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TWIN HARBORS TUMBER GOMPANY
Aberdeen, Wqihingtonl
Mqnufocturers crnd Distributors of west coost Forest products
525 Board of Trode Bldg.
PORTIAND 4. OREGON
Phone ATwster 4142
SAN FRANCTSCO I I
Frcnk J. O'Connor
GArfield l-56U
Co lif orniq Representolives SAN JOSE
Jim Rossmsn
516 Son Jose-Los Gqtos Rd. Cypress 3-2550 lTholosale
Conrylete line ol tir und Pime Plywoods
Warehouses
901 Kins St. Ooklond, Colifornio
Horry Holtgen, Mgr. Phone KEllog 4-8466
4710 So. Alomedo St. Vernon, Colifornio Percy Merifhew, Mgr. JEfferson 2288
15220 Roymer St.
Von Nuys, Colifornio
Phone STote 5-2514
508 Professioncl Bldg. EUREKA, CAIIFORNIA Phone 4142 ros ANGE|ES t5 C. P. Henry & Co. PRospect 6524
Cooprn.rftoncAN
Americqn Bcnk Bldg., Portlond 5, Oregon
Phone BEocon 2124 Telerype pD43
Purveyors of Foresl Producls fo Colifornio Reloilers
FIR-SPRUCE-HE'IILOCK
CEDAR-PINE-PTYWOOD
Represenling
Frosl Hqrdwood Floors, Inc. in the
Socrqmenlo qnd Son Jooquin Votteys
FROSTBRAND FI.OORING
OAK_PECAN-BEECH
Calif orn ia Re pret cnt at iaetWIIFRED T. COOPER IBR. CO.
234 E. Colorodo 3t. PASADENA I
Phone RYon l-763t
SYcomore 3-29ill
EVERY MONTH of the year, builders and larmerc need SISALKRAFT Products more ard more for PROTECTION uses. EVERY MONTH, millions of SISALKRAFT ads (7l-million scheduled for 195r) tell these users to .,See Your Lumber-Building Supply Dealer". EVERY MONTH, you can sell these low-cost, top-quality, steady-profit sales repeaters for more and more uses. For valuable merchandising aids to help you sell, EVERy MONTH, ttrire nout!
Miniaturc bundles of Certigrade shingles are offercd lly oftic:ers of thc ltctl Ce<lar Shingle llttrcatt following thc organization's 34th annual meeting in Scattlc early in I)eccnrbcr. Lcft to right arc: Iiarl S, Wasscr. N{ilrvatlkic, Orc., ncrvly-clcctc<l vice-lrresitlent, W. l-l ' Mcl,allcn, Vancouver, ll. C., ncrvly-electcd prcsi<lent, W. W. Woo<lbridge, Seattle, re-elccted secretary-trranager, an<l Virgil G' Iteterson. Seattle, re-elected treasurer.
In a<l<lition to McI-allen antl Wasser, trttstces elected were: Iire<l A. Itoles, Cottage (irove, Ore', I)ale Craft, Raymond, Wash., I{. I). Mackie and C. C. llosc, Aberdeen, Wash., l'aul Il. Smith and Keith G. Fisken, Seattle, Ii' R' Scott, Edmonds, Wash., It. H. Farrington, N. C. Jamison and It. A. Wilde, Iiverett, Wash., and Charles Plant, H. V. Whittall, J. A. MacKenzie and N, A. Iinglish, Vancouver, B. C.
Will Build Plywood Mill
Woodward Lumber Co. announcetl 1>lans for constructirrg a new plywood plant near Cottage Grovc, Ore.
Walter A. Wooclward, president, said the new plant, which u'ill employ about 200 rvhen in operation by early fall, rvill turn out more tl.ran 3 million sqtlare feet of plywood monthly. Power for the unit rvill be supplied by a new po\ver plant norv under c<lnstruction tln the 1>roperty.
Max Hill, formerly stcr & Johnson, Inc., sales department.

yard sul)erintendent l-os Angeles, is now for Tarter. Webin the c()nrl)ilny's
Ted Hoyt, ()wner of Lttmber I\lart, Los Angelcs, is on a 30-day trip to Kansas City, his ol<l home torvn. Ilc is combirring busincss and pleasure by visiting rclative s and fricnds in the arca, antt callirrg on a numlter of his lttnrber cust()tnCrs.
George W. Crowell, exl)()rter of IVlexican l\rntlcros:t pirre, I)urango, Mexico, spent the Christnras holitlays itt ltis hotue in Los Angclcs.
Glenn Fogleman, The California I)oor Cotrtpany of l.os Angcles, l,os Angelcs, and Mrs. Fogleman sl)ent ('hristmas u'ith their <latrghter an<l ttvo grandchildren :rt Ilelrlront, ('alif. They made the trip lroth ways by plane.
Jack Fairhurst, Fairhurst Lrtmlrer Co. of C:rlif" Iiurcka, tnrl l\Irs. Iiairhurst sailed fronr S;tn F'rancisctt Jitntt:try 5, on thc 1\Iatson liner Lur'line, t() sl)cn(l tltrcc u'ceks in Ilarvaii, u'ith he:r<l<luarters in Honolttlu.

S. C. Hooper
SylvesteiC. Hooper,6l, retired lumberman, passed away at Lubbock, Texas, on l)ecentber 26, after a long illness' He had been associated with the lumber business for many years.
Born in Meriden, Conn., he came to Los Angeles when he was sixteen years old, and went to work for the San Pedro Lumber Co., at San I'edro. He operated his own wholesale lumber business in l-os Angeles for a long period. In 1935, he went to Fort Worth, Texas, where he carried on a wholesale and commission lumber business, until his retirement two years ago.
Surviving are trvo sons, Robert B. Hooper, who was associated with his father at Fort Worth as a salesman in West Texas and when his father retired continued the business with headquarters at I-ubbock; David C' Hooper, a graduate student at the College of Alaska, and a sister, Alice L. Ilessonett of Los Angeles.
He rvas a member of the Masonic Order'
Funeral services were held at I-os Angeles, Tuesday afternoon, January 2.
1'a
S. Smith
Alhed W. Drummond
Shelton, Wash.-Alfred W. Drummond, 58, sawmills nlanager for the Simpson l-ogging Company in its Shelton operations, died suddenly Dec' 3, while visiting friends in Tacoma.
He was a native of Iron Mountain, Mich', where lte was born February 15, 1892. He worked in the California redwoods as a young man and was with sawmills in Grays llarbor comnrttnities before coming to Shelton in 1934 as a I'acific Lumber Inspection Bureau inspector.
I\{r. Drummond joined Simpson as a yard forernan ir-r 1937 and became superintendent of Simpson Mill One in 1912. He bccame manager of both Simpson sarvrrrills here in 1945.

FIe was a member of numerous Masonic orders. I{e is survived by a son, William, of Seattle; daugl,ter, Mrs. I)ale Rust, Seattle; and two sisters, Mrs. Will Dinsmore, Fortuna, California, and Mrs. Agnes Jackson, I.os Angelcs.
Osccr H. Miller
Oscar H. Miller, retired lumberman, passed away in
Sacramento, December l. He was 82 years old' He was
Lee S. Sm'ith, g4, father of Kenneth Smith, assistant to formerly president of the Knox Lumber Company, Sacthe president, Thb pacific Lumber Company, San Fran- ral.uento, and retired about l0 years ago after being witl-r cisco, passed'away December 21, 1950, in a,hospital at the company for 50 years. He was the son of Peter Miller Marlin, Texas, after a short illness' He had lived a full rvho was an early settler in Sacramento' ' tite, ,etirea four years ago, and drove his car up to the week Mr. Miller was an old time member of Hoo-Hoo. He he entered th€ hospital. rvas a member of the Independent order of odd Fellows,
'
In addition to ienneth, who flew to Texas to see his the Elks Lodge, and the Sacramento Exchange Club. father ltefore his death, he is survived by a brother and His only survivor is his granddaughter, Sandra Mae a slster.
Funeral services rvere held in Chiltoni Texas'
Dcvid W. O'Brien
David W. O'Brien, 61, passed away at his{rome in Flagstafi, Ariz., on December 22. Born in Stratford, Ontario, Canada, he had been a resident of Flagstaff since 1920. He was employed for 25 years with Babbitt Brothers Trading Co. as head of the shipping department'
He is survived by his wife, a daughter, four brothers and ihree sisters.
\Iiller.
Services were hel<l in Sacramento, December 4'
New Lumber Mill
Construction has started on a new Cal-Ore Lumber Co' mill, which is expected to cost $200,000, and to employ 50 persons. The mill which is to be built on a 2O-acre site iouth of Redding, Calif., rvill have a capacity of about 1 million feet a month.