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HYSTER I N DUSTRIAL TRUCKS ARE BUTLT TO DO THE HEAVY WORK

Pictured above is one of many typical examples of how Hyster@ Industrial Trucks are helping to effect trcmendous savings in the cost of handling Lumber.

Even if you are now using lift trucks or have never used industrial trucks of any kind, your Hyster dealer can show you how you can quickly realize more profit from your operation v'ith these multi-purpose utility tools. Your Hyster dealer knows materials handling. . he is an exPert on the problerns and their solution. He can help you x'ith special techniques and cost reducing methods. Call him today...why not take advantage of his materials handling knoq-how?

HYSTER DEALERS GIVE YOU ALL 3!

I PLANNING-your Hysler Deoler will plon r f,:1. il ::lii. jjl:J ]'.,: ff:::'"T,,I:: lo see ifil con be improved. tHE RIGHI SERVICE-omple spore porls stock, shop focililies, foctory-lroined mechonics ond on efficient field service lhol keep your Hyster lift lrucks going on your iob, wherever your iob mighl be locoled. Hysler lrucks ore noled the world over for lheir low downfime.

THE RIGHI TRUCK-for your iob from Hysler's complele line of induslriol lrucks (1.000-30,000 lbs.) ond over 100 iob-ottochmenls for economicol lood hondling.

HYSTER CO'YIPANY

4445 limbs do not fa,ll off as from the trees of the forest, but become stout, gnarly, ugly as the trunk itself. There !s none of the straightness and cylindrical symrnetry of the trees of the forest. The fiber of the wood of the trunk is twisted, knotty, defective, and e,ntirely lacking in quality. It has little value except for firewood. While just a hundred feet away stand its sister trees, tall, straight, round, graceful, strong, a,nd straight of fiber, valuable in a thousand ways for man and his uses.

"wHrcH pRovES hti"i MoTHER NATURE KNOWS NO SOCIALISM, AND THAT SHE TEACH. ES HER CHILDREN THE IMMUTABLE LA\ry THAT COMPETITION, EVEN IN INANIMATE THINGS, MAKES FOR QUALITY, STRENGTH, BEAUTY, AND USEFULNESS. AND THIS SAME LESSON THAT MOTHER NATURE TEACHES CONCERNING TREES, SHE TEACHES US LIKEWISE CONCERNING MEN.''

Arizonq Deolers' | 956 Annuql looms os One of Biggest

Phoenix, Ariz.-Advance reservations for the 1956 convention of the Arizona Retail Lumber & Builders Supply Association at Flagstaff May 17-19 were coming in at a greater rate than any previous time, Secretary-Manager Gus R. Michaels reported earlier this month.

Among the program highlights are talks by California's Si Sweet, assistant director of FHA, who will discuss Title I loans; Jack Doscher, OHI director; Bill Reilly, who will outline Arizona's planned progress, and James C.

L.A. County Hirs Building Peqk

With building permit valuations hitting $137,O85,547 in March 1956, Los Angeles County hit its highest monthly total in the histony of local construction, disclosed Arnold O. Beckman, president of the L. A. Chamber of Commerce. He revealed that the year's first three months totaled $346,+43,950, compared to $310,709,D9 in last year's first quarter. In announcing the new record, Beckman declared that this area's building in 1956's first three months has already beat the entire 1955 building figure for Chicago and Cleveland combined.

O'Malley, Phoenix dealer who is vice-president of the NRLDA, rvho will fly back to the Flagstaff meeting from an NRLDA executive meeting in Washington May 13-16. A panel discussion on Wage-and-Hour, Minimum Wage, and qnion organizational moves in the state will be among subjects in a panel discussion May 17 with Jerry Kelleher' labor consultant, and Frank Ryley, attorney, of the association on hand.

Entertainment events planned include a barbecue the night of May 18 hosted by Southwest Lumber Mills, a cocktail party before the annual banquet May 19, a ladies luncheon May 18 and golf May 17.

Employes of llansen-Pacific Corp., F-ortuna, rejected the lumber and sarvmill workers union of the AFL-CIO 57 to 29 in an I{LRB election.

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