Fine Furniture; 1936-09
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It began publication in 1936. and SEPTEMBER • 1936
MORGAN C. ALDRICH
. . . promising career dedi-cated
to the proposition
that furniture advertising
can be better.
(See page 26)
Two dollars a year
20 cents a copy
Grand Rapids,
M i c h i g a n
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'5iV "'..-—"•'-*" CA-VEL
T new line of Ca-Vel Upholstery Fabrics, on the furniture
you sell, presents new weaves, new textures and new colors
that reduce "sales resistance" to a minimum!
In addition, they help you trade up your customers. You get
the better profits that result from the sale of quality items.
Go into your regular selling season with a better styled, more
attractive line—well equipped to take advantage of the easier
sales and better profit produced by furniture covered with
these fabrics bearing the Ca-Vel label.
COLLINS # AIKMAN CORPORATION
200 Madison Avenue, New York, N. V.
Weavers of Ca^Vel Fabrics
All Mohair Fabrics Guaranteed Against Moth Damage for 5 Years!
Announcing
GRAND RAPIDS FALL STYLE SHOWING
Thursday, November the Fifth
TO AND INCLUDING
Friday, November the Thirteenth
A1COMPLETE SHOWING of household
furniture by all manufacturers of Grand
Rapids and many other important makers rep-resentative
of the furniture centers of the
country.
Hundreds of new designs in all furniture class-ifications
await your inspection.
For reservations or further information write Charles F. Campbell, Secretary
GRAND RAPIDS FURNITURE EXPOSITION
ASSOCIATION
Grand Rapids, Michigan
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
OFFER NEW HIGHS OF
VALUE AND SALEABILITY
Reaching out to new highs of excellence
is more than a fixed policy with HEKMAN
. . . it is a confirmed habit. Response to
HEKMAN values at the July Market
proved anew that past achievements are
used only as stepping stones to ever
higher standards of saleability. Cur-rent
HEKMAN creations offer wonderful
oossibilities for stepping up Fall business
. . a fact you can easily check by writing
for particulars.
HEKMAN FURNITURE CO.
KLINGMAN BLDG" GRAND RAPIDS
FlN€ FURNITUR€
the Homefurnishing Magazine from
the Furniture Style Center of America
VOLUME 1 1936 NUMBER 5
GEORGE F. MACKENZIE, President
PHIL S. JOHNSON, General Manager
ROD G. MACKENZIE, E d i t o r
K. C. CLAPP, Merchandising Editor
SEPTEMBER-The
Boiling Wake 5
Page Nine 9
Pictorial Review of the Summer Markets,
by Rod Mackenzie 10
Give Us Glamour, by Ruth Mclnerney 23
Furniture Frolics, by Ray Barnes 25
Yes, Direct Mail Stirs Up The Folks,
by Morgan C. Aldrich 26
The Sketch Book, by Marie Kirkpatrick 28
Merchandising Colonialism 30
Ten Guides, by K. C. Clapp 31
Tendency Not To Pull A Tendon, by Chet Shafer 33
Homefurnishing News and Reviews 34
New Stores 38
Published monthly by the Furniture Capital Publishing Co., Asso-ciation
of Commerce Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich. Acceptance under
the Act of June 5, 1934, authorized April 30, 1936. FINE FURNI-TURE
copyright, 1936. Eastern office: 545 Fifth Ave., New York
City, phone Murray Hill 23909, S. M. Goldberg, representative.
Southern office: 114J-2 West Washington St., High Point, N. C,
phone 21S2, C. C. Prince, representative. Subscription rates: $2
per year in the United States and American Colonies; #3 in Canada
and foreign countries; single copies, 20 cents.
for SEPTEMBER, 1936
Paying
DIVIDENDS in
STEADY
PROFITS
for STORES
MERCHANTS who invested in our sparkling new line of Eighteenth
Century upholstered pieces at the Midsummer market are reporting
substantial dividends in rapid and steady sales. They tell us our Modern
chairs and sofas likewise are being well received by their trade. . . . Naturally!
. . . We have built our line primarily FOR DEALER PROFIT, and that is
predicated upon right price lines, carefully selected fabrics and excellent con-struction
— a combination that insures customer-acceptance and customer-satisfaction.
Please write us concerning your upholstered furniture requirements.
WOLVERINE UPHOLSTERY CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
• • • • • • . j ^ . •
YOU BUY VALUE...When You Buy PAALMAN Tables
-!-^.;:; .___ When your customers are concerned with appearance and econ-omy,
PAALMAN'S diversified line of occasional tables affords
a satisfactory selection. Established for over 20 years as a
builder of quality merchandise, PAALMAN FURNITURE
COMPANY is in line with today's upward trend in consumer
preference for better furniture. . . Fresh designs executed with
superb skill, priced to enable you to realize a profit—these are
the reasons you buy VALUE when you buy PAALMAN tables.
For years our Tea-wagons have been unexcelled in character
and as profit-making items. Our display in the Keeler Build-ing
includes a variety of these and other occasional and
novelty tables, dinnettes and music cabinets.
No. 2805
Cockiail Table
No. 101
Hospitality Table
20th Anniversary Year
Order Now for Your Holiday Requirements
PAALMAN FURNITURE CO.
GRAND RAPIDS *• / MICHIGAN
Display in the Keeler Building
We appreciate mentioning you saw this m FINE FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
Clean Selling and Merchandising
based on 25 Years of Successful Merchandising
IN the Leading Furniture and Department Stores of the United States and Canada
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new accounts. It builds business with sound, legitimate merchandising, advertising
and display methods. They are effective because of the wide experience of over 25
years, keen analysis in its application, and thorough attention to details in the proper
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is so well organized that merchants say they cannot understand how the Joseph P.
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Better still — every Joseph P. Lynch plan has a vitalizing, beneficial effect on
the entire store organization and on future sales, as there are no reactions after the
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it—'and what it costs you for our
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volume in 15 days — at your own prices —
and at an advertising expense of about 2!/2%
in department stores and about 3^2% to 5%
In furniture stores?
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We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
l o r SEPTEMBER, 1936
PAGE NINE
FACTORY WAITING ROOMS
This properly belongs in the "Boiling Wake", but so ably
does it express the editor's own too-often suppressed
opinion, that we are running it here. It's a letter from the
buyer of a Metropolitan store and is the written expression
of many a similar conversation heard over a period of
years.
"At the last market . . . I had occasion for the first
time to visit the Grand Rapids market. Curious to see the
factories where so much of the nation's finest furniture was
manufactured, and to meet the men who directed their
destinies, I visited several of the plants. I wish I hadn't . . .
that I had confined my Grand Rapids sojourn to the show-rooms,
from which I probably never should have wandered.
"What a surprise! To say that I was shocked at the re-ception
and waiting rooms in the various factories is put-ting
it mildly. Dirty little cubbyholes equipped with hard
ugly chairs of the Golden Oak period . . . cheerless, dingy
coops where I sat and was peered at through a round hole
in a glass partition by a bored telephone operator . . . no
carpets on the floors . . . dingy chairs and un-upholstered,
backless benches to accommodate at the most three or four
visitors . . . in two factories, an arduous climb up rickety
stairs to a barren upstairs office . . . fully seventy per cent
of your factories' waiting rooms are less attractive than the
offices of a garage or a boiler-factory.
"Why is this? These plants make beautiful furniture, and
what better place to be proud of it than in the places
where the visiting public and even the visiting customer
can see it?
"It's beyond me "
ff
PROFIT IN FOOD SCARCITY
How can a furniture merchant make capital out of the
drought and the consequent increase in food prices?
Food will be a very valuable commodity and so, by ac-centuating
the food-conservation theme in the merchandising
of electric refrigerators, you have a selling point that's a
natural . . . more so this season than at any time that
this line became a furniture-store item.
Without an electric refrigerator, no home can dodge the
inexorable loss of food through spoilage . . . through in-ability
to buy in quantities that effect a savings, to buy in
advance of daily requirements.
The higher the cost of food, the easier it is to prove your
selling point, the more readily the prospect will listen to
your sales story. And the story is a true one, proven over
and over again. Savings of $10 to $15 a month by means
of adequate domestic refrigeration are conservative.
Electric refrigerator sales the rest of the year may well
be boosted to an all-time peak. It all depends upon the
ability of merchants to visualize new sales approaches and
to take full advantage of their natural advantages of dis-play,
prestige in the community, extensive advertising and
superior credit-extension facilities.
RUG SALES LAB.
ff
Commendable is the helpful activity of the Carpet Insti-tute
of America and the considerable contribution it has
made to the better promotion of wool floor coverings.
Commendable, too, is the co-operation extended the In-stitute
by many furniture merchants in the furtherance of
better merchandising in floor-covering departments.
Though other pages bare the minds
Of many men, the credit or
The blame I'll bear for what one finds
On this, Page Nine. — The Editor.
This Fall, 50 such alert furniture stores in selected cities
are acting as "test labs" for trying out certain basic mer-chandising
principles in order to stimulate sales on regularly
priced wool-pile rugs and carpets.
These stores will chart increased sales on better priced
merchandise, trace such other factors as influence on sales
in all home furnishings, customer reaction, awakening of style
interest among salesmen. Particularly will the plan evolved
by the Institute stress ensemble showings, accent style im-portance
of floor coverings in relation to furniture, draperies
and wallpaper.
After these tests have been made, all the impracticalities
weeded out, they will be presented to hundreds of furniture
stores all over the country. The results will be enlightening
in the extreme. More power to any plan that will further
the interests of floor-covering departments, too often a
neglected department in furniture stores.
ff
SHABBY STORES
A sad commentary on the appearance of furniture stores
as a whole was the recent study made by the U. S. Bureau
of Foreign and Domestic Commerce. To half of the 267
stores surveyed was given a rating of poor appearance,
interior and exterior. Needing improved display windows
and entrances were 40% of the group. Refinishing or re-painting
of store fronts was indicated in about a fifth of the
stores. A fourth of the group needed reconditioned floors,
30% required new or improved lighting, 40% needed to be
painted or re-decorated inside.
Department stores and women's apparel shops have made
praiseworthy progress during the past year in remodeling.
A furniture store has no business to be shabby, either. Urg-ing
homes to doll themselves up, furniture merchants should
set a better example in modernization.
ff
PUBLICIZING PRICE RISES
Up against certain price advances, dealers are wondering
how much longer to delay announcing and passing these
increases on to their customers. Some believe it will curtail
sales; others think it will stimulate them. Still others plan
to keep mum about increased prices, to quietly put in force
a small but store-wide markup on all home-furnishing lines,
old and new stock alike. With good current sales volume
generally reported, the latter course would seem sensible.
The individual merchant knows best his own customers and
his policies should be governed by that knowledge. However,
it should be remembered that public buying power is not
materially increased and too-sharp price-advances are there-fore
not advisable.
ff
OCT. 2 — 10
Engrossed in Fall ready-to-wear fashions and a variety of
other typical dry goods promotions, most department stores
in the past have seen fit to neglect the opportunity afforded
by National Furniture Week. They haven't had time for it.
They don't like to expend the effort and have no "budget"
for it in their overhead. All of which affords the furniture
store added opportunity to make the Week a spectacular
success in volume and profits. National Furniture Week is
well conceived, has been proven profitable for participants
and will break all sales records this year. Remember the
dates . . . Oct. 2 to Oct. 10! Put it to work for you!
1C FINE FURNITURE
PICTORIAL REVIEW OF THE SUMMER
T""1 HE song is ended, but the melody lingers on . . .
X the thrilling symphony of buying acclaim that arose
under the batons of manufacturers at the July markets
is echoing and re-echoing in ready consumer acceptance
of new merchandise that is finding its way to retail
floors . . . repeated in reorders of style-right, price-right
furniture that presages a record last quarter sales
volume for stores and factories alike.
From many fronts come reports of sales volume in-creases
for summer furniture events that bid fair to
establish 1936 as the banner year since—. Ranging
from 20 to 50% the gains prove interesting from
several angles. First, they outstrip 1935. Secondly, the
department stores apparently put on the pressure and
outdistanced the furniture store, due undoubtedly to
the fact that the latter as a rule hold the heat of their
At the top left is a radio
chair by Southern Furni-ture
Co., Conover, N. C.
displayed in American
Furniture Mart, with a
5-tube radio built into
the arm of the chair. The
living room group at the
left is by the Kroehler
Mig. Co., also shown in
American Furniture Mart
and is Spanish Mission.
The Victorian chair No.
1930 is by the Charlotte
Furntiure Co., shown in
Fine Arts Bldg.
To the lower left is one of the many blond suites in the
recent market, this one by Tomlinson of High Point, dis-played
in Merchandise Mart, No. 150 buffet, eight piece
suite retails at $225 without chair coverings and with top-grain
leather for $261, in blond walnut, regular walnut or
rosewood finish. . . Johnson, Handley, Johnson makes the
Queene Anne suite above, in walnut and shown in factory
showrooms.
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 II
FURNITURE MARKETS By ROD MACKENZIE
Editor. FINE FURNITUHE
advertising fire until the more lucrative fall months.
Other indications substantiating, some gainsaying,
previous predictions are; Modern, disdaining the
efforts of manufacturers to shelve it, still is the lead-ing
style in the popular price ranges. However, 18th
Century is making a valiant attack and in medium
price fields is showing progress, supported by the
efforts of several manufacturers who are supplying
additional ammunition in the form of special displays
and ensembles.
The trading-up movement appears to be in a very
embryonic state as yet, what with prices of $59 to $98
for bedroom suites, being reported in many sectors.
Many execs, however, foreseeing increased prices, are
energetically attempting to instill their sales forces with
the germ of selling better merchandise. The first of the
year should show some definite results. And mayhap,
National Furniture Week, which incidentally gives
promise of running roughshod over last year's event,
will provide the needed stimulus, only, of course, if it
is properly presented.
From the manufacturers' point of view July was the
first month for several years that this phase of the
industry could honestly report an increase over that
month in 1929. July also presented a 52% increase
over the corresponding month in 1935. More people
were employed, more unfilled orders were on the books,
shipments were better and cancellations were prac-tically
extinct.
As promised in the August issure of FINE FURNI-TURE
the staff herewith presents a pictorial survey of
style-right, price-right merchandise, gleaned from the
recent summer markets. We're confident that this re-view
will be of assistance in refreshing market
memories befogged by summer vacations. It is easily
understood that it is impossible to completely cover
the thousands of furniture and homefurnishing dis-plays,
exhibited in the various market centers, and
the staff, in presenting this panaroma realize that there
are many worthy contributions that were omitted. As
the old maestro would say — "Fo'give us, fo'give us."
At the left is a Mod-ern
vanity by the
American Furniture
Co., Batesville, devel-oped
in English hare
wood with enamel
trim. At the right is
a bridge set by Sikes
Co., Inc., with Wynd-wood
top t a b l e ,
chairs with leather
covering. Table, No.
801, retails at $39.50
and the chairs are
No. 134-10 at $40.
Cushman Mfg. Co., displayed in American Furniture Mart,
makes the group above
9
Above is an Old Hickory Furniture Co., chestnut davenport,
shown in the Merchandise Mart. The three pieces sell re-tail
for $45.50. Note the one chair has a book stand attached.
12 FINE FURNITURE
After many years' absence, gilt furniture was shown
tentatively by some manufacturers. At the left is
a group of living room pieces by American Wood
Carving Co., Chicago, exhibited in American
Furniture Mart.
At the left below. Provincial bedroom in bleached
walnut by the Kittinger Co. of Buffalo, exhibited in
the Keeler Bldg., Grand Rapids.
Herman DeVries designed the Modern bedroom
shown above for the Sikes Furniture Co., Buffalo,
exhibited in the Merchandise Mart. The suite is
veneered in oyster-white leather with contrasting
corner bars of maple.
Below (left), a Modern bedroom in blond finish by Estey
Co. of Owosso, showing in Waters-Klingman Bldg., Grand
Rapids. No. 640 davenport, by Grand Rapids Lounge Co.,
displayed in Waters-Klingman Bldg., Grand Rapids, shown
at right below.
Left, Dunbar Furniture Co.'s penthouse apartment
room. Davenport No. 1747 in lime-green chenille,
$99.30; table in bleached mahogany. No. 1842,
$16.80; lounge chair. No. 1595, plaid novelty cover-ing,
$39.55. Exhibited in Merchandise Mart.
Walnut spool bed.
No. 3625, by
Springfield Furni-ture
Co., shown in
American Furni-ture
Mart. Four
pieces—bed, chest,
vanity, night table,
retail at $78.50.
for SEPTEMBER. 1936 13
Ralph Morse's Old English
Club sofa. No. 1360, retails
at $154.50 in damask cover-ing
shown. Outside meas-urements,
34" high x 41"
deep x 82" long. Exhibited
in Keeler Bldg., Grand
Rapids.
Above, Modern dresser. No. 1937-2, by Kamman Furniture
Co., Philadelphia. Exhibited in Keeler Bldg., Grand Rapids.
Below, open stock American Colonial dining room by Kit-tinger
Co., Buffalo. Displayed in Keeler Bldg., Grand Rapids,
Right, a Chippendale book-case.
No. 376, with leather
drawer fronts, by Colonial
Desk Co.. Rockford, 111.
Retails for $29. Exhibited in
American Furniture Mart.
Antique oak dining room by G. R. Bookcase & Chair Co.,
exhibited in Keeler Bldg., Grand Rapids. Note armor-and-shield
carving on legs. In contrasting daintiness is the
delicate Chippendale group. No. 71, shown at the right. This
is by Tomlinson of High Point, and is finished in blond
mahogany. Eight pieces retail at $172.15; ten pieces, $262.90.
14 FINE FURNITURE
.?•-•<•*.••-
No. 110 wall desk
from a Chippendale
group by the Wabash
Cabinet Co., Wabash,
Ind.. is mahogany-
Width, 32V2"; depth,
17"; height, 55". Ex-hibited
in American
Furniture Mart.
No. 4038y2 chair by E. Wiener & Co.,
Milwaukee, Wis., exhibited in Merchan-dise
Mart. Height, 38V2"; width, 28";
depth, 36". Retail price, $25.
Above, one of Cochrane Chair Co.'s
line of chair specials. No. 2806, Chip-pendale
design, in silk damask. In lots
of eight, it is priced to retail at $12.50.
Exhibited in Waters- KUngman Bldg.,
Grand Rapids.
Below, No. 85 Georgian secretary in
Old World mahogany, by Bay View
Furniture Co., Holland. Mich., exhibited
in the American Furniture Mart. Top,
34" x 18". Height, 83".
00
Maple living rocm group by H. T. Cushman Co., N. Bonnington, Vt. Note
0110-armed chaii-side tables and modernistic tendency of diowcr fronts in
lamp-table. Exhibited in American Funiituro Mart.
f o r SEPTEMBER. 1936 15
Century Furniture Co., Grand Rapids, made this
Eighteenth Century chciir. No. A-800'-.:. Height, 12";
width. 30". Exhibited at Century Furniture Co. factory.
Grand Rapids.
Crane £ McMahon, Si. Mar-.-'ri Ohio, exhibited this
suite, the Mary Loy, No. IGZO, in the American Furni-ture
Mart. li is bird's-eyi' curly maple, blond finish.
Four pieces retail at S126.75.
Below, Romweber
Industries group
exhibited in Mer-chandise
Mart.
Leather-covered
chair in oak. No.
5192, retails at $60;
lamp. No. 5240.
$16; wood basket.
No. 5245, $16.
Heywood-Wakeiield, Gard-ner,
Mass., showed these
among their extensive line
of maple pieces upholstered
in colorful fabrics. Dis-played
in the American
Furniture Mart, New York
Furniture Exchange, Los
Angeles Furniture Mart.
Left (below). No. 246 chair
by Michigan Furniture
Shops, upholstered in vel-vet.
Height, 32"; width, 32".
Exhibited in factory s-how-roora,
Grand Rapids.
An end tublo with adjustable
top can bo converted into a
reeding table, sewing table.
music stand. Made by A. Rob-ineau,
Chicago, and exhibited
in the American Furniture Mart.
16 FINE FURNITURE
No. 3051 dresser in walnut and blond
rosewood by the Robert W. Irwin Co.,
Grand Rapids. Mirror, No. 160. gold
frame. To sell in medium price range.
One of Irwin's standard line, exhibited
at iactory showroom.
• ! • "«,'
Davis Furniture Corp., exhibiting in the
American Furniture Mart, featured a
Modern suite No. 200 of which this is
the dresser (Below). Four pieces retail
for $84.
Left, Chippendale dresser by Aulsbrook
& lones. Sturgis, Mich., from their suite
No. 555. Four pieces retail at $194.
Exhibited in the Merchandise Mart.
Right, dresser from the No. 189 mahog-any
bedroom group by Sterling Furni-ture
Co., exhibited in the Merchandise
Mart. Four pieces retail for $139.50.
Showers Bros., Bloomington, Ind., show-ed
this maple bedroom below. No. 1152,
of which this is the vanity. Top, 18"x45";
mirror, 22"x30". American Furniture Mart.
i
i-.
Left, B. F. Huntley. exhibiting in the
American Furniture Mart, showed as
one of their popular-priced suites this
No. 150 dresser. Top, 46"x20"; mirror,
32" x 24".
i o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 17
Shown below is No. 121-2 bureau base
and No. 121-62 mirror by Kindel Furni-ture
Co.. Grand Rapids. A distinctive
suite oi Chinese Chippendale design,
mahogany finish. Four pieces retail ior
$107. Exhibited in Keeier Bldg.
Left, a Modern dresser. No. 5000,
featured by the Ramseur Furniture
Co., exhibiting in the Merchandise
Mart. Wood is light finish maple.
Top, 19"x42". Mirror, 20" x 28".
tr
Right, a highly ornate Provincial suite
by the Groenleer Vance Co., Grand
Rapids, shown at their factory. Suite
retails for $425.
Right, the Catherine Schuyler bed.
No. 787, by Wheeler-Okell Co.,
Nashville, Tenn. Crotch mahogany
veneer. Retails at $34.80. Exhib-ited
in Merchandise Mart.
Below, one of the many distinctive Colonial
bedrooms. No. 2001, displayed by the
Colonial Mfg. Co. of Zeeland in the Keeier
Bldg. Poster bed and all cases are faithful
reproductions of museum pieces.
Modern dresser in blond maple. No. 890.
by West Michigan Furniture Co., Hol-land,
exhibited in Waters-Klingman
Bldg., Grand Rapids. Four pieces retail
for $96.50.
18 FINE FURNITURE
Unique, useful desk by
Western Furniture Co.,
Batesville, Ind., exhib-ited
in Fine Arts Bldg.,
Grand Rapids. Has hid-den
compartment hold-ing
bridge table. Retails
complete at $35. Modern
design.
Left, mahogany Pembroke table. No.
1223, with drop leaves and drawer,
made by Wood Products Corp., Grand
Rapids, and exhibited in the Keeler
Bldg. It is a $12.25 retailer.
Right, another Wood Products Corp.
table. No. 1237, is solid walnut. With
glass top, it retails for $9.75; without
glass top, S8.95.
"Type table," No. 1140, by the
Northwestern Cabinet Co., Bur-lington,
la., showing in Merchan-dise
Mart. Available in walnut
or mahogany. Top, 44"x22".
Retails at $24.50.
Right, Modern overstuffed chair. No.
167, by Wolverine Upholstery Co.,
Grand Rapids, exhibiting in the Waters-
Klingman Bldg. Height, 34"; width, 33";
depth. 37".
Nest of tables. No. 1381, in mahogany,
by Hekman Furniture Co., Grand Rap-ids,
shown in Waters-Klingman Bldg.
Top, 22" x 14". Retails at S7.75.
Below, No. 1239 Georgian table
of unusual contour by Wood
Products, Inc., Grand Rapids,
shown in Keeler Bldg. Retails at
$12.25. Top, 21"x2I"; height. 26".
Left, mahogany crotch-top table, with
two drawers, made by Ferguson Bros.,
Hoboken, N. J., and exhibited in Amer-ican
Furniture Mart. Retails at $30.
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 19
^~.S
Lcmdfitrom No. 651 occasional chair in
a variety oi coverings. Priced to sell in
the populcii price ranges, it is a 317
retailor. Exhibited in American Furni-ture
Mart.
Above, dium table. No. 1710, by
Hekman Furniture Co., Grand Rap-ids,
exhibited in Wators-Klingman
Bldg. Mahogany or walnut with
magnolia wood. Brass feet. Retail
price, S10.75.
i
i i
-V, -
Right, coffee table. No. 3333, in solid
Philippine mahogany with glass bottom
tray. Also available in walnut. By
Brandt Cabinet Works, shown in Mer-chandise
Mart. Retail price, $4.75.
Above, No. 3527 dropleaf table by
Brandt Cabinet Works, Hagers-town,
Md., of Federal American
design and priced to retail for $10.
Shown in Merchandise Mart.
il
Above, Modern drop-leai table.
No. 65, walnut, by Charles R. Sligh
Co., Holland, Mich., exhibited in
Waters-Klingman Bldg. Top, open,
41" x 54"; height, 30".
Left, Mersmcm's Sheraton walnut
console. No. 5397, m a h o g a n y
veneer over selected gum. Retail
price, $8.25. Exhibited in American
Furniture Mart.
Above, distinctive Eighteenth Cen-tury
occasional table, No. 963, by
Imperial Furniture Co., Grand Rap-ids,
and exhibited in their factory
showroom. Top, 24" x 24"; hoight.
27'. Retail price, SI8.50
Below, drum table. No. 5384, stripe
mahogany veneer over selected
gum, by Mersman Bros, of Celina,
Ohio, and shown in the American
Furniture Mart. Retails at $7.95.
* % • * • • • . •
20 FINE FURNITURE
1936 SENSATIO1S
BE ONE
of the
SUCCESSFUL
STORES
USING IT/
facts
about HOME BEAUTIFUL
£ PRINTED beautifully on 70-pound enamel stock,
8 pages, with an average of thirty-five 133-screen
halftone cuts. Your store signature on front and
back covers.
Among FURNITURE
STORE MAILING
PIECES
°°ea Your Home
W«ed a Desk?
N
Typical pages from
Home Beautiful
(actual page size 6" x 9")
£ TIMED to reach your trade just prior to heaviest selling seasons,
publication months being September, November, January, March,
May and July.
A PREPARED by retail experts in order to help stores through a necessary
trading up period and of establishing or re-establishing desirable prestige
in the eyes cf your customers. "Home Beautiful" is mostly pictorial but
contains enough keenly interesting editorial text to make the housewife
r®ad it all the way through.
Q PRICED far below the lowest figure at which any store publication was ever offered
. . . from $25 a thousand for 5,000 or over to $35 a thousand for the minimum quantity
of 1,000. In other words, this high grade pictorial presentation costs about trie same as
a first-class letter in the hands of your customer or prospect.
PLUS->\ Definite, Workable
Supplementary Merchandising Plan
0 To each subscriber we send a supplementary bulletin which tells concisely how to get the
greatest possible benefit out of the distribution of HOME BEAUTIFUL . . . how to tie it in with
newspaper and radio advertising, window displays and newspaper publicity. This bulletin
also analyzes your own potential trading area and logical mailing in each neighboring town.
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 21
ACCLAIMED by the
EADING MERCHANTS
and MANUFACTURERS
APPLAUD
Home ^Beautiful
entire furniture industry
THB i.LCB FraiXITITRK COHPORATION
MiCIIJGAN CHMR CO.
THE FUM-NITURE SHOPS
If you want HOME BEAUTIFUL exclusively in your trading area,
or if you desire additional details, please check the coupon
below and mail it as soon as possible. AUTUMN ISSUES
OF HOME BEAUTIFUL ARE NOW AVAILABLE FOR SHIPMENT.
FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED!
FURNITURE CAPITAL PUB. CO.
STORE PUBLICATION DIVISION
912 Assn. of Commerce Bldg.
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Please reserve for me the territory within 40-mile radius of my store for
exclusive distribution of HOME BEAUTIFUL, and send me order blank
immediately.
Please furnish me additional information about HOME BEAUTIFUL and
send without charge your Supplementary Dealer Bulletin showing my
trading area.
Store
Address
22 FINE FURNITURE
An Eighteenth Century living room
group by Barnard & Simonds, Rochester,
N. Y., displayed in the Keeler Bldg.,
Grand Rapids.
-f
Charlotte Chair Co. exhibited this grace-ful
chair. No. 1986, at the Fine Arts
Bldg., Grand Rapids. It is birch with
mahogany finish, flexible sagless spring
seat.
Victorian chair by S. Karpen & Bros..
displayed in the Merchandise Mart.
mahogany frame.
L *v
Mahogany drum table. No. 672, by Fine
Arts Furniture Co., Grand Rapids, and
exhibited in the Waters-Klingman Bldg.
Sheraton design. Top is 27" x 27", and
it is 29" high.
I s
Modern nest of tables. No. 7186, by
Ferguson Bros., Hoboken, N. J. Has
black glass tops with silver striping.
One large table and four small ones;
group retailing at $30. Exhibited in
American Furniture Mart.
Eighteenth Cen-tury
bedroom. No.
901, by Colonial
Mfg. Co., Zeeland,
Mich., retailing in
the medium price
brackets. Exhib-ited
in Keeler
B l d g . , Grand
Rapids.
f o r S E P T E M B E R , 1 9 3 6 23
The Customer's Viewpoint
Photo, Courtesy N. Y. Times
give us GLAMOUR/
T THOUGHT of a Cape Cod cot-
X tage. Chintz curtains, seeming to
rustle in a breeze with the salt still
in it. Old fashioned flowers. White
sails in the sunset beyond the win-dow.
Brass, pewter, maple. A New
England Nook. A Cottage on the
Cape.
But do you know the way the
dealer called it to the attention of
his customers r
'"See our Model Home. Open for
Inspection. Special sale on
occasional chairs and tables this
week."
Down to earth with a slam.
Building his merchandise up, then
letting it down with a bang.
A home is more than just a col-lection
of specially priced occasional
chairs and tables. Consult any
volume of poetry. Listen to the
favorite songs. Is it "There is no
place like home, because-I-bought-all-
the-furniture-at-a-sale.".? There
ought to be peep holes behind the
walls of all the room displays.
Station furniture merchants there,
and let them watch, unobserved,
the expressions on the faces of the
people who come to review interior
decorations. It's the Ideal Home,
to each, and the melancholy
monody of price is very far away
indeed.
At this moment, business people
in other lines are discovering the
value, the hidden profits in mer-chandise
that is given a build-up,
and kept there.
Beige vs Bedouin • Appropriate
names for various items. Named
merchandise not only makes news,
but five, twenty times more busi-ness.
A shade of beige hosiery is
by
RUTH McINERNEY
dramatically called Bedouin; ten
times more women buy it than be-fore.
A new hat design for a man
is called Tyrolia and the sales life
of what was mostly just a fedora is
trebled. A department store, find-ing
itself with an overstock of
women's smocks on its hands, re-names
them Bubble Smocks, then
Butcher Boy, then Market Boy,
each time infusing new sales spirit
into the item as the name is changed.
A million Chin Chukkers were sold
last year; they're really only little
triangular mufflers, often only dress-makers'
scraps, neatly hemmed -—
glamorously named. Phoenix
Hosiery reports as high as 2000%
sales increase in hosiery sold around
a dramatic campaign where smart
24 FINE FURNITURE
names are used for shades. Worth
& Worth, the coast-to-coast hat
people, say that a man's hat,
romantically named, sells three to
five times better than an unnamed
one.
There's glamour in a name, and
if you believe even a furniture store
can get along without glamouri-zation,
consider the gales of
glamour pouring out of Hollywood
daily, the deluges of drama drip-ping
from the modern magazines
and the advertisements, the rush of
romance exuding from every radio
in the land. Pretty hard for a cus-tomer
of today to act like the
sensible soul of grandmother's era.
In fact, it's almost impossible to
tell where reality leaves off, and
glamour begins — thanks to the
efforts of people who have things
to sell us.
Where Glamour Belongs • All of
which makes quite inconsistent the
idea that a person will be able to
step out of this land of illusion long
enough to plan home modernization
for his house. No indeed! The
glamour must come right along, for
home planning is at least one legiti-mate
place for it. We have every
right to feel the sentiment con-nected
with arranging a new domi-cile,
or re-arranging an old one.
And that emotional appeal is one
of the greatest sales incentives the
furniture merchant can use in sell-ing
us new furnishings. Stream-lined
down, it's nothing else than
glamour. A few years ago it was
called personality, two years ago,
charm. Next year — what?
Take one of those sale chairs the
merchant above was vending. It
comes into a home and is placed
beneath a painting called "Sym-phony
in Blue". It's sat in by a
lady wearing one of the Follow-the-
Sun Frocks, Winged Sandals, a
shade of hosiery called Myth.
Underneath is a silk slip called
Caress, and under that, a filmy lace
brassiere known as Shhhh!
Can furniture dealers hold out
in the face of such glorification of
the humdrum?
It's Practical • There's plenty of
practicality in the business of giv-ing
your merchandise a build-up.
Variety is the spice of the success-ful
merchant's life. Add new sales
interest to familiar items by chang-ing
the names of them, at intervals.
They're also easier to ask for
when named. "You illustrate goods
in ads, place merchandise in the
window so that we will see it and
want it. But sometimes, it is very
difficult to ask for what we want.
We often see what we want but do
not ask for it — because it's too
much trouble. Not, "I'd like to see
that little white lamp next to the
tall yellow one to the left of the
right in the middle." But "May I
see that Taj Mahal' lamp?" The
sale is speeded up. A definite per-sonality
is given the merchandise.
It's not just a lamp among a dozen
others. Part of the sale can take
place before the display window
outside, or while the customer is
reading your ad in the evening
paper. Complete labels and names
will help. Then sum up the infor-mation
about the merchandise with
an attractive name.
Not only will a well-chosen name
and explanation stimulate and
speed up the sale, but will also help
to justify a higher price. A name
takes the edge off price, draws at-tention
away from it. A name sug-gests
that the retailer or manufac-turer
thought enough of the goods
to give it a name. It removes the
stigma of mass production from the
item. A homemaker wants indi-vidual
charm in her house. Mer-chandise
must suggest originality,
the professional interior decorator's
touch. Alike, but different. It is
remarkable the subtle difference
which may be achieved. There is
one large Eastern city built up of
homes almost exactly alike — thou-sands
and thousands of them—yet,
inside, the housewives manage a
diversity that proves a man's home
is his castle, at least within.
Pride in a Name • Unnamed goods
give the impression that the pro-ducer
or retailer does not value the
goods enough to give it a name.
It's like unpackaged goods — the
cracker barrel idea. The public can
scarcely be expected to get excited
over something that even the maker
looks upon with a listless eye.
Furthermore, customers remem-ber
names long after nameless
goods are forgotten.
A name will group items
naturally, and provide opportunity
for a larger unit sale.
It's time to pension off such
words as "ensemble" and "set", or
at least to put them on a five-day
week. Here's a radio group —
radio, chair, lamp, smoking stand.
Call it "Station E A S E , the Voice
of Contentment". Another group
— desk-bookcase, chair, lamp go as
"The Three R's — readin', 'ritin'
and relaxation". Every home, too,
is in the market for a "Game
Group" — card table, four chairs,
bridge lamp.
And while we're re-naming fur-niture,
why not "Hide-away" for a
folding cot — "Old Port Comfort"
for an overstuffed chair — "Snuggle
Sofa" for a sofa. Every new radio
model deserves a name. Not "Model
A-6-Series B-1169", but "The
Stratosphere", "Empress of the
Air", or "Tone Troubadour".
And what a wealth of drama in
rugs and draperies that may be
converted to sales interest. For
American Orientals, "Laughing
Waters", "Ripe Wheat". For mod-ern
rugs "Broadway After Dark",
"Saga of the Skyscraper", "Squared
Circles". Flowered chintz drapes
"Garden in Wales", a rough-fabriced
green and cream line, "Tamarack
in the Dunes" — a heavy dull rose
and blue damask, "Baronial Hall"
— a grouping of dishes "Table
Talk"^
Sell more lamps under a cam-paign
called "The Light that Flat-ters"
— and push the sale of chair-lamp-
table groups under the pro-motion
"Little Evenings".
If we like to smile while we're
buying wearing apparel, why not
home furnishings?
Mister Merchant, is it FUN to
spend in your store?
Holding up a pitiless mirror in which the retail furniture store can see itself as its customers see it, Miss Mclnerney is
evoking a swelling tide of comment front the trade. Next month she tells, as a typical woman customer, what type
of advertising is most appealing to the feminine eye; what is most apt to make her buy. Many a merchant is due for a
surprise or two when he finds how effective is the bundlle of dough he's spending every year in the newspapers.
f o r SEPTEMBER. 1936 25
FURNITURE FQOLICI
by
J-M- WALLACE-PETAILEP-,
TP-EASURER, BIRMINGHAM
FURNITURE DEALERS' ASSN, . HEVEP—ARGUES WITH
HIS CUSTOMERS, FOLLOWS BASEBALL, FOOTBALL-LOVES
FISHING - - _ « AND FRIED CHICKEH.
A LATENHESSEE •
Manqaret Paq
S E A Q B E M
FUP-NiTUP-E DESICJHEP- , BoPH
AND EDUCATED IN GRAND RAPIDS,
L1M-ES HOPSE R.ACINO, BP-OILED
LOBSTER AND KlNG EDWARD Vlll.
- , _ . _ . STEM, PP-ES-G-R.BOOKCASE.,,-,
CHAIR.Co, HASTINGS, MICH, AND VICE-PP-ES .
G.P.FURNITURE EXPOSITION ASSH . HAS A PET
HOBBy Of SWIMMIN6 ACROSS GrUNN LAKE, mMlCH,
OH HtS BACK., AND KEEPING HIS P\P&
LIT ALL THE WAY
J-Samuel WHITE.
MEe?ANEr.
H.C. IS P-I0IM6 THE GOP
ELEPHANT, AS A CANDIDATE
FOR. LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOP-
- - IN NORTH CAP-OLINA.
28 FINE FURNITURE
don *t ever
play poker
with him!
(the man on the cover)
AMILD, blond little feller sat
in a poker game a dozen or
so years ago, regarding his paste-boards
with a pout and wistful
blue eyes. The five other wolves
in the game took time off from
their ante-mg and boosting to
encourage and console him . . .
that is, at first they did. But, as
the evening waned into night and
the night faded before the dawn-ing,
the five wolves were no
longer sympathetic and helpful.
In fact, the five were merely
former wolves, having had their
teeth neatly extracted and their
hides shorn. But the little feller
remained wistful and round-eyed.
He still does. The stranger
meeting Morgan Aldrich for the
first, second or third time is not
cognizant of the fact that he is
in the company of a placid keg
of potential dynamite equipped
with a high-geared thinking ma-chine
that is constantly in mesh.
Beneath a solemn and some-times
sanctimonious mien,"Aldy"
really possesses a robust, almost
Rabelaisian sense of humor re-vealed
only occasionally to his
best friends. His wit seldom
creeps into his advertising copy
which is, incidentally, among the
best and most compelling furni-ture
ad copy being written.
Ad manager for the Flint-
Bruce Co., Hartford, Conn., for
the past five years, Aldrich is
also counsel for the Century
Associates, a syndicate of better
Eastern stores. Before joining
Flint-Bruce, he was service man-ager
of the Periodical Publishing
•Co. of Grand Rapids, now de-funct.
Here he acquired much of
his present skill at retail copy
and layouts, having prepared a
furniture mat service each month
and edited three store publica-tions
— Homes Charming, Home
Furnisher and Within the Home.
In addition, he acted as adver-
"ALDY"
. . . smokes too-big cigars constantly.
tising counsel for several stores.
A graduate of the University
of Michigan, where he was car-toonist
for the Michigan Gar-goyle,
Aldrich began his business
career as a newspaper advertis-ing
solicitor and stepped natural-ly
from that job to the service
department of Furniture Record
in 1925.
The young feller isn't so young
now. His brow is creeping up to
a bald spot at the back of his
head, despite his scant 37 years.
But the ideas beneath grow as
luxuriantly and rapidly as ever.
He doesn't take the boys at poker
as often as he used to, simply
because most of his spare time is
spent fooling around the garden
of his meticulous white New
England home at Windsor, where
with his good wife he is rearing
a daughter of five years. The
Aldriches are both rabid collec-tors
of Early Americana, and
they're in a swell spot to indulge
fully their joint hobby.
Aldy revels in detective fiction,
his favorite author being S. S.
Van Dine and his favorite char-acter
in history Sherlock Holmes.
His musical risibilities respond
most readily to the compositions
of \ ictor Herbert. "It Happened
One Xight" is his idea of the
decade's best movie.
Capable of stowing away an
amazing amount of food at all
times, Morgan's favorite dish is
steak and mushrooms. Smokes
too-big cigars constantly.
YES, DIRECH
\V"ES, K. C, you're right . . .
JL direct mail is back with a
bang! Thrown more or less into
the discard during the depres-sion
because it couldn't be turned
out quickly enough, to cut prices
fast enough, direct mail is being
yanked off its dusty shelf to be
given a fine and fond polish.
Perhaps, after all, pigeon-holing
direct mail was a good thing . . .
for direct mail! Absence, you
know, makes the heart grow
fonder. And direct mail, our
memory tells us, was a great
thing for stirring up the folks
out yonder. Do you get it . . .
"folks" . . . not public? That's
why direct mail is back with a
bang. We'd almost forgotten it
was the most personalized and
highly selective bolt in a retailer's
salvo. Direct mail, you know,
comes in, sits down and chats
with the prospective customer.
Contrasted with the loud "heys"
and "yoo-hoos" of newspaper
clamor, that is just refreshing
enough to gain interested and
active attention.
A sincere and abiding love for
his work is one of the chief rea-sons
Aldrich has won to an
enviable and highly respected
position in the furniture trade,
for teamed up with the hard-headed,
smart merchandising
ability of George Butler, Flint-
Bruce executive, furniture retail-ing
and furniture advertising
throughout New England have
been decidedly affected for the
better.
Says Aldrich, '"Because no
other institution touches the lives
of individuals more closely than
the home, it is increasingly ap-parent
to me that ours is a pro-fession
to be proud of—one that
is an outstanding educational
and social influence.
"What would I counsel anyone
learning the furniture advertising
business? Only this—learn furni-ture,
study the psychology of
people, start writing and keep on
writing and writing and writing!"
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 27
1AIL STIRS UP THE "FOLKS
by
MORGAN C. ALDRICH
Advertising Manager. Flint-Bruce Co., Hartford. Conn.
Papers Aren't Enough • But don't
get me wrong! I still believe news-paper
advertising is the main and
dominant medium of retailing to-day,
because people have formed
the habit of reading newspapers
daily. But it takes more than gas
to keep an auto running, and many
a store has learned it takes more
than newspaper advertising to keep
a cash register humming.
You suggest in the August FINE
FURNITURE that a store paper, mag-azine
or house organ is a mighty
slick way of supplementing a furni-ture
store's newspaper advertising.
And you're right. I'll certainly
agree to that . . . migosh, I ought
to. I must have turned out nearly
200 of them the five years I was
with the old Furniture Record!
And don't forget, I've learned
things the past five years, on the
firing line in a furniture store. Yes,
you're right . . . as far as you go
with your counsel. But that's the
trouble — you don't go far enough.
In the small-to-middle size furni-ture
stores, and that takes in the
majority of them, newspaper adver-tising
gets preference because it is
easily and quickly prepared, and
can be closely and quickly checked
on results. Direct mail, especially a
store magazine, takes a different
kind of copy, takes more time and
labor to turn out and distribute.
For a store that doesn't have the
required time and facilities, such a
magazine is a hard-to-produce type
of direct mail, consequently is
neglected. You don't see the de-partment
stores neglecting it, do
you? Well, just ask the wife!
Don't Lag Behind • Why should
furniture stores be any less smart,
or any less quick on the trigger?
No sirree . . . not when, unable to
produce it themselves, they can get
a skillfully edited ready-made store
magazine that they can mail out
regularly to carefully selected lists
of customers and ought-to-be-cus-tomers.
You don't bag a pheasant
by sitting on a stump with a cocked
gun waiting for it to saunter past
your sights. No, you go out with a
trained hound and flush your bird
from its cover. A furniture store
that isn't bagging its game has only
itself to blame.
Here's why I say your direct mail
plea is a swell tip to furniture re-tailers,
K. C.! Newspapers, by their
very nature, are an effectively
proven method of getting a store's
general hot-off-the-griddle promo-tions
before the general public.
They're naturally impersonal, they
have to get quick action, for they're
dead as a dodo in 24 hours. They
give your promotion tricks the
privacy of a goldfish to your com-petitors.
Copy has to be brief, terse
and sketchy. Every furniture ad
has scores of others fighting it for
the reader's attention, diverting the
mind from homefurnishings to a
swarm of other possibilities for
spending the weekly stipend. That
this daily din does continue to bring
home the bacon is a perpetual
phenomenon . . . or does it? Some,
yes . . . but not enough. The results
being pulled in by carefully planned
and aimed direct mail prove that it
doesn't.
Why is D. M. Effective? • Why is
direct mail, especially a store maga-zine,
so good? It's a sharpshooter
for one thing. You send it where
you know it will do the most good.
Copy is different . . . fuller, more
personal, more descriptive and in-formative,
better illustrated . . .
and so more interesting and persua-sive.
It keeps your merchandising
stunts under cover, keeps your chin
guarded against competitors' socks.
Its arrival is less frequent than a
newspaper, so it's more of a nov-elty,
gets more attention. You know
the old fable about "Wolf, Wolf!"
Its very form is different, like a
magazine; it is easier to handle, is
less bulky and cumbersome, is less
apt to be sent to the basement after
it's a day old.
The life of most magazines is 30
days. They are more apt to be
thoroughly and frequently read.
When it is being looked through
and read it is with undivided atten-tion
. . . that's something.
I hope no furniture merchant
Here's the view of a furniture ad-vertising
expert who, reading the
article in the August issue, "Direct
Mail is Back on the Job," writes to
agree that a rejuvenation of the
effectiveness of store publications
is now strongly indicated. How-ever,
Aldrich believes that the re-tailer,
sometimes unable to get
the most possible benefit out of
direct mail, needs to be furnished
a supplementary service that out-lines
co-ordinated effort and
enables him to cash in 100% on
his mailings.—The Editor.
kids himself into thinking the right
kind of store magazine won't be
read. Mrs. Shopper is avidly read-ing
House and Garden, House
Beautiful, The American Home,
Better Homes and Gardens, Arts
and Decoration and Country Life
. . . and eagerly paying anywhere
from 10c to 50c per month for the
privilege. Some of the home maga-zines
are now even being put out in
two teeming sections to supply Mrs.
Shopper's growing appetite for
bright ideas to improve her home's
appearance and efficiency, to keep
her husband home nights, to keep
her castle up with the Jones' and
to make it the shining spot where
all Junior's and daughter's crowd
gathers.
I guess you get it by now. We
see eye to eye on getting on the
band wagon with direct mail's post-depression
debut, and on a store
magazine, too. But just a shipment
of smart home magazines isn't
enough. Really needed is a supple-mentary
bulletin that shows the re-tailer
how to use this advertising
medium most effectively. You notice
the doctor always writes "Directions
for taking" on every bottle of medi-cine,
don't you?
Who Are Your Prospects? • Let's
begin at the beginning. How many
booklets should a store send? To
whom? Not merely to the names
on a store's books. There are plenty
not there that ought to be. Not
cast to the four winds, but to a
carefully selected list of first class
homes. One general way a retailer
can determine the number of store
magazines he can wisely and profit-ably
use is this: Draw a circle on a
(Continued on Page 34)
FINE FURNITURE
EVERY period or furniture style that has endured
through the centuries has embodied certain dis-tinguishing
characteristics that the student of history
could allocate in a definite position as to design. These
identifying motifs force themselves into their respective
style—and no other—mainly, because they represented
the attitude of humanity at that particular time and
place. They exemplified the ideas uppermost in the
human mind, ideas related to sociology, religion, gov-ernment
or science.
If so-called Modern is to become a definite period
style—Marie Kirkpatrick's dresser is a typical com-mercial
example—marking the era in which we live,
it must have characteristics exemplifying ideas and
thought relative to today. Therefore, to design a piece
FAMILIAR DESIGNS, INTERPRETED
By F A M O U S DESIGNERS
of furniture in the Modern spirit, the creator must
concentrate on the spirit of the present.
Probably there has never been a furniture style
that has been as controversial as present-day Modern.
There are nearly as many "schools-of-thought" on
contemporary design as there are variations of the
style itself. For a designer to set himself or herself up
as an authority on what constitutes good or bad
Modern design is a dangerous practice, generally
leaving the artist out on a limb as the style evolves its
uncertain path toward posterity. However, the ele-mentts
of proportion, color, balance, asymmetric or
bisymmetric — in general, the requisites of good design
— cannot be ignored nor sacnfied in the development
of Modern furniture.
When one considers the growing list of mechanical
devices so necessary to our present-day well being, and
the complexity of our economic life, it is amazing that
a style has been evolved as positive as present Modern.
princess of the pencil
MARIE KIRKPATRICK
. . . couldn't keep out of the furniture
business.
ACROSS the desk sits a comely
. young lady. As her facile pencil
slides across the sketch paper she
converses in a well-modulated voice.
"How could I keep out of the fur-niture
business, with my father
operating a designing service for
years and years and my husband
being a partner in the business?
And especially, when I liked to
draw and discovered that I could
make a presentable piece of work?"
The artist pushes back a stray
lock of brown, fluffy hair with the
back of her hand and continues:
"lou see, I've always been rather
close to the furniture business.
Why, I can remember back when—"
and she casts a facetious glance—
"Dad used to take me clown to the
Pantlmd Hotel in Grand Rapids
during the summer market. It
would be a stifling hot night and
there would be a perfect sea of
straw hats on the street. And
numerous strange men would ask if
they should cut off my curls."
Several summers, but not too
many, have passed since Airs. J.
Russell Kirkpatrick—Marie to you
who know this personable young
designer—clipped her curls. In the
meantime she has blossomed into a
nationally-known designer in her
own right. But despite the heritage
to which she fell heiress, Marie con-fesses
that furniture designing is a
bloomin' sight harder than it looks.
Her first job was illustrating ad-vertisements
and articles for trade
papers in a publishing house. Event-ually
she affiliated herself with her
father's business and in addition to
developing an innate artistic ability,
achieved a reputation as an
astute business woman. She is
familiar with the language of furni-ture
buyers, calloused to the foibles
of factory foremen. Marie and her
husband travel almost constantly,
generally east of the Mississippi.
"My favorite sport? You'd be
surprised. It's combined with my
hobby and is antique-hunting. Our
country home at Lamont, Mich., is
furnished with such pieces and we're
constantly on the lookout for addi-tions.
In fact, my ambition is to
have a perfect early American home
m the country, live there six months
and devote the balance of the year
to traveling in Europe."
Marie has a true affection for
England with a predilection to spend
about one week at a time in Berlin
and Paris—"but often." If she
could only have one favorite book
it would be a big thick anthology
of poetry, and to relieve her pretty
head of the torment of trying to
create "something different" for a
malcontented manufacturer, she
reads Charles Dickens aloud. Be-cause
of the gorgeous interiors
shown in "Animal Kingdom," it
registers as Marie's favorite movie.
And her favorite public person-age?
Well, we must admit a bit of
chagrin, because it was presumed
that Mane Kirkpatrick was orgi-inal.
But after all, this hustling,
accomplished, princess of the pencil
and Judy O'Grady are daughters
under the skin. You've guessed him
—the Ex-Prince of Wales.
f o r SEPTEMBEH, 1 9 3 6 29
!i
U -
CHOICM • 4 - 5TR.PED • >.'AI.:NU7 •
30 FINE FURNITURE
MERCHANDISING COLONIALISM
the williamsburg galleries
HPYING in with the revived demand for 18th
_L Century homefurnishings, Tomlinson of High
Point in collaboration with Collins & Aikman Corp.,
Firth Carpet Co., Charles Hall, Inc., Crest Co.,
Desley Fabrics and Stead & Miller Co., presented
an outstanding display—the Williamsburg Gallsries
—in the Merchandise Mart at the recent summer
market. The plan was inspired by the restoration
of one of the most historical spots in the United
States—Williamsburg, Va.-
The merchandising plan of the collaborators
incorporates the unusual prospect of long-lived
interest and counterparts of the display can be re-produced
in retail stores. Dealer helps in the form
of consumer literature and identification tags carry-ing
historical and romantic stories of the products,
are furnished also. The plan includes seven rooms.
The illustrations on this page depict several of
the ensembles. At the top left a pair of Chippen-dale
linen-covered love seats features the Wren
room. A quaint butler's tray and candlesticks
enhance the group. Chippendale and Queen Anne
have been combined in a Colonial setting in the
Alice Page bedroom. The Dixon living room, in-spired
by the Great Room in the Market Square
Tavern, employs pine wall paper as a background
for the authentic early Chippendale sofa, flanked
by a pair of Pembroke tables. Sheraton is intro-duced
in the Berkeley dining room, a replica of the
supper room m the Governor's Palace. A typical
early American tavern chamber room is reproduced
in the Susanna Allen bedroom, dominated by the
beautiful poster beds. The Gloucester room, below,
is one of the highlights of the group.
•. !
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 31
TEN GUIDES to profitable
fall
selling
by
K. C. CLAPP
Merchandising editor, FINE FURNITURE
I Keep sweet with reliable and quick manufac-turing
sources for new Fall merchandise. Don't
fail to interview every manufacturer's salesman
who comes into your store. He may have the
very line you need to give you the edge that
means the difference between net profit and loss.
Cultivate manufacturers you are sure can and will fill
your re-orders with the same standard of merchandise
they showed you as samples at the markets. Beware
of skimping on construction and materials that change
what you thought you ordered from a good value into
just cheap merchandise.
2 Trade up and grade up. If you're borax, trade
up anyhow. It will pay this Fall. At no time
has it been profitable to sell dreck. This Fall it
will be not only unprofitable but inexcusable,
because people want and will pay for better
things, as you very well know. I watched a retailer
with a customer trie other day. He got through sell-ing
mother and daughter, came over to me and said,
"A year ago neither of them would have thought of
paying over $79.50 for a dining room suite. Today
they warned me they couldn't go above $150. They
bought a suite for $189.50." Offer your salesmen real
incentive to increase their average unit sale. Help them
by advertising better things, too.
need all the capital you can get to conduct a larger
volume of business. On the other hand, don't judge
too harshly. The man who was notoriously poor pay
two and three years ago perhaps couldn't help it. If
he wants new furniture, make every effort to sell him
what you and he agree he can pay for. Be most in-sistent
on prompt payment the first three months of
the account.
5 In appliance selling, some outside solicitation
is still necessary, but confine it to following up
definite leads obtained in the store. Indiscrim-inate
outside sales effort cuts the heart out of
your profit on appliances, especially when the
spread runs less than 40% on retail. Tie to one main
line for your higher priced units and one other for low-priced
leaders. Don't carry, in refrigerators, more than
two lines; in washers and ironers, more than three; in
radios, more than four. Don't extend outside sales
effort on vacuum sweepers. You've too much compe-tition
from the door-to-door crews of manufacturers.
If possible, merchandise kitchen ensembles with kitchen
furniture, linoleum, ranges, refrigerators, kitchen cabi-nets
and all other related merchandise together. If you
can't show them as model kitchens, at least be sure
that the woman who is buying a new range or refrig-erator
sees and hears about new linoleum to put under it.
3 Do a better job with your advertising. If your
ad man is something besides a yes-man and an
office boy, has ideas of his own, give him leeway
to put some of them across. Quit insisting on
junky advertising of loss leaders. Use more
small ads that carry a punch, rather than large ads
that slobber black ink and talk nothing but price.
Give direct mail a chance, employing it as a supple-ment
to your newspaper advertising. Use store maga-zines
sent to your best customers and prospects.
Direct mail is becoming increasingly effective. Here's
what three well-known and successful firms say about
it: " . . . I am sure this year we are getting much
better results from our circular advertising for new
business than we are from newspaper advertising. . . "
"Its (direct mail's) principal value to us consists in
making it possible to reach specialized groups of our
customers." . . . "We use direct mail regularly and
systematically and find that when carefully prepared
and properly tied in with other media . . . it produces
excellent results."
4 Don't let the bars down too far on credits.
People are more prosperous but poor risks are
still numerous. Insist on at least 20% down.
Eighteen months is long enough on the average
room-outfit sale. You can't pay for new mer-chandise
with accounts receivable, and you're going to
American Furniture Mart Plioto
This year will witness a revival of sales of
juvenile suites and children's furniture of all
sorts."
32 FINE FURNITURE
Buy lines that harmonize in price as well as in
style and colors. Too many furniture stores are
pounding Modern furniture heavily but con-tinue
carrying, almost to exclusion, rugs with
Oriental patterns. Introduce your floor-covering
buyer to your furniture buyer, even if you're both of
them._ By the same token, isn't it silly to concentrate
on living room suites at #167.50 and carry only a few-selections
of Axminster rugs at $39.50? Be consistently
"quality" or consistently "borax."
Study needs and desires of your customers
more closely than your competitor's antics. Buy
the leading ladies' mags and see what they're
telling women about furniture styles. These
publications are a potent influence on purchases.
Go to the movies occasionally and find out what styles
in furniture are being promulgated there. Watch your
stock closely to see what kinds and styles of furniture
are^selling best and how demand is shifting to certain
designs, colors, woods, fabrics. Don't bet your per-sonal
preferences or manufacturers' claims against the
opinions and predilections of your customers. You may
get the satisfaction of being right, but the sale is a
little important, too.
8 Get set for a big Christmas. Begin scouting
now for merchandise suitable for gifts. Stock
better grades of toys, especially wheel toys.
Search for novelty pieces that are outstanding
and distinctive, such as table appliances of
Modern design. The combined appeal of lamps as a
gift and as a contribution to better sight will make
this tops as a Christmas seller. This year will witness
a revival of sales of juvenile suites and children's fur-niture
of all sorts. Mirrors of new, simplified Modern
design will go well. Small tables, cellarettes, game sets,
occasional chairs, cedar chests and a host of other
regular items can be given the gift appeal with no
trouble at all. The trick is to do it cleverly and
naturally.
9 Be alert to the many possibilities for profits in
new home-furnishing lines . . . products that
have reached the stage of general public accept-ance
yet have not approached a saturation
point; products that are likely to enjoy a revival.
Examples: In certain localities where rate structures
and competitive conditions are favorable, electric
ranges, water-heaters, unit oil burners, coal stokers.
Another case in point is paint and wall paper for
which there is a huge potential market. Some stores
are ideally set up to handle these without much trouble
and extra expense. How about office furniture? Isn't
there an opportunity in your town among the new
commercial concerns that need new desks, filing cabi-nets,
office chairs, unit air conditioners? Pianos are
"hot" again. So are bicycles. Follow closely trends of
public demand, not only in furniture but in all kindred
lines logically within your merchandising capabilities.
Improve salesmanship . . . please improve
salesmanship! . . . For profit's sake, improve
salesmanship !! It is especially weak in your
selling of utility products. See to it that
your salesmen know all the possible talking
points about a product and that he uses them all on
his customers. Teach him to say something more than
'"This is a good value at $12.95;" to explain why it's
a good value . . . every one of the reasons why it's a
good value. Read Miss Mclnerney's article in this
issue and apply it, for it is expert analysis of the cus-tomer's
secret thoughts and inarticulated desires.
NEW SALES APPEAL FOR OFFICE DESKS
STORES handling office furniture are given powerful salc^
ammunition in the new TrestleWood desk line recently
brought out by the Gunn Furniture Co., Grand RapkU.
Each desk is shipped knocked down, thus effecting substan-tial
savings in freight charges. It can be set up quickly v-fit
any sort of space and in a variety of drawer arrangr •
ments. Tops, drawers, sides, legs can be replaced imme-diately
and economically from stock. Desks are available in
a number of finishes to harmonize with almost any decora-ative
scheme. Accompanying cuts show a TrestleWood desk
in various stages of assembly.
l o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 33
TENDENCY NOT TO PULL A TENDON
Three Rivers, Mich., August 20—
(Special dispatch to FINE FURNI-TURE).
It is now early in August,
this year. In my mail today I re-ceived
a notice that Crusader Air-craft
Corp. stock may be had for
$0.25 per share in Denver—or $2.83
by the bale. Then I got a specific
order from Editor-Woodcutter Mac-kenzie
to ease along downstreet to
Roody Culver's Undertaking Re-pository
& Furniture Kitchen. And
all I have to say about these two
proposals is that $0.25 for Crusader
stock is $0.24 more than I'll pay
and that Woodcutter Mackenzie
better get a new helve for his axe
because he is going to have a helve
time getting me clown to Roody's
this month. I may get down there
sometime because, as I have said
before in broaching the same sub-ject
for a lot less than $0.25 per
broach — (that's net) — I think
Roody has some sound facts for
everyone in the furniture industry.
But I am not going to pull a tendon
getting there. My tendencies are
the other way.
To Market • Whatever — I am
happy to report to my versatile
readers this month—(August to me
and September to you)—that I
have just returned from the Furni-ture
Capital of America and I have
purchased some Grand Rapids fur-niture
for the House of the Golden
Rathole.
The House of the Golden Rathole
is up on East street down here and
is one door north of the house that
Doc Mapes bought off'n Uncle
Pressly Caldwell and one door this
side of the place where Squire Bill
Kennedy lives who was born down
in the Lob in Indianny, which is not
far from the WTild Goose-Arm of
the Limberlost Swamp and fairly
close to the Black-Haw Patch.
(Black haws had a flat pit and you
spit 'em out when you et haws, Bill
says.)
Boat-Bottom vs. Gable • Bill has
just finished fixing over a boat. It's
a steel boat and he bought it for $2
from a fellow named Hostettler, or
some such name, who lives over in
Third Ward. Bill had to take the
bottom off and substitute it with a
wooden bottom, and the boat has
a bunty back end and a pointed
snoot so Bill had quite a time cut-ting
the lumber up to fit crosswise.
Bill said it was a lot different put-by
Chet Shafer
"LAZIEST HUMORIST IN THE WORLD"
ting a bottom on a boat with a
bunty back end and a pointed snoot
than putting a gable on a house.
"When you build a gable," Bill
said, recently, "all you've got t' do
is t' measure 'er from cornish t'
cornish."
Service with Sense • I never meas-ured
anything from cornish t' corn-ish,
myself, and I never put a bot-tom
in a boat with a pointed snoot
and a bunty back-end. But if I
thought I could enlighten the co-horts
in the furniture industry by
doing either one, I'd do it. My new
motto is: "Service Till it Hurts—
and then have sense enough to
quit."
On Location • Now, the House of
the Golden Rathole is across the
street from the vacant lot where
Old Lady Schnooder used to live
and suffered annually around Hal-lowe'en
from tip-overs — which is
something that, in a way, resembles
the collywoobles, or jitters. And the
furniture I secured in Grand Rap-ids
arrived just as Bill Kennedy was
starting north on a fishing trip. He
painted the boat a robin's-egg blue
and named it "The Good Doctor
Townsend." Bill remarked:
"Got yourself a new haircloth
sofy, eh?"
And then he said:
"Well, you better carry a first-aid
kit if you're goin' t' do any courtin'
on it. You're li'ble t' slip off an'
pull a tendon."
Settle-Sitting • Then Bill went
away and I looked over the House
of the Golden Rathole from cornish
t' cornish and the truck-driver got
the furniture inside—and then I set
on the settle and got to thinking
about Old John Hendricks, who for
29 long years has been the janitor
here at the Presbyterian church and
the Free Public Lib'ary—both.
During those 29 years Old John
has faithfully served one lib'arian—
Susie Silliman. But up at the church
he has served no less than ten dom-inies.
And that all goes to prove
that what the furniture industry
needs is an ecclesiastical Turnover.
It is now getting along about
dinner-time and dinner's at noon,
too. So there's no chance to get on
down to Roody's t'day.
Boosted to Bazit • As I conclude
this dispatch, I am happy to report
that I have been selected as the
Knight Bazit of the Sages & Seers
Association of America. I won this
title after a bitter struggle in which
everyone who has ever been called
a Sage & Seer participated, includ-ing
Alexander Hamilton and K. C.
Clapp. The Sages & Seers Associa-tion
will immediately launch a cam-paign
to popularize the full-flower-ing,
full-floating peacock feather-duster
over the clock on the mantel
shelf.
I regret, as I close, but one thing
in my life. I am sorry I was not
born down in the Lob, in Indianny,
or at least the Black-Haw Patch. I
would have been pretty accurate, I
feel confident, spitting out them flat
pits.
And my advice to my readers, at
this time, is:
"Measure 'er from cornish t'
cornish."
yrs (sgd) CHET SHAFER.
And, at the Battle of Appamatox
Court House, the land was gray
with rebels.
34 FINE FURNITURE
Direct Mail
(Continued from Page 27 J
map, with the store as a center;
that will take in the primary trading
area of the store's city. Set down
inside your circle the population of
each town over 1,000, then divide
this total population by five to get
the number of actual families in the
area. For the average furniture
store, research has shown that 30%
to 35% of these families should be
desirable and possible customers of
your store. With these potential-prospect
figures you now have, it is
possible to turn to the "Street Sec-tion"
of city directories and pick
the actual names for the mailing list
by selected streets.
With each issue of the direct mail
magazine, the dealer should also be
shown how he can tie the edi-torial
contents up to his floor and
window displays; how additional
store traffic past show windows and
into the store can be drawn from
people getting these direct mail
"punches"; how to tie up newspaper
advertising and publicity with the
store's mailing of the magazines;
even how to coordinate hard-hitting
copy for radio broadcasts.
No, just a store magazine isn't
enough . . . but an intensively
FINE FURNITURE'S
RECOMMENDED 1936-37 ADVERTISING BUDGETS FOR
FURNITURE STORES IN VARIOUS VOLUME CLASSIFICATIONS
Anticipated
Annual Sales
Recommended total
advertising budget
including adminis-trative
expense.. . .
% of Adv. budget
for newspaper adv.
% for direct mail...
% for other media . .
$50,000
$3,750
70
($2,625)
20
($750)
10
($375)
$75,000
$4,300
70
($3,010)
20
($860)
10
($430)
$100,000
$6,500
75
($4,875)
18
($1,170)
7
($455)
$150,000
$9,500
75
($7,125)
16
($1,620)
9
($855)
$200,000
$12,000
75
($9,000)
15
($1,800)
10
($1,200)
Increased volume will bring percentage for advertising expense from
7 to 8% down to between 6 and 6.5%. With little need for widespread
ballyhooing of bargains, newspaper copy should be cleaner, show
better merchandise, build prestige by use of more institutional copy
planned well in advance. Direct mail will be increasingly useful.
Unless real talent is available, heavy expenditure for radio advertising
is not advisable except by larger stores.
thought-out and concentrated mer-chandising
program centered about
a store publication, designed to sup-plement
the natural shortcomings
of newspaper promotion, would be
something.
Some organization, some day, is
going to do it . . . or have you r
Comparison Displays
TV^EEPING plenty of rug cushion
XV samples handy for ready ref-erence
is one of the reasons why the
Sterling Furniture Co., San Fran-cisco,
maintains such a high rate of
rug pad sales.
r x -*%
. . . d i s p l a y e d on easel-like racks,
easily removed for better inspec-tion
by customer.
The Sterling features six different
grades and weights under its own
name and displays samples of them
on novel upright racks in various
parts of the store's big floor cover-ing
department so that salesmen
can always find one conveniently
near. Selling is simplified for the
salesmen, who work all over the
store, because different colored
labels are used to indicate different
grades of cushions. Accompanying
tags give prices.
Metal Venetian Blinds
T IGHT weight aluminum slats,
J i lighter than the conventional
wood slat and occupying about one-third
the bundle space, have been
developed by the Kirsch Co.,
Sturgis, Mich., in the concern's new
\ enetian blind. A new tilting de-vice
is positive in action, non-shppmg
and eliminates the chain in
combination with the tilting unit.
The demonstration model of the
Kirsch Sun Aire blind, illustrated,
is 3' 5" wide, 4' 5" high and 4 ^ "
thick. The frame itself, exclusive of
top and side panels and compart-ment
for holding literature, is 2iy2"
SUN
wide by 37" high and will accom-modate
a blind sample 24" x 36"
deep. Comes in several colors and
is supplied to retail stores on a re-bate
basis.
f o r S E P T E M B E R , 1936 35
Homefurnishing News and
Instalment Store Sales Up 23%
Instalment furniture stores report in-creases
of 22.8% in sales for the second
quarter of 1936 as against the same period
of last year, according to a bulletin recently
released by Arthur Fertig & Co., furniture
store accountants. Gross profit margins arc
running somewhat higher because of cus-tomers'
willingness to buy slightly better
grades. Operating expenses dropped from
43.02% in 1935 to 37.60%, due principally
to increased sales volume. Advertising ex-pense
dropped from 7.78% to 6.45%. Re-possessions
decreased from 3.8% to 2.08%.
Prices Advance 5% to 10%
Price advances ranging from 5 to 10%
have been widely instituted by furniture
manufacturers, especially by those in the
Midwest, although several Southern firms
have notified retailers of increases. Mer-chants
generally have not resisted or pro-tested
the advances, which were anticipated.
Deliveries are still slow and several factories
have entirely withdrawn their lines. Others
arc taking orders for shipment no earlier
than November or December. Retailers re-port
their promotional plans handicapped by
uncertainty of deliveries, although many
customers are willing to buy now for later
delivery.
NRFA Stores 16% Ahead
Furniture stores belonging to the National
Retail Furniture Association reported a gain
of 29% in June sales this year over 1935
volume, and a 16% increase for the first
six months of the year over 1935; 30% over
1934. These figures, released by NRFA, are
the result of a study of 153 stores in five
sections of the country. Collections and
down-payments are running substantially
higher than last year.
Manufacturers' Orders Up 32%
The first half of 1936 saw an increase of
32% in orders written by manufacturers
over the same period of 1935. according to
figures released by the National Association
of Furniture Manufacturers. Case goo Is
orders were 36% greater; upholstery, 19%
ahead.
Begin Work on Heavy Orders
Southern manufacturers are effecting
greatly increased furniture production on
present standards of the 45-hour week as
work is started on the mountain of orders
written at the recent markets in High Point
and Chicago. Wherever production needs
warrant, men are being added to present
working forces, but there is no prospect of
employing double shifts, sentiment among
Southern manufacturers being decidedly
against such an expedient.
Records Broken at Western Market
A new high for attendance at summer
markets was recorded at the 42nd Western
Furniture Market in San Francisco in Aug-ust.
Buying, too, was close to breaking
records and in many cases exceeded, in first-day
volume, sales of the entire week of any
previous market. Modern was in greatest
demand among retailers, nearly 90% of the
upholstery business written being in these
styles, and about 65% in all lines. Floor
covering exhibitors reported business twice
as heavy as it was last year. Radio sales
were unprecedentedly brisk.
HAROLD D. LAIDLEY
. . . recently appointed manager of
sales and promotion activities for
the Merchandise Mart. Laidley is
key man in a newly inaugurated
plan of management, designed to
increase operating efficiency.
Orders Approach 1929 High
All recent records for dollar volume were
shattered at the Chicago and Grand Rapids
markets when orders at the Summer shows
mounted to a total of 67% of volume writ-ten
at the 1929 Summer market. This was
the gist of a recent report by Seidman &
Seidman, certified public accountants.
Rhode Island Stores Organize
Pawtucket and Blackstone Valley, R. I.,
furniture dealers formed a new association
at a meeting in Pawtucket late in July.
Co-operation among merchants on closing
hours, elimination of price wars and other
abuses are among the purposes of the organ-ization.
By-laws will be drawn up at an
early meeting.
MARKETS
GRAND RAPIDS
Fall Market
Nov. 5 — 13
Winter market dates not set.
CHICAGO
Fall Market
Nov. 9—14
Winter Market
Jan 4—16
SAN FRANCISCO
BOSTON
Sept. 7—12
NATIONAL FURNITURE WEEK
Oct. 2—10
Shaw Joins Robertson
J. Silman Shaw, formerly of Kahn & Levy,
has entered into partnership with George W.
Robertson of the George W. Robertson
Furniture Co., Galveston, Texas.
Manages Fairfield Store
Harry Lovell, former shoe dealer of Fair-field,
Iowa, has been made manager of the
Fairfield Furniture Co., succeeding the late
W. R. Baker.
d
Heads Appliance Dept.
Calvin R. Estes, formerly with the Sioux
Falls Gas Co., has joined the G. & G. Rug
& Furniture Co., Sioux Falls, S. D., as head
of the newly organized appliance depart-ment
in that store.
Joins Carl Store
Erwin A. Ibseher, formerly of the Brown
Thomson department store of Hartford,
Conn., has joined the Carl Store .of Sche-nectady,
N. Y., as manager of the furniture
department.
Fish Remodels Stores
The L. Fish Furniture Co., operating nine
furniture stores in Chicago, has begun mod-ernization
of its Englewood store and its
building at 208 S. Wabash Ave. The Engle-wood
store is being entirely remodeled with
new front and separate departments for fur-niture,
draperies, appliances, etc. A battery
of model rooms will be included. The
Wabash Ave. store will have a restyled main
floor and remodeled windows, with unique
arrangement of individual shops. Robert
Heller, industrial designer, is in charge of
the restyling of the stores.
Joins Resinous Products
Thomas D. Perry, formerly of Plywoods,
Inc., has joined the Resinous Products &
Chemical Co. of Philadelphia. Perry has
been intimately associated with plywood
manufacturers for the past 25 years. He
has become especially known for his work
in the adaptation of plywood to low unit
cost housing. After his graduation from
Massachusetts Institute of Technology he
was for many years with the Grand Rapids
Veneer Works, and the New Albany Veneer-ing
Company. Among Perry's publications,
his paper given before the A. S. M. E. in
June, 1935, entitled "Plywood House Units,"
aroused particular comment and interest.
Duo-Therm Sales Up 400%
Shipments on Duo-Therm line of oil-burning
space heaters are 400% ahead of
shipments for the corresponding period of
a year ago, according to officials of the
heater division of Motor Wheel Corpora-tion.
A record volume is also reported on
the Duo-Therm line of oil-burning ranges
and water heaters and on the Kero-Therm
line of kerosene-burning cabinet heaters
newly announced by Motor Wheel this
Markson's Progress Dinner
Thirty-five employes of the Markson Fur-niture
Stores celebrated a Progress dinner in
Utica, N. Y., Aug. 4, at which Samuel
Markson, president, predicted that 1936
would be a banner year for the organization,
with its several stores in Central New York.
36 FINE FURNITURE
Brown Buys Kaufman's
A. J. Brown, president of the A. J. Brown
Co., has purchased the Kaufman Furniture
Co. of Montpelier, Ohio. The deal merges
two of the largest furniture stores in north-western
Ohio.
Rohde Designs Troy Line
The Troy Sunshade Co. is completely re-styling
its line of streamline furniture and
has retained Gilbert Rohde as designer.
Buys White Oak Plant
The M. F. Blankenbaker Co. of Bright-wood,
Va., has purchased the White Oak
Chair Factory, and it was planned that pro-duction
would start in September after ex-tensive
remodeling.
New Factory in Virginia
Colonial Furniture Corp. of Fredericks-burg,
Va., has filed articles of incorporation.
The new organization has a maximum capi-talization
of g25,0O0.
0
Milne Sells Interest
John Milne, president and general man-ager
of the Cleveland Chair Co., Cleveland,
has sold his interest in the firm to H. B.
Moore, formerly of the Hardwick Woolen
Mills. Milne expects to enter the manufac-turing
business with his son, John, in the
near future.
Fall Jamestown Market
The opening of the Jamestown Fall mar-ket
probably will be held late in October,
according to Earl 0. Hulquist, market pres-ident,
who anticipates that it will run
through the first week of November.
Gold Store Remodels
Extensive remodeling and modernization
of the Gold Furniture store, Huntington, W.
Va., was begun in August. A color scheme
of black, ivory and gold Carrara glass is
The Norge stove division of Borg-
Warner, Detroit, has just an-nounced
its new line of electric
stoves. This small three-plate
model. No. ER-20-S0, is designed
for use in small homes or apart-ments
with restricted kitchen space.
being used on the new 60-foot front. Semi-partitions
on the first floor are being torn
down to make room for a large display room
comprising almost the entire length of the
building. Other renovations include chang-ing
the third floor from a warehouse room
to a display room and the installation of a
central heating plant.
Armstrong's Fall Campaign
Armstrong Cork Co. is presenting this
fall two campaigns—one on linoleum and
the other on Quaker rugs. Says A. K.
Barnes, director of advertising and merchan-dising,
''Both promotions are based upon
strong, fundamental appeals to the merchant
and the consumer: both are backed by the
most comprehensive program of advertising
Armstrong has scheduled within recent
years/'
Color pages are appearing in fourteen
publications in support of the fall promo-tions,
the basic appeal of which is the idea
of "Fashion-Thrift Floors," designed to
answer the problem of most women who
are looking for smart style at sensible prices.
Armstrong's fall Quaker rug promotion
concentrates the efforts of merchants par-ticularly
on six featured patterns. Retailers
are being furnished a complete assortment
of promotional materials.
A
National Furniture Week
Plans for Xational Furniture Week were
under way in more than 100 cities and the
objective of 500 cities is expected to be
attained.
Every furniture and department store in
Denver had made arrangements to partici-pate,
31 home furnishings outlets having
already ordered tie-up materials from head-quarters.
Plans for getting Furniture Week
mention on national hook-ups of both
broadcasting chains are under way.
Enlarge Appliance Section
The major appliance section on the fifth
floor of the American Furniture Mart will
be enlarged prior to the next major market.
Present plans call for the construction of
another east-and-west corridor through the
northwest quarter of the floor, and a series
of smaller display spaces.
Wallace Forms Own Agency
Resigning his position with Stevens, Inc.,
advertising agency, Oliver Wallace has
organized his own company, Oliver A. Wal-lace,
Inc.. with headquarters in the Associa-tion
of Commerce Bldg., Grand Rapids.
Among his furniture accounts the new firm
lists Berkey & Gay and the Imperial Fur-niture
Co., both of Grand Rapids.
A
Imperial Showrooms Ready Dec. 1
Ready for occupancy by Dec. 1, the con-tract
has been let for the new #80,000
Imperial Furniture Co. factory showrooms.
The modern brick and concrete structure
on the Imperial grounds just south of the
present factory site will more than double
present showroom space. Its entire 43,200
square feet, except for a kitchen and dining
room, will be devoted to displaying Imperial
lines.
Imperial's manufacturing departments are
being expanded to occupy the 20,000 square
feet of space now being used in the factory
for showroom purposes.
B & G Opens Plant No. 1
Orders booked by Berkey & Gay in the
July market following their premier showing
at the May market have necessitated an
expansion program, according to Frank D.
Made to retail for under $10, this
combination e l e c t r i c mixer and
juice extractor is one of a new
group of appliances designed for
the A. C. Gilbert Co. by Robert
Heller, industrial designer.
McKay, chairman of the board. The large
No. 1 plant will be put back into operation.
The finishing, trimming, packing and ship-ping
departments are being removed from
plant No. 2 where the company opened
operations and are being set up in plant
No. 1, part of which is occupied by the
firm's showrooms.
"16 Years to Pay"
A "co-operative bank plan" that enables
the customer to finance large purchases of
furniture over a 16-year period and at the
same time gives the store a cash sale, is
being tried out by the Paine Furniture Co.,
Boston, in co-operation with Massachusetts
banks.
Washer Shipments Ahead
A 54% increase in shipments by manu-facturers
of washing macliines was reported
for July, 1936, as compared with the same
month last year. J. R. Bohnen, secretary
of the American Washing Machine Manu-facturers
Assn., announces that 170.146
washer units were shipped during July;
14,944 ironers were shipped for a gain of
39.19%. Half-year shipments of washers
showed an increase of 28% over last year;
ironers, a gain of 29%.
PLYABLE-LAK-ER-FIL
(Patent Pending)
Sixty glazes in natural and colors for
furniture, boat bungs, canvas decks, im-perfections
in wood, metal and concrete.
Fast drying, non-shrinkine. staimtble:
water, alkali, lacquer and highly acid proof.
Sample can parcel po»t 15c anywhere in
the U.S.A. (Give color and purpose.)
PLYABLE-LAK-ER-FIL COMPANY
LANSING, MICH.
Long Distance Hauling, Packing
and Crating.
Large Trucks, Guaranteed Ser-vice,
Reasonable Rates.
Biodgett Packing: & Storage Co.
Grand Rapids* Michigan
for SEPTEMBER. 1936 37
"Arabella, what is it that's black and white and red all over?"
"I'll give up, Ignatius, what is it that's black and white and red all
overf
"Why, FINE FURNITURE, of course "
Whereupon Arabella wrapped the paddle around Ignatius's neck and dumped him
into Lake Arapahoe, because Arabella knew that FINE FURNITURE was not red all
over, but only by about 90% of the best furniture merchants in the United States.
A very fine accomplishment for a four-month-old publication —
BUT —
In case you're one of the miss-ing
10%, here's your chance to
sign up regularly for the most
authoritative, easiest- to - read
magazine in the furniture field. I
FINE
FURNITURE
Circulation Manager
FINE FURNITURE
Assn. of Commerce Bldg.
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Please enter my subscription for FINE
FURNITURE for years.
Check is enclosed Q Please bill me F l
N ame
Store-
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
38 FINE FURNITURE
FIRM NAME
IDEAL FURN. CO
BOLLE & DETZEL
BUTTERWORTH FURN. CO
ROME HOUSEHOLD OUTFITTING
BERN FURN. CO *
BLOM BROS
LITTLE NECK FURN. CO
HUDSON HDWE. 4 FURN. CO.
VALLEY FURN. CO., INC. *
STEWART FURN. EXCHANGE t
POTTER STOVE & FURN. CO.
TYSON FURN. CO
HUB FURN. CO.f
THE FURN. HOUSE
HENSHAW FURN. CO. *
HOME SUPPLY CO
ALLEN FURN. CO
HARTLEY FURN. CO
McQUARY FURN. CO
BLOM BROS.
BACKSTROM FURN. CO
PIERCE-BRADEN CO
* Branch store or
N E W
CITY
Washington, N. J
Newark, N. I
Wichita, Kan.
CO.tRome, N. Y.
Corning, N. Y.
Vineland, N. J.
Little Neck, N. Y.
Center, Texas
McAllen, Texas
York Neb . . .
Marceline, Mo.
. Eastland, Texas . . . .
Chattanooga, Tenn. .
Concord, N. H
Jamaica, L. I
Grand View, Mo
Ashtabula, Ohio
Delphos, Kan
. Lindsay* Okla.
Elmer, N. J.
Hawley, Minn.
Griswold, la
unit of chain.
S T O R E S
STREET
AND NUMBER
Shurts Bldg.
Halsey and Central
220 N. Main
239 E. Dominick
W. Market
9 N. 6th
Northern Blvd
South Main
. . . . 509 Lincoln
W. Main
621 Market
17 School
165th & Jamaica
226 Center
Hull Bldg
f Change
PROPRIETORS
Harry Shampanore
Emil Detzel
W. L. Butterworth
W. C. Butterworth
Joseph M. Rainone .
Morris Bernstein
Samuel Blom
Samuel Hofstein
Fred Hudson
T. B. Vines
G. R. Stewart
Earl Sutliff
W. O. Tyson
Ed. Parry
Frank G. Brown
A. L. Mitchell
L. E. Feasler. .
A. Goebricher
Alex Goebricher
R. Hartley
Ed. McQuary
Samuel Blum . .
Donald Backstrom
W. H. Pierce
M. Braden
of name or address.
DATE
OPENED
Aug. 31
Sept. 1
July
Sept. 15
Not set
. . . Not set
Aug. 1
Aug. 15
Aug.10
July 28
July
... . July
. . Not set
Not set
August
Auguts
Not set
Not set
Aug. 10
Aug. 22
Aug. 15
OLD WORLD FINISHES
hv a TO! 4*11-4'OAT htvquer process with
French
Polish
Effect,
Involving
Little
Labor
• • * . . -
* . ,
Perfect Finish
at
Low Cost
Write for
details
G. R. WOOD FINISHING CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
f o r SEPTEMBER, 1936 39
LYON
FUK^ITUFsf
MERCANTILE
AGENCY
ARTHUR S. LYON, General Manager
ICst. 1876—Publishers of LYON-RED BOOK
The nationally recognized
CREDIT AND COLLECTION AGENCY
of the FURNITURE INDUSTRY
and trades kindred-—-Carpet—Upholstering—Baby
Carriage — Refrigerator — Stove — Housef urnishing
and Undertaking
BOOK OF HATINCS—CREDIT REPORTS—COLLECTIONS
OFFICES
New York, N. Y 185 Madison Ave.
Boston, Mass North Station Industrial Building
Philadelphia, Pa 12 South 12th St.
Cincinnati, Ohio 6 E. Fourth St.
Chicago, III 201 North Wells Street
Grand Rapids, Mich Association of Commerce Bldg.
High Point, N. C Wachovia Bank Bldg.
Los Angeles, Cal 12th St. at Broadway
JOHN I. SHAFER
HARDWOOD CO.
SOUTH BEND, INDIANA
'Phone 3-3108
Saw Mill — Sparta, Tennessee
Service Yard
Modern Dry Kiln
Steam Heated
Storage Shed
Logansport, Indiana
A full line of
Air Dried and Kiln Dried
Indiana and Tennessee Hardwoods,
Including Hard and Soft Maple,
Oak, Poplar and Walnut
Immediate Shipment by Rail or Overnight
Delivery by Our Own Truck
TEGO
GLUE F I L M
TEGO-BONDING
BRINGS
NEW ECONOMIES
THE cost of Tego Glue Film now es-tablishes
a new level of economy.
Further consistent gains in its use have
permitted a substantial reduction in
our price list.
Tego-bonding has always offered
economies of operation and market-ability.
Now the actual price of Tego
Glue Film has reached a level where it
is becoming expensive not to standard-ize
on Tego-bonding.
Users who originally adopted Tego-bonding
for its unique quality are thus
obtaining the benefit of our policy of
passing along production economies,
made possible by regular and increasing
consumption.
RESINOUS PRODUCTS
AND CHEMICAL COMPANY, INC.
22 2 We s t Wa s hington Square
PHILADELPHIA
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FIXE FURNITURE
40 FINE FURNITURE
It's PICKLING
SEASON/
and
PICKLED FINISHES
are
the popular trend
T)ICKLED finishes adapt them-selves
to many of the popular
periods and styles in demand
today, including Modern. With
strong demand for light and nat-ural-
neutral finishes you should
let our experts help you with
your pickling problems.
This handsome French Provincial chiffonier,
No. 1901, is made by the John Widdicomb Co.,
using a pickled finish on solid French Walnut
fronts and sides.
We have the largest
library of pickled
finishes in the world
Vfie
GRAND RAPIDS
VARNISH CORP.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
- Date Created:
- 1936-09-01T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 1:5
- 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/173