18 minute read

NilNT & BU$$DI,I, $AI,T$ CO.

TUMBERMEN Can Now Sell

Branded Redwood FEN(ES

Douglos Fir - Redwood - Western Red

Cedcrr - Pine - Port Orford €edor Shingles

By

SHIP-RAIL-BARGE TRUCK AND TRAIIER

Representing

Coos Boy Lumber Go., Coos Bcy

Inman-Poulsen Lumber Co., Porlland

Coqst Pocific Lumber Co., Eureko

Honley Lumber Go., Eureko

High Sierro Pine Mills, Oroville ond other

Northern Coliforniq cnd Clregon Mills OFFICES sAN FRANCISCO 24

1455 Custer Ave.

Mission 8-4332

812 Eost 59lh 5r. LO' ANGETES I

Adoms 810l

WAREHOUSE STOCKS OF PTYWOOD AND DOORS

SAN FRANCISCO 24

1455 Custer Ave.

Mission 8-4332

OAKTAND 3 9029 Sqn Leondro St. lockhqven 9-7914

WAR,EHOUSE STOCKS OF [U'NBER, PTYWOOD AND DOOR.S tOS ANGETES I

7OO Eost 59rh St.

Adqms 8101

1571 So. 28rh St.

SAN DIEGO 13

Frqnklin 7425

We BRAND OUR PRODUCTS And Are Proud Of Thot Brond You are used to selling famous brand merchandise, and know what those brands mean to You and your customers. These brahds are fo.r assurance of customer acceptance.

'YIISSION PADR.E FENCES Will Sqtisly,loo.

Our Redwood Fences sotisfy becouse they ore groded to construction heorl or betfer, with o wide voriety from which to choose. Here you see only seven designs we moke ony lype you or your customer desires rough, combed, or surfoced. Order Gothic, chopped, or squore, in onY length or width. We mqke whol you wont.

Wrife for complele informqlion now.

Tacoma Lnmher $ales, Inc.

7l{ W. Olympic Blvd.

tOS ANGEI.ES I5, CAIJF.

Telephone PRospect ll08

Brcrnch Office:

1030 G Street, Arccrtc, Calif, Phone 705

GANGO fIR and and EAIL REDWOOD REPRESENTING

St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co.

TqcomGL Wcsh.

Deliqnce Milt Co.

Tacomcr, Wcrsh.

Dickmcn Lumber Compcny

Tccomcr, WaBh.

Karlen-Danris Compcnry

Tccomcr, Wash.

Tocomcr Harbor Lumber & Timber Co, Tcrcomc, Wash.

G. L Speier Co.

Arccrtcr, Cqlil. Also

Northern Ccrlilornic crnd Southern Oregon

FIR crnd REDWOOD MIIJ.S

Ponderosa Pine Manufacturers Launch Decorator Doors

The latest trend in color styling is the decoration of thc familiar interior pine panel door. Through the medium of their promotional agency-Ponderosa Pine Woodworkmanufacturers of stock ponderosa pine panel doors shcrtly will launch a campaign to stimulate this trend and the sale of their products through the biggest door advertising program in the history of the stock woodr,vork industry, accrding to D. G. Pilkington, general manager of the Ass'rciation.

At a recent meeting of door manufacturers in Chicago, the "Rancho" 3 equal panel door.was announced to a g.roup of building paper editors which will be a leader in the industry's extensive line of ponderosa pine "Decorator Doors" in a wide variety of panel designs.

At luncheon the editors were given a brief summal.y of Ponderosa Pine Woodrvork's program of consumer advertising and promotion as well as a preview of a new, fullcolor,24-page booklet of ideas for door decoration.

In the afternoon W. M Stuart, president of the MartinSenour Co., paint manufacturer of Chicago, spoke on r:olor and the infinite variety of new decorative effects obtainable through advancement in the science of color. Following Mr. Stuart's talk a demonstration of the applicatior-l of his company's new line of wood stains u'as given by a mernber of its research laboratory.

This meeting represented the third in a series of nreetings being held by ponderosa pine door manufacturers to develop products, decorative effects and promotional icleas that r,r'ill enable the architect to enhance the beauty of home design, provide the builder with a nerv selling featu:e, and stimulate door sales for the retail lumber dealer.

New elements in the industry's product development anrl promotional plans are being formulated and will be be announced from time to time. Ponderosa Pine Woodwork, National Woodwork Manufacturers Association antl the Western Pine Association are collaborating in this nationwide plan to make the public panel door conscious through their decoration r,r,'ith paint, stains, natural finishes, r,vallpaper, decalcomanias and other means.

Construction Activity in June 1952

New construction outlays during the first half of 1952 reached a record total of nearly $15 billion, according to a joint report of the Building Materials Division, U.S. Department of Commerce, and the U.S. Labor Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Moderate expansion of most types of construction activity took place during June, r.vith nerv construction totaling almost $3 billion, up 7 per cent over May and 6 per cent above June 1951. Private outlays of $1.9 billion in June were about the same as year ago, rvhile public construction expenditures of nearly $1.1 billion r"'ere 23 per cent larger than in Tune 1951.

The first six-months' total of new construction outlays showed a 4 per cent increase over last year resulting from substantially larger expenditures for military facilities, industrial expansion, and public utility construction. Militarr. projects and defense plant construction n'ere continuing to expand in June, but a declining trend in private outlays for new factories marked the completion of some important phases of the current industrial expansion program.

Private spending for residential building during the first half of 1952 was B per cent less than a year ago. Practically all of the lower volume was in the first quarter of the year. In the opening months of 1952, the level of rl,ork on nerv housing under construction was consicleral>ly lolver than in the January-Ma:ch 1951 period .rvhen the unusually high rate reflected the huge number of honses and apartments started toward the end of 1950. Second-cluarter expenditures for new housing were almost as high this year as last. Dollar outlays for home improvements, in the form of additions and alte:ations, were greater.

Commercial and recreational building picked up in June partly as a result of approval by the National Production Authority during recent months of several hundred additional projects. Compared rvith 1951, horvever, these types of building activity still lvere at relatively lou' levels. Highway const:uction shorved a substantial increase in -June and total highway expenditures for the first half of 1952 were 14 per cent above the total for the same period last year. School building and public power facilities were n.roderately ahead of 1951 for the first six months of the year.

Appointed Supervisor ol Scles Wcrehouses

H. W. Van Natta, of Atlanta, Georgia, has been appointecl Supervisor of Sales Warehouses for {arbor Plyn'ood Corporation, Aberdeen, Wasl-rington.

Mr. Van Natta has had many 1'ears of experience in merchandising plywood and related building materials, having been associated with Harbor Plywood Corporation and one of its predecessor companies for t.iventy-three years. During the past three years he has served as manager of sales outlets in botl-r the Georgia and Florida areas and for thirteen years prior to that tirne was manager of Harbor's Atlanta, Georgia sales branch.

In his new capacity Mr. Van Natta .ivill be responsible for operation of Harbor's u'arehouses at all locations throughout the United States.

Phil:ppine Hoo-Hoo Club Organized

Roy Stanton Sr., E,. J. Stanton & Son, Los Angeles, and Mrs. Stanton, have returned from the Orient where they visited the Philippine fslands, Hong Kong and Japan. They were away several weeks.

They spent three weeks in the Philippines at which time Roy visited the sawmills on the Islands. While in Manila, Roy organized the Philippine Hoo-Hoo Club and held a concatenation. 21 Kittens were initiated at the concat, and the Club l-ras 35 members.

They stopired off at Honolulu, and rvhile there Roy got the formation of a Hoo-Hoo Club under way.

They made the trip over on the President Cleveland, and returned on the President Wilson.

Asphalt Tile \(/ax

E. L. Bruce Co., Memphis, Tenn., has a nelv product, a special lrrax to use on asphalt tile floors. Bruce Asphalt Tile Wax is a quick drying, easyto-apply self-polishing' wax. It can be used on any clean asphalt tile floor although for best results the manufacturer recommends that it be used u'ith Bruce Asphalt Tile Cleaner which has been on the market several years.

Riverside Hoo-Hoo Meeting

The Riverside Hoo-Hoo Club held a dinner meeting at the Victoria Country Club, Riverside, on Friday evening, July 11. President C. M. Crane presided at the meeting.

Following dinner, Jack Zrlly, former Notre Dame football player and now a member of the Los Angeles Rams professional football team, shou'ed a motion picture giving the highlights of the Los Angeles Rams games last year, including the championship playoff betlveen the Cleveland Indians and Los Angeles Rams which was rvon by the Rams. After the shorving of the picture. he ansu'ered a number of questions.

The program was enjoyed by the gathering and X{r. Zilly n as given a fine round of apprause.

Among the visitors at the meeting \\,ere a delegation from San Diego, including Carl Gavotto, Supreme Hoo-Hoo on the Supreme Nine, and Hugh McConnell, president, and Syd Smith, past president, of the San Diego Hoo-Hoo Club. Nate Parsons and Ed Martin from I-os Angeles also attended.

Moves Genercrl Office

The E. K. Wood Lumber Company announces the closing of its Oakland, Calif. plant and the moving of its general offrces to Room 1115, Merchants Excl.range Building, San Francisco. The ner,v telephone number is EXbrook 2-0736.

When you see lhe CRA grode mork, you con be SURE rhe Redwood thot beors it will give top on-the-iob performonce-every time. Thot's becouse grode-morked, trode-morked, Cerfified Dry Redwood hos been uniformly groded, milled ond seosoned lo exocling stondords. lt's iust good business lo feolure the besi-CRA Redwood-the Redwood you con be sure of-the Redwood processed by the reputo ble member fi rms of the

Son lor Lcrry Weilcrnd

A son was born to Larry and Mrs. Weiland on June 26, 'rveighing 7 lbs. Il oz., and measwing 2ll inches tall. He has been named Kenneth Michael. Proud papa is the proprietor of A-Arrow Building Supply & Lumber Co., 534 N. Mission Rd., Los Angeles.

cPR 152

(Continued from Page 4) ers anywhere in the Continental United States. sales, sales for export, and sales to Territories sessions are subject to CPR 61 (Export).

Certain Products and Persons Not Covered

Export and pos-

The species and areas covered by the new regulation are delineated in such a way that it will not conflict with Ceiling Price Regulation 128 (Ceiling Prices for Pacific Northwest Douglas Fir, True Fir and West Coast Hemlock Lumber). Products covered by CPR 128 include: Fir lumber produced in California and in and west of the Cascade Mountains in Oregon and Washington, when sold graded under the rules of the West Coast Bureau of Lumber Grades and Inspection, and fir railroad ties cut in California and in those parts of Washington and Oregon in and west of the Cascade Mountains.

The regulations are phrased so that manufacturers of Douglas and White Fir lumber, produced in California and in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon and Washington, have the choice of pricing under either regulation, depending on rvhich rules they grade under.

Resellers, in,cluding wholesalers, retailers and operators of distribution yards are not covered by this regulation, but are subject to the General Ceiling Price Regulation (GCPR), or Supplementary Regulations D or 87 to the GCPR.

What This Regulation Does

Dollars-and-cents ceilings are spelled out for standard grades and sizes of lumber and railroad ties cut from the various species, in carload lots, f.o.b. mill, f.o.b. car at mill, f.o.b. car at mill's customary shipping point in the case of off-rail mills, and f.o.b. truck at mill.

Ceilings fllustrative of the spelled-out ceilings, are the following basic ceiling prices per 1,000 board feet on representative volume items, which are for air-dried or kiln-dried lumber, surfaced on four or two sides, unless specified otherrvise :

Ponderosa Pine-4/{'x RW (random widths), D Select, $215; 6/4" x RW, No. 2 Shop, 9107; 1 x 12" No. 2 Common, $l 16; I x 12" No. 3 Common, $85; 1" x RW, No 4 Common, $6e.

Idaho White Pine-l x6" and 1x8", Quality, $230; 1x iZ' Sterling, $139; I x 17' Standard, $109 ; 1" x RW, Utility, $7s.

Sugar Pine-S/('x RW and 6/1" x RW, D Select, $245: 5/4" x RW and 6/4'x RW, No. 2 Shop, gll2;5/4,,x RW, No. 2 and Better Common. $127.

Larch and Douglas Fir-1 x 4" and. wider, No. 3 and Better Common, $79.50; 7 x4" and wider, No. 4 Common.

$65.50;2x4" No. 1 Dimension permitting up to 25 per cent No. 2, green, $75;2 x4" No. 1 Dimension permitting up to 25 per cent No. 2, dry, $85.

White Fir-l x4" and wider, No. 3 and Better Common, $83; I x4" and wider No.4 Common, $67.50;2x{'No. 1

Dimension permitting up to 25 per cent No. 2, dry, $82.

Engelmann Spruce and Lodgepole Pine-4/4,, x RW D Select, $190; 4/4'x RW, D and Better Select, $195; 1x 6,,, 1x8", 1x 10" No. 2 Common, $115; lxlT' No. 2 Common, $116; 1x 10'and 1x 12" No. 3 Common, $89; 1x4r, and wider, No. 4 Common, $72.

Inland Red Cedar-I x 4" and wider, D and Better Select, $166; 1x 8", 1x 1C[' and I xlZ' No. 3 and Better Common, $93; 1 x4" and. wider No. 4 Common, $52.

Incense Cedar-Pencil Blank Stock, No. 1 $75, No. 2 965, No. 3, $35.

Delivered Sales

When sales are made on a delivered basis, appropriate charges for transportation may be added to the f.o.b. basic ceiling prices.

When sales on a delivered basis are delivered by common carrier, the addition to the ceiling for transportation is computed with certain exceptions by multiplying established weights set forth in the regulation for the various lumber items by the applicable common or contract carrier freight rate in effect at the time of shipment from the point of origin to the point of destination. The cost of a truck haul and handling after shipment by rail may also be added. When sales on a delivered basis are delivered by private trucks over distances of more than 30 miles, the additional charge may not exceed that computed on the basis of existing common or contract carrier rates. For short hauls by private truck the following amounts may be added: 10 miles or less, $3 per 1,000 board feet; more than 10 and not more than 20 miles, $4; more than 20 and not more than 30 rniles, $5.

In certain circumstances the added charges for transporlation may be computed on the basis of freight rates from specified basing points to points of destination, as follows:

On all shipments except fir, the rate to any destination in California from Klamath Falls, Oregon, or Susanville, California, whichever is lower, may be employed in computing charges for shipment to such a destination from any point of origin in California.

Portland, Oregon, may be employed as a basing point for computing freight charges for shipment of fir from points of origin in California, Oregon, Washington and Nevada to cestinations in California.

The rate from Klamath Falls, Susanville, or Spokane, Washington, whichever is the lowest, may be used to any destination in computing charges for shipment of lumber produced in South Dakota, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, Arizona or Nerv Mexico, if higher than the actual rate.

Retail Sales

For limited retail sales, producers may add $9 per 1,000 hoard feet to the basic ceilings, but no addition to cover t{elivery may be made on this type of sale.

A retail sale is one of less than 20,W board feet, made to a contractor or ultimate consumer for construction or 'maintenance. Retail sales must be delivered to the job site as specified by the buyer. The latter must have the privilege of exchanging or returning unused lumber and of obtaining prompt adjustment of any shortages in delivery from stocks maintained for that purpose.

The retail charge may not be made on sales to commercial or industrial users for remanufacture or to resellers for resale.

Commissions

Commissions paid for sales made through commission rnen who operate independently of buyers and sellers may

(Continued on Page 3O)

cPR 152

(Continued'fiom Page 28) ,,,,1 be added by sellers to the f.o.b. ceilings, but the selling price plus commission must not exceed the f.o.b. ceiling plus 4 per cent.

Ceilings on Special Items

Ceilings for nonstandard items which cannot be priced otherwise unddr the regulation must be determined by application by registered mail, return receipt requested, to the Office of Price Stabilization, Forest Products Division, Washington 25, D.C.

The application must describe the item, set forth a proposed ceiling price, report the differential between the proposed ceiling and the ceiling of the most comparable item priced in the regulation, and state the use to lvhich the buyer will put the special item.

Sales may be made at the proposed ceiling, subject to adjustment to any change in the ceiling made by OPS.

The proposed ceiling will be deemed automatically approved T days after filing unless OPS changes it in the rneantime or requests additional information, or 15 days after the furnishing of requested additional information if OPS does not act further in the meantime.

Mixed Car and Mixed Truck Shipments

On mixed car and mixed truck shipments, the otherwise applicable ceilings are increased by $3.50 per 1,000 board feet.

A mixed car or truck shipment consists of four or more of the items listed below. In a mixed car shipment, there must be at least 1,000 board feet of each of four items. and in a mixed truck shipment, at least 250 board feet of each. The items are:

Dimension; plank and timbers; commons and box; selects; pattern stock; siding; lath; casings, base and moldings.

Stop-Over Car Loadings

When lumber is loaded on a railroad car n'hich has stopped in transit, and which has been loaded with another seller's lumber, $2 per 1,000 board feet may be added to the f.o.b. ceilings, provided the addition for a mixed car shipment is not also made.

Pricing Rules

When an order does not specify a particular grade of lumber, the charge must be for the grade or grades actually shipped, but may not exceed the charge for No. Z Common.

When a shipment contains a greater percentage of short lengths than permitted by the regulation for random lengths, the excess short lengths must be priced separately in order to sell the balance as random lengths.

In all random length shipments, the charge may not exceed the appropriate ceiling for the averag.e length shipped.

When a buyer waives moisture content requirements, he may not be charged more than the appropriate ceiling {or green lumber. When such sales are made on a delivered basis, the appropriate established weights for green lumber may be used in computing transportation charges.

Cash Discounts

The same cash discounts allorved during the period January 25 to February 24, 1951 , must be continued. Manufacturers not in business during this period must allow a 2 per cent cash discount for payments within 1O days from date of invoice or date of bill of lading, rvhichever is later.

Records

Persons who sell, and buyers rvho in the regular course of business buy, 20,00O board feet or hbre of lumber covered by the regulation in any month, must keep for two years records of their sales or purchases for the month. The records must include dates of transactions ; names and addresses of buyers and sellers ; 'il'hether the sales are f.o.b. or delivered ; specifications of the items; p:ices charged, including all qdditions, extras and discounts; points of origin and points of destination of shipments; means of transportation used; amounts added for transportation and basing polnts used, if any.

fnvoices must describe the lumber sold and state the f.o.b. prices. They must state all workings, specifications, extras and services for which extra charges are made, but invoices need not show the charges separately for such items. On sales on a delivered basis, invoices must also show the destination and the applicable rail or truck freight I ates.

Buyers may comply with the record-keeping requirements l;y retaining invoices containing the required information. Buyers and seller likewise must continue to keep the records they made and kept under the requirements of the GCPR.

45-Ton Lock \(/eishs One-Third Ounce

Inexpensive new "jimmy-proof" burglar protection rs furnished by a new window lock being manufactured and marketed nationally by Safety Set Window Lock Co., Box 19725, La Tijera Station, Los Angeles 43, Calif.

Two powerful, slim inserts of fine steel, heat treated to withstand 45 tons pressure per square inch, are supplied for each window. Once in place both halves of windows (all wooden types) may be locked closed or five inches open, able to resist many more tons of leverage than any burglar can apply.

Anyone can install a set (two per windorv) with only a hand drill in less than three minutes. Carded in individual sets, the Safety Set sells for 39 cents per set retail. Standard trade discounts are allowed. i r

Ioins Scles Stcrll

Norm Carney has joined Lumber Co., Los Angeles. Bros. & Co., Los Angeles, lumber trade.

the sales stafi of the Spalding Norm lvas formerly with Baugh and is well known to the retail

CooprR,lttoncax LurnsEP Co'

Americon Bonk Bldg., Portlond 5, Oregon

Phone BEacon 2124 TeletYPe PD4il

PurveYors of Forest Products to Coliforniq Retqilers

FIR-9PRUCE-HEIiAIOCK CEDAR-PINE-PIYWOOD

RePresenling

Frost Hqrdwood Floorc, Inc' in the Sqcrqmenlo qnd Sqn Jooquin Volleys

FROSTBRAND FTOORING OAK_PECAN-BEECH

. Douglqs Fir

. Ponderosq qnd

Sugor PINE

Redwood

. Plywood

. Shingler lqth

Compdrly, Inc.

Johns-Monville Producls

. Simpson Logging Co. Products

. Nu-Dor Sliding Door

Fromes

Wholesole Dislributors -Direct Mill Shippers -Serving Southern CALIFORNIA'S Inlqnd Empire

THREE CONVEN'EN' I'OCATIONS

BTOOXTINGTON TUSTIN BAKERSFIETD

Ihe liiest drving of Western Woods, Hard & Solt Donestic -iiitlntp"it6d Woods up to SO'tengths-up to 5"thick

Cuslom MlLtlNG

. RE-SAWINg suRFAClNe...

SIIOOTH.EXD TRIMMING . MOUTDINOS. S "rt.tJii- crois circulating kilns operated by trained experienced kiln engineers,

cPR 155

(Continued from page 4) of the l0oth Meridian and east of the Cascade Mountains and produced from Western Red Cedar in the entire portion of the united States west of the l00th Meridian. rne toottr Meridian runs from North to South from the Dakotas through Texas.

Poles are used to support telephone and electric trans_ mission lines. Piling is used in the foundations of build_ ings and in .construction of bridges and docks.

Select logs are required, and are generally cut in longer lengths than sawlogs. They must be free from defects a-nd meet strict requirements for straightness. Cutting of the longer lengths requires greater cire and heaviei equip_ ment.

Cedar poles and pil]"q of longer lengths are cut mainly in the coastal areas. fnland productiorr- i. g"n".ally in the shorter and intermediate lengths.

Ceilings established by the new regulation are approxi_ mately at the levels prevailing under the GCpR, .*."pt to, those on Western Red Cedar of more than 55 feet in length, which are approximately 10 per cent above GCPR p.icesl

GCPR ceilings on poles and piling were low in relation to sawlogs, particularly on longer lengths. During the first half of 1950 the demand was light, accentuated by compe_ tition from light-weight steel towers. production du.i,rg 1950 was about two-thirds 1949. Long_term contracts are common in the industry. Consequently prices in effect dur_ ing the GCPR base period *"r. g"rr"rrliy at the pre_Korea level. Under the low GCPR ceilings, production of long Western Red Cedar poles almost stoppei.

To stimulate the production requi.ed for essential power transmission lines, the new regulation increases ."iling, on long cedar poles and piling, restoring them to the lon!_ term normal relationship with the ceiling on sal"logs. it provides the industry with uniform, idltinarte .Jitir.g. consistent with the requirements of the defense p.og.uil.

With Roddis Cclilornicr, Inc.

Lou Holland, manager of the lumber division, Roddis california, rnc., Los Angeles, announces that Bob Stevens, iormerly with one of -the major building materials dealers, has been appointed office manager. He ivill assist Mr. Hor- land and Carl Poynor.

National Building Material Distributors Association Opens Chicago Office

The National Building Material Distributors Assoc iation opened new offices at 111 West Washington Street, Chicago 2, Illinois, on June 1 and announced the appointment of S. M. Van Kirk as secretary-manager.

Formerly assistant manager of the f nsulation Board Institute, Van Kirk attended Illinois Institute of Technology and prior to World War II was in the sales department of United States Gypsum Company. Leaving the Corps of Engineers as a major in September, 1946, he became associ- ated with the Insulation Board Institute, where he han_ dled technical and promotional work for that group until the present time. His entire background has been in the construction and building material field.

Officers of the association for lgSZ are : John p. Ashton, Des Moines, fowa, president; Art E. Lundgren, Tacoma, Washington, vice president; Harold W. Spaiks, St. Louis, Missouri, treasurer. The board of directors include the officers and Spencer N. Havlick, Green Bay, Wisconsin; W. E. Loefelmacher, Rockford, Illinois; and Lee T. Mc_ Court, Memphis, Tennessee.

Record Advertising Budget

United States Plywood Cbrporation today approvcd a record yearly advertising budget of more than $1,250,000, it was announced by S. W. Antoville, vice president ancl director of sales.

During the past year, he said, the company l.ras increased its number of warehouse distribution units throughour the country to 52 and enlarged the scope of its key dealer pro_ gram to the point where it now comprises 1700 lumber yards.

New products to be featured in the forthcoming campaign include Novoply, a ne wkind of laminate made of ,esirr- i-_ pregnated wood fibers, and Armorply Chalkboard which consists of green porcelain-enameled steel glued to ply.n,ood.

Representing on a wholesale, direct mill shipment basis some of the older and better Fir and Pine manufacturers in Oregon and Northern California GREEN OR DRY ROUGH OR SURFACED

By rail or truck

lorest Products $ales Compnny

8611 Crenshaw Blvd. INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA ORegon 8-3858 And Repeof BUS'NESS

-r.rlong Sotisfled Customers

With WINDELER RED\(/OOD TANKS

Are his famiiy ond his home. Help youi Gu3lomsl moke his home o rcol plecrure by rtocking JOHN W. KOEHI guorcntecd WOOD PRODUCTS.. . WOOD WINDOWS, WOOD SASH qnd WOOD DOORS, qnd rhe new ROILING 3[AT INIENIOR DECORAIIVE BIINDS.

Yes, you will hqve sotisfted cuslomets wilh Windeler Wotering ond Storoge Tonks, becquse we pul 66 yeors of conslruclion experience inlo eqch tqnk. Remember, q sqtisfted cuslomer for one producl is good public relqlions for your olher merchqndise.

Tqnks, beco conslruclion Remr or -nDIlD -rdll--s,

Ask obout our lorgc voricty of typas cnd sizcr. Wc oko do cu3tom milling lo your ordcr.

GEOR.GE WINDEIER, GO. Ltd.

M anuf actarers Since 1885 22II JERROID AVE., SAN TRANCISGO 24, GAII'.

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