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D00RS "RGzo", "General" and "Trusscd GorG" IIllllRS
WE HAI|E THE FACILITIES TO SERVICE YtlUR ACCOUNT!
When you qre looking for PROPER.LY MANUFACTURED lumber -then you should coll RICHIYfOND 9392-becquse we hcrve the proper fqciliries lo service your qccounl. . . . We nre Volume Distributors of Pqcific Coqst Softwoods from the mills of Schqecher-KuXr ofiering direct shipments vio Cargo, Roil qnd Truck of Rough qnd Surfqced Lumber to the Reroil Lumber Deqlers of Southern Cqliforniq. Those EXTRA PR.OFITS will be YOURS when you coll us . . .
I Whcrt I Learned About Spirituclity From The lleathen
(As told to an American audience by an American missionary who had recently returned from India.)
I had heard tJris serious looking, dignified Hindoo mention the name of God several times, and I had a strong desire to ask him his idea of God. I refrained for some time, thinking it might be embarrassing to ask a heathen about God. I knew it would embarrass the average American to ask him that question, and how much more it would be likely to embarrass this heathen.
But one day I plucked up my courage, and when I heard him mention God-in the most reverent fashion-I asked him if he could and would tell me his idea of what and who God is? He replied: "Why surely, friend, I will be glad to tell you. ft is so simple, when you really understand God, to explain about Him. I will tell you just as my father told me.
"When I was a boy of ten, my father took me out one day into the garden. ft was a wonderful day in spring. The sun was shining. The sky was clear and blue. The air was filled with the song of birds, and everywhere nature was smiling. The grass, and flowers, and shrubs were wonderful in their spring garments, the perfume of the flowers \,eas everywhere, and everything was delightful to the eye, the ear, and all the senses.
"And my father said to me: 'Son, I've brought you out here to tell you about God, for it is time that you knew and understood Him. Now, son, when you see all these beautiful trees, and flowers, and other delightful growing ,and blooming things of the world, and all the other good and beautiful things that surround you and delight your heart and mind, always rememhgr this, my Son: that God made all these good and beautiful things. He MADE all these good and beautiful things; He is IN all these good and beautiful things; He is OF all these good and beautiful things; God IS all that is good and beautiful.
"'And, Son, when you hear the music of the songs of the birds, and the rustle of the winds in the trees, and the song of the brook, and all the harmonies and wonderful things that surround you in life, remember this: that God made all that harmony. He MADE all harmony, He IS all harmony my Son.
"'And, Son, when you see this wonderful light that ilIumines the world, making all living things to grow, and all beautiful and harmonious things to live, and making it possible for us to see and enjoy all these wonderful things of the world, remember this, my Son: God MADE the light! He is IN the light! He is oF the light! He IS the light, my Son.
" 'And Son, remember this: that as you go through life your duty is simply to remember that you must never DO anything, or SAY anything, or THINK anything that will mar the GOODNESS and the BEAUTY and the HARMONY and the LIGHT that God made. and that God IS."'
Ancient Advertising
H. G. Wells once said, when speaking of advertising, that the twelve Apostles were "drummers" advertising salvation, and that St. Paul, raising his voice at Athens, was a mighty advertising specialist long before the days of big type and printing presses.

You can go still further back. The rainbow was the first large size color advertisement, guaranteeing that the earth would never again be destroyed by flood.
Caesar, writing on the walls of Rome the proceedings of the senate, prepared the first famous political advertisement. And the great Asiatic King who inscribed on his tomb, "I am Cyrus, O man," prepared the first and most personal advertisement.
To advertise means to inform: and information is life.
As part or the the students were asked to write a brief definition of a self-made man. Abright-eyed young lady, wrote this one: "A self-made marr is like a self-made cigarette-a lot of Bull wrapped in transparent cover."
A Lot
Rita: "Do you care much for sailors?"
Nita: "Yes, indeed, gobs and gobs."
Hell
"Hellr" wrote Tom Dreier, "is a place where people are compelled to spend all their time thinking about their own little petty affairs."
His Odor
There was a young broker named Monk, On the Fourth of July he got drunk, He said, "What t'hell
Is that odor I smell?" And his wifie replied-"]ss smell punk."
Give cnd Serve
Give and Serve. Don't fail to give the smile and kind word to whoever enters your place of business. Avoid the appearance and feeling of indifference. Don't ever be too busy to say good morning with your mouth wide open enough so the other fellow will feel you are really glad to see him. Don't ever forget that your business and, your customer's business in this world are the same, namely, to serve, you in your capacity, he in his. Kindness and sincerity are aids to service.

introd ucing SKOOKUf,T
Increose soles with top quolity Western red cedor pre-pointed Americon Beouty Shokes monufoctured under rigid controls by the notion's leoding independenl monufocturer of shingles qnd shokes.
SEtt Z PERMANENT BRUSH.COATED COIORS
SKOOKUM Buff SKOOKUM Seofoom Green
SKOOKUM Silver Groy SKOOKUM Burgundy Red
SKOOKUi Foresl Green SKOOKUM Chocolote Brown SKOOKUi Prime While Avoiloble in slrolghl or mixed cqrs.
(Fill-in quontities ovoiloble from centrolly locoted distributor worehouses.l
Write Todoy for
Pointed Americon Beouty Shoke
Somple Pod and
\(/eyerhaeuser Has 13 Tree Farms In \(/ashington and Oregon
The Weyerhaeuser interests, of St. Paul, Minnesota, and Tacoma,'Washington, have 13 certified tree farms in Washington and Oregon, with a total acreage ol 2,554,208 acres. The largest of these farms is the Klamath Tree Farm, in Oregon, whose 574,64I acres of timber growing supports the Company's only Ponderosa Pine sawmill. The latest of its tree farms is the Millicoma Forest with 205.000 acres in the Coos Bay area of southwestern Oregon. When this farm was certified last July it brought the total number of such farms in the Douglas Fir region to 100.

The Millicoma Forest will supply Weyerhaeuser's newest and most modern sawmill at North Bend, Oregon, for all time to come. This mill is geared for a production of 300,000 feet of lumber daily, and the Forest is expected to easily supply that amount of logs.
Trcnslerred to Portlcgrd
Jim Lowman, salesman for Pope & Talbot, Inc., Lumber Division, at Los Angeles for the past two years has been transferred to the company's Portland office. Before coming to Los Angeles Jim worked out of the San Francisco office representing the firm in the Sacramento Valley. Prior to that he worked at the company's mill at St. Helens, Ore.