
7 minute read
STOCK AND SELL 0ougla$ Ff
Improved in many ways-and available in basic, all-purpose 3-panel designs-durable Douglas Fir Doors of{er you outstanding profit opportunities. Feature them! They're made to meet the demands of modern building. Send for catalog showing the complete line-Douglas Fir Interior Doors Tru-Fit Entrance Doors new specialty items. Sent free to any point in the United States.
Wiff Head "Trces of Tomor row" Program Of the Forest Industries
Appointn,ent of Colonel William 11. Greeley, prominent American forester, to head the nationwide "trees for tomorrow" program of the forest industries, was atrnounced January 25 in Portland, Oregon, at a dinner attended by foresters and forestrymen fror-n all parts of the nation.
Former chief of the Unitecl States Forest Service, and for the past 18 years secretary-manager the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, Colonel Greeley will retire from his present position to become chairman of the board of directors of American Forest Products Industries, Inc.
In his new work, Col. Greeley will head an all-American movement sponsored by all forest industries-pulp and paper, lumber, plywood, shingles and others-to stimulate the growing of more trees on privately owned forest lands.
In announcing the appointment of Colonel Greeley, Corydon Wagner, Tacoma, Washington, chairman of the administration committee of AFPI, disclosed a plan for a farranging program to keep industrial and farm-owned lands continuously productive. "The private forests of this nation serve as great test plots for developing the most practical ideas for applying improved forestry principles," Mr. Wagner said. "No man in this country is so generally held to have more understanding knowledge or to have exerted more constructive leadership in the establishment of practical ancl progressive forestry principles than Colonel Greeley."
Mr. Wagner listed four specific forestry developments advocated and stimulated by Col. Greeley. They were: 1. Registered tree farming which now occupies more than 11 nrillion acres of land. 2. Expansion of fire prevention efforts arrd improved rvoods practices. 3. Growing of seedling trees for reforestation by forest industries. 4. The conceptior.r and promulgation of the forest industries' policy statement advocating for private enterprise a continuous yield forestry by a process of tree cropping to provide America r,l'ith perpetual forests.
In accepting the appointment, Colonel Greeley stated that "in tree farming, America is moving toward a forest economy such as those of Finland and Srveden." lle emphasized that those countries have commercial forests which today are yielding undiminished crops after 4O0 to 600 years of continuous cutting and growing.
"Our job is to grow more trees," the Colonel said. "The forests of America are one great natural resour,ce that neecl never be exhausted."
Colonel lVilliam Buckhout Greeley was born in 1879, the son of an Oswego, New York Congregational minister. As a boy he migrated rvith his family to California and in 1901 graduated from the University of California. He attended the Yale School of Forestry, receiving the degree of Master o[ Forestry in 1904.
Entering the U. S. Forest Service as a forest assistant in 1904, he saw service in the southern Appalachians, Nelv England, California and Montana before his appointment as assistant forester at Washington, D. C.
He served with distinction in the first World War as chief of the forestry section of the division of constructiorL and forestry and was decorated by both France and Great Rritain in addition to his own country.
In l9ZO Colonel Greeley became chief of the U. S. Forest Service and in 1928 assumed the position with the West Coast Lumbermen's Association which he leaves to accept his new post with American Forest Products Industries, Inc.

He is a fellor,v and former president of the Society of American Foresters.
Lcrrge Home Proiect Set
Monterey Park, Jan. l7.-Development of a $2,5@,000 housing project on 115 acres south of the business district was announced here today by an official of Kaiser Community Homes of Los Angeles. Purchase of the property by Henry J. Kaiser, the industrialist, from the Capital Co. was confirmed by Mayor Bradshaw.
The project calls for the construction of about 500 homes, partially prefabricated, to sell from $5000 to $7000. Standardized for mass production, they will be frame and stucco construction in two sizes, five and six rooms. At least six months will be required to prepare the land for building operations, it was stated.
Exclusive Distributors lot Southern California!
FARLITE decorative sheet plastic
Tqble Tops. Dinetle Toble Tops. Counter Tops
Counfer Froits Refreshmenl Bqrs Furniture Tops. . Woll Pqnels Wqinscotlng Doors
Airplones Refrigerqtors Ship, Bonk ond Hospitol tnleriors . . . Elevotor Cqbs . . Both Rooms. Kilchens... Anywhere thof color, eqsyto-cfeon surlqce ond long wesr are desired.
FARLITE is crn exceplionolly slrong mqteriql trnd its dense surfqce qnd core reduces moisture qbsorption to the minimum. The pre-finished surfqce of FARIITE is unequolled by ony locquer or vornish finish. Time will not dull the inherent beouly of its colorsi it is eosily cleqned, sfqin resistonl qnd immune to the destructive octions of woler, common solvenls, fruil ocids, ommonio, greose, disinfectonts, cleoning compounds (wilhout grit), olcohol, dilure ocids ond clkolis.

YOUR C|.ASSIFIED DIRECTORY ]'|AKES A TINE PROSPECT IIST
town, listed in your classilied telephone directory, are many industries who should be using Wolmanized Lumber. For repairs to buildinqs where decay or termites have taken their toll, or in new conshuction longest life is assured with heated ]r'rnhs1.
Where wet processes are employed in production, floors, framing and roof decks should be WoLnanized Lumber, the h'-ber inpregnated with Wotnau Salts* preservative driven deep into the wood for positive protection.
StOCk thg nggded SiZeS. plan ro mainrair a well-balanced gtock of rhir "lunber-with-a-plus", in most-used boar& and dimension so you catr fill custoners' hurry-up orders Ior rilolmanized Lumber quicHy. You can 93dEs nirEd carloadg oI this kealed lumber wilhout iniury to lhe untreated lumber.
..WHAT CONSTITUTES A STATE?
Not high-raised battlements, or laboured mound, Thick wall or moated gate; Not cities proud, with spires and turrets crowned; Nor bays and broad-armed ports, Where, laughing at the sun, rich navies ride; Nor starred and spangled courts Where low-browed baseness wafts perfume to prideNo! Men! High minded men! Men who their duties know, But know their rights and, knowing, Dare maintain them." *** somone named *rr.."r*rrJrrrrl, ,"- much of the same, and wrote the following bitter verse: "A cold park bench for his mattress, A cold pale moon for his light, A cold harsh voice for a menace, And nothing to ease his plight. ffome from the wars, a hero, With medals and ribbons to wear, Here in the park he hoversAnd nobody seems to care. Pride defeated, and victory Only a bitter crustNow he is wearing the medal, Of the peace that betrayed his trust." ***
Every day in some of the newspapers I see pictures of returned soldiers in distress of some sort or other, without jobs, without homes, or in some other distressful situation. Wonder what these men, many of them with wound stripes, think is the answer to the above questien-"lfrfixt constitutes a state?"
A popular political columnist writes that millions of people in Europe look at the American labor situation at the present time, and it looks to them like revolution. There are millions of people on this side of the Atlantic who get the very same impression.
These are serious ,irr.:;or] ,.riot" in fact than during the darkest days of the war. There was never a time when we were in danger of losing the war. But who is winning the peace ? fs private ownership of property and free enterprise going to survive the present emergency ? The very character of our government hangs in the balance these days. Vast economic changes demand their place in the sun, whose shadows, if they won such places, would threaten democracy. The world rocks with tragic problems that directly affect us. There is a mighty plea
' from the heart of America for competent and inspired leadership in this time of danger. But there is no reply.
We sit quietly, most of us, and watch the mill races of politics running in strange and hitherto unheard of directions, and we continue to assume that-regardless of the severity of the storm and the enormity of the threat-our government is eternal. Yet if history teaches anything it is that republics are short lived. All governments are but bubbles on the oceans of time, and those that last the longest are those best defended.
The dangers that thrdaten us from the encouraged growth of class consciousness and class organization during the past twelve years, are appalling, and could hardly be exaggerated. We see them all about us now. No longer timid or anonymous, all about us in one dangerous form or another, Communism rears its ugly head and threatens us with damage, with hurt, with destruction. Mister average intelligent American sees these signs, and they worry him. But they have not yet carried his worry to the point where he will do something about it.

As this is written a filibuster goes on in Congress to kill by indirection a proposed law that is as thoroughly Communist and as completely un-American as anything Trotsky ever dreamed of. And only the unfortunate weapon of the filibuster can be relied on in this effort to protect the rights of the white race to remain white. A majority vote would impose a hateful and merciless thing upon the people of the South. And all for votes.
A month ago r a""urla ; ;.". columns that r was still opposed to getting rid of OPA and lifting all of its regulations and restrictions. I have changed my mind. The things I see all about me, convince me that it would be better and safer to get rid of Mr. Bowles and his whole organization. When I see a whole nation turned over to the tender mercies of the Black Market by the stupid failure of OPA to understand what goes on, I believe it would be far better to let natural laws go to work. ***
The curse of OPA is that it kills production, and stifes distribution. We read daily the statement that OPA has held the line against inflation. But has it? The shelves of the stores of the United States today are bare of a majority of the necessities of life, NOT because they are not
(Continued on Page 10)