----------------- -------------27

Tacoma Lumbet Sales--- ------- ---------------------lt

Tarter, Web,ster & Johnson, Inc.------------------*

Toste Lumber C-ompany-------

U. S. Plywood Corporation-------------------------- 3

\ffendling-Natlran C,o.----------- -------------------------- 9

West Coast Screen Co.-----

Vest Otegon Lumber Co.-- ----------------------23

Veotern Door.& Saeh Co.--- --- -------------------27

\ffestern Flardwood Lumber Co..---*----------O.F.C.

western Mill & Moulding C-o.-----------------------25

Veyerhaeuser Sales Company ----------------16'17

Vhite Brqthetr-----------.------- - -- ----.---------------------29

\Vholesale Building Supply, lnc.---------------------22

Vholesale Lumber Dictributors' fnc.-------------*

Vood Lumber Co., E. K.-------------------- - -----19

Wood Treating Chemlcalc Co.---------------------- r

July l, f9'15 FOUR PANEL
Have Received A New Stock of
- PlvwallSOID THROUGH Frames - Doors - Sash - Glass LUMBER DEALERS ONIY
CATIFORNIA DOOR COMPANY
\ile
FOUR PANEL DOORS Plypanels
THE
ANGELES 11 ."Buy lrom q Wholesaler"
ADVERTISERS
P.
LOS
Telephone: Klmbcll 2l4l

THE CALIFOR}.IIA LUMBERMERCHANT

Col. Gseeley Discusses Conditions in West Coast Lumber lndustry

Seattle, June 11, 1945-The Pacific offensive will be endangered by shortages of the lumber it urgently needs in great quantities unless losses of manpower and vital equipment in the West Coast lumber industry are stopped, Col. W. B. Greeley, Secretary-Manag'er of the West Coast Lumberman's Association, warned in Seattle today.

"The lumber industry has been steadily drained of manp,ower since the first effort of national defense," Col. Greeley said. "Over seven thousand woods and mill employees have gone into the armed services, and as many more have been drawn to the shipyards and other Pacific Northwest war industries. 'We are short today at leist 20 per cent of normal manpower. The industry maintained annual production ot 8fu'billion board feet through 1941 and 1942 and turned out nearly 8 billion {eet in 1943 and again in 1944. To date production is running about 11 per cent under that of the same period last year.

"Steady production of lumber in the Pacific Northwest has just been taken for granted by the War Agencies. Although constantly citing the critical shortage of lumber, they have made no effective effort to provide men for this industry. Their lack of help has run through the drafting of key workers by Selective Service; the low rating given lumber, until very recently, in employment priorities; and the constant refusal to release on furlough skilled loggers from the Armed forces. The unrest and migration of labor, at the loss of lumber production, has been seriously in-

creased by the complete failure of the government to enforce its own orders on wage stabilization. More disturbance of lumber's manpower has ,followed the gratuitous foisting of the Travel Tlme controversy upon West Coast logging by the Wage and Hour Administration.

"Now the War Department tells us that construction troops will equal combat troops in numbers with every landing of the attack on Japan, and that lumber will be their basic building material. In this offensive we will have no ready-made bases as we had in Europe. The bases will have to be built with every advance of our forces on the land of Japan or in China. The War Department says the job in the Paeific will be like building another Chicago in lumber.

"At the same time, it has not been possible to supply the lumber needed and desired for civilian requirements. There has had to be a general suspension of home and farm building as one of our war necessities, to conserve materials for the emergency.

"The West -Coast lumber industry will again give everything it has got to the war and civilian ddmands put upon it, just as the industry has done during the past five years. But it is being drained of its vital force. To maintain its record of producing what it has been asked to produce for the war, the West Coast lumber industry must be enabled to keep men in the woods and mills and to procure vital equipment for logging."

GLEAMING, PLASTIC.COATED WALI.S cEruNGs

For kitchens, bothrooms, qnd commerciol instqllqtionswherever o high-sheen, eosy-to-cleon ond duroble sur.foce is desired. Equolly suitqble for new construction qnd rdmodeling; opplied over existing wolls, regordless 'of condition.

?c1t 2 Tr{E CAufolillA tUnBEt, tilcHAtr
1'y, T. BLACr Advertiriag Mclcaor Subacription Price, $2.00 per Year SinEle Copicr, 25 cents eacb
&&Di@efrtJ/tshrrbcorporctcd utdor lh,r tcrn ol Cctiloniq l. C. Dloanc, Pror. cld -Trcc.; I. E. Mcrtir Vicc-pri.l W.- t. ltccl, Sc.tary Publirlcd ihe lrt qad l5tL ol mc} noath ct 508-$'10 Ccrtrd Euildia_ gr, lm W.rt SirtL Strcrt, Lor hgrlrr, Ccl., tetephor Vjlldlo llSJ Eil.r.d 6 Srcord-clc8 Eatt.s SrptaEbu 25. lli'!L, at rh. p6i Ol6co cr Lol trlgclu, Cititonic, udor trct ol ltcrcL 3, lgrlg W. T. EI.f,CT 8|5 Lrcvrarortl St. Sal Frcndrco PRorpcct 3810 M. ADAIIS Circntadoo ilclcg.t
T. E MANflN Mcacaing
LOS ANGELES 14, CAL., JULY t, 1945 f,dvcrtieing Botcr o! Ipplicctio!
AVAILABLE NOW FIR.TEX OF NORTHERN CALIFORNTA 206 SANSOTIAE 3t., 9AN FTANCISCO a Suil.r 256t
Aggrcttivdy
FIR.TEX OF SOUTHERN CAI.lFORNIA 812 E.59rh tItCEt, lOS ANOEI.ES | ADonr 810l ond FIR.TEX
odvcrtircd, to o*ura dcohn of Gonritt.nt Gurfomcr drmand.

Many thousands of these ProsPecm' after receiving the Nfleldwood Plywood literarure they asked for, have sent in our renun postcard. indicating when and what they plan to build with \Teldwood'

These are live leads which are being turned over to you. to local lumber

dealers. You will want tb follow up these prospecs. not only for a profitable sale of \feldwood Plywood but for the sale of other building materials, too.

This is the type of practical deraler assistance which makes \Weldwood PlYwood so satisfactory to handle and to feature-

WELDWO0D Plywood

?cgo 3 Joly l' l9{lt
lveldutood Plyurood. and. Plltutood Prcd*cts are Mawlactsred and matketed b! UNITED STATES PLYWOOD CON'PORATION THE MENGET CO'f,PANY NruYOrA,N,Y, iffiiLfrI. UIRIES! Ocldcnd 7 570 Third St. TWiaocrlr 55{4 Secttlc 90 lSth C W. Nicler.on Il.der lll{ Plq:ticr ond Wood Wcldcd for Good VanrproofVelduood, so marLed, is bon&d uitlt pbenoi fornatdehl& syntbctic resin. Otber tlps of uater-iesittan, Ve lduood a re man t fact*cd ui th extcn&d trea resi$ and orber approoed bondiag 4gentr. Loe f,ngeler 2l So Francisco l0 1920 Ecst lsth SL 2127 trr1Ey Sr. ATwcter 1993 Rlchmond 610l

New Wholesafe Lumber Firm In San Francisco

Shevlin-Cords Lumber Co., Inc., is the name of a new firm that has entered the wholesale lumber field, with headquarters in San Francisco. Their offices are at 6g .Post Street, rooms 417 to 419.

The principals, Crosby H. Shevlin and D. Normen Cords, are well known, and both are well equipped with ex_ perience to make a success of their new venture.

Redwood Logging Conference

San Francisco, California, June 4, lg4s-Nlaintenance'of California Redwood lumber industry's. good record in war production was the general theme of the 9th annual Redwood Logging Conference held at Fort Bragg, Calif., May 25 and 26. The first day was devoted to discussion sessions, with the annual dinner following in the evening. On the 'second day, loggers visited -the Clark Fork operations of the Union Lumber Compan;r of Fort Bragg.

Discussions covered the perennial subject of bark peeling, new state laws affecting logging, selective logging, truck and trfick logging, fire protection, Diesel yarder and tractor combinations, salvage logging, and other subjects. Attendance was made up largely of logging superintendents, foremen, chopping bosses and scalers of the industry.

Kenneth Smith, president of the California Redwood Association, and Califorrtia State Forester De Witt Nelson, addressed the conferende.

John Gray of the tTnion Lumber Company, Fort Bragg, was chairman of the Conference. James Hughes, Holmes Eureka Lumber Compiny, Eureka, rvas elected chairman for the 1946'Conference.

Mr. Shevlin started his lumber career with the Shevlin_ Hixon Lumber Co. at Bend, Oregon, in 1919, and three years later went to Omaha to seli lumber on the road in Nebraska and Iowa for the Shevlin and McCloud, Calif., mills. In 1926 he became plant sales manager at the Shevlin mill at Bend, and in 1931 went to Minneapolis to be vice-president of the Shevlin pine Sales Co. 1n this position he traveled extensively throughout the country. In 1943 he returned to Bend as assistant manager, hold_ ing that position until he decided to enter business for himself.

Mr. Cords has a background of experience in the mill, distribution yard, office sales, and road selling. Ife. went with the Chas. R. McCormick Lumber Co. in San Fran_ cisco in 1927, and, became associated with Wendling-Nathan Co., San Francisco, in 1936. For the past seveiai years he has been in charge of their pine department, and re_ signed to go into business with Mr. Shevlin.

Shevlin-Cords Lumber Co., fnc., will conduct a general wholesale lumber business', selling all West Coast fumber products.

Ycrd Chcnges

Clarence V. Small, manager of the Hayward Lumber & Investment Co., at Lancaster, was recently transferred to Bakersfield and will take o_ver the management of the company's yard there.

Stanley Smith, manager of the Barstow branch, succeeds Mr. Small as manager at Lancaster. Omar Johnson, assistant manager at Barstow, has been named manager of the Barstow yard.

Frcrnk Connolly in Eqst

Frank J. Connolly, president of Lumber Co., Los Angeles, left June Washington, D. C., and expects to Tulv 5.

Western Hardwood 15 for New York and be back in his office

Grcduates From Medicct School

William N. Henry, son of Charles p. Henry, Los Angeles lumberman, graduated from University of Southern California medical school June 23, and was commissioned June 24 as First Lieutenant in the U. S. Armv

Pcar tl THE CAUFORNIA TUIIBER iCRCHANT
Crosby H. Shevlin D. Normen Cords
Sarc /g/2 M}INT'FACTT'RERS AND 'OBBERS OF SASII ANID DOORS WHOI^ESAIE ONLY DEPEIIDABILTIY w QUALTtrSERVTCE IOHN lf,t. KOEHT & SON, rNG. 652-676 South Myers St. ANgelus glgl Los Angeles, Cclilonitr

ANNOUNCEMENT " I '

Crosby H. Shevlin crnd D. Normen Cords tcrke plecsure in crnnouncing the lormation oI their new wholescrle lumber firm-

SHEVLIN-CORDS LUMBER COMP/\NY

INCORPORATED

Olfices wilt be opened luly 2' 1945 crt 68 Post Street, Scrn Frcrncisco 4, with telephone DOuglcs 2469.

This orgcnization will conduct cr genercrl wholescle business in

VYEST COAST FOREST PRODUCTS

Speciclizing in Ponderosa Pine, Sugcr Pine,Idcho White Pine, Douglcrs Fir, White Fir, Cedcrr, Redwood and cssocicrted by-productswith dependcrble personcrl service <rs our policy.

Pogc 5 July I' 1945
SKtEVtINECORDS LUMBER COMPANY INCORPORATED 69
4
Post Street DOuglcrs 2469 San Francisco

The \(/est Coast Forest Picture

Paul Bunyan and his Blue Ox are gone forever from the woods of Oregon and other parts of the Pacific Northwest. They epitomize the pioneer courage, vision and strength of the lumber industry as an enterprise that turned the big timber of the virgin forests into wood products for the markets of all the world.

Prdduction in the age of Paul Bunyan meant only the production of logs and log products.

Now, in the new day of the west coast forest, industrial production also means the production of trees from the land.

The promise is substantial. Lumbermen have learned that it pays to grow trees-to produce trees as well as to produce logs and lumber. And so lumbermen who are re_ sponsible for the majority of west coast production are committed to ..the cdntinuous growing of timber crops,' - within the West Coast tree farms program.

On the other hand, the hope and promise of the west ,.coast forest future are rooted in research and in the new wonders of wood that have proved their value, in recent - years, particularly in the war. They greatly broaden the market for forest products, they offer increasing utilization . of forest material now unmarketable.

. Forest defeatism is folly. The greatest days of trees and men together in this region are ahead of us. Let us look a few facts in the face.

West of the Cascades-from Canadian border to Califor_ nia line-are 29 million acres of forest land, cover ing g.6 per cent of all west coast land area. Federal forest survgys show that 259 milliori acres of this land are commercial forests.

Today this area supplies our nation with 3O per cent of all lumber used, 90 per cent of the wood shingles and 23 per cent of the pulpwood. Last year, 1944, we cut a little less than 8 billion feet of lumber. Federar survevs show that in the Douglas fir bert alone we have 45r biliion feet of unreserved saw timber--old growth timber. This saw timber comprises several species, all valuable commercialry -Douglas fir, Sitka spruce, west coast hemlock, western red cedar, Balsam firs and some hardwoods.

- Back of this stand of old growth timber is a tremendous . reserve of young timber, growing trees, capable of making from 5Q0 to 1500 board feet per acre per year of wood.

What is the new 'West Coast lumber industry doing to

provide perpetual crops of forest products ? In .western Oregon and Washington more than 2,000,000 acres of privately-owned timber land have been certified as tree farins. This means that owners of 51 separate tract's from small holdings to half-million acre estates have agreed to.prac_ tice intensive forestry so that these lands will produce the maximum of forest products.

Many more owners of timber land have installed expensive fire protection systems; are leaving seed sources so that newly logged areas will reseed naturally; are practicing better logging so that small trees, not yet mature, are left.

There is going to be some economic adjustment necessary in this region as we shift from a mining to a cropping policy in our timber, from a harvesting of wilderness forests to managed forestry. This adjustment is already going on. It may often be an economic dislocation instead of an adjustment. fn some areas a slowdown in amount of timber that can be cut must be undertaken. It will require from 25 to 50 years before we can apply the sorind prograrri of sustained yield to all of our lands, before rve can work out the very difficult problems of allotment of public-owned ' timber to operators in various regions.

Today we are forced by the strict law of economics to leave much wood in the forestS, finding it profitable to take out only good grade sawlogs or pulp logs. At the mill other wastes occur.

Tomorrow we know that most of this waste will be channeled into profitable products for the use of humanity. The forest industries shall do their part to create many thousands of new jobs, permanent jobs, in the making of products which will utilize our materials to the full.

Laboratories at Oregon State College, Longview, portland, Bend and Seattle are tirelessly at work on projects in research, all aimed at creating new products from wood. More jobs will be created in our industry in the futuie not only from new by-product industries, but from our further processing of lumber. Better grading, trimming, packaging will suit the customer.

Developments in new products have been so nurnerous during the war that even those of us inside the industrv do not yet know all the story.

'We are truly living in the new age of wood. If some of the great scientific developments in wood use are hidden to our eyes for national security reasons, our boys in the army and navy know about them. They know the job wood has done since it was first inducted.

When the war is over, wood will take its place here in the , greatest timber-growing area in the world, west of the Cascades, as the raw material from which prosperity will be fashioned. The economy of this legion will be a forest economy, for most of the land is good for little but timber growing.

rHE CAl|FOriln rutlEr ntrlcHAl|l
Dean Johngon

SCHAT'ER BROS. LUMBER & SHINGTE CO.

Home Office-Aberdeen,'lVcrshingrton

Mcrrufcrcturers of Douglcrs Fir crrd West Coost Hemlock

CALIFORNIA SALES REPRESENTATIVE

Robert Gray Shinqle Co.

Gardiner Lumber Co.

Aberdeen Plywood CorP.

BUYING OFFICES

Eugene, Oregon Reedsport, Oregon

CALIFORMA SALES OFFICES

FOR

LOS ANGELES SAN FRANCIS@ lll west grh sr.-TBinity 4nl I Drunm st.-sutter l77l

More people thqn ever belore in United Stctes history crre thintcing cbout the home they crre going to build when mctericls cre cgcin crvclilcrble.

And many ol them will wcnt one or more rootns pcnreled in becutilul hardwoods.

We will ccrrry complete stocks of hcrdwood pcnels in grrecrt vcriety lor the convenience ol declers qnd their customers.

July l, 194{l
Looking forward
955-967 sourg ArI\MEDA STREET Telephone TRinity OO57 Mailing Aililress: P. O. Box 2096, Trnurnlr. Annx LOS ANGELES 54, CALIFORNIA lifornia I e,Ven€er

What if the sunset's drawing nearer? What if the shadows gather in, Thick with ghosts of the rnates who've headed Into space where the comets spin? : Eyes to the front, tho' the mists are heavy, Life, at best, is a brief parade; Keep one dream in your hearts, my brothers, Nothing shatters the unafraid.

I have printed the above before in this column But it deserves and.will stand, much repetition. The grand old sports writer came about as near to creating a masterpiece as has been done in a long time.

It came forcefully into my mind the other day when I read the speech that G€neral Patton ,made to his troops just before he led them on that immortal trek into the heart of Germany. It is true that this blessed land of ours is so thoroughly loaded down with heroes today that it is almost unfair to distinguish between th€m, or to place one before the other. BrJt this fellow Patton has that priceless thing we call "color" that makes him a standout whenever we think of our heroes. He fairly oozes personality, and punch, and color.

When he was in Los Angeles recently he used some cuss words over the radio. Promptly a bunch of preachers attackedhim for it in their Sunday sennons. He blasphemed God by taking His name in vain, they said. The thought that occurred to me was that Patton was probably thinking of one sort of God, and his critics were thinking of another. They were thinking of a super Man who sits above the clouds to judge our words and acts. Patton probably was thinking of that unbelievable.Power that made a thousand billion solar systems and holds them all in unison, rolling. perfectly through space. Patton probably thinks that limitless Mind is far above the thought of vengeance for well intentioned human words.

Even if you think of God in terrns of the old fashioned Lord who sits in an orthodox heaven to judge we poor mortals, you would still, I believe, lend a sympathetic thought to the philosophy of Jimmy Pumbleguod. According to legend, the following ver'se appears on the gravestone over the late Jimmy Pumblequod in a London cemetery:

Here lies poor Jimmy pumblequod, Have mercy on him,_dearest God; I know he would, if HE were GodAnd YOU **: Jt;ly pumblequod.

Anyway, to get back to General Patton's speech to his soldiers before entering Germany. Here are some excerpts. The speech has had little circulation, so most of our readers may be seeing them for the first time, and I consider them so terrific an episode in the German war that all of us should be familiar with them. They are the words, temember, of a true warrior, leading his men into the jaws of what he knew would be certain death for thousands of them, and perhaps for himself. In fact, it is reported that he had a premonition that he would be killed over there. He said: rl. rf rl

"Men, this stuff some souraes sling around about America wanting to stay out of the war, and not wanting to fight, is boloney. Americans love to fight, traditionally. All truc Americans love the sting and clash of battle. America loves a winner. America will not tolerate a loser. Americans play to win. That's why America has never lost, and never will lose, a war, for the very thought of losing is hateful to an American.

"You are not all goirrj .J ul. only two per cent of you right here today would be killed in a major battle. Death must not be feared. Death com€s in tim,e to all of us, and every man is scared in his first action. If he,says he's not, he's a liar. Some men are cowards, yes, but they fight just the same or get the hell slammed out of them. The real hero is the man who fights even tho, he's scared. Some get over their fright in a minute under fire. Others take an hour. Others days. BUT A REAL MAN WILL NEVER LET THE FEAR OF DEATH OVERPOWER HIS HONOR, HIS SENSE OF DUTY TO HIS COUNTRY AND TO HIS MANHOOD. *'k,k

"An army is a team. It lives, eats, sleeps, and fights as a team. This individual hero stuff is all _. The bilious ones who write that kind of stuff for the -

don't know any more about real fighting under fire than they know about Every man in this army plays a vital role. Every man has his job and must do it. What if every truck driver decided he didn't like the whine of a shell overhead, turned yellow, and jumped into a ditch? Where would we be now? Where would our country, our loved ones, our homes, where would the world be? No, thank God,

(Continued on page l0)

Pogr 8 IHE CAIIFORNIA I,UTBER IIERCIIANT
:ttri
*:f
{.**
,t**

ry""'dfum

540 Tenth Street, Scrn Frcrncisco 3, Ccrlif., MArket 6705

Distributors of HARBORD PRODUCTS

Super-Hcrrbord E:cterior Douglcs Fir

Super-Hcrborite Wectherprool

Fibre-Faced Exterior Plywood

Hcnbord Plypcnel

Harbord Fcrcki-Fit Doors

CETOTEX PRODUCTS

Celotex Building Bocrd

Celotex Tile

Celotex Plank

Celotex Celo-Siding

Celotex Celo-Block

AMEHCAN PTYWOOD HARDWOOD PANEIS

cmd

NEW IOI{DONER HOI.LOW CONE HARDWOOD DOONS

564

WEIIDI.IilG.I| ATHAII GO MPAIIY
Ollice
Dlain
llarlcet $L
4
"l Uerlf ec,ott Uedt'Since 1914IJOS ANGELES 3,6 5225 Wilshire Blvd. PORTIJTND 5 Pittock Bloclc
San francisco
5@kuM

(Continued from Page 8)

Americans don't think like that. Every man on K.P. has a job to do to win the war, even the guy who boils the water.

*,ir|

ttRemember, [nen, you don't know where I ,am. No mention is to be made of me. The U.S.A. is supposed to be wondering what has happened to me. I'm not supposed to .be commanding this arnry. Let the fi6f -

fe find out be the goddam Germans. I want them to look up and howl, 'Ach, it's the goddam Third Army and ttrat - -'- - of a Patton again.'f

rt||rl

"'\il/e want to get this thing over and get the hell out of here, and get at those Japs. The shortest way home is through Bertin and Tokyo. We'll win this war, but we'll win it only by showing tte enemy we have more guts than they have or ever will have. There's one great thing that you men can say when'it's ail over and you're home once more. You can thank God that twen$r years from now when you're sitting by tbc fireside with- your grandson on your knee and hc asks you what you did in the war, you won't have to shift him over to the other knee, cough, and say: 'I swung a shovel in Louisiana.'"

*,F:|

Friends, don't you think that speech was worth this rruch space, and a place in your scrapbook? The literature of the world has few to compare with it. So if that guy who has done so much to save the soul of the world finds that he cannot quite express himself in orthodox words or terms, we can forgive him, don't you think? Personally, I think his invective most attractive; leave weak words to wcak souls.

,***

Now let's talk a bit about that proposed Cradle to Grave Social Security bill that the German born Senator Wagner is hoping to put through Congress and load on the backs of formerly free Americans. Wagner leans so far to the left that he has forgotten that there is any other side. The philosophies he brought with him from his native land are all mixed in with other philosophies that are definitely red in tint. He proposes to put a Social Security tax of 8 per cent on American incornqs, and use ttrat money to do everything for Americans that Americans have dways done for themselves, and in so doing remade this part of the world into something grand and glorious. There are so many ruranswerable arguments against the thing you would think it would die a-borning. But it won't. It will have to be killed.

First, the thing could never be administered. A rnan who runs one of our state unemploSrrnent units says you would have to use one half of our population to administer the thing and collect the taxes from the other half. It would put the Federal Government into our personal lives in a way never- dreamed of, even in these days of war regimentation. Under just one of the innumerable phases of the thing, the housewife would become a hdf-time bookkeeper and tax collector and reporter for the Goverrunent. When she pays her cook her week's wages, she deducts the tax, fills out a form, puts in a thousand items of infornration, and remits the report and tax to t'he Federal Govern*et t. When the man comes to cut the grass, she does the same. The form must be filled out, the deductions must be ,made, the money must be sent in. So with the window washer, and the part-time nurse who takes care of the baby. The Federal Government moves into the personal life of every man, woman, and child. It goes into every pressing place, every bootblack establishment, every hot dog stand, every spot however small where people work. Collecting, repirrting, and remitting would become a part of the everyday life of every American. Instead of getting the Government out of business as we h'ave been prornised, the Government practically takes over all affairs under this ghastly proposal. And this is just one of the many things it iroposes to do. ***

Now, watch your blood pressure! We have just read the official stat€,nrent that we are just now sending about FORTY-ONE MILLION POUNDS OF GOOD AMERI. CAN BUT?ER TO SOVIET RUSSIA. Here in this country there are millions upon millions of fine American children who have not tasted a real piece of bread and butter since God knows when. Margarine is thc only thing that looks like butter t'trey ever see. Now will someone please rise and state why in the name of heaven we will condnue to deprive our Americans of this much-needed food, while we send it over to people who never were used to butter at any time, and who are not fightirrg anybody, or helping us win any war? Why should we deprive outrselves of this food, and send it free by Lend Lease? tit/hy should we send it under any conditions? And, if we have for some reason impossible to understand committed ourselves to buttering the bread of the Russians indefinitely, why don't we send them forty-one million pounds of the margarine we are eating, and keep the butter ourselves? Is there any sane human in America who will say nay to that suggestion?

tHE CAL|FOTil|A IUnBER ilElcflAltt
IOODT nllytBStlt8 CNGS qNCULATTON KILNS 2)/o to 7O/o mote capacitT due to solid edge-to-cdge rtacling. Bcter qudity drying on low taapcraturcr sitb a fert revcniblc citcuLadon. Lowcr ttacling coets--just solid cdge-to-cdgc rtacting- io thc rinplest fbrm. Moorekiln PaintProduce folweathcrptoofing dry kiln and nill roofr. Ure l. ,2. t. Noth Podea4 Orr. J.cltoavi$G, Itlo.id.

TRADE R(l(lMS FOR SPACE!

TACOI|A I,UilIBNB $il,T$

714 W. Olympic Blvd.

tOS ANGET.ES 15, CAIIF.

Telephone PRospect ll08

CAAGO and hAIL

NEPNESENTING

St; Ptrul & Tcrcomcr Lumber Co. . Tcrcomcr, Wqsh.

Detriance Lumber Compcrny TcrcomcL Wash.

Diclonan Lurrber Compcrny Tqcomcr Wash.

Ho*r owNERs have set aside a lot of money for their pcist-war remdeling-and the progressive lumber dealer will be ready with helpful suggestions and ideas ideas that will turn oavte space into useful roorns.

Turning unffnished cellars into game and hobby rooms, cluttered attics into double-duty guestand-playrooms, dingy kitchens into bright, modern, eficient work units these are some of the remodeling jobs that call for the Masonite* Presdwoods, the smooth, dense hardboards that can go right up over old construction.

Use the durable Presdwoods as wall, ceiling and furniture panels, as we-ar- and moisture-resistant work and play surfaces. Theyll come smooth or with pressed-in tile patterns, custom-ffnished or ready to ffnish on the job. They can be worked with ordinary carpenter's tools and can be readily bent on the job to form modern curved efiects. Grainless, splinterless, youll ffnd them practical to use in a large number of jobs.

For complete data on Presdwoods, the lignocellulose hardboards made from exploded wood fiber, write the l\{asonite Corporation, Dept. L-7, LLL West Washington Street, Chicago 2, Ill,

Kqrlen-Dcrvis Compcmy Tcrcomc, Waslr

Vcncouver Plyrnood & Veneer Co. Vcmcouver, Wash.

Tccomc Hcrbor Lumber & Timber Co. TccomcL Wash.

Clecr Fir Scles Co. Eugene, Ore.

CdDLumberCo. Roseburg, Ore.

S. S. WHITT{ET OI.SON

s. s. wEsiT coAsT

Jcly l. l9{It
MAS(I]{|TE # ":$xi,, r"Mosonite" is o lrode-morl ,€gistered in ihe U, S. Pot. Ofi. ond signifiei thot Mosonite Corporotion is the source of lho product.

filV M Stout aa

Bq ke biottre

Age not gurranteed--'Somc I havc told lor 20 ycaru---Sonc Lcr

Sort of a Slow Trip

Sam Wood, picture maker extraordinary, hands me this one:

A strutting he pigeon met a lovely little girl pigeon one day in Central Park, New York City. He asked for a date, and she agreed, very modestly. He suggested that they meet right there at noon the next day. She accepted the date. He asked where she lived, and she said in a penthouse over on the other side of the big city.

L A. Concern Hqs Unique Service For Lumber Yqrds cmd Mills

'Fern Trucking Co., 4550 Maywood Avenue, Los Angeles, established four years ago, has built up an efficient service for unloading, storing, stacking for air drying, and grading lumber.

Their yard, located in the Central Manufacturing District, has a storage capacity of about 10 million feet, and at present has in storage between five and six million feet, with two million Jeet under cover.

Lumber handling equipment includes three lift trucks, a Hyster, a Gerlinger, and one of their own make.

They have a fleet of eight truck and trailer outfits, and a total ol 27 pieces of lumber trucking equipment.

The owner of Fern Trucking Co. is Fernando Negri, and C. E. (Chuck)-Dunlap is the manager.

Sells Lumber Ycrrd

S. W. Cissna has sold the Freedom Lumber Company yard at Freedom to W. C. Hagelin, who has been connected with the company for the past five years. Mr. Hagelin has been associated with the lumber business for a long period.

So at noon the next day he was there waiting, but the pretty little girl pigeon did not show up. Hour after hour he waited and furned. But she was so pretty that he kept on waiting. Finally, late in the ifternoon, a soft voicc said "Hello," and there she wag

"Please don't be angry because I'm lat€," she pleaded. "It was such a lovely, sunny day THAT I WALKED ovER."

Producers' Council Meeting

The Producers' Cooncil, Southern California Chapter, held a meeting at the Clark Hotel, Los Angeles, Monday evening, June 18. Warren Hoyt of the American Lumber & Treating Co., Los Angeles, president of the Southern California Chapter, presided.

J. E. Mackie, manager of the Western office, National Lumber Manufacturers Association, San Francisco, and Orrie Hamilton, secretary-manager of the Southern California Retail Lumber Association, Los Angeles, were the speakers.

New Ycrrd hr Vcn Nuys

Middleton-Jungers Lumber Co. opened a retail lumber and building material yard at 5901 Sepulveda Boulevard, Van Nuys, June 1. J. M. Jungers, formerly with PattenBlinn Lumber Co. as yard manager, is manager of the new vard.

Ioins Scles Stcrff

William R. Suttle has joined the sales staff of the Ralph E. Barto Lumber Co. of Huntington Park. H'e was formerly with the Patten-Blinn Lumber Co., Los Angeles.

Pogo i2 THC CATIFORNIA I,UMIER NERCHANT. aa
HAMMOND LUMBER COMPANY Manufacturers of SAN FRANCISCO O cALTFoRNTA REDIYooD O Milts at Sarnoa and Eureka, Cdifornia LOS ANGELES

THE 5 POINT ROOF

l. STRENGTH, The nethod oI lcying one shingle o?er ctrother cnd nciling in plcce crectes cr "bridging" effect thct gives the Red eedar Shingle rool cmczing strength cnd solidity.

2. INSITLATION. Insulqtion ig the blocking off ol heat cnd cold lrcngurisaion. Genuine Cedcr Shingles show cr high degree of nqtural insulqtion, crecting q cooler building in lutnmer cnd c warrrrer one in winter.

3. LONG LIFE. Impregncted with ncdure's own preservclive oil, Red Cedar Shingles give cmtrzingly long aenice cnd resistqnce to wecther.

4. LOW COST. Figured by the cost Pet aqucre ol cn esti' mcted cqre-free gervice ol from thirty to lorty yecrs, Red Cedcrr Shingles build the lowest cogt rool you c<ru buy.

5, BEAUTY. Red Cedcr Shingles blend hqmoniously witb shrubs and liowers, When stcined or pcinted, the cedct wood mellows the colore qnd the ihick butts creqte becutilul ehcrdow lines.

RED CEDAR SHINGTE BUREAU

5508 Whire Building, Seottle l, Wn.' U. S. A. or Vqncouvet, B. C., Ccrnqdq

PI.ASTIG.FAGED PIYWOOD

Plcstic-lcrced plyvrood one oI the recent developments in the Douglcrs fir plyrrood industry is being supplied to the armed lorces in consideroble qucntities.

These panels are used mcrinly lor the packaging ol vclucble suppliei crnd mcchines thct need special protection.

When these plcrstic-Icced panels cne

relecsed lor civilian uses the lumber dealer will find thcrt they will serve mcny peacetime needs. They ccrn be used for outdoor signs, lronts ol stores, restcurqnts qnd other building+ cts weU cIs in the home-buildingr field.

They will be excellent mcrterial lor countertops crnd other surlaces that cre subiected to severe weqr.

July !, l9tl5 Pogo 13
2435 Enterprbe StreeL Ioe Angeles 2l - I?inity 2581

The California Lumber Merchant

I'm looking back through the years

A full score of years or more

And I'm greeting the first bright issue Of the C.L.M. as of yore. I eagerly scan its pages, Its fresh new lines I read, And again I exclaim, "Eureka !" This is what lumbermen need.

Today I am looking backward

And through the past years I see, A long procession of C.L.M.'s Coming each month to me; There would be Jack's own story, Facts and figures to heed, Fun for an idle moment And sturdy pronouncement to read.

I'm straying back through the yearsThe years that were care free and gay. Long years of industrious toil, Depression's years somber and grey; And here in the files are preserved, The records of times and of places, Bright scenes which we u'ould not forget, The words of old friends and their faces.

And now to the future I'm turningThe years we can mold to our will, In freedom of thought, speech and action, With our flag floating over us still; And the measure of lumberdom's service To each worthy cause will be told And enshrined in the files we'Il be keeping As the saga of peace shall unfold.

The American custom of standing in line before a bank teller's window has reached as far as the Island of Guam. The Bank of Guam, pictured above on pay day, is housed in one of the comfortable Quonset Huts which are being used for barracks, stores, offices, and now banks in occupied areas of the Pacific.

This Quonset Hut, which is being made by the Great Lakes Steel Corporation, Stran Steel Division, is a prefabricated building with steel arch ribs of such a design that the Masonite Presdwood lining can be nailed directly to the ribs. The huts are erected so simply that it tak-es but a few hours for enlisted men to open packing cases and set up a complete Quonset Hut.

Now that V-E Day has come and gone, the millions <jf soldiers and sailors who have lived in Quonset Huts will be good postwar prospects for modern convenient homes.

With Mcrnulcrcturers Lumber Co.

B. W. Byrne lrn Ecrst

B. W. (Bobby) Byrne of B. W. Byrne & Sons, wholesale and retail hardwood dealers, Long Beach, left around June I on a six weeks' trip to the East, Middle West and South. He will visit New York and many other eastern cities and rvill call on hardwood mills in the Middle West and South.

Don W. Swindell, formerly with Ralph E. Barto Lumber Co., Los Angeles, is'now with Manufacturers Lumber Co., Los Angeles.

FIIA Administrctor Besigms

Washington, June 1S-President Truman today accepted the resignation of Abner H. Ferguson as administrator of the Federal Housing Authoritp effective July 1.

Poge 14 flIE CAT|fOINIA lUruEI TEICHANT
GArfield 91r0 WHOLESALE ASTHBUTORS Hemlock Redwood Ponderosa Pine Red Cedar and Redwood Shingles O'Neill Lumb et Co., Ltd. 16 California Street, San Francisco 11 Douglas Fir

Allot Additional Lumber to \(/FA For Farm Use in Third Quarter

An additional 23,00O,000 board feet of lumber has been allotted to the War Food Administration for distribution to farmers for emergency maintenance and repair of farm dwellings in the third quarter of. 1945, the War Production Board announced recently.

Farmers make application for the lumber to the County Agricultural Conservation Committees, and approved applications are rated AA-3 by delegation of authority from WPB to WFA. Emergency cases for which applications will be approved are limited to repair of damage caused by fire, flood or similar disaster, or repair of dwellings that would be uninhabitable or a definite hazard to the health of the occupants if not repaired immediately, WPB said.

The lumber allotted to WFA is transferred from the amount originally allotted to WPB's Office of Civilian Requirements in the third quarter of 1945 for maintenance, repair and operating supplies for farm dwellings, WPB said. A similal transfer of 22,000,ffi board feet for emergency repair of farm dwellings was made in the second quarter.

MPn-589, Douglcs Fir Stock Millwork

Uniform dollar-and-cent ceiling prices at the mill level on Douglas fir stock millwork have been established by the Office of Price Administration.

Products covered in'clude frames, windows and sash and lineal sash stock, screen doors, combination doors and porchwork. Until now, ceiling prices of these millwork items when made of Douglas fir have been frozen at March 1942 levels.

Douglas fir doors and moldings are not affected by this action. t

Grosr Guttng

Ripping

Anglc Guttng

Bevcl Gutting

Rabbctlng

Grooving

lcnoning

Dadolng

Shapint

Routng

Gompound tltcrlng

Plougftint

Fluting

Radlus Guttrg

lointing

tlakes Available Lumber

Maximum Price Regulation

589-Douglas Fir Stock Millwork-efiective June 11.

Sell brterests in Lumber Finn

Interests of C. L. and M. W. McCready in the Santiam Lumber Co. have been purchased by the Powers-Davis interests in the same company. Walter Leisy has been made manager of both the Santiam and Powers-Davis mills at Sweet lfome and Lebanon. Ore.

Lumber Wcrges

Starting July 1, all new sawmills and logging camps in Oregon, Washington, California, Idahcr and Montana must get their wage schedules approved by the West Coast Lumber Commission, Portland, the commission announces. Ruling does not affect employers who previously had started ooerations.

Saleable Lumber

In these days of lumber shoftages a cutting machine that can take scraps, damaged and ofi.sized lumber and turn it into extra cash, can make a big difierence on the daily profit sheet A Wilson Radial Saw does just that and more! In addition to its versatility (any cut is possible) this saw is famous for its accuracy, speed, safety and easd of operation.'Wilsons are the busiest machines in the shop.

In most areas a Wilson Service Engineer ic near you. With his wide lumber experience he can give you much helpful, profitable cqtting information along with a Wilson demonstration o.. No obligation.

WRiTE On WIRE today.

July l, l9tlli Pogo 15
tuffiffiffi Cl|ilI]IE
Pogr .15 THE CAIIFORNIA TUIIABER IAERCHANT

ou cAN count on the lumber industry to take on the tremendous postwar building job with the same energy and effectiveness that has characterized its service in the.war effort'

You can count on lumber because as a nation we have the timber, the mills, and the facilities to produce quality lumber for normal domestic needs.

The war-time scarcity of lumber for civilian consumption is easily understood. war needs come first. And these needs are taking the best and very nearly all the lumber being manufactured... just as they are taking the best of everything for our fighting men.

In spite of the enorrnous lumber footage produced for the wdr, we still have available for our peace-time needs vast of timber resources, made up not'only of mature timber harvest, but also of constantly growing supplies of

count on lumber because Timber is a Crop, and modern forest management, with proper forest harng practices, is making significant strides toward the Loal of sustained timber production, where timber growth equals the harvest. You can count on lumber again, oru gleat renewable natural resource.

WEYERHAEUSER SAI.ES COTTPA]IY SAINT PAUL I, MINNESOTA WEYERHAEUSER 4-SOUARE LUTTBER AND SERYIGES

Tell Me Again

Tell me again the story, That you, told when we both were young, You were my prince in glory, A prince with a golden tongue. The touch of your hand was thrillin!, The fact that you l.ived, was joyBut I was only a girl, dear, And you, were only ? boy.

Tell me the way you told me, When our love was the song of spring, Hold me as you would hold me, When love was a sacred thing. Let the silyer that's in your hair, love, Be jet, as it usici to be, When I was so new to caresses, And you were so great to me.

Here by the fireside sitting, As the pictures in flames run by, Sweet be the moments fitting, And children, just you and I. For the love of our age is richer, And yet, I,would feel the joy, Of the love that was only a girl's, dear, For her prince' -1o"x:rTy*:Jo{u"*",.

The Righr Word

The boss said to the small son of one of his colored employes who had been painfulty but not seriously hurt in a work accident a fery days before:

"Mose, when will your,papa be back to work?', Little Mose said: "I don' know fo sho, Suh, but hit will be a long time."

The boss asked: "What ,makes you think it will?,, Little Mose said: "Case, Suh, compensation's done set in.tt

To c Stcr

Let a man fasten himself to some great idea, some large truth, some noble cause, and it will send him forward with energf, with steadfastness, with confidence. That is what Emerson meant when he said: ..flitch your wagon to a star."

Optimist

f'An optimist, my son, is a man who comes home and finds cigar stubs around the house, and decides his wife must have quit smoking cigarettes.',

Logiccl Delense

Defense Attorney: "Now tell the court in your words how you happened to take the car.r, Defendant: "Well, Judge, the car was standing in front of the cemetery, so I naturally thought the owner was dead."

A Soldier's Fcrewell.

Yea, say that I went down to death, Serene and unafraid; Still loving song, but loving more Life, of which song is made.

The Mcn

Search thine own heart. What paineth thee fn others, in thyself may be. All dust is frail; all fesh is weak; Be thou the true man that thou seek. -

Living Todcy

Thomas Dreier says: If we are ever to cnjoy life, now is the time-not tomorrow, nor next year, nor in some future life after we are dead. The best preparation for a better life next year is a full, harmonious, joyous tife this year. One's beliefs in a rich future life are of little importance unless we coin them into a rich present life. Today should'always be our most wonderful day.

A Scmrple Wcs Enough

The late Ambassador Walter'page was formerly editor of "World's 'Work," and, like all editors, was obliged to Irass on many offered manuscripts from ainbitiow writers. A lady once wrote him:

"Sir: You sent back, l,ast week, a story of mine. I know you did not read the story, because, as a test, I pasted the. pages 18, 19 and 20 together, and the stOry came back with those pages still pasted. So I know you are a fraud who criticizes things you have not cven read.,'

Mr. Page wrote back: .'Mada"': At breakfast when f open an egg, I don't have to eat the whole egg to discover h<iw bad it is."

Scotch Fun

MacDonald: "Did ye have a good time at the party Sat_ urday nicht MacDuff?"

MacDuff: "A wonder-r-rful time. Jist imagine! Fourteen o' us pipers a' gather-r-red tagither-r-r in Sandy Tamson,s wee back room, wi' plenty o, whusky-the verra best of whusk5r-an' a' playin' different chunes! Mon; Ah thocht Ah was foatin' in Heaven."

rHE .cAuFoRNtA rumdn ,$EIcHANT'

Direction.5 to Ord etL'4l Amended

Direction 5 to Order L-41 as amended, sets up three categories of construction projects with criteria that must be satisfied within each category before authorization is granted'

The amendment also provides for authorization without priorities assistance of projects that do not completely meet the stated criteria' or projects for which materials and equipment are on hand or are available without priorities' Horvever, such projects will not be approved unless they can be completed without supplementary requests for priority assistance on bottleneck items.

The three categories established in the amended direction are:

(1) Additions to or alterations of existing facilities to make civilian products, representing slight modifications of the type formerly covered by Direction 5.

(2) Facilities for production of bottleneck materials or components used in other industries.

(3) Facilities for needed civilian production or services, representing a slight expansion of types formerly approved by WPB, and now specifically itemized in Direction 5.

Resigns As AFPI Chiel

Washington, D. C., June l5.-Announcement of the resignation of Charles R. French as public relations director of the Amercian Forest Products Industries, Inc., of Washington, D' C', has been made by Corydon Wagner, Tacoma, Washington, chairman of the organization's administrative committee' Mr. French plans to start his orvn advertising business in Washington. His resignation became effective on June 1.

At the same time, Mr. Wagner announced the appointments of Chapin Collins as Washington manager of American Forest Products Industries and of M. O. Chenoweth as manager of the New York office.

FI -FbR y."r, SisalkrafCs position in the building paper industry has been ,rnqu.stioned. It is'known as a superior PtS"o antywhete' giti"g ;titi".ti* tlrat gertotlly ottoJt its claims as to guality'

ftne feathers make fine birds...

SisalkrafCs greater satisfaction creates frimdships, inspires confid.n.e, associltes you with qualiry .merchandise ' ' ' a business ap pii*.i"i "f th. oid ,to"y of "fitt" feathers makc fine birdsff' Further proof of satisfaction is its use in war. More than 11,000,0fi) mm in,i* "r-"a services have scen supplies, wrapped-in sisalkraft, sray as clean and fresh as when p-ac'ked,.it] tpit:.of exposure to Aleutian gales, Sahara dust, Guadalcanal humidity, or of being tfuown in6 the sea and foated to shore'

\tr0ith such overwhelming proof of p,rotection-from wind, rain, dirt, and moisture before th&r, these m^en are going to want Sisallraft in civilian life. e[ of which means a continuing active demand and unsurpassed opportunity for profit' '

Po3o ll Juf r, 1945
&--"rrVtd ,/ta. t rHE tAit oF AssoclArlolr
ffi "qaah ,l tl. Uoofu' {> Your Guarantee for Qudity and Service E K. If,lOOD LI'MBER GO. tOS ANGEI.ES 5' l7l0 9o. f,lanrdq 3t IEf,oroa 3lll SAN FRtrNCTSCO II I Drunn SL Elbrool 31710 OArI.AND 6 2lll Frododcl !t l5illqs l-|0,ll
Oaly a lcu dollats morea ftac' tion ol a Pcrccnt ol tbe en ire cos, ol tbc bouegites loat cflsromert tbe bctt in bxilding papa-Sisalkaft.

KIIPATRIff & COMPANY

Dcelcrr in Forcel Productr

Douglcs Fir-Redwood

Cedcr-Spruce

Genercrl O6ce

Crocker Bldg., Scor Frcnrcisco 4, CaliL Southem Ccrlilornicr Office cmd ycrrd

1240 Blinn Ave., Wihningrton, Cclil., p. O. Box Slg

Wholesafe to

Yards

Sash - Windows

Gasements - Doots, etc.

Los Angeles Hoo-Hoo Golf 'Tournamant

The I os Angeles Hoo-Hoo Club held a golf tourna.ment and dinner party at the Inglewood Country Club, Ingle_ wood, June 19. 50 golfers took part in the tournament, and 135 were present for the evening program.

Dinner was served at 7tffi p.m. president Roy Stanton presided, and Dee Essley was master of ceremonies. Dorothy Borchers, accordionist, who appears on several radio programs and has attended many Hoo-Hoo parties, entertained with musical numbers and songs. The popular Dorothy has been chosen Sweetheart of the Los Angeles Hoo-Hoo Club. The Lady Killer,s euartette, who appear in motion pictures and are well known night club .rrt.r_ tainers, sang a number of songs reminiscent of the.Gay Nineties. They were well received and were called bacl for several encores. Dee Essley lead the gathering in group singing accompanied by Miss Borchers on the accordion and I. S. Brown at the piano.

Bob Osgood presented the prizes. Jim Read won. the first door prize, a 25.00 war bond; the second prize, $10.00 in war savingg stamps, was won by D. D. McCallum; and W. O. Bullock was the winner of the th|r:d prize, $5.0O in war savings stamps. Robert A. Forsyth had the lowest Hoo-Hoo number among those present and was presented with 910.00 in war savings stampg.

Al Gavin shot the low gross in the golf tournament with a score of 78 and was awarded the Roy Stanton trophy and $lO.0O in war savings stamps. Curt McFadden was the low net winner in the first flight, and received the George E. Ream trophy and a $25.00 war bond. E. L. Thomas won the second low net prize, $10.00 in war saving stamps.

AIIGI.O CAI,ITORTIIA [u[IBEn C0. Wh"lrrale bi*rihntorr

Weil Coafi Wool.t

Ponderosa Pine - Sugcu Pinc

Douglcrs Fir - Redwood

W. A. Constans, first low net winner in the second flight, won The California Lumber Merchant cup and a $25.00 war bond; George Burnett won the second low net prize, $10.00 in war savings stamps and three golf balls; thelhird low net prize, three golf balls, went to Roy Stanton, Jr.

Bob Osgood came the nearest to the hole on the l2th green, 54 inches, in his shot from the tee and received three golf balls. In the other special events, the winners rvere given golf balls.

The prizes in the blind bogey contest were war savings stamps and the winners were: first, $2.50, Tom Crain; sec_ ond $5.00, "Btrzz" Blanchard; third, $2.50, Loren Weddle.

The following were contributors to the prize and, enter_ tainment fund: I-awrence-Philips Lumber Co., patten_ Blinn Lumber Co., San pedro Lumber Co., Hammond Lumber Company, Sun Lumber Co., Lounsberry & Harris, Tacoma Lumber Sales, A. L. Hoover, Long-Bell Lumber Co., Pope & Talbot, Inc., Lumber Division, West Oregon Lumber Co., Schafer Bros. Lumber & Shingle Co., Rodert S. Osgood, Precision Kiln Drying Co., D. D. McCallum, MacDougall Door & Plywood Co., D. C. Essley, South_ west Sash & Door Co., John W. Koehl & Son, Bohnhofi ber Co., fnc., The California Door Co., E. J. Stanton & Son, Harvey Koll, Atlas'Lumber Co., pacific Cabinet Co., George E. Ream Co., American Hardwood Co., Ryness Flooring Co., Associated Lumber Co., California panel & Veneer Co., F. L. Jordan Sash & Door Co., Western }Iard_ wood Lumber Co., and The California Lumber Merchant.

Pc6.20
IHE CATIFOINIA IUTITIET iTERCIIANT
Distribution Ycrd cnd Generql Office 655 Ecst Florence Ave,
Lumber
Our usucrl lree delivery to Lunber
cmywhere
Southenr Ccrlifonicr lf[[EI BR0S. .- StilTl t|lilrcf Los Angeles Phone: Alihley 1-226g Scmtcr Monica Phones: 4-g2g84-g2gg
Ycrds
in

6mERST0N & Gnnnx LUmBER CO.

Wholesale and Jobbing Yards

LumbcrTitnbem- Tiec FirRedwoodPonderocaSugar Pine

PATIUDO PIYWOOD

Itlcrnulcrctured by ASSOCTATED PTYWOOD MIIIS Digtributed Excludvely Siace l92l bv

GABwooD,N.I.ter.rnronrTAcoMAcHIcAGorANsAscITYsT.PAl'L

WE HOPE IT WON'T BE I.ONGuntil we are urging our old and new customers to "BIJY AMERICAN" for all their hardwood re' guirements. The signs are multiplying that it won't be too long.

Poge 2l July l, 1945
OAKLAT\TD
2flll
KEllog
SAI\ FRANCISCO
rsm Arny selca
Livirgrton strcct ATweter 1300
+lEtzl'
PAGIfIC MUTUAI DOOR GO.
OTLY
WHOI'SII.E
ANATT.NAL
onc*nizRuon
""?,*:"fl1Tii,+;f'-
@
'*i8frTffi",",'i"
AMERIGAN HARIDWOOD GO. rgoo E. lsth street tos aIIGELDS 54 PRospest 4235 WHOLESALD SaghDoorsMillwoil<PanelsWall Board CALIFORNIA BUILDERS SUPPLY CO. 700 6th Avenue Oakland Hfsatc &16 19th a S Stc. Sacramcnto 2-O788

Personnel Changer

The Shevlin-Hixon Company regrets to announce the resignation of Crosby H. Shevlin as assistant manager at Bend, Ore., effective July 1. Mr. Shevlin was associated with this company and its affiliates for twenty-five years, and leaves to enter the wholesale lumber business for himself in San Francisco. He carries with him the best wishes of the company and of his various friends in the organization.

The company also announces the appointment of James O. Gilfillan, Jr., as resident sales manager at Bend. Mr. Gilfillan has been with the company at Bend for many years and is well known to the trade. 'Donald J. Higgins, who has also been with the company for several years, will occupy the position of assistant to Mr. Gilfillan.

Elec'ted President

Thomas W. Dant was recently elected president of Dant & Russell, Inc., Portland, succeeding his father, the late Charles E. Dant..

Roy J. Darling was elected vice president and managing director;

Inspect Plywood Fcctory

A. C. Van Noy and E. D. Hetzel of the Los Angeles office of U. S. Plywood Corporation; John patriquin oi the Fresno office, and Joseph A. Graf of the San Francisco office, recently made a trip to look over the plant of the Cascades Plywood Co. at Lebanon, Ore. The output of this plant is coirtrolled by U. S. Plywood Corporation.

Ssn Francisco Firrrr Builds Lcrge [rcinercrtors

Rees Blow Pipe Mfg. Co., pioneer San Francisco concern, has just completed an incinerator for the Oakland Naval Supply Depot, that is 90 feet in diameter, and with conveyors. They have contracts for three others that are 7O feet in diameter, with conveyors. One is for Oakland Naval Supply Depot Annex at Rough and Ready Island, near Stockton, and two are to be installed at port Chicago, Calif.

This company also has a large contract for parts for amphibious tanks, and set up a production line for the manu_ facture of these.

The wistful bull poster which greets lumber dealers who receive Balsam-Wool in stockcars. Copy at the bottom of the poster reads, "No fooling ! . We are doing everything we possibly can in this shipping eme.rgency to get Nu-Wood and Balsam-Wool insulations to you. We hope you will bear with us and the railroads by putting up with any slight inconvenience this rnrartime package may cause you." Nu-Wood and Balsam-Wool are manufactured by the Wood Conversion Company.

With Anglo Cclilornicr Lumber Co.

R. 8. (Bob) Constans, formerly with Weyerhaeuser Sales Co. in Denver, is now associated with Anglo Cali,fornia Lumber Co., Los Angeles as sales representative. Before going to Denver he was connected with Dorris Lumber & Moulding Co., Dorris, Calif., and with mills at Snoqualmie Falls, Wash., Everett, Wash., Coeur d,Alene, Idaho, and Klamath Falls, Oregon. He is a brother of W. A. Constans, manager of Anglo California Lumber Co.

Virsit Northwest

Sam Beecroft, Arizona manager of Foxworth-Galbraith Lumber Co., Phoenix, Arizona, and Harold Britt of the same firm, recently made a trip to the Pacific Northwest on business.

?oigc AL IHE CA1FOINIA 1UHIET TIEICHAI{T
R G. ROBBIIIS [UI}TB[N GO. Distribwors ol Pacific Coast Forest Products _ LOS ANGEIES Douglcrs Fir pOntLAND 7ll W. Olrurtc ltrd. Pi..fi;A-'- Hemlocl tt"r,l*_# #i*" Boae C. Ianbley Cedc Lcne E. paskiU llT||I,NII,il BIIIMilfi $UPruY, ilO. Wholescle DistributorB oI Lrrmber curd ilt Produc.ts in Ccnlocd Quarrtitiec wcnehotrse'**oooo ol Wholesate Building Supplies Ior lhe Decrler Trcrde Tolcphonc l0(}? g2ad tt lEnplobcn 6961-5-6 Odcod" Cd.
Photo bl Wood Conaersio* Compa*xt

CoPclY

€t-**%.1

l'lilD

BOSS.TBBBBLL OO.

AaaapAaaeu "-/ Aoholeulott d wnsr coasr wooDs

Plcmt cnd Mcin Office

P. O. BOX 516, GRANTS PASS, OREGON

We cpprecicrte the loyclty crnd pcrtience oI our decler customers in this difficull perioi,-crnd qssure thim oI the best possible service under existing conditions.

WESTERN

BI'FFEI.EN FROITT DOORS

Raised PcaelRaised Mould

Verticcl Grcin Fir

Philippine Mchogtrny

(Write us lor picturee ol there doon)

Sth & Cypress

DOOR & SASH GO,

DISTNIBIITONS in Northen C<rlilonic lor

Bnllelcn Lbr. & llllg. Go. Tcrcomcr, Wasb.

Sts., Oakland-TEmplebar 8400

Julf l, 1945 Loe Angeles Scles Office 427 -428 Petroleum Bldg. Telephon+Rlchnond 028 I WEST OREGON I.UMBER GOMPANY Mcnrulacturers oI Douglcrs Fir Lumber and oI trecrted lumber, poles and posts-the trecrtment that protects against Termites curd Deccry Plant cmd Head office scm Frcrncisco strles oflicc P. O. Box 6106 Evcns Ave. crt Tolcmd St' Portlcmd 9, Oregon Telephone-ATwcrter 5678 Shevlin Pine Sales ' DEltoolril oa EHEVLIN PINE R.g. U. S. Pcr. Otr. Ellcgtrtl oFrcE S Fb.t t|c$ad !.o l&. lul&g MINITEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA D! TIICT tII!E O?FICES: NE"YT YORT CIIICAGO 'S"l*tY"i'&'H"Hl-8# I'H s ll. rn^Nclsc! ros lg*t%rBtdd' Los AritCELEs 8lll5 o!?ICE S P.trcLtrr! !l&. PBorProt 615 Gompany SEIIING THE PAODUGTS OF . tt. Xcclcrd
Evrr Luobor
llsClord, Cal|lonla e lle llrrll*Erc C8F!t le& Orogloa . Irb.r ot lb. V-t ta Pbr Arrocianoo, Forfcad, Org'oo t?ccEl POt{DE8otf, POE (PlNttE POI{DEnOSA) CUGTB (Goaulno fU.) m|E (PINT'E Ill|BEfrTITNA)

co1 UP AND DOWN THE STATE Co.,

Roy E. Hills, Wendling-Nathan Co., San Francisco, was back at his desk J:une 25 after a two weeks' trip to the Pin6 mills of Northern California and Southern Oregon.

W. E. Cooper of W. E. Cooper Wholesale Lumber, and C. M. Cooper, W. E. Cooper Lumber Co., Los Angeles, have returned from a business trip to Northern California and Oregon.

Charles E. Sand of Charles E. Sand Plyrvood Co., Portland, Oregon, left Los .{ngeles ,June 13, after a business trip to San Francisco and Los Angeles. When in Los Angeles he visited his son, R. C. (Bob) Sand, owner of Cole Door & Plywood Co.

Lee H. Eubank of L. H. Calif., is back from spending Pacific Northwest cities.

Eubank & Son, Inglewood, two u'eeks on business in

George Melville, manager of the Los Angeles branch of Simpson fndustries, Inc., left June 27 on a two weeks' visit to the head office and plants in Washington.

Clint Laughlin, E. J. Stanton & Son, Los Angeles, was a recent visitor to the Northwest.

J. W. Copeland, J. W. Ore., spent several days of June,

Copeland Yards, Inc., Portland, in Los Angeles the latter part

A. E. Wolff, manag'er, Kilpatrick & Co., San Francisco, rvas back at his desk June 23 lrom a business trip to Vancouver, B. C., Seattle, Portland and Eugene. He made the trip by air both ways.

Doyle Bader, general superintendent, Consolidated Lumber Co., Wilmington, Calif., is on a business trip to the Pacific Northwest. He will call on mills in the Redwood producing area on the way back.

R. W. (Jack) Dalton, R. W. Dalton & Co., Los Angeles, returned early in June from the Pacific Northwest, where he called on West Coast Plywood Co., Aberdeen, which he represents in the Southwest. He also called on sawmills in Oregon and Washington.

S. A. Douglas, Mulcahy Lumber Co., Tucson, Arizona, returned early in June from a business trip to Oregon and Washington. He spent a few days in Los Angeles going and corrring.

Wayne Rawlings, manager of Harbor California, San Francisco, left June 28 Harbor Plywood Corporation mill at He expects to be back July 9.

Plywood Corp. of for a visit to the Hoquiam, Wash.

Neal B. Waugh of the Neal B. Waugh Lumber Co., Tucson, Arizona, recently spent a few days in Los Angeles on business.

C. V. Drake, Portland, Ore., retail lumberman, was a recent Los Angeles visitor.

.Ed Armstrong wood Co., Los Lumber Co. and geles.

is now in the.office of American HardAngeles. He was formerly with Atlas Northwestern Hardwood Co.. Los An-

B. R. Glatts, Glatts Lumber Co., Pasadena, left June 15 on a two weeks' business trip to Oregon. He will return by way of the Redwood Highway.

Don Braley, manager of the San Francisco office of U. S. Plywood Corporation, was a recent visitor to Los Angeles.

Roy Pitche, und C,rrt M.F"dd"n of Associated Lumber Co., Los Angeles, have returned from a ltusiness trio to the Northwest.

Harry W. Aldrich of the H. W. Aldrich Lumber Co., Eugene, Ore., and Mrs. Aldri,ch attended the graduation of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, from Stanford at palo Alto, Calif. on Sunday, June 17.

Pogc 24 IHE CATIFORNIA I,UIIEER MERCHANT
OONSOLTDATED LI]MBBB OO. Yard, I)oeks and Planing lfiill tOS ANGEI.ES 7 122 West Jeflerron St. Rlchnond 2lll WII.IVTINGTON l{16 EaBt f,nnhcim St witE" olzo.:-NE 6-lg8l Wilmln$ton, CaHfornia

Willicm F. Bcdrd

William F. Baird, sales manager for Michigan-California Lumber Co., Camino, Calif., since 1932, passed awav in Placerville June 12. He was born in Gold Hill, Nevada, in 1879, and speht hi5 earlier life in San Francisco and Fresno. He saw service in the Philippines in the Spanish-American W-ar, and after several years' experience in rvholesale and retail lumber business became sales manager of the Madera Sugar Pine Lumber Co., Madera, and later was general sales manager of Sugar Pine Lumber Co., Pinedale, Calif. He served as a member of the advertising and promotion committee of the.Western Pine .Association.

Mr. Baird is survived by his widow, Mrs. Alice H. Baird; two sons, Malcolm Baird, Mill Valley, and William H. Baird, Berkeley, a daughter, Mrs. A. E. Chaddock of Fresno, and three sisters.

Hugh E Hcndley

Hugh Edrvard Handley, pioneer San Francisco lumberman, passed away in San Francisco June 16 on his 92nd birthday, a{ter a long illness.

Mr. Handley was born in Troy, N. Y. and moved with his family to Santa Cruz at the age of 3. ITe came to San Francisco in 1880 and spent a lifetime in the lumber business. He retired from his last position as superintendent of J. H. Kruse Lumber Co. atrout six years ago.

He is survived by his son, Hugh Warren Handley, sales manager of Van Arsdale-Harris Lumber Co., San Francisco, and well known throughout the Pacific Coast lumber industry.

Fnneral services were held in San Francisco on Tune 19.

Los Angeles County Building Permits Building permits issued during May in unincorporated area of Los Angeles County totaled 2,194, with an estimated value of $4,019,312, according to Cassatt D. Griffin, acting chief of the department of building and safety. Comparable figures for May, 1944, were: 1,648 permits valued at $1,799,583 and for April, 1945, 2,069 permits valued at $3,680,203.

Valuation of building during the first five months of this year is estimated at $13,096,400 as compared with $16,025,939 for the like 1944 period.

Woodworking Equipment

The WPB says preference ratings for class I wood working machinery can be obtained hereafter only on WpB Form 3131, except for direct use by the Army, Navy, Veterani' Administration, United States Maritirne Commission and War Shipping Administration.

Stuart C. Smith

WHOI.DSALE LUMBDN PBODUCTS

539-541 Pcrlnrcry Building

Pascrdena l, Cclil.

TelephonelSYcaurore 2-g8g7 Enith 6633

CAN,UNO GIUATITY SUGAR PINE qnd

PONDEROSA PINE IUTUIBER

Produced from logs cut on the CAMINO TR,EE FARM

Manulactured by MICHIGAI{.CALIFIIRI{IA

L. t. GARR & CO.

Ca/ifiqnia Sugcnr qd Pondcr*a Pine

Scles

July l, 1945
WESTERI TILL & IUOULDI]IG GO. WIIOI.ESIAI.E
& Sugcr Pine Lumber & Mouldings 11615 Pcnrnelee Avenue ct hnpericl HiEhwcry Los Angeles 2-Elmbcrlt 2953 CT STOM MILUNG cmd SPECIATTY DEIAU.S
Ponderosq
LU]TBER C(|. Comino, Eldorcrdo Gounty, Colifornio
SACNAMENTO LOS ANGEI.ES P. O. Box 1282 W. D. D-'r-iag Toletype Sc-13 438 Chcmber oI Conmercc Bldg.
Agentr For SACRAMENTO BOX & LUMBER CO. Mills At Woodleaf, Calif,

News of Our Friends in the Services

Lieut. Col. Ben Benioff of the War Transportation Board, Hdqrs. U. S. Army Forces, China Theater, is now stationed in Chungking. He had previously served in Australia, India and Burma. He was formerly an engineer with Summerbell Roof Structures, Los Angeles, and is a graduate of the California Institute of Technology.

In a recent letter to Jim Mackie, manager of the Western office of the NLMA, San Francisco, he gave the interesting information that he has on his staff three young Chinese engineers who are also Cal-Tech graduafes.

Pfc. Albert Koll, son of Milton L. Koll, A. J. Koll Planing Mill, Ltd., Los Angeles, is now stationed in the Austrian Alps. He is with the 20th Armored Division of the 3rd Army.

Sgt. Ruth Hanson, WAC, daughter of Francis G. Hanson of West Coast Screen Co., Los Angeles, was recently home on furlough. She is stationed in Washington, D.C.

Dale D. Constans, son of W. A. fornia Lumber Co., Los Angeles, Marine Corps June 16.

With Arcata Lumber Sales Co.

Announcement is made by Howard A. Libbey of Arcata Lumber Sales Co., San Francisco, sales agents for Arcata Redwood Co., Arcata, Calif., that Frank H. Watson-is now in charge of sales, succeeding the late Donald E. Holcomb, and is making his headquarters at the company's office, 42O Market Street, San Francisco.

Mr. Watson, who is a well known lumber salesman, has been for the past several years with the U. S. Engineers and the Central Procuring Agency in San Francisco. Prior to that period he was with Hobbs Wall. & Co., San Francisco, and MacDonald & Harrington, Ltd., San Francisco.

Ycrrd Moved toNew Loccrtion

As the yard of the Wholesale Lumber Distributors, Inc., at 601 De Fremery Street, Oakland, was needed by the U. S. Navy to complete their storage facilities in the Ninth Avenue Pier area, the company has moved its office and storage yard to 54 First Street, Oakland.

Plant Bought by Weber Co.

Constans, Anglo Calienlisted in the U. S.

Ensign Kenneth Koll, son of Walter Koll of A. J. Koll Planing Mill, Ltd., Los Angeles, is on an LST boat in the South Pacific.

Alan Bonnington, son of G. F. (Jerry) Bonnington of Lamon-Bonnington Co., San Francisco, was commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant in the U. S. Marine Corps, May 23. He was recently home for a short leave and is now stationed at Camp Lejeune, N. C.

C. A. Middleton was recently promoted to Lieutenant Colonel in the Army Air Force. He is stationed at Headquarters, Western Defense Command, Presidio, San Francisco. Before entering the service he was an executive with Anderson-Middleton Lumber Co.. Aberdeen. Wash.

The Weber Showcase & Fixture Co., Los Angeles, has purchased the cabinet-making and woodworking plant of J. Niederer Co. at 34ry-17 South Main Street, Los Angeles, Continuation of the plant's operation with no change of management was announced.

The Niederer Company was founded in 1888 by the late Jacob Niederer and is one of the oldest concerns of its kind in Los Angeles.

Convcrlescing

Casper Hexberg, district sales manager, IJnion Lumber Co., San Francisco, who has been ill for some time, is now convalescing at his home, 69 25th Avenue, San Francisco.

Lieut. Myron Koll, son of Harvey W. Koll, H. W. Koll Mill & Lumber Co., Los Angeles, is now "Somewhere in the South Pacific."

J. Archer Hughey, who formerly operated the Garvey Valley Lumber Dealers yard at El Monte, Calif., has been in the Army for the past two years, and is now stationed at Fort McArthur. He will reopen the yard when he is released from the service.

PATRICK LUMBER co.

Ternrincl Scles Bldg- Portlcrnd 5, Oregon

Teletype No. PD 5{

Douglcs FirSpruceHemlockCedcrr

Ponderosa and Sugcn PineDouglcrs Fir Piling

i9 Ycarr Continuourly Scrving Rctail lardr and Railroidr

Ios Angeles Representative EASTMAN TUMBER SALES

Petroleum Bldg., Ios Angeles 15 PBosped 5039

Pogr 26 THE CATI;ORNIA IUHIEI NEICHANT
fuly l, 1945 ?t1o tl HOBBS watt TUMBER GO. 405 Montgomery Street, San Francisco 4 Telephone GArlield 7752 Distdbuton ol REDTf,TOOD IUMBER SAIES AGETITS FON The Scrge Lcnd d Lumber Compcrny, Inc,, Willits, Calil. Sclmon Creek Redwood Co., Beatrice, Ccrlil. Cocst Redwood Co., Kcnncth, Cclil Los Angeles Sales Office 625 Rowcn Bldg. Telephone TBinity 5088 INSECT SCREEN CLOTH "DUROID" Electro Galvcnircd 'DURO" BnoNze I"oouers ge BAXCO cllR0lilATEIr U rltC CHr0RlDI Trecrted in transit crt our conpletely equipped plcrnt ct Alcuaedc, CaliL Trecrted cnd stocked at otu Iong Becch, Calil, plcnt !3ll Moatgonery St- Son Frturcirco {, Phono DOuglcr 3t&l gll W. Fifth St, Lor Angclo 13, Phono Mlchtgca Olfl PRESSURI INIIIII' TUilBTN SUIDDEII & CHruSTEIISOil, II[G. Lumber and Shieeing 7th Floor, Alceka Comnrercicrl Bldg- 310 Scrnsome Street, Scrn Frqncisco BRANCH OFFICES tOS ANGEI.ES SEATN.E PORN.AIID * T d T!ad. nd$ 6t7 lrctc Bldr. m0 H.orr Btds.

California Building Permits for M.y

Pogc 28 THE CAIIFORNIA TU'YI8ER IIERCHANT
May r945 43,972 27,88r t26,139 32,940 8,850 205,045 43,890 I 13,063 43,685 30,070 r97,2r5 71,440 8,525 326,?10 80,200 11,952 46,645 190 600 85,015 84,425 9,618 23,550 46,439 28,500 6,050 55,250 11,950 47,?n0 20;474 163,54s 24,675 24,500 3r3,079 24,555 26,95r 17,255 ' 6"mo l1,700 53,626 164,056 16,228 90,490 88,000 883,485 4,536,943 4,0t9,3t2 m Beach City City Alam-eda ... .$ Albany Alhambra Anaheim Antioch Arcadia Azusa Bakersfield Banning Bell Berkeley Beverly Brawley Burbank Burlingame Chico Chula Vista 38,000 42,454 21,647 17,t33 2,475 35,680 96,750 87,060 Mav 1944 $ 36,s6r 4,351 25,193 9,9n 20,0ii 7,905 gg,m0 5,484 6,786 260,Ozs A,4m 8,446 2,370,408 8,825 t?,r30 506,550 1,840 3,304 8,548 31,340 5,180 36,802 95,175 ,j,oio 15,250 7,1rS 22,985 20,145 79,929 10,320 95,970 I 19,169 st07s 25,6qJ 2,100 950 5,tm 19,000 19,607 18,909 32,000 16,050 771,r45 3,963,628 1,799,583 1,000 16,440 2 1(( 7,100 42,ll6 9,417 1,400 17,405 16,627 302,405 May 1945 50,590 9,500 98,o?ft 800,690 99,830 48,411 11,090 6,995 30,075 7,r50 47,005 95,150 300,930 3,m4 2t,ffio 76,278 23,460 45,3& t7,137 r3,810 159,400 80,036 92,rO3 4,577 t46,201 8,188 532,t56 45,500 870,r84 1,005,353 80,655 rn,645 54,687 65,618 29r,756 15,950 189,994 68,395 a,705 8,750 42,586 r46,398 37,496 2t0,250 7,675 3,149,405 21,343 61,425 29,424 166,169 2t,o35 29,050 30,969 May 19+f 20,05s 8,275 45,473 648,367 231,172 7,193. 10,706 2,655 6,000 3,350 14,100 17,875 l?2,393 4,423 449,444 235,850 7,8t6 n,258 1r,452 11,085 14,745 558,472 56,251 2,075 76,t33 58,905 16,320 20,000 852,7r0 539,414 7,048 59,250 19,65 9,&5 19,950 18,825 207,638 13,42s 65,835 18,805 4,808 2r8,3t2 9,025 16,150 46,475 1,645 35,863 6,359 145,846 397 27,t00 3,599 15,665 r05,651 148,836 ?,787 33,700 A,8n City Monterey Park Napa Newport Beach Oakland Oceanside Ontario Qrange Oroville Oxnard ..... Pacific Grove Palm Springs Palo Alto ... Pasadena :...... Piedmont Pittsburg ....:.. Pomona Porterville Redding Redlands Redondo Redwood Torrance Upland Vallejo Ventura Vernon ...:... Visalia Watsonville Woodtand Claremont Coalinga Colton Compton Corona Coronado Culver City Hili; Daly City El Centro El Monte El Segundo Emeryville Eureka Fresno Fullerton Gardena Glendale Hanlord Hawthorne Hayward Hemet Ifermosa Beach Huntington Park Inglewood Laguna Beach La Mesa Lodi
Beach
Los Gatos Lynwood Madera Manhattan Beach Martinez Maywood Merced Modesto Monrovia Montebello Richmond Riverside Roseville Sacramento Salinas San Bernardino San Bruno l San Diego San Francisco .... San Gabriel San Jose San Leandro San Marino - San Mateo San Rafael ......: Santa Ana Santa Barbara Santa Clara Santa Cruz 60,984 Santa Maria 59,843 Santa Monica ..... 115,077 Santa Paula Santa Rosa Seal Beach Sierra Madre South Gate South Pasadena Stockton Taft ... PARII.IUS TUilBDR COIIPATIY 420 Pittock Block Portlcnd 5, Oregon Wholesale Distrihutots ot Northwestetn Timhet Produets SAN FNANGISCO E LOS ANGELES 15 Pcul McCusLer F. f,. (Pete) Toste 310 Eeoray Street 326 Petroleun Bldg. GArlield {977 PRoepect 7605 ATTAS TUMBER COMPANY ED BAUER .- CARL PORTER a Htrdwoods - Sofiwoods Cantdion AIdu - Btuch - tople O 9035 E. 15th STREET LOS ANGELES '1 Telephone PRorpect 7401
Long
Los Angeles (Incorporated Area) Los Angeles County(Unincorporated Area)

HALLTNAN I|ACKIN LUIIBER CO.

Successors to Hallinan Mcckin Co., Ltd.

Sugcr d Ponderoscr Pine o Douglcrs. Fir

HONE OFTICE

451 Moncrdnock Bldg. 681 Market St. SAN F.RANCISCO 5

DOuglca l94l

Dishibutors oI r Sitka Spruce o Plrry0ood r Box Shook o Assembled Boxes

SO. CAIIFONMA OFFICE

Etner Willicons, Mgr. ll7 West Ninth St

tOS ANGEI.ES 15

TRinity 3644

PBUCI$Mil KII,il DRYIilfi CO.

Specialists in Custnm Milling and Kiln Drying

CUSTOM MIITING

Rescrwing, ripping and trimming of our remanufcrcturing. plont crt Long Beach, Cciif.

KIIN DRYING

Our kilns cnd opercrtors cre certified by Government {or drying qircrcr{t lumber. We qlso do other commercial drying.

illttt AND KtlNS

l4O5 Water 5t. ' long Beoch 2

t-B 5-9235

DRY KILN

136l Mirqsol 5r. los Angeles 23

ANgefus 2-1945

MAIN OFFICE

621 So. Spring Sl., Los Angeles 14

TRiniry 9651

HARDWOODS

TOR WAR IIEEDS!

July l, 1945
Sth cnd Brcmncn Slr Scu Francirco SUtter 1385 Zone 7 Sitre 18i12 500 lltsh St Ocklcnd ANdover l6lXl Zoae I

ARCATA RTIIWOOID GO.

trNCATA. CAUFORNIA

Mcnulacturers Quality Redwood Lumber

"Big l|lflll Lumher From s Little l|lill' SAIES AGENTS

ANCATA II'MBER SAI.ES CO.

420 Market St., S<rn Frcrncisco ll

Southen Calilornicr Representcrtive

I.I. Rea,5410 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 36 WEbster 7828

Terrible Twenty GolI Tourncnnent

The Terrible Twenty held its 228th golf. tournament at the Los Angeles Country Club on Friday, May 25. Roy Stanton, Ed Bauer and Clarence Bohnhoff staged the show. Bob Falconer, with a net 71, won first prize, a bronze golf ash tray. DeWitt Clark turned in a net score ol 74 and. took the second prize, a bronze golf sandwich plate, and Ed Cutting won the guest prize, two golf balls.

The new board of directors for the coming year includes Bob Osgood, chairman, Ed Bauer, vice chairman, Sid Alling, Clarence Bohnhoff and Roy Pitcher. The board appointed DeWitt Clark secretary, and Clarence Bohnhofi assistant secretary. Dee Essley was selected as chairman of publicity, and Sid Alling will be in charge of handicaps.

New Retcil Yqrd

J. G. Dooleyhas opened a retail'lumber yard at 3334 San Fernando Road, Los Angeles, which he is operating under the name of Dooley & Co. Mr. Dooley's7x5 formerly in the wholesale material business in Los Angeles.

AGilE

BLOWER g PIPE GO. INC.

1209 Nadecu Street, Ipa Angeles I IEfferson 4221

Mcnutcrcturers

BI,OWEN STSTETT and INGIXENATONS

See lhc Acme lnatncrotor with woter wosftcd top

Elected President

J. D. Long, Tacoma, Wash., chief of the research department of the Douglas Fir Plywood Association, has been elected president of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers. The society, which maintains administrative offices at St. Joseph, Mich., is devoted to the application of engineering to farm production problems and rural living. It was organized in 1907. Mr. Long holds engineering degrees both from Iowa State College and the University of California. He takes office July l, as the first Pacific Northwest man to become president of the society.

Wilt Mill Aircrcft Spruce

The Pioneer Lumber Co., which will mill aircraft spruce on the site of the old Aircraft Lumber Co. at Aberdeen, Wash., started operating on June 1, according to the announcement by President Jake N. Vohs. His partners are Ted Whitworth, secretary and sales manager, and H. D. Cobble, mill manager.

CIJAS SI F IE D ADVERTISING

WANTED

Experienced Planing Mill Detailer and Lister wanted. Ideal working conditions. Permanent position for right man.

J. A. Hart Mill & Lumber Co.

Jerrold Ave. and Napoleon St. San Francisco 24, Calif.

SALES MANAGER WANTED

To originate plans for postwar projects in connection with large established woodworking plant in Southern California. The man wanted must be thoroughly familiar with the market in this area; he must be able to evaluate any items offered with reference to cost of manufacture as well as to marketability of article; he must have imagination and initiative coupled with business judgment. Write for interview.

Address Box C-l116, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

LUMBER YARD WANTED

Want to purchase small lumber yard not requiring large capital. Must be located on West Coast or in Southwestern States.

Address Box C-llll, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Ccntral Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

FOR SALE

"ORTON" single surfacer l2x30, good condition, traveling bed, complete with motor, square head, V Belt drive. Available late August. Price $12O0.00.

For carpenter shop band saw; treadle type cut-off saw iron frame; Billing typewriter, Burroughs Bookkeeping machine; Electric adding machine, table type; see our ad in June lst issue.

Twohy Lumber Co., Lumber Yard Brokers

801 Petroleum Bldg., Los Angeles 15, Calif.

Phone PRospect 8746

lceo l0 THE €AIIFOITIA TUMTET NElCHAilT

DA1TT & BUSSELL. IITO. Fo"i[;"

Coail florett Frol.uctt

Dougl,crs Fir-Port fford Cedq-Sitkcr Spruce-Noble Fir-Hemlpck

Sf,N FRANCTSCO Sclb L Builer 2l{ Froat SL Gf,rlicld 0292

Ponderosc G Sugcn Pine-Bed Cedcrr-Bed Cedcr Shingles

MODESTO W.IL Winfrrc {20 Myrtle f,ir. Modedo 387{

tOS ANGEI.ES Heracra I" Sntth 812 E 59rh Sr ADqnr 8l0l

lTIE ARE EIIGAGED [ilTIREI.Y

in mqnulcrcturing articles for importcnrt wcn uses.

But our plcns cre crbout completed lor postwcrr production ol cn expcrnded line ol Eubank wholescle millwork items.

I.. H. EUBATIK & SOil

433 W. Redondo Blvd. Inglewood, Ccrlil. OBeson 8-2255

Here's o "liye" product with plenty of soles ond profit oppeol, plus steody yrior 'round repeots. Get your cuslomers lo try it-ond they'll continue lo buy it. Avoiloble in lorge ond medium size bogs to meel every gorden need. Order your stock todoylhen keep it on disploy.

Joly l, l9tlll Pcgp tl
WRIIE TODAY FOR FUlt DETAII,s, PRICE AND SAIES HE]PS rc eltilD nenr sAlrs RrprArs -DisptayE ser ?"!*flhl rHt YIAR 'ROUlID MU1CH THE PACIf IC tUMB:R CONPANY l00BusH sT,,SAN rRANCISCO (a) r NEWYgR( r CH|CAGO.T TOSANGETES LAilt olt - B01l ll Ill GT0ll GOilIPATIY {u*6", Wlr"l"raleru of Weil Coail Douglas Fir Ponderosa Pine Sugar Pine Redwood ShinglesLath Plywood 16 California St., San Francisao 11 Telephone GArfield 68E1

CITASSIFIED ADVERTISING

Rate--$2.50 per Column Inch.

FOR LEASE AF'TER THE WAR

The site of the Exposition Lumber Yard, approximately 26,000 sq. ft., extending between Exposition and lefferson Boulevards. Located on the North border'of The Baldwin Hills subdivision developments.

The only retail site in this territory with permits for both lumber and heavy manufacturing.

Address J. T. Mann, 4512 W.16th Place Los Angeles 6, Calif.

WHitney 143O

POSITION WANTED AS YARD MANAGER

Young man, thoroughly experienced and capable retail lumberman, wants position as manager of a yard. Prefers anywhere in California

Address Box C-11O6, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Catif.

LUMBERMAN

San Diego County country lumber yard and hardware will sell some stock to man who can take charge of yard, assist with books and in the store. Earning from stock to pay for same. This is permanent. Owner wishes to semi-retire. State age, full qualifications and minimum salary expected.

Address Box C-1107, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

WANTED POSITION AS MANAGER

Available after September lst for position as manager of retail yard, or executive in wholesale lumber company. Twelve years' experience in contracting, building, estimating and manufacture. llave sales experience and executive ability. Connection must be permanent with reliable firm. Age 34, married, financially dependable. Prefer West Coast, or Southwest United States connection.

Address Box C-1110, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central BIdg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

FOR SALE

Good City location. A planing mill now manufacturing window frames and.box spring frames, and some custom milling. Plenty of work with priorities. Machinery consists of:

l Resaw; 1 Planer; 1 six-inch moulder; 2 Cut-off saws; 1 Table saw; I Jamb sander; I Drill; 1 Band saw; Blowing system; Equipped tool room; Total $12,000 for good going business. Rent $20O.00 a month, good lease.

Small stock at cost. 36 Roller lumber truck and office equipment extra.

Address Box C-1115, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

SEMI PORTABLE SAWMILL FOR SALE LOCATED IN MENDOCINO COUNTY

Constructed so :rs to be easily knocked down for removal.

I Friction Nigger log turner.

t 60" 3 block, hand set, screw block, 18 ft. carriage and track for same to cut logs up to 24 ft. long.

1 Husk frame with top and bottom 54rt inserted tooth saws, saws practically new, belt feed works.

1 Sawdust conveyor with No. 78 chain, drive and sprockets, approximately 50 ft. long.

1 Counter shaft with pulleys and belts to go with rnill. Live Main roll case length of sawmill.

1 Tower 3 saw edger with tail shifting lever, in and out feed tables for edger.

1 Swing cut off saw with Chevrolet motor for power rolls and table for cut off saw.

1 Edger sawdust conveyor with chains approximately . 40 ft. long.

Tin roof and frame and timbers for mill.

This mill operated all last season and cut 25M' BM Fir per 8-hour day.

Price: As is, where is-$6,000.0o.

Address Box C-1114, California Lumber Merchant, 508 Central Bldg., Los Angeles 14, Calif.

LUMBER YARDS FOR SALE

A.

Yard near Los Angeles llarbor, spur track, machinery and buildings. $15,000. Some stock available at market.

Yard (closed) 10 miles from Los Angeles. Lease $225.00 a month, including residence.

Yard (closed) near Cornpton, qpur track across street, $12,500.

D. I Acte Yard site and building (closed), San Fernando Road, $11,000.

E. One acre yard site on Highway, Santa Barbara, no buildings, ipur adjoining, $12,5(D.

F. l/2 acres or more with spur, near Sepulveda Blvd. No buildings. /

G. Lumber yard on west side of town, closed for duration;'over half acre, boulevard frontage, complete with buildings. Lease $150 monthly, plus taxes.

H. Lumber yard, L. A. County coast district. 10 acres but only three acres used for yard. Will only sell entire 10 acres. New owner could subdivide balance. Complete with bulidings and spur track. Price $30,0O0. Small stock additional. Terms.

I. Lurnber yard site, 2 acres with spur, Los Angeles Southwest district. No buildings. $10,000.

If you want to sell your lumber yard, let us know. Twohy Lu,mber Co., Lumber Yard Brokers 801 Petroleum Bldg., Los Angeles 15, Calif. PRospect 8746

Pogc 32 IHE CAUF9RNtA tUmBER fftERCHAt{T
B. c.

LI'MBEB

Arcatc Redwood Co' ,l!O Mcrket Street (ll)....

BUYER'S GUIIDE SAN

FRAIYGISGO

LUMBER

Corl H. Kuhl Lumber Co., 6. L- nr""om, ll2 Mqrkel St. (ll)..YUkon I'160

...YUkoa 2067

Atkinson-Stutz Compcny, ll2 Market Streef (ll) ...GArlietd 1809

Earq Lumber Co. 16 Cclilornic St....... ...GArfield 5748 Exbrook 2082

Butler, Seth L., 2lrl Front St., (ll). ......Gf,rlicld 0292

Christengon Lumber Co. Evcng Ave. cnd Quint St. (24)..VAlencic 5832

Dcnt d Rugell, Inc., 2ltl Front Street (ll). ....GArlield 0292

Dolbeer d Ccrson Lunber Co., lltS Merchcnts Exchcnge Btdg. ({) DOuglcr 64,16

Gcnergton d Green Lumber Co., 1800 Army Street (24). ..ATwctcr l3{l{l

Itcll, Icmes L., 1032 Mills Bldq. ({). .SUfter 7520

Hcllincn Mcckin Lumber Co. 681 Marlet St. (5). .DOuglc l9{l

Hcmmond Lunber Compcnv, 417 Montgonery Stre;t (b). .DOuglcs 3388

Hobbg WcU Lunber Co,, tl05 Moatsonery St, (4).. ... .GArlicld 7752

Holmes Eurekc Lumber Co., ll05 Fiacncicl Centcr Bldg. (d). .. .GArlield l92l

C. D. Jobuon Luuber Corporction, 260 Cclilonic Street (ll). .GArtield 6258

Xilpctrick d Compmy, Crocker Blds. ({). .. .Ylll<oa G)12

LUMBEN

Ccmpbell-Coaro Lumber Co. (Phil Goslis), 2ll Prolecsionql Bldg. (l). .XElloqf l-20U

Glcnoralo! 6 Greeq Lumber Co., 2001 Livinssto! Si. (8). .EEllog.l-168{

HiIl 6 Morton, lnc., Dennison Sircet Whqrl (7)........ANdover 1077

Hogcn Lumber Compcay, Zad and Alico Streois (4). .. .Glencourt 6861

Kellev, Albert A, P. b. Box 240 (Alcmedc). .Lckehurst 2-275{

LUMBEN

Anglo Cclilornic Lumber Co., 655 E. Florence Ave. (l)......THornwall 3144

Arcalc Redwood Co. (1. J. Req)

5410 Wilshire Blvd. (36). .WEbster 7828

Atkinson-Stutz Compcny, 628 Petroleum Bldg. (15)........PRospect 4341

Allcs Lumber Co,, 2035 E. lsth St. (21). .PBospect 7{01

Burng LumbEr Compcuy, 727 W. Seventb St. (14). .TRinity 106l

Ccmpbell-Conro Lumber Co. (R. M. Enqstrcnd), 704 Soulh Spring St.. ..VAndike 55ll

Ccrr d Co., L. I. (W, D, Dunuing), 438 Cb. ol Com. Bldqr. (15). .. .PRospect 8843

Consolidcted Lumber Co.. 122 W. lellEroson St. (7)......Blchmond 2l4l

1446 E. Ancheim St., VJilmington. ..Wilm. 0120; NE. 6-1881

Cooper, W. E., 606-608 nichlield Bldg. (13). ......MUrucl 2l3l

Ddlt & nussell, Inc.,

812 E. 59th Street (l). .ADams 8l0l

Dolbeer 6 Cqrson, Lumber Co,, 901 Fidelity Bldg. (13) .VAndike 8792

Ed, Fountqin Lumber Co.,

628 Petroleum Bldq. (15). .PRospect 434I

Hollincn Mcckia Lumber Co. It7 W. 9th St. (15). ...TRinity 3644

Hqmmond Lumber Compcny, 2010 So, Alomedc St.- (51). .....PRospect 1333

Hobbe Wqll Lumber Co., 525 Rowcn Bldqr. (13). ...TRinity 5088

Holmeg Eurekq Lumber Co..

7ll-712 Arcbitects Blds. (13)..... .MUtucl 9l8l

Hoover, A, L.,

5225 Wilshire Blvd. (36). ...YOrk Il58

Kilpctrick d Compcny (Wilmington)

1240 Blinn Ave..... NEvcdc 6-1888

Cqrl H. Kuhl Lumber Co,, (R. S. Osgood), 704 S. Spring St. (l{). ...TBinity 8225

Ross C. Lcshley (R. G. Bobbias Lumber Co.),

714 W. Olympic Btvd. (15). .PRospect 0724

Lcwrence-Philips Lumber Co.,

633 Petroleum Blds. (15)..

MccDoncld Co,. L. W., Tltl W. Olynpic 8lvd, (15)

Orbcn Lumber Co,, 77 S, Pcsqdena Ave., Pqscdeac (3)

Luon-Bonnington Compcny. 16 Cctilornii Street (il).-.........GArlield 6881

O'NeilI Lumber Co., Ltd,

16 Cctilonia St. (ll). ..GArlield 9110

Pocific Lunber Co', Tbe

100 Buh Street (4) .GArlield llSl

HANDWOODS

E. L. Bruce Co., 99 So Bruno Ave' (3). ..MArkot 1838

Davis Hqrdwood Coopov, Bay at MasoD Strooi (6i....... .EXbrook 1322

Wbite Broihers,Filth qld Brqnncu Streets (7)......SUtter 1365

PBospect 8174

.PRospect 7194

SYccmore 6-4373 BYqn l-69!17

Parelius Lumber Co. (Pcul McCusher), -

310 Kecrny Street (ti). ...GArlield {9?

Pooa 6 Tdlbot, lnc., Lumber Division, i6l Mcrket Srreer (5). ..DOuglcs 2551

Soulq Fe Lumber Co., 16 Cclilornic Street (ll)..........EXbrook 2074

Scbcler Bros, Lumber d Shinqle Co., I Drunm Slreet (ll). .Sutter l77l

Shevlin-Cotds Lumber Co., lnc., 58 Post Street (4)... .DOuglcs 246{t

Shevlin Piae Scles Co., 1030 Moncdaock Bldc' (5). .EXbrook 7041

Suddeu 6 Christeuon, lnc.' 310 Scruome Street ({)..........GArlield 28't6

Tqrier, Webster d Jobnsoq, Inc., I Montgomery St. (1). DOuglos 2060

Ccrl W. Wctts, 975 Moncdnock Btdg. (5)..........YUkon 1590

Wendliac-Nqthcn Co., 56,l Mirket Sr. (4). .SUtter 5363 West Oresou Lunber Co., 19!15 Evins Ave. (2rt). .ATwater 5678

E. E. Wood Lumber Co., I Drumm Street (ll). ...EXbrook 3710

\llleverhqeuger Scle: Co., 391 Sutter st. (8) ... . GArrield 8974

OAKLANI'

LUMBEB

E, K, Wood Lumber Co., Zltl Frederick Street (6). .frlloe 2'l2Tt

Wholesole Buildiac Suoolv, Inc., 1607 32ad Streel- (8). . . .-. .lEmplebcr 5964

Wbolcsale Lumber Dlstdbuton, Inc.' 5{ First StreEt (7). .TWiaocle 2515

HANDWOODS

Strcble Hqrdwood Compcnv, First cnd Clcy Streeti (7)....TEmplebqr 558{

White BtotbeE, 500 Hish Street (l). ...ANdover 1600

LOS ANGELES

LUMBEN

Pccific Lumber Co., The 5225 Wilshire Btvd. (36)............York 1168

Pcrelius Lumber Co. (Toste Lumber Co.), 326 Petroleum Btdg. (15)........P8ospect 7505

Pctrick Lumber Co,, Eqstmqn Lumber Sqles, 714 W. Otympic Blvd. (15)......PRospect 5039

Penbertbv Lumber Co,, 5800 S6uth Boyle Ave. (ll)......Klmbqll 5lll

Pope d Tclbot, Inc., Lunber Division

il4 W. Otympic Blvd. (15)... ...PBospect 8231

Son Pedro Lumber Co,, 15l8 S. Centrcl Ave. (21)......Rlchmond ll4l

I800-A Wilnington Bood (Squ Pedro). .Scu Pedro 2200

Schqler Bros, Lumber d Shinsle Co', ll7 W. gth Street (15)

Shevlin Pine Scles Co., 330 Petroleum Bldg. (15). .PBospect 0615

Simpson Industries, Inc,, l6t0 E. Wqshington Blvd. (21)..PRospect 6183

Smith. Stucrt C, (Pcsadeac)

Pcrkwcy Bldg. (l)..SYccnore 2-3837, ZEnith 6633

Slcnlon, E. J. d Soa, 2050 E. 41!t St. (ll). ...CEntury 29211

Suddea & ChristEason, Inc.. 630 Bocrd ol Trcde Bldg. (14)....TRinity 8844

Tqcomq Lumber Ssles, 837 Petroteum Btdg. (15)........PRospect ll08

Toste Lumber Co., 326 Petroleum Bldg. (15). ...PRospect 7605

Wendlinq-Ncthcn Co,, 5225 Wilshire Bfvd. (36). ..YOrk ll58

Wesl Oreqon lumber Co., 427 Peir6leum Blds. (15). ...Rlchmond 0281

W. W, Wilkinson, 318 W. gth Street (15). .TRinity 4613

\JVeverhceuser Scles Co., lflg W. M. Gcrlcnd Bldg. (15)..Mlcbiscn 6354

E, K. Wood Lumber Co., 4710 So. Alqmedc St. (54). .. .lEtlerson

CBEOSOTED LUIUBEN_POLES PILINCFTIES

Americcn Lumber d Treqting Co', ll5l So. Brocdway (15)..........PBospect

Baxter, I. H. d Co., 601 Wesi Sth Sireet (13)........Mlchigcn Pope d Tolbot, Inc., Lumber Division' iu w. OlyEpic Blvd. (15). .PRospct

4363 6294 823I

sAsH-Doons-?LYwooD

Hcrbor Plwood Corp. ol Cclilomic, 540 l0rh'sr. (3)...:.. .....MArket 670s

United Stqtes Plywood Corp., nzt imv St. '(10).

CBEOSOTED LUI\1EEB-POLES_ PILINGFTIES

Anerican Lumber 6 TrectinE Co., '-ii6'it:; M;lgorery stt..-t (5). .Surter 1225

Bcter, I. H. d Co., --33t i,!;;ts;*rt Street (4). .Douglqs 38Ell

Hqll, tcmea L., "loid-t'litii nias. ({). . sutter 7520

Pope 6 Talbot, Inc., Lunber Division' '-isi ili'ti"i-!d;;i' (s). '. .Douslcs 2561

Voder Lccn Piliug G Lumber Co', ';i;-fi; si;;.t- trl . ' EXbrooL {e05 Wendlbq-Ncthcu Co.' "ifi'fri'-r.'.r--St. ({). sUtter 5363

PANELS_DOORS_SASH_SCNEENS PLYWOOD

Cclilonia Builders SuPPIY Co', -?bt-';ri i;;;;; ({)::. :.'........ Hlgqte 5015 ""rffi" ;t":iHii,"3f,l:;"',n, Glencourr 68Gl

E. C. Pitcber ComPoY' -'edd isfi 5i' iizll...l '. Glcncourt 3ee0 ot"ii'r,'.."ii.",?';:::i

rwinoqks 55{{

vr€slerB Door d Scb Co.. ";fi-E 6;;;;" -srreeti (?). rEmplebcr 8400

E. K. Wood Lunber Co., -'z-rrr "frJeJct Street (6) KEllog 2'4tn

HANDWOODS

Anericcn Hcrdwood Co., '"fiio i: iSih st;;;i (s4) Pnospect 4235

E. L. Bruce Co., -'Sg-iS-iil-W-"st'.n Ave. (44) TWinocks 9128

Stcltou, E. I. d Son, -'tondt;i iist SGir (ll).. cEnturv 2e2ll

W€atetn Hcrdwood LumbEr Co.' "ioir- riii-istu StreEt (55). .PRospect 616l

SASH_DOORS_MILLWONK_SCNEENS Bf,INDS_PANELS AND PLYWOOD IBONING BOARDS

Bcck Pcnel ComPqnY, -lto-5tl Eo"r 32nd-Street (ll). ADcms 1225

Cclilornia Door ConPcnY, The -i. o. r.iizs, Vern-on Station(ll) Klmbcll 2I4l

Cclitorniq Pcnel G VenEer Co., P. O. Box 2096, Termincl --Aunei (54) .. TBinitv 0057

Cobb Co., T. M', -!i00 Ceatrqt Avenue (ll)........ADsms llllT

Dcvidson Plvwood G Veneer Co., zlgi f"Gi'p.ise St. (21)... .......TBinitv 2581

Eubqok d Sou, L. H, (Inqlewood) -1ie-f[.-n.aoudo Blvci.. .. oBegon 8-2255

Hqlev Bros. (Soutc Monicc) iezb llt[ Sireet........... .. ...AShtev 4-2268

Koehl, Ino. W. d Son, 652 S. Myers Street (23). ANselus 8l9l

OrEaon Wcshinqlon PlYwood Co', gtb West Nirt[ Street- (15). . TRinitv 4613

Pacific Mutucl Door Co', 1600 E. Wcshingtoa Blvd. (21)..PRospect 9523

Resm Compqnv, Geo. E., ZeS S. lti-.a" Street (12). Mlchigcn t854

Scmpson Co. (Pcscdenq), 745 So, Bcymond Ave. (2)

Simpson Induglries. Inc.'

l6i0 E. Washinstou Bl --16't0 Blvd. (21) PRospecl 6183

United Stctes Plvwood CorP', 1930 Ecst l5th-St. (21)........nlchmond 610l

lsrh St. (21 West Coqst Screen Co., ll45 Ecst 63rd Street ( Western Mill d Moull 11615 Pcnelee Ave.

(l)... . .ADcms lll08 n Moulding Co., Ave. (2). .Klmbcll 2953

E. K, Co., {710 S. Alcmedc St. (5'!) ]Effetson

E. K. Wood Lumber Cc

9:::::
*Postoffice Zone Number in Parenthesis.
WE ARE DEPENDABTE WHOtESAtE SP E(IALISTS FIR PINE RED CEDAR PILING RAIL OR (ARGO SANTA fE IUMBER CO. Incorporoted Feb. 14, 1908 flc.uer.:l Oilici: A. J. 'GUS' RUSSELL SAN FRANCISCO St. Cioir BIdg., l6 Ccrlilornia St, EXbrook 2071 PINE DEPARTMENT Ccriilornro Ponderos,r Pinp Colilornio Sugcrr Pine

Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.