
12 minute read
TERRETT AlIlI(lUlIGES
A CHANGE IN ADDRESS AND TETEPHONE NU'VTBER
WE HAVE MOVED TO:
2625 Ayets Ave., Los Angeles 22, Colifornio
OUR NEW PHONE NUMBER 15: ANGETUS 3-6165
FOR BETTER REDWOODBETTER CAIT TERRETT FOR BETTER SERVICE
Fred BroderickDqmon Lee
Horry WilsonChqrles Peirce
RADAR equipped ships guorontee fost delivery in oll types of weother.
SHIP - TO - SHORE ielephones ossure occurote scheduling wifhout deloy.
HYDRAUTIC CARGO GEAR meons looding ond dischorge ot low cost ond high sPeed.
Los Angeles
Hoo-Hoo
Dinner Dance February 15
Hollywood
President I. W. Fitzpctrick Roosevelt
Hotel
Iiclrruarl' 15, 1952 u'ill be the big night of the year for the members of the I-os Angeles Hoo-lI.oo, their ladies, and gucsts. The occasion u'ill be the annual dinncr dance in thc bcautiful Blossom Iloom of tl-re Hollyu'ood ltoosevelt Ilotcl.

'l'lrc cocktail hour u'il1 start the ever"rir.rg's festivitics at 7 :09 p.n., ancl clinner rvill be served at .3:09 p.m.
'l'hc conrmittee has arrangecl for an excellent entertainrncnt program. Juanita Flama and her l)artner, Iiian \ralcntc, direct from the l{ivier;r Pacific FIotcl, L,nsenada, ancl the Los Angeles ISiltmo:"c Bou'l u'ill feature Flzrmenco :urcl Spanish dancing. Shirley tr{ills u'ill render vocal selecli<;ns, and Hal Sandak zrn<l his six piece society orchestra, n'ho havc been appearing in thc Casir-ro lloom of the Los .\rre'clcs -Ambassador Hotel ."r'ill give several of their spe-
G. F. Bonnington
dnd Bricrn Bonnington
Announce fhe Jormqtion ol the
BONNINGTON TUMBER CO.
Wholesole disrributors of DOUGTAS FIR . REDWOOD
PONDEROSA ond SUGAR PINE crnd other lumber products to Goliforniq Retqil Yords
Offices
505-6-7 Morris Plon Bldg. 717 Market St., Son Froncisco 3
Phone YUkon 6-5721
Eugene, Oregon, Oftice
Preslon T. Coursen
O. Do:< 1021Phone Eugene 4-OO14
Juonita Flcma, cnd her dcncing portner, Bion Vclenle cial singing r.rtrmbcrs urr<1 u'ill iurnish music for dancing rrntil 2:00 a.m.
Iior the ladies spccial gi{ts n'ill be al'ardecl.
'I-ickets urc $5.50 l)cr persoll irrclucling all taxes and tips. licservatiorrs rnust bc m:rr1c ir"r aclvance and checks sht,ulrl bc nrailecl to ()le l{ay, 1113 \rcnice Blr'd., I-os Angeles 1.5. Ci:rlif.; his tclcphonc number is l)Unkirk 2-7942.
I-he conrmittcc :rrrirnging for the dir.rner tlance irrclu<lcs l:loris liutncr, I{arry Libbl' anil l)on llufkin. Ole NIav has :rrran.qecl for thc cntertainnrerrt lrrogranr. I)resirleut -1. \\'. liitzllatr-ick u-ill presicle at the ltftcr clinnc;- cercmonics.
F'arrier Penberthy, of lrenbcrthv Lunrbcr Cornptrrr_r., nrarrl'gcr oI the r:onrparrr''s mill connectior.r at Yreka, C:rlif., ll.itlr his wife and three childrcn spent tl.rc Clrristmas :rnd Ncu. tr \ t';rr s lrolidlrvs irr Glenrl:rlc, (';rli[.
Ted Hoyt, presiclent. and Bill Belau, sales marrager of I-unrbcr NIill ct Sultpll' Co., Los -\ngelcs. rctrrrrrecl reccntll fron-r calling orr salvmill corrnections in Northerrr Califorr.riu. Norman M. Goodman, formerly u'ith Dell I_unrber C-'orp., is non. n'ith this company as salesnran. lle cor.crs the Slrn Fernlrrrclo \/alle1'. Rakcrslield, and Sarrta I,ie:-bar;r areAS.
Tom Lannin, assistant manager, Tr,r'in Harbcirs l_umlrer Co., I:.ureka, Calif., t'as recently in Los .\r.rgeles orr lrusiness for his firn.r. I-Ie made his headcluarters at thc ofljccs of ('. I). IIenrv & Co.. agents for Tu.irr Ilarlrors Lunrlrt,rCo, the:-e. He l'as accompanied by \lr.s. Larrrriu. J'lrcr. rrracle the trilt b-r' plane.
Uslolners
And Repeof BUS'NESS
With WIND ELER RED\TOOD TANKS
Yes, you will hove sqtisfied cuslomers with Windeler Wofering ond Storoge Tonks, becouse we put 66 yeors of conslruclion experience inlo eoch tonk. Remember, o solisfied cuslomer for one producl is good public relolions for your other merchqndise.
Ask obout our lorge voriety of types ond sizes. We olso do custom milling lo your order.
Ihe 2 best friends of the Retoil Lumber Deoler ora his cuslomer:-qnd his source of supply His cu3lomerc depend on his advice ond his purveyor protects him BY SEIIING HIS MATERIAT IHROUGH PROPER CHANNELS ONIY. We hove procriced rhe policy of foir deoling for over 40 yecrs qnd furnish our WOOD DOORS, WOOD SASH ond WOOD WINDOWS ro Ratoil Declers, ONIY, SINCE

The Bravest Bcttle
The bravest battle that ever was fought, Shall I tell you where and when?
On the maps of the world you will find it not; 'Twas fought by the mothers of men.
Nay, not with cannon or battle-shot, With sword, or nobler pen;
Nay, not with eloquent word or thought, From mouths of wonderful men.
But deep in a welled-up woman's heartOf woman that would not yield, But bravely, silently bore her partLo ! There is the battlefield !
No marshalling troop, no bivouac song; No banners to gleam and wave ! But oh, these battles they last so longFrom babyhood to the grave!
Yet faithful still as a bridge of stars, She fights in her walled-up town, Fights on, and on in the endless wars, Then silent, unseen, goes down.
O ye with banners and battle shot, And soldier to shout and praise, I telI you the kingliest victories fought, Are fought in these silent ways.
-Joaquin Miller.
The Fundicn OI An Executive
As nearly everybody knows, an executive has practically nothing to do except to decide what has to be done; to tell somebody to do it; to listen to reasons why it should not be done, why it should be done by someone else, or why it should be done in a different way; to follow up to see if the thing has been done; to discover that it has not; to inquire why; to listen to excuses from the person who should have done it; to follow up again to see if the thing has been done, only to discover that it has been done incorrectly; to point out how it should have been done; to conclude that as long as it has been done it may as well be left where it is; to wonder if it is not time to get rid of a person who cannot do a thing right; to reflect that he probably has a wife and a large family, and that certainly €rny successor would be just as bad, and maybe worse; to consider who much simpler and better the thing would have been done if one had done it oneself in the first place; to reflect sadly that one could have done it right in twenty minutes, and, as things turned out, one has had to spend two days to find out why it has taken three weeks for somebody else to do it wrong.-Anonymous.
The Bible
Born in the East and clothed in Oriental form and imagery, the Bible walks the ways of all the world with familiar feet, and enters land after land to find its own everywhere. It has learned to speak in hundreds of languages to the heart of man. It comes into the palace to tell the monarch that he is a servant of the Most High, and into the cottage to assure the peasant that he is a son of God. Children listen to its stories with wonder and delight, and wise men ponder them as parables of life. It has a word of peace for the time of peril, a word of comfort for the day of calamitS a word of light for the hour of darkness. Its oracles are repeated in the assembly of the people, and its councils whispered in the ear of the lonely. The wicked and the proud tremble at its warning, but to the wounded and the penitent, it has a mother's voice. The wilderness and the solitary place have been made glad by it, and the fire on the hearth has lit the reading of its well-worn page. It has woven itself into our deepest affections and colored our dearest dreams so that love and friendship, sympathy and devotion, memory and hgpe, put on the beautiful garments of its treasured speech, breathing of frankincense and myrrh.-Henry Van Dyke.
A Sure Sign
Young Married Man-"When I arrived home from the office last evening my wife greeted me with a big kiss. She had a swell dinner ready and afterward she wouldn't let me help with the dishes, but made me sit in the living room and read the paper."

Old Married Man-"And how did you like her new dress?"
-Petroleum World.
Only A Boy
He is perhaps five, eight, or ten years old. He is made up of the following ingredients: Noise, energy, imagination, curiosity, and hunger. He is the "cute little fellow down the street," "that spoiled brat next door" or "my son." That depends on who you are-but he is something else, too. He is tomorrow. IIe is part of an important generation. He is part of the future. So, anyone who influences his life is making an important contribution to the future. (Author Unknown.)
The Cog
I'm but a cog of life's vast wheel, That daily makes the same old trip; Yet what a joy it is to feel
That but for me the world might slip !
'Tis something after all, to jog
Along, and be a first-class cog. -Scrap-Book.

\(/est Coast Timber Owners Certify Over 4,OO0,O00 Acres as Tree Farms
Conservation of forest resources is on the march in the great West Coast forests.
In ten short years, West Coast tirnber owners have put their forest house in order, certifying over 4,000,000 acres of private, taxpaying land as \\'est Coast Tree Fartls. In addition, lhese far-sighted forest leaders have given the nation the greatest impetus to good forestry and a terrific shot in the arm in the form of the Tree Farr-n program, the Keep Green program rrncl enlightened forest legislation, all of which have been :rdopted generally throughout the country.
In the Douglas fi: region lvest of the Cascacles in Washington and Oregon 37 1,er cent of all inclustrial forests have beeti ccrtifiecl as West Coast Tree Farms.
Dnring 1951,322,(t92 acres of taxpaying forest lands rverc tlcdicatecl by their ourrrers as West Coast tree farms ar-rcl placed under perpetual forc-st cropping ancl tnanagetlent. Inclutlctl were seven new tree farnrs in Oregon totalling 213,445 acres and 1,.532 acres addecl to six existing tree farms. Washingtorr su\\r seven lrew trec farnrs aclded to their totals aggregating .15.605 acres and 72.110 acres were aciclecl tcl cleven tree farms already recognized.

Norv western Oregon has a total of 44 tree farms of 1,517,983 acres ancl western \\'ashington has 2,492,419 acres in 74' tree farms. Total tree farnr acreage in the Douglas fir region nou'adcls trp to 4,010,.102 acres, r'vhich is a healthy increase of 8.5 per cent in a singie year.
"Tree farms insur,, stability oi land olvnership," said E. P. Stamrl, chairman o;t the Forest Conservation Comrnittee of l'acific Northlvest F rest In<htstrics, the West Coast certifying organization.
Stamm went on to sal' his organization has been nrost carefttl in granting West Coast tree farm certificates. In tl-re past lcn years, ten ccrtific:rtes have been c:rncellecl for noncollpliar.rce with the rules
"Landowners llrust provicle," Stan.rrn saicl, "adequate protection against fire, insects and disease. They r-nust practice comfilon sense harvesting methods to gain natural reproduction. To insure cornoliance our foresters nral<e periodic inspectior.r trips over cvery tree farm.
"Our intentions alc to get the private forest ou'ner to practicc souncl forestry," the veteran forest leacler proclairned. "We rvill continue our carrpaign until the rnajority of all privatelyor,r'ned lands are under intensive forest managernent."
One of the clirect results of applying sound forest practices to these \\'est Coast forests has been to step up the utilization l)rograr1l in cooperaiion u'ith lur-nber and plyr,r'ood and pulp nranufacturers.
It is estimatecl by public ancl private foresters that an a<1tli[ional 25 per cent of sound wood is being taken off everl' acre of land in the Douglas fir region today than was possible tcn 1'ears ago. This.has col11e about because of two great utilization moves in this region. One is the far-sighted policy of nrerchandising lower grades of West Coast lumber, which has crrablecl loggers to hling out many small trees, marginal log* :rnd short logs whicli were one time left in the woods for lack of a rlarket.
The other great step in more complete utilization has beerr the technilogical developments in the pulp industry which rrrakes it possible to use small logs. Pulp firms, in the past two years, have also ,nstituted a virtual revolution as they have installed about 75 chipping plants at sar,vmills and plvwoocl plants to convert leitover wood into high grade pulp chips This wood formerly went into less valuable uses for fuel for steam and electric plants.
Best estimate out l)ere is that the present volume of Dotrglas hr forests has been rugmented by some 125 billion board'feet of lumber because of this vastly improved utilization program,
Scrn Joqquin Hoo-Hoo Club Will Meet Feb. 8
The San Joaquin Hoo-Hoo Club u'ill rneet ning, February 8, at the Desert Inn, Fresno. :s handling the arrangements for the meeting
Friday eveHenry Harr
The total area of attic vent openings should be approxirrrately f square inch per square foot of attic floor area u,hen the roof pitch is greater than a 3-inch rise in a 12-inch run, and dorrble that 'rvhen the pitch is flatter.
If you are going systern, piace thc better, belou. large to install a circulating cold air intakes near u'indouts. rvarm air heating outside walls, or
"l'm worried qboul onything but her
Representing on a wholesale, direct mill shipment basis some of the older and better Fir and Pine manufacturers in Oregon and Northern California ROUGH OR ry lErewr & Connpary 't 1l\ (rxconponrreo)

A*"z9r-Z.a-
EXECUTIVE & GENERAT SATES OFFICE: U. S. Not'l Bonk Bldg., Portlond 4, Oregon
Phone: ATwoter 3175 Teletype-PD 42
I'TANUFACIURERS OF QUAI.ITY DOUGLAS FIR TUMBER
Mills-Fortuno, Humboldt Couniy, Colif.
DISTRICT SATES OFFICES:
235 Montgomery Street Son Froncisco 4, Colif. GArfield 1-1842
TT_SF 144
5225 Wilshire Blvd. los Angeles 36, Colif. YOrk 1 168
TT-LA 191
Roy Barto Discusses Business Conditions in Philippines
Iloy Bartrt, president of Mahogany Importing Company, Los Angeles, returned early in Jar.ruary from a three months' visit to the I)hilippine Islands, rvhere he covered tl.re lumber operations in the major producing islands. He rvas g-reatly pleased rvith the opportunity of visiting olcl friends in the I'hilippine lumber industrl', and rnaking the acquaintzrnce of the r-nan1' ne\\' concerns thzrt have been developed since the u'ar.
Speaking of recoverv he said: "Recovery in Nfanila and in general is rnore than goocl. Manila is rebuilt much better tharr it s.as originally, the only exception being in the rvalled city.
"There is an abundance of good hotel and apartment accommodation. Residential building is not only of superior qualitv but has been expanded greatly beyond previous boundaries.
"The poptrlation increasc is about 30 ller cent o\rer Pren'ar figurcs. Harl>or and rvaterfront facilities arc frrlly rehabilitated.
"The lunrber industry in point of quality of output and rrrrmber o{ mills has increased materially over Pre\\rar. Mills however, have not fully recor.ered in respect to modernizlrtion and efficiency, u,hich is'largely due to exchange control lin.ritir.rg imports. The consenslls among the lumlter fraternitf ir-r general is that since the industrv is an irnportant factor in obtaining dollar exchange, rvhich the countr1' so badh,- needs, there should lte a more liberal governrlental policy rvith regard to imports of mill and logging machinerl', and supplies.
"Considerable strides have been m:rcle in the ir.rtrocluction of truck and tractor logging. This not only malces possible greater selection, but makes timber available fror"n isolatecl areas that could not feasibly be exploited ttncler previous methods of n,oods operations."
New Wrolescle Firm in Downey
Maus and Fully Lumber Co. is the name of a ne'lv 'rvholesale lumber compan\', 'ivhich recently lvas established in Do'ivne1' at 7053-55 Firestone Boulevard. The principals are Dr. Floyd T. Maus and Al V. Fully. They are also lvholesaling mouldings and doing custom milling.
F. C. Chck Appointed District Manager
John Lipani Named Sales Manager
R. B. McKamey, manager of the \\restern Division of the \\re)'erhaeuser Sales Company, Tacoma, \Vash', announces that effective -|anuary l, 1952, ail of that territo:y norv designated as the l-os Angeles area, rvhich roughly comprises Santa Barbara and South, u'ill become the Southern California District of the \\restern Division.
F. W. Click has been appointed district nlanager in addition to continuing as manager of the Los Angeles yard, r",,hich now comes under the direct ju:isdiction of this division. Thus he rvill have the responsibility for the management of not only the yard but also for all sales activities rvithin that district, both mill and out-of-yard shipments'

At the same time, G. John Lipani rvas appointed sales manager of the Southern California District reporting to NIr. Click. It 'rvill be his responsibility to coordinate the sales efforts of all the representatives n'ithin that district.
FHA Permits 3/t" Fir Plywood lor Roo[ Decking with 24" R.[t"t Spacing
The Fecleral Housing Administration norv permits t/s-inclt l)ouglas fir plyrvood (Plyscord grade) for roof decking over rafters spaced 24 inches on center. FHA had previouslv reqtrired f-inch plyu,ood in such construction.
FHA's recent action \\'as announced in a letter to Douglits Fir Plyrvood Association by Curt Mack, assistant commissioner of the FHA underwriting office at \\rashington, D.C. Ntack said a revision of FHA Minimum Property Requirernents is planned on this basis and tl.rat, meanwhile, his ofifice u'ill advise any regional FHA offrce upon request tlrat the /s-inch thickness rvith 24-inch rafter spacing is acceptable.
A folder giving detailed in{ormation regarding use and acceptance of Douglas fir plyrn'ood in homes built under FI{A financing may be had free of charge from Douglas Fir P11'1r,'66d Association, Tacoma 2, Wash.
E,mergency fire fighting costs during the hazardous season of 1950 exceeded $4,500,000 expended in the state of California.
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