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INCREASED SALES MEANS INCREASED NEED FOR CREDIT INFORMATION

Vhile increasing your sales effort to get your share of the building material business created by the new Housing program, do not overlook the element of CREDIT RISK. Not only will it be present in the case of new accounts, but also with old customers, who have been inactive and about whose present financial status you may know very little.

With our TVICE-a-week Supplemented Credit Rating Book you c:rn pass on a credit IMMEDIATELY, in nine cases out of ten, because YOU V/ILL HAVE OUR LATEST RAT. ING IN YOUR OFFICE AT ALL TIMES.

This service has functioned successfully for nearly sixty years. It keeps you advised of alt changes affecting the credit status of all of your accounts. It is not necessary to get a Special Report on each account about which you want to be kept constantly advised.

ft is the logical credit information service fot those who sell lumber and allied products as it furnishes much EXCLUSM information, and the cost is small.

In view of the rapidly reviving public interest in home building, the popular booklet, "The House For The Growing Income", has been revived by the National Lumber Manufacturers Association.

The booklet des,cribes an extensible house plan and scheme, whereby a small family and a thin purse may start a home-owning career with a charming cottage of four rooms, which'can be enlarged as income and family grow, and yet be at each stage an architectural unit which grows in beauty, rather than suffers, from the carefully planned extensions.

The original unit may be built at as low a cost as $2,000, according to the refinement of the interior finish and equipment.

'fhis booklet, although issued by an industrial Association, is not a piece of commercial literature and the demand for it has been so great that the publishers, the National Lumber Manufacturers Association, Washington, D. C., have been compelled to ask a nominal price of loc a copy, including postage.

The same Association is also bringing out anew its beautiful brochure, "Modern Home Interiors", which gives many interesting and stimulating ideas, illustrated by sketches, for the beautification and better utilization of interior space. This booklet, also strictly non-commercial, may be obtained from the same publishers at the same nominal fee as "The lfouse For The Growing fncome".

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