
6 minute read
AUCTION
Mondoy, Feb. 25th - Storting or lO:3O A. m.
By Order of Hon. Dovid B. Hecrd Referee qnd Williqm
A. Wylie,
Trustee
PITCHER IUMBER CO.
(Bonkrupr)
Approx. $5O,OO0 Evqlucrtion
TOCATED AT ANDER,SON, CATIFOR.NIA
NOTE: Anderson is opprox. lO miles from Redding, Colif. Pircher Lumber Co. is locoted behind Hoyfork Lumber Co. in Anderson.
CO'NPLETE TUMBER MILL MACHINERY
EQUIP'NENT - SUPPTIES - IU'NBER, CARRIER OFFICE FURNITURE
Berlin tlodcl No. 9l Planer, Complele wirh feeds ond Srerling 25 H.P. ,notor, Westinghouse 50 H.P. Dlolor ond o Sterling lngersol-Rond 5 H.P. Air Gompressor fnlernotionot lVz lon Dump lruck. illGllAEt TAUBER- PAUI AR0llS C0., luctioneers
5 H.P. Xlotor, olso hos sofety ond resel Swilches.
Gerlinger lumber Garrier Model No. PH-862-8 lon.
Americon Resow Seriql No. B 228O3.
"Comet" Rcdisl Sow llodel GL.
Hermqnce Gong Sow wirh 3O H.P. U.S. Motor.
Gomplete Elower Systern ond Gyclone.
Gomplete Overheod Sprinkling System.
Deski Electric lime Glock; Msrchont Electric Cqlculolori Remington Rcnd Typewriler, elc.
NOTE: tlony more ilerns loo numGrous lo mention. Wlile or phone lor descfiptive lolder.
22O S. Los Angeles St., los Angeles l2' Co,lif. Phone MAdison 6-o,621
Eligible for the programmed housing in this area are the in-migrant defense workers or military and civilian personnel of the follorving defense establishments in thc lurea: Camp San Luis Obispo.
Of the 400 housing units programmed for the Camp Roberts-Camp Cooke area, 250 are to be rental and 150 sales housing. Of the rental units, 50 are programmed as onebedroom units with a maximum monthly rent of $60.00, 165 as two-bedroom units with a maximum rent of $67.50, and 35 as units of three or more bedrooms lyith a maximum rent of $75.00. Of the sales units, 75 are programmed as trvo-bedroom units with a maximum price of $8500.00 and 75 as ur-rits containing three or more bedrooms rvith a maxinrum price of $9500.00.
In order that the housing constructed under the program may most nearly meet the needs of eligible defense workers (and military personnel) in the area, the FHA office rvill :rppl'ove applications of builders on a selective basis. taking into consideration the following factors:
1. The proximity of the site of the proposed housing to thc establishments where eligible rvorkers are employed, arrd the desirability of the site n'ith respect to transportation, commercial ancl community facilities and services, utilities, street improvements, and similar relevant factors.
2. The rents or sales prices proposed to be charged. the siz.e of the units in terms of the number of rooms and bedroon.ls proposed to be provided, and the relationship betl'een the accommodations proposed and the proposecl rent or salcs prices.
3. The capacity of the applicant to perform the underlaliing for which he is applying for assistance.
When a builder's application is approved, he rvill receive a ccrtificate of inclusion in the defense housing Program for the number and types of l-rousing units allotted to him. This certificate carries rvith it the privilege of relaxed credit controls, eligibility-subject to requirements of the National Housing Act-for Title IX FHA mortgage insurance, and eligibility for participation in the Federal Natior-ral Mortgage Association purchase set aside for the FFIA-irrsured or VA-guarantee<l mortfTages on programmed rlcfcr,se housing.
The builder of either rental or sales housing for rvhich l certificate has been issued rvill be allon'ed sixty d;rys in l'hich to start construction, a period rvhich can be extcnded by the FHA office if justifiable reason is given for [:rilrrre to proceed. If a builder's approval becomes void lrccause of failure to start construction, the units may be approved by the FHA for construction by another builder.
Under the terms of the Defense Housing and Community liacilities and Services Act, if r,vithin ninety days after this lnnorrncement private builders or eligible mortgagees have rrot, through bona fide applications for Federal Assistance provided for defense housing, indicated that they u'ill provide the housing programmed for the area, the Federal Governrnent may proceed to provide permanent housing as lrecessary to meet the unfilled needs of defense n'orkers and military personnel
Application blanks may be secured from the Federal Housing Administration offices at 172 W. 9th Street, Los Angeles, and 735 State Street, Santa Barbara, California.
Redwood Douglcs Fir Sugcn Pine
FOREST PRODUCTS, INC.

P. O. Box 1056 Leo Annex
SANTA ROSA, CATIFORNIA
Phone 673
Speciolizing in Pacific Cossf Lumber Products
DOUGTAS FIR - PONDER.OSA ond
SUGARPINE - R,EDWOOD
DOUGTAS FIR, PTYWOOD
Soufhern Colilornia Represenlative
J .D. Murphy lumber Co.
Wholesole Lumber
SAN MARINO. CALIFOR.NIA
PYromid l-1124
SYcomore 9-1863
Sometimes
Across the fields of yesterday, He sometimes comes to me, A little lad just back from playThe lad I used to be.
And yet he smiles so wistfully, Once he has crept within, I wonder if he hopes to see The man I might have been.
-Thomas S. Jones Jr.
What Is the MesscAe You Bring
By Thomas Dreier
Whether you are the head of the office or only one of the workers, you are responsible for what you bring into the place when you start a new day.
Do you come in with a smil'e, a liaugh, a hearty greeting, an expression of joy? Or do you look like someone who has eaten a green persimmon, lost all your friends, or become the victim of an attack of dyspepsia?
The boss, as always, carries the heaviest load of responsibility because he has more power to help or hurt. If he comes in with a warm greeting and a smiling face, all staff members will feel an uplift. If, on the other hand, he comes in with a black scowl and begins slamming things around and barking commands in an ill-natured voice, the office day will get off to a bad start.
Good times and good business start with good manners.
A Dillerent Girl
The teen-age lad had just come home from summer eamp, and he said to his mother:
"I met a girl who is really different, Mom."
"In what way?" inquired his mother.
"Well, for one thing," explained the lad, "'she can stay under water for one minute and twenty sgs6nds."-Jhs Vagabond.
The Viewpoint Feminine
"f have a friend I want you to meet," said the young man to the bevy of youthful femininity. Quickly they rose to the bait.
"What can he do?" asked the athletic girl.
"F{ow much is he worth?" asked the chorus girl.
"What does he read?" asked the literary girl.
"Who are his people?" asked the society girl.
"Which is his church?" asked the religious girl.
"Where is he?" asked the old maid.
, Fcmrilicr Things
It is familiar things that rest the heart, Blue, braided rugs, sunlit upon the foor, One pine, one star, the dusk has set apart, And laughter filtering through a neighbor's door; A woodland path the feet have often followed, And kittens purring through the noon, and books; An old, old air upon a violin, The lovely birth and dying of the year, A house serene and orderly within, And someone speaking gentl'e words, and dear.
-Elaine Emans.
Floyd Gibbons on LiIe
"We live to learn, that we may learn to live. We welcome good books as we welcome good friends. We hunger for knowledge that will broaden our mental horizon and dig deep into the well of learning for a better understanding of interesting people. We follow unknown jungle trails and tramp burning deserts that we nuly see, hear, and know. We bend every effort for a fuller, richer, happier life. Yet how little effort we put forth for a safer life."
Printing
Henry P. Porter wrote: "Printing is a good business. ft is clean, honorabl'e, respectable. It is celebrated as a trainer of men for higher stations in life. It has many inspiring traditions and legends. It combines the need for knqwledge of everything under the sun: mathematics, mechanics, language, spelling, grammar, color, composition, salesmanship, there is indeed no limits to the accomplishments that are required of a printer. The printer is brought into contact with all other vocations and professions. No vocation or profession can really exist without the printing press. From textbooks to novels, from pamphlets to newspapers, from tickets to tax billb, no man can evade the printed word.t'

Misunderstcnding
The two colored brothers in the jailhouse were talking things over.
"Boy," said one, "how come you got in dis jailhouse, anyhow?"
"FI'it was jus' a misunderstandin'."
"Ffow you me;rn h'it wuz a misunderstandin'?"
"Well, suh, h'it wuz dissaway. I thought that thing wuz a cash registah, an' h'it wan't nuthin'but a typewritah."
lf so, you con moke no mistokes putting in o trucklood or o corloqd now while lhe morket is ot boltom. Everylhing poinls lo o slronger mqrkel in the neqr fulure qnd remember, it moves up fost so don't be cqughf nopping - - ocl now.
