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- Michigan Artisan; 1908-01-10
Michigan Artisan; 1908-01-10
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and •
Twenty-Eighth Year-No. 13 JANUARY 10. 1908 Semi.Montbly
A SATISFIED CUSTOMER
No. 163 SaND BELT MACHINE.
§;;;
~
.,4; .<.~
is the best proof that
our Sand Belt Machines
are what we claim for
them.
Other c u s tom e r s
claim they do mar e
than we claim for them.
They will do for you
what they have done
for others.
Let us tell you more
about them.
Ask for
CATALOGUE E.
.,;;-
F'
Wl'"SONO « MILES CO., Cedar St. and SOil. R. R., OREENSBORO, N. C.
[g
II The Best Truck-- The Strongest Truck This is the famousGillette RollerBearing Factory
Truck-the truck on which it is said, "One man
can move a load of 3000 pounds while with
the other trucks it takes three men."
This is the truck that is strong where others are
weak-the truck that has an unbreakable
malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are lookingfor if youwish
to invest in rather than waste money on factory
trucks.
Gillette RoUer Bearing CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
The Lightest Running,
Longest Lasting Truck
~..
'C" . j"' Ie'
'I,
r-- ---
"
Pittsburgh Plate Glass
Jobbers and Dealers in
Company
Plate Glass. Mirrors. Window Glass. Ornamental Figured Glass.
WIRE GLASS, the Great Fire Retardant.
CARRARA GLASS. a New Product Like Polished White Marble.
For anything in Builders' Glass, or anything in Paints, Brushes, or Painters· Sundries, address any
of our branch warehouses, a list of which is given below:
NEW YORK-Hudson and Vandam 8ts. CLEVELAND-1430.1434 Weet Third St.
BOSTON-41-49 SudbUry St ••1..9 Bowker St. OMAHA-1608-IO ..12 Harney St.
CHICAGO 442·452 Wabaab Ave. ST- PAUL-349·3S1 Mlnne.otaSt.
CINt:INNATI-Broadway llIodCourt Sts. ATLANTAIiGA.-30-32 ..34 $, Pryor St.
ST. LOUIS-Cor. 7th and Market Sts. SAVANNA • GA.-745 ..749 Wheaton St.
MINNEAPOLIS-SOO_516 8. Third St. KANSAS CITY-Fifth and Wyandotte Sq.
DETROIT-53-59 Larned St .• E. BIRMINUHAM.ALA.-2nd Ave. alld,29th St.
GRANDRAPIDS...MICH.-39-41 N_ DIYislonSt. BUFFALO. N. Y.-372-74-76.78 Pe-arl St.
PITTSBURGH-lOt-I03 Wood St. BROOKLYN-635-637 Fulton St.
MILWAUKEE. WIS.-492.494 Market St. PHILADELPHIA-Pitcairn Bldg., Arch and 11th St••
ROCHESTER. N. Y·-Wilder Bldg••M..In {j EXClhangeSt.. DAVItNPORT-410-416 Scott St.
SALTIMOR.E-'22t-223 W. Pratt St.
.
Notice!JnOurN ew Factory
.~:'¥ci
Means QuicK Shipments
We desire to make it known to the
trade that their orders for Gluing Appli-ances
and supplies can now be filled
promptly. No waiting two to eight
months as was nece!"sary with the com-paratively
limited facilities of our Cincin-nati
factory.
We want to thank the many custo-mers
who waited so patiently for their
turn to get our appliances, and want
to express sorrow for those who felt
Veneer Pre83eSaD. . k:iods and.i:zes, (Patented) compelled, on ~ccount of the delay,
to adopt some of the imitations or in-ferior
appliances that are a drug on the market.
1 Such appliances waste money inslead of creating
profit.
Hand Feed Gluinll"Maehine (Pat.
PendiIlg.: Many stylesandlizes.
The extensive use of our products in the rep-resentative
mills and factories proves their
value. It is the experience of thousands of
users that they give tasting good service Q1ldthe
Power Feed Glue $preadin2 Maebine. Single, best a11dmost economical results. Experience Double and Combination. {Patented)
counts. .Avoid experiments and infringements by adopting our products perfected or actual experience. No make-believe.
No.6 GlueHeater. No. 20 GlueHeater.
;----------LET USKNOWYOURWANTSS--- ,
Power.Feed Glue Spreaders (Single,Doubleand Combinationwith patentedglue troughand other features). HllInd
Feed Gluin8 Machines. Ulany.tyles. Glue Pots. Glue Heaters. Glue :BoUers or Cookers (Cast Iron,
PlateIronandCoppef),with many ad'9antalies. Sectional Presses. Complete Presses (With Patentedadjust_
mentoftheScrews)... 11sizes; Steel Presses, Hydraulic Presses. Special Presses, all kinds. Retaining
Clamps. Dou.ble Clamps. Trestle Clamps. Carpenter Clamps. Factory Trucks. etc.
CHAS. E. FRANCIS AND BROTHER
Main Office and Works. RUSHVILLE. INDIANA. :Branch Ofllce. Clnclllllati. Ohio.
J
MARIETTA
STAINS ~FILLERS
TEN years have rolled around since The Marietta
Paint and Color Company's Stains and Fillers
. were firStoffered to the Wood Finishers of this coun-try.
Today this company is the largeSt manufacturer
of Wood Fnishing Materials in the world.
There is a reason for this; and that reason is found
in the fact that the goods sent out are entirely practi-cal.
Wherever The Marietta Paint and Color Co's
Golden Oak Oil Stains or Mahogany Spartan Stains
or its Early English and Mission Finishes have been
used, there need be no further introduction.
OLD
ENGLISU
OF the newer finishes OLD
ENGLISH is one Ihat
should become a largely used
and popular one. It is re~
markable for ils consummate
beauty. It was designed for I
use where -a dull, dead brown
color effect is ,desired. The
color produced by this Old
English Stain, while it. appeal1l
dull. yet it is nol dull: for there
is just a hint of red beneath
the dullness that gives one the
impression of hidden warmth
and transparency, Be sure
and write for a sllImple of Old
English.
'1i The Company's products in 1908 will be
found even more practical aQd perfect than
ever before.
tJI Any inquiry regarding any finish will be
given careful and prompt attention.
THE MARIETTA PAINT AND COLOR CO.
MARIETTA, OHIO
New Patterns in Hoohs.
WRITE US FOR PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO., Grand Rapids, Mich.
1
•
2
Let Us Explain One of the Important Features on
Each of These Machines That is on No Other
No. 156 Cabinet Smoothinl" Planer.
Our No. 156 Cabinet Smoothing Planer is the only planer that is equipped with Sedional Clamp Bearing••
Where our Sectional Bearings are used. the cutting cirde of the knives wiD always be a conStant orbit never vatying a hair"s
breadth. That mean' fine smooth surfacing.
The Sedional Plates take up their own wear, and rebabbitling the boxes is a thing of the paSt.
It is impossible for the operator to screw the bearings tight enough to hind, and overheating never occurs.
Our No. 186 Band Resa w is especially adapted for reducing timber of
large dimen,ions into picture backing, panel,. etc. The inside rolls can be locked.
while the outside rollscan be quickly moved to or from the saw by means of a
quadrant spaced in the most
accurate manner by eighth, of
an inch. This device is found
on no other resaw.
Our No. 202 Band Rip
and Edging Saw is equipped
with· a traveling chain in the
table under the feed rou.. Thi,
chain is used. in connection with
the upper feed roll, in edging.
It i, driven by a ,procket chain
and gearing from the ,ame ,haft
that run, the upper feed roll,.
For ripping, the chain can be
dropped below the surface of
the table. The machine will
rip material 24 inches wide by 12 inches thick and edge 12 inches wide.
No.-203 Band Rip a.nd Edglnd Saw.
SbalJ We Send You Circu.lars Dellcribing the Many Oth~ Important
Feature8 on These Excellent Machine.?
No. 186 Band Resaw.
West Front Street,
GRAND Rl
PUBLIC LIBRARY
28th Year-No. 13. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., JANUARY 10, 1908.
,=========
The Industrial Outlook.
"All indications seem to point to prospcrity."'·'-Hubbard,
Eldredge & Co., Rochester.
"\Ve look for very little jf any embarrassment in trade.
Easy conditiOll:-i \vill soon be restored."-Acme Kitchen Fur-niture
Company, Chattanooga, Tenn.
"The furniture industry at the presellt time is 011 a sound
and healthy basis; that is, a large majority of the factories arc
in a sound financial condition. and the small financial flurr)
will not affect them. "-1". Bockstege, president K.arges Furni-ture
Company.
"The furniture industry has been in a -ver:y healthy condi-tion.
11'lanufacturers as a body Rre contcnteJ. The de-mands
of labor, however, have largely absorbed pronts. The
advance in wage}, during the past two years is fully thirty-four
per cent."-Louis Kanitz, president I'Ihtskegon Valley
Furniture Company.
"Conditions are rapidlyimproving."-Robert Mitchell Fur-niture
Company, Cincinn~ti, O.
"V>/e have experienced very little ill-effects from tIte finan-cial
pinch and are not worrying over thc future."-Otsego
Chair Company,
"V>./ehave marc than usual advance orders for refriger-ators,
in fact enough to keep our factory gOiIlg until the
'warm ,,,,eather sets in at which time there is sure to be the
usual rush of husinesswhich will carry us through the sca-son."-
ldace & Co.
"Our city has passed through the crisis in a very succes~
£ul manner, having had no bank failurcs a11<1not having made
use of clearing-house certificates or any other form of nat
. money."-Vliddicomb Furniture Company.
"\Ve believe that next year will be a good aile for busi-
11ess. The. granaries of the west a~·e filled to overHo\',:ing,
which, ..v.ith good prices, must give us plenty of mOl1ey."-
\Vinnebago Furnihtrc Compally.
"The business situation in this part o( Lhe coulltry is C11-
tirely sound and thc-re h every reason to ;mticipate a good
winter and spring business."-Ncv,' Orleans Furniture lIJalltt-facturing
Company.
"Vi e consider the outlook favorable for a pr()sp~'r()u:->husi-ness
during the coming seasotl. This conclusion is arrived
at through careful personal inqulry 2nd through canvas by
salesmen."~Oberbeck Brothers :Mal1ufacturing C()111pany.
"\Ve are very optimistic as to the futur('. and firmly be-lieve
that the entire country will Soon resume its normal con-dition."-
Coye Furniture Company.
"Industrial United States, despite wars, pestilence, poli-tics,
economics and fallacies, has outgrown all competitors.
Every period o( disturbance has been quickly succeedc(l by
a wave of progress and confidence greater than the preced-ing
one. This record of 130 years is good enough for the
!\.Iacey Company. Tts business is larger, better and more
profitable now than it 1vas a year ago and its managemen(is
confident that the ensuing year will be better than the past,
$1.00 per Year.
and every department will be conducted accordingly. The
COmp3Jl}' ,,,,ill continue its policy of conservative aggressive-ness.
No curtailment of effort or output has been made and
none is contemplated. \!IIe have confidence. in the continued
cormnercial supremacy of the United States, and propose to
ngllt it out on that line."-O. H. 1.. \Vernicke, president the
:\·racey Company, Grand Rapids, :\Jich.
Cost of Making and Marketing Round Top Dining Tables.
A manufacturer largely engaged in the manufacture and
sale of round top dining tables remarked recently: "Eighty
per cent of the cost is in the top. The material, labor, the
cost of packing, shipping and ircigJlt amount to fully that
per-centage. Several years ago one of my designs proved
defective and the stock manufactured stuck on the floor.
Several buyers of jobs made offers for the lot; the most fav-orable
of which involved a cut of $6.00 per table. I figured
up the cost of substituting new pillars for the originals, in
which the defects existed, at $2, and after making the change
sold the lot readily at the price listed. It don't pay to jump
at the bait offered by job buyers quickly. A better plan is
to think it over and keep the goods,. There is practically no
differcnce in the round tops of dininK tables, and when a new
style call be produced by changing the -base it is better to lose
$2 in doing so than $6 by sellmg at a cut price.Jt
OUD 5PfCIAliMPfRIAl
WfAlnfDfO OAK OIl5lAIn
is the standard all over America.
Are YOUusing it?
Write us for Samplesand Quotations of the
BEST S"ELLAC VARNIS"ES
MANU£AfCTURCD a"'LV £I V
CHICAGO WOOD FINISHING CO.
ZSg·63 ELSTONAV[m2·16 SLOAN Sf.
CH I CACO.
~ •.
4 -f'~MI9.HIG7JN
CHEAP BEDROOM FURNITURE.
What a Salesman Ran Up Against in a Town Where Health
Fads Are the Only Things Talked About.
Demar, the salesman, had been having hard luck for a
month. He was beginning to think that all his old customers
were waiting for the Winter Exposition. Presently he struck
a town which had always been pretty good to him. It wa:.
a health town, and a lot of the money handled there came
out of the pockets of people who rode through the streets in
wheel chairs. Demar thought he would make a winning
there, sure.
He tackled his best customer first. Gillette was a pros-perous
merchant, with a store a little too big for the town.
He was never ugly when a salesman marked him for his own,
but occasionally he grew pessimistic and sarcastic. The
salesman found him in a disagreeable mood. He hardly
looked up as Demar entered with the merry swing of a man
who has got to make a sale or go to the poor house.
"\Vhat's the grouch?" asked Demar, handing out a cigar
and dro;ping into a chair.
He had hunted and fished with Gillette, and played poker
with him, and thought he might cut out formality. When
men play poker together and don't break friendship, it is sure
that they are good fe.Haws.
"Business is bad," replied Gillette, lighting the cigar. "I'd
like to shut up shop and go up north after deer, or some-thing
that would keep me on the Olove. You needn't get
out your picture cards. I don't want a thing. I couldn't
pay for the sttlff if I bought it. I'm up against it."
"I'll take my chances on getting my pay," smiled the
salesman. "Here! What's the matter with making a run
on those fine bedroom suites?"
"Bedroom suites!" repeated the merchant.
"Of' course! We've got some beauties! Look at these
veneered goods. Eh? That looks pretty poor, what?"
"What do they do with bedroom suites?" asked Gillette,
with a perfectly straight face. There was even an anxiety
in his eyes which seemed to await the answer as something
important. Demar grinned and threw off his overcoat.
I(The be.droom suite of commerce," he said, Ilis the thing
conducive to repose. In other words, where you pound your
ear! I've got some bedsteads here that make you sleepy
to look at" 'em! Look at 'em and see!"
IIHave you got a bedstead that will turn off the gas at bed-time'and
walk out on the roof of the porch?" asked the mer-chant.
Demar grinned. He was used to the merchant's way, and
saw a sale coming.
UNot yet," ,ne replied. "We are having some made."
'ITheydon't use bedroom suites any more in this man's
town," sighed the dealer. "I haven't sold six in three
months."
"What do they use?"
"\iVhy, they don't even use the sleeping rooms. How
can a man use a bedroom suite if he hasn't any sleeping room
to put it in?"
i<::l"osleeping rooms," said Demar, becoming interested.
"Where under the sun and moon do they sleep?"
"That's where."
I<Where? That's where what? What are you doing with
all thosc funny little bugs in your belfry?"
"That's where they sleep."
"That's where they sleep where?"
"Under the sun and moon."
"Oh! And I pres.ume they use the green, green grass for
a mattress and the cerulean sky for a counterpane! Why
don't you go out of town for a few days?"
"No, they don't slee,p on the grass. They're getting a
contrivance ma'de to keep 'em off the ground and out of the
dew. The people about here are sleeping in the open air,
rr:y frie.nd, so where's the use of my buying bedroom suites?"
"Oh, of course, there are a few cranks w:ho do that, bUt
there will always be a market for bedroom suites:"
Yes. Of course. They'll always have to buy sometlllng
to furnish their sle,eping rooms with, eh? Of course. Well,
they've got 'em furnished already."
'IDon't they buy of you?"
"They don't buy of anybody. They plant their things to
furnish their sleeping rooms."
"It is too bad," said Demar. "You used to be one of tht:
brightest men on my route, and now you are talking about
planting seed and raising bedroom furniture."
"You bet they do!" insisted the merchant. "You go dowh
here to the next r~sidence street and turn to your right, or
turn to the left, if you want, or just stand still, if that's your
notion, and you can see the slccping rooms from the sidewalk.
You bet yOU can! How would you like to contract to fur-nish
all those sleeping rooms? I guess you'd be in a shirt
without any sleeves if you undertook it."
I'What do they have in their sleeping rooms?" asked De-mar,
not qnite getting next to Gillette's obscure humor.
"The one on the corner," was the reply, "is furnished with
a fountain and a brass dog. There are also some pine trecs
scattered about, to give the perfume and the moan of the
WOOD FINISHING MATERIALS
FILLERS, STAINS, POLISHES, ETC.
~ If in trouble with finishing materials, now is the
time to let us put you right. ,
tj We match all sample~ submitted and fill all
orders promptly.
GRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHING CO.
SS-S9 Ellsworth Ave., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
health-giving north. The bedstead is on the roOI of the
porch, and the ceiling of the sleeping room is 50 far up in
the air that you couldn't reach it with a writ of habeas cor-pus."
"So that is the latest fad!" exclaimed the salesman.
"Sleeping in the open air! Well, that gets mel Do they
all sleep in second-story porches?"
1<1 should say not. Some of 'em pull out a window in the
sitting room and shove the head of the couch out on a flower
bed. They've got a bedstead here that runs on a track to a
French window, and out to the porch.
"When a man gets ready for slumber he undresses by the
fire, gets into bed and tucks in, touches a spring, and the .-
he is, with the North star for a bedfellow and the big dipper
for a dream-producer. I'd like to see you sell furniture to
a man whose sleeping room is half an acre in size, with it
pump on the side and a carriage house to store toilet articles
in."
"The fad will die out/' said the salesman.
('In time," said the merchant, Ubut not in time for me to
get rid of the bedroom suites I have on hand and pay my
bills. They've got some swell sleeping rooms up in the west
end," cant inned the merchant. 'lOne man takes out the
whole side of his house so the. air can get into his boneb.
And tentsl Say, what sort of bedroom furniture would YOu
buy to furnish a tent?"
"The kind we make, of course."
"Well, the .last sleeping room I was in up there was fur-nished
with a hot-water bag and a bottle of malted milk.
The occupant slept with his head through a hole in the wall of
the tent and took a bite of pure air for breakfast. That is,
he took a bite when the wind was in the south, and a bite and
a half when the ·wind was in the north. He told me that he
was fearful of getting dyspepsia eating so much north wind.
How ,Yould you like to put in new machinery to make bed·
foom sUltes for that man !"
"YOtt haven't looked at my pictures yet," said Demar.
"I don't want to look at them," said Gillette, "I've got
all the furniture I need in the store, and more 1 \Vhen a
111anbreakfasts on 110rth wind, lunche!:' on malted milk, and
,-,rraps the whole dog gasted landscape about him for a slc,ep,
'''''hat's the use of selling furniture ~ The landscape expert.~
are furnishing the sleeping rooms around here. One of the
new styles is an American beauty rosebush covered with wild
cncumber vines. [guess they expect Hie combination to giye'
an old English effect to the chimney! 1\0, you can't sell any
bedroom outfits around here, unless you've got rubber goods
and nursery stock!"
"I think l"tl have to go up and sc.e this sleeping room thal
is furnished with a fountain al'JI a brasss dog," said the sales-man,
with a smile.
"Ob, that's all right! Go right all up and look at it.
There may be other articles of furniture, like an iron fence,
a red roof, and a brick chimney. I've secn wheel-chairs used
as ornaments."
"There's always some fool fad on," grumbled the sales-man.
"And all the fool fads hit the furniture trade," replied the
merchant. "If you think I'm stuffing yoU about the out-door
sleeping rooms, jllst yOll go abollt town and size things
up. Pretty soon they'll get to eating condensed food In
capsules, and then there \vit1 be. no more dining room furl1l-ture."
"About the only real good trade in this town is the casket
trade," continued the merchant. "These health towns are al-ways
prime spots for undertakers."
"Then yott don't want any bedroom suites," smiled Demar.
''If you can furnish a suite \vith half an acre of lawn and an
apple tree thrown in, I'll buy a dozen."
Demar took a trolley out of the health town anrl waited at
the limits for the interurban to come along.
ALFRED B. TOZER.
HARDWOOD FINISH FOR PINE.
Capt. Purse Talks of New Process of Wood-Preserving That
is Claimed to Be of Immense Value.
Capt. D. G. Purse of Savannah is touring the south in the
interest of developing the process for drying all character of
swamp and highland wood, more particularly the swamp oak,
cypress, tupelo, etc.
He was attracted to this process some twelve months ago
and has been for the past six months in )Jew York conducting
experiments with wood brotight from Georgia, taken from the
native trees.
The results of these tests and experiments have been so
satisfactory and have made themselves so attractive to all
parties interested in the preservation and drying of this char-acter
of lumbe,r that a company who own the process have
delegated Capt. Purse to introduce this treatment in the
"outhern states.
As cxplained by Capt. Purse, the process of vulcanizing
pine and watery gum timber cons1sts of subjecting these
woods to intense steam heat in a huge steam cylinder. A
certai~n degree of te,mperature is maintained for a few hours
and the, aqueous properties of the wood removed. The dens-er
fluids, the albtunen and pitch, the natural preservatives of
the wood, are retained, evenly distributed in the pores of the
,vood, and the, timber thus treated is hermetically sealed and
made practically proof against the decay of time. The
5
hitherto useless tupelo gum, the cypress tree and the sap
pine become, unde,r this process, as valuable as the mahog-any
of South America, with the additional advantage that it
has less than one-fourth the weight of that valuable hard-wood.
An idea of the practicability of the process may be gained
whe,n it is stated that a plant consisting of a huge steel cyl-inder
eapable of receiving 22,000 feet of timber, may be es-tablished
at a cost of 1,500 to $3,000. Twenty-four hours of
treatment of the most aqueous and pulpy timber converts that
wood into a decay resisting material which not only vies with
but surpasses the most valuable hardwood as to time resist-ing
(LUalities, but it is also capable of being given the most
beautiful finish. Capt. Purse exhibits ~.;pecimens of cypress,
gum aId sap pjne trees treated by this process and Iinished by
a cabinet maker. At first glance the gum is taken for rare
old mahogany, but tmned over on the other side appears to
be the finest grade. of maple. The same metamorphosis ·is
accomplished with the cypress and the sap pine, the latter
being a wood which resists all attempts to fire it in its gree, I
state, and begins to crumble and decay the moment the dry-ing
out process commences.
One, fact of immense significance in regard to lumber
treated with the new vulcanizing process is that every
POH~ of the wood is hermetically sealed for alt time. This
makes lumber so treated par excellence for intenor finishlt1g
of dwelling houses.
\Vood as used at present is a perfect culture bed for germs
of disease and dangerous bacteria. Scientirlc investigation
has proven that the germs of diphtheria, scarlet fever and
otber dangerous infectious diseases may be, communicated by
the wood in the house for months after such an infected per-son
has been in the room. The, vulcanized wood offers as
little lodgment for disease germs and bacteria as does the
polished surface of porcelain.
"It is our plan," said Capt. Purse, in an interview, I'to es-tablish
plants throughout the south. In o:'der, however, that
no particular section may enjoy an advantage over another,
not a single plant will be established in the south until each
and every state in which this timber is found is ready to act.
Then the plants will be started simultaneously.
"This means more for the wealth of the south than any
discovery since Eli "VVhitneyinvented the cotton gin. Hither-to
any man owning land on which the 6'111nand sap trees
grew felt that his land was burdened with a useless p,roduct of
natul"e. The pine ,vas susceptible of treatment to the extent
that boards might be made of it, but they fatted away within
a few months of usage. The cypress and gum trees were
good only for the purpose of putting out a Jire, so heavily
charged are they with aqeuous properties. Under the vul-canizing
process these woods surpass mahogany, rosewood
and all other [me woods known to civilization for their wear-resisting
qualities and the beauty of finish which they take."
BIRD'S EYE MAPLE OUR SPECIAL TV
3,000,000 FT. For 1908 3,000,000 FT.
MADE and DRIED RIGHT and WHITE. AT REASONABLE PRICES.
SAMPLES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION.
MAHOGANY QUARTERED OAK FIGURED WOODS
LET US QUOTE YOU PRICES.
HENRY S. HOLDEN VENEER COMPANY
23 SCRIBNER ST., "RAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(Successorw to Henry S. Holden)
6
.'.. " ..
Absolutely Nothing Better
than our
dum an~ (onon,oo~ DrawerDolfoms
Dried by the "Proctor System" Machine.
( We witt describe it to you.)
Prompt deliveries of DRY STOCKrain or shine
( Something unheard of before. )
Quarter Sawe~ Oa~ Veneer
The Largest and Be&t Stock in Grand Rapids.
( Come and select your own. )
DiH~ an~ Po~lar (ross~an~in~
Cut to dimension if desired.
Walter Clark Veneer Co.
535 Michigan Trust Building,
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Make Business!
Say, there!
YOll fellows that insist
That business is rotten!
Can you tell me why?
Crops are good;
Times are good as usual;
1'1011eyis fairly plentiful-
Except with those who blew it in
In Vvr all ~treet.
You have cleaned up your stock-
If you haven't you ought,
And you know it-
And you'll have to buy more.
Don't yOu suppose
The fanners are going to put in a crop?
Or do you really think
They're going to let their land
Lie fallow for a year or two,
Vlaiting for you to get a move
On you:
Business is dull?
Then why don't you hustle?
v'lhy don't yOUget out and talk
To the. people? If
They're all "from Missouri"
And have to be "shown," why,
Go and show them.
That's what you're there for.
Talk up business-
Don't talk it down 1
Congratulate the farmer
On his crop-if he has one;
If he hasn't a good one;
Sbov>'bim the necessity
To pre.pare all the better
For a crop next year.
There are a dozen ways-
Yea, an even hundred-
By .\'J11Ch you can work up business
And have something doing.
Don't talk of hard times.
Never say "there is no business
During a political campaign."
If it slacks up,
And inclines to stay slack,
Get out and pull on the tugs!
lVlake business!
Don't say it can't be done.
Others ha\"e done it, and
v'lhat others have done
You can do, too, if you will.
This isn't poetry, but
It's business and it's sense.
Falling in Line.
The report of the Interstate Commerce Commission, just
made public, is of deep interest for the frankness "vith which
it tells the story of its work since the new laws regarding
transportation have gone into effect. The commission de-clares
that transportation men have universally come to the
front with every aid to put the laws into operation, and see
that they are obeyed. That is the best evidence that the
railroad managers as a whole are anxious to discover the
value of the attempt at "regulation,'! as they choose to term
that act of congress with reference to themselves.
Very naturally the flrst work of the commission was to get
the intent of the law clearly before the railroad managers, and
the greater portion of the year's work has been directed to
the chief cause for the enactment of the laws-that is, toward
the correction of those things nearest to the shippers' daily
business. This of course includes equality of treatment as
regards switching, terminal demurrage, reconsignment, ele-vation,
and other things making up the aggregate cost of
transportatjon.
In discussing the amended law with its enforceable reme-dies,
the commission says: "There has been a wider recog-nition
of its fundamental justice and there has been a quick-ened
sense of public obligation on the part of railway mana-gers
as well as a clearer perception by shippers of all classes
that any individual advantage is morally as well as legally in-
IMPROVE.D,EASV ANI) ELEVATORS
QUICK RAISINQ
Belt, Electric:: and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Powerfor Furniture Stores
Send for Catalogue and Pricu.
KIMBAll BROS, CO" 1067 N;.lh SC, Council Bluffs, la.
kimball Elevator Co •• 34J Pro!pect St., Cleveland, 0.;
I()8 11th St., Omaha., Neb.; 129 Cedar St., New York City.
defensible, and that the augmented influence of the commis-sion
resulting from its increased authority have all combined
diminish offensive ;practices of every sort, and to signally
promote the purpose for which the law was enacted."
The fact that railroad managers are taking the law seri-ously
is a splendid tribute to the American citizen. It will
be recalled that when the law was enacted, there was a great
hue and cry that the property of the stockholders in railroads
was about to be taken from them by an unjust law. How
near this is true can best be told by reference to statistics.
This country:s business is so big that the railroads cannot
carry it, and a great crusade is going on to expend millions
to improve the ,vaterways to help them solve the problem.
\'-'lith fair rates these railroads can earn good dividends on
the honest stocks and bonds that have be.en put into the
bands of the people. Heretofore, it has been the problem
of railroad managers to get great bulks of freight to keep
their long lines of cars busy in long unbroken hauls. The
small shipper was never considered except as a side issue.
"Vitlt the new law impartially enforced, the small shipper will
have. as much chance in the race for business as the larger
one. Another thillg it will do is to clear up the water in the
railroad stocks. There will be no more robberIes like thos..:
that occ.urred when so-called high financiers "scooped" in
the Alton road and pocketed fortunes in the deal with the
expectation that the business interests of the country would
pay the. piper.
",
ALHOLCOM6 &CO@
MANUFACTURERS "rl
P DEALERS
IN HIGH GRADE BAND AND SCROLL
SA~S
REFAIRING-SATI5FACTION GUARANTEED
CITIZENS F'HONE 1239 27 N MARKET ST.
~,GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
7
8
New 200 page
Catalogue for
19lY7 Free.
Saw and Knife Fitting Machinery and Tools r~:eB.1""':.a~~~,~r'
Baldwin. Tuthill al. Bolton
Grand R.apld8. Mich.
Filers. Setters,
Sharpeners.
Grinders.
'wages.
Stretchers.
Brazing and
Filing Clamps.
Knife Balances.
Mammerintl
Tool8.
Illvesti$ate OUT
Lllle.
Bolton Band Saw Filer lor Saws MI,inch up. B. T. &. B. Style 0, Knile Grinder. Full Automatic. Wet or d.lY.
MANUFACTURERS OF
HARDWOOD LUMBER &
VENEERS
SPECIALTIES:
~";~~'l'lQUAR.OAK VENEERS
MAHOGANY VENEERS
HOFFMAN
BROTH R:; COM PANY
804 W. Main SI.. FORT WAYNE, INOII.NA
BOYNTON eX CO.
Manufacturers of
Embo .. ;~d and
Turned Mtl'Dldin([a.;
Embossed and
Spindle Carvin ...
_d Automatie
Turnin ....
"Vc also manu-facture
a large line
of Emboseed Oma.
mente for Couch
Work.
SEND FOR
CATALOGUE
419·421 W. Fifteenth St., C"ICAGO,ILL
OFFICES:
CINCINNAT]--Pic}Utrlna Building. NItW YORK--346 Broadway.
aos1"ON--18 Tremon1 St. CHICACO--134 Van Buren 91.
GRAND RAPIDS--tlouseman Bldg. JAMESTOWN. N. Y.--'1 E. Third St.
HIGH POINT. N. C.--Stanton-Welch Block.
The most satisfactory and up-to-date Credit Service covering the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
The most a.ccura.te and reli :tble Reference Book Published.
Originators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System."
Collection Service Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Dra!ts.
H. J. DANHOF. Michigan Manager,
341-348 Houseman BuUdlnl1. Grand Rapids, Mich.
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.
W...r.i.t.e...u.s. fo,r'
aDd dlscoUDt
31-33 S. FRONT ST•• GRAND RAPIDS
Slep~en50nm~(0..
South Bend,lnd.
Wood Tumings,
T umed Moniding,
Dowel. and Dowel
Pins.
Catalogue to Manufac-turers
on Application_
---_. -------------------------
9
Qran~Da~i~sDlow Pi~e
an~Dust Arrester (om~anJ
THE LATEST device for handling
sha'i.)illgs alld dust from all 'wood-
'ix'orkillg machines. Our n,inetcen }'cars
e.t-perience in this class of work has
brought it nearer perfection than L1tl'jl
other s'Jlstenl, OJI the 111arket toda'J,I, It
is 110 experitnent, but a denwJlstrated
scientific fact, as 'i.J,'e ha'i.!c JPDcral hun-dred
of these s}'Sfen1s hL use, al/dnat a
poor Olle mnong them,. Our Autmnatic
Furnace F {'cd Sj.'ste1J'LJ as sho'rcn};i'n this
cut, is the nwst perfect 'Z(larking de7..Jice
of anything in this line. TVrite for otlr
prices for equipments.
WE "JAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETA1L WORK WITHOUT EX-PEKSE
TO OUR CUSTO}1ERS.
EXHAUST FANS AND I'HES-SURE
BLOIVflRS ALWAYS IN
STOCK.
Olfice and Fa.ctory:
208-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Cttlzen. Phone 1282
OUR AUTOMATIO FUBNAOE FEED SYS'I'EM
-------------------------------
10 -f'~MI91nG7}N $ 7IR;...TIS' 3JmL.1e'\T
THE OLD WAY WAS OOOD BUT THE NEW IS BETTER.
No factory having sanding to do can afford to use obsolete methods. The new way is
the way to profit-success. Ask for the proof.
A MONEY SAV1U<.
STURGIS MACHINE CO., Sturgis,. Mich. Charlotte, Mich .• Oct. 1st, 1907.
Gentlemen:-Jnclosed we hand you our check in settlement for tbe belt sander purchased of you about ODe moiIth ago. We have tried
tbis machine on almost an of our work.: and find it a money saver.
Work that we were doing by hand can be easily done on your machine in a great dealles9 time and gives better results after done. We
believe,ou will sell a good mallY 01 them as all woodwurking plants should own a machine of this kind. Very truly
CHARLES BENNETT FURNITURE CO.
GIVES ENTIRE SATISFACTION.
STURGIS MACHINE COMPANY, Sturgis, Micb Algoma, Wis., Sept. ll}' 1.007;
Gentlernen:-We have your favor of the 17 inst. and carefully note contents. III reply to same we are pleased to note that you will for ... :ard
the four inch Toller ill a few dayS,
With regards to the No.2 machine would say same has given us entire saUsfalCtiQUand we are making some impt()vements ~n same
which we will describe to You someday in the near future, Yours truly, PLUMBERS WOODWORK CO.
I STURGIS MACHIN~ COMPANY, Sturgis. Michigan
Correspondents and Salesmen.
One of the business correspondents in a promicnt west-ern
concern sent in his resignation the other day because he
was "tired of his job," as he expressed it; and, when pressed
by the manager to give his specific reasons for being tired. he
explained that he wanted a chal~ge-a position in which there
was a bettcr chance for advancement than in conducting the
concern's correspondence; and at length it developed that
what he really wanted was to get outside, to get "out into the
world" as a salesman.
~ow, there are no doubt a great many "inside menH in
business who feel that they are handicapped compared with
the "outside" workers. But is it really so? Was this young
correspondent's position right or wrong? Are the men who
write business letters really up a blind alley? Are they do-ing
a mechanical drudgery that offers no future? Is it worth
while to spend time in the practice of the art of writing good
business letters? The following is the sort of talk that the
young man in question got from the manager and, as told
by Worthington C Holman, it answers the above question
fairly well;
\Vhat is a good business letter, anyway? Business letters,
like men, are judged by their deeds. Well, then, what stand~
~-lrdsof action is set for thern? What does a good business
letter have to do? In the first place, it goes to a man a hun-dred
or a thousand miles away-a man whom you, the writer,
in ninety-nine case5 out of a hundred, have never seen and
who has never seen or hcard of you, and doesn't want to see
or hear of you; a man 'who has no more interest in yoU or
your particular business concern than you have in the Fiji
Islanders, individually or collectively, a man of unknown age,
parentage, hereditary traits, previous history, present condi-tion
or culture, mental quickness or stupidity, prejudiced big-otry
or progressive open-mindedness, comparative wealth or
poverty. In a word, he is as much a stranger to you in his
essential traits as if he were purely an imaginary man con-jured
up out of the mists of fancy. You have almost no line
on him whatever in writing to him.
And your letter going to this unknown man-this detached
atom of humanity in the remote distan'ce-this stranger who
'has never heard of you-your letter, coming to him out of
space like a flying fragment of a meteor from a far-off planet
-yOur letter dropping 1n upon him amid a thousand distrac-tions,
in the whirl and rush of a busy day, with men and af-fairs
clamoring for his time-your fragment of paper must si-lently
secure and rivet this man's exclusive attention-hyp-notize
his interest as Svengali hypnotized Trilby-win his
confidence-excite his hopes-convince his reason-secure
his abs~lute belief-and, supreme test of his faith, induce him
to open his pocketbook and send you money-single your
concern out from all 'the scores pursuing him as the favored
one to receive his order.
Too easy, isn't it? So easy that you are siek of your job
and want to get into other work more worthy of your power:;!
Excuse my smile! It is true. Admit that the salesman
-a real salesman, not an undertaker-wnose workattraets
you, is up against a tough proposition worthy of any man's
powers.
How about the business letter? At every turn it faces
a handicap. The letter, unlike the salesman, has no magnett~.
personality, no winning human voic.e, no expressive human
face or forceful human gestures. It has no big frame or
hreezy manner, no pleasant smile or hearty human handshake
or deferential, flattering bearing to receive attention, compel
respect and win an interview and a fair hearing. It has no
bodily presence at all in the sense that a salesman has. It is
a mere ghost of a visitor, a seeming mere shadow of reality.
If received with indifference it cannot protest. If inter-rupted
in making.its plea cannot object. If insulted-even
Cabinet Hardware
--AND--
Factory Supplies·
N..... ElIl!llUldFlint Paper.
Barton Garnet Paper.
DouMe Faced Flint and
Garnet Finisbilll! Paper.
Brass Buns.
WrOlJl!btSteel Bntts.
Cal.inet Looks and Keys.
Gold Plated and Gilt Cal.-
inet Keys.
Bellch Visea.
Bolts, Wa.hera, Zillos.
Wood Screws.
Coaoh Sorews.
Liquid Glue, Castera.
Upholsterer's Taoks.
LatllO Bead Burlap Taoks.
Wire Brads.
Stsndard Nails.
Cement Coated Nails.
El[,ow Catches.
Door Catcltes, etc., etc.
Our large and complete assortment of general hard·
ware is at your service.
Correspondence solicited.
InqUiries for prices will receive careful and immediate
attention.
FOSTER, STEVENS & CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
~Mlf ..HIG7!N
OUR CLAMPS RECEIVED -G-O-L-D_.M_-E-DAL
AT WORLD'S fAIR ST. LOUIS.
PILING CLAMP.
CHAIN
CLAMP
(Patented
June 30, 1003)
Write for prices and particulars.
BLACK BROS. MACHINERY CO.
MENDOTA. ILLINOIS
NO! NO TROUBLE HERE!
with the contunlcly of the waste basket-it can rcpc<lt llO
sentence in its own bchlaf. Ii its word as a truth-teller is
doubted, it canllot defend itself with offers of evidence.
It cannot watch the cl1~torner, after gaining admission to
his presellce, in order to size. him up and change and adapt
its talk to meet his opposition. It cannot draw forth his ob-jections,
one by Olle, uncover his prejudice bit by bit, fish fo\:
his susceptible point, detect the nibble of interest, coax the
the bite and tighten the line to fasten the hook secnrdy at
tJle proper moment. It cannot go 011 talldng amI talking, ex-tending
the interview to suit its needs. A few brief para-graphs,
and its chance at the prospect is gone. Any mistake
or bungle at its app:-oach or dE'.ll1onstration is ruinous. it
has no chance to explain or shift its position or recover the
lost advantage. Yet handicapped in a thousand ways as the
salesman is not handicapped, the letter must accornpli!;,h the
same results. It must land the order-secure the signature-get
the check-set the prospect to digging dovnl into his jeans
after the rcal I\10ne)'. Is it equal to the task? A thousand
times yes-if created by a master.
A rightly written letter can play on the human mind as
Simply wanted to get you to give this something better than a passing
glance and since we have caught your eye let's catch YOUl' orders for
Veneered Rolls. We build the famous c'RELIABLE" ROLlS.
WRITE FOR PRICES.
The Fellwock Auto. & Mfg. Co.
RVANSVILLE. lNOlANA
Ow's is the largest Roll Plant in the United States.
if it were a harp with a thousand strings. It can touch the
responsive chords of attention, interest, desire and conviction
in a man's breast as deftly and as surely as a musician touches
the chords of hidden harmony in his instrument. All its
strategy must be pbnned beforehand, but it can be so cun-ningly
and intelligently planned that its results arc as inevi-table
as the explosion of gunpowder when a lighted match is
dropped 011 jt.
A uead thing itself, without hands, voice, gesture or bodily
presence of its own, a letter can be so impregnated with the
personality of the writer that the writer himself seems to be
transported by some magic into the very presence of the man
who reads. \Vitbin the compass of a single page it can pique
the reader's ellriosity, eommalld his attention, sway his judg-went,
work upon his susceptibilities, move him to action-draw
his money as irresistibly as the magnet draws iron fil-ings.
A letter like this is in its ·way as much a work of art as a
picture, a statue, or an oration. It is a creation, a thing of
character, a piece of carefully planned construction, having
high la-ws and principles of its 0\'\'11.
WE BUILD HIGH GRADE
CATALOGS COMPLETE
Do You Want The Originality of our work ts one of its chief characteristics.
White Printing Co.
2 tQ 20 Lyon Street GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Something
Original? ENGRAVING
PRINTING
BINDING
A TOUCH OF CIVILIZATION.
Motherly Old Lady Res-orts to Sarcasm in the Interest of a
Better Furnished Home.
The furniture merchant saw a stylish rig draw up at tht:
3tO:'~ all(] waited at the front entrance. That was old Eben
Colton ar:d his wife Aln:ira. They owned one of the largest
.and best farms in the county and had money in bank and in
various industrial enterprises. They had been building' a new
house and the de-aiel' already saw himself booking a !:Ug'2
order.
;"Ne wat;t a little furniture," said Eben, as the two,
plainly dressed acd ~tooping with years of toil, stepped inside.
"] LtS! sorr.l" medium stuff that's 110t too expensive. Money's
IT <mey these days."
"First;' said Aln-:.ira. "we'll look at a parlor suite."
"\-Vhen 1 was a boy," growled Eben, "we didn1t know
what a pa:-]or suite looked like."
"\Ve don't yet," said Alrrjra, "unless we go to the neigh-bors'
now an' then an' take a peek at one. Our (Iwn parlor
looks like the back room in a county home."
"There's no pleasin' these women," said Eben, winking at
the furniture man, who was leading the way to the parlor
suites.
"If we could keep a couple of horses in the parlor," said
Almira, "we'd have the best furnished one for miles and miles
around. If it ever comes to be fashionable to keep stock
an' farm implelficnts in the parlor, we'll beat all the ncigh-bars
there an' back. You show us somc of the best parlor
suites you'vc got."
Old Ehell winked at thc rr:erchant again. He was not a
little pleased at Altdra's reference to his blooded stock and
his farm implen:ents. There wasn't a farmer in the state
who had bctter stock or better farm machinery. Still, he
thrust his strong rigllt ha11(l into his trousers pocket and
clutch cd his n:oney as he moved on toward the parlor suites.
He waS in·a place where his money was in danger!
"\Ve've nevcr had a touch of civilization in our homc,"
said Almira, poking at the plush of an easy chair with a
brown, work-stained finger. "\Ve"ll see now what it seems
like to have cnough chairs for the whole family to sit down in
at once."
"Whcn I was a hoy," interrupted old Eben, "we was glad
to sit on a bench out in the kitchen! \Ve didn't have 110 use
for them hifalutin' things they have now!"
Almira smiled at the old mall and continued her in spec-ti()
n of expensivc parlor furniture.
"When you was a boy," she said, "there wasn't any electric
lights, or telephones, or fancy farm machinery, but that's no
reason why we shouldn't have 'em now. We'll take that
7IR. T I.s .A..l\I
• 2m
dark brown parlor suite, and these leather chairs and that
leather couch, and that mahogany table. That will be quite
a lot of money, won't it?' ,
Old Eben looked at the merchant with staring eyes and
half-open mouth, like a man listening for a Iife-or-death
sentence. He was a p;·etty good sort of a fellow, was old
Eben, but he did h8te to part with his money.
"\;V'hy," said the merchant! hoping that the end was not
yet. "It will arr.0l111tto about three hundred dollars. \A/e
have some not quite as good, but-"
"For mercy sake, don't let Eben hear you say that t"
laughed Almira, " or he'll want me to do my selectin' all over
again! Now we'll look at somethin' for the dinin' room an'
the hall. We've always got along with nothin', and I expect
Eben will have a fit before I get done buyin'. He paid a
thollS:lnd dollars for that team out there, but he wants me to
keep right on wash in' without a machine, an' doin' my sewin'
by hand.
"As I said before, wc've never had a touch of civilization
in our home. Vv'e've made chairs with an auger, and used
slabs for tables, an' all washed OUf faces in a tin dish out to
the kitchen sink. The barn's been better'n our home, an'
I've often seen the blooded cattle lookin' through the win-dows
in sympathy."
"When I was a boy," interrupted old Eben, Hwe didn't
need a thousand dollars' wo:rth 0' furniture in one room. We
didn't ne.ed private baths, fOT the snow got in through the
roof an' we got into it WhCll we tumbled out 0"' bed in the
mornin'."
"Furniture is civilizin/' declared Almira. "If you havc a
beautifully furnished homc, your children won't want to go
out nights an' sit in thc bar-room at the tavern. It's fur-niture,
an' the choosil1' of it, an' the arrangement of it, that
makes a home. Of course there's the evil dispositions an'
the quick tempers to consider; but a man will" act meaner an'
talk n:eaner in an old barn of a place than he will in a cozy
little place full of rich an' dainty things."
"1 wish I could have you here to talk to scm:e of rr:y eus-tomeI'S,
Aunt Almira," laughed the furniture man. "You'd
make a c;-ackin' good furniture salesman!"
"When I have to go out to work," smiled the old lady,
"I'll call an' let you know how much it will cost you to get me.
I don't think folks ought to need urgin' to buy furniture. Fur-niture
an' the arrangement of it in the home, is the difference
between the savage an' the creature of civilization. McKin-ley
said that a cheap cQat makes a cheap man, an' I know
that cheap furniture, or nOlle at all, makes a bashful person
that everyone laughs at an' steps on whenever there is a
chance!" .
"When I was a boy," interrupted old Eben, fearful that
(tBTABI.lSHE:D lese)
THIS IS THE CAN
AND LABEL
New York
262 Pea.d St.
Boston
520 Atla.otic. Ave.
PbiladelDhia
26-28 J'Jo. 4th St.
1laItUn~
29 S. Haoovet St.
BERRY BROTHERS, LIMITED
VARNISH MANUFACTURERS
DETROIT
Chicago
48-50 Lake St.
Cincinnati
420 Main St.
St. Louie
112 So. 4th St.
San Franckc:o
668 H<.watd St.
BERRY BROTHERS'
Rubbing and Polishing Varnishes MUST BE USED IN FURNITURE WORK TO BE APPRECIATED
THEY SETTLE THE VARNISH QUESTION WHEREVER TRIED
WRITE FOR INFORMATION,
F'IN1SHED WOOD S-.MPUS, AND UT£RATURE.
CANAOIAN FACTORY, WALKERVILLE ONTARIO
Almira 'was saying too much about domestic affairs, "we
didn't think an article was no g-ood because it didn't cost a
h~ap of money."
The merchant was becoming interested in the. talk, and
urged the old lady 0/1 witl1:
"\V<: never had truch furniture in our home," he said, "and
I remember just how cheap we hays used to feel when we
\llent out to neighbors' houses vdJere tJlerc were TIne things.
I've never gotten over my bashful ways!" he added, with a
wink at old Eben.
"If you've got 'cm yet," said the farmer, "you keO::-j)'em
locked away in ,~ safe '''''ith a time-lock that opens only once
a year, and then in the middle of the night ~",
"T've felt the same way," continued Aunt Almira, "many
an' many a tinH.'! T've dreaded to se;: my children go ont
from our shabby home into well furnisbed (lileS, knowin' \-"hat
they would be thinkin' all the time. An' ,,,,,hen a child hegins
to get dissatistied with its home, hegins to compare it with
others to its disadvantage, it is a short cut to a job in the city
or on some one else's farm!
"Furniture hold;.; families together!"
"Ii yOll keep 011," said old Eben, "you'll be makjn' us be-lieve
that furniture cures the measles an' the rheumatism.!"
"As I \vas sayin" continued Aunt Almira, setting aside a
great dining table, "furniture keeps families tog;:ther. Tt
isn't the old homestead that we love. It is the rooms in it,
and the furniture. "Vhen we go away, an' look back at the
old home, we don't think of bare walls, but of the place as it
used tn look, ".-.i.th this piece of furnitt1rc he~-e and that other
THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
GLUE HEATER
Send your address and
receive descriptive dr-cular
of Glue Heaters,
Glue Cookers and Hot
BO:les and prices.
WEATHERLY CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
piece there. It is the way the room looks that brings up to
tIle home, an' furniture is "v1wt makes it look line and suitable
for remembrance. \\That is the price of tbis table?"
The dealer looked at old Eben and then at the table. He
half expected to bear tbe farmer break 011 tlnto one. of his
election-clay harangues concerning economy when the price
was mentioned.
"This is fifty dollars," he said, trying to make the StUll
look small by the way he said it.
Old Eben took it like a hero. He placed a pinch of to-bacco
ill his mouth ;wd walked away to a windm ..-.,. where he
could look out on the street. Al'mira looked the table
over and said she thought she'd take it.
"There ain't 110 use in hringin' up children in poverty-stricken
homes," she said, in a moment. "They can be
brought up amidst pleasant surroundings on the installment
plan! It is the house as the youngsters remember it that
counts all their lives. I'm ashamed to think what Ollr chil-dren
will have to look back tal
"\Ve're flxin' up the place now, hut we might 'a' clone it
years ago. \~Te're gain' to have a streak of civilization in the
13
home, after all these years. vVe might have had pretty
things before, but we never felt as if we could afford 'em.
·If r could live my life ovt.r again, it would be different! I
think these dinin' room chair" are real sweet, an' 1'1[ take a
dozen of 'em, Now, we'll go on to the sleeping room fur-niture.
vVe haven't got a bed in the house that is fit for the
bed of a river. 'VVhere did Eben go? I want him along."
At first the merchant had been amused at the observations
of the old lady, but now there was something pathetic in her
words and her manner. Her voice called him hack to busi~
ness.
"Ehen thinks \-ve'd better take the best there is, for fivl::
rooms 1 ./\5 r was sayin' to Jljm, furniture is the diyjdin'
line between the cave-dweller an' the 111an who makes rail-roads
and ginger pop! The higher the civilization, the finer
and the- mo:-e plentiful the furnlture, an' Eben an' me is gain'
to the top row in refinement. "1 reckon the children won't
knmv the place when they corne home for Christmas I"
"Y cs," said the merchant, "furniture is the. standard of civ-ilization.
The \-vell-dressed man from the finely furnished
home willS in the races of thc world!'
ALFRED B. TOZER.
Things Look Bright Here for 1908,
The "\-Iarietta Paint & Color Company of Marietta, Ohio,
is figuring on a very heavy inr.::rease in its business the coming
year and is laying its plans for the handling" of the same.
This, despite the fact of the pre:~ent slow-down on the part
of the cotlntry"s large industries.
In a reccnt COlwersatioll with C. S. Dana 'a1ld C. ]. La-
Vallee, presidcnt and vice president of the company respec-tively,
they informed the writer that the company"s business
in /11ahogany aod early English stains alone will reach figures
far beyond their calculations early in the year. The com-pany's
golden oak oil stains are now so weIl established and
haw: been p:'o\'ell so successful and pr<lctical beyond any
dOllbt that their general use by furniture manufacturers has
become an accepted fact.
A,lOt111;r sUlin which is coming into popular favor is its
old English oak Spartan "tain No. 831. This stain, whilt
producing a perfect finish, is remarkahle for its consummate
beauty of color. It was designed for use where a dull, dead
brown color effect is desired, and most completely does it
accomplish its purpose. But wbile the calor appears dull, it
is not dull, for there is just a hint of red beneath the dullness
that gives you the impression of hidden warmth and trans-parency.
Old English is a finish that is going to be more
used than formerly. Its peculiar tone of color is one that
you admire and grow to more thoroughly appreciate the long-er
you study it.
Since the !darietta Paint & Color Company entered the
wODd finishing field ten years ago it has certainly "made
good." Tt js today the recognized leader in its lim', and is
rated as the largest manufact~rer of ,vood finishing materials
in the world.
Early Success,
A concern which can show a large and profitable busin('s~:
during the hrst year of its operatiol1 is an exception, the;;e
day!;, and the fact that the dry kiln department of the Grau,}
Rapids Veneer \I\Torks has been compelled to increase its f-:,-
cilities speaks well for the merits of their process. Up to
the pres<':nt time their efforts have been confined largely to
the training of salesmen to handle a delicate and wholly un-usual
engineering proposition; but, notwithstanding this fact,
they have already installed and remodelled upwards of one
hundred kilns. rnquiry as to "how tliey did it" brings forth
the in.formation that the results are entirely due to word-of-mouth
advertising and the persistent use of space in the Mich-igan
Artisan.
--- ~---- ----- -_._-
7IR.TI.5'~
3 7 e
p-EL-TAAOE
MARK Fil:EGISTEFtEO
PAINT SPECIALTIES
START THE YEAR RIGHT
Be an optimist. Don't let fear cripple your business. The talky alarmists are like the gallery
panic-breeder who cries "Fire" in the crowded theatre at the first odor of smoke.
There is going to be ample business for those who go after it vigorously.
is going to get left.
Ad-el-ite Paint Specialties are going out as usual, with the same high standard of quality-a
standard which has given our goods a reputation for sustained excellence. Our Varnish Remover, Our
One Coat Dull Mission Finishes,. Oriental Crack and Crevice Filler, Fillers and Staius and Hygienic Kal.
somine are all Ad-el-ite Specialties of established favor.
We can supply you with anything needed in the wood finishing room or paint shop.
~
STA. E
The timid hanger-back
CHICAGO
L _
Don't Overflow Yaur Language.
The gray-haired old salesman silently but firmly refused
the cigarette tendered by the young and inexperienced sales-man,
and remarked: -"In tbe language of the lamented Arte-mus
"V\r·ard,'It don't pay to stopover.' It would be foolish for
yOU to call down that buyer from Chicago who left the mar-ket
before 'looking you over' as he promised to Clo.
"Let me relate an experience: Early in my first year on
the road I caned upon a dealer in Kansas City. I had
learned in a general way of the class of goods he handled and
knew that my stuff would fit well in his stock. When] met
Mr. Man of his town, he ,vas clearly out of sorts. Many
perplexing problems he had been caned upon to face during
the morning and was in no humor to consider my invitation
to look at my pictures. He was almost brutal in his refusal,
and as my temper is hung on a hair trigger I found it a diffi-cult
matter to retain my desire to utter a few forceful but
inelegant words and follow them up with a rapid fire argu:-
- .lent with my fists. Luckily for me, a salesman with whom
I had been acquainted, when he and I lived in the CatskiJls,
a considerable number of years ago, greeted me and claimed
my attention for a few moments. I had fully decided to dis-play
the qualities of an animal the great father of aU. had
failed to make-the mule-at the expense of the dealer, and
when I had finished my visit with the salesman I picked up
my suite-case and moved toward the e.ntrance. There was
something in the appearance of the tired and tortured dealer
that dissolved my wrath and aroused my 'sympathy. Per-haps
he had been mac.e unexpectedly the father. of twins, or
had been compelled to take up the note he had endorsed for
a brother-in-law, or had trifled with wheat options or received
a 'touching' appeal from the fool-boy at college. Be the
cause what it may, I SUddenly changed my· plans and greeted
the sufferer pleasantly. I complimented him u'pon the neat
appea.rance, of his slore, the character of his stock, the effec~
tive display of rugs, draperies and upholstery stuff and evinced
a real warm-hearted interest in his welfare. His troubled
look melted away, his nervousness and irritation disappeared,
and when I closed the door on the outside a wave of ap~
proval of my condltd passed gently through my brain. We
became warm friends. He has hought my stuff regularly
since, often placing orders with me for goods he did nOt
need. I have entertained him at my ,home, and shall ever
feel thankful to that undefined something ill the make-up of
every human being that caused me to do the right act when
I was disposed to do a wrong one."
"Say, old man, have a cigar. Cigarettes are too cheap
for a nature like yours," remarked the inexperienced salCs-man.
"Without men of yotU" kind this world wou.ld not be
fit for a gentleman to live in."
Bedroom Without Bed.
A new era in flat construction, in which bedroomless apart~
ments, made possible by the introduction of sanitary disap-pearing
wan beds, is tl1e feature, is about to be launched Upon
its journey of popular acclaim or defeat by a firm of western
flat builders. It is claimed that fiat buildings thus construct-ed
will make two and three room suites serve the purpose of
the old four or five room apartments.
The bed when not in use is folded into a closet or recess,
ventilated and lighted by a window or vent, creating an all-day
sanitary arrangement. The bedding is securely fastened
at the foot of the bed and when shut away for the day the
sheets and comforters hang slightly separted, thus affording
proper sanitation. vVhen not in use the ornamental face of
the be,d presents to the eye a large cheval plate mirror and
mantel place. \iVhen the bed is down, automatically dosing
doors form an apparently solid wal1.--Exehange.
.:f'~ HI prIG 7jN
The New Cure.
\Vhen you're melancholy,
Spiritless and blue
Aud you think your liver's
Gain' back on you;
And you're very certain
That yonr end's near
And yoU have a hunch that
You can't live a year;
When you've taken all the
Patent medicine
That has been invented!
Outward and \vithiul
Try a dose of laughter,
Allopathic size,
Give your constitution
One great big surprise, I
iI
Take it pretty often-vifty
times a day.
Never hear or notice
\-Vhat the cynics say.
Take it before keakfast,
Take it after, too.
Take it while you're eating
If it comes to you.
Keep a good supply right
With you all the while.
It will ease your system
From attacks of bile.
When you see a friend who's
Dismal and morose
Draw 011 your supply ~U1d
Hand him out a dose.
'Tisn't hard to get this
IVledicine a. bit.
YOll don't have to travel
Round and hunt for it.
Doesn't cost a penny-
You can get this boon
From ::1 baby's prattle,
From a lively tune,
From ;i playful kitten,
From a balky mule,
From a pompous statesman or
From a jony foo1.
'Tisn't hard to take this
Cure of which I tell.
Vou have the prescription.
Try it for a spell:
-Roy K. Moulton.
INSIST ON HAVING
Morris Wood a ~ons' ~olid ~Ieel alue Joinl (utlers
for there are no other.". U ju.rt aJ" good."
They cut a clean perfect joint always. Never burn owing
to the GRADUAL CLEARANCE (made this way only
by us), require little grinding, saving time and cutters.
No time wasted setting up and cost no more than other
makes.
Try a pair and be convinced. Catalogue No. 10 and
prices on application.
MORRIS WOOD &. SONS
2714 and 2716 Weet Lal1e St •• CHICAGO. ILL.
MACHINE. I\NIVES
PEItFECT QUALITY PROMPT SERVICE
RIGHT PRICES ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE
Dado or Grooving Heads. Miter MachlDes.
Unlver.al Wood Trlmm.r.,
Boring Machines. Etc.
Morton House
( AmericanPlan) Rate. $2.50 and Up_
Hotel PantJind
(European Plan) Rate. $1.00 and Up.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
The Noon Dinner Served at the Pantlind for 50e is
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.
J. BOYD PANTLlND, Prop.
15
16
ralm6r'S pat6nt Gluino GlamDS
Mr. Manufacturer-Do you everconsiderwhatjoint gluing ooas?
The separators and wooden wedges, if you use lhem and many do, are a
large item of a;pense accounts; but this. is small compared to wage ac-count3
of workmen who wear them oul: with a hammer. and then a
large per cent of the joints afe failures by the -insecurity of this means.
RESULT. it has to be done over again. if l?Ossihle.- -If you me inde-pendent
screw damps the result is better, but .slower, altogether too slow.
Let us leU you of something beltert, PALMER'S CLAMPS. All
fteel and iron. No wedges., no separators, adjust to any width, clamp
instantly yet &eCllrely,releases even faster. Positively one~third more
work with <me-third less help. In seven sizes up to 60 inches, _any
thickDes! ':':E' to 2 inches. 200 fadories convinc~ in 1906. Why not
you in 1907? Although sold by dealers everywhere let us send yOll
particul"". It E. Palmer Ii Sons. Owosso. MiGh.
FOREIGN AGENTS; Proiedile Co.• London. England.
Schuchardt & Schutte. Berlin. Germany_
USE A
MORTON KILN
IT WILL END YOUR
DRY KILN TROUBLES
Does not warp or check lumber.
THE MOST PERFECT MOIST AIR
KILN ON THE MARKET.
TRUCKS, CANVAS DOORS, RECORD-ING
THERMOMETERS and other sup-plies.
Write for catalog H which tells HOW
TO DRY LUMBER.
MORTON DRY KILN CO.
218 LA SALLE ST., CHICACa.
Ready for Your Perusal
Dry Kiln Catalogue
No. 225MA with
New Illustrations,
New Descriptive
Matter, New Com-mendatory
Letters.
Shall We Send It?
AMERICAN BLOWER COMPANY
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
NEW YORK CHICAGO ATLANTA LONDON
~MI9J-IIG7f-N
File Making.
One of the commonest of tools, one most frequently in the
hands of the workman, one which retails for a low price and
yet a tool which involves a great deal of care in selection of
material, in preparation and a high amount of technical skill
in the making.
File.s are usually made of crucible steel. At one titHe the
steel was imported for this purpose, but experience has taught
American manufacturers that American steel is better adapted
for file making at least, than sted purchased from abroad.
The first process is shaping, and rough forms are rolled
o11t, rounding, flattened, rectangular, etc. Netx it is cut in the
Designed by Otto Jiranek, Grand Ra.pids, Mich.
various required lengths. The small pieces afC then forged
into the exact shapes desired. They are thcn known as
"file blanks," as they have on1y smooth surfaces. Here the
blanks are annealed by heating and the softened steel is
ground to make the surface perfectly smooth.
The cutting of the file teeth was formerly done entirely
by hand. The workman used a hardened chisel, and that
method is still followed in ;ol fe'" ,shops in this country and
elsewhere. M.05t of the cutting the United States today,
bo\vever, is done exclusively by machinery. At first there
was a prejudice against machine-cut files, due in part to im-perfect
early machines, but today there is no doubt but that
the machine-cut files arc superior to the hand-made, as the
teeth are more regular and sharper and of more even depth.
After the cutting, the fdes are coated ·with a preparation
which protects them while they are being hardened. This
is absohltely necessary with the Gner files. They are slowly
and carefully raised to a certain heat and then plunged in
brine. All who use files know that while they will break,
they usually bend to a certain degree before snapping, and
this toughness combined with their extreme hardness is due
to the sc.ientific tempering.
After hardening, the teeth are sharpened again, placed in
lime water to prevent rusting, dried and oited.. After a final
inspection the files are ready for shipment and sale.
The,re are almost an infinite variety of files, both ;:LS to
shapes and degrees of fineness, There are two general spe-
17
cies as to cuts-the single cut and the double cut. The single
cut has but one series 01 cuts, all running parallel, and thc
cutting edges arc chisel-like. The double cut files have two
series of cuts, crossing each other and forming pointed teeth.
Rasps differ somewhat from even double cut tiles in that
the tecth are all separate and distinct. They ate designed
to cut very fast and produce fairly uniform work. The ordi-nary
horseshoe rasp has raSp teeth on one side and double cut
teeth on the other. The teeth of rasps are punched.
Factory Tools.
The Henry ROVl:eManufacturing Company 01 Newaygo,
Mich., operate a large plant in the manufacture of tools and
furniture for ·wood ;''1'orking plants; also mouldings, carvings
and kindred goods, Their trucks and cabinet benches are
well built and convenient for use.
ABSOLUTELY NEW
OIL SOLUBLE
MAHOGANY STAIN POWDER
Try our latest and best produc.
tion, a perfectly Oil Soluble Ma-bogany
Stain. For Reddish Stain
order No. C9722,Brownish No. 8701,
to darken either add Black No. 5111.
With these three colors any style of
Mahogany can be produced.
Just the colors for making your
own Oil Stains. Send us a sample
order-you will be surprised with
the results.
WAL TER K. SCHMIDT COMPANY
ANILINE AND WOOD STAINS
84-88 Canal St" Grand Rapids, Mich,
18
I!STABL1SHI!D 1880
PU!lLISHIIlO .Y
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
ON THE 10TH ANO 25TH OF EACH MONTH
OPFICE-2~20 LYON ST•• GRANO RAPIDS, MICH.
ENTEIlED ...a MATTI!.R OF THE 8ECOND 01."118
"American Industries," the organ of the National Associa-tion
of Manufacturers, "makes small objection to the $300,-
000,000 of tariff revenue that went last year into the .g:overn-metIt
treasury, but makes very great objection to the $500,-
000,000 or mOfC that went into the pockets of the favored
few who collected the revenue for their personal or private
gain, with the connivance and approval of congress, on pro-ducts
made within the country." The association demands
"fair and just reciprocity, moderate and ]lOnest protection
and a genuine equalizing revision." A tariff commission is
favored.
°to °to
Upon the authenticity of Benjamin Bosse, president of the
Globe. Furniture Company, the Evansville (Ind.) News claims
"excepting in'the highest grade of work," Evansville "leads
the entire world in the manufacture of furniture," passing
Grand Rapids, and St. Louis, former leadcrs in the furniture
making industdes." As Grand Rapids makcs no furniture
that is not included in the "high grade" classification, the
significance of the boastful statement made by the News is
not apparent. Without question, Evansville leads in its par-ticular
class of production-goods that are in demand every
day.
"t" "to
Manufacturers of machinery and factory equipment were
the first to feel the effects of the panic. Business suddenly
came to a standstill. vVood workers are very careful in the
making of expenditures when trade is dull. There is, how-ever,
a revival in the demand for tools, resulting from im-provement
in the wood working trades, and the tendency is
in the right direction. When capitalists shall learn to con-fme
their operations to legitimate enterprises Wall street will
be deserted by the promoters of visionary ente-rpriscs and ex-ploiters
of worthless securities.
"t" "to
The steady growth of Grand Rapids in, importance as a
furniture market has made apparent the fact ihat additional
hotels are needed. The extension to the Herkimer and the
the addition to the Paintlind now under: construction, will
help some, but will fait to supply the accommodations needed.
Grand Rapids has never failed to respond to the demands of
the furniture trade, and the Artisan feels justified in assur-ing
both tht buyers and selling agents that ample provision
will be made for their care and comfort before the opening of
the coming year.
"to °to
Many of the manufacturers of fine furniture, in the expec-tancy
of a curtailment of the demand for their product!;,
brought out much medium and low priced stock for the cur-rent
season of trade. Naturally, the makers of low and med-ium
priced goods think that their field of exploitation has been
invaded, The market for high priced goods is a narrow one
and when dull times appear the manufacturer is compelled to
take up a line of production that ·is deemed best to keep his
wheels in motion.
A considerable number of buyers for prominent retail
houses are members of the sect known as Christian Scien-tists.
During their stay in Grand Rapids they were regular
attendants upon services in the Science church and by their
optimism created an air of cheerfulness and confidence in the
market that was greatly needed. The sect is the organized
enemy of panic.
°to or
A few years ago the Mexicans purchased their furniture
in France and Germany. Through the. efforts of the "ad-vance
agents of commerce," that trade has been diverted
largely to the United States. The Mexicans recognize the
superiority of the American products and besides the advan-tages
gained by placing orders nearer home. are considerable.
"to °to
T. AShley Dent, the president of the E. A. Simonds Chair
Company, says the manufacturers will cut no more goods
than thc retailers require; that they will not accumulate
stock in the hope that it may be needed some time. General-ly
speaking, the manufacturers are well prepared to wait for
trade, if necessary.
"to "to
The retail furniture trade has pulled the buckle of its belt
up another notch and placed many orders for goods. Panic
or no panic, 'lection or no 'tection, the trade is out for busi-ness'
and nothing can stop it.
°to °t"
If trade shall be moderate the manufacturers will be en-abled
to fill all orders and the greatly abused commission
salesman will realize something for his work and expenses.
"Oh, that will be joyful"
"to °to
The manufacturer who has an established trade abroad is
"saying nothing to nobody" just at present. The cud of
COJltentrnent 1s sweet.
°to
A material int:rease in the
follow the Thaw trial.
of the currency should
"t" °to
Money flies faster than time when business is active.
A Scheme That Failed.
In October last; Kragen, who conducted a department
store in San Francisco, announced that he would add a fut H
niture sect.ion and invited manufacturers quite generally to
·ship goods at once to the total amount of $100,000 and date
the, bills Maq::h 1 of the current year. The manufacturers
were quite busy at the time, and Kragen's proposition did not
look good from any point of the compass or from an aerial
car. Kragell was rated at $150,000 with a stock valued at
the same amount, and ha.d overhangings that caused the dis-creet
man to pause -and polish the left side of his· nose with
his index finger. The goods required were not Shipped, ana
Kragen's furniture se,ction looked as dull and uninteresting
as the remains of a Dutch lunch. Recently the news of
Kragen's failure was flashed over the wires, and the wise lUl-niture
makers are thanking their stars for their good fortune.
"No-Never!"
"We never cut prices. \iVhen we put a figure upon an ar-ticlc,
i~ remains ~till a sale has been made. We would rather
keep the goods than sell at cut prices," remarked a promi-nent,
wealthy, intelligent, cultured and successful manufac-turer.
Six weeks later the representative of the aforc!'iaid
p., w., i., c. and s. m. called upon a buyer in Chicago and
offered a large number of "left overs" for fifty off. A sale
was made. Evidently the salesman was not famjJiar with
the policy of his employer and was severely reprimanded
Upon his return to "the house."
Importance of Color Combinations in Furnishings.
The question of color in upholstery is an important one.
It docs not always receivc the attention it should to make it
harmonious and suitable to its surroundings. Combinatiolls of
colors may bc eithcr pretty or ngly, according to the. variol1s
shades used. l~cd and green in the right shades combine well,
hut woe nnto the mall who fails to combine the right ones.
No color can, taken :ndividually, be called either pretty or
ugly. The dullest mud-color, if in its rig-ht place, is charm-ing,
and the most delicate mauve, if in the wrong vlace, hid-
\eons.
Dirt has heeu ddined as matter in the ,vrong place. No
one while digging among his flower beds would call the rich
.nol1ld ;;dirt," hut if he proceeds to wipe. his spade with his
pocket-handkerchief, he wilt certainly "dirty" it. In the same
19
ious combinations of the primary and secondary colors. Do
the golden hlossoms of the ragwort or the blue bells of the
wild hyacinth not harmonize ,,,,ith their respective green' foli-age?
Arc the orange orchards of the south, or the mingled
blue, green and gold of the peacock's plumage unpleasant to
the eye? And yet these combinations of color violate the
rules lair! down by theorists.
The t!"LIth;:lppears to be that in color there are various
sea les of intensity and .stn~l1gth. If the keynote, or, in other
wo;-(ls, the most decided color in a room, be strong and vivid,
you will have to carry ont the entire furnishings on the same
scale. The state apartments at vVindsor castle are astrik-ing
example of this fact. They are done in hright colors. The
rooms Queen Victoria formerly used are furnished in rose
brocade and have wall coverings and curtains to match. The
Nos, 108, 110 and 112 North Division St., Grand Rapids,
Nev..· Home of the \Vbite Printing Company, the ~iehigan Engraving Company and the Michigan ATtisall Company,
Erected by the White Printing Company 1907.
'..a..y, when in a picture we speak of a color being ugly or
dirty, all we mean i!-ithat it appears so with reference to its
surroundings. Take the snmc color and put it in a more
harmonious setting 8nd it will appear all right.
VI-·'eare told by scie11til'1cwriters on color that the pri-maries
(red, yellow and blue) harmonize ..v.ith their secon-daries,
viz: Red with green, yellow with purple, and blue
with orange. This is no doubt true in it general way, but it
is by no means illYariably true. Any color ,..,ill, under cer-tain
conditions, hanno11i;;;e "..i..th any othcr, provided they arc
of the proper shade, and thc setting and background are suit-able.
On the other hand the wrong combination can be
painfully discordant,
The truth is that color cannot be subjected to theoretie81
rules, The. only safe book for the student to consult is the
Book of Natttre. He will there [1l1dno limit to the har111on-effect
is rather bright, especially to one who likes quiet
shades, but for the purpose used they are not out of place.
It is far easier to combine quiet colors harmoniously. The
reason is that faults of color are less conspicuous in a dull
toned room than in a brilliantly colored one, For rooms
ordinarily u!-iedquiet colors are much more pleasing, less con-spicuous,
and do not become tiresome. Such colors as gray,
dull blues, bluish greens' and browns are never tiresome,
For drawing rooms and reception room!-i where furnish-ings
can be elaborate and where spaces are large, bright col-ors
can be used properly combined and will give the right
effect without appearing garish to the. se.nses. Harmony in
all the, furnishings, ",7a11s,curtains, furniture and floor cover-ings
give the beholder a sense of pleasure and delight. "lJu
Barry" rooms arc beautiful· and never jarring. Many others
could be mentioned as well.
20 ·J'~MI9pIG7(N
This space reserved for THE '{OYAl VARNISH COMPANY, Toledo, Ohio .
The Gra.nd Rapids Furniture Exposition.
A local newspaper of Grand Rapids of recent date contains
a lengthy article, well illustrated, on the subject of the Grand
Rapids Furniture Exposition. A part of the article, of gen-eral
interest, follows:
The exposition feature of the furniture business started in
Grand Rapids along in the late 70's, when buyers from all
over the country began coming to this market to look over the
lines of the local manufacturers and to contract with them
for furniture from special designs they brought with them.
In those days the manufacturers had no warerooms, the var-ious
pieces of furniture being scattered throughout the shops
in process of cbnstruction, part in one portion of the factory,
other parts in different sections of the plant, as facilities for
work demanded. The buyers were mainly practical men,
however, and producers and distributors usually managed to
get together most satisfactorily.
Ruycrs finally began coming in such numbers that the
manufacturers saw the advisability of setting aside part of
their establishments as display rooms, wherein were as--
sembled groups of their output. These were mostly shown
in the unfinished state~in the white, in the trade sense, with
just enough finished goods to show their capabilitieJ in this
line. Gradually they provided themselves with suitable ware-rooms
and added largely to their original tines. The con-tract
feature became eliminated in a large measure, not ap-pealing
to the manufacturers, for the reaSOn that they were
subjected to too. strenuous a competition, the buyers induc-ing
as many bidders as possible to figure on the work.
To tJlis feature of contract work. however, Grand Rapids'
early furniture manufacturers do not deny that they owe
much of their early success. The Sligh Furniture Company,
fc,r instance, win have no hesitancy iil telling you what a boost
they got when t1~eylanded a heavy con.tract from John Hand,
buyer for George C. Flint & Co. of New York. The elimina-tion
of this feature was merely a natural growth of the busl-nes's,
the manufacturers seeing the advantage 01 employlllb
expert designers and so covering the field of manufacture that
every dcrrand of the trade might be met.
The year 1880 found Grand Rapids with fourteen furniture
factories. During and immediately 'following this time ther:e
was a rapid increase both in the number of factories and the
output of -the old ones. This increase and improvement in
the number of lines had its natural effect, bringing additional
buyers, who now began coming in large numbers.
And from this fact that the buyers came here and. made
the bulk of their purchases for the season, manufacturers of
other lines elsewhere realized that to gt in touch with furlll-ture
buyers during the selling season it was necessary to bring
.their wares to this market. And in this realization was the
inception of the permanent furniture expositlon bere on a
large scale.
.
So for a time when furniture buyers came here to inspect
the warcs of the local factories they met also representatives
of factories outside the city who exhibited to them photogra-phic
reproductions of their lines of goods. But the system
of selling' through the ~'~dium of photographs proved most
unsatisfactory. Rarely does the trade photo do absolute jus-
Designed 'by Otto Jiranek. Grand Rapids, Mich.
tice to its SUbject, and ·especiallyis this true as regards piece.s
of furniture. The cheap piece of workmanshiv was frequent-ly
made to look most desirable, while others of superior ex-cellence
were belittled.
So the wise buyers proved lUkew.arm to photographs, af-firming
that they came here to see goods and 110tphotographs,
which they could stay at home and see in their offices at any
time. Though millions of dollars' worth of furniture are
still sold through the agency of pictures, the buyer who has
21
Henry Rowe Mfg. Company
Newaygo. Mich.
MANUFACTURERS OF
Wood workers' Benches.
Factory Trucks. Turnings.
Dowels. etc. Jl Jl Jl
No.1 Cabinet Makers' Bench.
No 1 Facton Truck. Just as ijood as they look.
OUR NEW CATALOG TELLS ALL ABOUT THEM.
the opportunity offered him will invariably make his selec-tions
from the manufactured samples in preference.
The 6rst mall to realize this changed condition was Fred
D. Hills, who is in the city today exhibiting at the \Villiam A.
Berkey Furniture Company's factory sales rooms that firm's
line of fancy cabinet \vork <lEd the samples of the Marble &
Shattuck Chair Company of CleveJand, Ohio, It was in
1883 that Mr, Hills introduced the innovation here of placing
on exhibition a line of outside samples. In the rotund;,
of the ldorton H nusc he installed a line of samples of the
Kew York chair firm he represented at the time. Others
were quick to follow his example. Shortly after this E. B.
Caldwell, representing the Connersville (Ind.) Furniture COIll-pany,
brought a line of chamber suites, ::-Indabout the same
time the Muskegon Valley Furniture Company sent samples
here for the inspection of the visiting hosts of furniture buy-ers.
The three named \vere the pioneers of tile outside ex-hibitors.
Of course there were no exposition buildings at that time,
and the lines of the outside Inanufacturers were shown ill
vacant stores wherever they could bc, found. So few of these
were available, however, that recourse was had to rooms in
the upper floo s of blocks about the city. On the completion
of the Blodgett block, about 1884, it was fOUllel admirably
adapted for display rooms of the kind required by the manu-factories,
practically all the space in the building was pre-empted
for the purpose, the only use to which it is put to
this Jay.
P. J, Klingman \vas really the first to make a great ex-hibit
of outside goods., and has been a leading spirit in the
furniture exposition ever sillce. As the number of otttside
exhibitors increased, the Pythian Temple, now the Ashton
building, and the Masonic Temple were pressed into service.
But with each recurring show the demand for space increased,
owing to added exhibits and enlargement of the lines repre-sented,
so that the erection of new buildings uevoted to the
purpose became necessary.
The &rst erected to meet this demand was the Waters
building, the largest in the world devoted to furniture exposi-tion
purposes. This building, with its seven acres of floor
space, is under the control of P. 1. Klingman, the lesset:,
and is distinctly his individual enterprise, thougll contribut-ing
its share to the welfare of the furniture communuy.
A close secund in size is the new Furniture Manufacturers'
building, with five acres of floor space. This building is
maintained on a co-operative basis, and space in it is ob-tained
only by taking stock in the building company, that be-ing
one of the cunditions of securing the right to exhibit
goods in the building. The Blodgett block, which affords
8. bout four acres of show room, is a private enterpl 1
by the Blodgett estate, of which C. J. Van Etten is the rep-resentative.
But in sveaking of the exposition buildings of Grand Rap-ids
we mllst~'not overlook the factory warerooms, which are
no,v very large and admirably adapted to display purposes.
The factories are the backbone of Grand Rapids' furniture ex-position,
the goods displayed in their warerooms the magnet
(Continued on Page 24.)
The Universal Automatic
cARVINa MACHINE
==== 'PERFORMS THE WORK OF ====
25 HAND
CARVERS
And do~ tile Work BeUer than it can be Done by Hand
___ -'- MADE BY
Indianapoli., Indiaft.
Write fOr Inlormation. PricM Etc.
22
STOP AT NIAGARA fAllS
on your way to New York or Philadelphia via
·GRANDTRUNK-LEUIGU VALLEY
DOUBLE TRACK ROUTE
New Coaches. Most Modern Pullman sleeping cars. Black
Diamond Express new throughout. Lowest Fares.
Inquire of C. A. Justin, Passenger Agent, new Grand Trunk
Station on Bridge St. near corner of Canal, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Prize Puzzle
Find the Location of' the WHITE PRINT/NO COMPANY·
.
If You Cannot Find It Phone 5580 (Long or Short Distance)
ORAND RAPIDS, MICHIOAN
FOR PARTICUL.ARS OAL.L. AT OFFIOE
--- ------------
24 ·~"MI9HIG7JN
Economy in TallIe Leg Turning
Cannot be aCCQmpllshed when the wark is doDe by hauch IlQYis illlU1ch better to ute an
old fallhionecl. Leg T urnin$r MaebiDe that leaves the work in such wlIi'b condition that it
requires fumhil1il by hand,
Tlte MATTISON No.5 TABLE LEG MACHINE
nol only produces the better Quality of work which is mOO!:euential. hut it also has the
capacily 10 111(.1]out the qllanlity necessary 10 JJllIl:e jt economical.
The Heart of the Macbine·ia the CUlter~Head, and if )'ou will malte a comparison
you cannot fail to see that it is far ahead of any competitor on thit point. Then comes
the Oscillating Carriqe ""hieh feed!, the WOflr. steadier and with 1_ dfort than any
other arrangement; next die Variahle melion feed whida has proven without an equal
for the pUrpose. There are also othet 200d fealW'eS and we would like an opportuoity
of 6.p]aiDi~ them all in detail Our lalie circular woo't C<Ift you anytmDlE aod it
ma)' prove worth a good deal.
Why not write for it today?
C. MATTISON MACHINE WORKS
863FlfTH STREET. BELOJT, W1SCONSIN. U. s.. A.
(Continued from Page 21.)
that attracts the buyers hither. _ So in considering the furni-ture
exposition as an abstract prop~;sition let us not los\,;
sight of the fact that the furniture factories are the primal
cause of it alL The splendid exhibition buildings in the heart
of the city obtrude themselves on our notice, but in different
directions toward the outskirts of the town arc tl1e factories
where Grand Rapids' world famous furniture is made and
where the finished, product is shown to the men who come
from far and tlear to stock their stores w.ith the best .and lat-est
the market affords.
Even ,"vith these facilities in the way of suitable buildings,
the space is inadequate to the demand. The new Auditorium
building, now nearing completion, will do much to relieve the
congestion, as about 75,000 square feet additional floor space
will be available when the furniture men again gather here
next July.
Two local furniture manufacturers' associations are direct-ly
interested in the exposition: The Trade Mark ASSOCiation,
which is limited in its membership, and the Grand Rapids
Furniture 1vlanufacturers' Association, which embraces all
the local manufacturers.
During these two months, January and July of cach year,
Grand Rapids is the Mecca of exhibitors and dealers in furni-ture
who have to figure on the wants of thcir customers.
This hegira brings to the city at each recurring exposition
several hundreds of .the country's most representative business
men.
Both buyers and salesmen are of the highest type of suc-cessful
husiness men. The buyers, who arc either members
of the firms or their representatives, stand for the best there
is in the fl1rniture business, and give orders for millions of
dollars' worth of goods to be deliv'ered them as the result of
their visit to the great furniture mart. The salesmen must
naturally be high class men, as the average successful busi-ness
man of today is so much of a specialist that he is loath
to devote much time to a man below his own grade of men-tality.
In other words, he simply won't ao business with a
"dub." Following the inevitable principle of the survival
of the fittest, the furniture salesman of today is a man of high
intelligence, keen perceptions and good principles. Were he
not possessed of all these qualifications he would be crushed
between the upper and nether millstones of keen competition,
and soon be relegated to the discard as a furniture has-been.
The salesmen, naturally, spend the entire month here, as
there are buyers looking over the market every day. The
latter will not tarry so long, nor as long as they used to some
years ago. Those who have large orders to place are usu-ally
here from a week to ten days, instead of ten days to two
weeks, as in the early, more scattered days of the exposition.
During this time they see everything in the market they care
to look at, making copious memoranda and keeping continuah
ly in mind the wants and characteristics of their customers.
The keen buyer knows of every prospective customer, what
he would be likely to want and how much he is willing to pay.
So, having looked over the market thoroughly, he goes into
executive session by himself in the privacy of his room at the
hotel, consults his memoranda, and after due deliberation
Designed by Otto Jiranek. Grand Rapids, Mich.
places his orders for the. many thousa.nds worth with the fa-vored
ones of the many he has had on the anxious seat, set-tles
his hotel bill and takes the train for his home city.
Some aspersions have been made· anent the habits of the
visiting buyers. They have been variously accused of such
crimes as excessive conviviality and undue hilarity. But no
large gathering in any city is exempt from such criticism, un-less
it is a ministerial conference or an assembly of the Ep-worth
League. Such reports are groundless. The fU1"niture
25
C. C. Wormer Machinery Co. offer the following at Bargain Prices:
Band Saw, 26" CresCfJnt
Band Saw, 26" :I<'rank
Band Saw, 32" Crc!lcent
Band Saw, 33" Fay & EJ;an
Hlfnd Slat Tena.uer, self feed
Boring l\lllcbine, 72" Andrews, a-spindle
Boring Machine, Clement Harz
Boring l\laehine, No. I Double spindle, radial
IJQciug Mtwhil;u:~, ,3-lSplndle, horizontal
Chatr Bending Press, Swartz
Cut-Off Saw, No.1, Roller CarE'iage
Edging Saw Table, 36x 18 feet
Faat Power .!\titre l\laehine
FUl'Tliture Makers' Saw, Double Cot-Oft'
Jointer, 12" Crc!I('cot. 4-sided head
Jointer, 18" Crel>t'cnt. 4-sided head
LaUson Chamfer Cotter
l\lonlder, 4_side. 7", Fay & Egan
Mouldel', i-side, 10", Fay &; Egan
l'laner No.2, Fay & EgUDCentennial, 2( x 6"
PI..1.oer, Single Cylinder, Holmes, 24 x 5"
Pluner, Single Cylindel:', Fay &I Egan, ::0 x 6"
Planer and Matcher, J. A. Fa,y, 24x4".
matchel!l l·r'
Planet', Single Cylinder, Frank, 26 x 8"
Planer, Single C~'Under, Rowley & H., ~6 x 8"
Parks' Woodworker, Combined l\lachine
Rod Pin and Dowel B-Iachine, No.2, Smith
Rod and }}(lweI Machine, No.2, Egan
Sander! Young's New Edge, iron fraDle
Saw Table, 33 x 60", iron frame
Saw Table, 48 x 150". Rip and Cut-Oft"
Scroll Saw, ll'9n frame, wood top, Cordesman
Saw Table, No.2, Cl'el!lcent COl11blnation
Sa.w Bench, Colbnl'D UniverJ;lBl
ShalMr, Double Spindle, Fay & Egan No. 8b
Shawver Twist l\Jaebine, 10" swing
8~'inA"saw, 6% feet, Crescent
TenoDer. Double Head, Smith
Tire Bend, Hand and Power
Variety Saw, No.1. Fay &; Egan
lVood J,aihe, 16"; Cabinet MakerB'
Wood Lathe, 20"; Cabinet Makers'
lVood Lathe, 20"; Porter Pattel'D :Makers'
Wood Lathe, 24"; Pattel'D Maker!!'
'Wood Lathe, Tevor Automatic
PRICE A.J..Y{) FULL I}E'l'A1L ON APPLiCATION. -
C. C. WORMER MACHINERY COMPANY, 98 Woodbridge St., Detroit, Michigan.
men, both salesmen and buyers, are as exemplary in their
habits as any body of men, equal in number, that you could
bring together, and more so than most. Today many of
them will help you make up the congregations of our city
churches, for a good citizen at home is alw'ays a good citi-zen
away froTtt home. On the other hand, a few of them
will doubtless fnreg·ather ill 50me of the hotel rooms and di-vert
themselves with the fascination of draw poker, for ,this
is a closed town, with an impenetrable lid and there is little
doing Sundays.
An idea of the magnitude of the exposition is furnished
in the following list of exhibitor!'.:
Barber Brothers
Berkey & Gay Furniture Co.
Wm. A. Berkey Furniture
Co.
Bissell Carpet S\veeper Co.
Burnett & Van Oeveren Fur-niture
Co.
Cabinetmakers Co.
Century Furniture Co.
Crisswelt-Keppler Co.
Fritz & Goelde1 Mfg. Co.
Grand Rapids Cabinet· Furni-ture
Co.
Grand Rapids Chair Co.
Grand Rapids Clock & Man-tel
Co.
Grand Rapids Fancy Furni-ture
Co.
Grand Rapids Furniture Co.
Grand Rapids Refrigerator
Co.
Grand Rapids Upholstering
Co.
Charles A. Greenman Co.
Gunn Furniture Co.
Hctte.rscheid ManUfctctllring
Co.
Hot Blast Feather Co.
Imperial Furniture Co.
I. X. L. UphQlstering Co.
Kelley & Extroll1
Leonard ~lanufacturillg Co.
Charles P. Limbert Co.
Luce Furniture Co.
Luxury Chair Co.
Fred Macey Co,
rVIichigan Barrel Co.
:Micbigan Chalr Co.
Michigan Desk Co.
Michigan Seating Co.
~1ueller & Slack Co.
Nelson-Matter Furniture Co.
Oriel Cabinet Co.
Overton Co. e. S. Paine Co.
Phoenix Furniture Co.
Practical Sewing Cabinet Co.
John D. Raab Chair Co.
Retting Furniture Co.
Royal Furniture Co.
Ryan Rattan Chair Co.
Shelton & Snyder Furn-iture
Co.
Sligh Furniture Co.
Steel Furniture Co.
Stickley Brothers Co.
Stow & Davis Furniture Co.
Sweet & Biggs Funliturc Co.
Valley City Desk Co.
David Van Blerkom Co.
\-Vagernaker Furniture Co.
vVelch Folding Bed Co.
\Viddicomb Furniture Co.
John \Viddicomb Co.
Shank & Shelton
Corunna Furniture Co.
Atlas FUfl1iture Co.
Skinner & Steenman Co.
B. L. ]'vlarble Chair Co.
Grohhiser & Crosby Furni-ture
Co.
Carrollton Furniture Co.
Lucc-Hcdmond Furnitur(: Co.
Holland Furniture Co.
F. Schloss & Co.
Empire Furniture Co.
Marvel Furniture Co.
Ohio Brass & Iron Bed Cn.
Grand Rapids Cabinet Co.
Anchor Furniture Co.
Kurtz Brass Bed Co.
Gunlocke Chair Co.
U. S. Chair Co.
Buffalo Chair Co.
Bison City Table Co.
K. P. 1.. Furniture Co.
Eagerstmvll Furniture Co.
Hee1man Cabinet Co.
~v1addox Table Co.
Rockford Cabinet Co.
Shearman Brothers Co.
J\fuskegon Valley FUfnituft.
Co.
1\.loon Desk Co.
L. & J. G. Stickley
Toledo Upholstering Co.
Binghamton Chair Co.
vVest End Furniture Co.
Cochran Chair Co.
Crawford Chair Co.
B. T. Owen Co.
St. J ohn8 Table Co.
Ottawa Furniture Co.
Imperial Chair Co.
Charlotte Manufacturing Co.
Verity-Caswell Table Co.
Hastings Cabinet Co. e. L Russell & Sons
'AT ells-Shidler Manufacturing
Co.
F. H. Conant's Sons
Union Furniture Co.
Grand Rapids Bookcase Co.
Black River Bending Co.
Booth Furniture Co.
Stebbins-\Vilhe1m Manufac-turing
Co.
Charles Emmerich & Co.
F. M. Curtis Co.
Coats Manufacturing Co.
Randolph Furniture \,Vorks
Taylor Chair Co.
\'fv~, B. Brown Cu.
Aurora Furniture Co.
American Furniture Co.
Wait Furniture Co.
Rus6c Hickory Furniture C(•.
Sinclair-Allen J\lanufaeturing
Co.
Bajnes-~{osier Co.
Chase City Furniture Co.
Steinfeld Brothers
United States Furniture Co.
Smith Metal Bed Co.
S. G. Estabrook & Co.
Northern Furniture Co.
Rockford Frame & Fixture
Co.
l. A. Glanton
Austrian Bent.vood Furniture
Co.
Cutler Desk Co.
1\-1ahe.rBrothers
Long Furniture Co.
Shelbyville vVardrobe l\lanu-facturing
Co.
Forest Furniture Co.
The Willowcraft Shops
Jamestown Lounge Co.
Hubhard, Eldredge & Miller
i'oJ:iller Cabinet Co.
Youngsville Manufacturing
Co.
"rarren Table \Vorks.
Parkersbmg Chair Co.
Orinoco Furniture Co.
Elgill A. Simonds Co.
\Voodard Furniture Co.
Ramseur Furniture Co.
Capital Furniture Co.
Boatwright Furniture Ivlann-facturing
Co.
Penn Furniture Co.
Knaus Brothers & Arwine
Co.
Prairie Grass Furniture· Co.
Hastings Table Co.
Greensboro Furniture Co.
Udell \Vorks
Royal Chair Co.
Detroit Cabinet Co.
Sprague-Smith Co.
Sargent ::VIanufacturing Co. e. H. Haberkorn & Co.
American Chair Co.
Cron-Kills Co.
L. C. & W. L. Cron Co.
Josiah Partridge & Sons
Lewisburg Chair Co.
Steinman & Meyer Furniture
Co.
Fanner Manufacturing Co.
Olbrich & Colbeck Co.
Fox & Mason Furniture Co.
The Bailey-Jones Co.
Standard Furniture Co.
Barnard & Simonds Co.
Rockford Chair & Furniture
Co.
Glenn K. Brown
Liberty Furniturc Co.
Himebaugh Brothers.
Alliance Furniture Co.
Kent Furniture Co.
Kent-Coffey Furniture Co.
A. D. Fischer Co.
H. C. Dexter Chair Co.
Phoenix Manufacturing Co.
Kenton Manufacturing Co.
Conewango Furniture Co.
E. Lauter Co.
Grand Ledge Chair Co.
Valley City Dc!'.k Co.
Forest City Bedstead Co.
Shelley & Ahl Co. e. D. \ViJman Co.
E. T. Burrowes Co.
Harper Furniture Co,
National Furniture Co.
Galax Furniture Co.
Mocksville Chair Co.
Basic Furniture Co.
Virginia Table Works
Conners\'ille Furniture Co.
Conrey & Birely Table Co.
Conrey-Davis Manufacturing
Co. e. H. Campbell Furniture Co.
D. 1.. Conrey Furniture Co.
The Hawks Furniture Co.
Camden Cabinet Co,
e. Hennecke Co.
Stearns & Foster Co.
Herschede Hall' Clock Co.
John Danner Manufacturing
Co.
Ge.orge HUllzinger & Sons
Jamestown Table Co.
Leopold Desk Co.
--- -----
26
Cosmopolitan Apartment.
We, are living up in Harlem in an ext<asweUishflat
That's nothing if it's not High Art, and you can bet on that!
For the hall. is trimmed in figures, Egyptian, in relief,
And the front door's Grecian columns wear the big acanthus
leaf.
There's a dome above the doorway-very stylish-Roman-esquc!
Looking, too, a little Moorish, for the carvings are grotesque!
But the door itselLswings open to a Renaissance ideal
And the bells, set with mosaics, make a ,Byzantine appeal.
Katie, says the Watteau subjects in the panels arc a dream;
\Vith the Flemish woodwork, really, they do make a noble
scheme!
Stained glass windows, set at random, lend a solemn Gothic
air
And electric shades in crystal show Venetian feeling rare.-
Iran's rugs and Turkey's carpets carelessly about are strewn;
Antique chairs from Spain and China with the symphony at-tune.
Proud we are of all this grandeur, but the landlord's call last
night
Was the single factor needed to touch off the picture right.
Atmosphere Italian dazzled from his tie-a radiant bow-'-
As he glanc.ed at our Pcnate.s-they are modest things we
knowl
"You prefer," I questioned gayly, "Higher Art-things richer
done?"
Signor Zetti smiled so sweetl)': "High-a-Art! Ees dat da
mon?" -ELAINE DARLING.
THE DESIGNER DREAMED.
Ancient Furniture Asks- an Opportunity to Show What it
Might Do _in -Beautifying Modern Homes.
The president of the Boughton Furniture Company took
his des-igner qut to dinner, one evening not long ago, and
backed him up_in a far corner of the restaurant, where no one
would be likely to hear what he said to him.
"We're running in a rut," began the president. "We've
got to have something new. We have now reached that
stage where we have to just give our product away in order
to get rid of it. I wish you'd think the matter over between
now and morning, and'let me know what you can do."
The designer had heard something of the like before, 50
he nodded, as a humble designer should when in the presence
of the big man of the company, and attacked a seven-course
dinner and a wine list that didn't look at all like financial de-pression.
The president talked a lot about new styles, but he' had
110thing to suggest. Anyway, that was what designers were
paid for, to get up things that would draw trade. After
dinner he lit a larg"e black cigar and went home, graciously
allowing the designer twelve hours in which to get something
that would be worth half a million good round dollars to the
Boughton Furniture Company.
The. designer went to his furnished room, pounded on the
radiator for the janitor to send up more caloric, and sat down,
wrappe<l in his overcoat to consider the matter.
"I'm blessed if' I have an idea in my noddle," mused the
designer, only he. didn't say blessed. "I've worked every
brain cell to the limit now. Think I'll ask the superintendent
for a job runlling a cut-off saw."
"Before you do anything desperate, like working for your
weekly stipend; suppose you give me a charice at drawinls
trade and ofllamenting homes."
The voice was low and silvery, and was accompanied by
the sound of something sliding over the carpet. The design-er
sat up and looked around the room.
Before him stood a queer-looking mediaeval seat, evidently
of Italian make, for it was splendid with paint and gilt. The
voice seeined to come from a bronze image set in the back.
The designer remembered having seen somthing like it in a
museum somewhere, only the one he had seen hadn't po's-sessed
the gift of spech.
"If you want something new, take me," continued the seat,
making a strange grin with its bronze mouth. fiI'm old
enough to be new, like some. of the jokes you see in the news-papers.
Get onto my shape, will you."
"I need a design for a chair, all right," said tbe designer,
"but I hardly think you'd fill the bill. You might answer for
a lawn seat, only your paint would wash off wItb the first
rain. The ancients made a mess of it when they put you ot!
the market. Besides, no drummer would take you out, fOl
you'd want to talk when he. was trying to hypnotize the
country merchant."
"You want something that will sell for three-ninety a
dozen, I presume," sneered the Inediaeval piece. "I lived in
a palace in Venice, and I've seen better men than you sent to
the embrace of the iron maiden. I'd like the opportunity to
bring a little culture into your pine towns, but I guess I'm too
elaborate for you. You look about as intelligent as a sau-sage."
The designer picked up a shoe to throw at the impertinent
visitor from mediaeval times, but there was a wrinkling of
the bronze face, and then there was nothing to throw the shoe
at.
<iRather cheeky for a Dago," mused the designer. "I'd be
thrown out bodily if 1 suggested anything like that to old
Boughton. Helli)! Where did you come from?"
Again the designer sat up and took notice. Before him
stood one of the quaintest objects he had ever seen outside
of a curiosity shop. It was a carved oak bedstead.
'IYou're Northern Europe, alt right, just after the flood!"
cried the designer. ~'lwonder how you got out? You'd
look well in one of those little houses that we furnish com-plete
for an even hundred! Run-along!"
But the bedstead didn't run along. It remamed to dom-inate
the room. It seen:ed that the ceiling haa been lifte<l
to give it space. Jt was large enough to nest a nerd of elt-phants.
The frame was of carved oak, square and 'heavy.
Carved posts ascended into the air and upon them rested a
huge "tester" of paneled wood.
"Why don't you give me a chance?" demanded the bed-stead,
speaking from the center of the carved headboard
"How do ·you know that it isn't time for me to come out
Ol.gain?" We old feHows come out about so often, yolt
know,"
You look like an ark," said the designer. "You'd be all
right in a lumber camp on a rainy day. How would you like
to come down to the shop and be sliced up into four dozen
chiffoniers? We'd have to buy a railroad and a haH~mile
right of way to deliver you to the trade in that form. I
want something modern and cheap."
"You want something 'cheap, all right," sneered the bed-stead.
"Your brass bedsteads look like nine cents compared
with me. I've sheltered kings beneath my canopy, and I've
heard the dreams of statesmen. You go make a hemlock
bedstead."
The designer was getting nervous. He launched his shoe,
which he had been holding ill his hand, at the Old-timer and
saw it whiz through the empty air and smash a mirror hang-ing
on the wall.
'IThat must have been a Scot," he mused. "J think I can
smell heather! I wonder what's coming off here tonight r
There! Now you run right away, little one!"
The little one was a Renaissance cabinet, standing there
by the radiator! It was constructed in the shape-of a temple,
27
Wood Bar Clamp fixtures Per Set 50c. OVER 15,000 OF OUR Price $2.80 to $4.00
STEEl RACK VISES IN USE
and the open dun-vcrs showed 111~ny secret biding places. It
possessed a 5ixteel1th~centllry elegance of detail which rather
pleased the designer.
I ,.' hen you get enough 0Cthese cheap. imitations," said the
cabinet, " sllppose you give Ihiea tr,ial? I'd make a hit with
the wise guys "who are taking "thcii- money out of the banks
and placing it in hiding, eh? Observe these secret drawers.
These magnificent panels. Chippendale wasn't in it witb
the man that made me !"
"Y Oll talk too much slang for a sixteenth-celltury product,"
said the designer. ...Y. ou go away back and kc,ep still. I'd
like to send a train-load oi you into the conr counHy-notl
Old Boughton would have a fit at sight ot you."
"Go ahead and design a pine "washboard," exclaimed the
cabinet. "Yo1['rc about that size, I take it." l've--"
"Oh, I know all about that," interrupted the designer.
"You've concealed the love letters of princesses horn the
coarse knight clad in stove pipe! Get out 1-'-'
The cabinet vanisbed, and in jtsplace came a table v(~-
neered with brass, ebony, and tortoise shell. It "vas heavy
and clumsy of frame, <:Iud looked like a river alligator orna-mented
with shining me,dals.
"1 think I have seen you bcforc/' said tI-)(~ designer, "vith-out
waiting for the uSlIal introduction ano. offer of service.
"YOll're seventeenth century, and you were made by one
Andre Charles Boule, who had tJle contract for furuishillg
the palace of the king ;:\t Versailles. I don't think much of
you, ,,,ith your clumsy old tlgure and yOllr lah-de-dah decora-tions,
but you rep,resellt your period, all right. You look
to me like a till scarecruw, but the people. of yonI' timc wer,c
a lot of sillies \vbo ,thought more of decorations than of any-thing
else. Anyvvay, YOll and all the otlWJS rcpl'csent a dis-tincti,'
e period, which is more tban our modem furniture does
\Ve copy and conglomerate and shift about until we have no
set styles of our own."
"That's ni<:.e talk from a desig-l1cr," quoth the table.
"\iVhy dOlJ't you get up something [me of your OWll, then?
If you've got to go back to the brains of theirs, why, just
take me. 1'11 cut a dash in society, I promise you. Come,
now!"
The designer 1111rled the shoe at the table and knocked off
a bit of veneering.
"'You go and talk to old Boughton about getting" lip
something distinctive," he rOared. "I'd like to represent the
twcntieth century, all right, btlt I've got to eanl my sen~l1
tcnts a week. )iow, you bun:p away, or I'll g-et up to you."
The tahle walked over and took th{~ designer by the neck.
The bedstead came back and sat clown On his seven-Course
dinner. The Italian scat butted him like a goat, while the
Renaissance cabinet dr(:'w out a polished panel anel biffed
him on the C;lf. Then the designer awoke.
He was lying on the floor, the chair in which he had been
sitting on the top of his diaphral11. T11crc \vasn't lllueh thl'
look of an Eng;lish g-lade or il Vcrsilil1c." parlor in his fur-
JJished room. He erept shivcringly into bed.
"It 'vas that confounded dillllc,rl" he. thought. "I wonder
.,vhat set all the old-time styles off all a tangent tonight?
TIH:y'r,e right about aile thing, though. 'Ve -won't have allY
lw('_ntieth celltury classics to show if we don't take, a brace.
I
'---
25 doz. Clamp Fixtures bought
by one mill last year, We ship
on approval to rated firms, and
guarantee our goods uncondi-tionallv,
lVrife for list Of
Steet Bar Ola'mps, Vises, EMiCk
Stops, etc.
\"\it can make just as handsome furniture as those old chaps,
if we get a chance, and quit copyingl"
He fell asleep and dreamed that he was making a bed-room
suite to look like :1 Texas steer, and a parlor suite to
look like a train of Harriman cars, and chairs to resemble a
city hall that was empty hecau>;e of a grand jury!
"I'll 111ake t11C furniture look like somethng distinctive of
the time, or bust," he murmured in his sleep. A,nd than it
was time to wake, urd ALFRED B. TOZER.
At the Peninsular Club, Grand Rapids,
The ftlflliture salesmen h.oJve lit their cigars. \\r ell. And
one is sp(:'aking. \\That is he saying? He don't know 'yet
what he is going to say, He is not going to say anything----,-
ye.l. Not yet. ¥\-'ill he say anything? There is no telling.
(r..Jaybe he will Talleyrand.) But if he says anything it
",:ill be a mistake, for that is not what he is there for. Why is
be there, then? To promote digestion and not thought. He
i:~ to obviate as tar as possible the hazard of thought. But
he is to say nothing. And to say it with sueh liveliness and
dexterity as to cattse his remarks to simulate matter whik
really elldowed with such soothing and oblivious qualities as
afe only derivable from vacuity. But has \1ot high reputa-tion
sometimes grown ont of after-dinner speeches? Some
men hin'c certainly become famous after-dinner talkers. Is
it an <lrt, then, that makes famous men? ~o. it merely
makes famous after-dinner talkers. But not famous men?
Oil, 110. Some hIltons men have become famous after-dinner
t;llkets, just as others have taken to drink, but it takes more
than either nun or after-dinner talk to make a famous man.
But the after-dinnef talk helps, doesl1't it? On the cOllttary;
it damages. If <1 man is a famous after-dinner talker in full
p\'<letice, it is next to impossible to pass him off as a great
man. Then what is the profit in after-dinner speaking'?
There isn't any, except for the second or third-rate men.
How is it possible, then., to get so much of it done gratis
by men of real ability? That is the marvel Of course,
it is a sort of intoxicant, and some men form the habit of it
and cannot brc:lk off. That explains some cases. Present-ly
when the true natnre of it is better understood it will be
rated as an exhiler<lllt, and furnished for dinner parties by the
caten~l·. There will be as many different ta~ps of it then a"
there arc of champagne, and it will be chargc<l for, roundly, in
the bill.
28
G
•
Has No Fears of the Future.
W. J. Long, representing the furniture department of
"The Fair,"-' Chicago, spent the second week in January in
Grand Rapids and placed heavy orders for immediate ship-ment.
Mr. Long has 110 fears for the future and the liber-ality
of his ptuchase created a cheerful feeling in the market.
Last year was the most prosperous in the history of "The
Fair," and the sales of the futinture department aggregated
a larger slim than for any year of the past. If all buyers
were as sagacious as :Mr. Long the factories 'would soon
be running full and normal trade conditions restored.
~lr.Long formerly resided in Grand Rapids, having been
employed in the main office of the Western Union Telegraph
Company as an operator. He 10cated~in Sioux City a de-cade
ago, where he began his career in the furniture trade.
Drawer Bottoms.
Since the basswood supply has been practicalty exhausted,
the question of drawer bottom stock has beeome one of prime
importance to the manufacturer. To obtain dry stock has
been very difficult, but since the \Valter C1ark Veneer Com-pany
(535 IHichigan Trust ht1ilding, Grand Rapids) entered
the field with gum and cottol1\'iood, guaranteeing prompt de-liveries,
the manufacturers may be. said to have overcome
one of their chief obstacles. Tbe "\-Valter Clark Veneer
Company are also prepared to fill orders direct from their
warehouse in Grand Rapids for quarter-sawed oak veneer and
birch and poplar crossbanding, the bttcr cut to dimensions,
if desired.
Unnecessarily Alarmed.
Quite a number of the buyers visiting the markets were
"scared" out of their wits by the conserv;ltism of certain man-
/ 10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALSID MADE ''lITH 12, 15, 20 AND a5 SPINDLES.
DODDS'NEW
DOVETAILING
GEAR
MACHINE
Th;~ little niachine has done more to perfect the draw~r work of
furniture manufacturers than anything else in tbe furniture trade.
For fifteen veaTS it has made perlo::ct-fitting vermin-proof, dove-tailed
stock-a possibility. This ba~ been acc'omplishcd.at reduced
cost, as the. machine cuts dove-tails in gangs of from 9 to 24. at
one operation.
ALEXANDER DODDS, Grand Rapids, Michigan
Reprctented by Schuchart & Schutte III B,~rJin, Vienna, Stockholm and St'
Pe.IeDbUT1l. . Representative by Allred H. ~~hutte at Cologne. Btuw:l~, Li~ie, Paris·
MIla.n ..ad Bilbao. Retn~sented III CTe!lt Briblln am:! In-land by the Oliver MacbinelY
Co., F. S. Thoml;:laODM, il·, 201.203 Deanillale. MB.DC~r. England_
L
.7IR.T I,soJL1'l
t T r:. 29
ufacturers in their failure of bring out lines of the usual
str-ength for the spring season of trade. A number, whose
stay in the, markets of the past have run from one week to
ten days, remained from two to three days. In that time it
was impossible to make more than a perfunctory examination
of a few of the lines. It was not to be ex.pected that the, buy-ers
would grow enthusiastie when the manufacturers were
frozen witb conservatism. To create optimism one must be
optimistic,
Infringement Suit, Belt Sanders.
Suit has been brought in the United States eircuit court
at Parkersburg, W. Va., by the Wysong & Miles Company
of Greensboro, N. C, against David S, Oakley, Elias N. Jan-sen
and Norton L, Upson of Parkersburg, W. Va., a firm
DeSigned by Otto Jiranek, Grand Rapids, :Mich.
doing business as the Oakley & Jansen Machine Company, for
1njul1cdon, profit and damages. The bill of complaint 5ets
forth that the defendants have manufactured and sold sand
belt machinery which contained certain inventions the ex-clusive
right to make and sell which is secured by letters
patent of the United States by the \Vysong- & 1.files Company.
30 .7IR.T 1.5'7L?'l
e Z".
THE CREDIT &UREAU OF THE FURNITURE TRADE
The LYON
Furniture Agency
ROBERT P. LYON, General Mana.ter
CREDITS and
COLLECTIONS
They "Gotta" Live.
I watched an artist man at work
Depicting chairs, buffets and desks.
"How can you give
Your art to such a task?" asked 1.
And stra.ightway he did maKe rep-ly:
"I gotta live:"
That is the way with men who carve,
Or write or print. We cannot starve!
Your stove or bench
We'll help you on the market put.
We may not. love the labor, but
We .gatta live,
A MODERN SACKING OF ROME.
After the Barbarians Come Old Furniture DealerS'.
Rome, December 28.-Christiall emperors, popes, mediae-val
nobles, the barbarians, fire, flood, earthquake, all have
contributed their share to -the demolition of the monuments
of ancient Rome. Pagan temples have been destroyed to
build Chri.stian churches, theatres and baths to build palaces,
bronze statues have been stolen or melted, while marble stat-ues
have been converted into lime or used as missles to check
an assault.
It is a pleasing fancy that present generations have a dif-
Jere-nt attitude toward the past, that archaeology is striving
to rebuild what has'Deen demolished; hut the £<tnc)' does !lot
seem to hold good in practice. In fact, while the so-c,alled
destroyers of Rome demolished but 'did not ill every case ob-literate
all traces of the past, their modern succssors of today,
although living in what is supposed te be a highly enlight-ened
time, ruthlessly. transform the ancient into the modern.
When the Via Nazionale was opened the palaces of illus-trious
Romans which once lined the Viens Longus and were
discovered while the ncw street was beil1g cut wcre destroyed
and rcburied. The remains of the celebrated Horti Sail us-tiani
which had survived the shocks of time and were in ('r'J
porated in two villas, Ludovisi and Massimo, )vere mercilessly
sacrificed by their owners in 1886 and pUlled down to make,
place for new streets and modern houses. A German, Herr
Spithoever, tllled (me of the va.lleys of thei gardens of S~llll-st
with materials brought from the Servian embankment and
converted the plaee illto flat building lots.
Suc.h lnstaic.cs could be multiplied almost indefmitely.
Hardly a month passes without the sale of an old palace or
villa fall of historic interest and romance. Tlle owners, Ro-man
noblemen of ancient and illustrious families, prefer hard
cash to an old palace, and they are always wilhng to sell nOt
only their hOllses, but also their old furniture.
The villa Mattei is called now Villa Hoffmann and is
owned by a German who some day will probabl.y turn It i11l:~
a tenement house. The Villa Aldobrandil1i will soon, it is
said, be converted into a hotel, while its beautiful garden, one
Grand Rapids Office, 412-4 J 3 Houseman Bldg.
GEO. E. GRAVES. Manager
CLAPPERTON ok OWEN, Counsel
THE STANDARD REFERENCE BOOK
CAPITAL, CREDIT AND PAY RATINGS
CLEARING HOUSE OF TRADE EXPERIENCE
THE MOST RELIABLE CREDIT REPORTS
COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE
• PROMPTLY-REUABLY
of the few old Ones still remaining intact in the centre of
Rome, will be uprooted and shops wlll be built in its place.
A corner of the Palazzo Venezia is doomed to disappear in
order that the monument of Victor Emmanuel 11. may be
seen frOl11 the Piazza del Popolo.
One by one the old palaces of Rome, are disappearing;
those that are left standing <tre being modernized and trallS~
formed, everything old is doomed to perish. The.re is a
craze among the Roman nobility Jar modernism, which is
encouraged by the tempting offers of both native and foreign
dealers in 'antique,s.
As a consequence, just as old palaces are being supplanted
by ne,ws ones, fitted with aU the modern comforts boasted in
hotels, the old furiliture, is gradually giving place to the new.
Bamboo cane chairs are used instead of carved wood. Eng-lish
mustin instead of brocade, wan paper instead of damasks
and tapestries,. parquet floors instead of carpets. No bet-ter
evidence of this chal1ge can be afforded than the accom-panying
illustratlons.
The sitting rooni of the Palazzo I\Jattei is one of the few
surviving typical examples of an antique furnished 'room.
There is not a single piece of fUfIliturc in it whlcll has not <l.
historical and artistic value. More than a living room, it is
a museum, and yet it is quite as habitable and comfortable as
any modern furnished room.
The drawing room of the r:Jlazzo Grazio1i g1Ves an e:ll
ample of a sort of transition, a compromise between the old
and the new. The background is ancient. The wainscot-ing
and beamed ceiling, thotlgh polished or varnished, are old,
but the furniture and bric-a.-brac bristle with modernity.
One of the halls of the palazzo Piombino, built by the
prince of that Jlame with the proceeds of the sale, of the Pa-lazzo
Ludovisi, and for a long time. leased lo American am-bassadors
to the Court of Italy as their private residence and
now owned by the Queen Mother, Ivrarghcrita of Savoy, is
dec.idedly modern. The wan paper is an imitation of da-mask,
the furniture is modern, though made to look old; the
pictures, decorations and ornametlts are such as can be found
in the ave.rage middle class Roman furnished room.
The new art plays an important part in the decoration and
furnishing of modern rooms, and while Italy continues to ex-port
her old furniture, French and English house furniture is
extensiveJy imported here. Everything all('.ient is banned
and the native fumitl1re is no longer appreciated.
\Vhile formerly a hallway waS decorated ,';ith a trophy
consisting of old armor, either captured from a vanquished
enemy or worn by an ancestor during the crusades, today it
is converte,d into a so-called Turkish room,_ with re···s ,.1_,·ill".
arrows and lcathershie1ds of doubtftll authenticity, and ara-besques
painted on the walls by a rnodern artist, perhaps the
descendant of one, who in his day painted Madonnas and
angels.
Italians of today, the citizens of modern united Italy, a'"e
very up to date, they will tell you, and they have left the
past away behind them.-1\Tew York Sun.
"
"Rutary St"'le" for brop Carvings, EmbOfised Mouldings, panels.
EMBOSSINC AND DROP CARVINC MACHINES.
MacblnclJ for all purposes, and at priceii within the reacb of
all. Every machin6 has 6ur gnanmtee againlltlbrenkHge for one
year.
"Later.a,l Style" for larn cnPlWity heavy Carvings and Deep
Embosslngs.
We have the Machine you want at a satllilfactory price. Write
lor descriptive circUlars. Also make dies for all makes of Ma-cblnes.
UNION EMBOSSINO MIICmNE CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
Wood
Forming
Cutters
We offer exceptional value in Reversible and
One-Way Cutters for Single and Double Spin~
dIe Shapers. Largest lists with lowest prices.
Greatest variety to select from. Book free.
Address
SAMUEL J. SHIMER &. SONS
MILTON. PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
L
List of Buyers
25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS. 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
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LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
JUST OUT
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LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
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LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
LIST OF BUYERS, 25 CENTS
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------
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Write for it, Remit Amount.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
31
BEAR THIS FACT IN MIND
You can presenl your daims £01' trade to a largerDumber of huyers of furniture and kindred good. through Ihe mercantile
editionaof the· Michigan Artisan. mailed to'dealen only, than is possibleby the use of any other trade p8p6.
WRITE FOR RATE CARD
~MI9.rIG~
RETAILERS IN CONVENTION.
Chicago, January 14.-The annual meeting of the Kational
Retail Furniture Dealers' Association was held here today.
The attendance was larger than was really expected and the
interest manifested was certainly greater and more earnest
than at previous meetings. The main features were Presi-dent
Rosenbury's message and the secretary's annual report,
which showed that those officers have been active during the
past year.
The President's Address.
Immediately after your executive officers' were elected iil
January last, a vigorous campaign was outlined, which was
begun by them with much enthusiasm and was only checked
by the lack of proper financial support. We saw at the
outset the necessity of this assocation engaging a paid sec-retary.
The proceedings of the annual meetings were written up
and printed in a neatly bound booklet, which was forwarded
through the secretaries to the members. The booklet was
issued giving the court's decision in full of the case of Mont-gomery
Ward & Co., with the South Dakota 1\'Ierchants' As-sociation,
and copies mailed to members.
Leaflets were also printed giving a copy of an article writ-ten
by a furniture dealer, entitled, "It will be a sorry day
when the furniture dealer is eliminated and furniture is sold
direct from factory to consumer." Later on the Associa-tion
Bulletin was issued, which contained a roster of member-ship
and important items regarding the assocIation, ana
mailed to a1\ members.
Endless corespondence has been carried un day aHel
day by your executive officers, pertaining to the work in
hand. State and local <lssociations have. been formed through
the efforts of your secretary and other officers, while other
local and state organizations have beeo" encouraged in their
work.
On February 19 and 20 the secretary and myself took ac-tive
part in the Iowa state convention, held at- Des Moines,
where three enthusiastic meetings were held. At that tim\..
the dealers took steps to organize a local association.
On the 21st Chairman Foster, the secretary and myself met
by prearrangement with a representative body of Chicago
dealers, which meeting resulted in the organization of a local
<lssociation, and which has' since affiliated with· the National
through the Illinois State Association.
On the 22d an executive committee. was held in Chicago,
the attendance being light. However, the situation was
thoroughly gone over by those present, and it was decided to
go ahead with the. work laid out, which included plans to se.-
cure the amounts promised to make up the "proposed $5,000
fund, and to push forward the '."Iork vigorously-to go ahead
and publish the, honor roll.
Soon after the first hono rroll was printed and copie:"
placed in the hands of the state secretaries to be distrib-uted
among the members. But upon becoming aware, that
this first issue of the roll was incomplete, mainly on account
of many factories having failed by neglect or otherwise to
make known their position, these copies were recalled and the
secretaries advised to proceed at once to re-canvass thor-oughly
the entire country and to re-print the roll. This was
not an easy task, but was <lccomplished after much corres-pondence.
On May 28, acting on a suggestion from your secretary,
I appointed Mr. C. E. Osgood, presiden't of the Home Fur-nishers'
Society, to rcpresetlt our association beJore the table
manufacturers at their meeting in )Iew York city, it being
deemed advisable to have the co-operation of various manU-facturers'
associations. Our position was ably presented by
::\'Ir. Osgood, and resolutions were adopted by the table manu-facturers
which were very favorable to our association, the
manufacturers asking in return that certain evils claimed by
them to exist be corrected by the retailers.
On June 26 your president met with the Indiana State As-sociation
at Indianapolis, taking active part in two very en-thusiastic
meetings, later on going to Chicago and holding
a conference with other officers to formulate pfans for the
Designed by otto Jiranek. Gra.nd Rapids. Mich.
July meetings, the proceedings of which have been read by
your secretary.
During the past six months your officers have carried on
a continued round of correspondence in -Performing the duties
which fell to them, and in the interest of the work which
they were striving to accomplish, the second issue of the
honor roll having been received from the pre~:5 ane! distrib-uted
to members. I visited twenty-nine different cities dur~
ing the past year in five states, a
- Date Created:
- 1908-01-10T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 28:13
- 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/91