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fhe Grnswer to plywood slorclge problems
Designed to eliminate all the troublesome headaches of plywood storage, Johnson & Flaherty "Plyracks" will handle as many as 220 difterent types of plywood-all fully accessible-in just 100 linear feet.
The secret of "Plyra&s" convenience is their complete flexibility-stacks from L0" to 6' may be stored with equal ease, up to 12 ft. in height. Adjustable hangers eliminate waste space. Slots in side-rails will accommodate removable hangers on lCt/' centers.
To end your lost space problems, use Johnson &Flaherty "Plyracks" and use l0O/o of your plywood storage space -they're economical, too---<all or write for free quotations.

says that the first religion was created when a mother knelt beside the dead body of a loved one, and out of the inspiration born of love and grief came that great yearning of the human heart to *"f,.
If a retail lumber merchant has so deported himself and impressed himself upon his community that his townspeople love him as a neighbor, respect him as a citizen, appreciate him as a skillful merchant of building things; if they are impressed with his business wisdom and believe firmly in his integrity; if in their minds he is the fellow they instinctively think of when they think of building, then who on earth can get this man's business away from him?

The first skilled *ortJ, irr**oJd we have any record of was a guy by the name of Bezaleel. Moses got him to build the tabernacle of the Hebrews, which was built of gold, silver and wood. Exodus says that the Lord filled Bezaleel "with wisdom and skill in timber carving."
Frequently some thinking person is heard to say-"This is the day of the young man," and he seems to think this fact marks a change in human affairs. Which, of course, is not the case. The world has always belonged to the young. Shakespeare wrote his immortal "Hamlet" at the age of 33, Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence at 32, at the age of 31 Daniel Webster was holding his own with those titans of word and thought, Clay and Calhoun; at 30 Lord Clive had conquered India, at 36 Lord Byron had won fame and fortune and was already dead, at 33 Alexander the Great had conquered the world and longed for more worlds to conquer, at 33 Jesus had accomplished His mission and had been crucified. It was always thus. And so, no doubt, it will always be.