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and the NEW YEAR

and the NEW YEAR

and Health, Happiness and Prosperity in 1943

A. B. IOHNSON IUMBER GO.

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Four O'Neill Boys in Air Corpt

The four sons of W. H. O'Neill, San Francisco wholesale lumbermen, are in the U. S. Army Air Corps.

Gil graduated December 9 from the Air Corps Officers' Training School at Miami Beach, Florida. W. H. (Bill) O'Neill, Jr. is an aviation Cadet at the Santa Ana, Calif., Air Base. Kenneth is a Cadet in the Army Air Corps, and Richard S. (Dick), the youngest, enlisted in tbe air corps as a private, November 28.

Gil, Bill and Kenneth were associated witl-r their father in O'Neill Lumber Co., San Francisco.

Thorn-Goodrich

Nancibel Goodrich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Goodrich of Alhambra, and H. Clifford Thorn, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Thorn of Pasadena, were married on November 15 at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. Eleanor M. King, in Pasadena. They are both graduates of the Pasadena Junior College.

The bride's father is E. A. Goodrich, widely known Southern California lumberman and owner of the Goodrich Lumber Company in Los Angeles.

Visits Site Of New Pine Mill

W. D. (Bill), Dunning, Southern California representative of L. J. Carr & Co., Sacramento, is back from a trip to Northern California, where he called on Mt. Hough Lumber Co., at Quincy, Calif., and Sacramento Box Co., Sacramento, mills for which L. J. Carr & Co. are exclusive sales agents.

He also visited the site of the new sawmill which is being built by the Sacramento Box Co. at Woodleaf, Yuba County, Calif. This plant will have a minimum capacity of 30,000,000 feet annually, of which 4O per cent will be Sugar Pine.

FRANK WATSON WITH ENGINEERS' OFFICE

Frank H. Watson, until recently a salesman with MacDonald & Harrington in the Sacramento and San Joaquin Valleys, and formerly with Hobbs Wall Lumber Co., is now assistant to Roy Paulus who is in charge of South Pacific Lumber Office of the Office of the Chief of Ettgrneers, 405 Montgomery Street, San Francisco.

Fire Destroys Lumber Mill

Fire destroyed the sawmill of the Mt. Whitney Lumber Co. at Johnsondale, California, during the early morning of December 4. The fire was of undetermined origin. The mill had a capacity of 85 to 95 M feet per shift. The company will rebuild at once. The box factory waS not damaged.

The lumber piled in the yard, estimated at about 11,000,000 feet, was not damaged and the sale of lumber will be continued as usual.

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