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DEAUVILLE BEACH CLUB

Board Of Governors

DR. F. J. \YAGNER

Capitalist; member of the local Board of the Security Trust and Savings Bank

President and Ckairman of the Board

J. J. COSTELLO

Vice-President, California-Alaska Coal and Coke Company - Vice-Presklmt

E. G. LEAF, Hollywood

R. W, HOWELL

Director of the Commonwealth Bond and Mortgage Cr. and General }lanager of the Deauvilie Beach Club

GEORGE L. PATTERSON

Owner of Patterson Electric Co.

ERWIN PHII,LIPS

Capitalist, Beverly Hills

HON. REX B. GOODCELL

Former Collector fnternal Revenue, Southern District

BURT KENASTON

Capitalist, Santa Monica

C. M. FENTON, Capitalist, Pasadena

A. E. COLBURN

President, A. E. Colburn, Inc., oldest exclusive furriers in Southwest

DALLAS M. FITZGERALD fndependent Motion Picture Producer Chairman Entertainment Comnittee

HON. IUDGE VICTOR R. McLUCAS

Judge, Superior Court, Santa llfonica

HON. JUDGE WM. FREDRICKSON

Judge, Municipal Court c. J. wrLD

President of Warman Steel Castings Co.

WM. HICKS

Capitalist, Director District Bond Co. and Continental Securities Co.

ROBERT B. PAYSEE

President, Western Construction Co. of Santa Monica

R. B. LAWRENCE

Sqcretary, Banta Company

J. B. FOX, Assistant Chief, Sheriff's Office

H. H. KINNEY, Secretary to Mayor Cryer

ALFRED W. ALLEY

President and General Manager, hs An. geres Municipal Engineers' Association, fnc., Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Civic Center Club.

N. R. WEBSTER

General Manager, Wrede4 Packing and Provision Co.

GEO. W. FAY

Comptroller Merchants National Bank, L. A., Formerly with Blair & Co., N. Y.

GEO. G. .ELLIS, Director

Bureau of Statistics, Merchants National Bank, Formerly Ass't Scretary, L. A. Stock Exchange.

For Men and Women in Every Business and Professional Activity

The Deauville Beach Club. true in every particuldr to its world famous namesake in France. , offerg c-omplete, luxurioue accommodations for special group gatherings, ai well as every facility for surf,, athletic and social diversions among a large represen- tative memberahip.

l_ust north of Santa Monica Pier, on a splendid sweep of gently sloping deeply sanded beach is rhe site of the Deauiille Beaclr Clu!.It is planned to provide the largeat beach area ever set aside for a club on the Pacific Coast.

You will enter the club, not from a co'gested beach-level sDeedwav. but directly from the top of the Palisades iver a magnificenr arctr te"ahinj to the fifth floor of the_ club building. Designed aJ a height-limit struc- ture, th.e club will include- private. and puSlic dining ro-oms, ballroom, gymnasium, the largest_.enclosed and tempered salt water pool'in Califor- nla, 5W guest rooms, liberal locker accommodations and numerous other teatures that are proposed to make it the largest. most completely equip_ ped and luxuriously appointed seashore clubln America.

A limited number of Founder Life Memberships are availabre for a short time at $200, When these are subscribed, the-price will be substaniially increased.

Metnbers of such clubs as the Wilshire, tr[idzaick, Brentwood. Holhzaood and Annandale countrg clubs and the Jonathan ctub. califoriia CIub, L. A. Athleti,c CIub and organizations of similarcio"aiii ii, eligihle.to membership immediately in the Deaurille Beaci Ctii.'*;ti- out aclion by the rnetnbershll> comntitte.e Si-mply fill out tlte foliowing,

DE^A,UVILLE BEACH CLUB

Adninirtrative Officec: lnrurance Exchange BIdg., Niath at Olive, Loe Angelcr Telephoneo: TRinity 9934-5 lf rtill available, plearc rcrcrve for nc a Founder Lifc Memberrhip in the Dcauville Bcach Club. Enclored ir my check for$2OO as Full Payment

Name

Addrcrr

My club ef6liatione are 4-8

New York Importing Roumanian Lumber

New York, July l9.-Reports from various lumber ln&nufacturing regions throughout the country reveal great concern over the extensive imDortation of Roumanian lumber importation ofanian through this port. Inquiry reveals that 4,000,000 feet of European spruce and true fir lumber have recently arrived true here from Roumania and here and been sold. Another shipment of 4,000,000 feet is now on the Atlantic.

There is no duty on lumber and this foreign product is being sold in New York City cheaper than iny domestic lumber is offered. While somewhat concerned over the price competition and the intrusion of wood from the other side of the world into this market when much low-grade domestic lumber is unable to find a market on account of the distance of the mills from consumers, with resulting waste of forest material, lumbermen are used to seeing foreign lumber in this market after twelve years of free tiade.

It is not that lumber is coming from such an unexpected

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