38 



Hardwood Record — ^Veneer & Panel Section 



July 10, 1922 



PERKINS 



183 



Trade Mark 

 Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. 



PERKINS 



183 



Trade Mark 

 Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. 



GENERAL OFFICES AND FACTORY 



Users of 



Perkins Veg'etable Glue 



ARE FULLY AND PERMANENTLY PROTECTED 



Patents covering Perkins Glue have been held vaUd and infringed by the United States 

 Circuit Court of Appeals. Patents have also been granted in Canada, Great Britain, Ger- 

 many, France, Belgium, Italy and other foreign countries. 



PERKINS GLUE COMPANY 



Factory and General Offices: LANSDALE, PA. Sales Office; SOUTH BEND, IND. 



The Style "L" Coe Clipper Embodies Many Improvements 



The New Coe Clipper 



The Coe Manufacturing Co., of Painesville, Ohio, will have 

 their new clipper catalog ready for distribution early in July. 

 It will describe in detail the four new types of clippers w^hich this 

 firm has been perfecting. In addition to the regular pow^er and 

 hand feed type and the automatic machine for use in basket 

 plants, it will describe the new clipper with the discharge table 

 and automatic stops. 



The machine is designated as the style "L" and an illustra- 

 tion and description of it are here given. It is intended for use 

 in plants that cut veneer into panel stock. It is equipped with 

 stops on the discharge table w^hich automatically appear and dis- 

 appear at the proper time and enable the operator to instantly 

 measure the piece to be cut ofT. The stops, as the name indi- 

 cates, stop the veneer in its travel past the knife so that the width 

 of the piece, or pieces, cut at any stroke is determined by the 



location of the stops. The stops can appear at any distance from 

 the knife from 6 inches to 52 inches. The hand wheel is used 

 to change the location of the stops. Thfrf-e is a graduated scale 

 and pointer in front of the operator which indicates the distance 

 the stops are from the knife. A turn of the wheel will change 

 this distance instantly. 



With the stops at the point corresponding to the width of 

 cut desired, pressure on the foot pedal at the right causes the 

 stops to rise and all the chains, both on the feed and discharge 

 tables, to move forward. The stops prevent the veneer from 

 traveling too far. When the veneer reaches the stops pressure 

 is removed from this foot pedal and the chains all stop and the 

 stops disappear. Pressure is then applied to foot pedal at the 

 left and the knife makes one stroke and is stopped again at the 

 top by a very ingenious automatic brake. As the knife starts 

 on its up stroke, the chains on the discharge table automatically 

 iCnnthiuvd on pntjc A'l) 



