1 minute read

CARLOW COMPANY

738 Eqst 59th Street tos ANGETES l, CAUF.

Telephone CEntury 2-9865

Manafacturer of Whire Pine Doors - Blinds

Metol Covered Doors

Yarcb for "Carlout-Los Angelef' Label

0lttuanat

Lester R.

Leonard

Lester R. Leonard, 56, Leonard Cabinet Co., Los Angeles died suddenly on March 30 following a heart attack.

He had been associated with the cabinet business for many years. He was with the Pacific Cabinet Co. for about ten years, and in 1940, with his son, Bill Leonard, they started the Leonard Cabinet Co.

He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Edith F. Leonard; a son, Bill Leonard; and two brothers, Arthur R. and Ivan E. Leonard. Funeral services were held in the Little Church of the Flowers, Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, on Saturday, April 2.

Charles K. Ames

Charles K. Ames, 46, Pine Box & Lumber Co', Los Angeles, passed away suddenly on April 7 from a heart attack.

He was born in New York. He was with the Pacific Door & Sash Co., and later with the Pacific Wood Proclucts Corporation, and in 1943 with J. E. Frutchey, they organized the Pine Box & Lumber Co.

Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Betty Ames, and a daughter, Barbara Ann Naylor. Funeral services were held at Utter-McKinley's Viewpark Chapel, Los Angeles, on Saturday, April 9.

Henry M. Woolsey

Henry Marvin Woolsey, 62, mill superintendent for the Hammond Lumber Company at Los Angeles, passed away in St. Luke's Hospital, Pasadena, April 14, following a short illness. He had been with the Hammond company for forty years.

He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Carrie Woolsey; a son, Lester Appsley; two sisters, Ruth Curry Burns and Minnie Adams; and a brother, Roy Woolsey. Funeral services were held in the Church of the Recessional, Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale, on April 16.

Iohn D. Tennant

John Douglas Tennant, 66, prominent lumberman and former vice president and manager of The Long-Bell Lumber Company passed away at his Longview, Washington, home on April 14 following an illness of 12 months. He was a Long-Bell director and member of the advisory committee, having retired from active management duties a yeaf ago.

During the days of the depression, he was called to Washington, D. C., to head the lumber division of the National Recovery Act. He had served as a director of the National Lumber Manufacturers Association, the National Manufacturers Association, and was for many years president of the West Coast Lumbermen's Association, and was

This article is from: