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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-04-23
Weekly Artisan; 1910-04-23
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and -----------------
lRA~~DRAPIL
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH••APRIL 23. 1910
SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY
The Largest Manufacturers of CHAMBER FURNITURE
EXCLUSIVELY IN THE WORLD
Catalogue to Prospective Customers. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 1
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only. ~-- .. ... --- ._------_. _.-------------. .. -.....-
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Bird' j Eyt Mapll
Birch
!f!...IIIIrftrtd Oak
and
ClrcaJJlan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
Fourth Floor, East Section, MANUFACTURERS'BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES, J. EDGAR FOSTER.
30th Year-No. 43 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• APRIL 23.1910 Issued Weekly'
MUCH BETTER THAN THE NIGHT SCHOOLS
Cincinnati's Co-operative System Enables Boys to Secure an Education Without Loss
of Work and Wages.
Through the co-opelatlOll at manufacturers w1th the
school authontle" Cmcmnd.tI h "aid to ha, e "oh ed the pro
blem of hO\\ to contmue the educdtlOn of apprentice" m the
"hops without cuttmg do,vn the earnmg cdpaClty of the boy"
whom nece"''''lty ha" drnen to become wage earnel" at a ten-der
ag e
It has been a problem whIch economists and "tudent"> of
good gm ernment all over the country have been wre"tlmg
wIth fOJ many yed.rs The average apprentice can not, or
w111 not, attend the mght schools after a hard day's toll, and
the result has been that hundl eds of thousands of worker",
have grown mto manhood eqUlpped only wIth the rudImentary
educatIOn aJbsorbed 111 the pubhc schools before they were
12 or 14 year.:; old.
DUllng the years when the boys are in greatest need of
instruction m those things which do not actually pertam to
their tI dde, but whIch fOlm" "uch an Important part m quah-fY1l1g
the lads for pOSItIOns on a hIgher plane than an unedu-cated
man could fill, they ha\ e been shut off f1am mtellectual
growth Appal ently the only thmg which conld msure edu-catlOnal
development of the applentlces wa.:; the co-operatlOn
of the employer" Such co-operatlOn ha" been cfbtamed m
CmCll1natl, and alt present thele is a continuatlOn school m
operatIon thel e which bids fair to be emulated 111many of
the large manufactunng centl es of the- country 111the near
future
1he manufactUl ers of Cmcinnati have j0111ed forces wIth
the board of educatlOn to compel the d.ttendance of appren-tices
111the contmuatlOn school The manufacturer", pay the
apprentice, for the time they "pend in "chool, and they "ay
that the results will more than justify the cost
A com p1eh enSlVe de"criptlOn of C111c111na tI'~ expenmen t
wit'] her contmuation school for shop apprentlces IS gIven
Iby F B Dyer, superintendent of the pubhc schools of C111-
cinnati, who wa;; m New YOlk a few days ago to attend the
conventlOn of the N atlOnal Metal Trade'> association, mem-bers
of whIch have contnbuted greatly to the success of the
experimental day school for apprentlces m that city
"Some years ago m Cmcinnarti we opened mght classes
for apprentices," "aid Mr Dyer. "Pattern mak111g 111ay be
taken as an example We advertised a course for apprentices
in every shop m the city There were fewer than thirty re-sponses
The attendance was In egular and capncious, though
the teachlllg was excellent Though the courses were con-
1 _
tmued they (hd not appeal to those we were wantmg The
I11ght schaab fills a need WIth olJer workmen, but the appren-tlce
b a day~tJme propositlOn He mu,>t come regularly and
through a senes of y eal" The employer must make It
worth hI" while to come, and, 111fact, must see that he Joes
come.
"Some of the progles"ne manufacturers of our C1ty for
"evel al years ined to cope With the problem by employmg
teachers for then apprentices, but ",uch teachers are scarce,
and only very large concerns could afford It The obstacles
to the extensive operatIOn of such a plan are too cibvlOUS to
need discU"sion The only agency thalt is adequate to cope
WIth the situatlOn is the state, and the state Will co-operate
when it understands that it is the great 111du;;trial class that
IS to be helped Employers may have to make some shght
'>acrifices They may have to concede to } oung workmen
a httle time for theIr 111tellectual betiterment, but 111 the ena
It w III be money well "pent a:-, an mvestment If authority
IS not given to require employers to send theIr apprent1ce"
to recelVe the 1l1structlOn whIch is the nght of every youth,
111a democracy at least, It is the priv1lege of every city to
offer an opportulllty to such youth 111part..,tlme day schools as
well as 111night schools.
"These Idea:; ripened 111the minds of some of our wisest
C1l1C1l1nati manufaoturers, and thus it came about that the
Board of Education of Cmclllnati last Summer proposed to
offer contmuatlOn course" for apprentices in any trade, and
plOceeded to vpen a school for machine shop appl entices as
soon as 150 stuJent,., were guaranteed More than 200 stu-dent"
were registered by eighteen manufacturers, and the
school ,;tarted Sept 1 A man was placed 111charge who had
been a teacher, a practIcal shop man, and for many years an
111structor of apprentices He tra1l1ed hI" own assistant The
average attendance has been 180 per week The boys came
four hour", per week, a new squad com111g each half day
The employers pay them for their time, and If they do not
show up at school they are reporetd and docked The school
runs forty-eight vveeks a year, eight hours a day, four and a
half day" a week, besIdes visiumg the boy" m the shops,
tallong With the foreman an,l keep111g a lme on the needs of
the boys The school is coSt111g the board about $15 a year
per boy.
"Tl1e course of study IS arnanged to coVer four years
Tlhe greatest difficulty wa" encountered 111getting the boys
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
c1a"slfied correctly and placed 111 "lImlal gl0Up" \\ ]l1le this
was gl adually accomph"hec1 \\ lth the a-,shtance at the fore
men, it IS "till nece""ary to do con"lderable md1\ 1dnal 111-
structlOn, thn" reqt11nng an as"\,,tant, though there ,ue hut
twenty boy" 111a gtOUp The COt11se taken b\ the bel\ '0 h
not narrow nor lS 1t "'Ithout cultural elemenh It mdude"
mathematICs, meCha111C" c1ra\\ mg, C1\IC..,. ane! recllll11~ \\ nt-
1l1g and spellmg The 1I1treestmg th1l1g about It h that e\ el\
study 1S g1\ en a pract1cal colarmg-, and 1S made to fUl1ctlOn 111
the shop or expe11ence of the boy The boy see" the pUl-pose
of what he IS study111g, and has a mot1\ e m mastenng
every dtff1culty The end of all tim, b not as some suppo"e,
81mply to "end h1m back next Jay able to turn out more and
better Walk, 1t IS to a"'aken hI;" dormant po\\ers and make
h1m alert, thoughtful, ongmal, competent up to the l11111tot
his ability.
"These mental exerClses rehe\ e htm of the monotomy of
shop routme A" he learns of the great mdu"try m \\111ch he
is engaged, and of 1ts captams and m\ entor", and as he dIS-cusses
1t" relatlOn.., WIth other occupatIOns an,] \\lth human
hfe, his mterest m h1S work mcreases, and he comes mto
sympathy With the ~teat body of the ~warL],s \\orkel" .\"
he learns to find ne\\ plOblems 111 h1" 'ohop e"pel1ence and
appltes hIS knmdedge to them, hb \\())l become" tran"tormcd
Into a fascmat1l1g at t IIe cea"e;" to be a mere hand, and
asp1re, to be a free 1l1a"tet of an honO! able u at!
"A great many expert eJucator" from dd'terent parts of
the world have V1;"lted the school and e"ammed carefully mto
the course and the method" of mstrnctlOn and hay e que,twned
the boys at lengt,h They pronounce the course as one of the
mo;"t s1g11lficant effort" ) et made to a,lapt eclucatlOn to \ 0
caiton, and the method used as repre"entUlg the mo,t ad-vanced
pedagogical ,1e\\ s
..
1
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, \\ e th1l1k so much of the plan m Omcl11nati that the
roard of EducatlOn ha" offereJ to open a contl11uation school
for any other classes of apprentices that may be sent, and also
for) oung saleswomen m "tores, or girls workmg m trades
A. h111 lS no\\ hefore the Oh10 State Leg1slature empowering
Board" of EducatlOn to require the attendance of all youth
under 16 at part-t11ne contll1UatlOn sohools. If I had the
,]ctermm1l1g of 1t, there would be a law reqUlring the at-tendance
of all apprent1ces through the1r apprenticeship. Such
"chool" \\ 111 do much to elevate the standards of work, the
Jegn_e of l11telltgence, and the morIa character of )'1oung work-ers,
and \\ lllltft them m the ,",cale of 11\mg so that they may be
\\ hat they should be-the strength of our Nation and the envy
of the \\ orId "
Gevurtz to Erect a Hotel.
Intormat1on ha" been rece1ved from Portland, Oregon,
that Phl1hp Gev nrtz, the prosperous dealer 111 h011.oe furl11sh-mg
goods 111 that City, WillI erect a hotel dunng the coml11g
\ ea I to cost $755,000 The 3lte, corner of Eleventh and
Stark "treets. 0\\ ned by ~lr Gevurtz, 1" valued at $150,000
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg·
ular colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
in acid and oil.
in aGid and oil.
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
.. EverythIng In Pamt SpecIalties and WoodFIUlshmgmatenals. FIllers that fIll. StaIns that sahsfy
•
WEEKLY ARTISAN
WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
.......
Zinc Lined, Porcelain Lined.
White Enamel Lined, Opal-Glass Lined.
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting m a
line of the "Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists.
New Furniture Dealers.
\'\ ~1 Allen has opened a new furmture store at Brew-ster,
Ore
Don & Rau ha' e opened d new furnIture stale at Al-bany,
Idaho
RInehart & WIlson are neV\ furnIture dealers at Glen-dale,
\V. Va
Holcomb & Glrtanner are new furnIture dealers at Port
Townsend, "Vash
The Ironclad FurnIture and Hal dware company are new
dealers at Irondale, Ore
J acdb Bornstem WIll open a new furnIture "to! e on Sun-bur}
-.treet, Shamokm, Pa
John ErIckson is makmg allangemenb to open a new
fm mture store at Towner, N Dak
Arthur J. Jeffrey, formerly wIth the Dorsett & Jeffrey
company of Buffalo, has opened a new furnitm e "tore at
II'estfield, N Y.
Adams & May, under the name of the VidalIa Furmture
company Ihave opened a large 'Stock of furmtme in theIr new
store at VIdalIa, Ga
H H Tandy hac; opened two new stores on \Valnut
"treet, Columbia, ~[o, one stocked WIth furmture and the
other WIth hardware
C E WhItehall, D F Lane and E J HIckson have m-corporated
the Banner Furniture company, capltalIzeJ at
$100,000 to engage in house furnlshmg bU'omess 111 Muncie,
Ind.
Samuel Goldman, for many} ears connected WIth furni-ture
trade in St LOUIS, Mo, ha" Ju"t opene1 a new furniture
and carpet store of his own at the corner of Seventh street
and Franklm avenue
Trade With the Philippine Islands.
Trade of the Umted States WIth the PhI1ippme Islands
shoVl s a marked 111CI ease S111cethe pas"age of the act remO\-
1l1g the tarIff dutIes on domestIc merchanJlse passmg between
the Islands and the Ul11ted States The tanff act whIch went
mto effect on August 6, 1909, as IS well known, proVIded for
an interchange free of duty of practIcally all artIcles of do-mestIC
productIOn of the U l11ted States anJ the Phlhppme
Islands The figures of the Bureau of StatIstIcs of the De-partment
of CommeJ1ce and Labor, show that the value of the
shipments of dome"tIc melchanclI"e from the U111ted States
to the Phllipp111e r"lands from July 1, 1909, to the end of
February 1910 (practically all of whIch period except the
month of July wa" under the new tanff) amounted m value
to $10,151,276, agaInst $6,871,764 m the correspondmg pelloJ
of last year Durmg the same perIOd the' alue of merchan-dIse
Imported mto the L:111ted States from the PhI1Ippllle
hlands was $11,420,475, agamst $7,070,1.32 m the same months
of the preced;ng year, an mcrease In the total trade of about
55 per cent when campal ed WIth the corre"pondmg month" of
last year
Permanent Tenants for the Furniture Exchange.
The Palmer ManufactUrIng company of DetrOIt, have se-cured
space for a permanent exhllblt m the FurnIture Ex-change,
in GranJ Rapids They wIll h,lVe many new patterns
of 1Jbrary and Jming tables and pedestals, and WIll also ;;how
a line of reed rockers and chaIrs formerly made by the PIOneer
ManufactUrIng company These two hnes are very strong
and will add very materIally to the "how 111the Furniture
Exchange The Vleekly ArtIsan welcomes thIS 1111eto Grand
RapIds and predIcts that It WIlll prm c a great succc""
5
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"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests;you will then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories, Sash and Door MIlls, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others wal consult their own interests by using it. Also
Barton'. Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnishedin rollsor reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
.. .
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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DO YOU WANT
the PRETTIEST, BEST and MOST POPU-L-
AR LEATHER FOR FURNITURE. ANY COLOR. WILL NOT CRACK.
If so buy our
GOAT and SHEEP
SKINS
Write for sample pads of colors.
DAHM & KIEFER TANNING CO.
TANNERIES
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CHICACO, ILL.
204 lake Street,
CHICAGO, ILL. ..
1"'----------------- ..-...----.,
Palmer's Patent Gluinl! Clamps
The above cut is taken direct from a photograph, and shows
the range of one size only, our No 1, 2<l-inch Clamp We
make six other sizes. taking in stock up to 60 inches wide
and 2 inches thick. Ours is the most practical method of
clamping glued stock in use at the present time. Hundreds of
factories have adopted our way the past year and hundreds more
will In the future. Let us show you Let us send you the
names of nearly 100 factories (only a fraction of our list) who
bave ordered and reordered many times. Proof positive our way
Is the best. A post card will bring it, catalog Included Don't
delay, but write today.
A. E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
Foreicn Representatives: The Projectile Co., London, Eng-land;
Scbucbardt & Schutte, Berlin, Germany; Alfred H.
Scbutte, Colocne, ParIs, Brussels, Liege, MUan, Turin, Barcelona,
and Bilbo..
t.. .. T.......................... .... .. .. ---.- ~
Baltimore Correspondence •
BaIt ll110re, \p11l 20 -Some new bl11ldIng<; to go up here
nf lntcre~t to thc tt1111lture trade al e the follOWIng- A South-ern
~lethodlq Frll"copal church 11111 be erected at Charle<;
street and Ll1ller"lty Palkway, cost $175,000, the Ulllted
Brethren Church soclet) ,1111 bulld a church bulldmg at Roland
qreet and FIfth al emlt, m Hampden, near here; the Lakeland
Presbytenan chUl eh strnctUl e II 111 be erected at Belv eJere and
~Ja1l1 al enues, La1<eland, a subuJ1b, An Enock Pratt branch
1Jbrary II 111 be bUllt at Beason and Towson street, Locust
Point and WIll be eqlllpped WIth the latest appliances; The
Arundel Boat Club" 111 enlarge thelr bUlldll1g the extra space
to be l.beJ for a re'iltanrant, The Maryland School for the
Dll11d ,,111 spend $22 ~,OOOfor new bl1lldll1gs on plans prepared
b) J o"eph E, an s SperI), archltect a new bUlldll1g IS to be
erected for St \lary.., Industnal Sschool, to cost $100,000,
Banner Counul JunIOr Order of U I1lted AmerIcan Mechal1lco,
of Keedy "I Ille, \\ ashl11gton county, wlll erect a lodge hall
Fred \\ alpert &. Co. Korth Gay <;treet say this 1S the
dull sea:'>on fOl haIr trade, but the} get theIr <;hare and look for
a good) ear The} clean and d) e half anJ do a large bUSIness
from coa"t to coast
George D Summers of 1513 Fast Eagel ,tl eet has let a
contral t to buIld a thl ee <;tory blllldll1g at 1047 Korth Gay
"treet, to be 28 x l)0 feet 111 <;lze, the first story to have a plate
~ldss front He" 11111101 e there a" "oon as lt 1:0 completed
Thele I" d cODSldelable n1drket here for filll1lgs fOl mat-tre""
es dnd all "upphes 111acce<;sOlY hade, r'\mellcan and
\tlilan hble alL ~clll11~ \\ell, al"o a ne\\ 8clglan fibre, straw
and h\1'hS are qUIet, thele 1~ plentl on hand but not as much
u"ed a" fOlmerh
John C KlllJlP &.. Sons do d 11l~h class bU<;111es"111makIng
artl<;Uc and fine quahty of furnIture at 220 East Clay street
The ~tlantlc Furl1lture company on Fall mount avenue re-ports
busll1e"s a" qUlet They are makmg a new ll1le of sohd
oak. genUlne quartered ,tock, of SIdeboards, also elg-ht or l1lne
"t) Ie" ot chamher sUltes that "ell from $1650 to $5500 Clllff-ol1ler..,
and" al drobeo, are also a part of the lll1t?
The l~ostel BlOS J\lanufactullng company of 320 North
Holbda) street, makmg spllng beJ<;, mattresse3, cots and
couches, are runnIng full tllne The outlook IS good and
they ha, e enlar~ed the manufactUrIng buo,l1les<; and doubled
the output 1heH brass and lron beds al e made at Jersey
Clt), K J
A nell theatre wIll be bt1!lt at 311 \Vest Fayette ,trect,
t() ll'st $90,000 '1 he Engl1leer's Exchan~e club VI ill erect a
club hou"e at 308 \\ est Fayette street
The Bagb, T urnlture company of Eutaw and Lombard
~treets makl1lg chamber sUlte<;. dmIng room chaIrs and kJt-chen
furl1lture, expect sales for thl<; ) ear to go ahead of last
I ear b) 15 per cent '1 hey are COyelll1g terntory flom X ew
York to rlorIda The) find the ll1dple lme;;; 111 extra good
demand J R Lau" lS thelr 11e\\ ..,ale:'>ll1ento take 111 Delaware,
Vlrgil1la. Maryland and \Vest Vllgll1la
The Balt1mOle \letalhc Bcd company are the local
branch of the One11tal l\letal Bed com pan) of Hoboken, N
J. and ShOll one of the lalgeo,t Imeo, and a<;sortments of
up-to-date good" that can be "een anywhere Thelr busll1ess
for the pa"t ) ear het" been the be<;t 111 the hIstory of th1s
firm '1 hey plan to take larg-er quarters 111 order to fill orders
more prompth C D Oshorn 11111 take ont thIS hne through
the Carolll1a" and J Emery Rush 111 Floncia
The ),1 l'lme, company have a large factory on Front
<;treet, mak1l1g- 1~.OOOparlor Sl1lte<; a year of sohd mahogany,
birch, veneers, etc A tnp through this factory dlsclosed
the fact that the furniture after bell1g polished is handled
."
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
only once, which is in the shIpping department The polish-ing
IS done after the upholstenng An up-to-date carv111g
machIne to decolate by power, wh1ch make" 6,000 revolu-tIOns
a minute, has been put 111and the latest belt sanders on
which one man does what three men J1d before
Comments on the Yerkes Auction.
"The succes" of the Yerkes auctIOn, 111New York, was
so remarkable that of course everybody has been comment-
111g on It," saId a collectol who attended It, "but do you
know that to me one of the most 111terestl11g comm ents was
that of a Wloman who attended the FrIday atternoon sale of
the great rugs vVe are all wonJenng why the pnces were
not higher, when she remarked
"'1 wonder how many thousand" of dollars fell off the
blddl11g when Mr Kn1by made that senous announcement
that It must ,be admItted that the rugs were 111bad condi-tlOn
and that Mr Mumford, who knew more about them than
anybody else, had arranged to restore them If purchasers
wIshed ?'
"She went on to say that there must be lot" of people
llke herself who not know111g much about rug" would be
111c1111edto 111fer from this that If the experts wIth 111sIde
knowledge took this VIew of the carpets it was time to be
cautious That was her explanatlOin for the pnces, whIch
fell be\tow expectations But one of her friends s3iid' 'Oh,
why, don't you know, that 1S only the same th111g practlcally
that Mr K1rby says down at the American gallener3 at a
porcelain sale when he announces' "If we know of any de-fecb,
ladles and gentlemen, we WIll P0111t thUl1 out to you"
Another attendant at that afternoon sale saId the way
out· "Did it ever stnke you that there is a marked dIfference
in the attitude of the rug collector toward the objects of hIS
devotion-or hIS fad, if you hke-and the attitude of a pIC-ture
buyer toward hIS beloved canvases? 1 mean m the way
they Judge art For example. If a paintmg IS by a partIcular
artt'it It is worth thousands, perhaps hundreds of thomands
of dollars and If not by that partIcular palOiter It 1'3 worth
next to nothing.
"We have just seen both these extremes nght here m
tihis sale of Mr Yerkes's pictures, so it isn't necessary to
hark Iback, even so far as the Bode bu"t. that's worth every-th111g
1f Leonardo dId It and nothing if a Victorian EnglIsh-man
did it.
"But now on the other hand thmk of what we have
seen here this afternoon DId anybody ask the name of the
artIst who produced one of these beautIful rugs? D1d any-body
say of those Pohslh rugs 'If tihey are by So-and-So they
are valuable, and If not hIS work then they are rubblslh?' On
the contrary, the buyers pa1d their thousands just on their
appreciation of the rugs as works of art
"ThIS seems to me-odd as it sounds-to give your rug
10\ er a nght to "ay that he I~ more truly an art lover, more
truly an amateur, than h1s pIcture collect1l1g frIend, who ha'3
got to have a name gn en to a canvas-and those gIven
names are many~before !he knows whether he wants to buy
1t or not."
~..
If your DESIGNS are right, people want the Goods.
That makes PRICES right.
(!"larence lR. bills
DOES IT
163 Madison Avenue-CItizens Phone 1983. GRAND RAPIDS. )lICH ..
..
1
350 feet long, 100 feet wide, 8 stories.
MANUfACTURERS.
All the buyers, both big and little,
who go to market this coming
July, will buy at
1411
CHICAGO'S BIG
FURNITURE EXHIBITION
During the January buying season
just past we show a heavy increase
in attendance of visiting buyers and
a tremendous volume of buying.
These are the facts and a lot of
talk is superfluous.
Send at once for floor plan showing
desirable exhibit space open for
Same old price. Address
THE FOURTEEN-ELEVEN CO.
1411 Michigan Ave" Chicago.
1
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
'--ACCURACY: DURAi~iLiTY:··£'-CONOMY 1
I Three most important requisites in case construction.
We absolutely guarantee our method of construction
to be stronger and less expensive than all others.
Let us tell you about It.
Ash for Catalog "J"
No. 181 Multiple Square Chisel Mortlser.
.... . WYSONU « MILES CO., Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., UREENSBORO, N. C.
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION.
----------------_.--------_.
Waddell Manufacturing Co.
Grand Rapids. Michige.n
This is one of our Latest Designs in Drawer Pulls.
Watch This Space for Others
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in wooa
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods .
Manufacturers Will Have Something Like It at
Their Annual Meeting.
The annual mcctlllg of the Furmture \Idnutartlll el~'
National assoClatlOn 111 ChIcago next month \\111 he at m()Jc
than usual interest and Importance to membcl ~ The c....e
cutive commIttee wdl meet on Tue",day, )'Iay 10, to complete
arrangements for the general meetl11g the ne,t day For the
past two years or more the assocIatIOn ha'i been tl) lng to
have all members u"e d ul1Iform S) stem of figUIIllt:; co~t. and
at thIS meetmg the e'<ecutn e coml11lttee \\ 111pre~ellt an cldh-orate
report on ",hat has been accC'mp!Jshed m that Illle dur-ing
the pa'it year The report \\ 111 I ccommend "Ol11e ne\\
methods which will be explal11ed b) mean'- at nc\\ plctllrc~
and drawmgs of ddterent pIeces at turl1lture and the dh-
CUSSlon of the recommendatIOn, I,., eApected to take the f01111
of a school of lllStl uctlOn that \\ 111 Impart Ideas and Il1form-atlOn
of great value to man) manufactUl ers
At the reque~t of seuetary Llllton, C K ColI) er, chall-man
of the Un!fo11m Clas'ilficat1On commIttee, has pr0l11lsed
to dellY er an address on the commIttee's \\ ark and purpo~c~
He wIll tell what the commIttee ha5 done and IS dOll1g to
mduce manufacturers to co-operate 111 plans to secure deqrerl
changes in classlficatJon I ules-changes that \\ III operate to
the advantage of all concerned m the furlllture I11d1l5tr} He
will show that better class!f'icatlon rule.; ma) be secured b)
better methods of packll1g and the adoptIOn of a ullltorm
system for deslgnatmg \ anou", pIeces of furlllture lor 111-
stance a system that WIll pre\ent bureau" from bell1g da".;ed
as ohlftoniers, wa5hstands a5 commodes, SIdeboards as buffet5.
etc As IS well known the"e term~ ale now used qUIte proml,.,-
,. ...
II
IIII
I
CUOlbh 01 I11lll"cnmmately The practIce mterferes seriously
\\ lth thE \\ ark of the classlfica t10n commIttee and IS a detri-ment
to the trade to .;uch an extent that many would like to
.;ee abont halt of the names for slml1ar pIeces of furniture
dhcarderl entlrel) Cnder present practices it IS frequently
cll:ffictllt e\ en fOl CApel ts m the busll1css to dl'itmguish a
\\a,-h~tal1d from a dlcssel, a buffet from a sldeJboard, or a
lJ11reau fJ am a chdtolllel
The electIOn of officel'- \\ ill al50 be of mterest to the
melJ1ber~ of the d~';OClatlOn dud se\ eral other important mat-tel'
dl e e"pectecl to he ';tlgge"ted and considered at thIS
meeting
Furniture Fires.
LeBlack & Bem man undertaker,., of Lake Charle5, La,
.;uffered a snldll 1o"" hy fil e on Apml 16
Ste\\dft 1310S & \I"alcl's fUllllture stOle at Newark, 0,
\\as burned on c\ pnl 14 Lo"", $18,000, m SUIance, $12,500
;'Iellch &. B) field furl1l tUI C manuf,tcturer5 of Boston,
;'Iass , \\ ere burned out on Apnl 16 La","" $8,000, insurance,
S5 ()(X)
The nradtOl cl \\ hole"ale hUl1Itu re house in N ashv111e,
Tenn. \\ a" bl1luecl on \plll 16 One man \\ a'i killed and
.;e\ eral others hm t by a fallmg wall Loss, $25,000 partIally
m'itlred
1he 5hop~ of the '\ ew England ChaIr company at New
H a\ en, (onn , \\ ere burned on \pnl 13 Three firemen were
k111ed and Se\ eral others 1111ured by the exploslOn of the
bOllel dUllng the hre The bmld1l1g wa" an old dIlapidated
frame on \\ hlch Insurance rates were practlcdlly prohIbItive
The chall l ompan)',., los5 1,., about $12,000
...... •• --. '! - _ ------ ••••• ---- --------- ---------------- _ ...
•
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Carpets and Rugs at Auction.
Alexander Smith & Sons, tJhe great New York rug and
carpelt manufacturers announce that beginning Monday, May
2 and cont1l1U111guntil the goods are disposed of, they will "ell
at auctIOn, through \Vtlmerd111g, Morns & Mitchell, 95,000
Ibales of rugs, and 30,000 rolls of carpet As usual, the Smith
company has Splung a complete surpnse on the trade, as It
was not considered hkely that there would be any auctIOn
sale, prior to the openl11g of the new season the second week 111
May
The goods to be sold at auctIOn Will consist of 45,000 bales
of wilton velvet rugs, velvet and tapestry rugs, of vanous
Slze3, also 50,000 bales ofaxm111ster, Smith axminster and Sax-ony
axmmster rugs 111vanOU6 sizes The carpet offerings Will
consist of 15,000 rolls of wilton velvet, velvet and tapestry, al-so
15,000 rolls of Saxony, extra axminster and Savonnerie
The last 3ale held by the Smith company was in Apl'II, 1909,
and conSisted of 16,000 pieces of carpets, and 28,000 bales of
rugs.
Wildmerd111g, Morri" & Mitchell, the well known auction-eers,
who Will handle the sale, announced that the goods Will
be sold on a credit of 4 per cent 10 days from July 1, antiClpa-tion
being permitted at the rate of 6 per cent per annum Sam-ple.,
Will be ready for 111spection by catalogue, on and after
Monday, Apnl 25, at the sales rooms of Alex. Sml1Jh & Sons,
105-107 F]fth avenue. In addition to announcing the coming
auction sale, the Smith company states that all qualities and
patterns of carpetings and rugs manufactured by the company
for the fall season of 1910 "'Ill be placed on sale Monday, May
9 Orders Will be executed up to October 31, so far as the
ability of the mills permit, at the pnce at which, they are ac-cepted
Complete hnes w111be 3hown at the offices of the com-pany
in Chicago, Kansas City and San Francisco at the same
date.
His Bluff Did Not Work.
How men will work to gain what they conceive to be an
advantage 111trade IS well Illustrated, by one of the best
known salesmen 111Grand Rapids, who has charge of a hne
of chairs in one of the furniture exhibition buildings in this
city, as related to the Weekly Artisan a few days ago: A
buyer came into the showroom and linspected the line, mak-ing
out a fine order, but before placing it he said to the
salesman, "what are your best tevms?"
"Two per cent off in ten days.
"I can get 5 off down in the Valley," declared the buyer.
"Well, there's the place to place your order," said the
salesman.
"Don't you meet competition?"
"Well, we don't allow anyone to make our prices or
terms."
"Well, I would like to give you the order, and I am
afraid I Will not have time to go back there, get d111ner at
the hotel and catch my train," said the buyer
"0, yes; there's plenty of time; and you can catch your
train all right enough"
"Well, I guess I'll not chance it. I'll give you the order,"
which he did.
Now, that buyer thought it was perfectly legitimate to
make that statement, but the salesman, who is an old timer
would not be bluffed, as he knew the house and was confi-dent
that they had not gIven the buyer any such terms.
Marriage is always a failure to those who get left.
9
Each
Net
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
$2~
•
$2~
Each
Net
to WEEK LY
p ••••••• _- •••• _._---_. ---~
Dodds' Tilting Saw Table No.8 I
We take pleasure In IntroduclIlg to you our new Saw Table The base IJ simIlar to what
we have heen usmg on our No 4 Saw T .hle. only we have made II larger on the Boor The
Ialsma and lowerlD, device IS the same 8S we have on the No 4 Machme. With lever and
pItman The lever IS made of steel
The arbor IS made of 1Yo meh steel. runDlng 10 long nng o~mg box~. and II for J -IDch hole
1n saw We furnIshone 14 .Bch saw on each machIne It wIll carry a 16-mch JaW If desIred
Table IS made with a center ahde 12 Inches wide WIth a movement of 21 Inches It hu a
lockmg deVIce to hold It when you do not wish to use H. and has a detachable mitre guaRe to be
used when usmll.the shdmg-table Can cross cut wIth table eXlended to 24 mches. also np up
to 24 mches wIde Table h.s a removable throat that can be taken out when usmg dado Jt
.Iso has two mitre guages fOI reaular work and a two rtded np guage that can be used on f"lther
side of the sa.w. more especIally when the table IS blted ..Jsoa hhmg np gauge to be u~ to cut
bevel work when you do not wISh to Illt the table The top IS 40x44 mche.
Countershaft has T & L pulleys lOx 14 mches. and the dnve pulley 16x5 mches. counter
.haft should run 800 Makmg 10 all aboul as complete a machme as can be found and at •
reasonable pnce Wnte us and we wlll be pleased to quote you pnces Address,
ALEXANDER DODDS, CO., !§1-183 Canal St.• G.alld Rapid•• M,ch'
.1.-.0.. . .. , ._. ~-- ••••• --- 04
._..- ---.-4-------..- .....--..
Here is
a Rocker
That's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
G80. SPRATT
8 O.
SHEBOYGAN. WIS.
No. 51111. -.----------~~-------~.. --- 4, ••
ARTISAN
METHODS OF PACKING FURNITURE
Grand Rapids Shippers Given Credit for Having
Established the Standard.
\\ H l,atchell '3upenntendent of tran"fer" for the South-ern
Railway company, vlslted Gland Rapld", ,lunng the past
week and entertameel a number of shlppmg clerks, foremen
of packmg rooms dnel others mteresteel, wlth a talk on pack-mg
and "h1pp1l1g dOl "een from the \ leWpOInt of transporta-tIon
managers He compared the methods u"eJ by packers
1Il dJtterent "ectlons of thiS country, and pointed out the
method" u"ed here and m Europe Crat1l1g anJ pack.mg ranks
lllghest m Europe, he "aiel. and m thiS country Grand Rap1ds
1S far ahead of most other CltJes or "ectlOns
"FUllllture," Sdld :\1:r Gatchell, "IS today the most im-portant
commodIty the raJIroads have to care for in ship-pIng
It 1S eld't!cnlt to transport safely for a number of rea-
"on", ch1efly perhaps because of 1tS general fragilIty and the
fact that 1t i" hable to severe damage from scratches. Rapid
trans1t 1S what } on want It IS what you demand. The
modern transportatIOn companies are extending every pos-slbe
effort to meet this demand. It rests with the shilppers
to prov1de packlllg which can stand the rapid transit. The
ra1lroad com pallles a1 e today spending immense sums of
mane: to lmprove every facility for transpo1'tation, and what
they ask 1S co-operatlOn It bes With the shippers to help
them 111thls mo\ ement.
"On account of the loose and slipshod methods employed
at large throughout the country III packing, thousands of dol-lars
are \cvasted annually. The railroads have to pay the
damage But thiS is not the only prase to be considered, al-though
it 1S most lmportant to us. When a firm receives
goods whlch ha\ e been damaged in the transit, he is most
llkely to change his place of purchasing, as he is put to con-
Siderable annoyance through his not being able to at once
place hiS cons1gnment of goods on his display floors. Grand
Rapids is -,ettmg the standard all over the Umted States for
better crat111g and packing"
:\Ir Gatchell stated that Gland Rapids packing is to be
made a critenon and standard willch WIll be held up to other
cities having large shlpments of furniture to make, and espec-ially
111cIties of the south where packmg is most careless. As
a result of hiS VISlt arrangements have been made to send
:"fr Gatchell at vVash111gton, DC, photographs of the differ-ent
processes of pack111g m Grand RapIds, with eX'planations
and a comparatl\ e cost per piece by the methods which are
employed here These photographs and descriptlOns are to be
used 111 the south for the purpose of llldllcing southern ship-per"
to adopt the methods which have proved quite satis-factor:
to tran"pol tatlOl1 companies, to shippers and to con-
31gnees
,
Mr. Karges Deserves Another Term.
One of the dutJes to be performed at the annual conven-tIOn
of the l\atJol1al Furmture Manufacturels' association, to
he held III Chicago 111May is iJhe electIOn of a pres1dent Dur-mg
the past year thls honorable and re"pons1ble office has
been filled b) 1\ F Karge" of the Ka1ges Furmtllre company, 0
E\an", l11e. InJ \Ir Kalges has gIven much valuable tIme to
the bus111ess of the assoClatlOn and m the d1scharge of hiS
duties a" pres1dent he has exerClsed dIscretIOn and excellent
Judgement 1Ir. Karges desery es another term in the presI-dential
office. and should the honor of a re-elel,tion be con-ferred
upon him it \CV ould be but a fitting recogllltion of the
... ,all1e of hi" services 11l the past
WEEKLY ARTISAN
STEEL TRUST ACTS GENEROUSLY.
Will Try Out a Plan for the Relief of Injured
Employes.
ChaJnl1an Gary of the Untted State'3 Steel corpo1atlOn
last l\Londay announced the adoptlOn of a new plan fO! as'3ht-mg
mJured employes and the famtl1e'3 of tho"e killed by ac-c1dent
The plan 1S to be ined as an expenment for a year
If 1t proves '3at1sfactory to employers and employes 1t wtll be
continued If not ;,uccessful 1t may be amended or dIscarded
It 1S a plan 511111larto ~hat followed at the Krupp Works at
Essen, PrussIa Employes w1ll not be requ1red to contribute
any part of theIr wages and rellef wtll be glven wIthout re-gard
to whether the mJury or death is purely accidental, due
to the employe1's negllgence or to the carelessness of the em-ployes
SubsidIary companIes of the United States Steel corpor-ation
have been ass1stmg mjured employes and the famIlies of
those ktlled for many years w1thout regard to legal liab1lity
at an average cost of $1,000,000 a year, but the new plan will
let employes know just what t'hey may expect. In announc-ing
the plan Judge Gary sa1d
"Under thIs plan rellef WIll be paId for temporary dis-ablement
and for permanent mjunes and for death. The re-hef
IS greater for married men than for single men and in-creases
accordmg to the number of chtldren and length of
serV1ce During tempo1 ary dIsablement smgle men receive
35 per cent of t'he1r wages and marned men 50 per cent, with
an add1tional 5 per cent for each ch1ld under 16 and 2 per cent
for each year of serv Ice above five years
"Following ~he prov1slOns of all foreIgn laws and all legIs-lation
suggested m thIS country, there IS a period of 10 days
before payment of rellef begms For permanent injunes lump
sum payments are provided. These are 'based upon the ex-
.. tent to WhICh each lllJury interferes with employment and
upon the annual earl11ngs of ~he men injured. In case men
are killed in work accIdents then widows and chtldren WIll
receive one and one-half years' wages, with an addItIonal 10
per cent for eaoh child under 16 and 2 per cent for each year
of '3ervice of the .Jeceased above five years
"It should be understood that these payments are for
relief and not as compensation. There can be no real com pen-sattOn
for permanent mjunes, and the notion of compensation
IS necessanly based on legal liability, which is entirely dis-regarded
in tIllS plan, as all men are to receive the relief, even
though there be no legal liability to pay them anything, which
is the case m at least 75 per cent of all work accidents.
"Expenence will perhaps lead to some modifications of
this plan, but it will be in operation for one year from May 1,
1910, and if It meets with success and approval from the men
and the public it is hoped that similar and possIbly improved
plans may be adopted in succeedmg years"
Judge Gary further said that there has been under con-sideration
a plan for the payment of pensions to dIsabled or
superannuated employes, and It IS expected this will soon
be put into practlOal effeot
The rehef plan as outlined will affect upward of 225,000
men at once The average number of employes last year was
915,500, whose wages totaled $151,663,394 It comes m addi-tion
to the increases in wages recently granted, which will
add from $9,000,000 to $12,000,000 to the corporation's yearly
e""penses It is imposs1ble to estimate the additlOnal charge
1!he new plan WIll make on its revenues, but it will probably
be in the neighborhood of $2,000,000
f······ . ...........•.. ~
No.15F"OX
SAWING
MACHINE
WRITE 44 FOR
NEW CATALOG
rrox MAC H IN E CO • GR18A6NDN FRRAOPNITDSS, TREMEITC,H
ROLLS
For Bed Caps, Case Goods, Table Legs
and many other purposes; in Gum,
Mahogany and Quartered Oak Veneers.
The FellwDck Auto & MfJ!. Co. EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
po • - ••• _. •••• • •• - - -- --_._---------- ....__ ....
These saws are
made from No. 1
Steel and we war-rant
every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
Write •• for
PrIce LIat
aud dlaeo_t
31-33 S. Front St., ORAND RAPIDS, MICH.
SEND FOR
~-- _.- _-----_ .......•••• - .......
11
r
··· ~
BOYNTON &, CO.
ManufaduterJ of
Embo•• ed and
Turned Mould.
ina., Embo ...
ed and Spindl.
Carnnp. aDd
Automatic
TurniDa•.
We a110 IIlaIlU-f.<!
lure a I.,ae Lne
of Embo .. ed
OrnameDts for
Couch Work.
'256.'258 W. Fifteenth St., CHICAGO, ILL. ... • 4.
1----
I
I
- - - - -- --------~~ ------- - - - -
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Yau can always get
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT
1..8", 1..20", 1..24" and 1..28" R. C. BIRCH
1..16", 1..2 0", 1..2 4", and 1..28" POPLAR
1...20", 1...24" and 3..16" GUM
Direct from our Grand Rapids Warehouses.
We solicit your trade.
1..20" R. C. PLAIN OAK
WALTER CLARK VENEER
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
COMPANY
Making the Goods "Sell Themselves."
"\Ve are giving mOl e attentwn to the \\ ark of makll1g our
goods seI1 themselves uhan to the traIl1lng of salesmen," 1e-marked
a sectIOn manager of the Boston department "tore 111
Grand Rap1ds Asked to exp1all1 the problem the manager
continued:
"By the use of our wll1dows, the arrangement of stock \\ 1th
descriptwn and pnce cal ds attached, and the hberal use of ad-vertising
in the newspapers, upon tJhe b1ll boards and 111 the
street cars, we seI1 many goods w1thout the aId of salesmen
Any boy in our employ may rece1ve paJiment for goods and
take the Shlpp1l1g directIOns, a very sImple proceedll1g \Ve
1I1ustrate and descnbe an artIcle so minutely that when a cus-tomer
enters the store he or she knows where to find an a1bele
advertised, and seldom needs d1rectlOn from the floor walkers
The experienced shopper enters the rug department and ex-am111es
a rug, takes ItS number, goe" to the cashIer's desk, pa} ~
for the same and departs wIthout the loss of a moment's tIme,
if so disposed We are constantly stnvmg to enlarge thIS k1l1d
of salesmanship Take the httle Item of pIcture postal cads
N a one with a gram of sense 111 any hne of business gIves a
moment's attentIOn to the collector of such good" Rarely does
the owner of a store or his employes take tIme to count the
cards a customer has selected His part 111 the transactlOn 1Sto
place the cards in an envelope and recen e payment for the
same"
"Have you observed what your neIghbors are doing in the
way of salesmanship?" the interVIewer enquIred
"Salesmanship)" In many stores thne is 110 sa1e'iman-ship
in evidence.
For 1I1stance," the interVIewer injected.
"I have it A fev; weeks ago in passing the store of a
neighbor I saw a spnng overcoat in the window that took
m} fancy I entered the store and found four or five sales-men
engaged 111a warm discussion over uhe coming munici-pal
election 'WIll some one show me an overcoat,' I re-marked,
\\ hen I observed that none of the group was dis- ~
posed to pay an) attention to me 'You will find the over-coat
man at the rear of the store,' one of the group remarked,
and then broke into uhe discussion."
"At the back of the store I found a man seated in a
chall observ111g the throng passing on the stJ1eet and smokmg
a cIgarette 'I v; ish to look at an overocat,' I said. 'You
have one in the main w111dow marked $3500 that looks good
to me ,,,
" 'N 0 use 1t would not fit you vVe have none of that
make that would,' remarked he of the cigarette."
"'\Vould you ml11d showl11g me an overcoat,'
sume there 1S one in th1S stack (indicating a pIle of
overcoats plIed on a counter) that would please me."
" 'No,' What sIze do you wear?"
" 'About a 38 breast' I want a good coat-one that will
wear well."
"The salesman slowly arose and proceeded to paw over
the stack. 'Don't think Ithere is a thil1ty-eight in the lot,' he
said
I pre-spring
~.. ..._--_ _-_ --_ - .
A. L. HOLCOMB & CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
OROOVINO SA WS
DADO SAWS
Citizens' Phone 1239
27 N. Market St., Oraad Rapid., Mich. .. _.. _a- ~
-'---------------_ ........
WEEKLY ARTISAN
UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead m Style, Conttrudlon
and Fmish. See our Catalogue.
Our hne on permanent exhIbI-tIon
7th Floor, New Manufact-urers'
Bwldmg,Grand Rapids.
.._--_._._------_._---
"At this moment one of the proprietors entered and ex-pressed
pleasure in meeting me. 'Lookrng for a coat, eh?'
Well, "Ed" wtll show all the good ones we have in stock'
"Bd" began to feel a httle interest in his occupatlOn and
turned over the stack for my inspection. Near the bottom
two coats of the same pattern and material as the one I had
observed in the window were found, one of which I pur-dhased,
and left the store. Such indifference to duty, and
disloyalty to a firm on the part of salesmen would in time
wreck any business"
New Credit News Bureau.
With a view of making their service of trade information
more complete anJ effective the Lyon Furniture Agency have
effected a co-operative arrangement wii'h a number of .special
agenCte'i Under this plan each agency furnishes all its
subscribers wtth a supply of blanks to be used in reporting
first and increased orders, and method of payment of cus-tomers
about whom they desire this combined service. All
ll1formation reported on these blanks by all the subscribers
to all the agencies is compiled in tabulated form, so that
each inquirer is given full informatlOn of all new credtt
sought and how payments are made with all creditors who
have inquired withm the previous year.
To dtstingui~h thIS special service from our regular
We Manufacture ti,e
La~elt Line of
rOlDlno
("AIDS
in the Umted States,
SUitable for 5 Un day
Schools, Halls, Steam-ers
and all pub1Jcresorts.
We also manufacture
Brass TrImmed I ran
Beds, Spnng Beds, Cots
and CrIbs m a large
varIety
Send for Catalogue
and Prteu to I
I'-_.---------_._--------------
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO
_40
13
..-..-_--_-._---------. ------- _. -----------.-.-..-___ ._-- ...
work we oall this deparrtment the Credtt News Bureau, the
Credit News Reports, and the blanks to be used in making
inquiries Registry Blanks The large volume of information
that will Q)efurnished from lines of busmess necessitates a
nominal charge of five cents for each credtt news report is-sued
but the service wtll be found of such great value that
this 'charge will not deter anyone from maklllg lIberal use of
registry blanks
The reasons for this additlOn to the Lyon Agency's re-ports
are given as follows:
"Overbuying, whether with dishonest intent or from poor
Judgment, has always been one of the greatest dangers in
credit dealing and most dtfficult to detect or prevent.
"Slow payments usually precede a failure caused by dry
rot, insufficient capItal or lack of business ability.
"Knowledge by every creditor of all First Orders and
materially Increased Orders, placed by a given concern will
render overbuying almost impossible
"Knowledge by every credttor of every Slow Payment
will serve to curtail credit before the danger point tS reached"
1
Japanese Taste and Refinement.
Not only will the forthcommg Bntlsh exhibiton at Shep-herd's
Bu.sh, London, contain the finest collections of Japan-ese
art ever brought together in the Occtdent, but it will also
give a remarkable presentation of the quaint domestic hfe
of the Mikado's sU1bjects
It is believed that as one result of the exhibition there
will be a pronou1l!ced renaissance of interest in and employ-ment
of Japanese domesttc art 111 Bttrope and Amenca As
most persons know the decorative ideal of Japan and
rthat of the we'it are utterly different. The Occt-dent
displays everything, finding satisfaction tn elaborate
detail and a multiphcity of objects-pictures, tapesltry, porce-lain,
rugs, carVll1gs, silver, furntture The Japanese, with
his more refined taste, takes care, beyond everything else,
that his rooms are harmonious, III good taste, the possession,
for in.stance, of a vase worth $1,000 does not mean that it
will be displayed If it happen that the vase does not harm-onize
wIth the owner's rooms it is wrapped up and put away,
and only produced when the collector wants to show it to
feHow connOIsseurs
In a Japanese house at the exhtbition the picture in the
centre of one wall is painted with such skill that only the
closest examinaion shows that it is not done in relief. As
a rule only one picture IS to be found in a room, the paint-ll1g
being seleoted and changed m accordance with the taste
of the occupier.
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Complete lines of samples are displayed at 1411Michigan Ave ..
Chicago, and in the Furniture Exhibition Building1 Evansville,
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber SUItes,Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, Odd Dressers, Chlfforobes.
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K. D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes. m Imitation
golden oak. plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Folding Beds. Buffets. Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards m plam oak. imitation quartered oak. and solid quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers in umtatIon quartered oak, illlitation
mahogany. and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, Dining and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds. CrIbs, Wire Springs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association.
Made by The Karges Furmture Co
~. . . , ••:
,.--------------------- - --
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
..
Made by World Furmture Company. Made by Bosse Furmture Company.
Made by Bockstege Furmture Co. Made by Bockstege Furmture Co•
. ,_._ ..-._.. . .......•. . .
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PU8L18HED "VERT SA.TUROAY ay TH..
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
'U.SC"'I'TION '1 eo I'E" YEA" ANYWHE"E IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHE" COUNT"'ES '2.00 I'E" YEA". 'INCilLE COI'IE' 5 CENTS.
~U.LICATION O~~ICE. 101-112 NOPITH DIVISION ST. GPIANO RA~IOS. MICH.
A. S WHITE. ""ANACOHNCiI EDITO"
Entered as aecond cia .. matter. July 5, 1909. at the post office at Grand RapIds. Michigan
under the act of March 3. 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE E LEVY.
The Implement Trade Journal ad'1ses merchant" "not
to employ inexperienced salesmen" If merchants generally
should act upon this advice where "ould the expenenced
salesmen come from m the course of a fe" ) ear,,? A suc-cessful
merchant remarked recentl} that 1t "as hIs policy to
employ inexpenenced salesmen occasionall}; that dIsloyal
experienced sale"men know ho\\ to "hlrk in the performance
of duty; to "Ide-"tep d1sagreeable customer'S. to beat the
time clock and to do other mexcusable things For a tIme
the untried sale~man \\ 111 not be famlllar with such tncb
and will try to carry enthUSIasm mto hIS work and render
faithful servIce He will make mIstake" but the cost to the
management on account thereof will be no greater than that
of the lazyness or indifference of dIsloyal expenenced sales-men
Too much experience m a salesman 1S not a good
thing for the employer
The workmg out of the expenment undertaken by the
United States Steel corporation for the rellef of mjured em-ployes
WIll be of lllterest to manufacturers in all hnes Very
few employers of labor can afford to follow the example of
the Steel Trust in dealing with employes but if the plan
that is to be tried out proves satIsfactory, it may be used in
modified form by less prosperous corporations in meetmg an
expense that 1S much larger and of more importance to em-ployers
than IS estImated by the general public.
American manufacturers ha'mg plants on both SIdes of
the geographical line between the Lnited States and Canada
and the1r number IS already large and steadIly mcreastng, are
quite indifferent to the changes made 111the tanff schedules
of the two countries from tIme to time No matter ho"
<;,ltght or radical such changes may be they denn benefit
therefrom on one side of the hne or the other.
Business men are awakening to the fact that relief ma}
be found for the irrnpositlOns Imposed upon the people by the
express companies by the passage of the postal package btll.
now pend111g m congress A majority of the stock of the
expre"s companies is owned by the raIlroads and through
"uch control they are enabled to plunder shippers ruthlessly
Congress should be urged to act promptly
Now Cmcinnatl proposes to get Into the furniture ex-position
game in earnel"t. \V1th furniture shows in Grand
Rap1ds, N ev, York, Chicago, Sit LoUls, Jamestown, Evans-
'll1e and C111c111natI the semi-annual "easons may have to
be extended 111order to enable buyers to take in all of them
But It ,,111 be a good thing for the raIlroad".
The <:;tatement made by members of the Southern pine
a""ouatlon that, for the past two }'ears, they have been
"dulllpmg" thell product all over the country, at prices
barel} co, enng the c03t of production, must be interesting
ne" 'S to carpenters, contractors and builders generally.
From the announcement of an early auction sale by
'\le:xander Smith & Son of New York it does not seem that
I!:he eastern carpet and rug manufacturers Ihave been so
rushed WIth order" as has been represented by the trade
1ournal'S and New York and Boston market report3.
Perhaps there is no orgamzed combine among the furni-ture
manufacturer" of Canada, but in h1s interview, repub-lIshed
from the Toronto \i\T orld, the president of the alleged
holdmg company talks, ,ery much like an AmerIcan trust
magnate
Perhap" members of the Hardwood Lumbermen's as-
"oclatlOn hay e also been "dumpmg" a part of their product
m order to mamtain prices If so the furniture manufac-turers
..h..ould tr) to di"cover the dumpmg grounds.
Old Father Tll11e has swift wings-he needs no flymg
machine Only sIxty days hence furniture manufacturers,
buyers and sellers. \\ III be "all ready for the opemng of the
"ummer sale3 season"
Deslgner" of furnIture posters "hould take a course in
drawing \Vlth scarcely an exceptlOn the furniture used in
pnntmg for the bIll board3 and dead 'Vlalls is shockingly
bad
Exposition Buildina in Cincinnati.
Reports from Cmcinnati state that the furniture manu-facturers
of that city are to have an expoaition building and
that 1t W111be the largest u3ed for the purpose in the middle
west A deal was closed last week by which the promoters
acquire the Drucker building on the corner of Broadway and
:t\inth street for a consideratlOn of $100,000, possession to be
gIven on May 1.
The property was purchased for the Ohio Valley Furni-ture
Butldmg. \\ hich concern was recently incol'porated un-der
the la"" of Oh1O The deal i<; <;aid not to be a case of
outright purchase, but arranged on a lease basi'S The owners
of the realty are non-residents, the property belonging to the
Phipps estate Practlcally all of the furniture manufacturers
m Cmcinnati are 'SaId to be interested in the exposition
, enture
More Work for the Nelson-Matter Factory.
Dunng the pa"t week the Nelson-Matter company of
Grand Rapkl" ha\ e hooked an order for all the furniture for
the new HermItage Hotel m NashvIlle, Tenn The contract
for furl1lture, rugs, carpets and draperies was awarded to
Montgomery & Co, of NashVIlle, m competItIOn with New
York and ChIcago bIdders The successful bId was $126,500.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
PROGRESS DUE TO PARTS MAKERS.
The Specialist. by Concentrating Thought and
Effort. Outdoes the General Worker.
The Apnl number of The Hub, the ~ew York publlcatlOn
de, oted to the Interests of the vehIcle mdustl y has an artlcle
011 "Pal ts Makers" expre,sIng some Ideas that may be found
worthy of conslderatlOl1 Iby fUt mture manufacturer~ The
Hub's suggestlOns as to the aJvantages of speclaltzIng are In-tended
for manufacturers of automobdes, but they may be
applied, with less advantage, perhaps, to the furl11ture indus-try.
The Hub says'
"It is mteresting to note that the automobile maker on
the quantity basIs lays much stress on his <;plendld factory
organiz1ation by which it becomes possIble to produce the
needed parts not only cheaper but so much betJter than they
can be assembled by gathenng them from special sources. It
is said the expense is much 1educed, also. No doubt the
claim is builded upon a rock foundation of fact, but there is
a more important poil1lt of view l\Iany minds devoted to
speciallzatlOn are certainly llkely to thInk out refinements of
parts with more succes~ ll1 results than the busy maker, who
has a vast establishment to think about, espeCIally when all
hands must be more or less, generally more, bound by the
routine of manufacture
"Even the buyer and tber of the machmes is Iii, lse to this
proposition, as IS shown by the news of the ddy, 111 whIch it
IS stated that a company of one hundred men of wealth has
been l11corporated to bU1ld one hundred automobllec,-one for
each-the sole actuating reason being to select from any and
every source the particular part of extreme excellence and
practicability in an automob1le, and assemble it in thIS auto
de luxe, regal'dless of the expense of the undertaking The
point aimed at is perfeotion so far as the present state of the
art will afford it
"Very good I t IS along these very same lines that the
parts maker of the trade is pnogressl11g His activities are
confined to speClalization Any part, be it of engme, frame,
or any subSIdIary bIt of the mechanism, is the better for hIS
thought, attention and concentration. He will gIld the refined
gold of previous effort, and make somethink better than the
large complete orgamzation WIll think out Evidences of
such evolution al e already well to tJhe front The parts
maker's exhlibit at shows I" the sectlOn in which is to be
found the real advance in the business.
"The evolution is proceeding along e~actly the same
lines as could have been noted in tJhe horse-drawn vehicle
industry. From that quarter sprung all the advance in the
art of vell1cle btuldlng; It Will be the same in the motor
vehicle trade.
"The parts maker With his plain or patented improve-ments
due to h1s concentratlOn of thought and expenment
on a qingle part, will be the advance agent of progress to
whom the budder must look for what is best to use 111 as-sembl1l1g
a perfect vehicle
"It IS no disparagement to the brains and abIlity of the
large manufacturer that this will be so, it is just the na"tural
outcome of things No carriage budder ever forged an axle
having the perfectlOn of parts that 1t has com1l1g from the
man who gives axles his undiVIded thought The calnage
builder learned this truth, then gave up trying He bought
cheaper and better than he could forge himself This is
an indIvidual l11stance Multiply it along the line
"We belleve the as"embled parts of the auto are crude
1:o-day COImpared to what they WIll be in the not distant
11
Manistee, Mich., Oct.
Grand Rapids Veneer Works,
Grand Rapids. Mich.
12,1907.
Gentlemen:
We ha ve your favor of the 9th, and we are very much
pleased to advise you that the dry kiln which you installed for
us is working very satisfactorily, and that we are able to turn
out at least one third more dry lumber with this system of yours
than we formerly could, and the lumber comes out in a very
much better condition.
We have another kiln that we are running with hot blast,
and we think that we Willmake a change next season and use
your system in both of our kuns.
We would be very glad. indeed. to recommend this kiln
to anyone who is having trouble in drying lumber, as we are
fully convinced that your system for drying lumber is the right
one. Yours truly,
THE MANISTEE MFG. CO.
Per Chas. Elmendorf,
Manager.
future, <Lnd the progress will be solely due to the parts
maker."
Satisfied.
It is a great thing to be satlsfied That means content-ment,
and in a business way prosperity. \Ve all like to have
our customers satlsfied. It's the best kind of advertismg, and
in this twentieth century of rush and striving for the first
place, advertb1l1g has come to be one of the most necessary
and valuable ad]t1l1cts of trade and commerce. This is well
Illustrated 111 the accompanY1l1g letter
Clinton, Iowa, Mach 14, 1910
Grand RapIds Veneer \V orks,
Grand RapIds, Mich
Gentlemen'
Replying- to yours of the 12th 1l1st, as to the results we
are gett1l1g from the Grand RapIds S) stem of dry kiln, we are
plea<;ed to mform you that we are well satIsfied It has
more than met our expectatlOllS and has done all you claimed
1t would.
Very respectfully,
HEMINGWAY FURN CO
Signed, \V E Hemingway
IMPROVED. EASY AND ELEVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt, Electnc and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Power ./01' Furmture Stores
S"nd for Catalogne and Pnc"s.
KIMBALL BROS, CO" 1067 Nmth St .. Council BlUffs, la,
Kimball Elevator Co., 3~ Prospect St., Cl"v"land, 0.;
l0811lh SI., Omaha, N"b., 128C"dar SI , N"w York CIty.
... . .. ....,
.... ... . .
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
,,- - .......... . .."
Wood Sar Clamp Fixtures Per Set SOc.
Patent Malleable Clamp FIxture.
E H SHELDOlli & CO ChlcaRo III
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 21 dozen Clamp FIxture. "tllch
we bought of you a lIttle o\er a )ear ago are gnInR excellent se-\lce "e are
well satIsfied with them and .haJJ be pleased to remember you "hene,er we "ant
anything ilddltlonal In thIS hne Yams truly
SIOUXCIty Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO
30,000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
Vise.
Sold on appro\al "nd an uncon
dltlonal money bd.ck guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL SAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
\Ve sohclt pnvllege of sending samples and
onr complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON & CO. I 328 N. May St .• Chicago. i
•••.• _. a. __ ",
~---------~-~----- _a· __ ~ . _ - - • - - - -- - - - - - •
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-John P .:\Iurphy. 12 \\ e"t lorty-thlrd street,
Kansas City, Mo , $3,500, J F Cottel1111,3314 Prospect street,
Kansas CIty, $3,500; E C Kreigh, 514 vYest 1'hirty-l1lnth
street, Kansas City, $5,000; J \IV. Bernardan, 3642 Jansen
place, Kansas CIty, $10,000, Henry ::\lohr, 46 :\orman street,
Buffalo, N. Y, $3,500, Fellx Famu1are, 301 Hamburgh place,
Buffalo, $5,000; Edward 1\ Meyer, 45 Ash street, Buffalo,
$3,000; Sophia DaVIS, 60 1\ akefie1d street, Buffalo. $3.000,
\iVaIlace Thayer, 39 A~be,rt street, Buffalo, $3,000; Alvin
Bauss, 532 Northampton street Buffalo $3.500, Fred DOlns,
114 Wesley street, Buffalo, $-1-,000,\\ Illlam Chabot. 34 1\ lll-slow
street, Buffalo, $3,600. "[argaret Pm' er '. 261 '\ orth
Ogden street, Buffalo. $3,500 Ech, ard Bll"k, 2423 Seneca
street, Buffalo, $12,000, P L Goodheart. 6526 DI eAel a, cnue,
Ohicago, Ill, $4,500, C H Noble, 2618 East Se\ ent} -fourth
street, ChIcago, $5,000, J J Keane. 6200 ChamplaIn a, enue,
Chicago, $35,000, T L Duque, 524 South Hd1 'itreet. Los
Angeles, Cal, $9,500, Stella !II Stan, 2817 Sun~et bou1e,ard
Los Angeles, $6,000, Sarah Y Ruhm"teen, EIghth a, enue
and T\, ent} -fitth street, Los Angele", $4,500, J T Cook,
Holh \, ood. Cal , $7,000, James Carr, 301 LydIa btreet, PeOlla,
Ill, $3,000, Dal1lc1 A Dugan, 606 Alden avenue, Trenton, N.
J , $20,000, LOtHS Mangold, 918 Llberty street, Trenton, $4,-
000, 'l{ IV Rose, 427 Pennll1gton avenue, Trenton, $3,500,
Edward Ramer, Hartley street and Lmden avenue, York, Pa.,
$11.000, R S Cov, an, 108 Twentieth avenue south, Nashville,
Tenn , $8,000, LOlliS MacDuff, 1451 Boulevard, DetrOIt, Mlch ,
$5,200, J II alter Drake, 116 Boston boulevard, DetrOIt, $10,-
000, L K Butler. 573 Jefferson avenue, DetrOIt, $7,500, 1-1
n Blank"tell1, 1418 Brush street, DetrOlt, $4,500, Paul Sun-da',
535 Hurlbut ~treet, DetrOlt. $55,275, J F ;\1cLaughhn,
Bru"h ;,treet and Garfield avenue, DetrOIt, $6,SOO. Peter Durst,
lIague and ] ohn R streets, DetrOIt, $4,500, Mlke Rogan,
420 .:\Iontgomel} a\enue, Youngstown, 0, $3,000, John S
\\' nght, Penns} Ivdl1la and Thlryt-seventib streets, lndlan-apoh",
Iud $6,500 ~1rs Stella 13 Colhns, 145 South Thlrty-first
"treet Omaha, \Jebr, $5,000, Ed Johnston, 1138 South
Central boule, ard, Omaha. $6,500, R SHall, 2418 Farnam
~treet. Omaha, $9,000, MI"s "Joe" V'lhon, 24 Broyles street, --_._~--------- ,-----------_.------- ----------------.-.-_ .-._-._~....
New designs In the Louis XVI Style.
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO. GRAND RAPIDS, MIClH..
No. 1711
...
No. 1705·1705
WEEKLY ARTISAN ... _ .. ... .....
STAR CASTER CUP COMPANY
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted cellulOId as a base for our Caster Cups, making the
best cup on the market. CellulOId IS a great Improvement over bases
made of other matenal When It ISnecessary to move a piece supported
by cups wIth cellulOId bases It can be done wIth ease, as the bases are per-fectly
smooth CellulOId does not sweat and hy the use of these cups
tables are never marred. These cups are timshed In Golden Oak and
WhIte Maple, Jimshed bght If you will try a sample order of thefe
gOOd,you WIll dellre to handle them In quantltle,
PRICES: SIZe 2X Inches .. $5.50 per hundred.
Size 3U Inches. 4.50 per hundred.
f o. b (]rand Rapidl PRT A SAMPLE ORDER
~ __ • Te ••• _ •••••••••••• .. ....
Atlanta, Ga, $4,000; Mrs. M. ::.vreimeyer, 4248 Virgima ave-nue,
St Louis, Mo., $4,000, J C Guckenberger, Mabbett and
Rusk streets, Milwaukee, Wis , $3,500, E J Coogen, Fortieth
street and Elm avenue, Ml1waukee, $4,000, Herman Bohlman,
2417 Center street, Milwaukee, $8,500; George \i\! Barfield,
4801 Second avenue, Woodlawn, Blrmingiham, Ala, $4,000;
B F. Selman, North Ninth avenue and Seventeenth street,
Birmingham, $5,500; H L Newton, 560 Laclede street, Mem-phis,
Tenn, $4,500; C H Crisman" 1556 Vmton avenue,
Memphis, $11,000, A D Mmkler, 1552 First avenue, west,
Seattle, Wash, $15,000, A P Molloy, 4344 FOity-.-.lxth ave-nue
northwest, Seattle, $10,000, VhllJam J. Trett, 905 MIdland
avenue, Syracuse, NY, $5,000, H C Clark, 100 Swaneola
street, Syracuse, $4,000; E J Scouller, 148 Corning avenue,
Syracuse, $5,000, Anna Thomasmeyer, McBrIde and HIckory
<;treets, Syracu<;e, $6,300; Huam Hucker, 930 Gr3Jpe street,
Syracu<;e, $4,500, Mary E Tucker, 604 Park avenue, Syra-cu<;
e, $6,000, Lucy A Jacbon, Bland and Lmcoln avenue~,
Evansvl1le, Ind, $3,000; J B Young, 500 North Market
street, WHJhlta, Kan, $3,500, A. E Schuh, 416 West Main
street, Richmond,' Ind , $3,000, August Anderson, 421 HarrI-son
avenue, South Bend, Ind, $3,000; Steven Nyccos, 1216
\i\! est Washmgton avenue, South Bend, $4,000, Thomas J ohn-son,
331 John avenue, Superior, Wis, $3,000; C CLines,
413 Perry street, Peoria, Ill, $3,000, R T Hollerook, Cherry
and Seventh streets, \i\!inston-Salem, N. C, $6,000; Wilham
Stuckenlberg, 3253 Texas avenue, St Louis, Mo , $3,500; Rose
Meyers, Penn and Twenty-sixth streets, St Joseph, Mo, $4,-
000; J D Ormsby, 229 Campbell street, Wmnipeg, Man,
$5,000, J. T. Parker, 408 Aubrey avenue, Winmpeg, $4,500,
F. J. Smith, 4944 Dupont avenue, Minneapohs, Mmn, $4,-
000; Mary C Russell, 4408 Thomas avenue south, Mmne-apolis,
$3,800; L. E Stetler, 2510 Logan avenue north, Min-neapohs,
$3,500; Mary P Thurston, 633-9 East Thirty-second
street, Mmneapohs, $20,000, Arthur Zekman, 61 East Seven-teenth
street, Minneapohs, $10,000; H W W Ilhams, 2322
Rice street, Little Rock, Ark, $3,000; S HAllen, 210 Eighth
avenue, Salt Lake City, Utah, $10,000; W. R Baxter, 354
North Main street, Salt Lake CIty, $6,000; Albert Wihite,
419 I street, Salt Lake City, $3,800; S S DIckenson, 676 East
Second South street, Salt Lake City, $4,000, Mrs E V VV.
Anderson, East Twenty-eighth and Burn<;ide streets, Port-land,
Ore, $15,000, H J Fisher, Patton avenue and Shaver
streets, Portland, $4,000, ~T T Scott, 1158 Adams street,
Mobile, Ala, $4,500; W E Flinn, Beauregard and Hamllton
streets, Mobile, $3,500, William F Simpson, 5203 Wall street,
Los Angeles, Cal, $4,750, L. B. l'Esperance, 355 Alexandria
19
...~
::K1:A~ou INTERESTING PRICES g~~~Vllt~6
SEND SAMPLES, DRAWINGS OR CUTS FOR PRICES.
CWartiatleolfroure. lf E. P. ROWE CARVING WORKS, ALMLft~N,
I.. • . ..... .. ..~.. . .
avenue, Los Angeles, $7,000; Evalene M McCay, 648 Haw-thorne
avenue, Los Angeles, $5,500, Jesse M Cox, Detroit
and Thnteenth streets, Denver, Col, $5,000, E. E Williams,
10840 Drexel avenue, Cleveland, 0, $5,500, Mary E Cassell,
1006 Eighteenth street, Columbus, 0, $4,800; Charles Defen-baugh,
490 Twenty-second street, Columbus, $3,600; A. E
Legg, 227 Maynard avenue, Columbu<;, $4,000; Harry Wright,
1215 Garfield avenue, Topeka, Kan, $3,500; J H. Bailey, 714
Mas~abeslC .-.treet, J\Ianche~ter, N H, $4,000, M V. BaIley,
99 Grant street, Manchester, $3,000; Dr D. C Lefferts, Red-lands,
Cal, $20,000
Miscellaneous Buildings.- The CatholJcs aI e building a
$50,000 school house at 5201-9 North Fifty-second avenue,
Ohicago St James illethodist M1.-.slOnare budding a church
to cost $100,000 on Tabor road, PhIladelphia, Pa The Corner
Realty company IS erect1l1g a theatre on North Twelfth
street, St Louis, Mo , at a cost of $185,000, exclusive of seat1l1g
and furniture The W1l1dom Park Baptists are buildl11g a
$25,000 church on Twenty-fifth avenue, M1l1neapohs, M1l1n
BU'-,l11e.-m.sen of Santa Paula, Cal, are plann1l1g for the erec-tIOn
of a $50,000 hotel The Mystic Shriners are to l11vest
$100,000 in the erection of a temple at Phoenix, Anz The
boarJ of trustees are advertising for bids for furnishing the
city hall at VisalJa, Cal, address M J Brynes, city clerk.
~T ork has been started on the erection of the First Baptist
church at Pomona, Cal, which IS to cost $60,000. The Uni-tarians
of San DIego, Cdl have adopted plan<; for a new
church to cost $80,000 ,
Flattery generally has an axe to grind
.. .-~
HOFFMAN BROTHERS CO.
FT. WAYNE. IND.
HARDWOOD LUMBER
I SAWED} QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLiCED AND MAHOGANY
I
Ira _. _.. • • I. •• ••• ..
DUMPING SOUTHERN PINE IN CANADA
An Interesting Controversy Between St. Louis and Toronto Lumber Journals That
May Lead to Lower Pric{"s.
The follow1l1g from the Canacla Lumberman of Toronto,
seems to expla1l1 how the high pnces of southern pine lumber
are ma1l1ta1l1ed and may strengtlhen the <;usprClOn long enter-tained
by fur11lture manufacturers and others that the cost
of hardwood lumber rs not governed entrrely by the la\\ of
supply and demand:
An Ontario traveler for a lumber manufacturIng firm
recently called upon a large manufactunng company \\ hrch
uses a great deal of lumber 111the course of the year, and
found that they needed a good sized bill of tank ]OlStS and
timber. He figured on the brll as closely as posi>rble and told
the manufacturer what rt would cost V\'hen the 111tervrew
ended he felt farrly satisfied that he would secure the order
In the course of a few days he returned, expect111g to close
the contract, and found to hrs drsapp0111tment that a tra, eler
for a Southern p111e concern had struck the traIl of the con-sumer
and had offered his goods at pnces which cannot be
approached by the Ontano ml1ls There \\ as not a smgle
item in the ltst on w1hrch the pnce'3 of the Southern pme
were not two or three dollars per thousand feet less than
the prices of the Ontano mrll, and on many of the Items the
difference \\as as great as $15 per thousand feet Tank jOlstS
4-in by 16-in by 24-ft \\ ere offered m Ontario \\ hrte pme, "e-lected
bill stuff, for $46 Tlhe Southern p1l1Cpnce \\ as $32 For
3-inch by 16-inch by 22-foot the On tan a p111e prIce \\ as $44,
and the Southern p1l1e pnce $31 SO For trmbers the pnces
were not so wide apart, an example being 6-inch b} 16-111ch
by 22-foot, for whrch the Ontano p111e pnce \\ a'3 $39 and the
Southern pme prIce $32 It must be borne m mmd. hO\\ e\ er,
that the Southern pme pnce was "deltvered," \\ hrle the On-tario
price was fob mrll, whrch means that another $2 or
$3 would have to be added.
There 1S no p0'3s1b1lity of talkl11g against an argument
of this nature, and the Ontano traveler had to lea Ye \\ ithout
an order, in spite of the fact that the Canadran mills seemmgly
had the gre<Lt advantage of a sibort fre1ght haul. In sp1te of
this, the Southern firm was able to quote a 10\\ er price,
freight included than the Canad1an manufacturer could quote
f. o. b. cars at the mill.
Is the Canad1an manufacturer askmg too much for hrs
lumber, or is the Southern firm askl11g too ltttle? Certamly
the former is not the case Canadrans have lost enougi1
money in the last two or three years to justrfy them m ask-ing
every cent they are asking today The cost of manufac-turing
is sufficient to warrant the pnce<; \\ hich are bel11g
quoteJ by Ontano mrlls The trouble ro, that the Southern
manufacturers are mak111g a convenience of the Canadian
markets and are strll at the old game of dumping their lum-ber
here at almost any figure 50 long as they can secure money
111return They mu<;t have money to meet the demands of
therr bankers, and are sellmg lumber for anything they can
obtam There rs no question that the Southern pine is being
"dumped" m OntarIo The price of 6-inch by 16-inch by 22-
foot, for instance, was $32. The same material was sold in
Boston recently at $38 'With a $10 frerght rate from the
South. there would only be $22 of the Ontario price left for
the cost at the mrll, whereas in the South an average price
is $23 SO
Trs dumpmg however, has been going on for many
} ears. and pme m the Southern States is being cut apparently
at a \\ a"teful rate, but one would expect that long before
thrs tIme man} of the Southern manufacturers would have
reached the end of therr resources, or rather, of their borrow-mg
pm" er" 1'hr<; 1S the real puzzle 111 connection with the
srtuatlOn II hrch Canad1ans are unable to solve. The best
solutlOn<; seems to be one which wao, recently given by a
Canadran on h1:o return fram a tnp through the South. He
thmk" that It 1S easier for a promoter to secure capital for
doubtful enterpnse" m the States than in Canada. Appar-ently
ne\\ caprtal b bemg interested from time to time, as
the old capital goes out of existence, and it begins to looJk
as If tIllS process could be kept up aLmost indefinitely, espec-ially
rf a fair living price is obtained in United States markets
There are other features of the situation which are of
111tere'-t to Canadians Visitors to the South all agree in
cnticr7rnR the enormous rate at which the lumber of that
countn IS being cut, and they contradict the reports which
are frequently published regard111g a reduction of the quan-tIty
of trmber be1l1g taken out The Canadian referred to
abm e <;tates that one of the most surprising sights of his
trip was the great <Lmount of lumber-laden traffic which his
tram, going south from Ohicago, passed on tlhe way. Prac-tically
e, ery ten miles a freight train was met, and over 50
per cent of the freight was lumber. Not only this, but in
the lumber manufacturing process there is far more waste
than there is in other lumbering districts Large permanent
ml1ls are not erected The machinery is not up-to-date, and
the timber is frequently unevenly cut
Coming back to the Canadian end of the situation, one
naturally Ivonders '" hy It i,..,that lumber which can be offered
••••••••••••••••••••• a ••••• ... . ~
OFFICES:
CINCINNATI--Secoad National Bank Building. NEW YORK--346 Broadway.
BOSTON--18 Tremont St. CHICAG8--14th St. aad Wabash A"•.
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Bldg. JAMESTOWN, N. Y.--Chadakoln Bldg.
HIGH POINT, N. C.--N. C. Savlag_ Bank Bldg.
The most satisfactory and up-to-date Credit Service embracing the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
The most accurate and reliable Reference Book Published.
Originatora of the "Tracer and Clearing Houae Syatem,"
Collect£onServ£ce Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Drafts .
......................... ••• ••••••••• •••••• ••• sa •••••••• w •• I ••• _ • aT h ••• 1 ••••••
• • c •••••••
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
-----~-----~------~-.-""-.-.-.-.-.-.-. a_ ••_. ....- . .•.,
f Lentz Big Six
•• a a •••••••
I ------------------_._._---_._._. _._.----_.. ... --. .. ..._. -.... - .. ._. . .. ...- - - - - - ... -.
No. 694. 48 in. top.
No. 687. 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGAh
at such cheap prices compared with the Canadian product,
does not completely monopolize the market There is, first
of all, one simple reason. A man who oflders a bill of South-ern
pine may get it in a few days, and he may not get it
for months. Deltvery is a very uncertain matter. If he
orders Canadian lumber he can depend upon delivery within
a reasonable time It frequently happens that after ordering
Southern lumber a Canadian consumer secures some of It
after a long delay, and in the end has to order CanadIan lum-ber
to take the place of the Ibalance of the order, which he
cannot secure in time for his work. For this reason Cana-dians
have been able in the long run to hold down the sales
of yellow pine The chief evil in connection with the sale
of yellow pllle in the Canadian markets is the disturbance
which it introduces into trade conditIons Iby providing a fac-tor
for the depression of pnces and by acting as a general
trade disturbing factor.
The Lumberman of St. Louis, Mo., takes issue with its
CanadIan contennpo'rary and prints interviews and letters
from a number of southern lumber manufacturers to show
that the Toronto papers make many misleading statements
in regard to the yellow pine business in the Dominion. The
denials, however, are evasive. It is admItted that there is an
over production of yellow pine lumber and that some of it
may have been dumped in Canada, but, "it has been dumped
everywhere since 1907." The Southerners emphatically deny
Ithat their export prices are lower than quotJations to domestic
consumers and declare that the sale referred to by the Can-ada
Lumberman must have been made by some concern
that was heavily overstocked and in need of ready cash The
St Louis Lumberman commenting on the letters and inter-views
says:
"Any well-informed manufacturer of yellow pine can pick
out of this editorial a number of statJments that are untrue
and ridiculously absurd. Just as an illustration our contem-porary
certainly knows or ought to know that the sentence
"Large permanent mills are not erected. The machlllery
is not up to date, and the lumber i" frequently unevenly cut"
~that caps the climax of ignorance Where in the world,
and that includes Canada, can you find larger, better, more
permanent mills than those in the South? What mills in
British Columbia can be mentioned in the same day with
those operated by Wm. Buchanan, the Long-Bell Lumber
company, the Chicago Lumber and COClciIompany, the Great
Southern Lumber company, the Kirby Lumber company, the
Central Coal and Coke company, Frost-Johnson Lumber com-pany,
the Pickering Mills, the Industrial, the Newman and a
score of others that we might mention? Our Canadian
friends need not worry abot~t the excellence of the material
they purchase on this side and they can be sure that the most
up-to-date machinery has been used in its making. And we
have an Idea, too, thalt they can be assured of prompt ship-ments.
Our Canradian contemporary should come over on this
side, visit the mills of the South, get his head full of real
information and then go back to Toronlto and tell his readers
of his many mistakes and erroneous statements."
Though It claims that "any well-informed" manufacturer
of yellow pllle can pick out a number of stwtements that are
untrue and ndiculously absurd" the St. Louis Lumberman
fads to mentlOn any such statements, except that in regard to
the character and permanency of the Southern mills. The
same is true of the letters and interVliews, intended to refute
the statements made by the Toronto paper. In fact the south-erners
admit even more than is charged agalllst them in re-gard
to the "dumping" pohcy some of them excusing that
practice on the ground that banks and finanCIers do not back
the lumberman as they should.
On the whole the Canadian editor seems to have "made
his rase" again<;t the yellow pine combine Whether it will
have any effect on prices remalllS to be seen, but if it is true
that "there is a great overproduction" and no combination to
maintain fictitIOUSvalues a sharp decline in the prices of yel-low
pine is certainly in order And a decline in southern pine
might bring about a decIllle in the cost of hardwood lumber.
Common sense doesn't mix very well with a love affair. .,
Henry Schmit 8 Co.
HOPICINS AND HARRIET STS.
eiDclnatl. OLio
makers of
Upholstered Furniture
for
LODGE and PULPIT, PARLOR,
LIBRARY, HOTEL and
CLUB IWOM
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Drying Furniture Stock
If the information contained
in this book would save you a
carload of oak a year, would it
not be worth reading through? I
Not a common catalog, but a book of
information, containing practical suggestions
really valuable to men interested in lumber
drying.
A complete treatise on Forced and Nat-ural
Circulation Kilns (progressive and
apartment types) with details of equipment.
A book you ought to have. Sent postpaid to
any address. Where shall we mail your copy?
AMERICAN BLO'¥[R CoMPANY DETROIT l"dCH ----
USA
Manufacturers of
"ABC" low speed;
low power exhaust
fans.
"ABC"roller bear-ing
trucks, trans-fer
cars and flexi-ble
doors.
"Detroit" Return Steam Traps.
New York Trade Notes and News.
X e,\ York. \pnl 21-Bus111ess IS qUIet in most lines. In
"ome there I'; c1ullne,..,s, due to tlhe appmach of the summer
"ea"on, but futl11 e orders for fall dehvery are com111g 111very
"ell \lreac1y the annual 1111mlgraJtlOn of busmess men gomg
to Fl11ope ha" started and the hst IS one of the largest on
relOl d so earh 111 the season In the furl11ture 1111ethe whole-
~ale tl ade 1<;falrl} <;easonable The retallers are not rushed
\, lth bus111e"" Some of them are carrymg on special rednctlOn
sales ~lanfacturers are not disposed to place large orders
for supplIes at ple"ent pnces
1he \tlantlc ~letal Bed company has been 111corporated
to manufacture bed", \\Ith a capital of $5,000, by John \V
\ \ Jlke-" John T Inglesby, \"1 0 Douglas J aCQIb Koeppel
an d Joseph Bartfeld
S Ornstein and 1. Ginsburg have opened a new furni-ture
store at 1957 Second avenue.
Lester Alexander has leased a loft at Grand street and
BlOadwa), where he will put in a big 1111eof upholstery
goods for tthe wholesale trade.
Fraas & Miller, retal! furl11ture dealers of Linden street
and Broadway, Brooklyn, have made Improvements 111their
store and put 111new ,..,how w111dows
The Ford & Johnson com pan) have taken a new ware-house
at 213 West Twenty-sixth street and wlll add a con-tract
department for school and church furl11ture
R Lawrence, who was assistant buyer for the O'N el!l-
Adams company, IS now furniture and upholstery buyer for
the Clstner-Knott Dry Goods company of Nashville, Tenn
R \ '\lorton who was 111the furniture department of
the Fourteenth street store and Rothellibergs, has succeeded
Frank S Haggmann as buyer for Price & Rosenbaum, Brook-lyn
D A Cella, who was for years with the Aimone Manu-facturmg
company has started the "Cella shop" in the Wind-so:-
Arcade, Fifth avenue, to handle choice decoratIOns, an-tique
furniture and bric-a~brac.
The Josiah Partridge & Sons COlllpany, have started m
a new l111e, makmg the American bent wood chairs Tlhey
have put m new machinery and a big demand is reported all
0\ el for these hnes.
H 1\ assel11 , late furl11ture and upholstery buyer for the
Goldburg-Slegel company, is now sellmg staff of Price &
Rosenbaum, Brooklyn.
'Dhe Bronx company a depal tment store at Third avenue
and 163d street and Jules DubOIS as the New York Molding
Manufacturing company, 643 Eig'hth avenue, are both being
closed out in bankruptcy
Charles A Unseld is contJinuing the busmess of L Un-seld,
deceased, at 131 Graham avenue
Herbert Cowperthwalt has secured from France, the agen-cy
for a new gildmg caster, which is a steel dOlme, without
wheels or hearings.
Alfred Schiebal has opened a new picture and frame
store at 3519 Bloadway
J & H Sakal sky, Grand and Essex streets, has taken th(
agency for the Carbon Stove and Range company of Beth
lehem, Pa
J acolb & Joseph Kahn, who have a large warehouse on
Twenty-seHnth street, are handhng a lot of spring and sum-mer
goods m porch and veranda chairs as well as speCial
hnes of bronze and monogram chair." office chairs and hall
racks
The Metropohtan Chair company are remodeling their
blllldmg on Twenty-seventh ,..,treet to make it a palace sale~
room They will have fine lighting facilities, spacious win'
WEEKLY ARTISAN 23
.'"
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Feed Glu. Sl'r.adine Machine, Sinele,
Doubl. and Combination. (Patented)
(Siz •• 12 in. to 84 in wide.)
-- Ven.er Pre ••••. different kind. and .ize. (P.leated)
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc., Etc.
- Hand Feed Glueine Machin. (Paleat
penmna.l Many .tyle. and .iz ••.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
LET us KNOW
YOUR WANTS
CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind.
dows for daylight and high power tungsten electric lamps
for even1l1gs '1he ceIlings and walb wIll ,be 111 white They
wIll have a number of sam1=>lerooms and shlppmg and stor-age
floors Ford & John30n have part of the first and
second floors and all of the thIrd and fourth floors
J F Woodlll, formerly a Phlladelphla furmture man,
late wIth R J Horner and Fred Ever3 of this CIty, IS now
WIth the Brooklyn Brass Refinishing company
::\;1 Gluck, who was assi"tant furmture buyer for Rothen-hergs
I" now aSsIstant buyer for A. I Namm & Son, Brook-lyn
Thompson & Co, manufacturing couches, beddmg and
box spnngs, has a fine line on show at his warerooms in
Brooklyn
Hammacher, Schlemmer & Co, Fourth avenue and
Thnteenth street, have an exhIbit of a fine lme of tools and
hardware for the furmture j rade
Olrver Bras of Lockport, NY, have a notable exhIbit
at 110 West Tv.enty-seventh ",treet, of brass and Iron beds
They make a specialty of the four post colonial and canopy
effects
Walter F Barnes of 372 Broadway is building up a
large bus1l1ess in desks, office and lodge furnIture
The Pantasote compan y, 26 vVest Thirty-fourth street,
are pushing their sales of pantasote, which is a substitute
for leather.
The Sons-Cunningham company of 26 Cherry street, are
making a fine lme of reed and Iattan furniture.
John Bottomly, late salesman for F. Mohr & Co, has
gone back to his old employt'r, R J. HDrner, on East Twenty-third
street
Baumann & Haubenstock have taken a new buIlding at
618 Grand street, Manhattan, an addltlOn to 614 Grand anci
have enlarged their parlor sUlte factory at Brooklyn.
Cowperthwait & Sons glive their salesmen bronze medals
for good work and service
The Pablow Reed and V\ lHaw Manufacturing company
have added anothel floor to then factory wt 128 West Thirty-third
stteet
The Carpentel company, retail furniture house of 378
East 143d street, John B Slattery and G. E Dahlhouse pro-pnetors,
have a large store but are lookIng for a chance to
secure a larger one
The Furniture and Carpet Employers' Mutual Benefit
association of Brooklyn are trying to combat any evening
No.6 Glu. H.at.r.
opening of the stores Some firms have been talking of keep-ing
open untIl 8 or 9 o'clock
Sears & Roebuck's Operations at Sparta.
During the past week it has been reported in Grand
RapIds that Sear3, Roebuck & Co, were to add a line of
cheap furniture to the product of their gasoline engine fac-tory
at Sparta, a httle town 20 mIles northwest of Grand
Rapids on the Pere Marquette If the managers of the big
mail order house have any such 1I1tentlOn they have not told
the people of Sparta anythmg about it They are building
an addItion to their engme factory, Ibut it is ma1l1ly for a
boiler and engine l'oom, and WIll not enlarge the capacity of
the plant to any great eXitent. Heretofore they ha,:e used
power furnished by the Sparta Mlllmg company but the ar-rangement
was not satisfactory to eIther party and finally
resulted m a law SUIt
The ga",011l1e engine faotory was establrshed by two
young men who sold Itheir product to Sears & Roebuck, but
went to the bad financially 111 trying to meet the require-ments
of their contract and sold out to 1Jhe ChIcago concern
who have improved the plant and its product and are now
enlarging it.
Sparta, Iby the way, is a prosperous little town. It's
greatest draw back is lack of houses for workmen with
families.
Pleasure IS almost anyth1l1g we dan't afford ~-._ -- .. ........ 1
THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
Glue Heater
Send your addrea. and
and recei... de.cripti ...
Circular of Glue Heater ••
Glue Coohr. and Hot
Bon. with price ••
The Weatherly Co.
Grand Rapid., Mich.
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
NO FURNITURE TRUST IN CANADA. -----------------------1 ,
President Harmer of the Alleged Holding Com-pany
Emphatically Repudiates the Ideo.
Fram the TOIonto \\ otld of A.prll 16-The \\ eekl} Sun,
in an edItorial under the captIOn of "A FurnIture CombIne
Too," pens an edItorial agal11st combl11es, basl11g Its argu-ment
on a despatch appearing 111 Thursday's Globe relatIve
to the meeting of the Ontano Fur11lture :,Ianufacturers'
assocIatIOn at Guelph, Its facts are so 1I1accurate and ItS
speCIal pleas so fOl ced that It has been brought to the attentlon
of some of the lead111g furnIture manufacturers 111 Toronto
R, Harmel, presIdent of the Canada Fl11 nlture IIan utac-turers,
LtJ, wa" seen by The \\ orId yesterday, and hay 111g
been shown the edltonal fr01l1 the \\ eekl) Sun, saId "There
IS absolutely no furnIture comb1l1e 111 Canada ~-\t the meet-ing
that Tlhe \Veekly Sun refers to my company \\ as not rep-resented
ThIS company was fOlmed 1ll 1900 and then 0\\ ned
and operated sIxteen furniture factones; It today operates
only eigiht. ThIs has been the result of metlhod" of economy
in management, and as a matter of fact thIs company was
formed in order to lessen the costs of manufacture and man-agement
and to put the fur11lture bU"111es~, so Lll d~ \\ e \\ el e
concerned, on a staple business baSIS
"So far as I can learn the meet1l1g at Guelph was for the
purpose of discuss~ng conditions and talkmg over busmess
procedure and plans looking to\Vard the development of the
furniture business 111 Canada I don't th1l1k any effort \\ as
made to fix pnce.>, because my knowledge of the furnIture
business tells me that no agreement to fix pnces could be
kept owing to tlhe uncertain condItIons prevalent 111the trade
"I t is not usually knoY\ n, but It IS none the less a fact,
that there are few furmture factones 1I1akmg a reasonable
profit on theIr business It is one of the most precarious
businesses m Canada and success 111 It depend~ on an accur-ate
and economIc systam of cost and dlstnbution The
statistics of Bmdstreet's WIll show tlhat WIthin very recent
years upward of a score or more of furniture factones hay e
failed, The sea of busl11ess IS stre\vn \vlth the wreckage ot
Canadian furniture factories
"We have found that the hig'h cost of lIv mg has 1l1creased
tlhe cost of production of furmture Our workmen demand
higher wages and our salesmen demand hlg1her salane~, and
the price of lumber IS much hIgher than a vear ago The
demand for furnIture IS necessarily 11l111ted 111 a country as
small as Canada lIhe great demand for oheap furmture
from the rural dIstricts IS chIefly 111 t<he \\ est, \\ hlch mu ~t be
sold alt low prices, which do not repay adequately t<helr manu-faoture,
The demand for hlgh-c1as, furmture 111 Canada b
compalmtively small, the competItion b keen betv\ een the
Canadian factOries anJ those 111the Umted States I belIeve
in order to profitably ma1l1ta111 tlhe furmture 1I1dustry 111
~.._ . •• -1'
10ufs babn
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
15-4 Livmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Cltlzens'Telephone 170Z,
,.. .
II
III
II
,., ?, , ~Give your men tools that are ac-curate
to the one-thousandth part of
an inch. Tools that are straight and
true and hold their cutting edge.
No matter how expensive and per-fect
your machinery may be, if the
f'cutting tools are not of the best, you
i I f ,can not turn out good work.
<J' Q) ~e:,
We pride ourselves on the fact that we
have manufactured only the very best for
thirty-five years. Write for our complete
.catalog. It shows many new ideas in fine
I ~11aborsaving tools.
IF"
lt~~~~I~ LWA-K~S-~~'C~C~'~L~
.. .. - - _. ._. ..~
Canada It \v III be necessary for the factory managers to in-crease
theIr pI Ices at least five per cent and even at thaJt no
factOr} \\ III be maklllg a fair bUS111es3 relturn on money in-vested.
Effect of the Tariff.
, So fal as I know, no furlllture manufacturers are com-pla111111gabout
the states' t3Jnff, but a reduction from 30 per
cent to 20 per cent at the present stage of the mdustry would
senously cnpple It The whole furlllture industry m Can-dela
IS bUIlt on the hope that WIth the mcrea~e m population
the demand for Ganaelllan-jmade furnIture will sufficiently
lllcrease to make Its productIOn on a large scale return ade-quate
profit, and untll our populatIon gro\Vs much larger and
the demand fOl hIgh and medIum grade fUl mture IS greater,
no fortune~ are gOlllg to be made out of tlhe furnIture bUSI-ness
"The sty les m furniture change like the styles in mI1-
11ll(ry, and the furniture that is out of Jate has to be "ac-rificed
3Jt a great loss to the manufacturer.
"Again I say, emphatically, tlhere is no combine among
Canadian furniture manufacturers but tlhe conditions of the
trade are such that an advance m the prices of furntlUre may
rea'3on3lbly be expeoted by the purchasing public. I might
add also that the furniture factones are <lJmong the glreat in-dustries
of Canada, consuming millions of feet of Canadian
lun ber, employing 1Jhousands of workmen, providing wages
ior hundreds of homes, and are reasonable subjects for fair
treatment by the tanff"
That lIquor Imploves WIth age seems to be demonstrated
by the fact that the older some men get the better they
lIke it.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
American Ex])osition in Berlin.
That AmerIca IS to have a comprehensive and I epresent-atl\
c eXposItIOn m Betlm m 1910, openmg m September, IS a<,-
sured :\1anufa'Cturer~ and bu"mess men throughout the coun-try
are ,hsplaying a ltvely interest m the undertakmg, and
appltcatlOlls fOI space hay e been receIved by the A..merican
C011111l1tteefrom many states The mdlcatlon<, are that every
bl al1ch of AmerIcan progres, ~ III be shown at the eXposItIOn
\merIcan manufactul el' of office fllrl11tllre hay e been suc-ce~"
fllim findmg an outlet 111 L1110pe for a pal t of thClr pro-dllCt,
and It wOllld seem that the all AmerIcan exposItion to
be held 1Il Berltn wOllld afford manufacturers mother lme"
OpportU111ty to do ltkewlse Bellm I" the commercIal center
of Furope, and our manufacturel s couLl not make a 1110re
favOlable ImpressIOn on foreIgn buyers than by exhIbIting at
the exposItion to be held thel e
Impetus has been given the exposItIOn enterpl be by the
appollltment of former Governor DavtJ R Flancls of .1\11,,-
souri, to the office of first vIce-president of the A..merIcan
Committee
I t is lIltel esting to note that the prospectu<' emphasl7e"
the practical benefit of an exposItion held In the heart of
Europe rather than making ,LU appeal to the natIOnal pnde of
prospective exhibItors The booklet draws attentIOn to the
Illustrious allspIces under wrllch t1he eXiposltlon IS to be held
and lays "tress upon the value thIS WIll have in enhancing
Ametican interests abroad PrInce Henry of PrussIa, brother
of the Emperor, ItS pI eSlden l of the Gellman ReceptIOn Com-mittee,
whtle m this country J PIerpont :\forgan is pre"ldent
of the commIttees whIch are dlrectmg the work of selectmg
representatl\ e exhIbits FOlmer Governor FrancIs IS first
vIce pre"ident and John VVanamaker IS "econd v Ice-presIdent
The prospectus points out 1 he practical SIde of the exposI-tion
as fol1o~ s .
"As this WIll be the fil st all-AmerIcan el\.po"itlOn ever
held in a foreIgn country ,It will he of mterest to all Europe
as ~ ell as to Amenca ExpJsitlOns have not been over-done
there a" they have here. American entelprI"e IS well recog-nized
aJbroad, anJ the rapId progress of thIS country has at-tracted
the attention of the entire world Thus, an AmerIcan
expositIOn held in the heart of Europe, WIll he of mestimable
\ alue to the manufacturer and business man in that It WIll
give him an opportu111ty to show and to demonstrate to a
receptive audience what has been accomplished in the Ul11ted
States along every line of endeavor"
Panama Canal "Has Been Dug."
Reports from \\T ashmgton state that th e Panama Canal
a<, orIgmally planned and adopted by Congre"" has been
2S .. -..... -- - ..-- - -..
Grand Rapids Crescent
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
. Built with double arbors, sliding table and equipped
complete with taper pin guages carefully graduated.
This machine represents the height in saw bench con-struction.
It is designed and built to reduce the cost
of sawing stock.
Write us for descriptIve mformation.
CRESCENT MACHINE WORKS
'--~----_._._OF._G._RA._ND- RAPIDS, MICH. _. _. _. ------- -------~ &.. - •••••••• ....
dug This plan contemplated a total excavatIOn of 103,795,
000 cubIC yards of earth The ~Iand total of excavatIOn ac-compltshed
to the end of 1\1alch last was 103,20S,666 cubIC
yards, or wlthm 590,004 of the total excavatIOn reqUIred
Ohanges m the plans made subsequently by order of the
\\ ar Department, however, mcreased the total amount of
excavatIOn to 174,666,594 cubIC yards Only about 70,000,000
cubIC yarJs therefore rem am to be excavated A..ctlve exca-vation
work on a large ~cale did not begin untd 1907, and
neatly the entIre excavatIOn called for under the orIgmal plan
has been accomp1Jshed m three and a quarter years
The ~ orth Branch (1\1lch) l'url11ture company ha" been
mcorporated Capital stock, $4,000 '
-------_._--_._------------------_._-----
Pitcairn Varnish Company
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
C. B. Quigley, Manage~r Manufacturing Trades Dep't.
1--,_. ,__..__. ._. • • , • _
•• • • •• •• It •• * ...
-----------_._._--- - . . ...
Manufacturers of
Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. J.
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Furniture
Association
Minnesota Retail
Dealers'
OFFICERs-PresIdent J R Taylor, Lake Benton Mlnn Vice PresIdent, D R Thompson, Rockford, Mlnn ,
Treasurer, B A Schoeneberger, Perham, MlUn Secretary, W L Grapp JanesvIlle, Mlnn
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE-ChaIrman Geo Klein, Mankato, MUIn, 0 Simons, Glencoe, Mlnn, W. L
Harns Mmneapohs, Mmn I C Dalllelo;otl, Cannon Falls
BULLETIN No. 106.
\'\T e present you thIs ~ eek wIth IllustratIOns from ['27 ~ hlch ha, e
been tried out m fifteen chfferent stores and ha, e proven to be thc
l11"Ostall-around ;,attslactory table that we could 1l11d \\ hl1e :)on md,
be dble to get some tables that look slmlldr to these \ve klliH\ b,
comparison that you cannot get any better table, ,1t dn\ prlCC tha11
these drc Thcreto! e, ~ e want C\ ery membel to try a few as the
tables ~ III speak for themseh es when vou get them These tables
Me priced fob ChIcago If you put a few of these on your floor,
,ou ne\ er nccd to fe,lr mall at der competitIOn Send your orders to
tbe ,ecretar:; Tanes\ dlc, :\Imn, and comply with assoCIatIOn rules
F27 No 006 Plam oak, ,!;olden
oak fimsh 1Vz mch legs Glo,",s
fimsh 24" 24 mch top PrlCC, I 0
b. Clllcago, V/ood Foot, $105, Glas"
Foot, $1.55
l<27 :1\0 41 28 x 28 mch top Qual-tered
oak or golden oak Hand rub
bed and pohshed top Pnce fob
ChIcago, Wood Foot $355, Gl.l'i'
Foot, $455
127 '\ n 26 (,olden oak 12 x 12
mch top GIn" 11111,h 30 mches
hlgh PrJcc lob (1111 ago, $1,60
F27 No 01 24 x 24 mch quartered
oak top, golden oak fimsh, gloss
Price fob ChIcago, Wood Foot,
$144, Glas" Foot, $194.
F27 '\ ° 36 (,olden °lk or qllar
tercd oak 12 x 12 mch top 32 111-
ches hIgh. Pohsh fimsh Pnce f
o b ChICdgo, $2 78
F27 No 34 28 x 28 mch top
Quartered oak, golden odk or ma-hogany
Hand rubbed and puhshed
Price, fob ChIcago, $7 56
SEND ALL ORDERS TO THE SECRETARY, JANESVILLE, MINN.
Minnesota Retail Furniture Dealers' Association.
BULLETIN No. 107.
HIGH CLASS LIBRARY TABLES.
In pre'ientmg you thIs lme of lIbrary table'i we feel} ou wIll not realIze what bar
gam'i they dre untIl you see the qualIty, fil1l'ih and constructIOn They are m e, ery
way hIgh class good" and the sellmg qUdlItles of these ha\ e been tned out 111tbe ld"t
SIX months 111twenty of OUI dIfferent members' sto! es Tn all ea'ies, they l1<\ve reported
tbat they dl e wIthout que"tlOn the be'it l111eof IIbl anes they wel e ever db1c to buy dt even
a much hlghel pnee These tables are ,tll fob ChIcago, and the fdLtory can make
prompt shIpment We h,lve abo arranged a complete 'iet of advertlsmg Ul1lts of each
one of these tables wIth tbe deSCrIption dttached vYe ",ant to urge our members to
use them as much as they pO~'ilbly can, knowmg the help they wIll bnng to our mem-bers
These Ul1lts are dll made up wIth hand drawmg cuts whIch WIll gIve a clear-cut
pIcture, no matter ho" coarse the mk nO! how coarse the paper IS upon whIch they
dre prInted You WIll note tbat our pnces on these arc "orne less than when they were
first bulletmed whIch goes to show what volume docs We are trYIng to make tll1"
factory account so good thdt It '\'\111brIng us still further savmg 1hIS can easIly be
done If all of our members WIll put them on theIr floor, Send all orders to the
secretary, JaneWllle, M1I111, and comply wIth assocIatIOn rules It takes a week to
ten days to make deln ery
Yours for hearty co operdtlon,
THI: BUYING COMMITTI:E
F27 No 45 Quartered oak top Golden oak fil1lsh
36 x 24 meh top Rubbed dnd polIshed top Pnee,
fob ChIcago, $473
F 27 No 56 Golden oak or quartered oak 44 x 28
meh top Hand rubbed and polIshed fil1lsh 5Y;; meh
legs Pnee, fob ChIcago, $11 57
['27 No 02 Golden oak or quartered oak,
gloss h111'ih 24 x 24 l11eh top Pnee, fob
CIlIeago, $227
};27 No 35 QUdl tel ed oak top, golden oak 11111"h
40 x 26 wch top hdud rubbed ,ll1c1 polIshed Pnce f
o b Chle,lgo, $655
F27 No 405 Quartered oak, band rubbed and pol-
Ished Pnce, fob ChIcago, $1393
MINNESOTA RETAIL FURNITURE DEALERS' ASSOCIA TION---Bulletin No. 108.
ADVERTISING HELPS.
Your eommlttce on ach ertls111g IS hnd111J tlldl 111 01 (Ill \0 ~(\ ld
veltls111" unIts fOI ,tll thc Ilcms "c hdndle I' d tlcl11cncl,l\' lob ll](1
wl1l be cal ned out only ,10 LIst as dS~olldtlOn fund, \\ III \\ 111 l11t In(l
IlllJ1c!tnQ. to the ,UppO! I thdt thIs movemcnt get" VI hy not 01 clcr
,ome 01 the fe llC)\\ 1116 umts and 1.1) them out In your ddvHtlS111g thIS
c 1111n,--month) It) Ol\ \\ III onl) gct a fcw no\\, Wl Id10w thdt you
\\ III 'oon bCg111 to Ildl1/c thc hclp that thIS U11lt syote111 bnng'3 ) au
r 27 No OOb IhlS pallor 'land IS
made of nlam oal, golden oak fimsh
It IS fim~hed m gloss The top IS 24
,24 mche~ TI,e 10" er shelf Ib
roomy and the legs al e neatlv t rned
The stock and fimsh ale e,ceJlf'nt
and the deSIgn "\ery artistIC"
vV,th t,pe 40t ",thout
Pncf' fob ChIcago
,Vood foot
Glass foot
t'pe 25c
r 27 No 36
ThIS pedes
tal I~ made
of golden
oak 01 quar-tf'red
oal,
polIsh fimsh
Top IS ] 2,
]2 In C he S
and It IS 32
mches hIgh
The can
structlon J '"
hIgh gladf'
thrnout It
IS a good
p r act I c al
pIece
WIth tvpe 40c ,'Vlthout hpe 25c
Pnce fob Clllcago $2.78
F27 No 34 'lllls pedestal table
1 q made m qual tered oak golden
oak or mahogany 1 he top IS 25 x
28 mches It IS 11and 1ubbed and
polIshed 'rhl~ IS a good senslblf'
deSign beSIdes beIng "\er\ artIstic
WIth type, 40c WIthout type 25c
Pnce, fob ChICago $7.56
$105
1.55
F 25 No 26
ThIS pedestal
's trade, of
golden oak It
IS fimshed m
gloss The top
IS 12 x 12 m
ches and It IS
10 mches hIgh
ThIS IS a good
practlcal piece
I' _, " 11\ 1hl-- llttlc padol
~tand Ie::. \' (11 111'1(1(' of golden oak
or "'t\ Ith '1 qual terpd oak top The
top IS 24, '4 mehes It 1 __ fimshed
In glo ...s.. and 11'1<;"a good "'lzed 10" er I shelf The It g __ ,ue hea,' turned
A good o;;;;trong <;;,ten'SIble table
"nil t\]H In,
!lll( E' f 0 1) (
"o(Hl f I( t
Glq ......, f( It
" 1tllou t t, pe 23c
hHag-o
\Vlth type
PrIce f 0
10, ,Vlthout type 25c
b ChIcago $1.60
$1.44
1.94
r 27 No 4'> TIllS llbrary table is
well made of quartered oak The
top IS 36 x 24 mches It has a hand
rubbed and pollsh fimsh The large
lower shelf IS of extra SIze There
IS a drawer under the top ThIS table
IS ., ery heavy and the constructIOn IS
of the best It WIll last for years
The lower part IS well braced This
IS a good sensIble deSIgn and a
practIcal SIze
F 2, '0 H I hl'o table IS made
of (I lal tel eel oah 01 golden oak The
top 1'-. g-O(Hl <;;;I7e beIng 28,- 28 Inches
It 1<;;' hand I ubhed and poh<;;;hed The
urn 1 .... heR\ \ and It ha..... '1 lllge shelf
1111'-. 1'" a \eI\ ...I.n ....Ible d..'" "ell ao;;
an al tI'3tH PICl(
",th t, pc 10( ",thout t, pe, 25c
PrI( e fob Clllcago $4.48
,Vllh type 40c WIthout type, 25c
PrIce fob Ch,cago . $4.73
1'" - .......0 j rlil ....laIge- quartered
cd.k taJ>lt-' 1 d'" 1 14- '. _~ Inch top It
has d del D 11111 lad d dla\,"pr The
legs ale e'-tla Ilea\' a ..... the'j are
made of e, tl a hea,.. ..,tock thruout
The de'-.lgn 1.... e ...c..e..edlngl' artIstIC
and It 1'" a ,f'r, PIRctlCcll <;;;Ize It 1<;;;
hand 1 ubhed lnd poh ...h.ed One of
the ...e. tlhl("~ "ltll t,\o 01 thlf)(> hea"
(llRll.., to lllc1tl11 ,\ ould 111'1h.€ '1 ,er'
Lttl a( tn f' 111nal') set 'llle giain 111
till", t'1bh 1 .... ('\.tla fine
:B 27 No 105 Tllls genume quar-tered
oak table ha' a large 48 x 28
mch oval shaped ton heavy legs
and a large dra" er It IS hand rub
bed and pollshed Very massIve and I
hea' v It IS 11lgh gratia m every
" a, and IS gotten up m a plam, rIch,
colomal btyle It ha~ a deep rIm
"Ith drawer and a lower shelf ThIS
1~ a large very substantIal and shape-
Iv table
- _~ 1
,V,th t, pe
Pllce, f 0
10c WIthout type 25c
b ChIcago $11.57
WIth t,pe, 40c WIthout type, 25c
PrIce, fob Chicago ....••.. $13.93
CANADIANS ARE SUSPICIOUS.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
But Generally They Approve the Suggestion for
a "Get-Together" Conference.
The editonal from the N ew York CommercIal, publIshed
in the \Veekly ArtIsan last Satm day, "uggestlllg that priOl to
the fOJ1mal conference between offiCIals of the DomllllOn and
the Ulllted State~ lookmg to the negotIatIOn of a recIprocity
treaty or trade conventIOn between the two nations a conven-tIOn
be called at Montreal of representatIves of manufacturers
busmess intelests of Canada and thIs countIy to take actIOn
on "\anoue; quee;tlOTI<;that would be helpful to the government
officIal" met WIth general approval fIam the press anJ the
bu"mess people "across the lIne" However, the approval
IS not unanimous over there as IS shown by the followmg
letter to the New York paper from a promment manufacturer
of ::YIontreal who probably expre"se~ the vievv s or feelings of
many CanadIan manufacturers:
EdItor, ~ew YOlk CommercIal
Sl1-1 am m hearty "ympathy with an} thing that mIght
lead to closel relatIOne; WIth our respectIve natIOns, if on a
mutually advantageous basis, but must confess some doubt
as to the punty of your motIves m thIS case Thl s doubt IS
]u",tIfied by our past treatment at \¥ashmgtol1 and by your
frank statement that our market and resources look good to
you Your pa.,t selfine'iS as a natIOn 11d~hleped ue; to grow up,
and you must not be Impatient of om present attltuJe If It
infers abIlIty to stand alone
Pere;onally, I would be plea,ed to see the convention
held, as a large number of your busl11ess men would come m
per"onal contact WIth our" and learn our pomt of vIew \Ve
once thought we could not eXIst WIthout your markets, but
yom delegates WIll find that am honzon has bloadened so
much that we may not properly apprecIate your benevolence
As to your sugge",tion that the conventIOn be called under the
auspices of the CanadIan Manufacturers' associatIon, the Idea
IS beautIful and worthy of the Golden !\ge, but I doubt If the
Candadldn manufacturel s are fal enongh advanced to mVlte
your manufactm ere; to a banquet where their own heads will
be offel ed a" the pIece de re"ls.tance I do not want to seem
to elJscam ag e so vast a step toward the mIllenlt1m but I be-lteve
that on cloe;el study of Canddlan condItIon:'> y au WIll
find that we hay e grown too tough to eat even when CO\ered
by your almost irresist<Lble flattery an,l that the best and
only way to get on board now IS to come 0\ er and help us
develop up, and you can be ,nre of a most hearty welcome-for
we lJke yOU lots, a" mdlvldual s
J 1I SlmRRARD
1\Jonilcal, C anacla, \pril 18, 1910
Pleads "Guilty."
Commentmg on l\Jr Sherrard's leiter the New York paper
says
"The CommercIal can easIly put Itself m thIS CanadIan
manufacturer's place, see Jnst how we look to 111mand appre-
CIate his feelIngs on the situatIOn It i", a matter of history
that our abrogatIOn of the la"t commercial treaty with the
DominIOn forty-four years ago was almost an insult in the
manner of ItS proJectIOn, since then we have never met Can-ada
anywhel e near half-way m any steps for recIproCIty; and
we have been e;elfi..,h, If not posItIvely hoggIsh at tImes \Ve
"acknowledge the corn" Hone'lt confeSSIOn is gOBd for the
soul
"It is tl ue also that Canada could much better afford to
worry along without our American markets than we could
without hers For the last three years our sales to Canada
were more than double her sales to us-$526,976,21O, as
agamst $239, 541, 688 But Canada meantIme has been buIld-mg
up other foreIgn malkets, and her commerCIal hOl'lzon has
certal111y bl oadened, It IS fast comprehenchng the world-mar-kets
"And, all these thmg, being conceded, why shouldn't the
Canaehan manufacturers take kmdly to the proposed mter-natIOnal
commelClal conventIOn, get our delegates from every
State of the PnlOn over 111 Monheal and tell them all these
plam facts, no mattel how dlsagl eeable or uncomplimentary,
at close range-"ngiht to theIr faces," as It were? That is just
what we Yankees would want to do were the condItions and
cilcumstances rever",ed The average American ltkes things
to be called by theil nght names, and all the world knowe; that
the aver<lJge Bllton or Canuck ltkes so to call them In no
better way-perhaps m no other way-coulel these two sets
of business neIghbors get together and learn what would be
moe;t desiralble for both in the ltne of trade reciprOCIty
"A", to the suggestIOn that the CanadIans would ne\ er
consent to parhC'lpatmg 111 a conference 111 whICh they might
be "ealten up," our correspondent IS far too mode~t He fears
that 111e;fellow countrymen could not be trusted to come out
of "uch a gathellng wlt1h tlhelr head:'> on We have It from
one Paulus J OVIUS,who u:'>eJ to do stunts in hlstory-wntmg
away back about Anno Dommt 1540, that "the whole Eng-lte;
h nation, beyond all othel mortal men, i", mOSit gIven to
banqueting and feasts"
"The CanadIans of thl" day dnd generatIOn must have
111htllted that predIspOSItIOn to feastll1g If thel e IS anythll1g
edIble in SIght, they are pI etty sure to take It in We Yankees
al e by no means tender-foots-but vve may be tender-headeJ
And the ~hances are that fmm an ll1ternatlOnal conference
,uch as hae; been e;uggested our delegate:'> would come home
headless instead of havll1g their stomachs lIned with CanadIan
pate" nut let's put the thing to a tee;t, any way"
MIchIgan IS ll1c1uJed 111 the lIst of e;tates from whICh the
CommercIal hae; recelY ed approval of ItS suggestIOn by manu-facturere;
and pI oml nent an c1finanClal men
New Factories.
(;eorete G Gllffith & Son are to establI"h a new furlllttll e b
factOly at Muncie, Tnd
The \Vllght Cabll1et COl11pdlly have establIshed a furnI-ture
factory at Nevada, Io-wa,
Tihe Peona TIeddll1g company IS a llew concern located
in the old patte! y build111g ,Peona, 111
]lhe TaylOl Bedehng company wtll manufacture mat-tree;
se;;, etc, at Taylor, Tex CapItal stock, $12,000
The EclIpse Metal Bed company, capItalIzed at $5,000
WIll manufactm e bede;, cnbe;, eraelles, etc, 111 New York
John \Vlalser, 0 C SchmIdt, Leonal d Koerber and
Fredenck Daub dre makll1g an angements to establI:,h a fur-nlttll
e factory at Elora, near BerlIn, Ont,
The Chamber of Commerce of OrOVIlle, Cal, ie; to furn-
I"h a site for a fur11lture factory to be e'3tablished in that
town by the Butte County Pll1e and Hardwood company
The Commercial Club of Orange, Tex, are negotiating
for the establIshment of a furnIture factory in that town,
WIth good prospects for cloe;ing a deal wllth a northern 00n-celn
that has been looking for a nevv locatIOn
The Sammett-Fogg company of Boston, bec1dll1g manu-factm
ers, have organIzed an aUXIlIary company WIth $25,000
paId up capItal to establie;h a factOly in PhiladelphIa, from
whIch they WIll supply their trade in Pennsylvania and the
South
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
..- -._. _ ...._----,----------_._-.----_-------_._---- -----. --.. ,
NO OTHER SANDER
No. 111 Patented Sand &elt Machine.
WYSONO « MILES CO., Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., OREENSBORO, N. C.
makes it possible to dispense with
hand sanding.
Our No.i71 Sander produces a
fmish on flat surfaces, irregular
shapes and mouldings that would
be spoiled by hand retouching.
Ask for Catalog liE"
.. -. .I.
Rugs Six Hundred Years Old.
Joseph \\ dd & Co l~ltth a\ enue and Thlft) -fitth "treet,
N ew York, have on e'Chlbltlon a collectIOn contdl11lng "orne
of the oldest ru~" 111 C'.htence most of them be1J1g of Chlllese
ongl11 The collectIOn I" of pecuhal l11teJ<>t and contalll"
several <;peClmens "hlch \\ ould not "eelll out ot plale 111 a
museum, rug" WO\ en dUl111g the :,I1l1~ D) na"t\, bet\\ een 1368
and 1644, whIch onS;111all) \\ ere <;plead mer "ome altar or
were part of the fur11lshlt1g of a parlor The) are beautltul
pIeces of work, in a perfect state of preserv atlOn, and are III
the nchest of colonng, 'loft 01,1 blues, 1\ ones, deep ) ello\\ s
and peach blow tones prevaJ1111g In onh one or t\\ 0 are e\ 1-
dent, the bri1hant color" usually a""oclated \\ Ith Chlllese art
at blue \\ Ith man) figure<; in blue anJ brownish and yellow
"hades n
-\nother hand"ome rug ha:, a ground of deep yellow wIth a
p1J1kl"h tone and blue and Ivor} III the figure:, and a rich
border of th(' blue One large central cIrcle and four small
ones each conta1J1ll1£; d deSIgn in blUIsh tones ornament a rug
at txqulslte pedch blO\\ ground
A Baltimore Factory.
On e of the finest factories 111 DaltimOl e b that of Leven-
~on & Zellltl at 3 ~orth Gay street They make parlor furn~-
tt1le couche" ml""lon fUl11ltUle, davenports and a large line
1
)
_..-/ '--
)
ONE OF THE PROMINENT FURNITURE FAOTORIES IN BALTIMORE, MD.
Most of the rugs have a centrdl oblong portIOn at a hght
tone wIth scattered figure:, and a border at the old blue \\ Ith
floral, Svva3tlkJa or other com entlOnal de"lgn, and III almo"t
every case the exact center of the oblong I" mal ked h) a large
cIrcle. The dragon, the tea plant and reproductIOns of the
Jade Images of "gla\ e foods" placed 111 the JO"" house" are
faVOrIte symbols.
In one rarely beaUtiful speCImen, about 250 ) ears old,
valued at $3,500, all the figures are placed upnght, d" 111 a
painting A blue dragon I11hablb the center cIrcle On
background of softest IVory are tea plants, \ a<;es. frUIts and
other obj ects, mostly 111 blUIsh tones There b a tnple horder
at leathel JUl11lture They are the ong1l1ators of the patent
l'ullmdn beel the) make for the southern states at pnces
I dl1g1l1g from $18 to $50 They also make a large 1l11e of
church lodge and club room furniture, of whIch they is"ue
a sepdrate catalogue They have the best of equIpment for
mak1l1g tht 11 hnes and have recently est:a~lisheel a wareroom
on Frederick street C E Hooper of San Antol1lo, Tex.,
b one of their <;ale<;men. covenng southwestern territory.
The b ~",t man at a wedding is the fellow who isn't get-tmg
marned
- - - --------------..,
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
J W Bowman IS a new undertaker at Braymer, 1\10
George J Kaber has purohased the retaIl furnIture husi-nes"
of J C Shafer at As'>umption, III
H. B & J B LaIng have succeeded :;vr E Glea'>on, furni-ture
and hardware dealeI, of Ely, l'vhnn
o E Perry has closed out hi" furniture Ibusiness at
Albany, Ore, and movecl to Newport, same state
The Rogers FurnIture company of Texarkana, Ark, have
reduced then capItal stock from $50,000 to $40,000
The Hammoncl-Brown-VV all Furmture company of Spar-tanbmg
have opened a branch store at Eevsley, S C
D. Sommers & Co, house furmshesr of Indlanapolts, Ind ,
hay e incorporated With capital stock fixed at $150,000
Halgus & Andrews have succeeded C D. Buckmann, in
the furnIture and undertakIng bus111es'> at Emmet, Idaho
The fluft rug factory recently establtshed at Marquette,
Mich, i" 1 eported as having more bUSIness than they can
handle
J A Gillison, undertaker, of Owensboro, Ky, is suc-ceed
ed by the J\Itller-Gdlt '>on Undertak111g company Incor-porated
N. G. Vander Linde, furniture dealer and undertaker of
Muskegon, Mich , has chsposed of his stock and retired from
bu"ine'>s
:t\ N Littlefield ha" bought a half Interest in the furni-ture
"tore of Sandltn & Bngman, FItzgerald, Ga, Mr Bng-man
retIr111g
n Engel has closed out his furmture business at Bo"ton,
Ga, and moved to Thomasville, where he wIll open a new
furn ture store.
C. M Pace, a banker, has purchased an interest in the
People's FUlmture company of Roanoke, Va, and has taken
charge of the store.
L F. Shank, undertaker of Des M01l1es, Ia, has sold out
to J \V Patnck, who has consoltdated the busmess WIth
another undertakUlg firm .
The Meyers-Spattl manufacturing company of Houston,
TeA, mattresse" and bedd111g, have 111creaserl their capitdl
'>tock from $300,000 to $350,000
\\ Illard Bal nhart, presIdent of the Nelson-Matter Furni-ture
compan), and famIly have returned to Gland RapIds from
their WIntel home 111 Altadena, Cal.
George Story, a retIreel furmture man of Grand Rapids,
MIlh , dled on Apnl 17, aged 59 years He has been a resi-dent
of the Furmtme CtIy "mce 1875
The Globe VI'>e and Truck company of Grand Rapids is
workmg on an order of forty trucks for one of the promInent
manufactunng compames of that CIty
The Gldclmg,> block, DanvIlle, Ill, IS beIng remodeled for
the me of the Hub Furmture company, at a CO'it of $15,000
mcludmg $3,500 for a pl3!te glass front
The Lashlee FurnIture company, dealers of Camden,
Tenn, have made an assignment WIth ltabIlities amountmg to
about $800 ancl assets estImated at $1,100
Albert L Lindholm, presIdent of the Lmdholm Furniture
company, San FranCISCO, Cal, was robbed of $160 by pick-pockets,
whIle ndmg on a Market "treet car.
The vVallager Manufactunng company of Milwaukee,
\;Vi" , have the contract for mak1l1g the furniture for the post-office
in Los Angeles, Cal TheIr bId was $48,198.
ScheIn & \VIener, furniture dealers of 1531 Third avenue,
N evv York, have settled WIth their credItors and the bank-ruptcy
proceedings aga1l1st them have been dIsmissed
The stock of furnitture owned by W B Anderson of
Angleton. Tex. whose bu"iness was recently placed 111 the
hands of a receIver, has been sold at auctIOn for 2651z cents
on the dollar, of the inventoriecl value
The retail furnIture dulers of Salt Lake CIty have
"igned an agreement to close then "tores at 6 o'clock on
Saturday" the same a" other evenings and to close at 1 o'clock
on Saturdays dunng June, July and August
Royal Beal, who for forty years conducted a furnIture
factory at Oxfordvdle, N II, dIed at the home of hIS son
Frank J. Beal of Plymouth, Mass, on Apnl 16, aged 92 years
He was well known as the Ulventor of the band saw
Edgar C Graves for thIrty years a member of the firm
of P H Graves & Son, furniture dealer" of Waltham, Mass,
has sold his interest m thatt hou.,e anel gone to Lynn, Mass,
where he takes the pOSItIon of presldent and manager of
the Symonds Furmture company.
The Colomal Furmture company, recently orgamzed m
Grand Rapids, with $5,000 capltal stock, "ucceeds an 1l1dl-
VIdual who has been engaged 111 the manufacture of piano
benches on a modest scale The company Will contInue the
business TheIr shop lS in the hland company's butld1l1g
The Hood & \v heeler Furl11tUle company of BIrm1l1g-ham,
Ala, has been 1l1corporated With capltal stock Itmited to
$50,000 all paid In The Wheeler Ulterest seems to have
been albsorbed by the Hoods James Hood is preSIdent and
treasurer, Rosa C Hood, vIce1plesldent and Mant Hood secre-tary
The Kunzelmann-E,,'>er Furniture company, dealers, of
MIlwaukee, WIS, are erect1l1g an elght-stroy bnck and con-crete
buIlding at the corner of MItchell street and Second
avenue, south side. It wdl be one of the largest and most con-venient
bus1l1ess bUlldmgs in the city and WIll be ready for
occupancy 111September
Henry J Nelson, the oldest furniture dealer in Bur11l1g-ton,
Vt, and probably the oldest 111 New England, dIed on
Apnl 10, aged 69 years He had been m the bus1l1ess since
he was a boy of 18 years He was born 111 Burltngton 111
1841, had always Itved withm 20 rod.., of hIS bIrthplace and
had done busllless at the "ame stand for over 50 years
The Ohio Casket company, Columbth, 0, has been or
ganized WIth $30,000 capItal stock The new company take'>
over the property of the CapItal CIty Casket company, re-cently
sold at bankruptcy sale, WhICh WIll be put in '>hape at
once for the manufactm e of all kinds of coffins and caskets
The officers are J A Cheney, presldent, \V S Hatcher,
'lce-presIdent, C MAnderson, "ecretary-treasurer and gene-ral
manager
... •• _. a_ •• __ e - ••••••• _. we •• __ .,
WOOD rORninO (UTHR~
As only the edge outlines of the
Cutter comes Into contact With the
lumber, there is no friction or burn-
Ing of the mouldings when made
with the Shimer Reversible or One-Way Cutters. These Cutters
are carefully moulded to suit your work, and are very complete,
inexpensive and time-saving tools. We supply special Cutters of
any shape desired and of any size to suit your machine spindles.
Let us have your speCifications. For odd work not found In our
catalogue send a wood sample or draWing.
SAMUEL J. SmMER &. SONS, Milton, Penn.
Manufacturers of the Shimer Cutter Heads for Flooring, Ceiling,
Sidmg, Doors, Sash, etc.
....... - _._--- .. ._",
32 WEEKLY ARTISAN
~ .
Miscellaneous Advertisements.
WANTED.
Clean, medium priced line of Buffets and Chma Closets for
territory east of Buffalo, N. Y., to Portland, Me, and south
to Norfolk, Va., by a well known experienced salesman.
Address "Results" 342 Sumner Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y.
4-23 4-30.
EXPERIENCED BRASS BED SALESMAN
Is open for clean cut, snappy, up-to-date lme to sell in cItIes
of Atlantic coast states from Portland, Me., to Norfolk, Va
Address "Ecce Homo", care 1238 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N Y
SALESMAN WANTED
To sell on commission a good lme of Buffets and Sideboards,
havmg an establIshed trade m MiSSOUri, Kansas and Ne..l
braska. Address A. B C., care Weekly Artisan. 4-23
WANTED
On salary or commiSSion a lIne to sell m OhIO, West Vir-ginia,
Pennsylvania, Maryland and Washington, D. C, by a
salesman with establIshed trade of more than 20 years. Ad-dress
"L. G.", care Weekly Artisan. 4-23tf.
SALEMAN
Travelmg New York, New England and South to Vlrgima,
wants representatIve lme of Dressers and Chiffoniers. Ad-dress
"Note Bene" 511 W. 21st St., New York City. 4-23 4-30.
WANTED.
Furniture men to learn furniture designing, rod making and
stock billing by mall. Our course of instruction IS just the
thing for superintendents, foremen and factory men who
wish to increase their knowledge and salary. Grand Rapids
School of Designing, Dept. L., Grand Rapids, Mich. Arthur
Kirkpatrick, Instructor and Designer. 4-9 e.o.w. tf
WANTED.
Salesman. If you are not making $10 dally sell our lIne of
Rocking Chairs and Novelties to Furmture Department
Stores. 15 per cent commission. Address Box 291 Cas-torland,
N. Y. 4-16tf
WANTED.
Position as commercial photographer of furniture by a prac-tical,
competent man. Ten years' experience. Best of refer-ence.
Address J. H. Packer, care Times Union, Jacksonville,
Fla. 1-22tf
•
New York Markets
New YOl k, \])111 22-L1l1~ceel 011 h held f1ll1lh at the
lug h pnce~ e:ota!Jh "heel la"t \\ eek Dealer ....a 1 t pI eChLtlIlg a
b1eak but C1u sheh ref the to make concession ~ dnJ thc trad(
IS of d. hand-to-mouth nature The quotdtJl)n~ .11 e not ba~ed
on \Veste1n la\\ \\lm:'h ,tand" at 83 @ 8-\- tenh Llt\ la\\ I~
quodted a cent hle,he1 .md slIlgle bOlled and douhle hOlled a1 e
quoted at the same fie,m es-8:; @ 86 cent ~-01 \\ It111I1tom
cents of the pnce of the Calcutta pi oeluct
Varni:oh gum~ ~ho\\ more actl\ It\ than tor ~e\ clalnwnth;,
Thele IS con"lJeldhlt lllqt1ln tor pcllleh ot thc hetiel gldclc~
to dlnve [elm I, '\0 1, I" quoted at 18 @ -\-.J cent,. \u 2
25 @ 32, \0 3,1:; @ 18 D.lmar-Data\ld.13 0J I-\- \landa,
pale, IS @ 18, dl11hel, 13 @ 15 ~1l1gapole 8 @ U}'i
Shellac IS dull Buyel ~ and sellers do not agree on
pnces cxcept fm small lots and thel e al e frequent conces-
SlOns from Vhe ca1d rate;, which have not been changed ma-ten
all} for a month or more
The turpent1l1e market ma\ bc te1med Ccl~\ tho\15h p11ce...,
alC qUIte steady 62 @ o2~ hC1e and tillce cenb 10\\CI at
Savannah
Receipt, of goahkins ha\ e been qt1lte hberal 1 )11.., \\ eck.
especIally Lat1l1- \mencans, hut nea1ly all a1e reported a~ ~oLl
upon an 1\ al and pi Ices are firm today, though lower than a
week ago MeXican frontlets are quoted at 31 @ 32 cents,
Duenas A.yre-., 40 @ -H, Payta'o, 4230 @ 43 ,\Iontere}, ram-
IPICO-.,etc, -t4 @ -\-:;, San Lm-., Zacatecas, etc, 45 @ 46 Vela
Cruz, 48 @ 50
The burlap husllless cont1l1ues dull-almost hfeless Bag
manufacturer, are not huy lllg at present The quotations in
..., the open market are 325 for eig1ht-ounce and 42S for 10.0-
ounce Calcutta goods, but the figures are frequently shaded
on actual tran:oactlOns
~heet Zlnc IS firm at last weeks quotatlOllS $775 per
100 pounds fob Peru, Ill, extl as and ,11scounts unchanged
Kiel.Kipp Deal in the Courts.
The deal maJe la~t fall by which the K leI Furlllture com-pany
at K1el. \\ lS, purchased the property and Ibusmess of
the B \ Klpp company of :1I1lwaukee, has resuLted in liti-gatJon
The \Itlwaukee papers state that B A Kipp has
brought smt agd111st J B Laun and A VI! Dassler for the
perfOll1lance at a contract alleged to have been enrtered into
Sept 9 1909. b} \\ hlth the defendants, who are owners of
the KId l~llfl11tnre company, agreed to purchase the assets
and ~t()ck at the 13 -\ KIPP company, and to take over the
contlOl of the company The pla111tJff states that the trans-fer
of the pi opert}
- Date Created:
- 1910-04-23T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:43
- 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/22