
7 minute read
@ur[ Btrhulil Tframhw 6,s.
P.O. BOX 665
Redwood
SATES OFFICE: 928 H Street
VAndyke 2-()3l I rwX:ARG17
ARCATA, CAIIF.
DOUGTAS FIR
QUATITY BAND .SAWN IUI,IBER DEPENDABLE SER,VICE TR,UCK & TR,AItER, RAIt
I lO7 Merchonts Exchonge Bldg. .-.
Son Francisco, Gslifornio
Phone: YUkon 6-5421 fltlLLS ond
PIiANING tUlltt
Smirh River, Goliforniq and personnel, reached through Dlckens 5-2897, are Edward G. Karst and John F. Hanson, partners; and Gayle Heming, sales manager, and Frank Carpenter, buyer.
luf Lumbermen's Tqlk Doesn't lnterfere With Their Golf Gqme
The 410th Terrible Twenty tournament was held at Wilshire Country Club, July 22. Cliff. Simpson was our host and everything was perfectly arranged, even to the breeze on the course. Our dinner was really tops, such steaks and apple pie !
Dr. Paul Rekers edged out Fleming and King with his 82-L2-70-72, by two strokes, in the lower bracket. Ed Bauer and George Gartz tied with 72's net in the higher.bracket and played it off in August. We played the first round matches in the match play tournament.
Cliff Simpson brought our prizes and now we are deal-
CAR,GO
f.qr West Fir Soles Co.
228 9o. Beverly Drive
Beverly Hills, Golif.
BRodshaw 2-4353
CRestview 5-6634 ing only in sterling silver. They will be most appreciated by our wives, as they are useful as well as beautiful. Bowles, our bachelor, can trade his for golf balls.
Frank King, our Most Terrible, is going to Africa this fall to spend two months looking at the animals. It looks like we will need a new Most Terrible about November, as Frank can't run so good, and the burnt-cork gag won't work.
Ed Bauer's friend, Emil Lug of Hacienda (L. A. Millwork Co.), was a candidate in August. Don't let his lumber activities influence you when passing on his candidacy, for eventually we may find a lumber man that doesn't talk shop every available minute.
Our infrequent member, Rex Wall, had arranged our August tournament among the ocean breezes at Virginia. Were you there-Friday, August 19?-H. M. Alling.
-Nafional Foresl Producfs Week October 16-22-
Wise Men snd Fools
"Fools can ask questions that wise men cannot answer," said the teacher.
"That," said little Johnnie, "must be why I failed in my exams.tt
-National Foresl Products Week , October 16-22-
Five Positive Types of Unsuccessful Men
There are five kinds of men whose lives are complete failures, even though they may become very wealthy and powerful. These five are:
1. The Machine. The man who puts routing first. He is often efficient, but he pays a high price for his success. He may be envied by those who do not uirderstand, but there are ashes and cinders in his heart.
2. The Miser. The man who holds fast to all he gets. He loves gold and property more than anything else.-llis life is wrapped up in getting and holding, while all real happiness comes from giving and enjoying.
3. The Hermit. The man who, instead of being A PART of society-a working, useful part-lives APART, keeping to himself, giving nothing of himself to others, and therefore getting nothing.
4. The Snob. The man who despises and imposes upon those who are beneath him in worldly station. He is always a toady to those above him, to the extent that he snubs those below him. There are not many of this sort in business because business weeds them out. But there ARE some.
5. The Autocrat. He knows no opinion but his own. Keeps his heel on those under him in authority. He lives to rule, to dominate. He represents force and authority. HC is often very successful financially, but always hated.
The best way to avoid being one of these lruman misfits is to take an inierest in the oth"er fellow, and firake it a business to lend a hand to others less fortunate than yourself. Learn. Then teach. Get. Then give.
This is the law of life. It is one of the bedrocks that cannot be changed by legislation.
-National Foresl Producls Week October 16-22Stick-ro-it.ivenegs
Josh Billings, the quaint old American humorist, once wrote this sage remark:
"Consider the postage stamp. Its usefulness consists of its ability to stick to one thing until it gets thar."
Kindness to o Tree
The following news iterg is from the Great Falls (Montana) Leader:

"Fred Call, a national forest fire guard, recently saved a giant tree by crawling into the hollow part, which was aflame, and cutting away the burning wood. First he chopped the tree down."
-National Foresf Producls Week October 16-22Rhymed Sellers
A two by four With several more Is lying in your stack; You wonder when You'll see the yen It cost you, coming back. ft never will, Believe me, Bill, Till after you are dead; Unless the stufr Is treated rough, And built into a shed.
It is no good, It's only wood
Wittr ri'frich your yard is filled; It isn't worth A cent on earth
Unless it's used to build.
It doesn't pay For you to say Bad words or to abuse it. A lot of tin
It will bring in, If you will rightly use it.
-Nafional Foresf Producls Week October 16-22Menfql fllsnsions
A man's house should be on the hilltop of cheerfulness and serenity, so high that no shadows rest upon it, and where the morning comes so early, and the evening tarries so late, that the day has twice as many golden hours as those of other men. He is to be pitied whose house is in some valley of grief between the hills, with the longest night and the shortest day. Home should be the center of Joy.
-Nafional Foresf Products Week , . October 16-22-
25914 President Ave., Horbor City, Colif. P.O. Box 667
DAvenport 6-6273
Telephones: SPruce 5-3461 TErminol3-6183
Monufocturers ond Jobbers of SASH AND DOORS TO THE RETAIT TUMBER DEATER
PRODACTS of PROGRESS
No doubt obour ir,.n OORi i,IODERN METHODS hove mode lumber-drying focilities o most profitoble investment for ony mill, regordless of size or drying requirement. Moore Cross-Circulotion Kilns-products of the progress which hos generoted from modern methods--ore so perfected thot lumber drying is sofer, more economicol ond more profitoble thon ever before! Why not osk o Moore Engineer obout kiln designs which could put on end to your drying problem. You con expect o prompt replyt
Moonu Dny Krr,r Compnny

Wro/no./" bitb;lntoa
FOR,EIGN AND DOMESTIC HARDWOODS
. xlnbwooo
MOUTDINGS.
Cleor Oqk Thresholds
. Rod ond Spirol Dowels
. PLYWOOD
Wood Finishes, Glues ond Hordwood Speciolties
Pnrooo/o
Rolph }V. Steffen'of the Associated Redwood MiUb office in Downey, Calif., made a sales swing through Kansas, Oklahoma aJld Texas, and reports business is now on the upgrade through the Southwest itroe lltrk of Kirk Lumber & Building Materials Co., Santa Maria, and representative-atlarge for the Lumber Merchants Assn., San Francisco, attended the NRLDA re-districting meeting in Washington, D.C,, the flrst week of August. tion at Valley hospitef folowing the accident. ilack Allenby, former assistant salesmanager at HansenPaciffc Corp., Joined the Fair Hipsley Lumber Co., August 1, as manager of its Cloverdale plant.
X'ormer L. A. lumberman Lou Woldner and his wife Winnie entertained eight guests July 31 at a swimming luau celebrating Lou's birthday.
Three prominent Los Angeles Hoo-Hoo were guests of the F ullerton, Calif., Shrine Club early last month at a, lunchbon. Dee Essley, Harvey Koll and Don Bufkln told the Shriners about Club 2's promotion in National F orest Products Week, about its LeRoy Boys' Home projects, and about Hoo-Hoo itself to an excellent resporute.
Newly elected Dubs prexy George Monnler of Rein- hart Lumber & Planing Mlll Co., has good reason for popping hls vest-buttons lately. His pretty and talented l6-year-old daugh- ter, Michele (right), is a real whiz on ice and san Francisco's own 1960 Cen- tral Pacific senlor Lady Champion. Representing the Skating Club, Michele is a Gold Medalist holder, which means she has passed all eight U.S. Figure-Skating tests. She continues her training on the Sutro lce Rinf ln San Francisco with her heart set on a place with the World's Team and, ultimately, a place on the 1964 Winter olympics fig- ure-skating team. George Monnier himself. incidentatly, used to be quite an "ice bird," both amateur and pro, but now it's become a question of "Who's teaching whom" when he sidles out on the ice with "the Champ."
Ilora.ce Wolfe expects to be away from the HollJrwood offices of Marquart-Wolfe Lumber Co. at least three weeks on his combined business-pleasure trip through Nevada, Montana, Idaho and Ca.nada.
Nello Hollanil of the Talbot Lumber Company offices in Beverly Hills, took ofr on a 3-week cruise of the Pacific Northwest . . . "just to look at the trees," she said.
' Charllo Tuoker of OwensParks Lumber Co., Vernon, Calif., shop steward for Lumber & Sawmill Workers Local 2288, reports Charlle Ba,llestero is vacationing in northern California, illm MoConnoll is vacationing in Yosemite, and Tanily Hooper attended the International Jamboree in Colorado Springs with his Boy Scouts troop. Tucker's own ball team, Legion Post 188, played in the district finals.

Whirtier
Ralph E. Shirley, 38, a survivor of the Bataan death march in WWIL sufrered severe burns over nearly one-third of his body, August 23, when gasoline vapors exploded as he was fueling a lumber truck at tlte Chandler Lumber Co., 7817 Van Nuys Blvd., North HollSrwood. The flash set his clothing afire but other workers in the retail yard ripped off his flaming shirt and beat out the fire. Mr. Shirley, who spent four years in a Japanese prison camp after the capture of the Philippines, was reported to be in falr condi-
Ammurition to "bang-ofr"
Jerry McNell's new title as District Sales Manager in California, Nevada and Arizona for The Visador Co., manufacturer of flush-door lites and louvers, was provided at the recent Los Ang'eles Home Show by the introduction of Visador's new "Beauti-Mould" which, Jerry declares, "created a darn sight more excitement than my new job title."
PeteStearnofB&MLumber Co., Ukiah, was seriously injured last month in an auto accident near Weaverville, but the popular Mehdocino county lumberman fared better than his car and is reported coming back strong.
I. S. Brown of Industrial Lumber Co., Glendale, entertained 16 couples at a Hamburger Luau last month. They say he's "some chef."
Dick TVohy, prominent engineer and son of Art Twohy, veteran southern California lumberman, has returned from a business-pleasure trip witlt his wife through the Northwest and