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Fast&E Sales.

Fast&E Sales.

iijriiiii',','r e're the trarne that natur.rllv conl6 trl rnind firr ( alif<rntia mlwrxxl and l)ouglas fir.

'l he l)acific l.trrnlx'r (iornpartv'is the r'rorlcl's largest supplier of higlt gracie rcchvtxxl alrcl I)otrglas fir prtxlucls rvith the broarlest linc irt all gratles.

Whatever r''or-rr neecls, there's a gocxl tlt;tttte \\u Ltrn it. .\lt(l vrrg "316' 1t' clelil'crv costs because lve can satisfi' vour full requirements in one rnlred

Ioacl fronr tlrc rttill. Sonre cxuttiltlcs ol ortr lilre irtclurlc...

Kilrt-clriccl ber.'el sirlings, ltatterns & surfaccd stock

|ull-sawrt, rough, Ir()l I(. tirtttters ttp to fJxS in reclwoocl anci up to (rx l6 irt

I)ouglas fir

A completc fanrill' of ertcl & cclge glLu:d I'AL( )()-l.oc proclucts ll.edwood rough and surfaced green lumbcr, 2x4 through 2r12, both upper and corrrrlon grades

'l'lic ne xt tirrre r,ou neccl to ltlace att orclcr for clr,ralitv lurnlrer, call the "one stop" strpplier. (.all 'l he l)acitic [.Lrrttltr (.ornllany.

We're your Natural llcsource.

End Of Era At Weyerhaeuser

When George H. Weyerhaeuser, chairman of the board and ceo at Weyerhaeuser Co., oflicially turned management of the company over to John W. Creighton Jr. Aug. 7, it became the first time in 91 years without a founding family member in charge.

decade should be around 5.50/0. Overall the industry should expand at about the same rate as spending in general.

The d-i-y market will lead the recovery in 1992 with a 60lo growth rate. Lumber and building materials will see the highest growth rate from their depressed 1990-1991 levels. Lawn and garden products should also move ahead at a slightly faster pace than the total market. However, over the next five years, lawn and garden products should outpace the d-i-y segment growth rate.

The professional home improve- ment market will recover slower as existing home sales will remain constrained into 1992. In 1993 to 1995, the professional R & R market should grow significantly to over $47 billion.

"Consumers seem willing to spend on their homes," said Home lmprovement Institute executive director Judith Riggs. "So it looks like our industry should do fairly well in the earlier stages of the recovery and as the rebound picks up steam, people will continue investing in their homes as a way of boosting their home's value."

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