December 25. 1921 



Hardwood Record — Veneer & Panel Section 



43 



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Two Coe Roller Veneer Dryers 



in tlie plant of the Pearl City Veneer Co. at Jamestown, N. Y. 

 The excellent qualit}^ of the panels produced in this plant 

 speaks well for these dryers and their other Coe Machinery. 



It is noted for : — Its satisfactory service ; Its 

 labor saving ; The high quality of its product. 



THE COE MANUFACTURING COMPAN^^ 



PAINESVILLE, OHIO, U. S. A. 



ll'c biiihi all the ynachinery for a Veneer Mill 



Cincinnati Furniture Exchange Elects Officers 



The Cincinnati Furniture Exchange, following its annual meet- 

 ing and dinner at the Hotel Gibson, elected a new Board of Direc- 

 tors for 1922. The members are: Albert Schirmer, Clifford 

 H. Dornette, F. B. Wersel. R. E. Becker, Howard E. Scheid, George 

 Zurborg, William J. Sextro, Joseph Sprengard, A. M. Eisen, E. J. 

 Kuhlmann, Henry Hagemann, Charles H. Groene, H. B. Kemper, 

 A. G. Steinman and Fred W. Stille. The board will meet in the 

 near future and elect officers for the coming year. At the meeting 

 James J. Reilly, President of the Chamber of Commerce, urged the 

 members to get together and have an exhibit of Ohio Valley made 

 furniture at the Fall Festival the coming year. 



Fire in Kiln Does $3,000 Damage 



The dry-kiin department of the Schirmer Furniture Company, 

 Cincinnati, w^as damaged to the extent of $3,000 by fire. The fire 

 started beneath piles of lumber in the drying room, which sets 

 apart from the furniture factory. Firemen moved nearly 15,000 

 feet of lumber to reach the heart of the fire. The origin of the 

 blaze has not been determined. 



Spontaneous combustion caused a fire in the stockroom of the 

 Globe-Wernicke Company, Cincinnati, O., manufacturers of office 

 furniture. The fire was extinguished with a loss of $1,200. Effi- 

 cient work on the part of firemen prevented the blaze from spread- 

 ing to other parts of the building. 



Evansville Market Will Soon Be Planned 



A committee headed by John W. Boehne, Jr., of the Indiana 

 Stove Works of Evansville, Ind., will meet within a short time and 

 formulate plans for the semi-annual furniture and stove market 

 that will be held in that city late in March or early in April. The 

 committee will also fix the date of the market. The affair will be 

 given under the auspices of the Evansville Furniture Manufacturers' 

 Association. John C. Keller, secretary of the association, w^ill 

 start within a short time on an advertising campaign and circulars 

 and literature advertising the coming market will be sent to retail 

 furniture and stove dealers in many parts of the United States. 

 It is expected that the approaching market will be more largely 

 attended than the two markets last year. 



Bosse Is Optimistic for 1 922 



Benjamin Bosse, mayor of Evansville, Ind., and head of the 

 GIobe-Bosse-World Furniture Company, has returned from a busi- 

 ness trip to St. Louis. Mayor Busse is quite optimistic over the 

 trade outlook for the coming year and he believes that 1922 will 

 bring a larger volume of business to the Evansville furniture fac- 

 tories than the present year has. The Evansville manufacturing 

 plants continue to operate on an average of 50 hours a week. 



YOU WILL not 

 appreciate the 

 Mengel grade and 

 the Mengel serv- 

 ice until you have 

 tried "something 

 just as good." But 

 will you not tal^e 

 our Word for it? 



ylr> 



m MengiIL CoME^ 



INCORPORATED 



Louisville. Ky. 



THE PAST AND PRESENT IN MAHOGANY 



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RANGOON TEAK 



B B T C L 



British Honduras Mahogany 



B. E. & P. CO. 



SPOT and SHIPMENT 



QUALITY AND SERVICE 



BUSK & DANIELS, 8 Broadway, NEW YORK 



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