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S-?-It-ft,-f-C-H Yoar Profit lDollars
The re-rooftng Seoson is here ond you lumber deolers will be getting cqlls for roo0ng items of oll descriplion, mony of which you will nol hqve in stock - - Don'l miss this exlrq business, drow on our complele stocks for your fill-in's, both in ospohlt roofings ond wood shingles ond shqkes. Remember too thot we ore cqrloqd shippers.
855 Et CENTRO ST. SOUTH PASADENA. CALIF.
T\TENTY-FIVE YEARS
As rsported in The California Lumber
At the annual meeting of the California Redlvood Association held at the Palace Hotel, San Francisco, Novernber 16, J. M. Hotchkiss, Hobbs-Wall Lumber Co., rvas reelected president. H. P. Plummer, Union Lumber Co., rvas re-elected vice president and R. F. Hammatt, tvas re-elected secretary-manager.
Fred Roth, State Hoo-Hoo Counsellor for California, rvas host at a luncheon in honor of N. A. Gladding, of Indianapolis, Hoo-Hoo No. 99 and Seer of the House of Ancients, at tl-re Elks Club, San Francisco, on December 10.
C. Il. Nlerritt, Hunting-Merritt Lumber Co., Vancouver, B.C., u'as re-elected president of the Red Cedar Shingle Bureau at the annual meeting held at Seattle on December 2-3. Other ofrfrcers re-elelcted r.vere W. C. McMaster, John McMaster Shingle Co., Seattle, vice president; R. S. Whiting, Chicago, secretary-manager, and Arthur Bevan, Seattle. assistant secretary-manager.
Ago
Merchant Dec.
TODAY 15, 1926
W. L. Bucksen, Ganahl Lumber Company, Los Angeles, r,vas appointed manager of the company's San Fernando Boulevard yard.
Frank Crowell purchased the Bentlel' Lumber Companl' yard at Eagle Rock. The yard l'ill be knolrtn as the Crou'ell Lumber Company.
Bart Macomber, San Francisco u'holesale lumberman and former "All America" football player at the Universitv of lllinois, is managing the Oakland "Oaks" in the California Professional Football League.
This issue carries an illustrated article of the Holmes Eureka Lumber Company's sarvmill operabions at Eureka.
I.umber shipments from mills in the Douglas fir region of \\rashington and Oregon to the state of Texas increased l0OO% in 1926 over 1925, according to the West Coast I-umber Bureau. At least 700 carloads of lumber and shingles, mostly Douglas fir, moved from the \\rest Coast into Texas during the month of October.