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- Michigan Artisan; 1909-01-25
Michigan Artisan; 1909-01-25
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and Twenty~Ninth Year-No. 14 JANUARY 25. ~ICf07 Semi-Monthly
I,
YOU can make more money out of our nationally advertised Royal by buying the unknown, unguaranteed
kind.
Our advertisements in the Saturday Evening Post. Ladies'
Home Journal. Everybody·s. M'IDsey's.and Cosmopolitan are read by
eighteen million people.
Royal Morris Chairs
are the best selling proposition in the furniture line today. They are
unlike ahy other because they are either upholstered or with
loose cushions, with footrest or without footrest.
Write us today for catalogue and proposition for your town.
CHAMBER
SUITES
AN!)
DINING ROOM
FURNITURE
Wrile for Catalogue
I
I
I ROYAL CHAIR COMPANY
STURGIS, MICHIGAN
Aulsbrook & Jones Furniture CO.
STURGIS, MICH.
I
I " t
II•
L
THE
CRAFT
PATENT APPLIED FOR
CHAIR
LINE
Offers For Your Consideration
an already popular line. strengthened with a large number of new
~'PROFIT MAKERS" that will "cause you to sit up and take nQtke."
The Improved Automatic Reclining Chair
is made in a variety of designs,
-coverings and finishes. This'
chair is in a class by itself, having
all of the good and none of
the bad features of other reclining
chairs, in addition to a num-ber
of new ones that the others
do not have.
The' adjustment consists of a
friction clutch, consequently is
noiseless.
Body of chair is balanced' so
that it does not require a man-ipulation
of the adjustment in
order to bring it forward.
Made with permanent upholstering
or a. single loose, reversible
cushion, the Sleepy Hollow
shape being always retained.
Has the only adjustable foot
rest.
Has narrow guide bars per-mitting
easy access to the chair.
The adjustment is controlled by
a button under the arm, render~
ing it unnecessary to leave the
cha.ir in order to secure a recl;T:.~
ing position. Body of occu-pant
is relatively in the same po-sition,
the arms affording a per_
fect rest
Reclining Chairs, Rockers, Morris Chairs, Turkish Chairs,
Mission Pieces and Roman Chairs
Our efforts in the past have been concentrated to manufacture well and economically and we are now endeavoring
to manufacture better and more economically. -Our constantly increasing trade is sufficient proof that our
efforts haye be'en 'appreciated by our customers.
TRAVERSE CITY CHAIR CO.
TRA VERSE CITY, YfICHIGAN.
,
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
rSligh'~--S-~lect Styles Sell and Satisfy--'
MANY NEW FEATURES ADDED FOR SPRING SEASON.
EVERYTHING FOR THE BEDROOM (Medium and Fine Quality). Office and Salesroom corner Prescott and Buchanan
, Streets. Grand Rapids, Mich. \\Trite for catalogue.
~-------------------_._--------- -l ----_._-------,
I VISIT
CHARLOTTE
IN JANUARY
GRAND RAPIDS
Furniture Exhihition BUilding
CHICAGO
192 Michigan Avenue
No. 892. 48x30.
CHARLOTTE ""lAKES GOOD TABLES
CHARLOTTE MFG. CO.
CHARLOTTE, MICH • .~.. -----------------------------'•
1
•
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
'. ~l '... r .',.,0
• ____.---.-~--------l
GRAND RAPIDS
==--=-=- --- --==. =
A Mena~e to Small Merchants.
D. M. \Vegner, of Volcgner £wthcr5, Grand Rapids, is in
favor of the parcels post bill. He believes it would benefit
all classes of merchants. "It \'ii11 not particula.r1y apply to
furniture dealers, but as merchants we should take some .in-terest
in it and endeavor to discov{~rjust whom the proposed
measure is to benellL I am <l',vare it has been asserted the
home merchant will he the man to benefit, as aga,inst the mail
order house, against whom it is HOW supposed to be directly
aimed, although at the outset it ,",vasstrongly alleged it was in
its favor. v\lhilc the bill as now drawn may favor the home
merthant I am inclined to the belief that this 15 simply the
opening wedge a.nd having p;lssed the original there will
shortly follow a number of amendments which will give an-other
dub to the big mail order houses to "\vield over the small
merchant. It has been claimed that ..".jth the radius of oper-atjol1
restricted to a small territory arounl anyone market
center, the small dealer will have a powerful ally ill fig-hting
the inroads of the mail order hOllses. How would th;s 'Nork
out? The small merchant could not handle his country trade
as he would the customers who come to his stoee. He must
reach them by catalogue as clo the mail order hou~~es. His
stocks are necessarily limited and bcfon;- he could print the
catalogue be 1vouJd be oul of the goods he therein dqlicted.
He cannot duplicate stocks on the spur of the moment and
he cannot substitute if he wishes to retain, to say nothing of
building up his trade. r contend that the~J1]<lll merch.ant
cannot catalogue his goods successfully. This means he can-not
do a mail order business over evcll ,1. small tcrritory and
tberefore this parcels posts law will eventually prove tn be
another element in promotil1g the growth of t1le big lw,il
order houses and to just this extent vvill be a menace to the
small mercbant"
@ * @
Pricing Goods.
George L. Hersey, represcnting J. Vl. Hen:iey & Co.,
Springfield, .:\:fass.,",,-hilc in Grand Rapids expressed his ViCH-"S
on trade matters as follows: "1 fJgure the cost of an article
to me at the price I pay for it in its home market p1tlS ten per
cent for freight, cartage and the handling- to put it on my
{joors. This is about an average percentage of addition which
is about equitable. For illstance, goods from Chicago,
Rockford or Grand Rapids would cost more than this ten pcr
cent addition, ..v..hilc goods from Boston, New York OJ" James-town
would cost less. Per]wps it is right to assume that the
cost of goods to me or any other dealer is the original price:
plus every item of handling, freight and cartage until it is
upon the floors of the consumer. Yet I figure tlle cost tiS I
have stated and these addtional items are estimatcd in the
general cost of transacting my husiness, which same is cared
for under the margin of profit which r elect to place (lpon my
wares, It is a problem to ngure this matter accurately, but
the method I pursue has seemed to work out satsfaetorily to
this time,
"\,Vith respect to marking the prices ,,\rhere one docs a
c.ash business, I think the only safe ",vay and satisfactory W<lY
is to ll1ake a difference of tcn per cent. Tl1is is the us1tal
margin between cash and time and T can see no otber way of
doing this than along the line of discounts."
An Original and Serviceable System.
David A. Frantz. a successful merchant of Lebanon, Pa"
is; entitled to a diploma as the orginator of a novel and ser-viceab!
c system for collecting ac.C01111tS. Mr, Frantz reveals
bis system as follows: "\Vben I start ant on a collecting
mission I will have say $500 in my pocket, and 1 come back
\vithout a cent. This puzzles you, eh? \;VeIl, I go to a man,
<lsk him fot the money .and he says be can't pay, ior be js just
<lhaut trying to borrow $100, I say all right, I'll loan it to
you. I usually know this before hand. I add this hundred
to his otber account and take his note. He will meet the ob-ligation
promptly, even 1£ he has to harrow the money else-where
to do it; vv·hereas, the open account he would take his
own time in paying. He is also paying me six percent in-terest
on the whole and in place of an uncertain credit I have
a paying investment "'ihile it lasts. I don't know, eertanly,
but have never he<lnl of anyone else following such a system,
but I have worked it for years with success:'
@ * @
Billboard Advertising Profitable.
George B. Koch, of Kodl & Henke, Cleveland, 0" states
that his firm invests from three to three and one-half per
cent of their expenditures in advertising. It uses the news-papers
considerably, but have also found it profitable to em~
ploy space 011 the billboards and in the street cars. The
firm c<ll1ce}ed its billboard contracts for two years but re~
centIy signed a new contract for the service. An advertise-ment
on the billboard is before the pUblic for da.ys, weeks and
months, A view of the viaduct Ilear the fi(-m's store was used
t'ery effectively and proJlt<lbly on billboards. Mr. Koch
thinks it is profitable to use prices il1 advertising articles of
furniture.
@ * @
Don't Crowd Customers.
C. T. Coughlin, of the Standard Furniture Company, Boise,
Idaho. does not think it is advisable to urge customers to
buy. He says: "A merchant should employ every means
to interest the public: in his goods and pricc:s and offer assist-ance
in the making of selections, alid then permit customers
to follow their own inclinations. YVlten the customer does
not find in om stock 'what he wants we advise him to go to
our neigbbors.. In 1110st caSes he returns and buys of us."
:oJr. Coughlin considers the distribution of prernums itlegit-imate
1l1erchandi"'ing-. sure to 'work harm. All the public re-quires
is reliable goods and fair prices_
@ * @
Sued for Damages.
1\Jrs. l\hry Macklin. who created a sensation by attempt-ing
to kill Charles Bender, a dealer in fut11iture in Chicago,
recently, has been arrested and pla,ced under $2,000 bonds to
appeal' for examinatotl in the future. Mrs. Macklin has a
suit pending against Bender for $10,000, charging a breach of
promise. Bender is a married man and has held a prominent
position itl the business and soci<ll world of Chicago. The
attorney for Mrs. M:'lck15n claims that the assault upon Ben-der
was made while the lady was temporarily insa.ne,
- --- -------------------'-~
4 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
HE BUYS A NEW CLOCK•.
And Shows what False Economy It Was 'to ,Keep the Old
One.
"At last," said Mr. QuiIlback,.:\ve have bought a new
clock, and goodness knows/'we 'needed it,
"The old clock was a small, round. nickel plated time-keeper
that we had had for some years, and in the COurse
of time-as alas J all clock owners do too-it began to show
signs of wear. But we hated to go to the expense of a new
clock as long as we could make that one do, so we kept it,
shaking her up 'most every day for something like a year
until finally it got to be so tiresome that we mustered up
courage and bought a new Clock.
Then I did a little figuring. In the course of a year I
had spent an average of five minutes a day shaking up that
old clock on, say, 300 days, -making, to save the cost of a
new clock, a gross tatalof time spent amounting to 1,500
minutes. You divide th's by 60 and you find that I had spent
in shaking that blessed old clock a little matter of twenty-five
hours!
"1\"ow, in the way of income. you know, I don't pretend to
class up with the Rockefeller:s and Carnegies and that sort
of folks, ,but fLgu'dng my earning capacity on the modest
basis of SO'cents ail hour I findt,hat I have spent in shaking
up that miserable old ticker time worth $12.50. The new
clock cost 69 ce~lts\
"Ot' cour<;c buying the new clock when we did inste,ad of
a year sooner we saved the wear On it during that period, and
if we count the life of such a clock at say ten years we find
•I
HAND CIRCULAR RIP SAW MORTJSER
that we have thus saved about seven cents worth of wear
on the new clock, and this, properly, of course, should be
deducted from the $12.50, but even at that on the best show-ing
possible we find that to save 69 cents we have'met:with
a net loss of $12.43, to say nothing of the wear and te3Lon
us caused by the aggravation of having to shake the :oId
clock up every day to make it go!
'I\Ve had been, as in so many ways we are prone to be,
penny wise and pound foolish. but we are learning wisdom
and we haven't got to shake the old clock up any more, any-way,"-
Sun.
@ * @
Sure.
His proper place.
Is on the shelf
Who only lives
To doubt himself.
@ * @
Glassware Smashil1g at Funerals,
A custom which would improve the condition of the glass
industry if it were more widely adopted prevails among the
natives of a certain district in West Africa. When a chief
dies. his neighbors meet at his palace and pa.rtake of a fun-eral
feast served in the deceased monarch's bowls and dishes.
At the end of the meal the presiding chief rises and, raising
his stick high above his head, with one great stroke smashes
to fragments the glass bowl and other dishes before him.
This is the signal. The chiefs all rise, and with their sticks
destroy all that remains of the dead man's glass and crock-ery.
COMBINED MACHINE
No. 4, ~AW (ready Co(cross-cutting)
No. a SCROLL SAW •
Complete Oulfit of HANO aDd FOOT POWER MACHINERY
----. WHY THEY PAY THE CABINET MAKER
He can save a manufacturer's profit as well as a dealer's profit.
He can m-ake mote mQuey with less capital invested.
He can hold a better and more satisiactory trade with his
customere.
He can manufacture in as good iityle and finish, and at as low
<:ostas. the fal.:torles.
The local cahinE't maker has been forced into only the dealer's
trade and prdit, bel::ause of machine manufactured goods 01:-factories.
An outfit of flames' Patent Foot and Hand-Power MachinE'ry,
reinstates the cabiflet maker with advanta~sequal to his competitors.
If desired, thesernacblues will be sold on lrial, The purchaser
can have ample time to test them in his own shop ~nd ~n the work he.
wishes them to do. l)escriptiv4 catalogue and prtee lUllft·ee.
w. f. &. JOnN BARNI'S CO.,654 Ruby St., Rockford,lII.
FORMER OR MOULDER HAND TENQNER
•
No.3 WOOD LATHE
NO.4 5AW (ready for rippillg)
No. 'l SCROLL SAW
MICHIGAN ARTISAN ..----~---_._---------- -------------..,
5
Luce-Redmond Chair Company, Ltd.
BIG RAPIDS. MICHIGAN
HolFFMAN
BROTHElRS COMPANY
804 W. Main St.. -I FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
A-- _-I--
,
No. 540"
Same as No.542
a n Iy Quartered
Oak Veneer
Seat,
$18 ~~~.
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGH CRADE
Office Chairs, Dining Chairs
Reception Chairs and Rockers
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
Desk and Dressing Chairs
In Dark and Tuna Mahogany.
Birch. Bird' 5-eye Maple.
Quartered Oak and Circassian
Walnut
•
IHARDWOOD'~~o1 ~r-GE~-O&~-~-~PO~~-AT-T -----.-..
I ! I SHEaD'GAN, WIS.
spJCIALTIES : t Manufacturers of Chairs
SAWED and I and Rockers. ~ compl~te SLlCEDQUARJ OAK VENEERS "ne of Q,k D,.", w"h
M A H 0 G A INY V E N E E R S q~rt" "w,d ,"om .h'd"
and seats. A large hne of ! Elm Diners, medium priced.
A select line of Ladies'
Rockert. Bent and high
arm Rockers with solid
scats, veneer roll seats, cob-blerseats
and up~
holstered leather
complete. High
Chairs and
Children's
Rockers.
You will ger
in on the froufJd
.fi~~r whttl you
buy from UI.
• ---_. -----------_.
~ i ~
I1Mortdn House I (Am";oan Plan) Rate. $2.50 and Up, I
Ho~!."./?..'!/!!.!indI
I GRAND RAPIDS, MICH, I t
No. 542
Oak, Solid Seat.
Price,
The Noon Dinner Served at tbe: Pantlind lor SOc is
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.
J. BOYD PANTLIND, Prop.
____ ___. _--..l .... _~N~o;:.,:.5.;.4::.2 ~ •
6 MICHIGAN
•
Ideal
Refrigerators
tjj The handsomest and be.t cheap fine of refrigerator.
made.
1/ Printed on White Birch in Imitation of Quar-fer
Sawed Oak, in effects which beat the
finest original •.
tjj The line. thongh .hort. is qnile complete. It indudes
4 size!!o. single door. one dotlble door. one side icing,
three aparlInent house and one four door, all either
zinc lined or white emuneL
tjj The good. are well made with y1i inch inside box
and charcoal sheathing insulation.
Every dealer should carry this
line, as it sells on sight. Send
for Catalog and Prices.
'1.
Grand Rapids Refrig. Co.
Grand Rapid., Michigan
ARTISAN
Grand Rapids Furniture Temple .
Another furniture exhibition building for Grand Rapids,
an illustration of which may be seeri on another page, wiIl
be erected during 1909, located on LyOll, Ionia and Division
streets facing 169 feet on Lyon street and 50 all the other
two streets, and across from the new post office. This pro-perty
was puro:::.hased by W. C. Grobhiser C'.nd Charles 0,
Skinner some time ago with this purpose in view. The stock
in the building company will be sold to manufacturers desir-ing
space who will subscribe $5,000. The enterprise is en-tirely
separate from the Manufacturers' building although
Messrs Grobhiser and Skinner are interested in both and it
will be known as the Furniture City Exhibition building.
The plans provide for a ten story building covering the en-tire
site, the cost estimated is $100,000.
In detail the first two stories will be in Bedford stone the
other storics in a dark red brick with stone trimmings. The
entrance in the center of the Lyon street frontage will be
sixteen feet in width, finisbed in marble with a barrel ceiling
in mosaic. This marble entrance will run back the full depth
of the building, fifty feet where it will lead to the freight
and passenger elevator. The owners have no doubt of its
success from the furniture exhibition standpoint, hut facing
the federal building and being contiguous to city hall and
Made by Woodard. Furniture 00" Owosso, Mich.
court house will build with a view to transforming it into
an office building if they deem it wise so to do at s9me future
time.
There will be a number of features connected with this
building which will make it different from others of its class.
On the first floor and to the left of the lobby will be a gri11-
room in charge of a competent caterer, while above this will
be made provision for a general dining room. The first full
floor will be used for exhibition purposes, as well as the
floors above, but while the others will be given over to per-manent
furniture exhibits, as is the space in the Manufactur-ers'
building, this first floor will have to be cleared after each
sale that the room may be employed for the accommodation
of visitors in the cities at times of conventions if there is
need for it. To adequately provde for this use provision
will be made there for twenty-five rooms, each of which will
have shower bath facilities.
Other well known manufact'urers have an interest in the
project and with the erection of this beautiful building Grand
Rapids can say that it is the latest and best of all.
@ * @
Collapse of a'Mercantile.Building.
A two-story brick block at Bellingham, \-Vash.> occupied
by the Alexander Furniture Company and Barlow & Co.,
collapsed a few nights ago, the damage amounting to $35,000.
The accident was caused by an excavation made on adjoining
premises. No one was injured, as the building was unoccu-pied
when the a.ccident occurred.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 7
• -----_._------_._--_._--~•
Moon Desk Co.
MUSKEGON. MICH.
Stand, for Integrity and Substantiality.
Ask for our budget of interesting facts.
..--- ------- ---_._--------_. •
Muskegon Interested the Visitors.
The lines manufacturl;d in )i!uskegou, !llich., and placed on
sale in Grand Rapids in January interested the dealers very
much find liberal orders were taken by the salesmen. The
Muskegon Valley line contained many beautiful specimens of
Colonial styJes, also Sheraton and the French periods.
The Moon Desk Cornpa.ny's exhibit of nfl-Lcedesks. suitable
for every branch of office work. was large atHl decidedly meri-toro115
Especially praiseworthy were their samples of s;-llli-tary
a11(ltypewriter desks.
@ * @
The Duff & Repp Furniture Company, of Kansas City.
Mo., confine their expenditure ior (Lclvertising to the news-papers
wth very satisfactory results.
rI MUSKEGON VALLEY FURNITURE COMPANY
! MUSKEGON
MICH ••••
COlonlOi SUiles
Toll POSI BellS I
Onn Dressers II
CililiOnlers I
I'/ornrooes I,,
[OUieg' !OilfliS !
DmssinQ !
mOles I
Mailoaany I!
IniaiU Goons !
!,•
Line on 1Ia1. in Manufacturers' Building, GrilPd Rapids.
ND; 483.
An Advantage for Installment Dealers.
F. Bacon & Sons of Louisville, Ky., spend three per cent
of their expense a,ccount for advertising in the newspapers.
The firm has experimented v,"ith premium distributions, but as
it d,lCS not work satisfactorily it witl be eliminated. entirely. In
the matter of credits, firms selling goods all the installment
plan have an advantage over firms doing straight merchan-
Made by Woodard Furniture Co., OW08SO, MiCh.
dising, yet giving uedit. The latter have no redress, "\"hjJe
the former au fully protected by their contra.cts.
® * @
An Aid to Business.
The ad"<:llltage gained by the merchant on account of ad-
\Ccrtising articles and prices is that the .attention of the reader
ip, focused on particular articles, awl when backed up by win-dow
displays of the goods actually advertised. it serves to in-cre<'
t"e business.
Louis
assigned,
® * @
E. Rice, dealer in furniture at VVincbester, Va., has
His liabilities amount to $11,000.
8 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
On short notice we can fill six or sixty cars with assorted lots of Big Six Asso-ciation
goods. Q!1ick deliveries and low rates of freight guaranteed. Our goods are
the best of their class. A trial order will prove the truth of this statement.
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers of Chamber Suites. Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, Odd Dressers,
Chifforobes.
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K. D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes,
in imitation golden oak. plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers" 0[- MantC'l and Upright Folding Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees,
China Closets, Combination Book. and Libffi'Y Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers of -Sideboards in plain oak, imitation quartered oak and solid
quartered oak; Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chi:lfoniers in imitation
quartered oak, imitation mahogany BDd imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers of the uSuperior" Line of P.rlor, Library, Dining and Dressing
Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Manufacturer! of uHygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cribs, Wire
Springs and Cots. Made by The Karges Furniture Co.
The Big Six Manufacturers of Evansville possess unequaled facilities for ship-ping
goods promptly. All have sidings in or adjoining their factories and cars can be
dispatched direct over the great railroad systems of the South and West.
Catalogues of all lines will be furnished to dealers on application.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 9
~_____ a _
An Inconsiderate Wife.
There is a Manchester man, a member of a well-known
club, '\\'ho, his friends aver, is one of the most unreasonable
grumblers in Lancashire.
Not long ago he had a slight attack of rheumatism, dur-ing
which he was carefully nursed by his "wife.
One day the good woman was so moved by the sufferings
of Ifer spouse that she burst into tears as she sat by his
bedside. This recurred several times, much to the disgust
al1d annoyance of the husband.
"How arc you getting on?" asked a friend who had drop-ped
in to see the sufferer.
"Very badly, indeed," "vas the reply. "and it's all my
wife's faulL"
"\Vhat?" demanded his friend. astonished.
"Yes; the doctor said that humidity was bad for me,- and
yet she sits there and weeps and weeps.!!
Made by The Bosse Furniture CQ,
Slow in Posting Tariffs.
Some railroads have been unable to comply with an order
issued last June by the interstate commission relative to the
posting of ta.riffs, owing to their inability to obtain the
tariffs of other lines in which they are participants, and to
some extent, to complete all thejr own files owing to their
supply of schedules having been exhausted.
This matter having been brought to the attention of the
commission, it has been ordered that any carrier requiring
an extension of time, prior to Feb. 15, may file formal appli-cation,
but good cause must be shown for modification of the
original order, and that it ha,s been tomplied with in all other
respects.
The order is not to apply to express or shipping car
companies that are amenable to the law, separate orders
covering them having been issued. The commissioner does
not favor an extension beyond July 1 next.
10 MICHIGAN
The Passel ius Brothers Furniture Manufacturing Cam-p,
any exhibited a line of <lining- extension tables in Chicago
that "set them all going." The mahogany Colon1al styles
were simply immense A new catalogue is in the ha.nds of
the engravers, a-nd will be ready for mailing the btter part
0f February.
MANUFACTURERS
A COMPLE.TE
Pedestal N9~412.
DETROIT, MICH.
I
LINE.!
J
PALMER MFG. CO. 115 to 135 Palmer Ave..
DETROIT, MICH.
Manufacturers of
FANCY TABLES
PEDESTALS TABOURETTES
for the
PARLOR AND LIBRARY
Our falDOlItl ROOKWOOD F1NISH aroWs I'
ill popuhuilY every dillY. Nothing like it.
Write for Pic:ture. and Price ••
.• .-----------------1I
PlonrrR
nanufaduriof
(ompanJ
Reed Furniture
Baby Carriages
Go-Carts
W
Putt tine 8hown o'llty
at the faclory.
ARTISAN
The Palmer .Manufacturing Company are having a good
trade Their new line of parlor and library tables will be dis-played
in a new catalogue which is in the hands of the engrav-ers.
The Pioneer Manufacturing Company, manufacturers ot
reed and rattan chairs, rockers and baby carriages are havillg~·
a good trade. Their city business the last yedr was the largf7
cst they have ever had and the new year starts in welL
Charles F. \Valter, president of the Grand Upholstering
Company. died suddenly Sunday morning, January 24, from
heart trouble. He was president of the Grand Upholstering
Company for ten years, and was wi.th the house sixteen years.
He was 58 years of age at the time of his death. Many
of the furniture dealers and manufacturers of Detroit a.ttend-ed
the funeral
@ * @
Premium· Giving Hurtful.
George Koch, of Koch & Henke, Cleveland, 0., in discuss-ing
the premium giving plan employed more or less by re-tailers
of furniture, said: "The people whose cllstom we
,
Ma.deby the Karges Furniture Co.,Evansvtne. Ind
B,eek would resent any attempt to make them presents. They
would think we were tacking on a margin to pay for such
gifts and the effect would be to cheapen our system of doing
business. It would prove hurtfUl and perhaps destructive to
oUr business."
@ * @
Elected Officers.
The Statesville (N. C.) Furniture Company-held their an-nual
meeting recently and re-elected the old board of officers.
The directors are \V. A, Thomas H. C. Cowles, D. J. Wil-liams,
A. P. Barron, L. C. ',Vagner, ]. G. Shelton atld P. F.
Laugenor. The directors subsequently elected Mr. Thomas
president, H. C. Cowles vice president, and J. G. Shelton sec-retary
and treasurer.
@ * @
I •
Evert Stuck, of Columbus, O. has joined the operating de-partment
of the Jamestown, N. Y., Metal Furniture Compa.ny.
L __
-_. -- ---- ---------------------
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Made by
NELSON·MATTER
FURNITURE CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
11
12 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
•
Woodard Furniture Company OWOSSO
MICHIGAN
Manufaclurers of High Grade
Medium Priced
BEDROOM
FURNITURE
In all the Fancy Wood. and
Finishes.
Line especially strong on
Circassian Walnut
New catalog just out..
If you have Dot received one send for it.
Questions of Impor~ance.
Is it profitable for the owner of a factory with a capa.city
amounting to $150,000 per annum to make a diversified line?
What importance is his competition with a line of 200
pieces against a manufacturer with a capacity of $500,000 per
annum, making a line of 1,000 pieces?
If a manufacturer of a diversified line offers to the con-sideration
of buyers thirty patterns of dressers, how much
trade should he reasona.bly expect when a competitor places
on the market ninety dressers equally as well made and
with a greater variety of styles?
vVould it be profitable for the owner of a moderate sized
factory to operate the same in the production of a line of
dressers of a single style-say sixty - patterns of colonial
dressers and chiffoniers, or tall post bedsteads?
Not many years ago "Ed" Morley gained his nom de
plume, "ca.r1oad," by seIling the products of a factory located
in Rochester, N.Y., making chamber suites in one style.
A factory in Memphis. Tenn., earned a lot of profit for its
owner, when it was operated'in the production of a single
cheap dresser. It suited the r~quirements of a certain class
of trade, which bought it in' carload lots.
A few years ago a manufacturer located in Chicago, man-ufactured
music cabinets _in one pattern and sold them in
thousand lots. The profits he gained were squandered in the
wheat 'Pit and caused his retirement from the furniture busi-ness.
The above facts suggest that small the manufacturer can-not
operate profitably in the producing of extensive lines, and
that, as in other branches of business,. the big fellow has de-cided
advantages when he enters the markets.
@ * @
Not Considered Suitable for Crating.
Clarence R. Hills, the well known designer of furniture
recalls a trip he made through the southern states a few
years ago when his attention was called to gum or Tupelo
lumber. "It was not considered fit for crating," Mr. Hills ex-plained,
"and was sold so cheap that it was hardly worth
while for anyone to handle it. During the past two years
it has been used moderately by the furniture makers of the
northern states for drawer work and cheap furniture, but
while the lUtli.ber is very handsome, the trade has not taken
it up with confidence. Two years ago I made the design
for a fine dining room suite in Tupelo for a prominent man-ufacturer,
but after it had been made ready for the market
he did not have confidence in the wood that would warrant
his offering it to the trade. "With a solution of the problem
of properly drying the lumber Me Hills predicts that there
would be a growing demand for Tupelo furniture.
@) * @
It Will Always be a Sheraton.
Charley West, of Des Moines, Iowa, stopped in his tour
through one of the big furniture exhibition buildings in Grand
Rapids to admire a chamber suite, constructed in the style
of Sheraton. "When I move to my new store I shall buy a
Sheraton suite. I shall not care whether I find a buyer for
it or not for I admire Sheraton. If it fails to sell I shall have
the pleasure of looking at it frequently. It will always have
the expression of Sheraton and if it should stay in the store
ten years it will never become a sticker in my mind. It
will always please me, because I shall'- never lose my loye
for the art of Sheraton.
@ * @
The maturing of plans for the erection of additional furn-iture
exposition_ buildings in Grand Rapids annoy the maJla-gers
of exposition enterprises in other furniture centers. The
drift toward Grand Rapids is steadily growing stronger and
the prestige gained gives the Michigan city the leading posi-tion
in the marketing of furniture.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 13
f---·--------·-----·------·----------------·
Single Cone All
II
! $2~
II Each
Net
I
Are very popular with the
Steel Springs
Furniture Trade.
$2~I
Each II
Net II
iI
I•
We manufacture a
No. 46. Single Cone. $2 Each. Net.
full line of Single and Double Cane
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
All Wire Springs.
SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis.
•
rOlOlno
("AIDS
John Mowatt, the superintendent of the Grand Rapids
Chair Company, recently recalled the fact that thirty years
ago, when furniture was sold and shipped unfinished, the
manufacturers, on account of their ability to turn over their
capital every sixty days, realizE',d larger profits than they
do today_ The delays, annoyances and lo!',ses attending the
processes of fihishing goods were sustained by the. retailers.
The goods ,','ere not well finished, the average retaiter not
in the Unite<l States,
suitable for Sun day
Schools, Halls, Steam~
ers and all public resorts.
We also manufacture
Brass Trimmed I r 0 n
Beds, Spring Beds, Cots
and Cribs in a large
variety.
Send far Cara/Qgut
and PriCts to
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO
having at his command the shop room and facilities deemed
necessary by the trade of today for finishing furniture as it
Made by the World Furntture CO, Evansv1lle, Ind.
1 should be. ~vlr. 1'lowatt recalled one firm which em-ployed
$50,000 capital, realizing a profit of $85,000 on its out-put,
of twelve months, thirty years ago.
14 MICHIGAN
l!STABLISHED 1880
~I.IIlLl.HII!!:D .'"
MICHIGAN ARTISAN co.
ON THE IO-r", AND 2!h" OF EACH MONTH
OFFICE-lOB, 110. 112NORTH DIvISION ST.• GRAND RAPIOS. MICH.
ENTERED III THE POBTOFFICE AT GIl~ND RAPIDS, MICH., All SECOND CLASS MATTER.
The placing of many contracts for hotel furniture has
addeq. greatly to the business booked by the manufacturers
during the past month. Heavy orders for new hotels in Salt
Lake, Portland, Seattle and other points in the northwest re-cites
a tale of prosperity enjoyed by the people of that sec-tion.
Other important orders taken were for hotels located
in the large cities of the east. Without an exception, these
orders were placed by de.alers.
+ +
The C. F. Adams Company, of Syracuse, N. Y, have ex-pressed
the opinion that the enactment of the proposed par-cels
post law by congress would be 'an advantage to small
dealers in rural towns. Such dealers could employ a catalogue
as successfully as more pretentious merchants by system-atizing
the business in the right way.
+ +
Large show windows, the contents of which should be
changed frequently, have become almost indispensable in the
retailing of hous,e furnishing goods. The old cabinet maker
of the pa.st century used the shop windows to exhibit coffins,
but in the!'ie enHghtened times those hideous objects are kept
out of sight.
+ +
It is a, fact well known to the public that merchants are
enabled to sell goods on a shorter margin for cash than they
can for credit1 and on that account many consumers take ad-vantage
of every opportunity to ·discount bills for articles
purchased. The discount is never refused.
+ +
Not a discordant note was sounded by anyone of the
eight hundred huyers who visited Grand Rapids during the
month of January. They sang the song of prosperity in the
present and increasing prosperity in the futnre. It was an
inspiring chorus.
+ +
Very satisfactory sales were made by manufacturers shQw-il1g
lines in the exposition towns during the month of Janu-ary.
Buyers needed goods for early spring shipn:e·~t, and
the factories quite generally are in full operation.
+ +
Of the several hundred merchants interviewed during their
stay in Grand Rapids the past moqth, not one faile.d to de-clare
that the prompt collection of accounts when due was
not only the best policy, but absolutely necessary to retain
the good will and the patronage of customers.
+ +
The general opinion of time~paymcl1t merchants is that it
iF,not wise to crowd customers to settlement when temporar-ilyembarrassed.
A little leniency exercised-at s\.lch atime not
only wins the friendship of such customers, but fairly prompt
payments of accounts.
+ +
With the addition of several strong lines of upholstety from
Milwaukee. New York and other points, Grand Ra.pids now
ARTISAN
ranks as high in importance as a market for-uphol,:,tered fur-niture
as it cver has in the manufacture of case work.
+ +
H. B. Graves, of Rochester, for the purpase of intelligel1tly
pricing his goods, adds to the market cost the freight charge
a.nd a margin of gross profit sufficient to cover all items of
eX'Pcnse, leaving a fair return_ ~tl the capital employed,
+ oj<.
A singular condition of the trade -is found in the fact that
aU· retailers of house furnishing goods in Pueblo, Colo., do an
installment business. It is a quite a "come back" town.
+ +
It Bede:s all what facts are recorded in history. A news_
pa.per in Rockford dedares that Adam Bede was a ca.binet
maker.
+ +
The offering of premiums as an inducement to purchase
goods is probibted under the laws of Canada,
@ * @
No Profit in Catalogues for Retailers.
H. B. Graves. a leading dealer in furniture in Rochester,
N. Y., in dscussing the parcels post bill pending adion by the
congress of tIle United States, refers to the USe of catalogue's
by retailers as follows: "I am familia.r with the parcels post
measure to a certain extent but I do not think its workings
will have any ill effect whatever upon the retailer. He can-not
do much mail order business anyway, as catalogucs arees-sential
to that, and catalogues he cannot issue with profit.
Vife frequently receive requests for our latest catalogue, and
'.ve, for a long time past, have sent a stereotyped letter in reply
stating that we can issue no ca,talogue as the styles change
so rapidly we would be una-ble to fill selections for any length
of time. At that, we carry rather heavy stocks. and if that is
true with us it will be true with retail dealers in general.
Booklets are used by many dealers advantageously. Their
cost is inconsequential."
@ * @
The Trading Stamp Evil in Peoria.
A reluctant tone pervaded the remarks of F. E. Avery, of
the Comstock-Avery Company, Peoria, Ill., in discussing the
campaign inaugurated and prosecuted by the merchants' as-sociation
of his city against the trading stamp evil. The
merchants issued their own stamps, redeeming them with
goods in their own stores. which amounted to the ten per
cent discount it was the custom 6f the merchants to allow for
cash under ordinary trading methods. Mr. Avery said, in
discussing the result: "The 'Public ,",,'asbenefited for they
obtained better premiums than the old trading stamp outfit
could give and it cost us much less. In fact, although we
went into the matter to kill the trading stamp evil we ma.de a
profit clearing up two and one-half times what we put into it.
The stan'p business was allowed to die after the old trading
stamp company had be.en given its quietus, but it is ready to
be resuscitated if a necessity arises in the future."
@ * @
Premiums Illegitimate.
C. S. Mahon of the Schipper & Block Furniture Company
of Peoria, IlL. fears there is an element of iIIegitimacy in of-fering
permiums to stir up trade. Whether this is justly so
or not, many peop.le would imagine that they were pa.ying an
extra price for goods to provide .for premiums offered. In
any event, the premium distribution plan is bound to create
unsatisfactory conditions in trade and so long as the mer-chant
can increase his business by the pursuit of legitimate
methods it is not advisable to employ the premium distribu-tion
plan. .
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 15
EVANSVILLE
EV;\:::\SVILLE, Ind., January 23.-The manufacturers ot
Evansville are receiving many orders through the mails. All
the lea,ding houses have issued, or will 500n issue, catalogues:
illustrating their lines for the current year. The catalogues!
of the Karges Furniture Company, the Globe, the Bosse, the!
World ~Illd the Metal Furniture Company will be delivered ani
short notice.
T:vIany of the retailers of Evansville visited the markets in
Cbicago and Grand Rapils last month and returned home
very much pleased with their experiences,
Eli D. 1.filler, of Eli D. l,..filler & Co" spent the month in
Chica,go and took the usual goodly Humber of orders for the
l\-liller folding beds.
The new line, of buffets and china closets brought out hy
Made by the Metal Furniture Company,
Evansv1l1e, Ind. Price, $6.75.
the \Vorld Furniture Company is an important feature of the
products of Evansville.
The favorable weather has enabled the contractors to push
the construction of the Evansville Furniture Exhibition build-jng
rapidly, and it is probable that the strttcture wilt be ready
for occupancy early in the coming st1m111.er.
Preparation~ have been commenced for the annual ban-quet
of the Evansville Furniture Manufacturers' Association,
to be held during the current month.
The I-Iyg-ielle .i\-1etal Cabinet Company have filed articles of
incorporation and will engage in the manufacture of metal
kitchen cabinets. C. A. ElJes, John n. Shrouder and Charles F.
Shrouder arc the incorporators,
Evallsville lines will he sold in the Rocky 1lountain region
hncafter by D. Tl. J acbon.
Ivlanufactllrers are shipping many goods by rail and water,
to points in the south .'ll1d west.
@ * @
Nelson-Matter Catalogue.
The l'\ c!s0n-:\lattcr Furniture Company, of Grand RaPtds,
will be pleased to mail their catalogue (just issucd) of fine
and medium pri.ced furniture for the chamber and dining roOm
to dealers in furniture The book contaills about 7CO illus-trations
of high grade work.
@ * @
Officers for the Current Year.
The Jamestown (N. Y.) Chair Company held their annual
meeting of stockholders recently and cletted officers for "the
current veal'. The president is C. \V. Swanson, vice pr:esi-
• . .. I
dent S. B. Carlson, treasurer T •. 11. Goulding.
Baby Shows Profitable.
The Greet1\vald Furniture Company, of Salt Lake, derives
profit and pleasure from baby shows During his stay in
Grand Rapids recently ~h. G-reenwald made an interesting
statement in regard to such a show given a few months ago,
as follows: "\Ve gave a baby carriage to the handsomest
baby and didn't have a fight with the losing mothers, either.
Thcy received consolation prizes of silver rattles and we gave
away 487 of them. Vie had SOD of the infants wlJO were
under one year. Vie made trade friends of all those mothers
and of all tbeir friends among the women, and when you
can make friends of a large number of women at a clip there's
Made by th~ Globe Furntture Company.
Evansville, Ind.
something doing WitIl a furniture JlOuse v'll c're going to
try a baby show again next summer and we'll give away two
baby carriages, one going to the winner and each baby w-ill
have a chance to draw the other.
@ ~, @
Discounts Discontinued.
1-1. Rich & Brother, leading dealers in furniture and kind-red
goods at AJlanta, Ga., formerly allowed discounts on pUf-ehases
to school teachers and ministers, but the system caused
50 much trouhle that the 5rm substituted a net cash basis.
Other customers resented the discrimination aga.inst them,
and many concluded that they were paying for the advantages
conceded to the preachers and school teachers.
,...- - --- -- ---.., IUNION FURNITo~~~,l£~'l
I China Closets I Buffets
! ~::~::~:on~dion
I and Finish. See our Catalogue..
Our line on permanenl exhibi~
: tion 7th Floor, New Manufact~
I, urers' Building, Grand Rapids.
•
16 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
FIVE COMPLETE LINES OF
REfRIGERATORS
at
RIGHT PRICES
Opalite Lined.
Enamel Lined.
Charcoal Filled and
Zinc Lined.
•
and houses of detention the metal bed naturally is preferred,
but so long as furniture is made of wood the beds of the
same material should be considered the most desirable.
@ *@
"Arts and crafts is a modification of the mISSIon style,"
remarked a. young man who knows all about styles in furn-iture.
"But" he added, "the mission cabinet work of today
is so superior to that of the monkish workers in wood of past
centuries, that they would be ashamed of their lack of skill
if given an opportunity to inspect a twentieth century sample
of mission work.
OUR LARGE NEW LINE OF
DINING and OFFICE TABLES
are the best on the American market
when prices and quality are considered.
Stow 8 Davis Fumiture Co.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
, City aalearoom, 4th f100l'. Blod ..ett Bid ...
Zinc Lined with Re-movable
lee Tank.
Galvanized Iron Lined;
Stationary J ce Tank.
Send for new Catalogue
and let liS name )'fJU price.
Oallen~eRefri~mtor(0,.
GRAND HAVEN, MICH" U, 5, A,
•
To Manufacture Musical Instruments.
The Greene Music company was organized recently at
Somerville, N. J.. by Arthur H. Greene and others for the
purpose of engaging in the manufacture of pianos and organs.
The company's capital is $10.000.
@ * @
Beds of wood are steadily returning to the favor of the
public. Brass and iron beds have had a long run, but the
tall post and Napoleon styles in wood are steadily crowding
the metal bed into the back ground. For hospitals, asylums
The season
for banquets
is now
here. Our
Banquet
Table Top is
jUlt the
thing for
banqueb.
•
MICHIGAN
OUR LONDON FURNITURE LETTER.
The Trend in English Modern Furniture Styles; Popularity of
the Antique; the Queen Anne Period; Austrian Furniture;
"Modern English" Styles; L'Art Nouveau and Its Dread
Influences..
By George Cecil.
At the commencement of the late Queen Victoria's reign,
the furniture in the li~rjng-rooms aml that which was used for
the bedrooms-especially the latter-followed closely the lines
laid down by the furniture makers of George IV and 'VVillia1l1
IV reign. It was well made and simple in .;:-Jfect,while that
which was of a decorative nature was in perfect taste. In
the course of a few years, tradesmen pined for something
more pretentious and a passion for (much dreadful) gilding
ARTISAN Inset
chairs and stools which were in Use amongst the Romans.
One ftnds the result of their perverted imagination in certain
suburban homes-the misguided' mistress~s of which are too
easily led astray. That is to say, being incapable of think-ing
for themselves, tbey blindly entrust themselves to the
guidance of some oily young floor-walker whose business it is
to sell urJsalcabJe stock at the highest price. Fortunately
for the shop-keepers, suburban ladies have an amiable habit
of discussing their purchases with sympathetic friends, all of
whom are fired \vith a jealous desire to be .known for their
expensive furniture. Consequently, if the wife of the local
mayor learns that the neighboring alderman's spOUse has
bought a sH of antique stools, she loses-no time in providing
herself with a similar set. So much for the "rnodern an-tique."
The furniture
ages when they
makers draw upon examples of the middle
are asked to design speeiaJly strong arm
chairs or tables. For instances, the 11311
stools with which the nouveau riche likes
to furnish his newly acquired (and newly
built) ~ountry-house. are copied from the
monastic stools and benches which are
associated with the reign of Henry IV.
The Elizabethan s4ovel-board tables also
are reproduced to the order of these peo-ple,
and many modern dining room tables
aTe almost exact replicas of those around
which our Georgian ancestors sat until,
overpol~'ered by innumerable bottles of
claret, they gently sought'a resting place
On the floor. Popular, too, are the ('Queen
Anne" models An astonishing number
of looking-glasses and wardrobes are
made in this style, while many of the
London equivalent for the American
"smart set" a$k for Queen Anne dress-ing-
tables.
There also is a growing demand for
gemJine antique furniture; it is preferred.
by a great many people to modern bed-steads,
tables, chairs, and so forth. It is
partly owing to tbis craze-for it is little
less than a craze-that an enormous
quantity of antique dealers have started
business all over the country. Many of
these people calmly manufacture "an~
tiques," which they succeed in selling to
guileless American multi-millionaires, as
weB 2S to their English customers. Hav-ing
made the table or chest of drawers.
they bury it in the back garden, digging
it up after it has Jain in the earth for
some weeks. It is then well belabored
with a poker, to give it an added appearanec of age, and after
it has had a few charges of small shot fired into it to procure
the necessary worm-eaten appearance it is buried. once mote.
After its final disinterment, it is cleaned. and "sold to the high-est
bidder." It must not, however, be supposed that every
coIlectcr is easily gulled. th. Alfred de Rothschild is a
particularly knowil1g bird, while the great Wertheimer is
more than a match for the most astute rascal who ever "made
to order" a Blblebox or a coffin stool. So keen are some col-lectors
of the furniture of other ages, that nothing will iq-duce
them to have a single modern piece in their houses. Some
enthusiasts even go the length of providing the servants'
rooms with ancient bedsteads, washing-stands, and chests of
drawers, while the children of the house take their meals off
a shovel-board table and sit up in Charles I cane seated chairs.
In such establishments the fendersl fire-irons and grate are in
keeping. Consequently, there is no little demand for Sussex
THE CORRECT THING.
PRQGRESSIVg \VI'l'CR-You're behind the times, Elfie! Every witch
who knows -what's what has shaken her broom for a carpet sweeper.
--''Judge''
set in, with the result that early Victorian furnture (in com-mon
with early Victorian art in general) has ever been an
eye-sore to well-brought up people. In the late fifties,
things took a turn for the better, and many of the bureaus
which ,"vere made at that time, are treasured today while the
wardrobe and dining room tables of that date convey an ad-mirable
object lesson to those Philistine furniture makers who
have done so much to lower artistic prestige in this country,
In this connection it may be mentioned that the large estab-lishments
are not free from the taint of Philistinism, though
the trend in modern English furniture styles is either to copy
the antique, the Middle Ages, or the Queen Anne or Geor-gian
period. Some adopt the "Modern English" style, while
there is a small demand for Austrian furniture. Fortunate-ly
for one's comfort, Uthe antique" models arc 'not in general
demand, The guileless designers, believing that Lucullus
and ather bon vivants knew how to make themselves com-fortable,
have carefully copied the uncomfortable couches,
Inset MICHIGAN ARTISAN
! The Latest and Greatest 1m-
IBISSELL'S New (Patented)
Remember
the
BALL
BEARING
costs
but
$2.00
per
·dozen
more
than
the
old
style
and
retails
for
$3.00
per
dozen
more.
I
Always foremost in everything that constitutes a
a genuine, needful improvement in carpet sweepers,
we illustrate herewith our
new BALL BEARING
machine, and it is not too
much to say, that it marks a
most important epoch in car~
SQlJAIlE AXLE: TOB[ pet sweeper.deveIopment, be~
ing one of the greatest improvements that has been
made in the carpet sweeper up to this time.
Never before have Ball Bearings been success~
fully applied to the carpet sweeper, the
great obstacle being the application of a
satisfactory Ball Bearing device that could
be marketed at a price that would bring
it within the reach of the masses of the
people. After many years of experimen~ o.,,'';''wol
tation, we have finally produced a Ball BoDR~.;"",.
Bearing sweeper, the easiest running, most noiseless,
and thoroughly
efficient machine
that has ever been
offeredon the mar~
ket, and this too,
without having it
cost but a trifle
more than the
ordinary sweeper. Showing Dusl Proof Axle Tu~.
- - -----
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
provement in CarpetSwe~~er-s-;.-1
Other valuable features of our new machine are Pressed Steel Wheels, as true as if turned on a lathe, and which give a positive rotation of the I
brush, not found in any other sweeper. The "raceway" or ball retainer •
performs a twofold function, as in addition to retaining the balls, being fitted
with projeCtingarms, conneCtingdireCtly with the friCtionspring, the driving
wheels are at once forced againSt the brush pulley in the moStpositive man~
ner when pressure is put on the handle of the sweeper.
Another improvement in our Ball Bearing swe~per, is the adoption
of Square Sheet Metal Tubes that cover the axle rods, preventing all thread
and ravelings tram winding about same,
as well as preventing dust tram escaping I
through the ends of the case. In ad- I'
dition to this, these tubes provide a true
plane for the lateral act;on at the driving I
wheels, thus providing for the inevitable !I
law of wear in a carpet sweeper, whereby I
as the tace at the brush pulley or driving !
wheels become worn, the driving wheels II
will take up this loss, by still engaging I
the brush pulley, insuring the positive rotation of the brush. I
Our "Grand Rapids" and all our exclusive brands such as "Gold I
Medal," "Premier," "Welcome," "Furniture Protector," "Prize," "Cosmo- I
politan," "Boudoir," and "Superior," are now constructed with all our I new improvements, and a little later in the season, our complete line at
high grade machines will be so equipped.
Write for our Spring Offer.
Bissell Carpet Sweeper Co.
(Larges, and Only Exclnsive Carpet Sweeper Makers in ,he World.)
Branches: New York. 25 Warren So.; Niagara Falls. Can.; London; Paris. I Grand Rapids, Mich. 1
Inset
Inset MICHIGAN
fire-dogs, :pop-cranes and hangers, and other fire-place fur-nishings.
The modern English style is, generally speaking a thing
to avoid. It is designed by persons who, having enjoyed the
supplementary education furnished by well-meaning (but
Made by Woodard Furniture Co., Owosso, Mich.
somewhat stupid) philanthropists, give vent to their appalling
want of taste. They have the sublime impudence to take a
beautifully carved Swiss chair, and to inlay it with cheap,
tawdry modern enameIwhich is a remarkably long way after
the cloisonne of which it is supposed to be a copy. Othcr
incongruities also are theirs. They think ,nothing of pro-viding
a simple Dutch bedstead with a shapeless carving, while
the modern Queeu Anne furniture can, if carried out by an
injudic.ious designer, be an eye-sore. The lower orders
amongst the disciples of L'Art Nouveau also have great faith,
in the allurements of velvet plush, and painted flowers.
A good deal of the modern sitting and bedroom furniture,
besides that which is utilized for the dining room, the study,
and the hall-way is of fumed oak. A great· many English
people are much pleased with the effect, but those whose
taste is irreproachable object to it because of its painfully
new appearance. The sale of it however, is enormous, and
if it is-decorated by means of beaten coppe-r or brass, or with
quantities of gaudy enamel, it appeals 'strongly to the Philis-tine
hearts of people whose artistic education has been neg-lected.
In agreeable contrast to the fumed oak bedroom fur-niture
is the solid mahogany furniture, which is in vogue in
certain circles. Popular, too, are the inlaid mahogany bed-steads,
and -other bedroom furniture. Some of these are pro-vided
with carved splats. Thc simplicity and gracefulness of
the pierced rails are much in evidence ;-in fact whether the
modern bed is in oak, mahogany or any othcr wood, pierced
rails usually are insisted Upon. Greatly sought after also
are the white enamel suites of bedroom furniture, while a few
people set their affections upon white enamel with enrich-ments
in relief and gilded cane panels at the head and foot of
the bed. Such furniture is greatly in request amongst the
wealthy lower class who are willing to pay an extra price for
an additional amount of gilding.
At the present moment, there is a considerable sale for
solid black oak aining chairs with turned legs and under
ARTISAN
fra.ming, while the fumed oak dining chairs upholstered in
tapestry, besides those which are provided with rush seats,
find many purchasers. Sometimes they are upholstered in
roan leather, or morocco. The roan tint certainly has a very
pleasing effect under· certain conditionsj and when these
chairs were first introduced they met with considerable suc-cess.
One also comes across dining chairs of Queen Anne
design, the turned under-framing of which is a specialty.
In this connection, the Queen Anne style has a considerable
vogue, and applies to dining room furniture of almost every
description. This style is particularly effective when allied
with Italian walnut, whlle the Ch1ppendale designs also a.re
made in this wood. One also finds Jacobean styles in dining
chairs, the models being faithfully copied-even to the velvet
and the fancy ban dings.
@ * @
Amusement for House Furnishers.
Under the title HOld Fashions and New," the Chicago
Evening Post of April 27 welcomes the return to that city of
the manners and customs of the early seventies, when walnut
furniture, marble mantel pieces, ill looking hat racks, excelsior
mattresses and ingrain carpets were used in old fashioned
houses, with basement dining-rooms and long, narrow front
halls. The remarks of the Post upon this subject affords
amusement-to modern home furnishers. One paragraph COn_
tained in the. article reads as follows:
"Vlith the old fashions go a calmness of outlook, a Serene
crccd and a serener disregard of all troublesome modern facts.
It is possible that this serenity is the attraction which is draw-ing
present interest back to its physical surroundings. At
any rate, there is a decided turning toward the marble man-tels,
the heavy silver, the china and any of the rea.IIy beauti,
ful exceptions to that rule of undeniable ugliness, The quiet
households, which have deficd the mission invasion and looked
upon the colonial as primevially out of date are now calmly
finding themselves on the boundaries of good style again.
This swing of the pendulum the older generation will prob-ably
accept as unemotionally as it accepted the swing in the
Made by the World Furniture Co, Evan8ville. Ind.
other direction. For it is merely standing still. But if our
felicitations upon their quiet vindication are not out of place,
,we would like to tender them most heartily to the old fashions
and hope, for a while at least, that they may save us from the
new."
- - --------------
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
ARTISTIC andINEXPENSIVE
CATALOGUE COVERS
LET US FIGURE ON YOUR PHOTOGRAPHING
ENGRAVING and PRINTING
at
Rigbt Pricell
PERFECT
WORK
PROMPT
DEUVERIES
COMPLETE
CATALOGS MICHIGAN ENGRAVING CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
I1_-
17
18 MICHIGAN
FLAT FURNISHED FOR $150.
Tenement Children Taught How to Run it.
Fifty girls whose a,verage age is about 11 and who Jive in
that densely populated Jewish district which has its centre at
the corner of Allen and Stanton streets are attending a school
at which they arc learning things much more important to
them than the things that are taught in the public schools.
That is, they think these things ~re more important, what-ever
professional educators may say about them, for the)'
are learning to become good housewives.
They are going to school in a flat, a model flat, and the
curriculum includes just those things an East Side housewife
should know, and no others.
Model tenements are not new; model flats are not new,
but there arc many new and interesting features in the work
which the young ,vomen of St. George's Protestant Episcopal
Church have been doing for the last two months in the House
of Aquila at 130 Stanton street. A typical three room East
Side flat is on exhibition.
It has been furnished complete for the occupancy of five
persons-father, mother, daughter, son and male boarder-at
a cost of less than $150, and these :fifty gjrls are Jearning
how to keep it in spiek and span order, how to prepare such
meals as they hope to prepare latcr in their own homes when
they are married and how they may sa,fely begin the married
life with a reasonable amount of savings.
Most persons do ·not know the House of Aquila under that
name. It used to be the Pro-Cathedral before the Cathedral
of St. John the Divine began to rear its stately arches up on
Morningside Heights. Now it is one of the centers of work
of the New York Protestant Episcopal City Mission Society,
of which the Rev.' Robert B. Kimber is superintendent.
Its once lofty Spaces have been cut t1p into floors and
rooms, and many activities for the benefit of the residents
of the neighborhood are carded on. There are a day nursery,
classes of various kinds for children. including the very lit-tlest,
sewing schools and cooking schools a.nd a gymnasium
for men and boys. About 800 persons, mostly children, come
directly under its beneficent influence. Miss Anna Duncan,
who is a fountain of cheerfulness and helpfulness, is in charge.
Tucked away up under the rafters, where only the rounded
tops of the stained glass windows of the old cathedral may
be seen, is the model flat. It is an undertaking apart from the
varied activities of the House of Aquila. The house repre-sents
part of the work of the diocese; the model flat is car-ried
on entirely by the young ,"vomen of the city missions
committee of St. George's Church.
Mr. Kimber suggested the Bat, but the young women have
done the work. Those who have been active in it are :Miss
Margaret Greble, Miss Susan Ellis, Miss Julia Cutting and
Miss Dorothy Merry1ees.
They consulted Miss Mabel Kittridge, who has had exper-ience
in running model flats in various crowded sections of
the city, and she gave them valuable suggestions. Her work
has been to rent actual apartments in tenements and furnish
them as a practical lesson in domestic science for tenement
dwellers.
The,young women of St. ,George's adopted her suggestions
and added some of their own. The most practical arrange-ment
combined with the lowest expenditure of money was
what they aimed at, and they think they have accomplished
it in the model, flat in Stanton street. Furnishing three
rooms complete for less than ,$150 sounds like a grea.t under-taking
for those not familiar with tenement conditions.
They obtained from Miss Kittridge two model rooms
which she had shown at the congestion exhibit held last
spring at the American Museum of Natural History and added
a third. The three rooms stand in a corner of the top floor
schoolroom in the House of Aquila. looking like some new
ARTISAN
kind of doll house. The three windows and the door open
on the school room, which is just as ·light and airy as the
average East Side.
The first impression as yOU enter the door is that the
model flat isn't big enough for one let alone for five, and you
conclude that the model is on a smaller scale. But it isn't; it
is fully as large as the average three rooms in an East Side
tenement, and after a few minutes within its walls the re~liza~
tion comes naturally that a family would find it most com-fortable
if the members did not mind rubbing elbows occas-ionally.
You are informed by one of the young women in charge
that the tenement house law as to the number of cubic feet
of space necessary for five occupants is rigidly observed. The
kitchen is 10 feet square and 10 feet high, the living room
the same size and the extra room is 7 feet deep! 10 feet wide
and 10 feet high.
The flat is completely furnished .a.nd yet there is room to
walk around comfortably. The kitchen is considered the most
important room in a tenement flat, and in this model flat care
has been taken to make the kitchen complete in every detail.
It is 111uchlarger than the kitchen one often finds in apart-ments
which rent for $40 a month or more,and is really an
attractive room.
A small coal stove stands opposite the door. Gas stoves
are unknown in the tenements, and there is nothing theoreti-cal
about this model flat. The stove cost $13.
There is a good sized table which serves of course as a
dining table. The stationary tubs have a movable partition
and may be used as a bath tub. The floor is covered with oil-cloth
of an attractive pattern.
All the requirements of an up to date kitchen are there,
and at first glance there seems to be more pots and pans and
skillets and other utensils than are necessary; but it must be
remembered that this is a Jewish kitchen, and kosher cooking
demands a double set of most kitchen articles.
-·There is room in this 10 by 10 kitchen for a commodious
china closet, built of plain wood and stained. Behind the
gJass is an attractive array of blue and white dishes and the
necessary glassware.
There is a bread box of japanned tin and a sugar tin and
a flour tin. Nothing missing as far as the man observer can
see, and the observer's wife, who went along just to have a
look at a flat that could be furnished for $150, corroborates
him.
"What did the kitchen cost?" you ask. "It looks as if the
$150 must have been exhausted right here."
Your attention is called to a typev.:-ritten list tacked on the
wall. Each item that has gone into the kitchen is set down
and the price thereof is set down against it. The total is
$j7.47. It would be $4.071ess were it. not for the requirements
of kosher cooking.
The articles for the kitchen were not bought at bargain
rates at that; ordinary department store prices were paid. A
Jewish housewife might cut the total a bit by close bargaining
in Grand strect.
Passing to the living room, which also serv~s as a bed-room,
what first meets the eye is the liberal use of cretonne
of a pretty pattern. A clothes closet has been made in one
corner by the simple method of draping cretonne from a shelf.
What appears to be a cosy corner covered with cretonne
is really a bed, and a triple bed at that. There is a large
size hospital cot and beneath it a single metal bed which is
pulled out into the center of the room at night. The hospital
cot is for the mother and daughter; the single bed for the
father.
This room contains also a table of stained wood, an oak
chiffonier, a mirror, a picture and a few chairs. There is a
small Crex rug on the floor. The typewritten Jist ill this
room shows a total which isn't ql1ite correct.
There is an entry of a chair at $6, but no chair which
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 19
could possibly cost that much is in sight; and therehy hangs
a tale.
The young \',romen who furnished this flat detcrmined that
one thing it "hould have ,vas a comfortable chair for father,
in which he could rest after his hard clay's work, Sf) they
went to a high class store alld got a chair of wicker for father.
It Slue was comfortable.
But it was also out of place. as almost every visitor re-marked:
certainly not the kind of chair for a tenement. So
it was b;:lnished and a lr.ore substantial wooden rocker ""viii
take its place. It will only cost $3.75. \Vith this change the
cost of furnishing the living- room is $46.62 and more than
$8 of that \'Y"Nll for cretOllne.
TIle male hoarder is an almost necessary factor in East
Side tenement life and the projectors of the modcl flat took
this into accouut. \Vere it not for the male boarder a family
of three or even four might get along very well in 1"wor00111S.
The third room is for the male boarder and the SOIL
A metal bed 'with a trundle attached furnishes the slecping
accommodation. There is a. metal washstand, a chiffonier and
mirror, another cretonne covered closet, chClirs and a rug. A
•
STAR CASTER CUP CO.
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted celluloid as a base for our Caster Cups, making the
best cup all the market. Celluloid is a ~Teat improvement over bases
made of o~her material. When it is necessary to move a piece supported
by cups wlth celluloid bases it can be done with ease, as the bases are per-fectly
smoolh. Celluloid does not sweat and by the use of these cups ! I tables are never marred. These cups are finished in Golden Oak and
t White Maple. finished light. If you will try a sample order of these
I goods you Will desire to kandle them in quantities. I
I PRICES: Size 2U inches $5.50 per hundred. I Size 2U inches 4.50 per hundred. I
: f'. o. b. Grand Rapid8. TRY A SA.MPLE OIWER. : ~,------ -~
rack contains five toothbrushc;;, an unobtrusive hint to East
Side visitors. This room also cost $40.83 to furnish.
This makes a total of $144.92 for the three rooms. \'-'ith-out
the provision of kosher cooking it would be $140.85. It
should be borne in mind that this sum includes mattresses,
blankets. bed linen, everything nccessary to housckeepillg.
Everything in the flat can be \vashed. even the cretonne, and
this fact is One of the lessons the model tlat aims to teach.
At each windmill is a. window box which contains growing
plants. iii"
The next step the young \YOllienof St. George's will take
is to furnish this model flat with the clothes necessary for the
occupants. Then they will be prepared to show tenement
dwellers how to Jive, eat and dress at the lowest cost po:.;sible
witb health.
A model flat may be good to look at, but its purpose will
not be ful/llled unless those for whom it is intended learn the
lessons it has for them. So those who will be making- homes
for themselves in a fe,,\' years come daily to the Hat to ;;ee
and to work.
The teacher is a girl of 18, a girl of the East Side who
understands the people and their customs. She is Etta Rab-inowitz,
'wbo came from ROllmania seven years ago. She i;;
au American girl now, speaking with only a slight accent.
She worked in a factory for a time, but ,,,..-henit 'vas sug-gested
that she might earn her living by teaching girls how
to keep house she jumped al the chance. She is all smiles as
she tells about her ".-ark. She loves it and her pupils love
her and the .york too, so therc is something very pleasant in
this novel schoolroom.
There are six or seven girh in each class and there arc
eight classes, on :-Vfonday,Tucsday, \Vednesday and Thursday
afternoons and on the evenings of those days. Friday is the
day for preparation for the Sabbath and Saturday is the Sab-bath
and Sunday is Sunday for Episcopalians, so there can
be leaching on only four days of the week. The classes are
full, with a waiting" list.
Each girl cmr.cs to one lesson a v,reek and there are sixteen
lessons arranged now. }laybe there will be a sort of post
graduate course la.ter. Here. is the present schedule of
lessons:
1. Uncover hed-air bedroom.
2. 1I1ake fire-prepare cocoa.
3. Cook two cerea.ls-set breakfast table.
4. Bake griddle cakes, stack dishes.
5. Daily care of living rootH.
6. Bake gingerbread, \vash dishes and towels .
7. Daily care of bedroom.
8. Care of sink. window box, garbage pail.
9. Cook potatoes.
10. Scrub kitchen, table, tubs.
11. Bake biscuits, prepare tea.
12. Thorough clea,ning of living room.
13. Simple cooking lesson.
14. Thorough eteal1ing of bedroom.
15. Vlashing lesson.
16. Prepare dinner.
Each pupil has a card with the schedule of lessons, and
WhCllshe has taken lesson No.1 the card is punched at No.
1 and so on. She can always tell how her course is pro-gressing.
The girls like the cooking lessons best partly because it's
pleasanter work and partly because tbey eat ",,·hat they make,
cat it right there in the cozy flat in all its bright newness.
No.4 and No.6 are mighty popular lessons.
The children in the afternoon classes come in after scbool
at 3:30 and have a most delightful time helping Miss Rabin-
O\vitz until 6. The evening classes begin at 8. Tardiness is
rare.
As soon as a pupil appears she gets into a big blue check
aprOll and a white cap and becomes the busy little house-
\\.·ifc. The teac.her Clsks a few questions at the start and
thel1 the class hustles about at work that seems like play.
The children pay for their lessons. Each one must bring
a cent every tin..e she comes and drop it in a. little bank. The
money is supposed to pay for the coal. It doesn't, but it
pleases the girb; to know that they are doing something to
educate themselves.
Although the pupils of the model flat like· the lessons
there is a seriousness and thoroughness in the way they go
about thcir work which indicates that they have an eye on
the future when they will have a little home of their own.
Boys are wanting to join the classes now, but there isn't
any room for them.
The model flat is open for inspection every day. It has
been open for two months only and already has attracted
wide Clttentioll. The inquirers and tbe vi'sitars haven't all
been persons interested in settlement work.
There have been inquiries and visits from those who
,vish to make their own humble homes more livable at a
small expenditure, and not all of them belong to the class
that goes by the general term of tenement dwellers.-N. Y.
SUIl.
20 lIIICHIGAN
Bissell's "Cyco" Ball Bearing Sweeper.
\Ve illustrate herewith the new Ball Bearing Carpet
Sweeper introduced by the Bissell Carpet Sweeper Com-pany,
and which marks onc of the most distinctive as well
as important improvements that has ever been made in
carpet sweepers. Never before have Ball. Bearings been
successfully applied to the carpet sweeper, the great obstacle
being the application of a satisfactory ban-bearing device
that could be marketed at a price that would bring it within
the reach of the masses of the people. After years of ex-perimentation,
the Bissell Company have finally produced
what is claimed to be the easiest running, most noiseless
and thoroughly efficient machine that has been offered on
the market up to this time, and this too without having it
cost but a trine more than the ordinary sweeper.
"Vhile ball-bearings constitute a most distinct and 'val-uable
element in the construction of this new sweeper, it
possesses other new features of equal merit, namely, wheels
of pressed steel as true as if turned on a lathe, and which
is the first essential necessary to the pO;i;itive rotation of the
brush, as if the driving wheels are not perfectly round and
true there must be a corresponding loss of brush power,
and which defect hitherto accounts largely for the complaint .,
of the sweeper "dropping the dirt." The hubs of the steel
drawn wheels, and on which the ball-bearings rest, are also
steel' and are milled to the most accurate fit.
The bearings consist of ten balls to each wheel, or forty
balls to the ·sweeper, These balls are 5~32 in. in diameter,
and are steel ground balls of the most perfect workmanship
the bearing in detail consists of a steel' milled "raceway"
encircling the hub, the retaining mechanism consisting of
two stamped sheet metal members, one folding over the
other and completing the "raceway" for the perfect reten-tion
of the balls. The "raceway" or ball retainer performs
a twofold function, not only retaining the balls, but also
having projecting arms connecting directly with the friction
spring proper, whereby the driving wheels are at once forcej
against the brush pulley in the most positive manner when
pressure is put upon the handle _of the sweeper.
The letters patent just issued in various countries cover-ing
this device lay great stress not alone on the application
of a ball bearing on the hub of the carpet sweeper, but the
frictional principle connected therewith, whereby the most
positive propelling power of the brush is uniformally main-tained,
not only under all conditions, but with the least
pressure or effort on the part of the operator.
Another highly important mechanical' feature of this new
ball-bearing sweeper is the adoption of the square sheet
metal tubes running lengthwise through the case, and en-closing
the axle rods, thus providing a true plane for the
lateral action of the driving wheels as they follow in to en-gage
the brush pulley. This feature provides for the inevit-
ARTISAN
able law of wear in a carpet sweeper, whereby as the face of
the brush pulley or driving wheels become worn, the driving
wheels will take up this loss, still engaging the brush pulley,
insuring the positive rotation of the brush, even when the
brush pulleys or rubber tires on the driving wheels are
badly worn.
It is universally conceded that a perfect ball-bearing con-stitutes
the lightest and easiest bearing ever produced, and
it has been the aim ,of inventors for years to evolve a carpet
sweeper equipped with ball-bearings, but not until the pres-ent
time has it been accomplished, owing to the great cost
to produce -a ball-bearing sweeper that could be sold at a
popular price, It is claimed by the Bissell Company that
the features embodied in the new ball~bearing sweeper not
only improves its light running and sweeping qualities, but
also adds materially to the life of the mac:hine.
One of the Bissell Company's most popular brands, the
Grand Rapids, is now equipped with these new devices and
will be offered on the market for the coming fall and holi-day
trade. These new features will be added to the com-pany's
entire line of high gradc machines as soon as the
work can he accomplished, and the company anticipate a
largely increased demand for their product.
@ * @
Why the Trust Plan Failed.
Roger W, Butterfield, the president of the Grand Rapids
Chair Company, has been interested in the furniture manu-facturing
business many years. His first savings acquired
shortly after graduating from the law department of the
Michigan University. amounting to $500.00 was invested in
the stock of a furniture manufacturing company, and he has
long held stock in the Grand Rapids Chair Company and the
\Viddicomb Furniture Company. In a reminiscent mood re-cently
he recalled the effort of the late Charles R. Flint to
organize a trust to control the manufacture of furniture in
the United States. Mr. Flintca.me to Grand Rapids and
tendered Mr. Butterfield a retainer after stating briefly the
object of his visit. Mr. Butterfield stated that his firm re-presented
a number of furniture manufacturing corporations
and asked for time in which to consult his clients. A hurried
investigation of the affairs of the local manufacturing cor-porations
Mr. Flint had proposed to include in the trust
showed an aggregate indebtedness of $600,000. Under the
trust plan this indebtedness would be increased $1,000,000 and
upon the whole it was proposed to provide for the pa.yment
of an annual interest of six per cent. The business of the
interests involved was not paying six per cent and Mr.
Butterfield was unable to see how it would be able to do so
with an addition of $1,000,000 to the indebtedness.
E. H. Foote of the Grand Rapids Chair Company de-clared
that the trust would kill Grand Rapids as a furniture
center; that the business would be conducted in New York
and that a considerable number of the factories would be
closed for all time.
Mr, Butterfield advised his clients to reject the plan,
which was finally done throug-h the refusal of the Grand
Rapids Chair Company and the VvTiddicomb Furniture Com-pany
to enter the combination.
Henry Scltmit ff Co.
HOPKINS AND HARRIET STS.
(J1D(liOOllti, OLio
makers of
Upltol&tered Furnitnre
fo'
LODGE and PULPIT, PARLOR,
LIBRARY, HOTEL and
CLUB ROOM
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Window Dressing,
The direct influence \vhich a dressed window has upon
buying will never be known, probably, but that its indirect
influence is great and that its direct effect is considerable
no well-informed merchant can doubt. As soon as a mer-chant
really becomes convinced in his own mind that such is
the case, .it .is obvjous' to him that ]lcre is a WCapO!l for
gaining trade which he must use. It is like a sword.
If it lies in the attic, forgotten and covered with dust, it
is absolutely \vorthless. If it is brought downstairs and llUllg
ill a conspicuous place it may hold the eye of a fe"v for a
We are now putting out the best Caster Cups with cork bases ever
offeree to the trade. These are finished in Golden Oak and \Vhite Maple
in a light finish. These goods are admirable for polished floors and furn-iture
rests. They will not sweat or mar.
PRICES:
Siz~2;( inches $4.00 per hundred
~iz~:.l%lillches" 5.0U per hundred
Try a Samplf. Order. F. O. n. Grand Rapii.U.
'------------_.------
moment. If it is furbished up, cleansed and sharpened, it
may defend the owner against assault or enable him to at-tack
and overcome his adversaries. V·/indow dressing is
much the same. As long as the idea lies in the back of the
merchant's mind it does him no good. \\lhen he makes a
feeble and half-hearted attempt at it, it may hold a wander-ing
eye for a motuellt. But it is effec:tive only when he takes
it up, studies its possibilities carefully and makes use of it
to its fullest extent. A sharp s·word is a formidable weap-on
when in the hands of a master of swordsmanship. It is
a mockery in the hands of one unskilled in its usc. So \vin-claw
dressing is a power for the man who knows how to
handle it, and it is apt to become ineffective to say the least
when it is grasped by the man who does not know how to
make the most of it.
Once the man who desires to usc this \veapon for the ad-vancement
of his trade has settled this in his mind, he must
consider how to do it. First he 111Ustlook to his windows-
\vhat kind of windows are they-how large., wbr.t shape, hov,,'
the light falls-in short, what their possibilities are. These
are important, but preliminary. As the general looks over
the chosen field of battle, so must the merchant examine his
windo-ws for the strife of winning trade. Can this window
be used for display? Does the public pass this way? \Vhat
kind of goods can be displayed 1110Steffectively here? All
these arc questions worth while.
After that, comes the display proper. There arc three
things to be taken into consideration. First, what goods will
adapt themselves to displ"ay readily; second, what g.oods .vill
attract attention and bring trade, and, third, what goods is
it best to display with an object of dearing up and securing
quick returns. These are not little, idle things, but ones
which every accomplished and expert window dresser takes
into consideration. Suppose there are goods which sell at
sight. Even though they make good window displays, it may
be wise to displace them in favor of something else, for the
21
store IS a place to sell goods. The window should look
pretty-all right, but that is not its sole-not even its chief
-function. It is only a meaus to an end.
Nor is this all the preliminary work. The seasons are to
be considered, the state of the public mind regarC:ing certain
lines, and their pocketbooks as well.
Many merchants will know two-thirds of these things and
need not go over the ground again, but as it is necessary to
know them all, they are mentioned.
1\ ow, with this much accomplished, the ground is cleared.
You have the limitations of the windows, the goods which
will be best for display and next comes the plan. How are
you going to arrange them? \\1hat is the general form? \Ve
think th"t a helter-skelter windO\'v"not only shows bad judg-ment,
carelessness and haste, but that it detracts from the
window's usefulness. There are numberless plans to choose
from, many of them excellent, so make a choice. In some
lines of goods, such as h,ouse furniture and fittings, dignity
is admirable. Columns may be used, and a general stateli-ness
obtained out of proportion to the space. With grocer-ies
this may not be best for it will grow stiff and formal.
"lith dry goods, grace of line and contour is admirable.
Vlith food stu[{s, something appetizing is excellent. Lay
figures are good.
Some time ago we stated that in advertising, a picture of
a person doing something with the article advertised is better
than a picture of the article itself. This hint may be borne
in mind in window dressing as well.
A little ingenuity, a few inexpensive fixtures, and you
have possibilities unbounded for windows. Remember, a
window is part of your assets, and this 'should be kept in
mind when changing locations, buying a stand or refitting
and repairillg.
Last, but not least, pay close attention to the changes.
111 advertising there are varying opinions about the value of
keeping one fixed form before the public; Some believe in
mally changes, while others prefer to hammer into the minds
of the public the name, and cling to familiarity. Both are
right, but not so in window dressing. Change is vital. The
public grows weary of the same thing over and over again.
At first they admire the display; next they pass it with hardly
a glance, and last of all it tires them. It takes an except-ional
display to hold attention for more than a week, and
Big Rapids Furni-ture
Mfg. Co.
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
SIDEBOARDS
BUFFETS
HALL RACKS
In Quartered Oak, Golden
and Early English Finish. No. 128. Pl-ice $12.
2 off so days.t. Q. b.
Big Rap{d8.
'------------------------.-----
this time grows shorter in proportion to the size of the city.
Get new ideas and adapt them, Clever money-dra\',,·ing dis-plays
are worth many times the labor, both mental and phy-sicial,
which they require.
It is hoped that this article may have value to merchants,
more in stimulating them and awakening them to the possi-bilities
for them, than for the sake of technical" instructions.
These latter cannot be furnished in a general article, but are
supplied elsewhere from time to time.
22 MICHIGAN
Know Your Business.
Detail and retail are cousins with the same surname.
They are of the same old gratidmothcr, the French verb tail-let,
to divide, but you can110t -divide them without detriment
to reta.iL
The man. who, undertakes a business, without a keen ap-preciation
of the necessity of knowing where leaks are liable
to occm and the manner of slopping them before they sink
him, is merely giving employment to a few people while his
credit lasts.
The average retail furniture business should yield a net
profit of at least ten per cent of its sales. Until ,it does this
it should be under suspicion. If customers arc not returners,
if prices are too high for them, or too low for you, if two men
are doing what could be done by one and are killing time in
concealing it, or if one man is doing the work oitwo and
doing it to get it through rather than to get it thorough, yoU
may depend upon it there is rheumatism somewhere, and
more likely than not in the detaiL The difference between
detail and cha,rity, is that the former uncovers a multitude
of sins, and yet there are numbers of men in the furniture
business who, knowing- detail, neglect to lift the cover and
root out the sins,
The man who displays dirty, uncared for gopds is one;
tile man whose office system is incomplete, and whose boo'r.::s
are seldom posted to date IS another; the man whose out-standing
accounts cry in vain for a collector, whose salary,
instead, is paid to the bank" as interest, is yet another. The
man of system with all the detail wires out, has means -of
knowing at all times what each man is doing, wherein his
stock is weak, and where strong, what class of goods sell
best, and what pays the best profit, how large the stock this
morith or last and how things are moving as compared min-utely
with former seasons.
There is no better way of knowing if you are in a way
to make money, or if you are getting -full returns or if your
advertising and delivery is good or bad, than by ascertain-ing
what people say of you.
There should be someone at your entrance to receive cus-tomers.
No matter what the size of your business this is es~
sentiaI.
If you cannot afford a floor walker do-it yourself. If you
cannot do that have it done by the salesmen in turn. Women
like such attention, and men do not dislike it.
The price tag should tell a full story of its article to the
salesman. It is a blot on a fine· piece of furniture at best, but
being necessary, should be as inconspicuous as possible, ex-cept
in cases where p3.rticular attention is callcd to a price.
The size need not exceed 2 x 3 inches, and it should be
marked with ink, never lead pencil, which smears,
•• • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • •• •• 0 •• •• 0 •• • • • • •• I • • 1 0 0 4 6 6 • D.te....•-14
,......... • • • • • 10 11 12 • • • • " ,. • 16 16 l' 1. • Kfg .... \V7-B4 ........ • • ,. 00 al "" • • • O. O• • 06 00 O. o. o. .0 • • INo .....6-1.""......... • • 31 .. • • • 3. 3' .5 36 • • 3' 38 3' 40 41 40 • Price .. _........•....• • • •3 .. • • • .5 '6 •• 43 •• •• • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • ••
The above is front and back of one of the few tags that
cover the situation.
How many managers, buyers, or salesman, can go through
a stock of seventy-five to one hundred and fifty thousand dol-lars
and from the tag specify the number, quantity, maker,
cost, and age of every article in it?
It is aU necessary, particularly the matter of age. The
rocker which has been offered for sale in vain for two years
should be branded and subjected to an extra push. The
above ta.g will show all these data to everyone but the CU5-
ARTISAN
tamer and wlH prevent her from carrying the correct number
of an article to a competitor for a lower price unless the sales-man
chooses to give it to her.
The tag is explained as follows:
Date. 3-14 would mean that the article was received in
IV1arch,the third month of the fourteenth yea.r of the store,
presuming it were establishcd in 1889. The store cstab-lished
in 1898 would be marking all tags this year-H.
Mfg. w7-84 would mean that w7 was the cost of the article
in dollars, w being part of a cost word, 7 being plain fig-ure,
and 84 the number of the manufacturer. each manu-facturer
having a number.
No. 5-1003 would mean that the cost of the article was 50
cents in addition to the above dollars, 2, 5, and 7, standing
for 25, 50, and 75 cents, all other values being written in
full; 1003 is the number of the article.
If a tag were marked as above, w meaning 1, and 84 stand-ing
for the Imperial Furniture Company, the sa.lesman would
he informed that the mahogany side table No. 1003, made by
the Imperial, was received in 11arch, 1903, and cost $17.50.
The back of the tag keeps the stock record, the original mark-er
crossing off the number next higher than the stock, and
salesmen continuing to cross off as they sell down. 1\0 tag
should be allowed to remain soiled, and a new set should. be
provided at least once a year, when old goods should be noted
and marked accordingly.
It is the custom in some stores to pay (P. M.'s) premium
money to the salesmen to induce them to push the sale of old
or undesirable goods. Whether this policy pays or not de-pends
upon conditions of stock and trade. If stock is weedy,
and in spite of the best the buyer can do continues ,to accum-ulate
articles that do not sell, you must, to relieve it, take
into consideration that phase of human nature which prompts
the most conscientious of us to push harder on our mower
than on some one's else.
A salesman is hircd to sell your customers ostensibly what
they want. If he is magnetic, or creates the impression of
knowing h~sbusiness, he can influence thelr wants. Becan
therefore. to a certain degree, sell what they want, or what
he wants them to want, or what you want them to want. As
a rule, what he wants to sell is that which sells with the least
friction; whereas, what you want to sell IIlay be that which is
slow selling and ties up your money_ You pay him a fair
salary and you feel h..::should sell what you want sold, He
will undoubtedly try hard to do so. If he is a decent, con-scientious
fellow he will try ha,rder, and if there is something
in it for himself he will try hardest. If salesmen abuse the
system, by ignoring goods, in order to make them candi-dates
for P_ M.'s, replace them, as they have not your inter-est
at heart, or make their sales exempt from payment of
P. :VT.'s. The accumulation of undesirable stock is a con-dition
you must overcome or it will overcome you. The
method most used is that of p.aying a commissl0n of two to
five per cent on such goods as arc marked with a certain tag;
Educate your salesmen to your policy of doing business.
If you keep such goods as Chippendale, Colonial, and Mission
see that they can talk intelligently to such as ask for these
styles. This can best be done by circulating among-them the
trade papers, Your salesmen will, under your policy, make
your business express or freight; their doings wilt make or
unmake you. The proprietor or manager, who feels too im-portant
to have anything in common with his people, is taking
nine steps whcre ten are possible in the direction of success,
and that tenth step may mean the profit. The mana.ger should
make rules of government and store conduct, see that they are
lived up to and, under their cover, mix in. in order to get at
the meat of things_ The employer sets the pitch, and the help
sing to his sea\e. If he is pompous to them, they will be un-consciously
more or less pompous to their store inferiors, and
certain of their customers_ His method of treating custom""
ers will. be the standard of his salesmen a.nd his store habits
MICHIGAN
~---------
ARTISAN 23
•
OUR OAK AND MAHOGANY
DINING
EXTENSION
TABLES
ARE
BEST MADE
BEST FINISHED
VALUES
All Made from Thoroughly Seasoned Stock.
LENTZ TABLE CO.
NASHVILLE, MICH.
No. 567
I "--------------------_._-------- .I.
will be the habits of certain of his people. ~othing makes
the salt'.5Il1an nill faster for his car than the knowledge that
his employer will be at the store to see his late arrival.
The daily ad., and the location of advertised articles,
shOl.tld be a matter of early attention to the salesmen. The
one ignorant of such things show the inquiring customer that
her call was the first a.nd dampens her ardor. Vv"hen a cus~
tomer asks for several things, that ,,,... hieb best promises a. sale
should be shown her flrst. Retracing of steps, afterwards, is
poor policy, since a tired customer keeps thinking of what
may be accomplished tomorrow.
The question of exchanging, and sending goods on ap-proval
is one which taxes the decision of mallY dealers. \Vc
are in business to do what the public wants done, for a con-sideration,
and the trouble arises because of its lack of knowl-edge
as to just 1,.-vhatit does want done.
In the old days when father ran the business, he VdlO
bought a parlor :mitc, knc\\' just what he 'wanted and got it.
It was made of walnut, \'v·ith carved bunches of grapes, so
placed as to lacerate the back of the neck and was upholstered
in haircloth, or red plush with a yellow band on top.
Its selection caused no brain fag, but, in these hair-split-ting
later days, the ordinary man delegates such duties to !lis
wife, who goes into training before purchasing. She has
color conceptions, and tape measure exercises. with studies ill
blendings and effects, and if you arc twentieth eetitury in
your doings you must help her out.
Figure it all in. It is part of advertising or the price.
Occasionally your furniture on approval, which is retuTllcd as
unsuitable the day after its use at her reception, helps mater-ially
its success and causes you to make resolutions, hut what
of it after all. Perhaps the very davenport she returned
fdled the hearts of some of her guests with envy, or whatever
a better name for the same thing is that they began forthwith
a campaign on the breadwinner for additions to their Ol;VIl
parlors. You are included in such campaigns. are you llot?
You are only making a, show window of a private residence.
1£ such things were unheard of some of you would want to
do that and pay for it. If you can say anything or do any-thing,
or advertise anything, or even loan anything that will
prompt a desire ior more or better furnishings, is it not what
you are after? There is seldom a piece of furniture bought
but leads dired\.y or indin'_ctly to the purchase of some other
piece by its owner or some one \..-ho sees it.
One great fault of even the best of stores is incoll1'pletc-ness.
No bookcase, china. closet, or music cabinet should be al-lowed
to remain with unfitted shelves; factory tags should be
removed; casters, pulls and keys should be in place and the
old bluff that the drawer li1lhich sticks is locked, should be
abolished by prevention. Omission of these details lessen the
salesmen's chances and keep him promising to remedy the de-fects,
which burdens no (me's memory but the dissatisfied cus-tomer's.
\Vhel1 the purchaser is about to say, "I'll take it,"
the time is inopportune to discover that the sideboard has a
split leg. It is parade day for that board and it'should have
its Sunday clothes on.
Thcre should be in use a method of tracing the sale of
goods., of checking goods recc-i.ved, from a total purchase book
showing at a glance the goods still to arrive, and a daily sum-mary
of sales, shipments, costs and profit with comparison
with former sea..'ions.
The cash store, which is generally the high grade store,
should mark cost in characters, and price in plain figures,
while the installment store should use a character price and
not mark cost. The higher you are above wholesale, the more
necessary it becomes to conceal it, and consequently the lower
the price, the better the results tram plain figures.
The higher the grade the more necessary it is that the
salesman know something of the cost, the. maker, of the 54-
inch table, which the customer wants in 60-inch and which is
in stock. The more elaborate the desires of the customer
the ntore it bebooves the salesman to know where such
things may be had.
The trouble \vith most businesses lacking proper detail, and
suffering from it, is tbat they are unconscious of its absence.
They attribute sale shrinkage to politics, or labor strikes, or
crops, and scent hard times, assisting conversationaIty in mak-ing
realities of their surmises.
Trade is good; !lcver worse than fair except to your book-keeper,
or your wife, and never otherwise in shaking hands
with the traveling ma.n, who often spreads trade contagion
which it should be his duty to quarantine.
@ * @
For Sale at Once.
The best paying complete House Furnishing business in
Michigan. Old established, good prices, a gold mine for
a hustler. Address "Bargain," care Michigan Artisan.
Nov. 25th-tf
24 MICHIGAN
STYLE LOUIS XVI.
By A. Kirkpatrick, Director Grand Rapids School of
Furniture Designing.
The people were so disgusted ,.·.j.th the pomp and ex-travagance
of the Lpuis XV period and the shameful misuse
of the money that it caused them to revolt, and a new phil-osophy
began to Plake itself felt. It was quiet evident to
them that the sysie'm of government was wrong and that they
should have more
power in the af-fairs
of state.
Louis XVI, a
Illan of good in-tentions,
but weak
in character, suc-ceeded
his grand-father,
Louis XV,
and was crowned
king of France
in 1774 under dis-couraging
a t1 d
ominous circum-stances.
He was
married shortly
before this to the
young and beau-tiful
:L\hrie An-toinette,
Arch-duchess
of Aus-tria.
He ruled
forcighteenyears, Arthur Kirkpatrick.
and ;n 1792 was
tried· for conspiracy and beheaded in 1793. Thc young queen
preferred simplicity and truth to politc deceit, and her char-ade.
r was one of the chief influences of the coming style.
Gradually under the new rule, the architecture and furni-ture
designs became more simple. Straight and geometri-cally
curved lines took the place of the excessive curves
used in the precceding reign. In fact all kinds of decoration
took a decided turn toward the Classical, which was partly
due to the recent ,discoveries of Herculaneum and Pompeii.
Their rich store ~f long hidden art treasurers offered many
suggestions for the new style.
Columns and pilasters \vith Roman capitals reappeared
in both archi~ecture and furniture designs. Instead of the
irregular panels of the Louis XV period, we find the rectan-gular
and oval shaped panels· surrounded by carved mould-ings.
The corners of these panels formed an important part,
and were gencrally of a geometric pattern, centered with a
rosette. Wreaths and festoons of delicately carved and
undercut flowers draped and adorned the richly finished furn-iture.
Chair and table legs tapered toward the feet and were
either spiral or fluted. The flutings were often filled with a
tri-Ieaf or husk pattern for some distance down from the top
or up from the base and sometimes ·from-both top and base,
leaving a plain fluted space in the center. Very often both
the base and cap were richly ornamented. Much of the furn-iture"
was painted in delicate colors and decorated with gilded
carvings and metal mounts of dainty bowknots of ribbon,
bows and arrows, torches, clusters of war trophies and shields
with wreaths of laurel leaves and roses. The Lquis XVI
scroll took the form of the oval or ellipse instead of the
circle as used by the Greeks.
The decorations on the painted panels and the tapestry
coverings seem to have been suggested by both the Grecian
and Louis XV styles. The Greeks used painted panels de-corated
with figures from mythology and herding scenes with
ha1fnaked, hide dad sheperds as central.,figures. The de-signers
of the Louis XV time used nymphs, cupids and aIle,..
gorical figures while those of the Louis XVI period retained
ARTISAN
the light and dainty treatment of the previous reign, but used
the Greek's suggestion as to subject, and placed figures of
full dressed shepherds and shepherdesses in their scenes in the
little bopeep effect.
The leading designer of this period was J ea.n Henry Ries-ener,
who was born in Gladback, Germany in 1735. When
quite young, he \'v·ent to Paris, and became an apprentice
to the ebanist, Jean Francois Oeben, and remained in his
employ until the master's death. Riesener's work must have
been an important part in the business because in 1767,
Oeben's widow married the pupil, Riesener. It is not known
just what pieces were designed by Oeben and what by Ries-ener,
because in many cases we find that they both worked
On the same piece. The "Grand Bureau du Roi" was begun
in the workshop of Oeben in 1760 but was not finished until
1769, a little over two years after the death of Oeben, and
was signed by Riesener, who \''las noted for his fine mar-quetry
work, inlaid in deep tones on mahogany. His first
work shows that he followed the ideas of Crescent and
Coffein, but he soon changed his mode of ornamentation and
construction to meet the developments of a ncw line of
taste which demallded a radical change from the happy rov-ing
decoration and curved outUnes of the previous reigns.
He became so proficient that his work was noticed and ad-mired
by ::"I1arieAntoinette for whom he worked as chief
designer and cabinet maker for twenty years. The Louis
XVI style is considered one of the most refined of the period
styles. The student should notice this difference that when
a style is almost a copy of a classic period, it is an effort on
the part of the people to apply an ancient design to a new
character and mode of living, but this ,tyle will never be
as strong and full of meaning as the style that is an out-growth
of the period in which it was invented.
The accompanying cut shows a number of examples of the
Louis XVI style. Number 1 is a design of a bcd, showing
the straight, square construction, carved mouldings and fluted
columns. The flutings are crossed by a spiral shaped wreath ,..---_._---- •I
'---_._--'-_.~
Fred j. Zimmer I
39 E. Bridie St••
G rand Rapids,Mich.
Every Pieee Guaranteed
PERFECT.
Maket of
HIGH GRADE
UPHOLSTERED
FURNITURE
WrUefor fCuts and Price.B. ll
~._--------
and the post is crowned with a carved knob. The center-piece
on the head of the bed is a design of a carved torch
and quiver with ribbons. On the whole tbis bed is an ex-cellent
example of the Louis XVI style. Example number
2 shows the Louis XVI treatment of the acanthus leaf in
combination with mouldings. Figure 3 shows a number of
carved mouldings with the finished ends and corners. Num-ber
4 is an example of an oval shaped shield in combination
with the acanthus leaf and a laurel festoon. Figure 5 is a.n
example of a shield with the upper corners terminating in
ribbons and combined with mouldings and a wreath of roses
and a spray of laurel. All of the effects on this plate are
strong Louis XVI features.
@ * @
Revenge is sweet, when it isn't an instance of sour
grapes.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
.-------------- -----------------------~i r-----------------
EXAMPLES OF LOUIS XVI STYLE.
25
,-
26 MICHIGAN
•
ARTISAN
RICHMOND CHAIR CO., Richmond, Ind.
',I Double Cane Line
,.
j "Slip Seats" -the latest
and best method of double
Catalogues to the Trade.
Cane seating.
..
Factory Dining Rooms.
During the exposition season the manufacturers outside
of the local business center of the city serve meals to the
buye-rs who may be in the warerooms at the noon hour. All
of these factories are located within .fifteen minutes ride of
the leading _hotels! and in other furniture centers would be
considered within easjr walking distance, but in Grand Rapids
the time of the buyer is considered valuable, and by providing
carriages, automobiles· and dinrters the manufacturers enable
him- to utilize every minute at no expense to himself. A local
newspaper described the factory dining rooms in detail re-cently,
from which the following is condensed;
Among the elaborate factory dining rooms of the city is
that of the Grand Rapids Chair company, with its massive
oak furnishings, which are changed every year. That is to
say, the chairs, buffet, china cabinet, etc., are changed. The
dining room table is 80 feet in diameter .. its size having re-quired
that it be practically built in the dining room. It is
a large round oak table, and brings forcibly to memory, as
16 or 18 of the factory's customers congregate around it for
the noon refreshment, the tales of King Arthur's famed
round table.
Over this elegant table at the Chair company hangs a
beautiful large canopy lamp of many colored glass, some
three and a half feet square! while the wnlls are delicately
tinted as far as the moulding and prettily papered above
that. In the room is also an exquisitely finished buffet and
a china cabinet to match the mission style of the rest of the
furniture. On the ,"valls are mugs and steins of various ages
and degrees of beauty. Like the other lunch rooms, the
cooking in this cosy room is done entirely whh electricity
in the most up-ta-date manner, by a young lady.
At the Luce Furniture compa.ny's plant the lunch rOOI11,
to put it in the society editor's language is "a perfect dear
of a little room." It combines that so often forgotten e1e~
ment of extreme coziness that seems to welcome every comer
and bids him pa.rtake of the refreshment there offered, both
solid and liquefacient. For it must not be forgotten that
each of these lunch rooms aJso has a modern buffet.
The Luce dining room is a small denlike affair, finished in
oak. It's very size, however, a.dds to its charm and makes
of it a cosy little lounging room as well as a mere eating
place. It has seating capacity for about eight hungry buyers
at a time, but feeding capacity for alt the furniture men in
town. The kitchen is larger than some of the others and
modern in every respect, while a colored chef presides at
chafing dish and oven. The walls are handsomely oak
paneled to within two feet of the ceiling, exquisite china-ware
decorating the walls from the top of the paneling to
•
the ceiling, Four beautifully shaded lamps hang from the
ceiling on heavy chain pendants, and the furniture is oak and
of a most pronounced mission style, making in all a lunch
room calcUlated to delight the heart of a discriminating c1ub-man.
Perhaps the most pretentious ditling room of all the
factories, and that which lays most claim' to being a dining
room as compared to a lunch room, is the long dining hall
of the Michigan Chair company. Here the kitchen ap-proaches
that of a hotel in size, and the service is of the
best. The long hall will accommodate a large number of
customers, and the furniture is picked from the best designs
of the factory. A feature of this room is the art work on
the walls, which shows rare taste in the selection, and ranges
from famous paintings to popular subjects. One piece on
which the company prides itself is a panoramic view of
Niagara Falls taken in one eight-foot photograph, one of
the only three extant.
The long table when set will accommodate 25 or 30 din-ers,
and the company keeps a colored chef in the kitchen all
day, fromS in the morning until 6 at night, to serve light
lunches and drinks.
Stickley Brothers' dining room will seat from 15 to 22
around its large roundrriission table, and is finished in oak
and German tiling, with electric lamps hanging from the
ceiling, and hcavy c:urtains in the windows. Two colored
chefs are here employed to keep down the hunger of the
buyers. .
The C. S. Paine company feeds its visitors in its office,
having a table set apart for that purpose, and hiring a young
woman to preside in the kitchen during the noon hour. Here,
of course, where the preparations are not so elaborate, mere-ly
a light buffet luncheon is served.
Berkey & Gay have fitted up their cosy little dining room
with one of their own Flemish oak dining suites, the chairs
of which are high-backed and elegantly hand carved. The
table is a long narrow one seating over a dozen people, and
the kitchen, as in all the dining rooms, is operated by elec-tricity
and modern in every respect.
The Sligh Furniture Comapny conducts its lunch room on
a somewhat different plan in combining with it a reading and
lounging room. The room is paneled in mahogany and oak
and the furniture is massive and after the mission style. In
one corner is a large lounging davenport, in another a writ-ing
desk and a few easy chairs, and against one wall is a
reading table littered with furniture a.nd other magazines.
In the center is the large round dining table, The Sligh
plant, like most of the others, serves just the noon meal,
but the dining room is open to tired buyers for a few min':'
utes of lounging and smoking at all hours.
:VII CHI G A N ARTISAN ! MICHIGAN FURNITURE CO-. ---'1 ANN ARBOR
MICHIGAN
c,
No • .sa. No. g:1. Ko.83.
Manufacturers of Bedroom Furniture in Oak and Ash. Also Odd Dressers in Birch and
Imitation Mahogany. The best goods on the market for the price. Write for pictures and prices.
"-----
Here is One of the Old Timers.
vVho does !lot remember the old time Boston Rocker?
Kothing more comfortable was ever made, ior it seemed to
fit you at en·ry point. \Vith its solid \-vaoden seat and panel
No. 5001 Colonial Rocker.
back. very high, roomy and comfortable. It was pure Colon-ial,
and probably the ftrst one came over with Miles Stamlish
in the :"Iayflower. To improve on the old Boston Rocker
was the work of the Hafner Furniture Company, of Chicago,
and the above cut shmvs how ·well they have succeded. The
frame is solid mahogany, finely finished:'and highly polis bed,
and the upholstering is so well done that if Priscilla or Miles
could have had it on that eventful yoyage, they would have
gone to sleep in it the first day, and slept all the 'way over.
At any rate the Hafner Furniture Company is prepared to
furnish everybody (through a retail furniture dealer) with
one of these luxuries. Get next.
@;J * ®
POE'S DESK UNEARTHED.
Writing Case Once Used by the Poet Now in a Book Store.
A desk that was once owned by Edgar Allen Poe has
been 011 exhihition for several days in the windows of a \Vail
Street book store. The desk is a small portable affair of a
fashion long out of use.. 1t is neatly made of mahogany,
v\:ith brass mountings. That the desk was Pac's there is said
to be no qucstion, for its history has been carefully traced.
The de:~k was for several years, after the poet's death, the
property of l\lrs. Clemm, Poe's mother-in-law. From her it
passed into the hands of Amos Bardwell Ha,yward, who, with
his wife, ".·.e. re intimate friends of :"1rs. Clemm. The desk
was sold for the first time at auction, with several other ar-ticles
and books of Poe's, in this city on April 17, 1906,
bringing about $100.
In the desk originally was a volume of George P. Morris's
poems and ballads, a presentation from the author to Edga,r
Allan Pac, bearing 11r. l'dorris's autograph. This book was
sold separately at the same time with the old desk, and
brought $25, and eventually found its way into Henry \V.
Poor's library, which is now being sold a,t the Anderson
book sales rooms. At the sale of the third part of the Poor
library last week this identical book was sold, with a few
first editions of Poe's works, but, following the vagaries
of book auction prices, only brought $6.-N'. Y. Times.
2;
•
28
LANDSCAPE ART INDOORS.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Evergreens Now a Part of Decorative Schemes.
Landscape gardening in city hones is no longer confined
to the facade, stoop and vestibule. It has entered the houses
and modern decorators rely on the assistance of growing
green plants as well as on the colors on the walls or in the
hangings. The clusters of living leaves are often the dots
on the i's in the decorative scheme of the room.
That they are different from the greenery formerly used
is apparent at a glance. The day of the sheltering palm is
past and the rubber plant, in spite of its immunity from steam
heat and lack of air, is no longer seen even in that part of
Flatbush, Brook! ..·· that is' in the know.
Entrance Hall With a Summer Bower in White and Green.
Plants for decoration indoors have followed the fashion of
those formerly used only in the open. Closely cropped box,
bay and arbor vitae. are the varieties that appeal to the taste
of the up to date decorator. He no longer considers the pos-sibility
of placing a graceful young palm near a white carved
Renaissance mantel even if a crimson ta.pestry forms a ba.ck-ground
of complementary color for, the plant. His bosom
would swell with pride, however,were he to place a drawf
laurel in a way that gave the necessary accent to the picture.
In a certain great hallway i~l a certain great house on the
Hudson River the central points are marked by four stand-ard
bay trees that catch the eye and give the aspect a char-acter
it would otherwise never possess. This hallway, which
serves as a species of gigantic living room, is not restful in
line or color.
It contains many pieces of furniture ,and they are of
varied colors and sizes. This lack of dominating scheme is
less noticeable because the four round balls of dark green
bay form decorative points that set the eye at rest, at least
more at rest t1..an it would otherwise be.
This is the purpose of the dwarf bay trees, the box and the
arbor vitae that come now in triangular, oval and natural
shapes. In a yellow room with no dark tones beyond the
furniture coverings and the rugs on the floor stand two
massive pots painted in the prevailing tone of the,room and
containing ivy trained to grow in a triangular shape. The
dark green leaves flanking the open fireplace, which is never
used but contains logs that nobody thinks of lighting, give
point and contrast to the light colored room.
A hallway in a house done throughout in a shade of rather
cold gray welcomes the traveller that enters by the invita~
tion to rest under a bower of ivy growing from a pot over a
circular frame of lattice work, and two trim box plants stand
at the ends of this indoor garden seat. For the same color
scheme upstairs the gray walls and the white woodwork are
relieved by green arbor vitae plants that stand in pots on the
landings. '
A Pompeiian room
of too varied colors
was found to need
some sort of toning
down. The decorator
had so few hangings in
the room that". they
could not be relh~d on
to do that ;for the
ovcrcolored ap'~~ment.
Four standards of bay,
however, accomplished
the purpose"'~na·\ the
green fitted i'n well Pompeiian Dining Room; Plants In.
with the red and yellow dispensable Detail.
color scheme.
A dining room on Madison avenUe was painted through
the combined freakishness of the woman who owned the
house and the decorator in a pale shade of green finished
with gold. Proud as she was of it in the beginning the green
and gold got as much on the hostess's nerves after a while
.as it did on her guests.' That green was too insistent, but
it was not possible in the middle of the season to do the
room all avec.
It was then that the
decorator placed iour
pots of growing IVy
about the walls. Each
was trained on a heart
shaped screen turned
upside down. In the
corners were f our
dwarf bay trees. The
effect had just the tone
of subdued green that
the hostess and the
decorator had previous~
ly struggled for in vain.
The paler green formed
a beautiful background
for the tree5 and· the
ivy drew out the pale
green of the walls.
Four pointed arbor
vitae trees, trimmed so~i:~~~~!~~~::::that their triangular"~
shaped sides we.re flat, Potted Cedars to Give Color to Gray
removed th.e .garlshness and White Hall.
from a dinIng room
done in Delft blue, white and yellow. As the ceilingJ had
painted rafters of the same color it was found that toning
down was necessary. The foliage did it.
Hallways large enough to have room for the tubs are now
deliberately painted in colors that are suitable for the box
or bay. One example of this kind of decoration is a hall
panelled in white and carpeted in red. The wooden mantel
is also painted white that it may serve as a background for
the two beautiful grown standard bays that give the con-trasting
touch of color.
A particularly daring use of growing plhnts for the sake
of added color was the work of a decorator who finished a
MICHIGAN
halhvay in ,,,,hite and black and a small addition of lavellc1el'.
It was not until he had put sm:ll\ arbor vitae trees in the
hall that the color scheme had its just value. Qnly the fact
that the hall '''';is a flood of suntight all day excused SllCh a
funereal color scheme, ·which \vas relieved by the growing
green.
"The demand for the
greens in various geo-metrica.
l forms, ovals
and similar designs,
came fro~:1. their suc-cess
in beautifying tbe
fronts of houses. Dec-orators
saw how well
they looked there and
determined to try the
aesthetic effect of a
transfer to the interior
of the houses. "The
time was especially well
suited to the introduc-tiOIl
of the new style,
as palms and rubber
plants had gone wholly
out of fashion.
"The dwarf plants
had already been grown
for the windo·w decora-tions,
whic.h are thls
year composed almost
entirely of box. The
regular design is a row
of lo\\' plants with two
ar each end rising
somewhat higher than
the others. This is
varied in some cases by
having two hox plants in the middle of the row as wel.l as
at the ends.
"These same plants have been adopted now for indoot
USeand in addition to the box we have bay and arbor vitae as
well as the ivy 5tandards. Vie make them in the design
required by the decorator. In very few cascs are fancy pots
used. \Ve usually paint ordinary pots the required color and
do the same with the basins ·n which they sit.
"\iVhile these new greens are hardier than palms or ferns,
they are not equal to the tuhber plants of other days.
Sometimes we rent the plants, guaranteeing to keep them in
good condition. In any case \ve keep them under our care
that they may not lose their freshness. "-SUl1.
Entrance Hall in White, Violet and
Black, With Only Green Cedar
to Vary This Scheme.
@ * @
Piano Prizes Never Drawn.
Yea.rs ago, it matterS not how many, \vhen gift e1lterpri5es
were more numerous than tempcrance drug stores, a prize
was given with every purchase. No cheap goods were car-ried
in stock and the mallager of the enterprise could well
"tfford to distribuk valuable prizes among the ctlstomers.
Envelopes conta.ining slips, upon 'which the number of gifts
offered were written, 'were placed in a. box, and when a c.us-tomer
had made a purchase he or she was allowed to draw
one of the envelopes, open it and give orders for the delivery
of the prize. There were 110 blanks. Usually the main
prize was a piano, but it was !lever drawn. Owing to this
fact many people were impressed with the belief that the box
did not contain an envelope with the number of the prize.
The lucky number was in the box, but the envelope contain-ing
it \vas laid flat in the bottom of the boxJ while those con-taining
prizes of ordinary value were placed in the box in
the usual way. The busilless \va.s broken up by the legal
authorities because it was considered a lottery.
ARTISAN
r------------------------.., I,
II,IjII
,,III
,I
I No.2. 30 inches deep. 30 inches wide. 45 inches high.
\ A QUICK, EASY SELLER!
We m~e ot~ toll. Send fo( '3\l1 Cat"log and. get "cq\lamted f Wttho: Large Line, Low Prices and Liberal Terms. I ROW!~I!ND~I~!~NA~CFOs.~1. 'I . :=..":-J --- __==: '\ I
I' I,
II
I,,I
,I
,
II
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I No Stock complete without the Eli Beds in Mantel and Upright.
I Evansville. Ib.dlana ELI D. ~ILLER &. Co. W""'o"ul,,"dpric~
ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, CHICACO.
I
I
29
30 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
heavy ecru linen with a large monogram embroidered in the
centre are stunning used with some color schemes in n brav,in
and green room with fumed oak or mahogany furulture, for
instance.
Any of these linen spreads may be-made at home. They
are expensive in the shops. The heavy linen cost from $9
up to $50, and the thin linen lawn from $25 up. The cotton
JaW)l, equally pretty, cost from $12 up.
These spreads may be made long enough to tuck in un-der
the bolster and then go up over it, or there may be an
extra strip for the pillows if the pi1low cases themselves arc
-not embroidered. \iVhcn a mangram is not embroid-ered
in the middle of the spread, there should be
an extra strip with a monogram for the pillows, or a smaller
monogram may be embroidered near the end of the spread,
so that-v,,-hen it is spread over the bolster it will come in the
middle,
110re inexpensive spreads are made of dimity with knotted
fringe on the edge. They are very pretty and cost about
$3.50. Attractive spreads are made of white linen or linen
taffeta with a floral border about four inches wide let into
the spread, outlining the rectangle of the bed. Sometimes
valances are used with them trimmed with the same border.
They are particularly pretty for children's rooms.
Valances are being used a great deal now, either of figured
dimity or of a material that will match the spread. They
are used particularly with the four poster beds, but very
frequently with the brass beds also.
The dimity and linen spreads are made 50 large that they
almost touch the floor, so that a valance is not necessary,
but it frequently adds to the attraction of a bcd, and may be
made to cover awkward places. The best way to make it is
to attach it to a sheet which lies flat over the top of the
spring.
Some of the Oriental spreads are very pretty. Among the
cheaper ones are those of India print or of Indian embroid-ery
on a white ground. The Japanese mehroidered spreads
arc beautiful, and the Indian ar.d Mexican drawn work.
TO HAVE GOOD BEDS.
How to Choose the Mattress-Dressing the Bed.
Most hair mattresses for full slzed beds weigh forty
pounds. \,Vhen the hair is shorter they are sometimes made
to weigh forty-five pounds. The cost of the mattress varies
according to the quality of the hair nsed and the amount.
The best hair is the pure South American drawings, that is,
long hdirs, very curly and full of vitality, drawn from the
tails and manes of South American horses, says Harper's
Bazar.
The prepared cctton felt mattresseS are both sanitary
arid comfortable. They cost about $15. They are infinitely
better. than the poor quality. hair mattresses,
Cheaper than these, and, not comparing with them in
value are -those made of ordinary cottOn felt, costing about
$7.50, stilt better than poor hair ;, cotton and wool at $5;
African fibre with cotton top at $4.50; and least desirable ""f
all, the: excelsior with cotton top and bottom at $2.50. Neitl,er
the fibre nor the excelsior is comfortable, and. the excelsior
soon breaks and mats down very unevenly.
In 'buying mattresses as well as box springs it is well to
remember that imperial edges and fancy ticks, although at-tractive,
add no real value to the mattress and increase the
price considerably, Divided mattresses for double beds cost
SO cents more than the single mattresses.
The best pillo\-vs are made of live geese feathers. The
softest are made of live geese feathers and down, but they
are not the most practical. Pillows made from duck feath-ers
are not so good and much less expensive,
Embroidered linen pillow cases are more beautiful than
shams or bolsters to be used during the daytime. A spread
of heavy linen embroidered eithpr simply or elaborately may
be used with these pillow cases.
The spreads made of thin linen or cotton lawn enl1)ro;d~
ered are lovely used over a light color. Spreads nlade of
•
5~el~JviUeDes~
===(om~anJ===
SHELBYVILLE, - INDIANA
MANUF ACTURERS OF
OFFICE FURNITURE
t
Write for latest c:atllogue
:\rrCHIGAK ARTIS.AN 31
.----------------- --1.-. _ -----------~
Hafner Furnitur Company
Couches
Box Couches
Adjustable Lounges
Davenports
Bed Davenports
Leather Chairs
and
Rockers
CATALOG
UPON
REQUEST
Samples &hownat Man-ufacturers'
Furniture Ex-change,
Wabaah Ave. and
14th St., Chicago.
ESTABLISHED 1873.
No. 3065.,
,
No. 3065 Davenport.--Size, 78 inches IonI"This is a substantial and beautiful design
and unique pattern. The thoroughly COllStrtl 'ted frame is of selected northern birch and
beautifully finished in mahogany, rubbed an polished. The upholstering is plain, scat,
hack and arms with a ruffled horder on frol t of scat. The filling is of tow, moss and
elastic cotton felt top. The springs used in t lis Davenport are of highly tempered steel
of the double COlle shape, There aTC 36 SPtings in its construction, each spring being
securely tied eight times by hand. This D --enport weighs, ready for shipment, about
250 Ibs.
Price No.1 Leather I • - $42 .--------. -~i-----------"
Besides, you 1~lnget rid of him just as quickly with a smile.
If a It's all in the I manner.
No matter Ihow big your business is, you ought to know
every man \,,110 works for you. It pays.
1\~ever ridiJule a conscientious worker. If he makes a
blunder, call »lm do-wn good and hard. He will expect it,
and stand for it. But ridicule rankles and has no place in
business.
respect 1£ you can'
IS going, you
H ow to Handle Salesmen.
•
No business is big enough to support a sorehead.
man is eternally sulking over his job, discharge him.
Suggestions from an employe are all right, if he doesn't
neglect his duties to think them out.
The manager who has his favorites among subordinates
never earned his position. Maybe he bought it, but he
won't keep it.
You can handle mcn better by compelling their
than inspiring their gratitude.
Nearl'y all the men in high executive positions are gentle-men.
Now and then you find a boor, but even a dead cat.
will float on the surface awhile.
Some men are so versatile and plausible at making ex-cuses
for being late in the morning that it seems a shame
to call thcm do\',-'n. Still, you had best do it.
The man who sneaks around telling his fellow employes
how mean the boss is for not raising his salary seldom gets
it raised.
The value of assigning specifiC rcsponsibility to a man
consists largely in the fact that you can haul him up on the
carpet if he doesn't make good. -while the same responsibil-ity
divided among three or four leaves you ever in doubt
as to who's to blame \vhen things go wrong.
- Date Created:
- 1909-01-25T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 29:14
- Subject Topic:
- Periodicals and Furniture Industry
- Language:
- English
- Rights:
- © Grand Rapids Public Library. All Rights Reserved.
- URL:
- http://cdm16055.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16055coll20/id/170