- Home
- Michigan Artisan; 1907-08-25
Michigan Artisan; 1907-08-25
- 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.4 AUGUST 25. 1907 Semi-Monthly
Colonial
Dining Room Pieces
FROM THE UNE OF
"r• . ,
l' t "THE ~7
BETTER
MAKE" I
&. ~
WE HAVE OVER 400PIECESIN OUR LINE
Bedroom and Dining Room Furniture
----SUiTES TO MATCH ----
NELSON~MATTER
FURNITURE
COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Factory and Salesroom.
37 Canal Street
Catalogues to Dealers 'on Heavy Plate Paper.
Quick Shipments on Everything
BIGGEST LINE IN T"E WORLD
J 108 VARIETIES _
of PRINCESS and EMPRESS DRESSERS
Have you seen our New Cata-logue
devoted exclusivelyto
showing the I08 Varieties
of PRINCESS and EM.
PRESS DRESSERS
which.we manufacture--·by
far the Biggest Line of Prin·
cess and Empress Dressers
in the world?
The best of it is, we have every
one 01 those 108 Varieties
in stock all the time for in-stant
shipment.
You will not find that our low-priced
items(down to $8.00)
are oversold, so that you can
gel from us only the high·
priced items without waiting
three or four months.
Wedo not put out any low.
priced items as a bait, but carry all in stock at all times, and you can get the beautiful selection which
we offer you from no other manulacturerin the country.
NORTHERN PRINCESS DRESSERS ARE WEll MADE
-~~= NONE BETTER ~~=c----
•
tjj Northern Princess Dressers are noted lor their elegant simplicityof style.
tjj Northern Princess Dressers are carefully and beautifullyfinished-··the very latest in the market.
tjj Above all, the Price is right,•••Prices to suit every Buyer.
4Jl Drop us a line today for a copy 01 our new PRINCESS DRESSER Catalogue showing every
one 01 the 108 Varieties.
NORT"ERN fURNITURE COMPANY
S"EBOYGAN, WISCONSIN
Callinet Makers
In tbes.e days of close competition~
need the best posaible equipment,
and this; they can have in . . . .
BARNES'
Hand and Foot
POWER
Machinery
Our New Nand and foot P()\1/er Gircular Saw No. 4
The strOllgest, most powerful, and in every way th~ best
machine of itl kind e\'er made, for ripping,
c:ross-cuttlng, boring and gTOoVlllit.
Send for our New Catalogue.
"W. F. ®.. JOHN BARNES CO
654 Ruby Street. Rochford. Ill.
The Ford 8 Johnson Co.
MANUFACTURERS
Chicago Salesroom
Ford-Johnson Bldg., 1433-35-37 Wabash Ave.
For the July market we will have many new things
to show. All furniture dealers are cordially invited to
call and inspect our line, which includes Chairs, Rockers
and Settees-all goods; Dining Room furniture; Mission
furniture; Fiber Rush and Malacca furniture; Reed Rockers; Children's Go-Carts and
Carriages, etc.
WE ALSO SHOW SAMPLES AT OUR OWN SALESROOMS IN
Cincinnati Atlanta New York Boston
1
I-I
2
MONARCH
PUSH BUTTON MORRIS CHAIR
Public Demonstration
Of tlu> Famous------_
MONARCH PushButton Morris Chair
It Brought Crowds to the Store and Started the Fall Season with a Boom.
Beginning: Monday IDOfflUl/lwewitl ei~ lI;public demOMtration
of Ramsey. Alton', Famou$ Monarch -Pu&h Button Morris'
Chair, II chair that is adiusted to anY desired position by the
oceupant witfIout "';:ertilli' out. of the chair_ Th.e I'ush button
does af'llf ~th the lltCOa1'tnience of ~n2: out of the chait.
Is INtantlY AQju5ted
Ramsey -Alton Man ufacturing
. PORTLAND, . MICHIGAN
IT PAYS THE RETAILER TO MAKE A PUBLIC
DEMONSTRATION OF THE
Below is a sample of a full page advertisement used b.vthe Winegar Furniture Company of Grand
Rapids (The largest retailers of house furuishing goods in the state of Michigan), annonncing a pUblic
demonstration of the Monarch Push Button Morris Chair:
Why not order a stock of these superior chairs-the best of their kind on the market? The Mon-arch
costs no more than the common old style Morris chair that lacks comfort and conveniences.
If you have not secured the agency for the famous Monarch Push Button Morris Chair for your
town, write for it at once. Our full line is illustrated. described and priced in a handsome catalogue
which we mail to dealers. Wnte for it now.
Eaoy
to
~l.
s.."",',.J"J._.
S\"<'"-' _., ",,~~, ...... ""
...... ""' .. CIIo<n. ;,.., ,1><""'" "00 " ,"- ""
01,b.", ....... "."i.,..'...
;''W''..".",'"''"~f..'""',"'''''''',''.'I''"·.''.'.'"..,''"..''<''l'o' ....iI<'''~... ;...
-;~".':;"~=,",~1, ::,:
~"'. ,h~ ~., ~.......... rl," ... _ ..... .....". __ ~"""".","'w .. ","',,..,,«\.
",."""ill"" '" '"'Y .<...~'h"....".....
..... ~o< .... """'.",..".·." ..... """''''
v,* "'. """"""'l>oJ .. ,.,w':.," I. '"' .""
_"'-_ .. ""' .... ltll' .. "".""'C ..." ,.;.
~',':.::~;.""'"""" .. ~_',.."",< Jr'OO
nr- Mp "",-", ,.."i.. ." "','"" .. ""
..." ' ll<y ·VIo_.; • w ""I)' &gI;" "" ,. c;... .., Wo·
!IOTho<u',,"' ,_".... .....-.\-d,......_ <A.'I><" ,.".f«,,,,...,.,..,,· . F'" _, .... _llill" ~_ ....~,h"
......... 'l"\I ..... ""'p" .
Demonstration at Both 'Stores
WineGar'S TWO BIGSTotas
So.. J)fv:l~on and CherrY St&. 85-87 Canal ,st .• Cor. Erie
Co.
\"',\1
;~ "I l .,' ,
28th Year----No. 4. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.. AUGUST 25. 1907.
A Suggestion to Ease the Money Market.
A banker of Bostoll, l\Ias5., st1ggests a greater use of bank
checks and increase in number of small deposits hy people
geJleral1y as a remedy for the monetary stringency and 11ighcr
rates of interest prevailing. Substitlltion of checks for cur-rency
in wages payments, deposit Df more money in bank
and carrying less about in the pocket, greater llSe of t11e sys-tem
of checks in the smaller concerns of every day business,
are recommended in order to give mOHo lO;-Uling ability to t11E'
banks when strain Oil accommodation i~ great. Inquiry
of banker,.; and merchants as to their views Oil the merits of
the proposition shows generat disposition to dass -it with tlle
numerous theorie.<=;for currency reform that spring up annual-ly
and generally about the crop movlng season \\'1H';1]small
bills are needed west and south, and eastern banks are dr;;I.\vn
Upon to meet the need.
That the small Wrtge earner willingly would assist in giving
banks more ability to lend to the mer('.hant or to the financier,
!lot to say speculator. is doubted; that Ill: will prefer a check
to actual cash, or would deposit it instead of cashing it
through the grocer or other smaE t1H';fchant, is matter of
doubt. If a mechanical effort is mad",. to induce habits of
thrift, the per~on to be benefited is likely to resist, especially
in ,So delicate a mrttter as the form of his wages. It may he
said that the questiOIl is one of utility; the people in the
east do !lot like the silver dollar coin and for years specimens
in cornman use among the people have been fe.w; in the west,
notably the far west, the paper dollars are held in sim-ilar es-teem,
or lack of it. The cent coin does litHe work on the
Pacific slope; in tbe east it is the most favored a11d one of
the most useful of our token coinage.
The British and continental Et1I'opeans to a great extent
are wedded to the use of gold coins; p~\pcr mOlley is of little
use in the smaller transactions, where here we seldom see our
gold coins used in such business dealings. 11atters of envir-onment,
habit, personal like and dislike, govern in tile form
of mOlley, and lessen the Success of the effort tOlviden the
use of checks by substituting the sanw for the sn1all wages
paid to workers is doubtful. The savings bank offers a good
place for the thrifty; it is doubthtl if giving a check instead
of cash would make a man more thrifty; the difficulty of C<lS11-
ing it would gi\'e another ground of complaint ag;-i.inst that
"\Vall street," the conception of which in the public ml11d al-ready
is strong enough, ano the more inconvenient form in
which \vages were paid, by increasing the snpply of lO:-lllable
funds to "the big men," either in business or speC\.11atlon,
scarcely would be tolerated.
There is much of interest and suggestiveness in the the-ory,
but it is feared that it is too late to restrict the wage
earner's freedom of use of his money, al1d that is just what
would happen if he were paid by check instead of cash with
the hope of making him morc thrifty. And ::liter all, it is
!lot so much the dollars of the small earners that are needed
just no\"/ as confidence in the existing credit agencies. The
outlook this autumn is fairly good; true, the banks' reserves
$1.00 per Year.
are low, much too low for the season, but the thorough li-quidation
in the stock market has removed one source of
trouble. The treasury is well able to extend aid over the
crop moving season and 1\'Jr. Cortelyou doubtless \vill de-posit
government money with the banks, customs receipts
incLuded, under the new law, if such c<)urse is needed. Con-fidence,
after aB, is the desideratum aifd we dou'bt if the
workingman '>"'ould h3ve his confidence increased in his
country's money system by a chauge from the direct cash
payment basis to which lH~is accustomed.
Stationers in the Furniture Trade.
During recent years stationers, as wen as jewelers,
throughout the United States have added office and library
furniture to their stocks of merchandise. Desks, typewrit-ers,
sectional bookcases, secretaries, couches, chairs and kin-dred
goods are handled in large quantities-often on the com-mission
basis. A considerable number purchase goods out-right
of the manufacturers for the purpose of gaining the
extra discount offered for cash, but others carry samples
only, furnished by the manufacturers. Solicitors are em-ployed
and espccial attention is paid to the trade of men
WllO arc about to open business offices.
OU~5PfCIAliMPfRIAl
WrA T"r~rD OAK 'Oil STAin
is the standard all over America.
Are YOU using it?
.ANU£A~TlJRC:D tsHj.Y OY
CHICAGO WOOD FINISHING CO.
2.59·63 ELSTONAVEm2·16 SLOAN Sf.
CH I CAcao
- - -- -- -- -- -- -- ---- - - ----~~~-~
MUSKEGON, MICH.
Moon Desk Co.
OFFICE DESKS
New Styles for Fall Seasen,
OUR OAK AND MAHOGANY
Dining
Extension
Tables
Are Best Made, Bdt Finished Values. All
Made from Thoro~hly Se~ned Stock.
No. a64~Dining Table
Tup, 48.48. Mad. m qyort.red 001:,
rull Pu~,hed. Nkkd Calt... ,
No. 584. Same style as .b<)ve with square top.
LENTZ TABLE CO.
No. 384J4 Dhdttil Table. NASHVILLE, MICH.
WHITE PRINTING CO,
I I GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I I
HIGH GRADE CATALOGS COMPLETE
Something DiffERENT in Couches
No. 155
WOVEN WIRE
COUC"
$4.00
Net
We have made for some time, Couches and Davenports with woven wire tops. Our latest es~aJ in
this line is DIffERENT. Made and shipped K. D. Easily set up. A trial order will convince.
SMIT" &. DAVIS MfG. CO.,St. Louis.
5
SPR.ATT'S CHAIR.S
THE BEELMAN CABINET COMPANY
1662-1672 Columbus Road, CLEVELAND.·0.
ARE THE JOY OF THE CHILDREN.
"THE BEELMAN LINE"
FOR SPECIAL SALES OUf new CHILD'S MISSION ROCKER was a winner from the stare.
Wrirt for Caro./ague and price~. Our tine is large and prices are right. MISSION ROCKERS
MAGAZINE STANDS
TABLES
MEDiCINE CABlNETS
We make SEND FOR CATALOGUE
CHAIRS
1o,
GROWN-UPS
as well al
CHILDREN.
GEORGE
SPRATT
& CO.
Sheboygan,
Wis.
Soy you law
this ad in th,
Michigan Arti-
~an.
6 MICHIGAN ,. ?" r ;;;;;a;
71R..rr 10' y:I.i'l
Si t 'f' 3hi"t s@
SHELBYVILLE DESK CO.
M,\N"llFACTURER5 OF
OFFICE DESKS
Mahogany, and Imitation Qyartered Oak, Plain
Oak in Three Grades.
SPECIAL FEATURES
A SQUARE DEAL
SHELBYVILLE, IND.
Miscellaneous Notes.
Among the late visiling- buyers to the Grand £tapids mar-ket
was \V. H. Riley, of ~le111phis,Tenn. Mr. Riley came
over from Chicago Augt1st 4 and stayed but one day. It was
his first visit to Grand Rapids, and he said to the Artisan
representative that he expects to make semi-annual visits to
this market hereafter. Mr. Riley is a prosperous furniture
merchant, in one: of the JUost progressive cities in the south.
He has been in the mercantile business in Memphis for nearly
thirty years, and has recently erected a fine four story build~
ing at 594-6-8 Madison avenue. He aaid that Memphis
is growing very, rapidly,and that it is his belief that in no eit)
in the country of the' same size are real estate and rents so
high. vVhile he carries a large stock and considerable high
grade furnitun', the bulk of his sales are of lower and meilltun
grades, and business in this line is steady growing. He will
be a welcome guest at Grand Rapids.
The Lentz Table C~l1npany ,hav~ been doing things of late.
A new 200 horse power engine and an addition of twenty-five
feet to the smoke stack are among the' improvements. When
it comes to making' diriing extension tables, nothing is too
good for Lou Lentz. He is always on the lookout for the
best things, and how to make the best use of them. That's
why the Lentz tables are so popular.
Creditors holding about a third of the liabilities of Alex-ander
Crow, ~urniture dealer of Philadelphia, Pa., have asked
that he be declared bankrupt. Other creditors object and
are contesting the proceedings vigorously. The latter in-sist
on giving extensions and allowing Mr. Crow to continue
business.
F. S. Harmon & Co. have made an agreement with the
J\Torthern Pacific railway whereby they relinquish the ground
occupied by them in Tacoma, \\'ash .. to the railroad company
for depot use and receive another site in exchange.
The L. Harbach's Sons Co, Des Moines, la., have been
incorporated to manufacture furniture. The capital stock
is $200,000. The incorporators are L. Harbach, L. H. Har-bach
and W. C. Harbach.
M. K. Hunt has Deen appointed trustee by the creditors
of the Baldwin & Standish store in Sault Ste. ':\'larie, )-lich.
An inventory of the stock is to be taken to satisfy creditors.
IVlcLain, Simpson & Co., furniture and carpet dealers of
538 Eighth avenue, New York, who were recently adjudged
bankrupt, will pay all claims in full.
,
l,
Charles N. Saunders of Ncg-aunee, :rvlich.,has invented a
carpet cleaning machine, -...vhich,after a thorough test, is
pronounced a great succcss.
Elijah Van Camp, vice presidtnt and one of the founders
of the Cleveland Varnish Company, died .11 \-tishome in that
city recently.
The Little Furniture Company of Gastonia, N. c., are
selling out their stock at cost and will go out of business.
Asa F. Leopold, formerly in the retail furniture business
at Duluth, Minn., died in a Chicago hospital un August 4.
George vVebber has sold his interest in the business of
Webber & Lavery, Cadillac, l\:lich., to H. C. Harris.
The S. S. Key Furniture Company succeeds Key & Mos-ley
in Pratt City, Ala.
E. P. Pittman has sold his furniture business in Coleman,
Fla.
Vv'. H. Kent has opened a furniture store at Viola, Ill.
Installment Sales by Mail.
The business of 'selling furniture on the installment plan
by mail is growing and it is said the installment merchants
arc cutting the ground from under the regular mail order
dealers who require that the full purchase price of an article
be remitted with an order. Below will be seen an adver-tisement
ofa prominent merchant illustrating how the busi~
l:ess is conducted:
HDMES FURNISHED
BY MAIL DN CREDIT
W.IU"';5~ homo' on "'~" .11 0'0' ,"" Un,.. d S,......
Wo<h.n« ._'.tdy ""'h'"" fo:.,- ,~,; <-:"di,««om"""
d."",,_nc .ft....", __•• _.,,, '-'I ""'> Joo04,
~.::.,1r,.a~~./.:',';,'i:~l~ib,~.~~'~'::"~~~~'~~d'l:
5~~':t.Jf£*:1FiWO:~'l~n;i~,i~ II'OQ<Is at 1,..",-. "', ..... 'ban a'7"'''''' ~'''' ;~tM""''''''''
"'0"_"'0010 ::.-.~.::.o '489
HARTMAN FURNITURE
AND CARPET CO.
223-22:5-227-22& wn.h AQ.. Chfcllso. U. S. A.
,--------------------------------- --- -
CRY IS FOR SMALLER CARS.
Chicago Shippers Declare Big Equipment Is Fatal to Their
Trade.
Adviccs from Chicago state that certain shipping inter-ests
have begun a movement fOl~ a combined protest, against
the increasing size of freight equipment and power on the
railroads of the United States.
it is stated that as the size of the power and equipment
increases so does the delay to goods in transit increase. The
big freight car and the enormous engine, it is admitted, wilt
Made by Globe Furniture Co.. Evansville, Ind.
not hurt the big shipper, but will make it almost impossible
for the small dealer to con[jnuc in business. Already, it is
stated, there is a great demand for smaller cars of 30 tOllS
or so, anJ they aTc not to be had on any railroad in the
country. So great became the craze for larger equipment
that many of the railroads "scrapped" their small cars, and
now the smalt shipper is confronted with a big car and a big
minimum -weight. If he is not a carload dealer he f-inds
himself in a bad box.
The hrillg-ing out of the big eng.ines built for the Erje, the
largest in the world, is made a basis for this argument. In
so doing the fact is ignored that these machines are intended
solely as pllshers to help heavy trains over steep grades.
They could never be used in train service for the rails now in
use would not permit it.
Colonial Furniture in Salem and Lynn.
A. C. Titus & Co., of Salem, \LlSS .. who have a branch
store at Lynn, halldle furniture in colonial styles largely.
l'vIany of the residents of those cities are descendants of colon-ists,
and their homes ('ontain many samples of the colonia'
periods, not only that of America, but of other na.tions as .\CdJ.
7
Having used colonial furniture from infancy, the people know
what is pure amI reliable, and ha'le no tolerance for frauds.
Titus 8:. Co. are fortunate in having such intelligent commun-ities
to deal with. ')''1anyof the old houses in these cities are
charming examples of the architecture of past centuries.
PartiCUlarly attractive are the entrances. Architects from
many citic!:>at bome and abroad a.re often seen in the streets
opposite tbese homes busily engaged in sketching the same.
Designers of furniture, when permitted to enter the homes of
these people, find many specimens of beautiful design and
workmanship. One delightful old home has been occupied
by a wealthy family and their descendants through nine gen-era.
tions, and as the present occupant of the house has three
\'igorous young sons, there is apparently no immediate pros-pect
of a change in the ownership of the place.
Furniture Repairing.
The repairing of furniture is a profitable industry that any
dealer can engage in. A grt~at many retailers in the larger
cities operate quite extensive shops, and advertise the same
liberally. The Paine Furniture Con:pany of Boston use a
large amount of spaee in the daily newspapers for the pl1r~
pose of soliciting orders for furniture to repair. A lat£:
issue of the Boston Herald contained the following adver-tisement
well displayed:
***** * ***** 1'**** * ***
* FURNITURE REPAIRING. •
* Vie do all kinds of furniture repairing, cabinet work, *
* reupholstering and refinishing. The facilities of our *
* tomplele furniture factory on the premises enables us to *
* do this work economically and satisfactorily. *
* Orders placed this month can be executed promptly. ,."
* No charge made for estimating or teaming.
" PAINE FuRNITURE CO.
* 48 Canal Street
* Between J',;"orth Station and Haymarket Square.
*
*
**'" * ****""***** *- ****>i<
Morris chairs with push buttons, by the use of which the
back can be quickly and easily changed, are made as a spec-ialty
by the Ramsey-Alton Company of Portland, Mich. r ,
QRAnD TDUnK DT. STST[M
,MOST ATTRACTIVE ROUTE
JAMESTOWN
EXPOSITION
Tickets on sale daily until Nov. 30
11901, at very low rates. Pas-sengers
have choice of
several routes.
On season and sixty-day limits, liberal stop--over.
Passengers may go one route and return via another.
FulJ particulars at City Ticket Office, 97 Monroe
street. Phones-Citizens, 5576; Bell, main, 576.
C. A. JUSTIN, C. P. & T. A.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
NG BEDS E BREAD AND The "ELI" fOLDI . ~~OfIT WINNERS 'thout the Eh o.d s in Mantel and Upright.
No Sto,k ,omp''''' w, "'." .... IUe. '~d'~~~ ELI D. MILLER &: Co.Writeforcutsall P
PrICe $18.50.
Has 48 InNcho.T2o5p1, .5 Legs and is Highly Polished.
It's One of the "SUP~RIOR"
_ .._. -----,-.. re all Peaches, Pie and
There are man~ mta~logue a.nd get a tast~. Pudding. Send or ._'
BOGKSTEGE fURNITURE GO.
[VIllNSVILL[ IND.
Globe
Side-boards
Are Ihe 8e81 on
me GlObe lor
me MOney
GET OUR
CATALOGUE
Globe
Furniture
Company
EVANSVILLE.
IND.
Cupboards
Kitchen
Cabinets
and
K. D.
Wardrobes.
Is all we moke but
we make lob of
them.
Get Catalogue
and Prices.
The Bosse
Furniture Co
EVANSVILLE • INO. •
nar~es
War~ro~es . are Good Wardrobes
GOOD
Style
Construction
Finish
PRICES RIGHT
Writ~JT' or Cata /ogue
Karges Furniture
Company,
EVANSVILLE • IND.
10 ·5t~MI9f1IG7!N
The Sargent Mfg. Co.
MUSKEGON. MICH.
Bachelors' Cabinets
Ladies' Desks
Extra Large Chiffoniers
______ Abo Manufacturen and 'ExporterJ of ------
ROLLING CHAIRS
Chairs adapted to all kinds of invalidism. both fot
house and street use.
OVER FORTY DESIGNS TO SELECT FROM
Muskegon Valley Furniture Co.
Musl<ellon.
MicL ••
Odd
Dressers
Chiffoniers
Wardrobes
Ladies'
Toilet>
Dressing
Tables
Mahogany
Inlaid
Good.
Ladie'
Desks
Music
Cabinets
I·
I
HAND CIRCULAR RIP SAW MORTISER COMBINED MACHINE
No. 4, SAW (ready for cross-cutting)
Complm Oulfit of HAND and FOOT POWER MACHINERY
WHY THEY PAY THE CAal"'~T MAKER
He can save a mamdaeturer's profit a~ wen as a dealer's profit.
He can make wore mOrley with less capital invested
He can hold a better and moTe satisfactory trade with b is
customers.
He call manufacture in as good style and finish, and at as (ow
cost as the factories_
The local cabinet Ulaker has been fQrced into only the dealer's
trade and profit, because of machine manufactured goods d factories.
Au out6t of Rarnes Patent Foot and Hand·Powe1" Machinery,
reinstates the cabinet maker with advantages equal to his competitors.
If desired. these machines will be sold on trial. The purchaser
can have ample tittle to test them in bis own shop and 011 the work he
wisbes tbem to do. De8c1'ipUve catalogue and prwe list free.
W. 1'. Ii. JOI1N BARNfS CO.,654 Ruby St .. Rockford, III.
HAND TENoNER
No.3 WOOD LATHE
No. 4, SAW (ready for ripping)
FORMER OR MOULDER No.7 SCROLL SAW
11
RELIABLE and SUBSTANTIAL fURNITURE
SUCH AS WE
MAKE IS
EVER THE
SOURCE OF
PLEASURE
AND PROFIT
TO THE
RETAILER
AND THE
PURCHASER
R.OCKFOR.D CHAIR and FUR.NITUR.ECOMPANY
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Johnson Chair Company
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
JVlanufacturers __
Office Chairs,
Dining Chairs, Bedroom Chairs,
and
Parlor Rockers
Send (or our new Catalogue, just out,
illustrating our enttre line.
PERMANENT EXHIBIT:
Furniture Exhibition Building, 1411Michigan Avenue.
The Higher Degrees of Furniture Construction
Have Been Taken by the
ESTEY MANUFACTURING CO.
FOT Workmanship _------------....,
FOTQuality
CHAMBER SUITES
No. 40()
SIDEBOARDS and BUFFETS
FOT Designs
OWOSSO, MICH.
CATALOGUE MAILED TO THE TRADE ONLY
For Finish
14 -J'~MIgrIG7JN
A. MONTGOMERY WARD.
The Chicago Millionaire Merchant Who Lives in a Fortress
and Wraps Himself in Mystery.
"Watchdog of the Chicago lake front!"
A. Montgomery \Vard, in years past, has become better
known to Chicago through this sobriquet than ever he has
through the gigantic business of his original mail order house
in which his millions were made.
But that A. Montgomery Warda.lso is called the watch-dog
of a smooth, undulating gravel roadway which leads out
of Oconomowoc village north along the west shore of La-
Belle Lake will smack of novelty.
La Belle Knoll for 20 years has been the Ward country
home, a mile and a half out of Oconomowoc, Wis. Tt is a
farm of 300 acres, where the casual visitor ringing the bell
of the old fashioned farm house in the old times might he
invited to a glass of hot toddy on a cold day or to a prime
mint julep when the mercury stood in the 90s.
But the old farm house of the Durands, the barns, and
the granaries and stable, are gone. La Belle Knoll has sup-planted
them with the
\;Yard ,architecture, which
may stand invincible to all
weathers long after the
\;YaHls have deserted it
for that bourne to which
Col. Durand has gone
these many years. And
under the Ward regime
the, traditions of the old
farm have changed more
radically than have the
farm's fields, fences, and
architecture.
"Watchdog of the Oc-onomowoC
road" is more
than a village adaptation
of the W,ard spirit in the
lake front controversy in
Chicago. The sign manual
of the master of La Belle
Knoll obtrudes itself on
even the simple farmer
who dirves in and out of
the vitlage along this west
shore of La Belle lake,
year after year.
*********
how many infantrymen might be stood off from attack by
land and; water?
And the \Vard family c011sists of only Me Ward, Mrs.
Ward and Miss Marjorie Ward, adopted heiress of the Vlard
millions and daughter of Mrs. Ward's dead sister~ a giri
just in the bloom of her young womanhood, but a Ward i:\
legal name only.
Ward was a boy once, ragged, working for 25 cents a day
in a .Michigan barrel factory when only 11 years old. At 14
years old he was working in a brickyard at 50 cents a day,
which meant more help to his father's impoverished family.
When he got a place in a St. Joseph, Mich., store at $5 a
month and board the Ward fortunes were looking up indeed.
Ward, the merchant, developed there.
It was as a traveling salesman and a successful one that
the idea of selling goods by mail came to the mind of A.
Montgomery Ward. He was named for Gene. A. Montgomery
"Vard, kinsman of \Vard's great.-grandfather, Gen. Isreal
Ward, who served under Gen. George \Vashington in 1772.
Two men and a boy constituted this first mail order house
in the world. Holt was the other man's name; the boy's
name is forgotten. The beginning was in 1872 in the loft of
a Chicago barn.
There are 2,000 em-ployes
in the great build-ings
of Montgomery
\N ard & Co" as they front
the preserve of Gntut
park today. The month-ly
sales of the house ex-ceed
$2,000,000. Ward
himself, with his millions
retired from the house
several years ago, main-taining
only the watch on
that park preserve, which
in his land titles is assur-ed
to him forever to re-main
free of encroaching
buildings.
v.,r ork- work- work -
work-work!
This was the builder of
the, Ward fortune-cease-
Ie s s, tireless, timeless
work. There were no
vacations in these years
of fortune building and
fortune laying. Says a
man who worked among
these early co-workers of
the millionarie- that was
to be-men who were to
become 'heads of depart-ments
in the great house
in the early years of its
success: "There was Holt. VVhen the business had ex-panded
sufficiently, Holt became manager of the gun depart-ment
of the store. He had been a tirless worker, and for
years there had been no va~ations tm anyone. Holt was
in bad health when he recived notice that he might have a
vacation of two weeks with full pay. He accepted the offer
and went home. Two or three days later he shot and killed
himself.
"Keeney was an Irish buyer for the notion department of
the house, Keeney shot himself and died. Birch, head of
the crockery department, committed suicide. Wicker, head
of the dry goods department, went to an exhibition of the
Athletic dub and fell dead as he sat looking on."
, The Thorne brothers, five of them, and all nephews of
Ward's are the business heart of the Montgomery Ward &
* BEWARE OF THE •
* DOG. •
* DANGEROUS •
* PASSAGE. •
* * * * * * * * •
Imitation Leather Couch
$1 Down and SOCa Week
HishInnd Rugs THESE STRONG, Sl1JRDY DURABLE RUGS art" equal", every "·ay 10
,bo.,.,.. """"",•• from $15" $10 Thoy ~ .. $12 50 ...hJghest grade product of the rua: <Pakers &l1 Y'"'' ~h...... •
from hlllldred& of chou:c floral or oneolal carper .... '8'1S on ~
your QWI\ lenDS of paymenl at the low pnc," of •. ' .• --. ~J~~DWEN~··~~~~~ ooinl""~b\;' furnI>1l .. rum'';' a f><IrloN ~,
B~"'. D!tIIrI;&mom ....'''n. PIDIMJ<>o>n> and
1UUl Kn,, __ ... llllebeo-a -tIll(, ....
~Iar ~_IDt-t<>rI"" !l?1'tIUe1I1 Iw JoII;.
::'::: $6& DPPo5tr£ PUB~IC L1BRAIIY ::::"~:. '$95
An Attractive Advertisement of a Rug Sale.
The portals to La Belle
Knoll are of granite, lettered deeply against wind and weath-erof
a thousand years. Two granlte vases. fined with flowers,
top the columns. Winding dO\vn to La Belle Knoll cottage,
200 yards away, is a beautiful drive between sloping- green
borders mown to velvet smoothness, Viewed from the road,
a skyline of huge elms shuts off the view of" La Belle lake
and in the summer shadows under the trees most of La Belle
Knoll's architecture is hidden.
But grim and fortresslike above it all stands a giant
round town or vitrified red brick, its white cupola perhaps
80 feet in the air, commanding miles of lake and fields, and
woods and hills. Twenty feet or more in diameter at the
top, flying at full mast the stars and stripes at the national
emblem, the thought would obtrude: "Can this be the sum-mer
home of a private citizen? Manned by sharpshooters,
15
Our Spring Business was ..50 per
Cent Greater Than Last Year
Sales at the mid-summer furni-ture
show in Grand Rapids were
more than satisfactory to us, all
of which proves the popularity
of the Woodard line. If you
are looking for
Circassian Walnut
We have the Strongest Line in America
LIKEWISE COLONIAL DESIGNS
Have you our new fall oatalog ?
A A If not send for it. ..A A
Makers of medium priced Bedroom Furni-ture
in all the Fancy Woods and Finishes.
Woodard Furniture
Company
Owosso, • • Michigan
Co. of today. It has been odd that almost allY of \;Yard's
friends and a:-;sociates refuse absolutely to speak of \~Tard's
personal life for public print.
An old friend of the man's was ttlling the other day the
pretty little story of the time \Vard sent back to the Michigan
town of his birth, incidentally looking up the ·woman who
once had worked for the \Vard family. He found her ill and
in bed. Her husband was dead. There was a mortg-age on
her home for $3,OCO, and she could not meet even the inter-est.
\Vard sympathized with her, engaged a physician for
her, supplied a nurse, and guaranteed all the household nec-essities
to the town merchants and left her. A week later
he mailed to her the canceled mortgage, on the house. to-gether
..v..i.tb a substantial check.
"\\.That is t1l1s ll,'ltivc home town ()f his?" was asked.
"Let me sec- 'ah, yes, Niles, 'wasn't it?"
The story is told of a timekeeper in the \Vard establish-ment
when 'Nard himse1f \vas omnipotent in it. There were
1,500 employes in the house at the time, every Ol1e of whom
had to be checked in his comings and goings. This time-keeper
reported for duty at 7 o'clock in the evening, having
his own half hour for luncheon. But the apparatus of a
burglar's protective association had to be arranged fat' the
night at doors and 'windows, and the home life of the man
was uncertain.
The Thornes-l1ephev'is who have succeeded to the busi-ness,
'were gaining their husiness training at the time. They
were heads of depart1r~ents and conductors of much of the
business policy of the house, even then. But \\lard, meet-ing
this timekeeper in the street one day bey()11d possible
earshot of anyone in the hOl1se, stopped him.
"I "vant you to keep a time check on the Thorne. boys,
too," be said. "Do it on the quiet. Don't let anyOne know.
But send the time reports to me marked 'Personal.' "
Friends of the man admit that he is retiring, avoiding
public notice of any kind-cold, even as he is seen by most
men. In business always he was a sphinx toward his em-ployes.
"Vhen he had something to say he sent for the per-son,
said it, and sent the person away again. But the greet-ing
of a "'good morning" from him was unknown to the
ranks of his workers. He was the human icicle, shunning
and shunned in all but the relations of business.
Memphis Hotel to be Furnished from Grand Rapids
Arthur Gibson, of the Gibson & Son furniture house of
J\.femphis, Tenn., ]. S. Aisthorpe, ,of Cairo, Ill., and L. S.
Parker of Memphis, were in Cr:md Rapids, Aug. 19, select-ing
furniture for the new Gayaso hotel, at :rvlemphis. The
Gavaso has been entirely remodeled and is \lOW one of the
lea~ling hotels of the south. It is said that hetween $10,000
and $15,000 'worth of furniture will be purchased in Grand
Rapids by lhc three visitors.
Morton House American
......F'lan
Rates $2.50 and Up
Hotel Pantlind
Rates $.. 00 &ondUp
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
European
......F'lan
The Noon Dinner Served at the PanUind
for 500 i' the fiNEST IN THE WORLD
J. BOYD PANTLIND. Prop.
16
Sligh's Superior Styles Sold All Through the Season
Dull Trade is Unknown by Dealers Handling the SLIGH LINES.
« THE JULY SEASON'S SALES,:OF;:SLIGH GOODS A RECORD BREAKER.
«iI CORRECT STYLES, GOOD MATERIALS AND HONEST WORKMANSHIP. STRONG FEATURES
IN THE SLIGH LINES.
SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY, BUCHANAN STREET.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
,
c
The White Directory
CONTAINS A CAREFULLY COMPILED LIST
OF MANUFACTURERS OF
FURNITURE, PIANOS, ORGANS,
INTERIOR FINISHES
AND KINDRED INDUSTRIES
,Now Ready. Send h, your order.
WHITE PRINTING COMPANY
PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, PUBLISHERS, BINDERS
2-20 LYONST., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
The New Banquet Table Top
u well .. OFFICE. DlNING and DIRECTORS' TABLES are our .pecialty.
r'"~-",
r
"oL"'~""~£ ",1 . STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE CO.• ~~~pido.
Wriie for CatalolJUe. ,Get satDPle& of BANQUET TABLE TOP.
WE manufacture the larg.
est line of FOLDING
CHAIRS in the United
Statea, suitable for Sunday
Schools, Halla, Steamers and
a.ll Pu bli~ Reaorta. • • • •
We also manufacture Brass
Trimmed Iron Beda, Spring
Beds. Cot. and Criba in a
large varlety. • • •
Sead for Cat.lope
and Prl.cu to
Kauffman Mf~. CO.
ASHLAND. OHIO
THE LEXINGTON
Michigan Blvd. & 22d 51
CHICAGO, Ill.
R~furnished !lnd re-fitted
throughout. New
Manairem:ent. The
fumittlre dealers' head-quarters.
Most con-venielltly
situated to
t b e fumilun, display
bouses.
Inter-Slate Holel CO.
OWNER &. PR()PRIETOR
E. K. Cril~y. Pr~s.;
T. M. Cdley, V. Pres.;
L H. Firey, SeC-Tleu.s.
The average Chicago commercial traveler is a Chicago
boomer. On one occasion one of them ~aid, 'There are but
three cities in this country. f.;cw York is one, and Chicago
is the other two." "'len, that's going some, but when onc re-calls
the fact that Chicago bad but 109.CGO people by the
united States census in 1860: and that by the city directory
for 1907 the population is 2,367,000 and that the city's in-crease
within the last year is 65,500, not only the commercial
travelers but everybody in the city has something to talk
ahout.
Every reader of the ?\lichig'<Illl\.rtisan kn<)l,vs that Chicago
is a great £l1rniture and bedding; manufacturing city and
yet it may be faidy questio,ncd jf nile of them can give more
than an approxinwte estimate of the number of factor.ies or
the value of the <1l1Htwloutput. A week SpCllt in Chicago
visiting friends and acql1aintallces in the ftlrniture trade, some
of whow tbe writeI' had not seen fo!- scver,ll years, was spent
pleasantly, although a great mall)' \Vcre missed, not that they
are dead or gone out of business, bllt some \Vere on their
"racations, others at home sick or 011t of tbe eity On business
and a good m,any more, the scribc did not have time to call
on. The following aJ'e ;lD10ng' those called on:
Horn Bros. 2S1 to 291 \Vest Superior street, manufacturers
of tine and medium Ch;:lJlJbcr furniture. This hOt15C waR es-tablished
In 1876 in a, small way_,hut bas had a eontinuotls
grmvth for llearly 30 years, and today it SUHlds among the
very best jIJ Chicago. Their line is chamber furniture, made
ill mahogany, tuna mahogany" quartered oak and bird's~eye
maple. Colonials enter largely into their product, and are
much sought after by the best furniture dealers Their 1907
cat<llogue contaius 109 illustrations, nearly all of which are
made in several woods and finishes. Trade 'was reported
vcry good, and everything around the factory looked pros-perous.
The Right }--follorable Presley 1,1. Herron, D. C. (Doctor
of Commerce) the head pnsh of the Sanitary Feather Com-pany,
says "Everything is lovely. a1Hl the aquatic fowl is
elevated at a very high altitude," but not so high but that
his choicest <1own and feather" find their way into the bins,
machines, pillows, bales, and ticks, and from there into the
hands of the leading furniture and dry goods merchants,
and thence to the holt1e:s of the People, with a Big P. as :VIr.
Lincoln used to say. The olnces of this company have re-
7IRTIS A..t"l
9 7$· 17
cently been enlarged, and President Herron has had a nice
private office fitted up """here he can shut himself 1/1 when
otcasion demands it, or invite his friends to a pleasant chat
or get down to business without being molested by the
gencral activity always to be seen about the business office"
Trade was never better with this company.
O. C. S. Olsen, \vho recently purchased the factory on
l'\-loffatt street formerly occupjell by Spragtl~e, Smjth & Co.,
has built a fine three story and basement brick addition
56 x 116 feet, which wlll give him very much more floor space
than in his old factory at Austin aVe',l1ueand May street.
The first floor wlll be occupied as a machinery floor the
second ""ill contain the offices, and such other uses as NIr.
Olsen decides on. Also new dry kilns of the Morton patent
with a capacity of 60;000 feet of lumber. He expects to have
the H'hole factory in running order by the first of
September_ The Chicago, :Milwaukee & St. Paul tracks
run just south of the factory, with side tracks right into the
lumber yards and shipping rooms, a convenience possessed by
very fe"\' furniture faetories in Chicago.
A. ]. Jc\hnson & Sons Company report a very heavy busi-ness
in dining room furniture.
Hanke Bros. for twenty-ilve years actively engaged in
the manufacture of futniture on 'Vest Kinzie street, have
sold their plant to the Northwestern Railroad Company and
it is said they have retired from the business altogether,
The Johnson Chair Company Shipped more goods in Jttly
than in any month in the history of the Company. Their July
sales were very heavy.
Boynton & Co., manufacturers of wood carvings, mould-ings,
etc., are enjoying a fine business. Theirs is probably
the largest line of mouldings of any house in the business.
Schultz & Hirsch, manufacturers of all kinds of bedding,
have been in business twenty-seven years, and are having a
splendid trade. They have always been noted for making
good goods.
Joseph A. \\-1eyers, President and Manager of the Manufac-turers
Exhibition building Company 1319 lvlichigan avenue,
is very well satisfied with present tonditions and the future
outlook. vVith his able Secretary, Geo. W. Jackson, he has
no difficully in keeping the big building filled to overflow~
ing with exhihitors. Indeed, it is only a question of huw
many manufacturers he can accommodate, as they all want
to get into 1319 if possible.
The Kimball-Chappell Company, maiwfacturers of brass
bedsteads, put some beautiful goods on' the market in July,
;md had a huge business as a re'ward for their enterprise.
Frank Seng has been stung by the auto microbe and
ha>i one of the worst cases on record, of course only the
best automobile that money can buy is good enough for
Frank, and nobody has a better right to el1joy it.
The Hafner Furniture Company, manufacturers of up~
holste-red furniture at 26th and Dearborn, report a heavy
business. This house is one of the old-timers~probab\y the
oldest in this line in the city.
Speakmg of mai! order business, one gentleman said "last
year \ve received an order for 1,000 couc:.hes from one of the
mail order houses, which developed into 6,500 in a single
year. \\lbere is the furniture store that could use one-third
as many in the same time?" KowJ it is up to the manu-facturers
to either fill these orders or see the mail order
houses build their own factories and still more complicate
matters by sharper competition than ever. These huge mer-cantile
houses cannot be driven out of business; they are
not in a trust, but are their own sharpest competitors, and
arc strictly within the law. To resolve and to boycott will
not mend matters in the least, and yet I realize it is a serious
problem .. and who is wise enough to solve it?"
'iV. C. Lumpkin has opened a furniture store at Hearne,
Tex.
18 -§l~MI9rIG?JN $
~STAaI.ISHEO 1880
""0.",
, - ,
I \ i '-
\ , , L' _~-
" ~
~ ~ ~'''':
- -
PU"L.I.!IH~D ST
MiCHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
ON THE IQ.,.K AND 25TH 0" EACH MONTH
OFP'ICE-2.20 LYON ST•• GRAND RAPIDS, MICH,
ENTERED ...8 Mo\.TTI!.R OF THE 9ECOt<D Cl/lliS
The sojourner in Boston notices, as an evidence of Yankee
thriftiness, that the mercantile houses, with rare exceptions,
are "as dark as a pocket" at night. The "eyes of the
stores" (the display windows) are closed and the dimly
lighted streets create the in:lpression that death has caused
the mournful condition so noticeable to strangers. The
stores of Hemy Siegel and Cobb & Eastman are wen lighted
at night, offering a che.e:rfulcontrast to the gloom' of Wilsh-ington
street. Roston needs an injection of Kew York 'ideas
and Chicago liberality,
*1* *1* *1* *(*
Buyers make their estimates from a-p-pear,mces as wen
as from statements."-GoQd Fixtures. That's true. And yet
a truth ignored by many otherwise good business men.
There are. too many men who spend for five thousand
'catalogues what they ought to spend for one thousand. The
mails are daily burdened with poorly e.ngraved and poorly
printed catalogues, ninety per cent of which -find their way
to the waste basket without ever having been perused. A
catalogue in a waste basket is a wasted catalogue. Don't
do it.
*1* *1* *!* *\*
Battle Creek merchants have gotten rid of catalogue
house competition by hard work. They united and fought
along educational lines. They talked the matter over with
the far,mers, and assisted them directty in building roads and
making markets. They were patient and persisted. They
also advertised in local papers, and enlisted these publications
on their side. The result has been a g"reat victory, one worth
all their efforts.
*J* *1* */* *1*
A retailer in furniture doing business in Buffalo mailed a
large number of red tags to residents of many towns and
cities in western New York upon which was printed the cut
of a large buffalo and these words: "Take this tag and ship
yourself to Buffalo. for old home week, September 1 to 7,
The tOvVllamI all it cOlltains will be youn." Undoubtedly,
if you possess the price.
*1* *1* *1'" *1*
Upwards of $2,000,000 were lost by the de!itruction of the
hotels and cottages, with their contents, at Old Orchard
Beach, :Me" recently. The hotels and many of the cottages
,,,,,ill be replaced. creating a heavy demand for cheap fnrni-tun~.
There will be a lively squabble among the. members
of the New England I-Iouse Furnishers' Association for this
important trade.
*/* *1* *1* *1*
Reports in re.gard to the oiana-gement of the express com-panies,
obtained through theintcfstat{'. comm('.rt":ccommission,
reveal the fact that outrageous charges arc imposed for
services rendered. To check the hoggishness of these public
servants, a parcels post wilt be established by the govern-merit,
it is hoped, speedily.
*1* *1* *1* *\*
A s"Tenti"t of l\ful1ich, Bavaria, has invented a microscope
by whleh onc can see an object 1-2.000,000 of an ineh in cir-cumference,
That lens is hardly capable, however, of photo-graphing
the margin of profit resultil1g to manufacturers of
kitchen cabinets from the sale of their goods.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
There is no safer foundation for a merchandising business
than satisfied customers-with satisfaction comes good will.
Hence the merchant should never advise a .customer to buy
anything that is not worth the price or that is not sure to
prove sati!:dactory.
*1* *1* *l* *1*
Most of the concerns that go to the wall because of ;;l.lleg-ed
tightness of the mOlley market are found to have been
doing business on borrowed capital. When they can't any
longer pay an old note with a new and bigger one it is time
to stop.
*l* *1* *1"4' *1*
Beauty in a window display is a thing to be sought for,
but lt is not the primary thing, Attract attention to the
goods and show th{:m in the most advantageous light possible,
If heauty may be added, it will serve an added purpose.
*l* *1'" *\* *l*
The salesman who sneers at customers who ask for cheap
goods is worse than useless to his employer. His services
are not worth 'his salary, whatever it may be, becaus'e he
lnakes enemies for the store and drives trade away.
*\* *\* *1* *1'"
Every merchant who is alive to his own interest will
urge the congress of the United States to establish a par-cels
post, by law.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
The merchant who is interested in his customer's interests
is apt to succeed. He is able to see with a ct1stomer's eyes
and correct mistakes he. might make otheTwise.
*1* *1* *1* "'1*
When the opportunity comes to make good, tat) many
men are engaged in grumbling, at their lot and miss the
chal1ce.
*1* *1' "'* 'I"
Owing to the hoggishness of the express companies, a
parcels post is becoming an imperative necessity.
N,ot Satisfied.
Buffalo and Boston spent a lot of money on "Home Com-ing
Week," and arc not satisfied. Over 100,000 people,
several of whom formerly lived in Boston, responded to the
invitation to come home during the second week of August,
but none of the important tradesmen derived substantial
bene-fit from the influx. The people were too busily engaged
in looking for Paul Revere's grave, Longfellow's home, the
statues of Daniel Webster and William Lloyd Garrison, the
frigate Constitution and l\Iother Eddy's spiritual home to
give much time to the big merca11tile cstabllsnments. The
transportation, companies, the hotels, the restaurants, the
soda fountains and like businesses were well patronized. In
Ruffalo the results have not been -figured up; but in many
quart~rs. the expressions of dissatisfaction are more pro-nounced
than were those that followed that most beautiful
and enchanting failure, the Pan-American exposition.
Death of a Collector.
O. H. Sypher, the most noted collector of antique furni-ture,
china, glassware and kindred goods in the United States,
died recently at his home in East Orange, N. J., aged 74
years. It is believed that Mr. Sypher was the first New
York dealer to import tapestries. He imported the Barberini
ta~estries from the Barberini palace in Rome, which were
owned by a famous Florentine family of that name, His ad-vice
was sought continually on the furnishing of homes and
evidence of his work may be found in many a Fifth avenue
mansion. He was called upon almost daily by the custom
hcuse 05cials to dC':ide on the value of al1tiqt~es.
"Introspection and Retrospection,"
1 have the blizzard of eight years ago to thank [or the
most valuahle kSSUll 1 e\>'ET learned.
Yet the bliaanJ oIlly illdirectly-a magllincent old Scotd>
Canadian directly,
"But from all evil some good we. may takc"-and jf th;:tt
blizzard hadn't imprisoned a number of us in the city. av,;-:,'
from our suburhan homes, I wouldl1't have had the 1c:sson.
and you couldn't have bad it.
For hours, a couple thousand nervOus men paced wearily
up and down the big- ,,,,aiting rooms of the terminal depot.
or gathered in grOl1ps and discussed the sitllatioI1, or asked
questions of raihv:ws employes.
No trains were running-no tdling \,...hen any would run.
At la;;t four of Us decided to go to a hotel-and ·went,
after telegraphing our families.
Ferguson-·-the Scotch-Canadian and an iron master; :Mil-well-
a Ja\\,'yer; Beale-a manufacturer; and myself.
V/e could get hut one room-and that on the t.op floor,
and a pile of snow had drifted in through a ventilator. But
it was shelter, and there were tv,,'O big heds and plenty of
covers,
After some dinner and a smoke we went to the room.
Vole drew lots for bf:'d partncrs, and Ferguson al1d I got
the short oncs.
\Ve said OUf prayers all(l tumbled in. Now that discom-fort
was over, we were ·indined to have some fun.
Except Ferguson He ,vas silent·-and it was strange,
for he was a mighty companionable old chap.
But we couldl1't make him ta{k for a long time. The rest
of us chaffed, and told storics, and laughed-Ferguson was
silent.
He waSll't asteep-I discovered that \\rhen I yanked the
covers off him and got a jab and a kick at the same time.
At last he talked-and ",,'hat he said was worth listening
to.
He told us that he had been doing something his mother
taught him up m the Vl,rilds of Canada, nearly fifty years be-fore.
"Introspeciion and Retrospec::tion." he called it.
Every night, h~ said, during all those years, he had done
it.
This is how: Lie with eyes closed, and -nentally review
day.
Things done and Bot done, and why.
Personal behavior; treatnlent of others; maintenance of
self-respect
At first, he said, it ,..'.as hard to remember much that had
happened, and still harder, I1ext t11ornit1g, to apply the de-cisions
and resolves made.
But sticking to it made it easy, and no\-\' every c\-'ent of the
past day marched in or.derly p!'()CeSSiOll before him "...h.en JH'
willed, and he awoke each moming armed and outfitted
Eor that flay.
TIe told LIS that it had become his habit to defer over-night,
\vhenever possible, his decision on important questions.
Away from the man ',vith an alluring proposition, or an
engaging manner, he could decide things on their merits.
and few things looked the same.
He never changed lJis night tjmc decisions-said that
where be was wrong once he was right a hundred times, and
was satisfied with that proportion.
Told us, too, of instances where he had reversed daytime
decisions at night-and profited hy so doing.
But what he had to say abont personal behavior, treat-ment
of others, and maintenance o[ self-respect, "vas most
interesting.
If Jl(' lwd smoked a cigar too many: if he had been hate-ful
in manner; if he had displeased himsdf in any way.
If he had been any Jess a man than he felt he ought to
be-and hJs standards ·were high.
19
Thc[-e was s11ame and reproach, and lntent to stand
straighter, and effort.'> to stand straighter.
He held that confessing a fault. was simply common
honesty, and that an apology, if it was due, shOUld be made
as sincerely and unaffectedly as a littlE;': courtesy to one's
family .
.More things Ihe told us-but you catch the drift, don't
you~
And now for my experience with "Introspection and Re-trospection."
I was self-assertive and positive; what I said and did was
right because I said and did it-in my opinion.
That is, before I trk.d the plan.
t thonght I \\'as rather a hig man in achievement and
position.
Also, before I tried tbe plan.
I had an idea that the world was especially made to be my
habitation, and that pretty much everybody else was trespass-ing
on my property.
Ever feel like that?
Politeness, while never essential, was all right with my
friends and those from who I wanted favors, but with who
were subordinate or who wanted favors from me-not to be
expected.
It was awful, the fm:t night. I lay awake a long time,
And I didn't get anywhere near the business end of
things.
My confounded m.eannesses-that I had felt to be virtues
-loomed up too big·.
I\- ext day I nearly took a man off his feet by saying,
"Good mornjng." I had previously grunted at him..
I apologized to another for some nastiness of the day be~
lore, and he immediately inquired about my health.
T kept on, night after night--and made amends 1110ming
after morning.
Making amends ,-..as tough work ior awhile-but about
the time I got sort of used to it I didn't have much of it to
do.
Yet it was never halt as tough as the arraignment of
self by self-the baring of my soul to my soul in the still
watches of the night.
I grew de center and de center-had to, to find any comfort
111 living.
I made fewer business mistakes.
I have kept it up-every night. no matter how tired I
am, I spend a quarter of an hour in reviewing the day and
planning for the morrow.
I am glad I learned-so will you be, if you learn.
\?Ii/hy shouldn't we understand that in respecting the rights
of others we arc firmly establishing our own rights?
\Vl1y shouldn't we all be pleasant to do business with?
\Vhethcr employer or employe?
"Vhy shouldn't we make the most of ourselves?
\Vhy shouldn't we be men-big, broad, kindly, thinking
men?
The world needs each of us as that kind of a 111an-and
Introspection and Retrospection will do much toward making
each of us that kind of a malL-C. A, Peake.
\Vhile suffering under ';a bad s-pell' an upholsterer of
Cbelsea (1\la5s.) ]lUng up a sign hoard over his door recently
upon whjch is inscribed the words: "Chelsea Novelty Op-houlsterring
Company." The intelligence of the community
was greatly shocked.
The Ramsey-Alton Manufacturing Company of Portland,
Mich .• operate a large factory in the production of Morris
chairs exclusively, Many styles of frames are used, anyone
of which would please the originator of the Morris chair,
the famous William Morris.
OUR NEW 1907 LINE OF ALASKA REFRIGERATORS
with side ice chamber is made in twenty-one styles,
zinc lined, white enamel and porcelain lined. Our
cataloguewill interestyou. Write for it.
THE ALASKA REFRIGERATOR CO.
Exclusive Refriger810r Manufacturers.,
MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN.
20 ·~MI9rIG7jN 2
Pacific Purchasing Plan Impl'actical.
Two years ago, when fOUT big furniture stores in Los
Angeles, Cal.-Barker Brothers, Niles Pease, the Los An-geles
Furniture Company and the Frederick-Mackie Com-pany-
were consolidated, under the name of the Pacific Pur-chasing
Company, it was announced with the blare of many
trumpets that the furniture business of that city and vidnity
would be concentrated in the stores of the new compallY. It
was planned to practically eliminate competition, but when
the Pease Brothers, the California Furniture Company, the
Lyon-McKinney Company and Bronson & Co. opened new
stores with fresh stocks, the Pacific Purchasing Company
was signally affected. The old stocks of Niles Pease,
the Los Angeles Furniture Company and the Frederi<::k-
Mackie Company were not easy to dispose of. but in due time
the Pease store was closed. On February i next, when the
lease of the store occupied by the Fr.ederick-Mackie branch
of the Purchasing Company expires, the second store will be
closed. The handling of the lar~e stocks of the several com-panies
and firms mentioned has not been an easy undertaking,
and this fact may account for the failure of the Messrs, Barker
and Frederick to attend the mid-summer sales this year.
Princess Dressers and Washstands.
The princess dresser of today is different in construction
from the princess dresser of 1886, In that' year the late
Colonel Penney of Grand Rapids obtained letters patent
fOr a cornbination dresser and washstand and commenced
the manufacture of the same. The combination consisted
of a zinc-lined tank, a movable dresser top, bencath which a
wash-bowl was placed and a pail, contained in a cabinet, to
receive the water from the bowl. The dresser was con-struded
without drawers in the base" but a toilet and mir-ror
and small drawers on the movable case top were provided.
The dresser did not sell very well; in fact, it failed to please
the ladies. The gentler sex did not consider it of any ad-vantage
when in use over the old fashioned washstand, with
pitcher and bowl, and the manufacture of the cases was dis-contiuued,
after the market had rejectcd it. Washstands
without toilets, constructed in the form of center tables, con-taining
the tank, bowl and slop pail of the regular dresser,
were also brought out by Colonel Penney, but failed to com-mand
a market.
Railroad Inconsistency.
A news dispatch from Omaha states that although the
Union Pacific is contesting in 'the court the recent laws en-acted
reducing the passenger rate in Nebr-:}~ka to two cents
a mile, yet that road has, in many sections of the state, just
ordered put in effect a rate even less than two cents. Orders
have been sent by the Union Pacific to all stations that where
any other railroad, because of having a shorter line, charges
less between stations than does the Union Pacific, the Union
Pacific rate should immediately be reduced to meet the short
line rate. Before the two-cent rate went inttJ effect. the rate
from Omaha to Lincoln was $3. The two-cent bill reduced
the rate to $2. The Union I:'acific new order will further re-duce
the rate to $1. The new orders, in many places, will re-sult
in a rate of lcss than one cent a mile, being- m",-devolun-tarily
by the Union Pacific, despite the figH in the courts in
\'\;'hichthe Union Pacific says two cents is a confiscatory rate.
(£ST""BUSHED 1858) BERRY BROTHERS'
Rubbing and Polishing Varnishes
I MUST BE USED IN FURNITURE WORK TO BE APPRECIATED
. THEY SETTLE THE VARNISH QUESTION WHEREVER TRIED
WRITE FOR INFORMATION,
FINISHED WOOD SAMPLES, AND LITERATURE.
New York
262 Pearl St.
Boston
520 Atlantic Ave.
Phil"de)pbi8.
26-28 No. 4th St.
BaltilJlGre
29 5. Hano'Ie! 51..
BERRY BROTHERS, LIMITED
VARNISH MANUFACTURERS
DETROIT
eANADIA" FACTORY. WALri£RVIL\.E; ONTARIO
Chic.~o
48.50 Le..k~St.
Chu::innAti
420 MaiD St.
St. Loub
112 So. 4th St
San Frattc.itco
668 Homatd St.
THIS IS THE CAN
AND LABEL
...
Reciprocal Demurrage.
The last legislature of Oregon passed a reciprocal demllf-rage
law, and ..v..ithin a short time it will be in effect. After
its legal enactment and enforcement, tbe failure of railroads
to supply cars within stipulated time, when called for in ac-cordance
\'v·ith t1l(~ regulations, subjects the roads to a fine
of $2 a day for each car 110t delivered. )[01' is the shipper
free from respollsibility, for if he fails to lead the car l,vithin
48 hours after receipt, he is subject to a similar Ilne. In
addition to the line for non-delivery of cars, shippers may sue
for damages for failure to sllpply rolling stoc:k.
Proof of d;;.rnage must be made to the Oregon state rail-way
commission before legal action may be enforccd. Just
STAR CASTER CUP CO.
NORTH UNION STREE:T, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATRNT APPLIRD FOR]
We have adopted celluloid as a base for our Caster Cups, making the
best cup on the market. Celluloid is a great improvement over bases
made of o~her material. \V~elL it is necessary to move a piece supported
by cups with celluloid bases It call be done wilh ease as the bases are per-fectly
smooth. Celluloid does not ,>weal. and by tb~ use of these cups
tabJ~s are lIev<:,r Jn8rred_ These cups are finished in Golden Oak and
White Mapl~i fini~hed light. If you wW try a sample order Of thelU
(foodsyou Wl l del'wt'e to handle them in quantities.
PRICES: Size 2){ incbes $5.50 per hundred.
Size 2;,( inches 4.50 per hundred.
f· o. b, Grand Rapidl1. THY.l1 SAMPLE ORDER.
how the lel\·vwill work is a matter of much interest to both
shipping- and rail interests. III various states the effect has
heen diJrercnt, and wh.1t its resultant action may prove in
Oregon is a mattcr that time will ans.ver best. So far through-out
the summer, there has bcen no paucity of cars, the sup-ply
being larger than for sevcral years past. The test will
come a little later, when crop mov<:mcnt on a large scale
commences.
So far as has been possible to learn, the railways have
said little as to their course of action. It Inay bc that an
attempt will he made to test the constitutionality of the:
statue.-Orcgon TradesmOin.
The Reason for It.
Every piece of furniture in a room must have a good
and clear reason for being there. In a living room there
must be at least one sofa or davenport, one large easy chair,
an ample table, a bookcase, a wall cabinet, several sl11.aller
chairs and a rocker Or two. A desirable sofa is long enough
to lie upon and take a nap, and deep enough and low enough
to sit upon comfortably. If geesc cushions are provided,
in the summer these call be stored away and the sofa used
as a settee. \Vhcn maps are to be consulted, large books
examined or a collection of prints enjoyed the advantages
of a large tahle ~vill be apparent. Tlw Hthaise lounge" which
used to bc common in France, and is an excellent artick for
the family room, has no back except at one end, as an Irish-man
mjght say, and it seems narrower than it reatly is on
account of its length. The end of the lounge is set into a
frame work of the seat at a little slant, and i~l some cases is
carved in a lively expression; the legs and braces are also
turned and so simple a piece of furniture takes on quite an
air, while keeping its ornalTIQntation strictly lii bounds.
21
Trying on Furnitul J
Trying on furniture is the latest in }Jew York. \iVhen
the prospective bridal couple goes to a furniture to pick
out a bedroom suite they don't have to speculate as to how it
will look in their room 01' whethe" it will flt. \Vhen a sales-man
lws seen that a certain suit has tjckled the eye of a pros-p<:,
ctivc customer he summons a porter or tWQ and turns
them loose in one of the several rooms fitted up around the
main .~hO\vroom, setting them at work removing all the furni-ture
in it. Thcn the sllit that the customer seems to be
bankering after is placed in appropriate positions ill this
room, and one can see at a glance just how the bedroom
will look if that particular suit is bought. There are a half
dozen of these smaller rooms around the main showrooms,
and as each one is decorated in a different manncr it is easy
to pick one ant that apprOXilTlat<:sthe scheme of your ,room
at home. Like many ways of selling modern goods 11 is ex-pensive
ill the beginning but it pays in the cnd, for this plan
o[ shO\ving goods seldom fails of its intended effect.
"Red Book" Men in Confer~r:ce.
District 11,a.n'1agers of the Furniture Commercial Agency
Company. publisher of thc "Red Book" held a four days con-ference
in Cincinnati dmil1g the seccond wcek in August
and ,vere wel1 entertained by Executive Manag'er E. M.
Schwein and Secretary R. S. Smith. Among those in attend-ance
,",'ere, \7'v'.l James, Jr.; New York office; C. .1V1. Fuller,
Bostnn; B. G. Tiffany, Jamestown, X Y.; H. J. Danhof.
Grand Rapids, IVfich., and]. A. Eshelman, of High Point,
N. C.
Approbation.
r like to hear 'em talkin'
'Bout We tbings thM ought to be;
Thcre's ncver any balkin'
In their speeches-no siree.
take delight in viewin'
Their valor in debate;
don't kl10W what they're doin'.
But the eonversation's great.
It's most invigoratin'
To read their "\yords sublime,
To hear 'em permeadn'
The corridors of timc;
To have applause or laughter
COllie ripplin' throug-h each line;
don't kno\,\,. what they're after,
But the conversation's fine.
't:=::~The D. & B. Line
Steamers leave Detroit weekdays
at 5: 00 p.m., Sundaysat 4: 00 p.
m. (centr.rltime) a.ndfrom Buffalo
daily at 5:30 p.m. (e:demtime)
reachingtheir destina.tiontbe next
morning. Direct connections with early trains.
Lowest rates and superior service to New York,
Boston,Phitadelphia, Atlantic City,all points east.
Popular week end excursions to
Buffalo and Niagara Falls, leave
Detroit every Saturday.
RAIL TICKETS AVAILABLE ON STEAMERS
All classcs of tickets sold readin2"via Michi~n Central. Wabash and Grarul
Trunk railways between Detroitand Bnffaloin either direction will be accepted
for trallsponation on D. & B. Line S~ealIlers. Send 2c. sta.m2.for illustrate.i
pamphletandGreatLakeswap. Address; L.G. LEWIS, a.p. A.
DETROIT & BUFFALO STEAMBOAT CO., Detroit, Mieh.
PHILIP H. McMILLAN, "'ICE-Pf\"s... A, A. SCHANTZ, GEN. MG".
22
DEPARTMENT STORES.
Facts Concerning Their Management.
An interesting article, b.eautifully illustrated, concerning
the business methods of depat"tment stores in the larger cities
recently appeared in Everybody's Maga:r.ine. The article is
reproduced in part for the benefit of the readers of the Arti-san.
The importance of the arrangement of the differe,nt de-partments
of a store so as to attract trade is gone into ex-tensively.
The location of the department is decided on in
advance, the rule being to place the jewelry counters in frotlt
near the entrance, where they are observed both on entering
and \eaving the store. The notions are £Suod in the rear,
conveniently near the other attractive departments. The no-tion
counter is said to bring more trade to the store than
any other, owing to the ncce~sities every woman must have,
The millinery and suit departments are always on the second
and upper floors, where plenty of room and light can be had.
The department stores owe their success to their system
of conducting business, the present system being vastly su-perior
to the old. "Formerly the proprietor bought as
cheaply as possible in quantities that were measured only
by his capacity to sell and by his credit. Prices were not
fixed, the proprietor generally depended upon the cleverness
of his clerks to insure him a profit. The best salesman was
he who imposed most on the public and so commanded a
high salary. The percentage of selling cost was thus enor-
1110US."
The present method was originally employed in the BOl1
Marche in Paris and was first adopted in this country by A.
T. Stewart, soon followed by John Wanamaker. It is what
is called the factory method. There is a certain fixed per~
centage of profit to be realized in all departments. The
prices are marked in plain figures and the employe has no
say in the matter of fixing them. Each department has a
certain amoul1t of capital to do business with and it is the
concern of the buyer or head of it as to how that capital can
be employed to the best advantage, a certain per cent profit
made and the money re-invested in new stock.
The merchandise manager looks after both the buying and
selling. He comes next to the proprietor in importance, is
posted On subjects of wide latitude in regard to the business,
looks after the advertising and keeps stocks moving. He
directly oversees an departments, the managers of which
are accountable to him. Reasons for non-selling of goods
are inquired into and bargain sales conducted to dispose of
unpopular goods.
The profits of the large stores are immense. Marshall
Field leads the others, the business of the firm last year being
$26,500,OOO'-that is, retail. The wholesale was twice as
much morc, bringing the total up to $70,000,000. John
\Vanamaker's Philadelphia store comes next with $20,000,000,
the New York store ranking third with $17,000,000. Adver-tising
costs anywhere from $100,000 to $500,CCO a year, Siegel
Cooper's being represented by the btter ngure.
The distribution of charity is an important part of the
year's expenditures, often as much as $10,000 is set aside for
that purpo!>e, not to mention the at"tides given away for the
same purpose. The merchandise manager finds this distri-bution
to be one of his hardest duties. His salary runs from
$15,000 to $50,000 a year, the maximum being paid by The
Fair in Chicago. Buyers receive from $5,000 to $10,000 a
year, the range being from $2,500 to $35,000. The linen
buyer ill Ivlarshall Field's receives the latter sum yearly.
The matter of hxing the selling prices of articles devolves
on the buyer of each de.partment in stores where no
merchandize manager is employed. "Everything is deter-mined
on a percentage basis. Added to the price of the
goods that are billed to the store are the various charges,
such as rent, delivery, bookkeeping, selling expense, ete.,
amounting to from eighteen to thirty per cent, the average
being twenty-five. The furniture and piano department~
require a vast amount of space and must pay a high rent. Tht:
per cent of pront is based on the number of times the work-ing
cap1tal can be utilized in a year. Proflt on certain a:-
tic1es may be only two or three p,€r cent, on others as high
as forty per cent. Prices are fixed in odd cents owing to thi"
percentage system.
Under the buyer is his assistant, whose salary depends
on that paid his chief. The stock clerk receives from $25
to $60 a week. Thc best paid ·salesn1en are in the furniture
and piano departments. They receive a fixed weekly salary
and a commission computed regularly.
Vast numbers of clerks are employed; the Wanamaker
store in Philadelphia has 7,000, one-half of whieh are nl)1
placed in contact with the public.
Delivery systems are very intricate. D.'1acey'sclaims tu
have the most perfect in New York. The B. Altman COD1-·
pany have the most expensive wagons and automobiles in that
city for delivery 11SC. Salesmen are mostly paid on the
percentage system.
The accommodations for the comfort of the public are
very adequate, vVanamaker being especially strong on that
point. IVlarshall Field's, too, is noted for its cozy and spa-cious
rest and writing rooms. Restaurants are a necessary
adjunct to the comfort of shoppers and they are found very
generally in the departmcnt stores in the larger cities.
As a feature of the Wanamaker New York store may be
mentioned the concerts which are given daily by the best ar-tists
of the time. Richard Strauss received $3,COO for three
concerts. The annual expense is $50,000 for this pleasing
way of entertaining the vast crowds which gather regularly to
enjoy the finest music of the time.
BEST LINE
OF
OAK
DRESSERS
COM·
MODES
and
CHIF·
FONIERS
ON THE
MARKET
PRICES $8.75 to $13
CHAS, BENNETT FURNITURE CO,
CHARLOTTE, MICH.
The ROYAL • the Original Push Bulton
IS Morris Chair
MORRIS CHAIRS
·--FROM---
$6.25 to $30.00
CATALOGUE. UPON APPLICATION
Royal Chair Co.
STURGIS. MICH.
Chicago Salesroom; 1st Floor, G. D. WiUiam& Co.,
1323 Mic.h.Ave., CHICAGO. Ill.
Publishers of Programs Impose Upon Merchants.
Among the trials the retailer i" often tOt'ced to undergo
arc the calls of the publishers of programs for churd! enter-tainments
alla picnics .'lnd souvenirs for the use of delegates
to cOllvention:s. Endorsed by a particular union, relief or
musical society or a religious congl'cg'atioll, the solicitors
'-'take on" as much effrontery <lnd swcll-bc:tdcdncss as the
leader of a brass band from the rural districts or a "barker"
for a side show at the circus. \Vhen the ac1vertjs(~ment ue-rnanded
is refused, the solicitor has resources at his com-mand,
and sug·gests rt cash donation or the gift or an article
of merchandise. The money contributed may reach the
treasury of the society, or it may not, according to th(~ form
of the payment. Tn discussing the practice o£ kvying' trib-ute
upon business men by the unions and ")ther predatory
bodies, a merchant of Detroit, IvTich., said: "\Vhen 1 refused
to take space in a program, the suggestion of a cash dona-tion
wa;.; presented almost in tlle form of a demall(L Refus-ing
to yield \0 the grafter the amount he said the union would
accept, Ilot at all daltllted, he proposed that T donate a sidc-boar<
l, which he then and there selected, worth $50, to be
offered as a prize [or the wilmer of the fat woman's run-ning
racc. Our firm name would be published in the pro-gram
as the contributor of the sideboard and we would derive
much benefit as a result of our liberality. It did not require
a moment's reflection to reiuse the proposition. It would
be cheaper for our firm to give the union $50 in cash than
to donate the sideboard. Not less than 1.000 unions and 50-
cities are working the program and sot/venir game in De-troit,
and the gift of a side hoard to one ,>yould bring to our
door the representatives of the other organizations men-tioned,
with demand;.; for like favors."
In communities where the merchants maintain organiza-tions
for mutual protection, the raids of the solicitors have
been checked in a measure, but there are always a few weak
EfUht Years of
Test Have
Established Its
Supr.-emacy.
All Others
are lmltators.
No Others
So Good.
THE."ROYAL
PUS" BUTTON
MORRIS CHAIR
men in trade \vho submit tamely to impositions that should
ll('ver be tolerated.
The Reversible Bed Rail.
Quite a commotion exists among the manufacturers of
metal beds over threatened litigation on account of the use
of tJ)('. reversible bed rail. A manufacturer in Ol1e of the
eastern cities claims to own a patent covering the reversible
rail, and he notil-i.ed all other manufacturers of metal beds to
cease using the rail and p,-epare to settle his bill on account
of damages sustained_ This condition caU!'ies much work
for the lawyers, and incidentally the history of the business
of manufacturing metal beds in the United States is under-going
investigation. One of the threatened manufacturers
slates that his attorneys have been unable to find evidence
in the patent office that a patent upon a reversible bed rail
had ever been gTanted.
Previous to 1880 no brass beds had been manufactmed in
the United States. A few flat iron low ,and narrow beds for
hospitals and· public institutions had found a. ready market,
but tbe bl-ass beds llsed were imported from England. The
bed;.; ,,,,ere welt made and beautifully fll1ished, but the designs
did not satisfy American tastes. During the first administra-tion
of President Cleveland. certain capitalists of Buffalo de-cided
to establish a factory and engage in the manufacturing
of brass heds. \Vorkmen were engaged in England and
brought to Buffalo and in a short time tbe industry began to
thrive. Cnmplaint was made to the federal government,
charging the Buffalonians with having voihtfOd the alien con-tract
labor law. Defendants ,vere tried, convicted and heav-ily
fined, and the business for the time being was practically
abandoned. l"-fany of the workmen remained in the United
States and to their skill and experience is due the impor-tant
industry of manufacturing brass and iron beds in the
United States.
23
24 ·f'~MICHIG.7IN ... C «
Good Will a Valuable Asset.
A circular addressed "To All Employes" by General
Manager Handy of the Lake Shore Railway Cornpany ex-presses
scntimellts and ideas that might be used to advantage
by many merchants if properly impressed upon their sales-men,
It re.ads, in part, as follows:
"The public judges a railroad corporation ,,-cry larp;cly by
the treatn~ellt it is accorded by the agellt representing the
company in whatever capacity he may be employed. A 1'('-
putation of fair dealing, with court(',ous and absolutely fali
Made by Horn Bros Mfg. Co I Chicago. Ill.
treatment of all customers, is essential to the success of all
railroads.
I'The good will and friendship of the community served
by our railroad is the most valuable asset it can have; and
the strongest recommendation for promotion an employe
in any department can possibly have is the fact that by uni-form
courtesy and kind accommodation of patrons he has
secured for himself and for the road fhe good will and the
friendship of the communities ill which he is located,".
Some Use for an Undertaker's shop.
"The one thing in Little Italy and other down-town dis-tricts
that I can't gct used to," said a policeman, "is the
many uses to which undertakers put their shops and places
of establishments. [used to be of the opinion that the
only possible errand a person could have .at an undertaker's
was to purchase a coffill and other fuoeral supplies, but down~
town I notice people go there for all sorts of purposes. They
. go to vote, to get married and to transact all the legal bUSl~
ness that a notary public is capable of transacting. Yesterday I
even saw a party eating luncheon in an undertaker's establish-ment.
They had come to town appar('.ntly to attend. a funeral,
and instead of patronizing a restaurant, they calmly munched
their midday meal in the midst of the lugubrious surround-ings.-
From the Philadelphia Record.
Charlotte, Mich.
The Chas. Bennett Furniture Company will soon issue a
new catalogue of chiffoniers, dressers, commodes and other
case goods. This is a desirable medium priced tine, and fits
in nicely in every well assorted stock of furniture.
The Charlotte Manuhcturing Company has a deslgner
who knows a thing or two when it comes to parlor, library
and directors' tables. The line was on exhibition in Grand
Rapids in July, and the order book gives abundant evidence
of the appreciation of the trade. His name is Highee.
Ever hear of him?
Charley Elmendorf.
The man in the wheel house of the Manistee Manufactur-ing
Company, don't know how to take a vacation ·without
work, so he took a line of sideboards, buffets, and dressers
over to Chicago to have a \'acatioll, al1d he 'had it, by sell-ing
so many goods that he has now to work with hands,
feet and brain the rest of the year to keep his hundreds of
customers from jumping on him. 'Serves ,him right.
The Sterling Desk Company is a new firm recently or-ganized
by Keene B. Phillips and .Frank De Kline to sell
officc desks, tables and chairs at retail. Their place of busi-ness
is over 49 Pearl street, Powers Opera House Block,
Grand Rapids.
Richmond Chair CO.
RICHMOND, INDIANA
Double Cane Line
SEE OUR NEW PATTERNS
CATALOGUES TO THE TRADE
25
DAVENPORT BEDS
nest in t~eWorl~
---at---
Prices to Suit All
We also show the larg-est
line of Loose Cushion
Parlor Suites ever shown,
also Leather Suites and
Couches.
Don't fail to see our line at our Show 35 to 41 North Capl'tol Ave. Rooms. Over 8,000 ft. of floor space.
Thos. Madden, Son & Co. ~~~~~~~p.o~~s:
Robbins TaOl6 Go.
OWOllllO. MIGhi!lan
No. 318. AMERICAN OAK.
44x48 IN. TOP. AMERICAN BASE.
7 IN. PILLAR.
UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD. ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We Jead.in Style. Com1nJCQoo
and Finish. See our Catalogue.
Our line on permanent exhibi~
bon 7th Floo(. New Manufact-urers'
Building, Grand Rapids.
MANUFACTURERS OF
HARDWOOD ~~~~i~~
SPECIALTIES:
~'i.";'i!'E'BQUAR. OAK VEN EERS
MAHOGANY VENEERS
HOFFMAN
BROTHERS COMPANY
804 W. Main St, FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
26
A Great Mistake.
A party of capitalists, engaged in many ktnds of business,
in looking for a new field for investments, found an opening
for a department store in one of the great cities of the east-ern
states. A building containing many acres of floor soace
was erected and the management assembI ..<..1. the products of
famous factories, looms and vineyarus throughout the world
under its roof. Experienced managers of departments were
employed and the "big chief" was a man who had WOn fame
and fortune in the marts of trade.
Elaborate displays of furniture, carpets, rugs, curtains,
clothing, dry goods, glassware, shoes and other necessities
of mankind were effectively arranged in the store windows
and the forthcoming opening of the establishment was 'made
the subject of much conversation and discussion in business
and social circles. An experienced advertisement writer
called upon the "big chief" for instructions as to the line of
prejudices of the puritans would not again be offended. The
community was but little affected by the statement. A few
of the more curious entered the store and returned to their
friends with reports of its magnificence, but continued to
place their orders with the old established houses.
Three ye~rs later the hostility of the cititzens continued,
but the firm set to work vi.gorously in creating a demand for
goods in the country and neighboring towns and have been
successful in obtaining a sufficient amount of trade to war-rant
the merchants 10 keeping their doors open. Whether
they will succeed in ''v'inning the gpod-will and patronage of
the puritans is a problem the future will determine.
Another Museum for Salem.
A wealthy 'woman formerly living in the interesting old
city of Salem, Mass., provided in her will that her house
and its contents should be transferred to the city and used as
DINING ROOM OF SUMMER HOME AT NEWPORT, R. I.
goods that should be used as a leader in the preparation of
the flaming announcement, to appear in the Sunday news-papers,
of the opening, and was directed to make the wine,
champagne and liquor department a feature. The opening
day was proclaimed in variegated colors, but in the body of
the full page advertisements the liquor d~l}artment stood
out as prominent as a burning barn on a lone prairie. The
city in which the store had been located is puritanical, and
the descendants of Governor Winthrop, William White, El-der
Brewster, Myles Standish and their fellow voyagers from
Leyden to Plymouth three hundred years ago, turned up
their supersensitive noses and declared the offending mer-chants
must suffer on account of the indi,:tnation and wrath
incurred by the publication of the offensive advertisements.
The puritans and their friends continued to bestow their
trade favors upon the old fogy merchants. with whom they
had dealt in the past, and the newcomers "Werecompelled to
witness the attitude of the community toward their enterprise
without a grain of consolation. FinaHy the management de-cided
an apology was due the public for the mistake made,
and in humble language the firm acknowledged that the tem-per
and taste of the c_ommunity had been misunderstood when
it announced the sale of liquid goods; that the department
had been abolished, and that the temperate inclinations and
a public museulU. The city recently gained possession of
the property, and will soon open it to permit residents and
sojourtlers to inspect its call tents. The house contains
many rare and almost invaluable pieces of furniture, collect-ed
in many pa.rts of the world.
The Monarch Morris chairs manufactured by the Ramsey-
Alton Company of Portland, ·Mich., are especially valuable ,in
a stock for the holiday season.
ftopkln& ."d Itarrtt.t Sb.
Clnel ... tl. O.
Nenry Schmit &. Co.
)lA.kBd 0..
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
POR
LOOO~ AND PULPIT, PARLOR
L1BRARl. nOTJ:L
AND CLUB !lOOM
August Furniture Sales in New York.
The August furniture ~<tle is the product of the haste
of modern life in this country. Tt not only brings money
to the de:J.ler and the manufacturer and saves money for the
housekeeper, but it cconomizes timc for all three. It makes
busy \'v·hat would otherwise he a dull season for the maker
and seller of furniture and hurries up the consumer, because
it enables hir1.1to profit by buying early.
Strange as it may seem to a Xew Yorker, this pt'ouuct oi
a restless ag;e had its origin in Philadelphia. In tlte Quak-er
City, according to the claim of one of its leading mer-chants,
who aLso owns a mammoth establishment in ?\Tew
York. the first furnitnre sale wa:':i held in lSg9. Its popular-ity
was assured at the very beginning, and like every other
good thing it was soon transplanted to New York, '>vhere it
bas assumed vast proportiom;. Enough furniture is SQld in
New York in the month of August to erect a half dozen of
the best type of departmcl1t stores.
Naturally Augnst would be th/? dullest month for the fur-niture
dealer in the whole year. It is too early for the house-wife
to buy. As like as not she is out of town, having sought
;m escape from its heat and dust. Or if she remains and
has plans for furnishing a l1ew home, or fitting up an old one
more elaborately, she is inclined to ,vait 11ntil the beginning
of the apartment-leasing period, on the first of October.
And were the housekeeper not persuaded to buy furniture
bargains ill August, if the stores were empty of cllstomers
who would IHturally wait until Fall, there \vould be thrown
out of employment in this city during the summer, an army
of forty thousand clerks. It would also make idle a still
larger army of workers who wouid have nothing to do, ill
the great furniture factories of Grand Rapids, IVlich., and at
Jamestown, K. Y., and in the oak belt of the Carolinas.
By means of the August sale the purchaser is ,able to buy
furniture as low as half its ordinary price. In most stores
many pieces of [l1TnitHT~:of expensive make, which bave re-mained
lUl~old during the spring and carly summer ;.\re sac-rificed
to make wny for !Jew autumn goods. And althottgh
just a.s good ;u; what b.'1Sbeen sold ior twice the price form-erly,
the August fllrJlitl1re must go to make room for later
<:onsignmellts.
The August sale also permits the manufacturers to put
on the market furniture of excellellt workmanship, bttl of a
.<:;tyle \vhich, for some reason or other, did not prove as popu-lar
as other lints. It also makes it possible for makers of
furniture to put up [or sale at low prices pieces of new design
in order to learn whether they will strike the public fancy.
Grand Rapids, the centre of the fttrniture industry, has its
great furniture exhibition in June, at \vhich time buyers
from all the big department stores pick up as many bar-gains
as possible, to tempt August pmchasers. The samples
of tl1(~exhibition, although just as good as if just turned Ollt
Murphy Chair Co.
MANUFACTURERS DETROIT, MICH.
A COMPLETE LINE
27
of a factory, are all bought up to be sold in August at a sac-rifice.
In the Latter pa.rt of July the New York city furni-ture
fair is held, and its samples also find their way into the
shop ~vjndows to help attract the August bargain hunter.
So grc;rt is the attraction of August furniture sales that
thousands of shoppers are attracted hither from as far away
as Lake Champlain and the Connecticut Valley. These
out-oi-towners find it more economical to pay the expenses
of a trip to attend a New York furniture sale than to buy "to
home."
The ;,few Yorker who moves every fall, throwing away
some of his furniture to fix up the new flat with something
more substantial or more ornamental, finds the August sale
most opportune. He can pick out a chair or bed, a desk or
table, which just suits his fancy, pay a small deposit, and
have his purchases stored free until he is ready to tn(we.-
J oumal.
Mr. Meisi.ng~r·s Succ.essful Season.. I
In a letter to the Mtchlgan ArtIsan John ]. MClsing¢T who
manages the furniture department hOlr Ceo, W. McAlpin
& Co .. Cincinnati, says: !
. HHave completed taki~lg stock and find th.at notwit~stand-
I1lg tlle unseaso~1able.sprlng weather for the SIXmonth!;!ending
July 31 have gamed III sales reduced the stocks and $howed
pro1Jts in the following departments: Furniture, uph~lstery,
rugs, pictur0.s. This is 111y fIrst season here. Was f~rmer1y
\vith Chapman & Co., Brooklyn, N. Y." ,
I Pione/er
Mfg. Cq...
I
DETROIT, MICH.
I
R66d furni~ur6
Baby Garrla0611
Go-GaJ111
~
Full line sh~wn Oft
second Hom.·.j 1 319
Mlchil2ah Avd.. Chi •
caItO. .In JanuatyI .
r
ItOOKWOOD
Full line $OWQ on lMtCDl'2d
£Iool'. 1319 Michigan Ave.,
ChiCaKO. in JauulU"Y'
28
MODERN MIRROR PLATE GLASS MANUFACTURE.
Methods Employed in America's Up.to-the- Times Plate
Glass Plants.
The following highly interesting description of the pro-cess
of manufacturing plate glass is by William D. I-Iartupee,
chairman of the manufacturing department of the Pittsburg
Plate Glass Company:
Few people understand the difference between plate glass
and window glass. It is a difference in re:flection entirely,
which means, if you look at an object throu,?h plate glass, at
a building, for example, the lines will show true and exact.
The openings, vertical and horizontal lines, columns, decora-tions,
etc., win appear to you just exactly the same as though
no glass was interposed between the building and your eye.
\Vhile, if you look at the same object through a piece of win-dow
glass, the lines will not be true, but wavy or broken.
The opening will appear crooked and out of place. Columns
are apt to have a spiral appearance, and tOle whole image is
distorted and untrue. To illustrate again ju~t what we mean,
if you sU5pend a plumb bob from a line, and look at the line
through a plate glass window, it will appear absolutely verti-cal
and straight; while if you look at it through window glass,
it witt be wavy and not verticaL This is expressed by saying
that the image of an object seen thrO'\.\gh plate glass is true
and exact, while the image of the same obiect. seen through
window glass, is distorted and not exact. This is not due to
any chemical difference in the structure of the two glasses,
but is entirely due to the physical characteristics of the two.
This physical character of plate glass consists in the two sur-faces
being perfectly true and parallel tu each other-the
surfaces themselves having been made so by grinding,
smoothing and polishing both sides of the glass by skillful
workmen on large, delicately adjusted and ~ccurately work-ing
machines.
The chemicals that enter into the' composition of plate and
window glass are practically the same, although the plate
manufacturer, by reason of wanting his ~lass clearer, of
more brilliant color, and freer from defects than the window
glass manufacturer, will, and does, select his materials with
the greatest care, and requires that they shall be the best ob-tainable.
For example, his sand must be of the whitest-his
limestone of the purest....,...no trace of iron must show in
either, for this would give a greenish tinge to his glass, which
must be pure and crystal-like. No little pieces of alumina
or clay must be allowed to creep in to the mixture that is
to be melted, for thcse would cause, on dccount of their
difficulty to melt, defects that would mar the appearance
of the finished plate. These ddects mean little to the win-dow
glass manufacturer, and are hardly noticed by llim, but
to the plate: glass manufacturer they are important, and in-deed
vital. Every material must be subjected to the most
careful chemical analysis.
In order to show the excessive care, the large amount of
labor, the risk of breakage in the work lol.ndhandling that
attends the manufacture of plate glass, a brief outline of its
process of manufacture may be interesting.
In the first place, the materials that form the basis of
glass, are sand, known in chemistry as silicic acid, soda ash,
known in chemistry as carbonate of soda, and limestone,
known in chemistry as carbonate of time. Some variations
are made in the above ingredients by some manufacturers,
as, for example, substituting all or part of the carbonate of
soda for the sulphate of soda, which is known to the trade as
salt cake! and also by the addition of minute quantities of
arsenic and carbon to the mixture, to counteract certain im-purities
that may be found in any or all f)f the above in-gredients.
All the ingredients are carefully weighed, as a
druggist would weigh the ingredients of a prescriotion-
L••
then they are ground very fine, and thoroug\'ly mixed and put
into a huge crucible or pot preparatory to going into the
furnace to be melted.
Mixing of the Matel'ials.
The mixing of the materials is a very important matter,
and the reason the ingredients are ground very fine is, to en-able
us to mix the particles more intimately together-each
minute grain of sand wants, and must have, a little grain of
soda, and one of lime, lying right close up to it when it is
subjected to the heat of the furnace, for otherwise it would
not melt. And the same way with the lime; unless a little
grain of soda lies up next to it, the lime will not be melted.
Did you ever look at a piece of glass and see a little white or
gray speck imbedded in it? Well, that is because a little
grain of sand, or a little grain of lime, did not get close
enough up to a little gr<lin of soda, $0 as to be influenced by
it. The hoiting of the n~as!';helps to bring these ingredients
closer together, and the perfection of the operation consists
in each ingrediellt being combined with just tIle right amount
FURNITURE POLISH
We offer a polish guaranteedto~roduce a BRILLIANT
and PERMANENT lustre on any fimshed wood. A dealer's
trade bUilder. Send for sample 14 gross, $3.75.
Our Supttrior Repair Finisb never fails to remove
burlap marks and mars; and, used with crystal shellac and a
.set of our colors, [aniline, to match any finish] will repair
deep scratches and jams) and reproduce the original finish,
at once. A boon to factory or store.
Repair outfit complete,With.colors, one$Q.25
quart finish, and instructions for use,. U.
Send for Samples.
Grand Rapids Furniture Polish Co.
24 MIUolIIA...e., Oraad Rapld-s. Mich.
Automatic Phone 8226:
of each of the other two ingredients, so after the mass is
melted in a clear, transparent, crystal colored mass is obtained
without any veins, streaks or foreign particles being found in
it.
If he saying Ilpurified by fire" was ever true of any sub-stance,
it is true of plate glass, for it is only by applying the
most intense heats, and violently boiling the materials hour
after hOUf that we can obtain the beautiful dear, flawl'ess glass
that has done 50 much to beautify the· world. We could go on
and tell how we sometimes put a potato at the bottom of
the melted mass to cause violent boiling as the gases arise
from it, and work their way up through the melted glass; or
sometimes stir it with a piece of wood fastened to the end of
an iron rod; or how to get a little piece of clay in the glass,
either coming from the side of the pot or drvpping from the
cap of the furnace, that our chemicals or heat will not dis-solve,
but stays in the glass as a defect, and must be cut out
before the finished :plate is sent out to be used-or how a few
bubbles of air confined in the boiling mass will ruin the entire
pot of glass. A great many details like the1:lc could be men-tioned,
but would he wearisome to dwell u?on, and afe only
cited to show the care that must be taken to get a molten
mass of metal sufficiently pure and free hom imperfections,
out of which to manufacture plate glass.
Pats in Plate Glass Plants.
Now a word about the pots in which the glass is melted;
as they play an all-important part in the manufacture of plate
glass.
They have to be tried by fire-not a steady continuous
heat, which is not s) hard to bear, hut a Leating to a white,
dazzling heat, three thousand degrees hot-hotter than any
known thermometer will register; then they are taken out
of the furnace and emptied of their contents, during which
the 5urrqunding air cools them to a dull red; then they are
quickly put bilCk il1to the glowing furnace and heated up
again preparatory to receiving another charge of the mixed
ingredients, and repeating the operation day in and day out.
Plate glass mamiiacttlfers have hunted the world over to
find clays out of whlch to make their ]Jots, 5d that tbey "vill
stand this terrible test. Such clays have been found in
Missouri, in this cODntry, and in Germany and in Fmnce,
but not anyone clay alone will stand this punishment-it
takes a mixture of the.se clays irom these far separated parts
of tbe world, and they, in their turn, have to be as carefully
prepared, mixed and manipulated as does the batch out of
which the glass is made.
Three years from the time the clay is taken out of the
mine, until it is made into the pot ready to receive the glass
mixture, is the least time we give the entire operation; and
when we can give it four yeul's we like it better .and get
better reslllts.
After the day is mined. it is piled out on the ground and
left for a year, for the wind and rain :and sunshine to weather
it, This means the disintegration and ripening' of the clay
and the elimination from it of ally particles of vegetable mat-ter
it may have contained. Th(',n it is taken to a mill and
washed, to take other ingredients out of it that might shorten
its life in the furnace--then it is dried and ground ;wet burnt
in blocks and sent to the plate glass maker. He then pro-ceeds
to grind it all again into a powder, and then he mixes
the powdered clay from .l\.Jissouri with some ham Germany,
itnd with some from France, adds water, pnd stirs the mass
l1p, just as a woman would mix up a batch of bread-only a
machine docs the mixing, and holds many hundreds of
pounds. Then when thoroughly mixed, this mass, still like
the bread, must be kneaded until it is all of a sticky, plastic
consistency. :!vlany machines have been devised for doing
this, but, just as the housewife claims hand made bread is
better than machine-nude, so the plate glass maker has
found that no machine can equal the bare feet in kneading
his batch.
Now takes place a long period, a year generally, of tramp-ing
and working the clay back and forth from fifteen to
twenty times, and letting it lie, between these \vorkings,. jn
bins to age and ripen. Two years have now passed, and the
clay is just ready to be made into a pot.
A man starts fifteen pots at onee~each day he adds a few
inche5~bt1jJdillg it all up by hand, going round and round
the pot, adding little pieces of clay at a timc, and \'v'orking
and pressing it together with his hands, so tha.t the finished
pot i~perfectly homogeneous and no crack or parting shows
'where the sccond piece of day is added to the first. It takes
fifteen days for this man, with a boy to help him, to finish his
fifteen pots, or his average is one pot a day.
Afte.r the pot has been built up, it is damp and wet, so
it must be carefully dried in a room of a certain tempe.rature.
antl if you dry it too fast, it cracks, and your work is all lost.
In a year, if carefully \vatcbed and dried, it will be ready to
go to the oven, to be gradually heated up to a brigbt red
heat prepar,ltory to being put into the white hot furnace to re-ceive
the glass mixture. Poor pot! After all these years of
preparation, its life is but from twenty to twenty-five days in
that terrible heat, and then its work is done.
Melting and Casting.
The pot, having heen put into the furnace and brought
up to the necessary high temperature, is filled heaping full
with its required batch of silica, soda and lime. r.,:le!tillg
reduces the bulk so much that the pot is filled thre.e times
before it contains a suffic.ient charge of nlo!ten glass. The
mixture boils like. an effervescent t~ass,' all alive, and is like
liquid water. Then, 'wllen the che.mieal actilJn has all taken
place, it settles down to a quiet mass of molten glass, ready
29
for the next operation. The pot is then lifted out of the fur-na<::'.
eby a large electr;c cran£;. The pot, and its contents,
weighing about two tons, is carefulty skimmed to remove a.ny
imperfection which may rest upon the surface-then taken
by another e1e(".trio:c:.rane to the casting table. This is a
large, mas.<;i\re,flat table of iron, about 2S feet long and 15
kd wide. having as an attachment a hea,,'y iron roller which
covers the full width, and can he mechanically rolled the
entire length of the table. At the side of the table are ad-justed
strips of iron upon whieh the roller rests, and which
permit the production of pJates;of different thicknesses, as
these strips are thicker or thinne.r. The pasty or half-fluid
glass metal is now poured upon the table in front of the roller
from the melting pot, and the roller quickly passes oyer it,
leaving a sheet of glass of uniform thickness. The ends of
the sheet, after it is rolled, are slightly rounded, as it is im-
Grand Rapids Caster Cup Co.
2 Parkwood Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
We a.re nDW putting lIDthe best Caster Cups with (:o-rk ba~s evet
offered to the tmde. These are finished in Golden Oak and White Maple
ill a light fmish. These goods are admirable for polished floors and fllrtl-iture
rests. T"e~ will not sweat or mar.
PRICES:
Size2U inches•..... -$4.00 per lIundred
Siz(!'2X indles-····· 5.00 per hundred
Try a sampte Oraer. F. O. B. (-}r<tndllapid8_
possible to roll the glass so as to get a perfectly square sheet,
The heavy railer is now moved out of the way, and then, by
means of a stowing tool, the red hot plate is shoved into an
annealing oven. All these stages of the 'work have to be per-formed
quickly by men of long training and experient:e_
Annealing and Carrying Glass.
The annealing oven, into which the glass is then placed,
may hold from one to three plates, as the case may be, and
for hours it has been heated so that when the glass is put into
it. they are both of the same temperature. As soon as the
glass is jn the oven, all the openings to it are closed and
sealed up-the heat is turned off and the glass and oven cool
off together. This cooling process takes several days, and
when the temperature gets down to that of the surrounding
ail-, the oven is opened up., the glass pulled out on a flat table,
the edges trued up square with a diamond and ally defects
that can be seen are cut out. The examinrttion of the glass
at the oven mouth is only a preparatory one, to discover
such defects as show on the surface, for the surface is rough,
opaque and wavy in appearance, and defects in the body of
the glass cannot be detected. The glass is then raised care-fuIly
on its edge, .>:ndcarried to the grinding and smoothing
departments, where it is put through the next operation.
The tarrying of plate glass is a dangerous and delicate
operation-twenty men are required to carry the largest
plate, ten men on each :side. They have Ie::ther straps with a
handle on each end. The glass is lifted and carried by these
straps-one man on each end of the strap. They must step
together in perfect unison, stand perfectly straight and go
very slowly, or the glass, which towers from six to eight
DRESSER No. 734-Golden Q!!.rt..-.d O.k. $30: M.h°Il"'Y.
veneered. $31; Birdseye Maple, $31.
CHIFFONIER No. 16 -Mahogany, veneered. $21.50; Birdseye
M.pl .. $21.50: Gold.. Q!!.rte,ed O.k. $20.50.
DRESSING TABLE No. 174 -Golden Quartetd Oak..$1&.50; Mahogany, veneered. $19; Birdseye Maple, $19. Write for new catalogue.
30 AI:f'~MI.f,HIG7JN '
.feet above their heads, may break and crash down on theIn,
cutting them .. often seriously, and many times fatally.
Grinding and Smoothing.
The machine for grinding the glass is a circular, flat, iron
platform, from 24 to·28 feet in diameter, and makes from 20 to
25 revolutitons per minute. It is perfectly level and smooth,
and runs as true as a balance wheel of a watch. The surface
of this platform is covered with a thin mixture of plaster
of paris; the glass is then laid on this table, pressed into the
plaster by men ca.refully and skillfully walking over it. The
whole top of the grinding table is c.overed in this way, and
when the plaster has set, which it does i11 a very few' minutes,
the glass is ready to be ground. The table is then set revolv-ing
and large, circular flat discs are lowered on the glass, hav-ing
square irol1 blocks fastened to their under side. These
runners, as they are called, revolve in the opposite direction
to the table, and sharp sand is fed on the grinder by a stream
of water, which, getting between the glass and the iron-shod
runner. does the grinding. The :first operation is done by
very coarse sand, until the glass is ground to a straight, true
and even surface-then finer and fmer grades of sand are used,
and at last the gri11ding operation is finished by the finest
flour of emery. This final operation on the grinder is called
smoothing. The top of this grinding machine is movable,
and when the smoothing is finlslwd, the machine is stopped
and the glass on the table is washed off carefully, for if one
grain of sand is left on the glass at this time, that grain of
sand will spoil the whote table of glass when it enters the
next operation of polishing.
The glass, ,,·,hen it leaves the grinder, has <t perfectly
straight, true surface, feels like velvet, b\,t is opaque like
children's drawing glass.
The glass, after being washed and inspected for defects
of all descriptions, and stitl being nnl11y, imbedded in the
plaster, is put on the polishing machine, which is a machine
muc.h like the grinder, and receives the grinder top-only
the polisher has runners shod with dozens of circular felt
discs which rest on the glass. The material used for polish-ing
the glass with these felt discs is rouge, made from sul-phate
of iron crystals, which have been burnt and ground to
an impalpable powder. Same water is used in this operation,
and it t~kes from three to fOUT hours.
Now all this work of grinding .. smoothing and polishing
has only finished one side---'-the other side is still rough as
when it left the annealing oven. The table top is taken away
from the polisher, the glass carefully raised, all the old plaster
taken off the table, everything washed clean, a new bed of
plaster spread on the table and the glass carefully turned over
and imbedded in the plaster. Now the side that has been
polished is down, and the table top is taken back to the
grinder, and the rough side, which is now up, goes through
the same operation of grinding, smoothing and poli,shing as
THE QUALITY KIND
IS MADE BY THE Horn Bros. Mfg. Co.
281 to 291 West Superior St., CHICAGO, III.
Bedroom Furniture Our Specialty
7IR T 1.5'..7L"I t 3 f:.
the first side did. After tlle second side has been polished, the
Klass is carefully raised from the -polishing table and taken
to the wash rack, where it is carefully cleaned and then taken
to the wareroom. Here it is minutely inspected, every de~
fect cut out-defects that the eye of an ordinary man would
never detect, are here, by skillful inspectors, in~tantly noticed
and corrected. The glass has, during all these operations,
been more or less broken. It has had to stand tOllS upon tons
of weight upon it in the grinding and polishing operations.
It has had to be lifted, turned over, washed and carried. All
these operations are attended with' the risk of breakage, and
entail great loss upon the manufacturer.
In the warehol\se the glass is cut np for orders, carefully
packed in boxes, with sheets of white paper between the
Why Not Order?
Say a dozen or more Montgomery
IronOisplay Couch Trucks rent you
(loB approval f If not satisfactory th~ can be
returned at no expense to you whatever,
while the price asked is but a trifle, com-pared
to the ~n~en~ lhey atford and
the ecoW)my they represent in the saving
of Boor space.
Thirty_two couch.es. mounted on the
Montgomety Iron Display Couch Trucks
occupy the same Boor space as twelve dis-plated
in th.e U&ualmanner.
Wrile f01 catalope giving full desaip-bOD
and price in thi!l ditf~ iinishetl, to-gether
with illustrations demonstrating the
use of the Giant Short Rail Bed F au.tener
for Iron Beds. Manufactured by
H. J, MONTGOMERY
P ...T..E.JilTB'it
Silver Creek, New York, U. s. A.
Dennia Wire and Iron Co .• e.-L.n Muu-fwlD'el$,
London, Orat.
plates to prevent one plate from scratching another in trans-portation,
then all carfeully packed in straw, and the box is
nailed up ready for shipment.
Fires.
The furniture establishment of Blumberg Bros., Chelsea,
Mass., was damaged by fire Aug. 12. Loss $2,000.
Listmann Furniture Company, North Yakima, Wash.,
Aug. ll, Loss $3.000.
F. Deinzer & Soos furniture. factory, at Detroit, was
damaged to the amount of $30,000 Aug. 16. The cause of
the fire was a defedi ...e. electric motor. They manufactured
mattresses and uph'olstered furniture.
Capital Furniture Company Indianapolis, Aug. 13, damaged
to the extent of $5,000.
31
REX [::;:~]MATTRESS
CHAS. A. FISHER & CO.,
1319 Michigan Ave., Chica.go.
WRITE FOR
BOOKLET
AND
PROPOSITION
Wa.rehoulle,~
ST. LOUIS, MO. KANSAS CITY, MO, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
PEORIA, ILL LINCOLN, ILL. CHICAGO. ILL.
Popularity One of the Essentials to Success.
It is not ahvays the man ,...b.o does the big things jl] busi-ness
who meets with the greatest success. There are people
in business who have built up large and successful institutions
by hitting on a little thing that "went" with the public, made
their place of business popular and increased the flow of
dollars to their tills 50 that they Soon had a large and still
grO\ving business.
Many men in business seem not to realize that they are in
the position of being servants to the publie and if you ..v.ill
think about the men you know who are sHccessful you will
Ma.de by Chas. Bennett Furniture Co., Oharlotte, Mich.
see that they have studiously put themselves and their busi-ness
houses in the position of being servants to the public
and of at all times being politely ready to wait on thc public
The goods in one store may be of just as high grade and
the stock be just as complete' as those of a rival store nearby,
but if the proprietor, manager, floor walkers and salespeople
of one are affable and accommodating and of the other indif-ferent
or inclined to be grouchy, 'vho will get the most busi-ness?
The answer is casy and all because the one store does
things which tend to make it popular with the people. Big
advertising space in the local papers and marking down
prices are all very ,veIl to get people into the store, but no
amount of advertising or marking down will overcome a
feeling on the part of the public if it once gets it, that its
presen(;c in tho.;-s,torc is not fully appreciated by the people
of the ~tore. It's slow progress ma·king a store popular and a
quick one making it unpopular with the public, but once a
store has become popular with the pUblic, it has obtained. a
big lead over all its competitors.
A flooclNalker once hit 011 the idea of having the door
opened for the customers to enter. That little move did
wonders faT increasing thc popularity of that store before
other stores ,",,"okeup and got into line.
A saleslady who was casting about for a new idea to
make herself popular with customers and thus increase the
showing for her department, hit on the idea of taking an in-terest
in the little folks. By tact she soon hecame popular
with a large clientele of fond mothers and it was not long
until she had her weekly wages increased without asking for
it.
Are you a patron of hotels or restaurants? 1£ you are
ynu know wllat particular feature this one and that one is
noted for. You know which one to go to for a steak which
just suits you and what one to go to for a broiled lobster
a 1a Newburg that makes you feel as though you were on the
best of terms "vith the whole world.
These same principles apply to one line of business as well
as another. r talked with a novelty manufacturer in Grand
Rapids, Mich., a short time ago, who was jU5t about to leave
ior YOlll1gstown, Ohio, to visit a foundry \-vhich, he had
learned, made .1 specialty of a certain class of work that
would enable him to get ce.rtain castings made a little better
than he had been able to get them made anywhere else.
Somebody at the foundry had been making a special study
of the needs of the novelty business and had dropped onto
that idea that a department to make a certain difficult class
of castings would stand a good chance of making the foundry
popular with a clientele that had been foreign to it, and the
department was put in. It was the new idea that quickly
made it popular.
It is the new idea that makes any buslness popular and it
pays to ha\Te somebody about who js capable of getting out
a new idea once in a while.
Push button Morris chairs of the Ramsey-Alton make
may be ordered in large or small quantities of the Ramsey.
Alton Company, Portland, Mich.
HOME TRADE LEAGUE EXPOSED
Mr. Clark's Scheme Included War on the Chicago Jobbing
Houses.
The American Home Trade League~ Promoted by Alfred
C. Clark of Chicago as stated in the, J\.Iichigan Artisan of
July 25, a.ppears to have already "Come to Grief." It has
been discovered that the object of the organization while
purporting to assist the retail dealers ill ftghti.ng mail order
competition, also included a scheme to help certain jobbers
or, perhaps, to "bleed" them. At any rate Mr. Clark has
been working a plan to divert bus-i.ness hom the Chicago
jobbing houses and thus benefit thos.e in other cities. This
plan, however, was not a.dopted until the Chicago jobbers
had refused to be bled.
The character of the II orne Trade League was exposed
,when a confidential letter, written by an Omaha, jobber to
IV1r. Clark, was missent and fell into the hands of the Dry
Goods Reporter. Later, other letters were found showing
that Mr. Clark had received $1,000 from Omaha jobbers whQ
had contributed that amount to boost the library end of the
Home Trade League with the_ hope that they would secure
some of the business that now goes to Chicago. The- money,
~it appears was used to print and mail a lot of circulars sent
to merchants asking them to join in the movement and in-cidentally
attacking Chicago wholesalers. One of the letters
written by Mr. Clark to one of the Omaha jobbers who had
"chipped in" $100 said: "You will notice that this circular
helps the western johbers as against Chicago and is worth a
good deal as a document in our campaign."
Mr. Clark's first plan, it is stated, was to have the Chicago
wholesalers furnish the "5inews" for the war on the mall-order
-houses. He asked them to' put up a qnarter of a mil-lion
dollars, but they declined to go into the scheme which
they declared would amount to nothing more than an adver-tisement
for the ..enemy ..-themail order dealers. Thcn
he classed the Chicago jobbers as "enemies" and enlisted
wholesalers in other western cities to fight the Chicago job-bers
as well as the mail order concerns.
The letter that exposed the scheme most completely
came from Minneapolis. lmpellcd by a motive of curiosity.
A prominent jobber is that city replied to l\lr. Clark's in-vitation
to join in the movement and received a confidential
letter in reply. Inclosed with this letter were cDpies of other
lettersbne of which, according to Mr. Clark's statement was
frani W. S. v\'-'right, treasurer of the \Vright-Wihelmy
Company of Omaha to Mr. Clark and another supposed to
have been written by Mr. Wright to <ll1other Omaha firm
urging support of the Home Trade League.
Another letter which, according to 1.fr. Clark's statement,
was written by Mr. Wright to John Brady of the 1JeCord-
Brady Company, Omaha, said:
"l always have had a strong impression that this mail
order business could be materially lessened' by educational
weirk. The only chance we l1flVeis the country press.
"\Vhat I would like to know would be 'whether your
house would be willing to be one of ten to put up $100 each
for the purpose of mailing circulars like the copy attached
to the merchants, and working up through the medium of
the country press an anti-mail order sentiment. Some sug-gestions
in regard to the matter are- attached.
"This Home Trade League i~a responsible organization,
and has done some good work. You will notice this circular
helps the western jobbers as against Chicago, and is worth
a good deal as a campaign document.
"I should much like to see this proposition started here,
and I believe if we can get ten or twelve houses to put up
this much money that the resu~t will be widespread in its 'in-fluence
and pay large dividends on the investment."
To, the Minneapolis merchant Mr. Clark gave the list of
the Omaha contributors as follows and asked that steps be
taken to obtain a similar amount from Minneapolis, stating
that $1,000 woutd just pay penny postage on 100,000 circulars:
Wright & Wihelmy, $100; M. E. Smith & Co., $100; Lee·
C1ass-Andreesen Rdw. Co., $100; F. P. Kirkendall & Co.,
$100; Byrne-Bammer Dry Goods Co., $100; United States
Supply Co" $lCO; Carpenter Paper' Co.,' $100; Lininger Im-plement
Co'., $50; Omaha- Crockery Co., $50; McCord-Brady
Co., $50; E. E. Bruce & Co., $50; Perlin, Orendorff & Martin
Co., $50 Richardson Drug Co., $50.
One of the Home Trade League circulars, headed "Mer-
~hants Take 'Iiarning" ad:vised retailers to "buy in any job-bing
center outside-of Chicago." \Vhen Mr., Clark's attention
was called to this circular he refused to give any explana-tion
of his motive. He admitted that his circulars were
"pretty rough on the Chicago jobbers" but claimed that such
a policy "was necessary in order to whip them into support"
of the Home Trade League.
The Dry Goods Reporter, -in cQmmenting on the expose of
::Vlr.Clark's scheme says:
"About a year ago Clark attempted to interest Chicago
jobbers in 'a scheme of publishing attacks upon mail order
houses in counhyi1ewspapers. His scheme was turned down
as impracticable, because it WOLild give a lot of free adver-tising
to the retail catalogue -hottses. There are some who
say that Clark has been ,sore ever since :because of his
turndown. There would have heen 'some ,fat advertising
commissions for the promoter of such a publicity scheme,
and Clark was then, and is now an advertising man and
understands the game.
1\ow that the Home Trade League has been reveaied as a
petty market organization inspired by the dis<lppointment
of (me man, and the hYPocTisy of several others, the retailers
of the country will have. little use for green circulars from
mysterious sourc.cs,"-
249-256 SQ. Canal St., ·r_ -r-
FREE
With an order for
lhe following Se·
lection of
'SAN1P.l~
PILLOWS
we will indude a
SANITARY
DISPLAY RACK
like cut, K, D.
3 prJ. 61b. Cherry @ 95e
3 Pl". 711. Olive@-$1.35
3PI'1.6Ib. P8Bch@ 1.1S
3 po. 7 lb. Pear @ 2.10
3 Pt>l, 6Ib, Plum.@ 2.40
This Rack win in-crease
your Pil-low
Sales 100%
[t may be referred to as SELECTION "0", without .pecial·
ly naming Grades and Qyantities.
SEND US AN ORDER FOR SELECTION "0"
~~J\~~~'
CHICAGO. ILUNOIS
33
Honesty is only another term for "Square Deal"
No. 2544.
"SQUARE DEAL"
is the kind that can be depended on
when "your not looking," or where
you can't see. You can't see what's
inside of upholstered furniture, but
when the inside is as good as the cover-ing,
i. e. hair, moss and tow of ap-proved
grades (the only kind u;ed in our
factory), the merchant and the con-sumer
both get the
"SQU AR E DEAL"
MUELLER & SLACK COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich.
GENERAL CONDITIONS ARE GOOD.
A Talk With John Widdicomb About What He Observed
While Seeking Rest.
"\Vhat did you see, hear or learn that would be of value
or jnterest to your friends in the furniture trade?" That
question was fired at John W.iddicomh, the well known fur-niture
manufacturer of Grand Rapids, Mich., who has just
returned from .a vacation trip in Europe, by a representative
of the Micll.igan Artj",an, and the reply was substantially as
follo.vB:
"Really," I don't think I can say anything that will be
of use to your readers. I ·went over there for a rest, tried
my very best to get it and succeeded pretty fairly. I tried
to put business out of my mind entirely-did not talk about
it except when compelled to~.and I got a good rest."
To the sug"gestion that a wide !:t'wake,progressive business
man could hardly spend even a few weeks "on the other
side" without observing the conditions and trend of business
and financial affairs, I\·U. \Viddicomb said: "\Vhy, of course
[ took notice of geuNal business .affairs, but I did not see,
hea.r or learn of anything of particular sjgnifica.nce. Busi-ness
over there--in England, at least, is fairly good. There
has been nothing like a reaction that I could sec. Some of
those directly interested in financial affairs have been hit
quite severely by the shrinkage in the value of stocks~
shares they call them-but that does not seem to have affect-ed
the manufactl1rlng, mercantile or commercial interests. I
did not notice any gloomy feeling or disposition to curtail
operations, On the contrary the people are prosperOU3 and
cheerf1Jl-looking for a continuation of present conditions.
I did not hear any explanation or reason for the slump in the
value of securities. I do not think they blame America for
their losses, If they were entertaining such an idea r would
most certainly have heard something about it.
"As to the furniture industry) I can point to one thing
that indicates its condition. The Lebus Company, which)
as you have stated heretofore, owns and operates the Jargest
factory in the world, built a new plant three or four years
ago. They thought they had made it large enough to meet
their requirements for a generation at least, but they have
already had to increase its capacity, and are now engaged in
enlarging their power plant.
"While in New York, on my way home, I gave consider-able
attention to business and I did not discover anything
that should be discouraging, or that shows a tendency to
reaction in gen<:ral business affairs. Of course, the finan-cial
speculators are not really happy, but their. woes are not
felt by other interests and I do not see anything in the sit-uation
that should cause any borrowing of trouble.
"Here, at home, business is certainly good. With our
company it was never better and there is no apparent reason
why present conditions should not continue, unless we have
a gellNal shortage in crops or something of that sort."
Toured the Rocky Mountains.
Daniel F, Tower, presid'?ut of the Grand Rapids .Brass
Company, returned on August 24 from a six week)s vacation
in the mountains of western Colorado. He had a fine time
and never looked better in his life than now.
Ramsey-Alton Morris chairs have been on the market for
seven years and have never failed to meet the requirements
of dealers and their customers.
"Antique furniture niade~ orde~," is the audacious art':'
nonncement of a cabinet maker of Brookline, Mass., upon ,a
sign board over his door.
inexperienced salesman may be pardoned for talking too long
on these features of a dresser or a commode, but when the
f1nish begins to grow dull or fade and the mirror develops
waves or pinheads the customer feels that he has heen swin-dled.
And he has, for more has been promised than it is in
the power of the dealer to fulfill. ltmay he got as much
for his money as he shou14 cxpeet;.but -the point is, that the
salesman made him expect too mttch, promised· it to him, in
fact, nad hence he is actually cheated by mean's ()f. dIe, saJes-man's
glowing prornises~ What docs he do then?, Either he
goes baek to the store with a com?laint, which, is lmjust as
against the piece purcha!1ed, but just as against the-nl~,rchant,
or else he goes to another dealer for his future wants .and
urges hi's friends to do likewise.
With such experiences the dealer is disposed to make un-just
claims upon' the manufacturer, but the latter are not so
compliant as formerly! and rarely allow claims for damages
unless the proof submitted in support of the same is conclu-sive.
Exaggeration is generally resorted to by the sales-man
because he has nothing to say worthy of consideration,
Educating the Customer.
The average customer knows not, and knows that he
knows not, the various kind of. woods used in the construe";
tion of furniture and the finishes applied to the same. If
the salesmen have but tact enough to .supply the wanted in-formation
in a quiet, tactful way, being sure that his manner
is not overbearing, the customer will appreciate it. For ev-eryone
is anxious to learn, and gives due respect to the one
who teaches him. But when it comes to learning in the
store, the customer does not want the knowtedge handed
out in a manner that implies he ought to have known without
asking.
The tactful salesman will tell the customer what- he wants
to know without forcing him .to ask too many questions, and
will tell it in a way that is interesting <l.ndrespectfuL In
this way he will gain the confidence and respect of the cus-tomer,
and make the selling the easier,
He will not say, "You don't know it, but-," Rather
he will couch thai: idea in words something like this, "Few
People know it, but-," and then go on to tell it, and the
MADE BY MUELLER & SLACK CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH,
customer need not admit he did not know it unless he feels
like it.
In this way the salesman can show his knowJedge of the
subject without appearing to do so in a superior way, and
without offending the customer. It is a.lways a good thing
to let the. customer realize that you know something about
what you are selling, for then the customer has more con-fidence
in you and in the store, and buys easier, arid is less
likely to object to the price.
All this implies that the salesman knows the subject,
which he n:J-ustif he is to be a real successful salesman, where
there is any competition to be worthy of the name.
. Then he must also know the various kinds of covers, and
be able to tell without hesitation just what each is suited
for. Too often a salesman knows none of these details,
and feels only that the store is a good square place to trade,
and unhesitatingly recommends every article he shows, for
style, and for anything else that the customer may ask about.
This is wrong,
A salesman should never dilate up-on the lasting qualities
of finishes or the permanency of mirror backing. Custom-ers
are led to expect too much, and trouble is created. The
He feels he must make a sale and knowing nothing to say
to effect a sale, he brags about the durability of the finish or
permanency of the colors ina fabric, such as a couch or di-van
top, for instance. He might as well gloat over how
long a pound of sugar will last, when he does not ·know how
many there are in the family, or: how many spoonfuls the dif-ferent
members like in their coffee.
In selling a dresser he is only selling so much wood put
together and finished in a certain way., What the customer
will do to it he cannot guess, and how long it will last is
about a.s much of a conjecture a.s it is how long the sugar
will last. It depends on the individual, rather than an the
dresser. And the salesman, in telling how ,the finish is
applied, need not perjure his immortal soul in swearing how
long the finish will last or the mirror remain flawless, He
should tell his customer what may be reasonably expected.
WHITE PRINTING CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
PRINTERS OF CATALOGUES
and everything needed by business men
35
36
Mahe Your Advertising Profitable
Use Outs to Attract Customers ,
(We will furnish duplicates of the cuts shown ~(ow fo.r th.e prices stated. Remit with order. MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO .• Grand Rat>ids. Mich..)
Price $1.00.
I:BUY
Mate
Your Own
1arms
Price 65 Cents.
PAYLATE&
Prier SO Ceftts.
,
r~~-·~-=-o;'~-'iRE~CiEDif
:I! II ~ % I. A1140 0
I Saving to You
i DURINC THIS
j . Clearane, .Sale
I;!•
,
-, TQ qlri<k1Y""d docis.ivd~ ol.~r w' <ow"
\>«> ... "" s\<>d< <>I" !>;'rn",,'" m "",po,s,l.,., 1<"
J.. new;arri1ooJo, ""'otf ...._.~r"'""T~.
.. I>!ntl" or. pasl~y •. ·ond aO-tuaL Come in ~~
Mondayis Special Bargains
Price 50 Cents.
SUGGESTIONS FOR DECORATORS,
------------ -
"Christmas Greetings"
i f] A Special Publication in , Three Colors for the Holi-day
Trade.
,, g Of Great Value to Dealers
in Furniture and Kindred
Goods.
,
Sarp.plesand Prices on Application
White Printing Company
CATALOG AND COMMERCIAL PR
- Date Created:
- 1907-08-25T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 28:4
- 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/2