1 minute read

PINE. SPRUCE. CEDAR FIR - RED\TOOD ALAN A. SHIVETY WHOTESALE

fidence which prescribes limited constitutions to bind down those whom we are obliged to trust with our power. Our Constitution has accordingly fixed the limits to which, and no further, our confidence will go. In questions of power, then, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief with the chains of the Constitution." *:8

"Men are valuable just in proportion as they are able and willing to work in harmony with other men."-Elbert Hubbard *:r*

Socrates taught, nearly five-hundred years B.C., that a man only succeeded by the building and development of his own character, and that in order to do that successfully, he must be able to stand and'watch himself go by. He said that a man should look upon his own mind, his own character, as a thing apart, and he should sit ofr and watch its workings, and judge its development, its character, and its strength, in an entirely abstract manner. If he found that his mind was showing small weaknesses, such as anger, envy, jealously, fear, etc., he should realize its imperfections and go to work to build it up. So men have called that Socratic self-inspection. :F*

"It is so easy, so very easy, to misunderstand, misinterpret, misjudge. Give everyone the benefit of a possible error, and discount your own observation liberally. This is advice for all of us-for you and the other fellow-because the very advice we give and apply to others is an injunction we may need ourselyss."-J.

Corwin

Business is not static. If il *Ju, there would be many surefire formulas for business success. Business changes constantly, and sometimes violently. Alert management shapes policies to meet current needs.

lewis Joins Mqr-Moc lumber Co.

Jack Lewis, one-time Bakersfield retailer. has ioined Dick McKannay at the Mar-Mac Lumber Co.'in San"Francisco. f ewis has just been with Kabax Lumber Co., Grants Pass. Ore.

Son Diego Hoo-Hoo Elecf Seeley

(Continued from Page 14)

Ofificer, and Bill Seeley, Bill Evenson, Bill Pumfrey, Wes Thomas, Jim Smith, Don Schrage, Perry Smith,- Eddie Gavotto and Bob Heckel.

Then came the election of officers for the club's 1959-60 term. The popular Bill Seeley, a prime mover in the club's far-famed Hoo-Hoo Quartet and long one of Club 3's most actively interested members, came into his own as president_of_this_enterprising club, succeeding the equally iopr:- lar dealer, John Collins, who gave Clu6 3 one of its best terms in his 1958-59 guardianship.

Young Bill Evenson was eleited vice-president of the group and-this will surprise no one-Chuck Hampshire was elected for the 13th term (or is it his 14th?) as Club 3's treasurer without equal. Each officer was 'given an ovation when his election was announced.

This article is from: