40 



Hardwood Record — Veneer & Panel Section 



August 10, 1922 



PERKINS 



183 



Trade Mark 

 Rea. U. S. Pat. Off. 



PERKINS 



183 



Trad! Mark 

 Red. U. S. Pat. Off. 



GENERAL OFFICES AND FACTORY 



Users of 



Perkins Vegetable Glue 



ARE FULLY AND PERMANENTLY PROTECTED 



Patents covering Perkins Glue have been held valid 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. 



Evansville Veneer and Plywood Users 



George E. Reichmann, manager of the Evansville Furniture 

 Company at Evansville, Ind., has returned from a business visit 

 to St. Louis. 



Richard E. Edwards, president and manager of the Peru Chair 

 Company at Peru, Ind., has been elected jfiirst vice president of 

 the First National Bank of that city to take the place of Milton 

 A. Edwards, w^ho died recently. 



The estate of the late H. Fred Reichmann, furniture manufac- 

 turer and banker at Evansville, Ind., who died recently, is valued 

 at more than $150,000, according to an inventory filed in the 

 probate court in that city a few days ago. Mr. Reichnnann w^as 

 a director of the Globe-Bosse-World Furniture Company and 

 president of the West Side bank in addition to being connected 

 w^ith several other large manufacturing concerns of that city. 



William M. Elles, manager of the Evansville Desk Company at 

 Evansville, Ind., has returned from a business trip to Indianapolis. 



Plans are going forward rapidly for the semi-annual furniture 

 and stove market that will be held at Evansville, Ind., September 

 11 to 16th. John C. Keller, secretary and traffic manager of 

 the Evansville Manufacturers* Association, under whose auspices 

 the market will be given again this fall, has sent out more than 

 1 4,000 invitations to retail dealers in all parts of the country 

 and he will send out a large number more invitations ^vithin 

 a short time. Mr. Keller says in the event that the railroad strike 

 is settled before the first of September, he is of the opinion that 

 the attendance and sales at the market this fall will be larger 

 than in past years. 



Russe Buys Control Allen-Eaton Panel Company 



W. H. Russe, one of the most prominent lumbermen of Memphis, 

 who recently practically retired from the hardwood lumber busi- 

 ness through transfer of his interest in Russe & Burgess, Inc., to 

 Franklin T. Turner and associates, w^ho later formed the Turner- 

 Farber-Love Company, has just acquired controlling interest in 

 the Allen-Eaton Panel Company through acquisition of the stock 

 of Otis A. Felger, of Grand Rapids, Mich., and J. Q. Eaton, of 

 Memphis. He is preparing to take an active part in the manage- 

 ment of the company. This change in stock ownership will neces- 

 sitate reorganization, due announcement of which will be made 

 later. The Allen-Eaton Panel Company is engaged in the manufac- 

 ture of panels and built-up veneers under a special process con- 

 trolled by C. B. Allen. The plant has been closed down recently 

 because of inability to secure coal but it has obtained fuel and 

 operations were resumed Aug. 7. Mr. Russe has had a small 

 amount of stock in his company ever since it was organized. 



Shoe Takes Family to North Carolina 



Perry V. Shoe, vice-president of the Kosse, Shoe and Schleyer 

 Company, walnut and veneer lumber manufacturers, has gone 

 to North Carolina vifith his family where they will enjoy a month's 

 vacation in the mountains. 



Plywood Company Moves to Larger Quarters 



The United States Plywood Co., Inc., of New York City, 

 handlers of waterproof plywood, "Casco" waterproof glue and 

 other similar products announces that the growth of its business 

 has necessitated moving to greatly enlarged quarters and that it 

 will soon occupy its own building containing somewhat over 

 25,000 feet of floor space. The building is on Eighth avenue. 

 New York, running from Fifteen to Sixteenth streets. Lawrence 

 Ottinger, president, states that this will give to his company the 

 most complete plant for the handling of plywood in the East. Mr. 

 Ottinger further states that his company is also opening a new 

 depirtment for the handling of veneers. 



v^ in, B. Baker of Chicago, secretary-treasurer of the National 

 Association of Chair Manufacturers, is enjoying a vacation in 

 Colorado. Mr. Baker expects to be gone until around the middle 

 of August. 



