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Hoo-Hoo No. 39 Mcmbcrr
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Tclk bv F. B. I Agent
Jesse R. Wagner, resident agent in the San Francisco Bay area for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, was the speakcr at the dinner meeting of Hoo-Hoo Club No. 39, held at the Claremont Hotel, Bsrkeley, April 16.
Mr. Wagner's subject was "The Responsibilities of the F.B.I. in the Current Emergency," and his informal talk was most interesting to his audience. The F.B'I. was formed in 1908, he said, and he told of a number of cases which prove the fact that the department never lets up in its efforts to arrest criminals who come under its jurisdiction. He rnentioned incidentally that out of nearly '100 kidnapings since the Bureau rvas formed, only two remain unsolved. He gave the information that there were 1,800,000 major crirnes in the United States in 1950, which means one every 18 seconds, and said that they rvelcome facts in regard to crimes, fronr the public. The speaker answered a large number of guesfions.
The door prize of two Reveille tickets was won by Kermit Noble of the Western Sierra Lumber Co., Pleasanton, Calif. Other prizes of one Reveille ticket each were won .by John Duarte, Insulite Division of Minnesota & Ontario Paper Co., Oakland, and Andy Anderson, Lincoln Lumber ,Co., Oakland.
Bob Meyer, Home Lumber & Supply Co., San Leandro, Calif., 'rvas chairman of the evening, and introduced the speaker.
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Lee LeBreton, president of the Clu!, presided.
Chairman Ed LaFranchi reported that plans for thc Reveille on May 1l were well ahead, and that Herb Farrell is lining up a great show.
Sacramento Box & Lumber Co. Buildl New Planins Mill and Dry K:lnr
Sacramento Box & Lumber Co., one of the most progressive concerns in the West, has recently completed its new high speed planing mill at Sacramento. The mill is l20xl40 feet, and according to Eric Engstrom, general manager, the daily output runs between 150,000 and 200,000 feet according to the type of stock being run.
Two Ross lift trucks with 8-foot forks unload lumber trucks from the company's big sawmill at Woodleaf, Calif., and bring their loads into the planing mill. All of the mill's machinery is new.
Sacramento Box & Lumber Co. has also built a new dry storage shed which has a capacity of 1,800,000 board feet of lumber. It is 100 by 205 feet.
At the company's sawmill at Woodleaf the nerv dry kilns with a daily capacity of 125,000 feet are already in operation. The kilns are double-end North Coast type, furnished by C. M. Lovsted & Co., Seattle. The kiln buildings are of reinforced concrete construction, and the kilns are fttrnished with the latest type of control instruments.
Adjacent to the kiln buildings there is a series of storage tracks with a capacity of 4 million feet. Automatic stacking equipment is now being installed.
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