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ll Reeisons why you should sfock eind sell

1. tr sropt HEAT on Gotlt! Kn'rsur*blanket is one of the most remarkable heat and cold stoppers ever developed. Thermal efficiency: O.27 Bcu.fft./sq. ft.ideg. F./in. Q. C'. Peebles, Armour Institute).

2. usnlq PnoTEGnox! Krusur is loneJived because of the materials from which it is made: wood "fibers impregnated with asphalr.

3. ecolotrtlcll! Mass production makes xurrsul's cost low. The exclusive compresed feaiure reduces storage, shipping and handling cnarges.

4. trtotsruns-nEsFTAtT! Kurrsur blanket will float on warer indefinitely, proof of its resistance to moisture infiltration through ;:gj,tfrl.:*ton. Asphalt impregnation means lasting moisture

5. rlnr-ntgstlt{T! There is aa insulation known that will make a wood frame structure fireproof. But an insulation must not add to the possibiliry of a fire. Ktrrrsur meets this requirement because it is chemicallv rreated to resist fire.

6. nrssrs vrnmr, lil8Ecrs, Futou8! The materials of which KMsLJL is made-orincipallv wood 6ber and asphalt-do not offer any subsiscence td insecis o'r vermin. A chemicil treatment makes rrfosw insulation resistanr to mold and fungus growth. Krusur is termite-proof.

7. ilor.SgTTutlot Once installed, KTMSUL does not sag, sift or settle. Rows of strong stitching,.running the length of thJblanker, nold KIMSUL at the ProPer densrty.

8. Uom wEgflrt Krvsur blanket is one of the lishtest insulations known 1,000 square feer of Standard Thick xusur weishs only llj pounds. Averase density includine asphaltsatu-rated paber covir is onlv r.4 lb-s. per cu.'ft. Thus. it-is eisv to handle anl ihstall Addi negligibli weighr ro structural loall of building.

9. rUxlnrt Kusur 6ts in corners, tucks behind pipes, elecaical wiring and other "tight spots" . . it is as flexible is a towel.

10. zuf T0 liltTALlt Krusur is amazingly easy to handle and in-. stall. Usually one run can do the job, riaking wonhwhile savings in labor cosi.

11. I rucrresrEl-l trilDAnD w|DTlttt Kur,rsw blanket comes in Commercial Thick (nominally % inch), Standard Thick (nominally 1 inch) and Double Thiclc (nominally 2 inches) . . giving you choice of thicknesses to fit specific needs. Each thickness is ivailable in four standard widths:i6 in., 20 in., 24 in., and 4s in.

tooK AT Ktrflsutl

Krr.rsur blanket is soft and flexible . . free from dust or harsh, irritatine ingredients unusuallv easy to bandle and install. Mede olcheinically ueated wood fib'ers, iirpregnated with asphalt, xlusur is one of ihe best "heat-stoppers't kiown. Faced iith a tough, waterproof covering, KIMsLJL blanket resists rough haooung gles an rnsulauon ot outstandrng neatness.

.tr(tr.su,. (rreor.xerx) raraNs KDaEBTLy-c.Ar,r INsrrLAnoN

(Continued from Page 8) dealer said: "I think it will be three or four years, the way we are going. The only thing that could shorten the time would be for the American nation to go back to work. They may have to get hungry before they will do it, however."

It can be said or UNnie ln"l n" purpose was splendid and its intentions noble. The innumerable Americans returned from Europe whom I have interviewed on the subject, can think of little else that is good to say about it. The State Department a year ago promised Congress that our contributions to UNRRA will cease by the end of 1946. No change in that termination should be tolerated. We have contributed $2,700,000,000 and more than nine million long tons of supplies to UNRRA, and no man can say or even estimate what portion of that great store of wealth reached its proper goal.

We send our store .t ir""larrio one place, and an iron curtain drops behind it. We are forbidden to know what becomes of it. We send it elsewhere, and an occupation army grabs it. We send it to still another place, and the mongrels who get it murder our young men in cold blood, and then thumb their noses at us with one hand, while holding out the other hand for more charity. We send it to innu,merable places where the Black Market gobbles it up. Had our money and supplies gone where we intended them to go, UNRRA would be a wondrous charity. Lehman was as qualified to head UNRRA as Ma Perkins was to head the Labor Department. LaGuardia is as qualified to head it now as Wallace was qualified for the Department of Commerce.

Fulton Lewis ;.., s.y"*thl, Jro"a of the important appointments in Washington for the last twelve years were "ghastly and grotesque."

TREES. Joyce Kilm"r**lr, lmmortality by writing a poem which says: "I think that I shall never see, a poem lovely as a tree." Recently Jan Struther, a young woman who wrote "Mrs. Miniver," launched a parody on trees, and defending poets. She said:

"I'll never see, whereter I roam, A tree as lovely as a pome. A tree is just a thing that growedBut only man can make an ode."

Whereupon Betty Smith, the author of "A Tree Grows In Brooklyn," brought forth this one:

"I'd rather say I hated fleas, Than be like you that runs down trees. 'Where'd I be, I would like to know, If o'er in Brooklyn no tree did grow."

So far as we know the thing has ended there.

Two friends were talkir;.io,i Uo-ustic conditions. One said: "In spite of alt the confusion here at home, this is still God's country." The other said: "It sure is, for at the rate things are going up no one but God can afford to live here." ***

I offer the following-and guarantee its truth-as an all time masterpiece of understatement. One of my good lumber friends has his own plane and flies a great deal on business. A recent check showed that his plane had some weak spots, and his associates made him buy a better and safer plane, but not until our hero had objected strenuously. He said: "Shaw! There's nothing wrong v/ith this plane! JUST ONE BAD WING!"

Hoo-[Ioo Club No. 39

Meets October 28

The next dinner meeting of Hoo-Hoo Club No. 39 will be held on Monday evening, October 28, at the Claremont Hotel, Berkeley.

Tom Hogan, Hogan Lumber Co., Oakland, recently elected president of the club, will preside.

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