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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-10-15
Weekly Artisan; 1910-10-15
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and I GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRARY
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.. OCTOBER 15. 1910
Manirtee Manufa&:uring CO.
MANISTEE, MICH.
No. 18 WARDROBE DRESSER.
Quartered Oak. Golden Finish. Polished.
No. 19 CHIFROBE.
Quartered Oak. Golden Finish Polished.
C] We provide for the ladies as well as the gentlemen with these medium priced com-binations.
We issue a catalogue showing our full line of Chifrobes, Dressers, Chiffoniers,
Buffets and Sideboards. Ask for one.
~SJ!-eciaIistsfg theFurniture Trade..
.MICHIGAN ENGRAVING CO.GRANDRAPIDS
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I I NEW DESIGNS IN LOUIS XVI STYLE !
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No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
Graqd Ilapids Brass <00. I
GRAND RAPIDS, MIOH. It
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
A Page From the 1910 Fall Catalogue of
POSSELIUS BROTHERS FURNITURE MANUFACTURING CO.
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
Send for this Catalogue and you will find the most
saleable goods on the A'llerican Market today.
Chma Closet No 3 Buffet No.3.
This Line of Dining
Room Furniture has
sold and is selling far
beyond our expecta-tions.
The famous VICTORS
are as popular as ever.
The round tables are
the talk of the trade
in the large cities.
Serving Table No 3
V',,:';:' -::::. DIRer No 3. ExtensIon Table No 604 C. Arm Chair No. 4%.
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY iI
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GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only. ~... ---------------------------------~ I
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
tn
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Bird' J Eye Maple
Birch
f2.!iartered Oak
and
Clrcaman Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS' BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES, J. EDGAR FOSTER.
, GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRARY
31st Year-No. 16 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., OCTOBER 15,1910 Issued Weekly
COUNTRY HOUSES AS A FASHIONABLE FAD
Two Models Found on the Eastern
For Use in
The country house has become a fashIOnable fad N Ovv-adays
It IS a refuge for the CIty bred man and hIS famdy,
where he can "dnve dull care away." Such a home, located
several mIles south of Maca ta wa Park, on the eastern shOl e
of Lake MIchigan, IS that of a lady whose business and ioocial
responsibihties are heavy and who has planned her house for
use all the year lOund It has all the modern conve11lences
w1t1h a number of extras; a dynamo room for power to pump
hard and soft water and electric hghting and it IS an attractive
house m every way. The location IS on a hilltop overlooking the
lake, and commandmg a view Df the surrounding country for mIles
The large hving room has windows looking Clast, south and
west and m It Dne gets a three-qual ter VIew of the whole
horizon.
The owner's good taste is dIsplayed in many ways The
woodwork and floors throughout are of 1naple, fi11lshed sdver
gray and a more restful effect cannot be Imagined. There
are two large porches, east and west and upstairs a sleeping
p011ch for the owner who has an east room, so that she can
see the sUn rise.
In two bedrooms there are d1cs'Sers blUli In between the
w111dows, the two long drawers com1l1g below the wmdovvs
and the minor 111 a space below the small wmdow between
the other two. It is quite in the English style and one tha
1111ghtwell be adopted more generally m the bU1ldmg of new
houses. The furniture for the house has not yet been pur-chased
and doubtless WIll be 111the beautiful sdver gray to
harmonize WIth the wDodwork. There is a built-in SIdeboard
in tthe dining room. The walls are paneled lIhe convenient
10catlOn for the refrigerator, a trunk hft and many other de-tails
have been considered by the owner in her plans for
thIS aiJtractive house.
One of the fm niture manufacturers of Grand Rapids has
a very attractive summer home at Macatawa Park. Its loca-tion
on the lake front is ideal---Jonly a stone's throw from the
water's edge. From the large front porch one steps into a
large living room which is U11lque in its ornamentatlOn. The
woodwork of the mantel is decorated wirh various brass
furniture ornaments giving it a novel appearance. Other
parts Df the room are similarly decorated, for instance, the
back Df the cozy corner seat.
Shore of Lake
All Seasons.
Michigan-One Planned
The owner has traveled extensIvely and m hIS travels
has pIcked up many odd pIeces Df brIc-a-brac. There are
strange looking idols, pagodas, 111stnuments of warfare and
utenstls for domestIc use, queer shells anu a large panel wood
carvmg represent111g a scene on the Jjanks of the NIle WIth
palm trees and tlhe pyramIds in the dIstance and camels and
Egypban figures in tlhe foreground.
lit is an interesting room to explore and brings visions of
hfe beyond the seas, 111many foreign lands.
Express Commission May Be. Next.
The foldmg cnb of a baby was brought mto use to sustam
the charge that the express compa11les are operated under a com-mercIal
agreement, at ,,yashmgton Dn October 10. Charles L.
Hamilton, a merchant of PIttsburg, offered a baby's cnb for shIp-ment
from Chautauqua, N. Y, to CenterVIlle, Pa, vIa MaYVIlle
The Amencan company's agent at Chautauqua IS saId to have
refused, saymg "The Ame11can Express company has an
agreement WIth the Adams Express company that prohIbIts our
makmg dehvery at l\1ayvl1le of packages receIved at thIS pomt "
The cnb went by another mute and the charge was $2.50,
$1 50 to the Amencan company and $1 to the Adams
company. The Adams rate from Ene to CenterVIlle IS $1 and
the dIstance from Chautauqua to CenterVIlle, via Mayvdle, IS
about the same. Complaint IS made that the mterstate CDmmerce
commisslOn IS movmg very slowly WIth its investigatlOn of the
outrages perpetlated upon the bus111ess world by the express
compames It may be necessary to start a movement in Con-gress
tD prOVIde for the appomtment of a board or commISSIOn
10 llave ]UlISdIctton over the management of the expres~ som-panies.
Factories Are Busy.
Manufacturers generally report an improvement in the de-mand
for furnIture. The factones of Grand Rapids are well
employed-a number to capaCIty. Ohio river factones are busy,
espeCIally SD at EvanSVIlle, where the spring lines for 1911 have
been completed and placed on the market. Catalogs WIll be is-sued
early in the coming month The factones at IndIanapolis,
Shelbyville, Columbus and other p0111tSin southern Indiana are
busy.
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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By E. Levy, Representative.
ChlCago, Oct 14-Early m '\ovember "\h~~ \1111> Do~t
sch, daughter of the late Joseph Doebch, of the Doetsch 8-
Bauer compan), Chicago, wJ1l start out on the road to ~ee that
company's many customers m the east and 111troduce then
lme of parlor furl11ture frames vvhere not now placed Tl11';
IS MIs~ Doetsch's third attempt to meet the trade 111thl" VI a,
and It has been her pleasure to not anI) meet \\ Ith "Ulll',,,
111the sale of their goods but she ha" alwa\ s telt gratetul 0\ el
the manner In ~\vhlch all of her deceasec1 father's cu ~tamer"
I ecelVed her and proved their appreClatlOn b\ g1\ 111~
orders as before Said :;\1lss Doetsch \1\ em-bara"..,
ment and t1111Icht) VIa.., "oon 0\ el c lmc VI hen I tuund
how k111d and COIdial one and all VI el e \\ hen [ 111tlOducecl
myself, and I was grahfied to learn the high e~teem 111 \\ hlch
my departed father wa.., held by those \\ho knew him, many
of them for more than a quarter of a century
"Our deSigner, "\Ir Bauer, has not only 111CI eased the num-ber
of patterns thiS "eason, but also I eahzed the I eCjunemcn h
of the trade and has brought out With each succeechng ,,(;,,"on cl
lme that has proven very saleable. and It IS bettel ami largel thl'
season than ever Yes, I ~o out With lonfidence thiS time (ftu
my past expenence, behevmg OUI l111e\\ III find g (eatel ta \ 01 th,111
ever I am g01'1g as far e,1~t as Boston, \\ hel e I h11gel eel a httle
extra time when I VI as filst there, to wandel tlllou~h some ot the
picturesque, ll1~ton~ narrow and \vmdmg streets .,
Sinle the reductIOn of the two dally paper-, that VI el e
formerly tvvo cenb, to anI) one cent a copy It I.., a I u11a!l,
able fact that few people are now ..,een gomg to \\ 01k
morl11ng"> \\Ithout a paper In their hands One cent h 1111ghh
lIttle 111Ihelf, but It seems to hay e made a gl e,lt clIttercnce 111
the pUlcha..,e and sale )f mor11lng pape1s 1n tlll~ ut) Th1S
reductIOn IS a notable exceptlOn to the rule of the mcre,1"ecl
pllce of commochtle.., of all kUlds
The Chicago Asbesto" Table :.\Iat company have gotten
out some \ er) attractive pr111ted 11utter, vvhllh the) a1 c 11O\v
ma1l111g to the tJ ade Th1~ l lm pan) ha"> entered on d natIOnal
campaign of advertlsmg and al e domg a gl eat deal tovv ards
educat1l1g housekeepers about how to presen e the beaut) of then
d1l1ing room table tops whIch are so eas11) mall ed In "pJlled
lIqUIds, hot c1hhe", etc
J Klmmeth & Co, manufacturers of upholstered fUll11ture
have completed arrangements for the adchtlOn of ,111othel
story to their f,1ctory at 8.3;) :J\'"orth -Wood 'itreet It \\ as ollh
a few yeals ago that they enlarged theIr plant fully a thml
IDEAL STAMPING AND TOOL CO.
SOCKETS. DOWELS.
TOP fASTENERS
and GlJlDES
for Extension Tables.
Also special stampings
In steel and brass.
Write for
NO.KUM.OUT TABLE SOCKET. Patent a~plled for. samples and prices
465 N. Ottawa St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
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POLISHES
Quality and Economy I
Two excellent reasons for using the
Excelsior or World's
Fair Polish
on high grade furniture. We claim to sell the best and
most economical polish, and have proved it by their
being the Standard polishes for 25 years of use in the
furniture manufacturing trade.
Get our prices and send for sample before placing
your next order.
GEO. W. LIGHT MFG.
COMPANY,
2312 W. Van Buren St., CHICAGO.
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more than the ongmdl sp,1ce u~ed anel already the space 10
too small tor the1r 1l1crea..,ed hade The; expect to have the
bmlclIng lam pleted before the snow flIes
1 reedman nl o~ &.. Co , 733 l\i[athn ~treet, report they are
I ecen 111gman) order" for their new sty Ie dIvan fold111g beel
Tll1~ bed opens vvIth two movements, and h qUIckly and eaSIly
opened dnd closed It cllffers matenall) from other foldmg
couch beds, as the back of the d1van IS used as the head of
the bcd and the' efO! e IS Just hke a regular bed when open, 111-
as much as the sleeper has no upholstery to face "hen lY111g
on either ..,Ide It IS splembdl) 11Iustratel11l1 a httle pamphlet
they hay e recently Issued
The pador frame fd~tones are all work1l1g on new deSigns
tor the com1l1g season, and VI ord comes from the Sterl!ng
F11111lture compan), that the) al e mak1l1g greater efforts than
evel to show an exceptlonall) good 1111eof Engh~h patterns
111overstuffed chairs, wh1le they have many mOle patterns 111
three pIece 'il11te,,>than they hay e yet manufacurcd J\Iart111
nrockman of the camp an) does all then de~lgn111g and vou-ch
e" tor the can ectne"s at style of every pa ttel n made
The Zangel1e & Peterson cOlnpany ale al"o completmg
all angements to show then new Ime of pallor frames at theIr
factory, 21G4 0) bourne avenue, and they VI 111 be ready about
\ovember 1 "\T1 Peter"on of th1S company has elone the
greatel part of the dec,lgnmg of the1r lutput, ,111d1t 1" through
hh expellenee anJ practical knowledge 111the productIOn of
parler f1ame~ that much of the succe,,» of their 11l1e has beer
achIeved
\lthoug-h there have been many kIreb of fur11lture poh~l'
put on the ma1ket \\lth111 the la~t twenty year"i,-thelr num-ber
I~ leglOn-llone has taken the place of the old and rel!able
"Excel ~lOr" and "World's FaIr" pol! shes manufactured for
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 5
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B. WALTER & CO.
Manufacturen ot TABLE SLIDES Exclusively
WABASH
INDIANA
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT
upwards of thIrty years by the GeOl ge 'IV LIght l\lanufac~
tunng company, 2312 \\ e-,t Van Duren street, Chlca~o
Althou£Sh the co~t of the 111gre(1Jent~ of theIr pohsh ha~
advanced 111 pnce con'olderably S111ce they placed It on the
111arket they have nelthel advanced the pnce nor '2h'lns-<II It"
hIgh quaht} It 1, because the ul11fonn qUclht} of both of
these polhhes 11d~ been ma111ta111ed that the} have contInued
to sell to theIr lId cu-,tomers de'oplte the stlOngest competI~
tIon The manager~ of the <:ompany claIm thel e IS noth111g
on the market at present that equals i'helr products 111econ-om},
both of tIme and quantIty reqUIred and WIll be glad to
send 'iamples to manufacturers to PIO\ e theIr assertIOn \\ nte
for sample bottle or for a tnal order of bvo, three or fi, e
gallon can, which V'.111be sent at barrel pnces
C ChnstIansen, who has been manufacturing work benches
and other factory eqUIpment f01 many years In thIS city, and
whose factory 1, at 2219 Grand avcnue, IS add111g a one story
bU1ld111g,55 by 105 feet, to hIS plant ThIS addItIOn h beIng
erected lust west of the plant and the west wall of the old
bUIlcl1ng vv!I1 be taken do\'. n a" scan as the ac!cl1tI111 IS 111
concl1tlon to permIt of thh change It" 111add about 2j per
cent to space at present occupIed and WIll gl eatly 1 eheve the
conge"ted condltlu1 under whIch they hay ( been WOlk1l1~
£01 many months past
It was only a few year" ago that alaI ge mach111e shop ot
thIS uty tLll ned out from specIal dra W111gSof ,1r Chn stlan-sen'"
desIgl11ng a mach111e to produce one lf the best hand
"crews for V'.ood work111g factones nOl" on the market, and
S111ce theIr sale commenced he has sold thousands of them,
"hlch have g ont 111tOhundreds of factone-, throughout thl ~
country and Canada "l\!r Chnsilan"en a,,~oclated "Ith hUT
recently, hIS son John. who hav111g learned all detaIl" of the
bU~ll1ess ha~ proven an effIcIent aSSIstant 111the management
of the bu-,mess
Among the fUIl11ture buyers "ho ha' e \ I-,Ited ChIcago
~how rooms thIS week are \ Utt, PlOphetstoV'. n, III , C
Nutt, J\Iendon, III . H \\ Krause, Storm Lake, Iowa, ;\ ]\1
Henderson. Story CIty, Iowa, H Bud. ]\It Pleasant. 1C'\\'l.
~ and II Hart :V!eh Ille, Mont, G A \\ achter, Pender, Neh
New Factories.
rI he Toronto (Ont) FurnIture company are erectmg cl f Il-tory
,It a CQ~tof $70,000 on Duffelm ~tJeet
The Reed Shop, recently estabh"hed by V\ H ~ll11th IS
manufactullng reed and rattan ftumture at l1H() ~Ixth ,tl eet
San DIego Cal
N L Kaudy of Stanley, \V 1", has been negotlatmg fOI a
~Ite on \\hlch he purposes to e"tabh"h a small furl11t1Jre facton
at JnternatIOnal I, alh, J\Illln
W J Hess, ;\ 13 }ontame and E K \\ agner have Inc01-
pOlated the VVIllow Gra"s Rug company, capItalIzed at $100,000,
to establIsh a factory at Green Day, WIS
The Phoemx ChaIr company has been orgalllzed to take
over and remodel an old fa'2tory and manufacture chalfs and
medlllm grade fur1l1ture at Peterb01ough, N H
The LewI,,- Weller ManufactUrIng company has been IWDr-porated
by WIlham LeV'.IS. E J vVeIIer and others to make bed
r00111furmture at PtlLa, "J Y CapItal stock, $10,000
.~ \ CanadIan organ manufactunng company IS reported to
have deCIded to establIsh a branch fact01) 111 the "States," prob-ably
at North ChIcago, whIch wIll employ 100 to 12:5 skIlled work-men.
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1he Brown ChaIr and Upholstenng company. capltahzed
at $20,000, are bwld1l1g a factory at Sherman, Wexford county,
J\llch , and expect to have It 111operatIOn before the end of the
year
Otto R Muenter, Hugh and E H Cameron have orgamzed
the Muenter Manufactunng company to take Dver the Idle plant
of the \\ IsconS111 '\rt CabIl11etcompany at Fond du Lac and man-ufacture
chalfs
Officers of the Commercial Club .of Peon a, 1lI, have becn
negotlatmg \\ Ith the En~lIsh \ eneer company of '\menca for
the estabh ohment of a great furmture fact01 y 111 Peona The
Enghch Veneer company of AmerIca LSdescnbed as "capltahzed
at $2 000,000, WIth Its pnnclpal place of bus111ess 111Alabama"
Department Store President Insured.
Frank B. Culbertson, first vice president of the Spokane,
\\ a,h, chamber of commerce, who made a f.ortune 1ll mlll111g
operatlOns 111 the Coeul el' \lene chstJ ict 111 northern Idaho, has
taken a hfe 111"tllance polIcy of $100,000, nam1l1g as the bene-fiCIary
the department store of whIch he IS preSIdent He now
carnes $225,000 of whIch $12j,000 IS 111 endowment poliCIes,
the first matunng next year Others follow at the rate of $3,-
COOand $10,000 e\Cry 12 month s The pohcy whIch is the larg-est
ever Issued m the West undel the head of corporatlOn 1l1-
surance, IS to protect the company's bUSIness, stockholders and
credItors 111 the event of Mr Culbertson's death
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6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
t--- .•-------~--. MAKES AN IMPORTANT PRECEDENT -.------ --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1
Damages for Destruction of Trees Based on
"Expectation Values."
In an actIon for fire trespass on the Black HIlls 1\ atlOllal
1')1 est, broul:iht by the Umted States aga111st the \I1SS0Ul1
RIver and ~orthwestern RaIlway compan}, the JUt) ha"
awarded damages to the government not only for the 1o,,, uf
merchantable tlm ber but also for the destructIOn of unmer-chantable
young growth ThIS IS regal cled by government
officials as establIshing a very important precedent c.;o fa1
as is known at the Department of Agnculture, It IS the first
t11ne that an} c('urt has recogl11zed vvhat forester~ call the
"e:ApectatlOn value" of } oung growth as fnr111shing a baSh
for the award of damages The diffIculty 111the "Yay of such
an dward in the past has been that thel e vvas no way to [110\ e
to the satlsfact10n of the COlll ts the money \ alue of the los~
suffered
The avvald 111the South Dakota case follo'.' ed the pres-entatIOn
of eV1dcnce as to the cost of WOlk 111 Ieforeot111g
\'Vhich the government is actuallv dOlng 111 the Black Hills
The amount claimed £01 the} oung gr'J\\ th l'urnecl \\ dS $12
an acre, and the claim under this item was allowed m full bv
the Jury The total amount of damages c1a1mec] \va" :jl3728-
85, of which $2,63±.45 was for merchantable tlmbel destroy eel
or injured by the fire
It is recognized by foresters that the cost of artlficial
reforestation WIll not alwa} s fur111"h a fair basIs for esti-mating
the damage to forest reprod 11etlO 11 ,Vhere ne\\ gI 0'.' th
can Ibe expected by natural sovving from seed-trees on th e
ground within a short tune, artIfiCial plallt111g or sowing is an
unnecessarily expensi\ e method To meet such cases '" hat
are known as "yield tables" are be111g prepared By the use
of these the loss can be shown in terms of the final crop and
the time necessary to produce it
Thus, If it is known t1hat ten thousand feet of timber per
acre can be cut once in seventy years, it is easy to calculate
the value of the crop when It is ten years old by dbCOUllt111g
from its value when mature. In European countnes \\ here
forestry has been long practIced th1S methud IS regulaJ1y ap-plied
in selling, condemning or estimat111g damages on tore-t
property. It is also used in insurance, which would be 1m
practicable if there were not both an accepted bas1s f01 de-termining
the loss suffered and a reasonably accurate know-ledge
of the hazard involved.
Post Card Advertising.
Advertising the different departments by means of pIC-ture
post cards has been found a profitable scheme by a small
west side store, says the New York Times. Even so small
a purchase as a five-cent spool of thread entltles the customel
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for
$10.75
Mirror,
24x16 PI. F. P.
Top, 32x20.
Wood Knobs.
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Satin Walnut
or
1m. Mahogany,
Dull.
Mail
All
Orders
to
CHAS. BENNETT FURNITURE CO.,
CHARLOTTE. MICH.
t.o a fJ ee package of post cards, Vv hleh the saleswoman pre-
~ents \\ Ith the request to look at them before leaving th<;
counter.
The shopper looks. On the first card is the pidure of an
l'11maculate kItchen that is furnIshed WIlh every appii·'l.11ce
k IL \\ n to the most progressive cook "VISlt (; 11' l1lo(lcl kIt-ehel1,"
IS the advice printed below the illustratlOn. The second
ea,ll 111\1te- 111spectlOl1 of wall paper, the third (); c;l1peb, and
,0 on through the entIre store.
"Arc these photographs of departments 1rl yoU! own
~j )re ?', the cU:otomer asks
"They are," the saleswoman replIes "Every depal L11,ell.
111the store dIstrIbutes photographs of every other depart-ment
It seems a pretty good way to get customers intel-csted
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
Manufacturing
Grand Rapids. Michigan
All Knobs and Pulls have the
Waddell COlIlpany
No-fium-Loose Fasteners
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
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Grand Rapids Factory AHairs.
Charles R Sligh, president of the Sligh Fur11l1ure com-pany,
al rIved 111 Grand RapIds on October 7, after spend111g
five ~ eeks 111the western mountain states and on the PacIfic
coast :!'Iifr SlIgh IS largely interested 111 agricultural IrrI-gatIOn,
m1l1111gand tImber lands 111 Arizona and Wash111f;ton
and naturally gave much of his tune to those Interests. Ex-cept
at Los Angeles, he found Ibus111ess In the princIpal CIties
of the coast m a dormant condItIOn Dullne,s prevalb In
San FranCIsco, Portland, Tacoma, Seattle and Salt Lake ::\11
SlIgh spent a few days in southern Idaho, and was greatly
Impressed WIth the natural and acquiled advantages of the
regIOn About $60,000,000 have been eJl..pended in the devel-opment
of irrIgatIOn plants and the country has prospered
greatly SInce the gather1l1g anJ dIstnbutIOn of water wac;
undertaken BOIse IS a !busy lIttle CIty Its banking and
commercIal 111tere"ts are Important The ]obb1l1g busIness of
the CIty amounts to upwards of $50,000,000 annually.
The Blockmeler Plano company have made an angements
to open a do'\ n-t0'\ n show room 111the Goodspeed building,
Pearl street.
The Grand RapId" Refllgerator company have 11l1der
lomtructlOn an additIOn to the enameling sectlOn of their
mammoth plant, w,lllch covers an area of 25 JI.. 130 feet, three
._--_.__._---_ ....
stories hIgh The rapid growth of the enamelmg branch of
the company's busl11ess necessitated the constructIOn of this
addItion. It WIll contain 30,000 square feet of floor space
Concrete is used in the walls
The Architectural "\Vood Working company, who came
from Philadelphia, to take over and use the dId Michigan
Barrel company plant on upper Canal street, have a cataLogue
in the hands of the printers and WIll be ready to book orders
before the end of the month.
l\Iessrs Mueller and Slack of the Mueller & Slack com-pany
are both at home at once for the first time since the
close of the July selling season. They 'both report having had
satisfactory selling trips and the factory is exceedingly busy.
The MIchigan Desk company, which, a few years ago,
was 111 straIghtened financial clfcumstances, has just com-pleted
the third year under new management and is now in
a very prosperous condition
The Grand Rapids company have added store fixtures of new
designs to their line of products.
A stock to be eloquent 111vanety must embrace all that
1S valuable in the fur11lture trade
_1001
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PITTSBURG PLATE GLASS CO.
LARGEST .JOBBERS AND MANUFAOTURERS OF
GLASS IN THE WORLD
Mirrors, Bent Glass, Leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass
\NIRE GLASS
Plate Glass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beautiful than white marble.
CENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN ACED VARNISHES.
q For anything In Budders' Glass, or anythmg m Pamts, VarnIshes, Brushes or Painters' Sundries, address any of our branch warehouses, a
!1st of \\ hleh ISgIVen below
NBW YOBE-Hudson and Vandam 8t ••
BOS'.rON--U-49 Sudbury St., 1-9 aowker St.
CHICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave.
CINCINNA'.rI-Broadway and Coun st •.
S'.r.LOmS-Cor. '.renth and Spruce Sts.
MDrNEAPOL:tS-500-5l6 S. '.rhird St.
DE'.rBOrl'--53-59 Lamed St., B.
GBAND BAPIDS, MICB-39·4l •. Division 8to
Prl''.rSBt1BGB-10l-l03 Wood St.
MILWAt1B:BE, WXS.--f92·494 Market st.
:BOCHBS'.rB:B,llI'.Y_WllderBldg., Mam Ie :Szohan,.. S*s.
BAL'.rDtO:BE-310-1lI-14 W. Pzoatt St.
I
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CLEVEr.AllI'D-143G-1434 W•• t :rhUd at.
OllolA.B:A-llOl-ll07 Howard St.
s:r. PAtl'Xa--459-461Jackson St.
A:r:r.AN"l'A,GA_3G-32-34 S. Pryor st.
SAVAl'illl'AK.GA.-745-749 Wheaton st.
B:AllI'SASCI:rT-J!'lfth and Wyandotte St ••
BI:BMDrGHAJlI.ALA.-2nd Ave. and !l9th 8t.
Bl7P:I'Ar.O,N. Y.-372-74·76·78 P... rl Sto
BBOOB:L'Yl'l'-:rhird Ave. and Dean st.
PHIr..ADBr.PJUA-Pltcalm Bldr .. Arch and 11th
DAVBllI'PO:B'.r--fl0-416Scott St.
OB:LAJlOMACrl'Y, O:s::r.A., lUO-212 W. :First St.
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Own Your Own Electric Light Plant
"ABC" Vertical Enclosed Self-Oiling Engines
Save 25%
Direct-connected to any good make of dynamo. Can be run safely
anywhere a steam line can be carried. No Noise. No Vibration.
Economy. Efficiency
"ABC" Engines require only one-half of the "ABC" Engines is the very high-the
usual amount of steam. est attainable.
Consume only one-fifth the usual amount Friction loss less than 4%.
of oil. Will run constantly at higher speeds
The wear is so slight that adjustments than any other reciprocating engine.
are required only once in six to nine
months.
Lubrication
of "ABC" Engines is ample at any speed and is not distributed under pressure.
Oil is separated from water, cooled and filtered at every circuit.
Automati.: internal lubrication by a pump and gravity flow.
Get Lateat Bulletin,
288MA.
AMERICAN BLO'¥ER CoMPANY
DETROIT MIeN -----
USA
Ablest Engineering Organization m the Blower Busmess-operatmg three large plants devoted
exclusively to the manufacture of Fan System apparatus and the allied lines.
An "ABC" Vertical Enclosed
Self-Oiling Engine, direct-con-nected
to dynamo, making an
ideal Outfit for Isolated Electric
Light Plants.
Mailed poatpaid at your
requeat.
Furniture Fires.
A M. Foster's furmture store at Canbou, ~Ie , ,vas burned
last Friday mght Loss, $7,000; msurance, $3,000
J A. Suggs, furniture dealer of Witners. Texa~, was bUlner!
out completely on October '( Loss, $4,000; insurance $2 300
The stock and store of the FIrst Furmtnre company wel e
damaged to the extent of $'t 30 by fire on Octobel 'I Loss full)
msured.
A blaze in the packmg room of the ~Ietal Furlllture com-pany
EvanSVIlle, Ind, last week, caused a loss of $300 or $600
Fully insured.
Potter & Co, furnIture dealers of PrOVIdence, R I, suf-fered
a loss of about $30,000 by fire 111 theIr store last ~Ionday
l1lght. Well insured
John N. Kremer's furl1lture and hal dwarc StOlc at RICC s,
1\11nn, was burned on Octobel 10 Los~ $20,000, wlth com-paratively
small l11surance
Edward Shaw's stock of antIque furl11ture at 1t'2, "Meadow
~treet, New Haven, Conn, wa~ badly :"corched on October 4
Loss estimated at $1,500, no insurance.
Tbe Higg111botham-Harns company's fUll11ture store at
Rule, Texas, wa~ bUlnee! on Oct 7 The ~tock, ,alued at
$18,000, is a total los~ Insurance on stock, $12,000
PhIllip Strohel\ fUll1lture factory at 82 ElIzabeth street,
New York, WhlCh was burned out last June, had been rebl11lt
ane! recently re~l1mee! operatlOns, was completely gutted again
by fire on October 7 Los~ $55,000, partlaJlly l11~ured
The plant of the H L Judd Curtam Pole ,ranllfactt1lI11~
company of MemphiS, Tenn, was completely de"tlo\td 11\ flle
on October 8 Loss e~timated at $140,000 to $1 "lO,non pill
tially insured The plant was the large~t in Ih lIne 111 the
country, employing over 200 hands
Few Idle Freight Cars.
A decrease of 22,500 111the number of Idle freight cars on
the raIlroads of the Ll11ted States IS 1 eported In the fortmghtly
hl1llet111of the c\mencan RaIlway aSSOCiatIOn, Issued as of Sept
28 The ldle hst on Sept 14 lllc1uded 47,017G cars, al1d on Sept
28 o11h 2-*,328 car~ Thls IS the smallest idle lIst reported at any
time S111cethe mHldle of last March, when all but 17,3-12 of the
freight cars on c\mencan and CanadIan Iall way" were III de-mand
\11 sectlon~ of the country except New England re-ported
decreases m the number of Idle cars, and 111that sectlOn
there ,\ as only a shght mcrea~e The demand for cars on the:
crop carrymg roads contnbuted substantIally to the decrease 111
the Idle lIst which occurred dunng the last half of September
Express Companies Go To Court.
lmted C;tate~ ClrcUlt Judge Kohlqat of Chlcago has Is~uec1
d temporary order dgdllFt the Ill11101S~tate raIlroad dnd Wclrc-hou~
e COl1lmbSlOn and V\ 1lham H. Stead, attOlney general of
the state, re:"tramll1g them fr0111 1l1terfenng ,\ Ith the bU~l11ess
of the PaCific, the c\dal1l~, the c\l1lencan, the NatlO11al, the Welh-lar~
o and thc Ul11ted States Express compal11es ~o far as their
1ate~ al e conLel ned The companies deny that the bU~l11e~~
) lelds profits and declal e that the new schedule of maX1l11l1111
-r clt-es-IS-con-fis-cat-Ol)-, -un~reaso.n.a_b.le-._. a--n-_d.~.unfai-r -------
IMPROVED. EASY AND ELEVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt, Electnc and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Power for Furmture Stores
Send for C"talogne and Pnce •.
KIMBALL BROS. CO., 1067 Ninth St., Council Bluffs, la.
Kimball Elevator Co., 717Commerce Bldg ,Kans," C,(y,
Mo J Pe} (on Hunter Termmal BId'!:.Dallas Texas
Western Engmeenng Specl1.1tles Co , Denver, Lolo
~
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 9
• - - - - -. .. _. • ••••••• 4 -.
People wonder where their profits are going when the trouble usually lies in poor eqUIp-ment.
A httle foreSight in the begmning would have saved them dollars--a little more money m-vested
at the start in "OLIVER" "QUALITY" equipment.
Some manufacturers of wood working tools slight their output by putting In poor materials-employmg
poor workmen-simply to be able to make a little more profit. 'Ohver" tools are bUllt
along machme tool hnes-careful-accurate -durable-safe.
Some purchasers fall to mvestigate thoroughly before placmg their order. Some unscrupulous
salesman tells them to purchase something-they go ahead -find out too late they are wrong-lose
money, whereas a letter addressed to us would have procured our catalogs-set them thmking-saved
them money.
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QUALITY MACHINES-ISN'TIT
TOO BAD-ISN'T
THAT TOO BAD.
"OLIVER" No 61 Surfacer .-----------------------------_._------
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OURLINE-SURFACE
PLANERS
HAND JOINTERS
SANDERS
WOOD TRIMMERS
CHAIN MORTISERS
LATHES
"OLIVER" No. 60 Saw Bench.
SAW BENCHES
SWING CUT OFF SAWS
BAND SA WING MACHINES
BORING MACHINES
SAFETY CYLINDERS
VISES, CLAMPS, ETC., ETC.
ADDRESS DEPARTMENT "D"
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES-lot
National Bank Bldg , Chicago, III.
No. 50 Church St, New York CIty.
1125 West Temple St., Los Angeles, Cal.
PaCIfic Bldlr , Seattle, Wash.
~_. ----------- ---------------- ----~I
Refrigerators in Mexico_
Samuel E .i\Iaglll, UmteJ States consul at Guadalapra,
MexlCo, furmshes the follovv1l1g 111formaton ,1" to the use of le-ft
Igerators 111that country
A.lthough all 1efngel ators Imported 111to thIS dIstrict are
made 111the U111ted States and the only cQmpetltlOn comes from
Ice boxes made by carpenters here, a conslderatlOn of local condI-tions
may enable some American refrigerator manutaLtnrers to
develop a method for 111CI eas111g the MeXican demand for their
product Several Important facts have made It chfficnlt m the
pa"t to create a great demand for refngelator~, name-Iy
(1) fhe LOol chmate of the 111tenol or tablelan(l of l\Iexl-co,
upon whIch are located neaJ1y all the populous CIties -a ch-mate
so cool as to make Ice water unnecessary, and :l\[exlcan~
have not yet acqUlred the habIt of dnnk1l1g cold vvatel
(2) The custom of all housekeepels here of mak111g dally
purchase" of their table supphes 111 quantIties Jmt "ufficlent for
one day and ChSpOS111gof all penshable food each 111ght
(3) The 111gh retaIl price of refllgeratOl ", due to the
fl eIght and Import duty (the la~t named be1l1g 20 centavo" pel
kilo or about .3 cen b gold per pound) places them beyond the
reach of most famlhes as a good one sells for from $25 to $75
gold
(4) The high co"t of ice at rftail 1" almost prohIbitive, be-
111gat present l1l Guadalajara about 1 cent gold a pound
To overcome these condItions and create a better market
for refngerators, AmerIcan manufacturers thereof l111ght offer
some special 111ducements to local dealel s in ice to take a large
quantity for sale at cost to famihes who WIll use lee, or for rent
to customers as an 111ducement to take ice regularly ThIS
method is used WIth success by many concerns 111the United
States, notably the telephone companies vvith their receivers, and
it would overcome the obJ ectionable "first cost" to the consumer.
The \Hlter has talked wlth "ome Ice dealer" along this lme ancl
beheves the bU"111es"can be done thIS way to the mutual advan-tage
of the Ice dealer and the AmerIcan maker of refrigerators
Owmg to the hIgh Mexican Import duty, refrigerators for
thIS country should be con"tructed as hght as possible consistent
\Vlth the "erVlce whIch they are to perform.
New Patterns for January Sales.
Goshen, Ind, Oct. 12-Goshen IS prosperous ancl the
ftl11l1ture factones here are all d01l1g well The Banta Furm-ture
company, makers of tables and c1Jmng room furniture,
had a good trade 111Grand RapIds 111July, and it is keeping
up well. They Will have several new patterns in theIr ex-hIbit
In the Leonard ExhIbItion bmlding, Grand Rapids, in
January
The Hawks FurnIture company has had a good trade all
the season Their hne of chamber smtes in mahogany, Cir-cas
"Ian walnut, blrd's eye maple and quartered oak is one of
the be"t in the country. They wJlI have quite a number of
new patterns to show 111 Grand Rapids in January, in the
Leonard ExhibItion bUlld111g
...--------------------- -------------~-_-.-------.-.-,
A. L. HOLCOMB &. CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
OROOVINO SA WS
DADO SAWS
II
II CItIzens' Phone 1239
I 27 N. Market St.. Grand RapIds, Mich. ~------------------~--
I-R-o"T'T-li~-G-'1
,l Drying lumber liberates steam I l and acid in the kiln. That is why I
I your unprotected kiln depreciates I
II h hId" faster t an ot er bui mgs. III
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i EBONOIDI ,,
Kiln Coating II ,, ,I
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10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Sug~{'stion~ on Floor Coverin~s.
fhe melanc11( 11 ell\' 1 ldll I \\ C much ot thell -!,1 III ,11
thc du""t, chldf->1I1dlcd dl'peald llC (i the d\ela~e h me altu
beIng el( :,ed fO! ,he ,l'111111e1 (II dlter hung 1\ 1de l ]lLll t tIll
I aVdge" ot ~H 1 an I dH~t 10 let\11n t1 111\ leI\ \11-!, thl -!,11 gc
ous tll1h of dl1Llll11l1dl ~plellcl I j() g,l/l up 111 J Idl I 1\ dlpapl
dllll lug~ thelt ~CUL1 'II ](le1111 tlllCa( 1) II C ll1d dull I' 11 ( dll
e;..hllalatll1g' c,,)erle11C, \\ Itl1 (IlL 11] I,ll \ I,ll -!, l!Jlll' 111,1111
tUlnl"hlng lUl111le111Ulh l'a'l1ll1ll1 ,ll Ul(J 11 1, ~ \lP tl11
floor cO\ell11g" at thl' tunl (t \la l'uh,lp"", )l1l I (hl
olc1el lUg" ha, e been u~ed j 1 plirll1 'u \ I, l, I\llll h \\ 1 I l1lll
,,!tate c(JJhllleldhll llalL-i111g dhou al1d 11 1 c1 uh l1l,l I III
I e-carpetlng of "0111e Hlom
l\e\el hd\e rllthtlC e±tel""" III IU~" alld l \l]Jtl' lll11 '
\\ ell WIthIn the mean" oj the model dte pl11 "l It I thl L\ 1112,'
roe111 the Id11ge et prIle and llHtlllal I- -!,lea'-tl)l1 'hl
()lle11taL an 1 thell n1ll"t "atl"tdLL J I \ ell U 11l1tatl 11'- ) ,hl
clulable hbre 'Ub" 01 'tll"lll-:; (ll"J-!,l1 a 1<1 -!,r'ltetul l 1 rIl-!,-
\\ hIle tl e \\ Ilton lUg" <1m! tIll "h~hth l hed]Ju \ \. 111111'l
\vh1c11 ale all\ d\ ~ III -:;rcat dema11l! ,lle be111g "hO\\ 11 111 111d11\
new pattcrl1~ the popula ,11 t tllC cbt<1pel 1'1", 1" 11ILll2,11l",
pal t1culal1} fOl d1l1111-!, r, ('111 ,1Ilcl hecl rO)111 1'e \ "u ,lh
\vea\ e ru~ l,l1\ccl tile I\.11111dl1Wlk 1\ III ht ) U1 1 t 1w 111 11':;
the 1110"t c\l1lable ~h \\e\\ ,b alualt\\L ,ll1cl 1l,1"(l1dIJ!L 1\1,'
on the 111,11ket 1h(\ b \\ e ,hl I (\. \J! hl cl (J()1JL1111 t'l]k'
tlle'l \\ Ith de"I-:;lh lh<1 1al1-!,l ir 1\11 dabl)] all cmhn""ee1 eitle,'
that fUlthu empha"l/c the le,unl)LII1Ll tll thl pla111-ll11 ulcl,
cOI1\entlOllal-hoduecl c1e"l-!,11 , ,1llt ?Il ,,) Ildl 11l kCL]lIIl-!'
\\ Ith the \\ <11\papu" ,111I elJ a]Ju l 11l\\ 11 U'l ()n~ ]Jell l,l
larl) pleas111~ r1e~H.?,n \\,h all ld,l]Jllt )11 (I thl 1llelll ),0
Idea carlleJ out 111mn"" ~Ieell alld I clull blnl \llnJ]1(\ IUC,
of thIS ~hIe \\ ~l'o 111 \\ all1' "11dr1c,, ) hI 1\\ 11 II I h I 111-h
Olange that maele It ,,<:'llll e"l'll alh "lilt Ihll t 1 III 11hral \
v\ Ith Ih leather t01]',,, 11 tlll d1111, -!, J '11 1\ 1 '1 1 - l I) II
"\ a I aJ a eftects al e 111,Ill hked ) )] 'hl dlll
lIbel lug.., ul1 alcount 1)1 tlL I -!,ll It \ 111l \ 1[ l I 1"
then pnce and the ea'c \\!th \lllllh the\ 111a , ] e dl Illd III
~upelceclIng all other tabllc~ t he(! 10 111 1'-l j hell l ) 1"
1S possIble to ca'l) out mOl e ",ulcL""tulh t1o, l >l 11 " l ne
of a bed room \\ I,h the"e lug" ,,111lC the\ all 11,UIL 111 1\ \hl
11101e dtlIcate shade'l, s) Lal d t) hncl 111 \ III II ru~, \ ,u"
ge"tvJ11 h 0111 a dealel III I e~al 1 t) ne11dln2, elll \ ' 11 nt tJ1JlI
lUg 01 l1laUI11~ h \\01th rel1lemLenng In'tead)) U'I11g
thread vll11Ch IS lIkeh to look l1lh\ghth ,:;e a 111 I( 1 IHII
whIch 1l1a) be boug1Jt 11 almo"t an, l 10, 11ld h 11uLh
stlOn~el tllan e, en the u'1he..,t thlla I \no hl ule I 1\ llLh
r----------------------------------------------~ I Grand Rapids Caster Cup Co. I I 2 Parkwood be .• Grand Rapids, Mlch :
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We are now puttIng out the best Caster Cups With cork bases ever
offeree to the trade These are finIshed !l1 Golden Oak and \\ hlte \lap!e
m a light fill1<;;h I he<;egoods are admnable for polIshed floors and furn
,lure re,ts They Will not sweat or mar.
PRICES
$4 00 per hundred
5 00 per hundred
.P 0 B Grand Rap,d.
SIze 27.( mches
Size 2% Inrheb
Try a Sample Order
'-----
Protects the inside of a wood, brick
or concrete bUIlding, stops the rot-ting
process, is fireproof and cheap.
You know you ought to coat your
kilns with Ebonoid at once.
Sold by
Grand Rapids Veneer Works
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
I1d\ hl 01 'dlue h to use hran 1nstead of soap when washmg
l'~, )t thl' c1e"cllptlo11 The bran may be hed m a cheese-l
'oth hew, and dtro beIng dIpped 111 warm water should be
1 nhbed ,lgOI ousl) on the rug The rug should then be rInsed
I,Ith d eloth \\ lung fI om \lva1m salt water.
I he aUI al tn e rae, rug~, 111 pla1l1 colol s with neat wh1te
, Ilpe, dUO"'" the en l~, al e to be found in SIze, 24x48, suitable
1m the bath 100m, £01 a dollar and a dollar and a half. The
\ eno able rarr.., IlJC,.,F has been drIven frOI11 the kItchen by the
"al1ltal \ 11l101eum to the tIled floor of the bath 1"()\om and now
It 1" lapulh helng made to lend1ts l1uaint effectiveness to the
hed 100111
John Barnes a Candidate for Congress.
] (h11 narne~ a I etetan 111anufadul el of fur111ture, IS a
l,ll111Hlale t01 cllltllW a" leprc..,entatIVe Jl1 Congre"s 111 the
I ill1l th ,Ill hl~an LOllgre~slOnal d1strIct He 1" the pres1-
dent ot thc Bl1chancln Cahmet C0111pan) and 1" largely m-tue..,
tec1 III the ~pencel ~ Barnes company of Benton Harbor
\rl D,lIne" IS a natl\e of Kentucky, but ha~ hved 111 ;\llchl-
-!,an 111dl1\ } eal " He commcnced the nunutacture of furm-
UHf' a~ 1111chana1 neall} f01ty years ago
Buchanan and Niles Factories.
Puchal1clll \1Jlh ()It 12~'1 he Buchanan Cab111et C0111-
jJdn\ b h,',111-!, a g,)o(l trade In kJtlhen cab111ets and de"ks
r11 'hc Illal rutU\ e the\ "Ill erel t a Llr:se warehouse for stor-dC?,
l an I "hlpp1l1g purposes.
KOlnpas.., & Stoll of "\Iles, ,(Ich ha\e had a \ery good
"ea:,on The) confine tbell 11l1e to KItchen cah111ets and have
alaI ge busl11es" 1n that 1Jne of fllflllture
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Marietta
11
To the Test!
Put Us
A furniture maker gets a new idea-a
"hunch." Designs a new line. It looks
good to him. It is good--distinctive--out
of the ordinary.
PROBLEM: What shall the finish be?
What particular color and tone will dove-tail
with that particular design? Steady,
now; you've got a real gordian knot to un-tie.
Upon your success depends the popu-larity
of your pet product. What you need
IS a stain specialist. Write Marietta.
Making special stains to fit special con-ditions
has been our special forte for years.
We are more than manufacturers, we are
originators. Much of our paint is "custom
made," all of our stains are "mixed with
brains."
Address Desk NO.3.
Paint &, Color
Marietta, Ohio.
Slil1h Factory Lunch Room.
For the C,)11\enlence and benefit of theIr employes the
Sligh Furniture company ha\ e btah1J"hed a ltll~ch room at
theIr factor), V\ hlch IS certa111ly a model mstltutlOn It IS
located In a large ba"ement under the bIg addItion to the
plant that was erected last yeal, and IS eqUIpped wIth every-thmg
m the vvay of COOk111gand "en mg utensIls that IS re-qUIred
by a fil st class restaul ant F or the men "II ho ma)
wIsh to "wash up" before partaklIlg of their noon-clay meal
there are numerons V\ ash stand" tnrl1l-,hed wIth hot and cold
water, soap and mdn Idual to'" e1:-., and for those \\ ho may
wIsh to rema111 III the loom untIl the 1 o'clock v\ hlstle blo\\ s
there are seats an'l a row of table" acro~" the best-hghted
end, where the} may I ead all of the popular weeklJes, maga-
LlllS and newspapel -', play cards. OJ enJ(1) then pIpes or
cIgars (Some of the men 111Slst that Cl!~alette" be prohibI-ted.)
A capable chef 1'-, employed and has all the ass1stants
necessary to co k a dll1ner for 250 men and the I epa:"t IS more
lIke a "square meal" than a luncheon r1 he bIll of fare con-
SISts of meats, ,egetables, bl ead, the be:"t of butter, pIes and
coffee, vvIth sugar and Jersey CIearn, all dealt out III hberal
portIons and the,e I" no rule aga1l1'Ot encOlC:" or. repeating
At first each man was reqUIred to step np to the cook's
connter, take a plate and stack on all the meat and vegetableo:
that he deSired, take It In one hand, V\ Ith a cup of coffee 111
the other and go to a seat at one of the ten tables \\ here he
found a bOll 1 of nch steam111g hot soup a ,,,,altl~g h1111 That
plan had to be changed, ho\", ever-It v\ as too slow-some of
the men had to wait too long befOl e the} could reach the
counter. ~ ow n erything except the coffee IS placed on the
tables, where the d111ers may help themselves \\ Ithout waiting
for each other and the coffee IS poured after they are <;eated.
Co.
The lunch room or restaurant was looked upon a'S an in-novatIOn
or expenment, but 1'0 noVo conSldel ed an unqualIfiul
"uccess by the men at least It 1<;not lIkely to prO\ e a :"ource
ut dIrect plofit to the company, but may work out about
e\ en 111 a finanCIal sense A pI am, substantIal. t.;enerous
meal, a~ good or better than can be obtained for 25 cent'S at
the pubhc restaurants IS serv ed for 12% cents There 15 no
cashIer m sIght The 111en get tIckets-eIght fOl a dollar-at
the ofhce and are not bothered ''''Ith checks and '3l1ps advIS-mg
them to "pay cashIer please "
The factory emplo}, about 450 men About half of them
ha\ e been carrY111g- d111ntr palls The others vvent home or
out to restaurants for luncheon ~ ow fully half of them use
the factory lunch room, and It 15 probable that many more
WIll do '30 when the} apprecIate Its ments, the qua1Jty and
quantIty of the meal, ItS convenience" and the pleasure of
eat111g 111a place whele everything from the kItchen to the
cuspIdors, IS as hright and clean as "Spotlesstown"
New Glass Beveler.
A glass bevehnlS mach111e, patented b} E Homan of J er-o;
e} CIty, N J, pro" Ide'S for hold111g cIrcular glass dIsks whIle
a bevel is belllg grounJ on the edge, a holder for the disks
whIch IS preserved from scratchl11g or cloud111g, a holder
wherel11 the d1sk 1S revolved about a center by the (hag of
the gllnding actIon, means whereby the revolutIon of dISks
ahout them is regulated and contI oIled; means for lapidly
dnd eaSIly placmg dIsks In the holdmg tool, means \\ hereby
dl;,ks of varying JlmenslOns may be rapIdly accommodated;
means for adjusting for vallous be' el", means for inspecting
glass cutting without removmg the glass, and means for
amplifymg the limits of the SIze of disks
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
[W-I
!...
Wood &ar Clamp Flzlures, Per Set SOc.
Patent Malleable Clamp Fixtures.
E H SHELDON & CO , ChIcago, III
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the25 dozen Clamp FIxtures "lllch
we bourht of you a httle over a year ago are gIvIng excellent se-VIce \\ e ar~
weJl satIsfied wIth them and shall be pleased to remember you" helle, er we "ant
anything addItional In thIs hne Yours truly,
SIOUXCIty, Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO
The RockiuK Chair Will Nof Go.
Whether wIth the commendable purpo"e ot dl\ en111g the
public mmd from regula1, progress!> e, llbllfgent and radIcal
pohtlcs, or WIth the reprehensIble oblect ot 111crea,111gthe na-tional
unrest, nobody knows, but somebody has set afloat a n·-
mor to the effect that 111 the fur111sh1l1g ot the modeln home
hereafter the rock1l1g chaIr 1" to be ehmmated L\ er} thl'lc;
IS to be straIght backed If one IS to bend at all It 11111be t01-
ward rather than backwa1 d \\ hen one enter" one" h0111e, 111
the future, so thIS rumor has It, one may have a chOlce 01 Lh re
postures. He may stand, he may sit up straIght or he '111\ re-c1111e
But there is g01l1g to be no lea111ng back, not e\ en on
the hmd legs of a I,leml"h chaIr, says the Chlbtlan '('L e
M0111tor.
The average man WIll want to knO\\ at once \\ hethe1 the
modern home IS g0111g to be a happy home 1t 1 hIm 11111e\\ d'
when he could skip hghtly and blIthely 0\ er the cal peted floc)!
111hIS worsted shppers, when he could Sit berure a C0111t01tel.ble
grate fire and read a comfortable book 111 the hght ot a L0lJ1to1t-able
coal-OIl lamp, \\lth a shade that sottened the 111c1chglOl1 ut
the anthraCIte and gave to the en\ !ronment an atlJ10,phd e II hllh
of Itself was suffiCIent, almost, to draw from the melodeun or
the ~even octave piano the strams of "Home, ::wveet Home'
Now, mstead of skipp1l1g shppe1ed over carpet, he b ,hot
booted on an Oriental rug acro<;s a polbhed l1drchlood floor, the
steam radIator ha~ taken the place ot the ho~p1table gl ate anel
If he sits down to read at all, It must be 111the gldrt, ot an clec-tnc
bulb or a gas mantel
And, as If to cap the clnnax, they ,n e nO\1 ~o thh 1111l1Ul
,ays, talkmg of ehminat111g hIs IOlker-the lockE'1 he hd~ luu!-'u]
r"·
Lentz Big Six
No. 694. 48 in. top.
No. 687. 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top. II
If
•II
II
III..
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGA/'v
30 000 ~~e·~t~ck 1 Vises
Sold on approval and an uncon
dltlOnal money back guarantee
"
I
SHELDON'S STEEL SAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We SOlICItpnvIlege of sending samples and
our complete catalogue
I
E. H. SHELDON ~ CO. I
----_._. 328 N. May 5t •• Chicago. _.__ .... .. .--- .... --~
tonl ard to through all the long and busy day-and substltutl1lg
tOl It -ometh1l1g of the penoc1 of LoU1~ XV Nothmg could be
mUIe unneCeSSa1} or mOl e ea <;lly answered than the questIOn
\\ 111he ,tancl tor It) He WIll not If the worst comes, he IS
likely to 11~e 111 hI, ,trength and demand that an after-d1l1ner
"ltt111g room be fitted up for hIm, that It be carpeted WIth three-ph
1l1gra1l1 or Bru~~eb, that It have a coal grate stove, a round
center table, a kerosene lamp \",th a student burner, a rocking
chall, a lock and key and no connection WIth a telephone
Ebonoid.
\\hat 1, ebonOld) \Vho ever heard of It? Well, whoever
1~ operatlng a dry kiln WIll wonder how it is that it takes so
much ~tedm to operate It If they WIll mvestigate care full}
the} \\ 111find that kiln<; depreCIate faster than other bU1ldmg,
\\ ood \\ 111ab,orb 30 to 30 per cent of ItS own weIght 111 the
torm ot \\ ater or aCId solutlO11') A sl11gle brick WIll ab,orb a
P111tot \\ dter -\ cement wall IS a ventable sieve Heat Ul11ts
tollO\\ the \\ ate1 absorbed b} the walls. Hence the loss of heat
,111e!the deca} ot IIooel, softe111ng of bncks in summer and
~helhng off from fro~t 111 \\mter High priced pa1l1ts are no
good One LOnce1n spent thousands of dolla1 s experimenting
\\ 1th coat1l1g~ The coatl11g was finally developed which ha,
,tooe! a 10ur } ears te5t That's IEbono1d Look over the Grand
Rap1cl~ \ eneer \Vorks "ad" 111 thIS issue of the vVeekly Artisan
tm tl1rthel pal tlCulars
Some thl1l~, \\ould lamE' }our way ed,lly If mounted on
l(l'-)ter~
WEEKLY ARTISAN
E.ach
Net
13
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~ $2~
E.ach
Net
No. 46. Single Cone. $2 Each. Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cone All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH & DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
New England's Only Furniture Organization.
From an edItorial in the Home Furnisher, Boston: "Dlel
you ever stop to think that the Home Furnishers' AssocIatIOn
of Massachusetts is the only orgal11zation in New England re-lated
to the furniture industry? In other parts of the coun-try
there are orgal11zatons of manufacturers and jobbers but
'\ ew England has only thIS one association. It was fonned at
the begl11ning as a straight retail organizatior. The ll,31'[j [,le
turers and Jobbers have always been admItted as honorary mCI11-
hers but from t1l11e to time the Home Furnb~~"'" ASSollatlOn
Jf ~tassachu)outs has been asked to admit c\e,y tU'111tl1re COll-
CLlI', whether retader, jobber or manufacturer :1s aJ1 act1v ~ 1ll21l1-
ber.
The manufacturers have stated that they a'"f' not ~UffiCIClltly
strong to have a permanent organization of th", 1 (\\\ 11 but they
~-- . ..- ..- _. .. III
t,I
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III
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Don't Burn Your Moulding.
Blackened edges so often found
m hard wood Mouldings mdlcate
the use of inferior tools, which
fnction and burn because of their
faIlure to have proper clearance.
The Shimer Reversible and Non-
Reversible Cutters are made of the
finest tool steel by expenenced workmen. In deSign and con-structIOn
they are supenor to anythmg on the market They cut
well and retam theIr shape untt! worn out. Send us draWIngs or
wood samples for estimates on speCIal cutters. Many useful de
signs, WIth prices, are given in our catalogue.
SAM.aEL J. SHIMER & SONS, Milton, Penn.
Manufacturer~ of the Shimer Cutter Heads for Flooring, CeIling,
Sldmg, Doors, Sash, etc.
are VItally mterested in the success of the retail dealers and thev
want to be adlmtted WIthout restnctlOns. The matter has been
discussed from tnne to time and pOSSIbly some step will bl:'
taken In the future looking towards broadening the purpo-es
of the organizatIOn.
The manufacturers of upholstered goods and sofas have
talked of organizing an assocIation chiefly for credIt purposes
The manufacturers of New England certainly need united ac-tIOn
whIch would come from a definite orgal11zaton.
In the matter of freIght claSSIficatIOns and freight rates
New England has apparently been discnmmated against for
years Our Boston Chamber of Commerce has done a great
deal for all hnes of business but of course is not 111 position to
help any I11divldual industry. The New England conservatIve
Spult IS probably the chief cause for this inactivity, but there
IS a general feell11g that the time has come to adopt a more
milrtant pohcy m order to regal11 some of the prestige that has
been taken by the west and south
- ---------_. _. -- ----._-------.-..-.--I-.----..,
LOUIS HAHN
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 Livmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
CItizens' Telephone 1702.
......._.-..-------_. -------------.-.-...
14
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
UPHAM MANUFACTURING CO. MARSHFIELD, WIS.
No 2228 TOilet Table
SEND FOR OUR
Dressers
Chiffoniers
Dressina Tables
Suites
Wardrobes
Sideboards
Buffets
Etc.
Made in
Oak, Bird's-Eye Maple,
Maho2any, etc.,
and
All Popular
Finishes No 2240 TOilet r .b.e
COMPLETE CATALOGUE
Walter Clark in a New Location.
I lr 0\ er e1ght ) edl ~ tbe \\ alte1 lleuh \ enlU e( 111]ldl1\
ha\ e had tbe1r ottlce" 1ll the \lIchH;an L111--t 1Jt1lLdl1H... elml
warehouses at Soutb I011la and Pre"cott "tleet" 1 hUI 1J 1'"
nes" ha~ glown so exten"1\ el) that t\\ 0 large ln11111l1~" drL
now occup1ed V\ lth part ot a th1rd one dnd apparen th the lnd
1" not) et 1he great demand tor "nlh "tulh a" thl \ handle
through the11 V\ drehon"e" ha" madl It nece"<l1 \ ,C) hd\ l . le
ofLce and V\ arehou'ie togtthel henu the CJ ec t10n (ll ,1 hne
large, four-star) I eel hnck blllld111g on the COlllel ut '-,Dl1th
Ionld and Pde"cott qreeh and tbe IlnW\ al of thc ottlll" to
thl~ bUllcbng and tbe ar" antages to hoth hm el and "C lie' h
apparent
::\Ir Clark 1'3 ably assisted h) t\\ 0 hlghh e,penenLul
) oung men Leon Sn) der an,l Jo"eph Honrle \f 1 c"'l1\eler ...
palllcular elnh I~ to 11\e among the n1111-,tel ...hln\ the 11 \\ hell ,~._--------
III
II
II
III
III
THAT NEVER GETS OUT OF STYLE.
For Many Years Made Exclus velv bv
C. CHRISTIANSEN, 2219 Grand Ave., CHICAGO
Also manufacturer of the Chicago Truck for wood\\orklllg factones
Send for Catalogue h-----------,,----------------------~
... re<jl111ed amI he \\ to make the gldde" If veneel hc~t ~lllted
to the11 tlade \11 Iloude 1" the "pellal :'>ale~ agent. and
"plnd" mll,t ut h1:o tnne on the road Thl~ firm deab 111
\ eneer panel" dra \\ er bottom". back'i and fi~urecl \H oe1:'>,and
dl e agenh tOI the famou'i In"h glue
\[r Clark \\a~ In a leme11lSCent mo)(l ",hen called upon
1)\ ,L I cpre"cntat1\ e It the "u than and told of some of l11S
e"pCllenCl" In the \ enell bU~1l1e~'i He WdS over eleven
\ edr" \\ 1th the Crl dnd Rap1c).., \ eneer \\ 01 ks and spoke m the
h1ghe ...t terms of h1S expenence with that firm and of h1S form-el
manager ITe \\ anted to try hI:'> hane! h~mse1f at "manag-
111g a bU~1l1es", "0 w1th the encoUlagement of a few fnends
and \ ery Itltle money, he "struck out" on January, 1902, and
be~an the e"tablhhment of the pre'ient bU'iUleSS It was a
...nle e...~ trom the fil ~t and t111~ firm count'> among It'3 custom-er
... nearh all It the large"t manutactUl er'i of fur11lture, p1-
dno" etc. In the country
I! \\ alter ha~ a hobby OUb1de o! htb1l1eS~ It 1:0 automo-blltne:
In thh he 1"> an entbu"la~t and say:'> he enJOYs the
dhllnctl<J!] (! ne\ C' ha\ ll1£; been ane,tcd for ()ver:'>peedlng
Hu"tlt. 1~ the \\atch\\ lrJ, hovvcver, alCund thIS l11:otltut1On
and \\h1Ie the automobtle "en e~ as a pleasure vehIcle once
In a \\ h11e It al'io ha'o to earn Ih Itv1l1g by tak1l1g Its part in
the ~el1e1dl \\011... of the company
PalmPl"s New- Cat8Io~.
CLhe Palmer \Ianutactunng company of DetrOIt have Just
t:o"uecl a ne\\ catal()~ue- '\ cJ 2-1- The CO\er IS hand somel)
em bo ..."ed, and the book contaIn" 8-1- page~ of cUb. "llOW1l1g
It!)I dn ,111dcenter table~ and pede~tal", and a fine vIew of the
factol) 1 hell l111eat table" h one of the best on the market
Ever) hl1 nlLure clldler 'illOUld ha\ C d COP) of theIr catalogue
tOI I( j" f1111 of ~ood lh111g..,
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Don't Be in a Hurry.
Albel t \ \ Bnckwood, Amellcan con"ul at '1apdchl1ld
:.\fexlco, fur111"hes the follov,lng mformatlon fOI the benefit
ot tra\ e!111g <;ale<;men '" ho eApect to Jo bU<;1l1e"., 111 that
CJl111tr)
"1 he ("ten::,1\ e field offered b) \[exlco tOl t11C '''lIe of
\.Illencan good" 'ih u!d be cultn ated by \mencan ::,ale" 1'cn
Id a mapner "1111lar to that" '11Ch ha" made the rt-plc"entatn c.,
(f Gell11an and ~panhh hrn', "ucce".,fu! th~re The cs",enuah
ar~ a courteou" and una,,· '11l1ng heanng 11 tile pa t (t tllc
travelJng 'idlc'-lllen anJ an a\ ldance ot preClpltatlcn 111t! \-
lng to c1r~~ order'i :\It- ·,,"an muLlnnt" h ghh ajJl' eua e
j'C I'te11(.'" dnel a (lehbcI dte "t\ It. ()t C )llc1l1c.tlllg hUSII C'o" 11(-
Made by Manistee Manufacturmg Co. Mamstee. MlCh
gotlatlUn." be111g dC.cu"tollled to mlJ1gle the 'if CIa! clunent 11
theIr cO!1lmerclal affall" t) a much lalgcl extent than do
\. mel Icans
"It I" u.,udl fo the he"t "alC'-11l11l110m LUro]JC to 111dl~c
dll extendetl pre1J!1lJl1al} call, al\1lu"t exc!thn cI} "ocla! 1'1
nature, UPOll pro"peLt1\ e ))dt!on,- at thur place" of blhIJ1C""
before later \ entunng to a"l attentL.Jn to detaIl" of thc
purchase .\mencan tra\ clIng men 1\ ho u"udlh attempt t J
dl"patch 'iuch tran,)dcilOn" at ,1 'i1l1gIc bllef 111tCI\ Iev-, appear
abrupt dnd 131usque L hh prefelence h) :\le:AICall'i for the11
own unhUJ ned manner of bU')111e'i.,1;0 \ er) decIded and of long
stanJmg The Il11p'Jrtance to \mcncan expO! ter'i of ha\ Jl1~
thell ag-cnh conform to It c.an hdrdl) be 0\ erellpha'il/ed
Charlotte, Mich., Factories.
Charlotte, -:\1Ich, Oct L1-Charlotte has tvv0 pl0'iperous
fur111ture factorle'i The Charle,., Bennett FurnIture COmpdn)
makers of c1re'iser." chIffonIers and buffets lJl cheap and
medll1m grades They WIll soon add ten ne\'" sty Ie'i ot buffets
Jl1 quartered oak They ha\ e thell lme on exlllbltlOn lJl ChI-cago
the year round
The Charlotte ~Ianufdctunl1g compan), makel s of tables,
wJ11 not show lJl Gland Rapld<; 111 Tanuarv but \\111 shOll 111
Chicago
15
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TIfE •IIIIIII
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"ELI" FOLDING BEDS I\RE BREI\D I\N/)
PROfIT WINNERS
No Stock complete WIthout the Ell Beds 10 Mautel aud UpnJ,:ht.
ELI D. MILLER & CO.
EVANSVILLE. INDIANA
Wnte for cuts and pnces
ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, EVANSVILLE.
---_ ..
~----------------------------------------------~
Palmer's Patent GluinJ! CIamps·
The above cut IS taken dIrect from a photograph, and
shows the range of one SIze only, our :No.1, 24-mch
Clamp. We make SIXother SIzes, taking In stock up to
60 mches WIde and 2 Illches thICk. Ours IS the most
practIcal method of clampl11g glued stock In use at the
present tIme. Hundreds of factorIes have adopted our
way the past year and hundreds more WIll III the future.
Let us show you. Let us send you the names of nearly
100 factorIes (only a fractIon of our lISt) who have or-derecl
and reordered many tnnes. Proof posltlve our way
IS the best. A post card WIll brmg It, catalog included.
Don't delay, but wrIte today.
A. E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
FOBEIG:N BEPBESE:N'TA'rIVES: The projectl1e Co"
London, England; Schuchardt & Schutte, BerlIn, Ger-many;
Alfred E. Schutte, Cologne, ParIS, Brussels, Liege,
Mllan, TUrin, Barcelona and Bllboa.
~--------------~-~~~~-------~-.-.-.~...~I--
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUBLISHED EVERY SATUROAY .V THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR ANYWH!!:RE IN THE UNITED STAT!!:S
OTHER COUNTRIES $2 00 PER Y!!:AR. SINQI-E COPI!!:S 5 CENTS.
PlJl!Il.lCATION OFFICE, 108-112 NOPlTH DIYISION ST. GRANO RA .. IOS, MICH,
A 5 WHITE, MANAQINQ EDITOR
Entered as second elalS matter, July 5, 1m, at the post office at Gand RapIds Mlch,C'an
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE E I-EVY
1\Ianufactures now form, for the first time 111the lll',ton
of our commerce, more than one-half at the total e"\.pOlh at
the U111ted States In the eIght months end111g \\ Ith \u~u't
the figures of the Bureau of Stat1st1cs of the Department at
Commerce and Labor show that out of a total e"pOl tat10n C1±
1,027 m1l11on dollars, manufactures amount(d to J-12J~ m11110n
or 52 8 per cent of the whole One year ago out of a toted E'"\.
port of 989 mil110ns m the e1ght months, manufacture, contnb-uted
475 m1lhon, 01 but 48 per cent, t\\ a y ears a~o thur ,hal e
was 472 m1l11ons, out at d total of 1 07) m11hOlb or -1-± per cent
of the total, ten years ago, tak1l1g the figures for the entne
year, manufacture~ formed 350 per cent, 20 years ago 21 pel
cent and 30 years ago 15 per cent at the total nports of do-mestic
merchandIse The value of manufacture,:> e:xported dm-lllg
the first eIght months of 1910 averaged male thdn Zh ml1110n
dollars for each bml11e~s day, In 1900 a httle 0\ e1 lr;j m1111CJn-and
1111890 a 11ttle over three-quarters ot a 1111l11ondollal" t01
each business day These figures, taken t10m a CUllent 1epul t
sent out by the \\ ashlllgton stat1StlUanS, are mte1eqmg becathe
they show an 1mportant change 111the charactel uf the coun
try's exports A fev\ years ago cotton, \\ heat and flour t01 med
more than fifty per cent of the e:xp011'0 and until \Uglbt at tIll-year
agricultural products 111cludlllg meats, made Up more than
half of the total. That manufactureed al tlc1es should e:xceed
agricultural products at a time when crops have been large f01
several years 1S surpns111g It cel tam I) shO\\" rapId gl 0\\ th 01
the manufactunng llldustne~ The statl°t1cs ho\\ e\ el, are not at
interest to furmture manufacturer, e:xcept 111 a general \\ a\
because they make no mentIOn of furl11ture e'<:ports 111 ~lv 111(;
the detaIls The) give the figures on nea11) e\ e1\ thll1g manu
factUl ed In th1s country o.. cept ft11111 tw e and \\ ooel \\ 01kIne,
machmery ::\Iu~t be that fur111ture manufaLtm eh C,l!e so httle
for the export trade or give 1t so httlc attentIon that the "t It1-
tlC1ans have reached the conc1nslOn that 1t 1, not \\ orth mc 1
t10111ng
The value of snllpltcltv \\ auld be 1cdhzed b\ p10ie"1011dl
wmdow dressers If they shonld Vl~lt the famDu, ..ll t c;allc1\ 1ll
Pans, the Louvre A s111g-lee)..ample \\ ould SC1\ e the pUIPChl
The famous statue, the \ enus dc :JItlo, occupies a placc 1n
the center of a room 111 whIch no other \\ ark of al t h ,hm\ n
\Vlth such a settmg the mterest of the connOlsselll or the -tu
dent is centered upon a single object There IS nothlllg 111Vle\\
to divert or diVIde the 111terest of the spectator A room 111the
art gallery of Dresden, Sa:xony, IS occupied e:xc1uslvel) by a
\\ onelel ful lMlntlllg--the S1st1l1e ::\ladonna The study of these
pIece, trom the hands of the masters of art In past centunes
Jlloduce, a tcelmg of a(ltmratlOn, sympathy and 1everence, be-
Cath-e 111 thCll c}..elutlOn 1t ~eem~ that the D1V1l1e J\1a"ter l1dc!
l11spncd the ~()ul, and eltrected the hands of the artIsts To
ele"'cend it am the lofty consldel atlon of art to the Lommon place
occupation ot \\ 1l1elow (IIesslllg me:ty be d long step, but 1f 1t
",hall ,CI \ ( to t mpha"'lze the" alue of ~1111phc1ty111 the arran!:;:?
ment of ~(oel" 1ntended to attract the attention of the publtc,
1t IS \\ orth taklllg
'-,C\e1dl \(dh dL,O the keepel" of hotel, III vanous cIties of
\mcllc,l can"ecl to be pLlced 111 plclln Vle\\ back of the desks 111
th( publrc offices of tlle1r establshments the nal11e~ of the c1erk~
on clut\ clt1l111C, thc \a11OUS \\dtches of the clay ll11s 111nOVd-t10n
\\a, glcatlv appleuated by the trave1111g publIc and the
quc,t!on ha" been 1a1,:>ecl\\ auld Its 1e-111ttoductlOn sen e a good
pm po':>e 111 the mercantile bus111ess' Presumably It would
The -ales peopk \\ auld take pnde 111 the revelatIon of then
Identity and the recog111t10n by customers would prove them ad-
\ antageOtb to emplo) ers In many bus1l1ess offices the quarters
ot heacl~ of departments a1e stated by names attached to the doors
of then rooms 01 desb, or \\ lth sIgns placed consp1cuously upon
el table 01 pedestal But the means proVIded for IdentIfyIng an
111c1n1e1ual ,ought fOl by the caller are not so Important as that
"ome mean, fOl that purpose sho'lld be provided.
The :Jl111ne~ota Retail Furl11ture Dealers' a~sociatlOn, at Its
1ecent cOlJventlOn, took actlOn that WIll lesult in placing the
name of every 1eta1!e1 d01ng bus111ess 111 the state on the sub-
SCl1ptlO11books of the vVeekly ArtIsan The action of the as-soclaton
\\ as taken \\ Ithout a suggestIOn from the publtshers,
and fOI that leason the :JI1ch1gan Artisan company greatly ap-pI
eClates the honol conferred and the valuable support guaran-teed
by the association.
1he 1l1dustndl \\ OIld h e:xtencltng Its l111es and the Opp01-
t\1111t1e- tC)) ret,lllers \\ ele never better than they are at the
pre-em tllne I3thll1eSS ~hould not be 1egarded, ho\\ ever, from
the qanelpOlnt ot hg IIIes Sel VICe to the consumer should be
the first cons1e1e1atlOn, and 111 the 1endellng of service inferior
gooch and 10\\ prtces should not be we1ghed dgd111st honest goods
and faIr pnces The co,entJals of hade are not pnce, eh~cOt111t
,111e1profit
1 he 1l1dn \\ ho \\ lOte "Home, Swect Home," had d home
1Ullllshec! b\ the J auc!on lur111ture company The ft11111ture
made b\ thl' company (fits Itke ,l ta1lor made "lllt," reads an
,[(Iv el t1sement ot the Talldon 11ll111tule company of J\Iacon, Gd
,TOle pOlnted t11<\nl1uthfu!") Pel hap" Eh' II hat?
\ 1l1akel ot ttll111tm e m;1\ be chosen
(,1 and RapHl" Tloard ot [raele 111 January
\\,\\-an TI-\\1l111111l:;\\el) 111fad
fOl p1eQc1ent ot the
He ha~ a W1l1111ng
\ mCl chant chmb, n Die ea"'ll) to ,Ulcess \\ hen hIS bankcr's
i< ot 1'" un the bottom Il1l1l:;of the lac1del
[he des1c;nel IS 111lght1e1 than thc "a!c,man \\hen he ha~
the ,alaI \ to back hll11 "Money talks"
Memory IS a quahty that enables the young artist to forget
hb eally "01 iginal" designs.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
'1
II,
,
I
A. PETERSEN &CO., CHiCAGO
MANUFACTURERS OF THE
BEST MADE and LEADING LINE of OFFICE DESKS
I
I..
Upholstery Goods for Gowns.
"The latest shoppIng stunt is huntmg for fashionable tnm-'
111mgs and dress fabncs among the upholstery furmshmgs m the
shop~," says a New York dressmaker. "It's a queer Idea, cer-tamly,
but the effectIve thmgs an mgenious woman can pIck up
111thIs V\ ay are almost wIthout end.
"I know one clever woman who has had a between season,,'
even111g wrap tnmmed \\ 1th wide bands of what to all appear-ance~
l~ a cashmere shawl. In reaMy she chose a beautIful pIece
of madras, turned It on the wrong SIde so that the 100~elJ woven
threads showed to the best advantage, and framed the bands wIth
a narrow puff111g of black chiffon.
"Remnants of tapestry to be found at an upholstery COU11-
ter are rich m suggestIOn to the clever woman One custo-mer
recently purchased a quarter of a yard of SIlk and wool
tape"try of such design that it could easily be cut into separate
medalhons for trimming purposes.
"She couched round the edge of each one of these V\ 1th
metal thread, using heavy floss of the predominating color to
keep the metal thread in place When applied to the black
chIffon cloth V\ a1st for V\ ll1Ch they wel e bought hand embrOId-ery
in the qme shades connected these medallions and served
as a frame for each one The tnmming gives the effect of
sahel hand work, when 111reahty the bits of tapestry cost but a
tnfle
"Bands of tapestl yare equally f 1.shlOnable on hats, and
chal mlllg flo\\ ered designs may be picked up at an upholsterv
IIII
III
I ----------------~I
IN THE COUNTRY.
counte1 \\ h1ch \'\auld co"t double the pn'2e at a tn111111mgcoun-tel
The same 1Strue of metallIc and CJlk galloons wh1ch are 50
much m vogue and whIch are eas1ly beaubfied by hand w1tl1
colored dots or cross st1tches when more elaborabon IS des1rec:
"In these days of plac111g net 0r lace beneath transparent
matenals, the substant1al net to be found at a curtam depart-ment
IS far and away the best choice, provIded the frock is not
of too da111ty a type For a blouse to wear with a tailored suit ,
nothing is better than a firmly woven and elurable curtam net
overlaId wIth chiffon cloth.
"The laces which come to match these all over curtain nets
are also desirable for covenng w1th a layer of chIffon cloth dnc1
many a high priced blouse has for its sub-stratum net which
came from a curtain counter instead of a lace counter,
"The department devoted to bead fringe for lamp shades
lS another mIne for the resoUlceful woman and many a yard
of bead fringe is bought by dressmakers who do not h111tto their
customer~ that 1t was originally intended to do duty on a
lamp shade"
Disappearing Furniture in Apartments.
\Vllha111 H Barry of Chicago, '" 111invest $135,000 m the
erectlOn of an apartment bUllding on the corner of the Grand
boulevard and Thirty-ninth street The bUlldl11g WIll be three
stories, 100x150 feet and the apart111cnt~ WIll be equipped wIth
bUllt-l11 and dlqppeanng furmture 111addItIOn to kitchenettes 0r
buffet lotchens
Our attention to every detail from carefully selected and matched lumber
to the finished product has given the Petersen Desk its Leadership.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE. FULL LINE. RIGHT PRICES.
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dining Room Furniture
BUFFETS, CHINA CLO'lETS and TABLES
Library Furniture - Library Desks. Library
Tables, Library Bookcases, Combination Book.
cases, Etc.
Our entire hne Willbe on exhibition in January
on the third floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most Attractive Inducements for Car Load Buyers
Are Offered by the
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber SUites, Wardrobes, Cplffomers, Odd Dressers, Chlfforobes
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabmets, K D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, m Imitation
golden oak, plam oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upnghl Folding Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards m plain oak, imllallon quarlered oak, and solId quartered oak,
Chamber Suiles, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chlffomers m umlallon quarlered oak, 1J11ilatlon
mahogany, and Imilallon golden oak
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, LIbrary, Dmmg and Dressmg Tables
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by The Karges FurnIture Co
Manufaclurers of "Hygiene" Guaranleed Brass and Iron Beds. Cribs, Wire Spnngs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association.
. ..... ...
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
I
III
IIIt
IIIIt
,It
I,
I
I,IIt
I
ff
II
I
I
I,
It
It
t
IIt
tIIt
It
III
I Made by Bosse Furlllture Company. Made tJ\ \\o!ld FUfll!tUle <:'-01111-'.111\
Made b) Bock'tege Furniture Co
-------------------------- ..----- -----------------------.---.---- .....
20
.-..-..------.------_. --- - . - _.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
-----_ ..-.-_._. --_._--- _._------_._--------------- ._-~,
FOUR NEW
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M 0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in acid and oiL
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held ftrst place in the estimation
of Furmture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
... ._--_.---_._.----------- Everythmg m Pamt Spec1altIes and Wood Fmtshmg materIals. Ftllers that hI!. Slams that satisfy
--------~-------------------------~
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
ImhanapolIs, Ind -"Bert" SmIth, 913 Rural street, 86,-
800, EmIly Coffay, Park and ThIrty-fifth :-,heet~ 82 ')()C\
Lena K Blakeley, Kenwood near ThIrty -second streeJ 82-
500; Allen E 'Webb, 1110 \Yest Th1ftY-second '-treet 82,-
500, IV. EMICk, 2944 ;oJ 01 th IllInOIS . "h eet, 8") noo 'f I'
Cathellne Burkhardt, 945 IndIana street, $2600
Ohllcag-o, I11-N O. \lcQulston, 1249 '\ orth l U1t]eth
aHnue, $9,000, T J Campbell, 6741 ThlOop sheet, $3000.
JulIa Takens, 21 SO AlIce place, $10,000, :JII" Ahce Hal t
3800 \Vallaee ",tl eet, $2,500, EmIl Nelson, 7154 St Ld \\ I ence
avenue, $6,000; Charles H Rood, 3911 :'Iontlcello ,'( 111.1(0
$3, SOO, I J Yloffatt, 5314 IndIan street $3,000, Louh Hen-mng,
1454 Glenlake aHnue, $4000, r :JI \\ alter, 3324 '\ orth
Caltfor111a avenue, $4500
CinCInnati, 0 -Rosa Bryant 11e"s and Oakland a \ enue,
$5 :;00 J C ~lcLenman. H'lwell awl Olmond a\ enue, 84-
000 \\ 11ham C Hoeb, 1713 Race street, $3 500 II Jlltam
.schult7, 3121 J effer"on a\ enue, $2 :;00, Anna ,IcCall en
SqUIre and Elberon a\ enues, $4,200
Cle\ eland 0 - ,f -\ :JIaUl er, 319 0\ ello lk !MIk S) 000
~11" S Stearn", 2071 II, est EIghh -"e\ enih ,treet 8:? 600
Charle" Bendall. 2104 \Ve"t 101"t "treet $3 000 ,fl~ ,fane
Lothnnger 3:;73 1\ e"t I'tfty-seconc! street 5;2:;00, IV -\
Kolat 9111 Cre"tv. ood a\ enue $2,700, G H Oltmtead, 3-!-69
Ea"t Boule\ al d, $3,000
Del1\ er, Col - -\ :JI r a]rch]ld Boule\ at d 1 an(! \ \ e" t
ThIrty-second street $4000, G 1\ '\ aht. 216 \ laIn '-trlot
$2,500, Oharles E McFadden, 1108 St Paul street. 84000
R V. Baxter, 417 Quitman street, $2,500, C H Trueach,
Knox Clourt, $3,000.
St. Louis, Mo -John C Roberts, Benoist HeIght", $7,-
000 A..mle Boughton, 917 Belt avenue $16,000, Altce Hilger,
4347 Taft a\ enue, $3,000, August Grumme, 3015 Victor street
84,000, E D Johnson, 5406 St Louis avenue, $5,900; Henry
II e"tphale, 5933 Bertha avenue, $3,500.
Columbus. 0 -A.clam Vogel, 413 East Livingston ave-n
ue 82800 Thomas Raybov\ ld, 236 Eighteenth avenue, $3,-
~CO ,II s -\nna Brennan, 318 South Th]rd street, $3,000
S\ lacuse '\ Y -:l\lartin Kuzhke, 110 LIberty street, $3,-
000 Conrad D]elleln, 404 Castle street, $3,500, Charles \V
Hask1l1'-, 1411 Souih State street, $6,500, E E BU7Zard, 1417
East Genessee street, $5,500 ; John F Klllham, 1213 Mac!tson
,treet :ti5,OOO
Omaha ~ebl -Joseph Kauth, 2021 Bancroft street, $2,-
~OO, D J Hughes 2504 South Th]rty-second street $6,000,
,Irs John 'larmet, 706 South Th]rty-second street, $4,200,
D S Efner, 1111 North EIghteenth sheet, $5,000, F W
COllle\. 81:; 5"uth Thirty-fifth street, $2,500, ]\1 0 Hanl-
"on 3219 IYOO!\\ orth avenue .
Kansas Clt\, 1110 -Tllce Ov. en, 3416 South BellLm
sheet S4,000, tIed T Palks, G30 rAster street, $2,300; J
C Parkel 6019 I ee "treet, $3,000 L\ E S\vamon, 3224 Jef-
III "on a\ enue, 84000, J F Pre\'\ltt, 4302 HIghland ayenue,
<:;3000
'11l1neapo!t". J\Il11n -tranc]s r Thoma", 3741 Ly ndale
a\ enue, $3600 A. IY IIenn1l1g, 4051 P]lbburv a\ enue, $5,-
000, Dendek Knutson, 1834 East Tlmty-fourth qreet $5,000,
\ugust Odell, 2737 Tenth avenue, south, $4000, Herman
II ehmann, 2100 PJll"blll\ a\enue, $12,000, George H Pari-nd~
e, 1 GI 0\ elanel a\ enue, $10,000, Ole Buholz, 2427 Lake
of the Isles boule.\ arc! $10 400
'1\1]1\\aukee II]S -Lmma Hoel11g, Twenty-fourth and
Chambers streets $3,000; J M J1ohnson, Twenty-sixth and
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
RICHMOND TABLET CHAIRS
No. 100 DOUBLE CANE SEAT
RICHMOND, IND.
No. 100 GENUINE LEATHER SEAT
"SLIP SEATS"
AND THE
MOST SANITARY
RICHMOND CHAIR CO.
(Trant streets, $2,500, Fred Doenng, 828 Prospect avenue,
$5,000, Otto Kapke, 1260 Tenth street, $5,000, Peter Schem-enauer
Thirty-sixth and \;\ nght strcet'3, $3,700, Stephen
Kl amer, 1308 \\1 ells street, $6,000
Mobile Ala ~S H. Smith, 629 Montgomery street, $4,-
000, J J. Cook, 288 Compton street, $3,500, Harry T
Smah 959 Government street, $2,500
Schenectady, N Y -E T Yates, R F D 1'\0, 1, $3,500,
T B Hayes, 377 McClellan street, $8,500, Jacob Manoth,
Rexford Flats, $3,000
Superior, \!\T1S-Jdhn Larslon, 1212 Xorth Eighteenth
<.,ircet, $2,500, John Breen, 1617 J Iammond "treet, $3,200
Tacoma, \Vash -Frecllund Bjorkman, 1014 Souih K
street, $10, 'l7±, F. A Pelhgnm, South rorty-foUl ih street
and c)hendan avenue, $2,500, Mn N K I-laubner, North
Sevenih and Lawrence streets, $2,500
Buffalo, ::.J Y -Pelagia FronCL:ak, 1243 Sycamore street,
$4,000, John F Hermann, 337 IIuntmgton street, $3,100;
\\ llham H Dawson, 52 Vlcbona '3t!eet, $3,200, Jacob Schmitt,
672 Humboldt street, $2,530, Susan Jenner, 17 Bolton street,
$3200, DIXIe II Drake, 2312 hl1more st! eet, $4,500
loronio, Ont ~Dl C BJOOwn, Dlnscarth and Schofield
<,treeh, $7,000, \Y P Graham, 131 Emerson avenue $4,000,
Thomas Edmunds, SJ mmgton and \Vallace streets $11,000,
DI F C Hu"band, Roxborough street and Glen road, $6,000,
J S111gel, 308 J arVh "trcet, $5,000, H 1\1 K111g, Glendale
a venue, $4,000, G 1\I Bryan YiOlkville and Yonge streeb,
$4 oeo, J 1 eren, Dundas and ITmon street", $7,000
Duluth, )1111n-11 P 'l homa'3, Sixteenth avenue and
\\ v il1l111g"treel, $3,000, D ~dam'3, \\Te"t Second ancl Tvven-t)-
second avenuc~, $2,SOO, L \\mnel, 1206 \Vest ThlfCl
"treet, $3,500
Philadelphia, Pa -John Janke, Broad street and N edro
avenue, $7,OCO, E G nUl well, jE'1g-hty-tll1rd street and Hol-stem
avenue, $4,500, George Y V\T ood, George's Lane and
\ \ v nnefield a\ enl1e $9,700 Elmer I Cuihbel t"on, 253 Rox-
I'orough avenue, $7,800, George H \\ lCk ROler and Ontano
<'ireeh, $4,000
I'eona, IlI-\Y J Brandon, 514 "\rmstrong avcnue, $6,-
000, G A Gl1bbons, 520 North street, $3,500
RIver FOI est, Ill-Frank J Butler, $12,000
Bloommgton, Ill-Ray Burke, Lee '3treet and Emer"on
a\ enue, $3,000, l\Iaraget Hackett, Graham street and North-westeln
avenuc, $2,500, Julius Schausten, 407 South Madison
street, $8,500
LOUISVille, Ky -D B. Perkms, 1856 Frankfort avenue,
$3,000; C. W F. Lasch, 2134 Park place, $2,500; F. H. MJller,
2118 Olmstea,1 street, $2,500, C R Carlton 425 North Twen-tIeth
street, $3,000.
Lmcoln, N ebr -H 0 Barber, 1900 B street, $9,500, S.
R Unthank, 3303 R street, $3,500, ElLa R Rmger, 601 South
Twenty-nmth street, $2,500.
Decatur, Ill-Robert MJller, $20,000
Mlscel1aneous BU1ldings-A three-story brick hall and
theatre to cost $150,000, IS bemg erected on the corner of
Oakdale and Southport avenues, Chicago Frank O'Brien
IS bU1ldmg a theatre to cost $18,000, at 718-24 ·West Forty-
"eventh streei, Chlca~o The Shubert Buildmg corporation
are erectll1g a $40,000 theatre and offIce bU1lding on Califorl11a
street, Denver, Col Odd Fellows Lodge No 169, Minne-apolis,
1\lmn, are bmlc1Jng a $35,000 bUlldmg at 257-61 Ply-mouth
avenue, north The Sisters of the Hou'3e of the Good
Shepherd are expendmg $150,000 111the erectIOn of a buJld-lng
011 Colorado !hol1levar,l, DCl1\ er, Colo Architect H H
Richards, 13-1. Van Buren street, Chicago, IS prepanng plam
for a SIx-story, prcssed bllck and steel hotel bU1ldmg, to be
elected by Charles l\I MIX at Hot Spnngs, Ark The con-t!
act for erectmg the Sisters' Hospl1tal at Chicago Heights,
Chicago, has been let to the Rahn-Johnson company at $63,-
328
ReSidences-Gland Rapids, M1Ch -P H Travis, 87
Morns avenue, $7,000; Thomas Newhof, 368 Slg:,bee street,
$2,500, R Thomasma, 28-1- DaVIS street, $3,800, G J. \Ves-smk,
122 Pnnce "treet, $4,000
Atlanta, Ga -1' H Alston, the Prado, $5,000, "Dolph"
Walker, 713 Edgewood avenue, $4-,000, \V M Haynes, 102
vVest Fifteenth street, $~ ,000, ::\Irs \!\T. 0 Jones, 58 East
11fteen th st! eet $8.500
THE TZ":SndtlPARLOR. NEW""U BEDr
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Always ready with
beddIng in place.
So .imple, 80 easy, a
child can operate It.
Ha. roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK, Norman & Monitor.
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
}Iinnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture
Association
OFFICERS-Prelldent, J R. Taylor. Lake Benton, Mlnn , VIce-PresIdent, D R Thompson, Rockford, Mmn.;
Treasurer, B A Sch ..eneberger, Perham, M'nn , Secretary, W. L. Grapp, JanesvIlle Mmn
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ChaIrman, Geo Klem. Mankato, Mmn., O. SImons. Glencoe, Mmn.; W. L
Harns \1mneapohs. MInn , C. Datllelson Cannon Falls.
BULLETIN No. 171.
"tancl, but nO\, that V'.e have the ong111al we can have duplI-cate"
:-,truck off and vve are able to furni"h you these value:-,
ot $1 SO to $3 SO for only 40 cents apIece
:rut don't target that unless you get them and unless
j"OU put them 111your local paper that this work is all f01
noth111g and therefore It IS up to each 111dlvldual dealer to make
the best of thIS opportunIty, whIch, by the way, no other
as"oclatIOn gIves
\.re ) au gOIng to be the fellow that reaps a splendId fall
bus111ess. becau"e you have gone after 1t, or are you going to
go to the neAt conventIOn and have to say that thi" was not
the be"t ) eal 111 the hIstory of your business" We hope
not So \V ork up the enthusiasm that you ought to have for
) OUl blb111e"", becau"e, remember, that unless you are en-thusla"
tlc about It. no one else WIll be
II e ha, e had our <,a) now and It is up to YOll whether
or not) au are gOIng to make good
THE ADVERTISING COMMITTEE
FALL ADVERTISING CAMPAIGN.
\" each ) eal 101b around the turllltul e dealer h made
to realIze that the last qual ter of the ) eal b the penod tor
profit makIng lITe can congratulate) ou on the elegant bu SI
nes" pro"pect" that \\ e have thIS fall becau"e '[111ne,>ota ne, er
had a better crop and nevel before chd ) our farmer fnends
receIve for theIr chop more than thE:) are no\\ gett1l1g. all at
whIch mean:-, that the) are S;0111S; to ha, e more reach ca"h than
at any tIme 111the past
Consequently "omebod, b gOIng to get a gooJ tall bU"I-ness
IVho IS It g0111S;to be" I" It gOIng to he ) ou or the
other fe11o\\" ThIS q ue"tlon can onh be deCIded b) ) our-
"elf and we knO\v that the only way to get aftel bU"1I1es" IS to
advertise 111such a ,va) that ,,,hen) OUf cu"tomer.., thInk of
furmture they th111k ot you l11stead of ,>omeOI1e el "e
Now ho\\ are) ou gOIng to do It" Only b) cont1l1uall),
and everlast1l1g1y presentIng s0meth1l1g ot 1I1tere"t dnd "orth
to your patlOnage, and If you th111k that bv 1I1"ert1l1g an ad-vertisement
thIS V'.eek, and "klpp1l1g t" 0 or three" eeks and
putt1l1g 111 another 'ad" vou al e gOIn~ to get result" ) ou
are decen 1I1fSyour:-,elf becau"e that k1l1c1of ach ertl'-,Ing rarely
brings results.
Our aSSOcIatIOn I eahLe" thIS more than an) Jther ors;an-ization,
and is stra111111ge, en nen e "lth111 ItS po" er to pro-duce
advertis1l1g help" that" III be u'>eful for the majorIty
and adaptable to thell needs at figures that are not proll1bl-tlve,
and so we present to ) au 111thIS "eek's depal tment a
senes of advertb111S; UllltS all of "hlch are out of the oreh-nary
and all of which are hard to get
If vou want to Impress the value of the'>e U11lts upon
your m111d, think of thl" Suppo"lng you" anted to run an
"ad" of an) one of the th111g" Illustra teJ 111 thh "eek's depart-ment,
where would) ou get the cuts" V\Tould you not haye
to go to an engraver" IYoulel you not ha, e to ha, e a pIcture
of it? If you dId each one would cost ) ou more than $1 50
to $350
This of course, V'.e knovv the av el age "mall dealer, could not
Sturgis Factories.
SturgIs, 111Ch, Oct 13-Sturgls 13 one of the most pro,,-
perous httle cities In Southern ::\Ilchlgan There IS ah, a) s
something doing here Thel e are four large fur11lture fac-tories
111 the town and all of them al e d01l1g a fSood bus111ess
There is also a fold111g go-cart factory that I., one of the
largest and most prosperous 111 that 1111e SturgIs has qUIte
a number of other factolles of vanous k111ds. and the town
has a busy look about it that IS 1I1spiring
The Grobhlser Cabinetmakeb' company has Just I""ued
a new catalogue, one of the largest and finest that the wnter
has seen this year ThIS company IS famous for theIr line
of dining room suites, d111111gtables, lIbrary tables and fancy
furniture.
The Royal Chair company has made a national reputation
Association Jottings.
II hen our orga11lzer, H F Davis, calls on you, gIve him
the hand ot tellow"hlp, and the 111formatIOn necessary 111
carr) 111gon hIS WOIk
Be SUIe and sIgn the contract sent to you and return it
as soon as possible.
II hene, er you meet a brother furniture dealer do your
best to eAplaln the good that thIS association work is doing
\nd If ) ou don't succeed the first time, try, try again.
Don't let your business fall back, but advertise, and call
111more
After read1l1g thIS bullet111, don't think that you can go
and SIt down and let the other fellow do the work, because
) ou "on't make good in the end if you do.
If you have heard the story of casting bread upon the
,'atel'S anJy It to ;p::mr advertismg
"Ith theIr "Push the Button and Rest" chairs. They have
one of the largest upholstering establishments in the
country devoted to making chaIrs They make their own
frames and have a great many patterns Mr. Walton says
thIS IS one of the best years in the history of the company.
The sales for 1910 will probably break the record
Stebb111s & IVIlhelm meet a large demand for their li-brary,
center and director's tables. They make a large line
and shay, tV'.Ice a year 111 Grand Rapids They will issue a
ne" catalogue in January.
Aulsbrook & Jones make bedroom furniture in mahog-any
and all the other popular woods The styles are attrac-tn
e and every piece is well made, well finished and sold at
the right pnce This factory i3 one of the busiest in the
town.
Minnesota Retail Furniture Dealers' Advertising Helps.
BULLETIN No. 172.
Lace Panels.
\\ e have
a large
assort
menl at lace
panels of
varIOUS
S I Z e s
kmds and
de sIgn s
Thev add
a beauh
ful fimsh-mg
touch
to a door
The Bat-tenburg
desIgns
cannot be
dIstmgmshed from real hand work
We also have some very elaborate
patterns m IrIsh pomt All of tnese
desIgns are mounted on a very fine
qualIty of net These panels can
be had both m whIte and ecru The
eCIu shades al e pal tlCularly rICTl
PrIces from •
ThIS umt wIth type as shown, furmshed for
$40
IlLASTIC COTTON FIlLT MATTRIlSSIlS
These elastic cotton felt mattresses
never reqUIre remakmg The only ren.
ovatIOn they ever requIre IS an occasIOn·
al aIrIng In the hot sunshme They
are made from cotton of superIOr qual
Ity with exceptionallY long, tough fibres
of great strength It is carefully In
spected and tested and absolutely pure
It WIll not mat down or become hard
or bunch up as the tufting IS accurate
The tufts are of the same dIstance apart
and of the same tcnC:;lOn Don't compare
thIS mattress wIth the cheap kmd but
come and let us show you how good a
mattress we sell you tor, only
ThI' UnIt wIth type as shown, furnIshed for
$40
HANDSOME RUGS OF ALL SORTS
No 508-Handsome Tapestry and vel-vet
rugs Our tapestry Brussells rugs
are made from the best worsted yarn
WIth a stiff, firm back. Our beautIful
onental deslgns are espeCIally a<1apted
to dInIng rooms Our rugs cannot bf"
equalled In deSIgn and colonng at t1
pnce We have them from the seam
less to the three-seamed ones It IS
hard to find the equal of the artlstlc
deSIgns and pertect blendIng of colors
1n these rugs
Thl' umt WIth type as shown, furnIshed for
$.40
Wall Mirrors
The;se
mIrrOI S
h a v e
oak
fI am as
fro m
one Illch
to two
Inches
wid e
aClO I d-
1n g to
the SIze
of glass
They come m good AmerIcan or
French plate sIzes from 7 '\.9 to 12
x 20 mclusIVe These mll rors add
a pleasmg fimshmg touch to the
bathroom and are Just what IS
wanted m a great many places
where a large mIrror cannot be
used We have all kmds of these
large and small round or oval, some
beveled and some plam Come m
and let us show you our lme PrIces
from
~__ J
R .. throorn Ru~s
Thb UnIt WIth type as shov.n, furnIshed for
$40
THIlSB SOFT, DOWNY PILLOW~
I
We ha\ e a great varIety of pat-terns
m bathroom rugs The col-ors
are partIcularly good These
rugs are reverSIble and easIl,
cleaned Every woman wlshes her
home to be damty and up-to-date
and these rugs add One of the lIttle
fimshmg touches which go to make
a refined home They are so mex-pensIVe
that you cannot afford to
get along WIthout one ('ome m
and see our assortment PrIces
accordmg to SIze
No 501 Our assortment of PitlO\\ s
are filled \\'Ith do\\n IJ\~ goose and duck
feathers These feathers are cleaned hy
a sClentrfic process which removes all
Impurities so that "e guarantee these
feathers to be clean sweet and pUT e
All feathers cleaned by thiS process re-tain
their natural buoyancy and are not
brIttle nor hfeless The coverings may
be had 10 all grades of ticking from the
lnexpenslve strIped to the art tIcking
PrJ,ce.e 1ange from
ThIS umt wtth type as shown, furnIShed for
$40
HANDSOME TAPESTRY PORTIERBS
No 073
These hand
<;ome tapes-tT
y porlleres
art" three
varus l Q n g
and can bp
had In Widths
tan!{Ulg from
'U Incht.s to
4i inches
Thf'se have
bf f n selected
\\Ith fl:reat
carl from the
la.rg-est and
most n..!Iabll
manuf ac tur
er"i The \a·
nety co\ers
stYles and
values to m('et the reqUlremt'nts of any
homE' There is always In every home
a place for one or more pairs of thf'se
curtains and they add very much to the
decorative appearance Prices from
ThIS umt WIth type as shown, furmshed for
$.40
TAPESTRY BRUSSELLS RUes
No. 509-Great values in Tapestry
Brussells Rugs. They are excellent
weanng Rugs, carefully made of best
quality fibre They come In lIoral and
oriental deSIgns, with any color effect
deSIred and WIth fine medallion centers
These make an exceedingly neat
sitting room or parlor rug These rugs
when dusted every Once in a whIle make
them look as new as if never walked on,
which makes them durable They most-ly
come In 8-3 x 10-6 and 9-12 ft, as
that Is the ordinary SIze needed.~---
ThIS Untt wI(h type as shov.,n, furnbhed for
. $.40
CARPET SIZED RUeS
No. 510-These high grade, c...refully
made and good weanng velvet Rugs,
floral or oriental deSIgnS' Or medallIons
centers are made for most any room, es-pecially
for parlor The appearance of
the Rugs are luxuriant The effects
harmonIze Can be had in any stan-dard
size or color PrICe& art the lOW-est,
they will suit your pocket book as
well as yourself Come and Inspect our
large line, you will find just the one you
want for your parlor~
ThIS UDltWIth type as sho"Vn,I furmshed for
$.40
SEND ALL ORDERS TO THE SECRETARY'S OFFICE, JANESVILLE, MINNESOTA.
This UnIt WIth type as shown, furnIshed for
$.40
- - - ---..- I
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
YOU CAN
MAIL YOUR CATALOG
NOVEMBER 1st
If you place the
order with us.
W"ITE
PRINTING COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MIC".
I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
\lfred ] ohn"on, undel taker of Deel field ,Y IS, has sold
out to II E ,Yl!hams
The Rollup Mattre% company, ChIcago, have 111lreased
theIr capItal stock from $5,000 to $13,000
The North St Paul (.:Y1inn) Casket company are electml;
an addItion to thE:1r factor) at a cost of $12,000
The stock of the Lottman Furniture company, bankrupt
(~ah e'iton, TeA, b to be 'iold by the reCE:1ver at auctIOn toda)
II Ilham Oakes succeed'i hIs father, vvho dIed recently 111
tbe fill1l of Oakes & '\ lehols, undertaker'i of ColumbIa, Tenn
'1 bc Queen CIty Furl11ture club, C111C1l1natl,bas endOlsed
New Orleans as the place for the Panama EAposltlOn m 191')
Lockwood Brothers of Paterson, X J, have enlarged
thelf furl11ture 'itore by takIng a long lease of an adJoll11ng
hul!chng
The J\ewaygo (::\Jlch) ChaIr company have 1I1stalled
con"lderable new mach111ery and are now turn1l1g out 250
chaIrs per day
The Plogre'i"lVe Salesmen''i assocIatIOn i'i a new ChIcago
01 gamzabon that proposes to "better the conchtlOns of retal!
'iale'imen In ChIcago"
The names of the David'ion~Clav Fur111ture company,
dealers of Ternple, Texas, have been changed to the Dameh-
])a \ Idson Furmtul e company
The Cookerette company of Traverse CIty, :\llch, manu-facturer'i
of "fire-Ie'is cookel'" have 1l1creased theIr capItal
"tock from $100,000 to $135,000
The firm of Tanner & Gold, furnltul e dealers of 1630
"urth Carh "Ie" treet, Pbl!adelpll1a, has [been dl %olved James
Gold WIll contmue the bU'imess
\ H Ludmgton & Co, fUlmture dealers of CoupevIlle,
IVash have retired from bUS111eS'i,having sold their stock to
the I L Todd Hardware company
The WIlliams Organ & PLano company of ChIcago, have
dropped the worJs "of ChIcago" from the name and increa'ied
the capItal stock from $SO,OOO to $1 SO,OOO
\IT egner Brother'i, c]ealer" 111 )house furnl shmg good'i,
Grand RapIds, have 1l1creasecl theIr capltahzatlOn fr om $80,-
000 to $100,000 One half of thIS amount l'i prefel red
Edgar N Sloan ha" resIgned hl'i pO'ilt!')l1 as manager of
the i\therton lurnlture company's 'itore at PIttsfield, Mass,
and returned to hIS former home at Bndgeport, Conn
The Klel f ur111ture company of MIlwaukee, are erecting
two concrete ad(htlOns to their factory on Thlrty-second
'itreet One of the bul!d111g'i WIll cost $45,000 and the other
$8,000
The annual meet111g of the Fl11niture Manufacturers'
Katlonal assoclatlOn, i'i to be held In c.t LOl11s, :\10, on
Tue'idav and lIT ednesday of the thlfd week 'lf N ovem ber-
N 0\ ember 1S an,1 16
C E Yoder and E P Humphnes, have purcha'ied the
plant, stock and bus1l1ess of the Bellefontaine (Ohio) Maures,",
and L"pholstenng company and changed the name to the Bel-lefonta1l1e
1\lattl ess and Comfort company,
Col A D l\lartm, formerly manager fOI the Ford &
Johnson company at Frankfort, Ky, has orgamzed a com-pany
that propose'i to employ 250 pnsoners in the Kentucky
pemtentlary 111the manufacture of chalts
On account of the shorten1l1g of the dayhght hours, the
1,\'ash1)urJ1 8:: TTpV\,'occ! ('Inn f {c'my at H'r 11";,", 'lLar Spllng-field,
l\1a'i'i, whIch ha'i been runmng ten hour'i pel day, wac,
put on a n1l1e-hour scheJtlle last :\Ionday
The COllnth (1\JIS..,) ChaIr company has closed negotla-bons
WIth the N 01th 1\loblle Development COlllpel11Yand entel ed
into a contract to move the plant to 1\Iobl!e L he capItal stoch
of $50,000 \\ III be doublecl and the plant WIll be enlarged
The four fl1l111ture deahng firm., In Ha\ elhlll, :\1as",
have SIgned an agreement v.rth then U1110nteamster" '" htreL}
the men are to recen e a ral"e m \\ ages from $12 to $13 SO per
\\ eek The agreement is to tUn untl! October 10, 1913
i\n mventory of the estate of the late Charle" \V I\la k
v.a'i filed 111 the probate lOUIt of Kent C(Jl1ntv on ()dober 8
1 he propel t) i" largely c4tcck 1.1 ~Jle Onel Can)1I1et competn)
and I;; valued at $217,6~2 20 -\ blother and tvvo sIsters are
the heIrs
'1 he -\cme \Janufactul111g l'1l1lpanV r t San \f arcos, Tex,
01 ganl/ed last ,;prlng to manufacture fUf11lture and Thompson
sal11tary "how ca'ie,;, have I11creaserl then capItal stock from
$20,000 to $30,000, the bUb1l1es" ha \ 1I1g g I )\\ n beyond theIr
expecta tlons
B E Bennett has sold hI'; Interest In the furnIture stock
and undel tak111g bus111ess of Dennett & Lake, Pa\\ Paw, 1\1Ich,
to the semor partner, Charleo IE Lake, who ha~ admItted hh
son as partne1 and the bU';1l1ess \\ III be cont111ued unclel the
';t} Ie of Lake & Son
The IIenke lur111tUl e ('(',mpanv of Cleveland (), orgeul-l/
ed by H -\ Henke to .,ucceed the firm of Kuch & Henke
1 ecently dl ,;soh ed, are el ect111g a handsome fOUl-story bUlld-
1I1g on Lora1l1 avenue and II e'it Thn beth street, whIch they
expect to OCCUpy 111November
\le,;a (-\l1Z) Free Pre,;s-1 he Jones-Davis Furniture
company 1S 111 receIpt of a carloetcl of new fur111ture I e~en tl\
ordered from the factones The goods look Just about nght
to make glad the hearh of 10\ el s of \\ ell furnbhecl hV1l1g
loonb, and \vlll no doubt attl act many customers
PettIt & Co, ftlll'ltUI e and carpet dealers of Harnsburg,
1'a, are clos111g out their ",tock at cut pilLe" TheIr store ha.,
been leased to other partie" and as they are unable to secure
another deSIrable location they announce that they WIll close
ont and retIre from the bus111ess whrch they "tarted eIght
years age)
BellJ3m111 Duveen of the film of Duveen Dro", llfth dvemll
\Jew York, Importers ancl dealers 111antique f11111ltUI e and elrt
goods, IS under alte'it on a chan;e of defraud1l1g the govelnment
by nndervaluatlOn of Imports '1he Chel!ges extend over several
year" and the amount of the duties evaded IS estImated at a
mllbon doll2.iS
George-"GlaclOus, but thIS old sofa has a queer aIm I"
Grace-"Oh, I am not 1l1tere'ited m the arm of a sofa when
there are others around"
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26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
r
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FREEDMAN
CONVERTIBLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Success.
Full Size Bed in Divan Space.
SIMPLEST IN ACTION.
LEAST SPACE.
STRONGEST BUILT.
Supersedes all other Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRA nONS AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & CO.
~------------------------------------------------------------_._.~.~.~._-----------------------------------~
Manufacturers of Upholstered Furniture.
Factory, 717-731 Mather St., CHICAGO.
------------------------ ----_.--- --._._----------._------------~
THE LYON FURNITURE AGENCY I
CREDITS AND COLLECTIONS
ROBERT P LYON, Ceneral Manager
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
OF THE
FURNITURE, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY,
UNDERTAKING, PICTURE FRAME MIRROR
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES.
The Carriers Liahility Prohlem.
The l\1el chanb' and Shippers' associatIOn of K e\', Y01 k
CIty have been requested by some of the members to take up
the questIOn of the extent of carners' lIabIlIty for loss or
damage of con'3lgned merchandIse wIth the offIcIals of the
ea"tel n raIlroad", and to endea\ or to all ange a U11lform basIs
of settlement.
The P01l1t in dbpute IS whethel the call1el 1'3 lIable £01
mal ket value at pOInt of shipment or at pOInt of delIvel v of
goods lost or damaged in tranSit The rallI oad '3 claIm that
the market price at the p01l1t of shipment 'ihould I egula te the
settlement of loss or of damage to any 'ihlpment, and P01l1t to
a clause to that effect in the uniform bIll of lad1l1~ nO\\ In use
Commission merchants, ho'" ever, questIOn the le~al \ ab-
(lIty of thIs clause They insist that unclel the common la'"
the shIpper 1'3 entitled to reco\ el damages based upon the
market value of merchandIse at the P01l1t of delIvery and that
the terms of a bIll of lading cannot I estnq thb ril:ih t unless
the slllppel has "alved this nght fOl some consideratIOn I e-celved
The commission mel chan ts ftll thel al gue that the mal ket
pilLe of goods 1'3 elt the point "here goods al e put on '3ede
namely, the POtllt of delI\ elY
An English View of Cheap Production.
Enterpnse, aided by expenence and knowledge 111 the
form of management, IS requIred to utilIze capital and labor
Lal·Ol IS the secon,1 factor 111 ploductlOn, and capital the tl111d
h I" essentIal that management and labor should be Im;hly
::okIlled, for other\\ Ise nClther can profitably assist capItal
Enterpnse, knowledge and c{)ncentratlon ale wealth plO-
~, ---
I,I
Ii
I
ductn e, and especlelIIy so if confined wlthl11 the 'iphere In
\\ hlch expenence has been gained. SpecializatIOn IS the key
to profitable productIOn Cheap productIOn is a boon to hu-mal11ty,
for It tends to bring IU:Aury WIthin the reach of all,
cheap productIOn 111 one sphere stimulates further productl11n
in other species of actiVity, as It makes pOSSible what 111 other
Cllcumstances might be impOSSible. As an IllustratIOn, let
us take the ca'ie of a sewing machine This is a necessIty in
most homes, more especially 111 poor ones If the cost of pro-dUC111gthese
machines were 11Igh, only the better class faml-hes
could buy them; and so we come to see that one of the
essential factors in human welfare is cheap productIOn. It
shouLI be our mal11 object 111lIfe, therefore, to bring about a
general recog111tlOn of this pnnciple; to see that the economIc
aspect of It IS thoroughly undel stood by the workman hIm-self
-London Engineering
Personals.
Ernest Oberbeck, manager of the Oberbeck Manufactllll11~
company, Grand Rapids, VVIS., spent Tuesday 111 Grand Rapids,
:'I11ch
VV. C GlObhl'3e\, LOlliS elnd Hugo Kamt7, pre::Oldent and
,CCI etar} I e"pectn e1y of the :\1uskegon Val1ey rl\lllltUl e com-pam,
::,pent Tuesday, October 11, 111Grand RapIds
George G Heye, of New YOJ k, preSIdent of the Hal t Mu-ror
plate company, il1'3pected the company's factory 111 Grand
Rapids and spent several days WIth Joseph S. Hart thIS week
George Calder, who I epresents a number of 1111es,has J u::,t
I eturned flOm a trip in the west Like others who have visited
the PaCific coa::ot recently, he reports the furniture trade rather
clul1 at nearly all pomts except Los Angeles
New York
Grand Rapids
Philadelphia
Boston
Cincinnati
Chicago
St. Louis
Jamestown
High Point
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CapItal, CredIt and Pay Rahngs
Clearmg House of Trade Expenence
The Most Rehable CredIt Reports
RAPID COLLECTIONS.
IMPROVED METHODS
WE: ALSO REPORT THE PRINCIPAL DRY GOODS
DEPARTMENT AND GENERAL STORES •
GRAND RAPIDS OFFICE 412-413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
c. C NEVERS, MIchIgan Manater
...-----------_._._._- --,_._-~._._------------
WEEKLY ARTISAN 27
..... ' --- •• __ __ ••• _.. :u ---... ! WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES I
1 Zinc Lined. Porcelain Lined. i
! White Enamel Lined. ORal-Glass Lined. I
I I
I I : You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting III a :
: line of the "Alaskas." :
: Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists. !
I I
I I
I I : THE ALASKA REFRIGERATOR COMPANY, EXCI~s~~:~~;~M~U:~S:K~EoGrON, MICH. 1
: New York Off1ce, 369 Broadway. L. E Moon, Manager : ._--------------------------------------------------------~-------------------------------------~
Manufacturers Benefit Through Education.
Manager John Hoult, of thc Luce Furnitm e company is
conv1l1ced that a great cleal of good has been accomphshed
for the furl1lture industry by the educational campaIgns 1l1sti-tuted
by the several orgal11zatIons of manufacturers There
is no longer such a wide dIfference in pncec; as f01 merly
prevailed and a bettcr sy"tem has replaced the old in sellmg
the product. Not ,,0 many $600 dressers are sold as formcrly,
and the maker of the $15 00 ell cs"'cr does not put so much
matenal and wOlk mto a pIece as to leave no profit !lTanu-facturerc;
generally are becoming ::'vllssourians-they mu"'t be
shown. The estimates of cost prepared by the National Assoc-ciation
have been studIed eagerly and the error of hIS ways has
been pointed out to many a one who "didn't know how" The ..
industry is stronger and in a better condition generally than in 13 edvers (he
many years.
lli2he.r Prices for Refrigerators.
A gentleman largely engaged m the manufacture of 1e-fngerators
111 reVIeWIng the condItIons of the tradc saId
"The past year's sales were consIderdbly larger than V\ ere
tlhose for preceding years, but the margin of profit was nar-rower
There is but one source of supply for metals and
prices are fixed and stable There has been a steady advance
111 wages and less effICIency in workmen. It has been almost
impossIble to obtain competent shop hands even at the top
prIce There is lacking the feelIng of I esponsIbllIty and pride
in execution of the work at hand that formel1y charactenLecl th::
men of the shops, and the manufacturer's cost of production
has been advanced on tlhat account The entrance of several
newly organized manufact111 ing COI porations into the field,
under inexpenenced and theI efore incompetent management
has disturbed the market and the growing scarcIty of lumber
suitable for Use in the manufacture of refrigerators, are addI-tional
causes for the un satisfactory I esults of the year. Goods
must be priced highel If the l11dustry is to prosper. Noone
in the industry is purposely seeking bankruptcy and thel efore
an advance mu-,t be expected by dealeIs in refngeratols"
Improvements in Challenge Refrigerators.
The Challenge Refrigerator company, manufacturers of
refrigerators at Grand Haven, Mich, have greatly improved
their 1111e,and offer a large number of patterns to the trade
Both in design and in the arrangement of compartments, and
the accessories thereto, marked improvement IS shown 111the
patterns for 1911. The plant operated by the company IS a
very large one.
Chairs for Students.
It would pay any furnIture dealeI to send for one of the
KeII-Anway CIrculars Just receIved hom the press ThiS CIrcu-lar
is made up especially for students The ChdlfS are labeled
"Handy Andy," "The Frat 2\fan," "The Co-ed," "Cozy," "Touch
Down," "Colomal," "Old POInt Comfort" and "The Student"
The KeII-Anway company of GI and RapIds, aI e expel t uphol-sterel
s, and though establIshed only about a ) ear ago, have al-ready
bUllt up a good business.
Real bargd111s are ea<,l1y dlscermble by the experiencecl
shopper. No talk is reqmrecl to emphaSIze their good qualIties.
"BEAVER," "GINDEREllA," "OOCKASH"
STOVE HEADQUARTERS
"THE LINES THAT SELL"
NoleIMPERIAL BEAVER-one ofmany.
']jest, They Stand the 'lest."
THIS IS the IMPERIAL BEAVER. It is the finest cooking
range made anywhere m the world.
We think so, and so will you when you see its advantages:
Study the above picture. The glass oven door is guaranteed
not to break. No heat lost when you look at your baking. This
range holds Its heat longest, saves z 5% in fuel, and has unusual hot
water capacity.
It is the best-looking range built-and wears as well as it looks.
Send for samples and see it-but we warn you that no other kmd wi!,
ever satisty you again, If you do I
W. D. SAGER, 330-342 No. Water St., CHICAGO
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
CHEAP COTTAGE FURNITURE.
En~Uand Far Ahead of AmerIca in Designing
and Construction.
In London onc find., the mo"t perfectly 'll11ple dl1l1 chalm-ll1g
furnIture thdt I, be1l1g made anywhere at the pre'.,ent day
It 1, called cottalSe furmture, and although hm In prIce l~
made upon the mo,t attractlve hne, and maele to endul e.
\10"t cheap fUllllture I' \ ery "ham, poor \\ oocl h u"er! 111 It·
constructIOn anc1It 1" hadl) cured and filled Cheap \mencal'
furl11ture IS apt to be OrI1dte and a", far remrJ\ ((1 from the
truly dttractn e as It IS po, sIble to be It looks shabb} and
old after a few week,,' wear and makes an) room ugh \\ hel e-as
thh neV\; al tlStlC furl11ture of EnglanJ !STO\v, mal e beauti-ful
wIth age, as the \\ oed 1, of the he"t and the craftsman'.,hIp
hke that known to olden tIme, Each pIece IS made as \\ ell
as It possIbly can be anc1111 the end I' eAtJaOlehnalllv cheap
for It la~t for generatIOns
England passecl through a chedp ,ham fUl 111tUle penoel
]U.,t as we are now, but she saw the folh ot the th111g and a
few artl"i:" 111fur11lture, notabl} ,IeS.,l s Heal &. Son WI neel
theIr attentIOn to the makll1g of pel fect f11ll11tUle along Sl111-
pIe and ll1expensi\ e hne, HappIly their mOl ement came at
the same tIme as that fm the bllllchng of .,n called "gal den
cltle,," and thIS cottage furnltl11 e pro\ ed to be e",acth \\ hat
\\ as needed for the hlr111.,hll1g of the al tlstlC and 'lmple cot-tages
of these beautiful ne\\ Englhh t'l\\ n" for \\ ork1l12;
pe'lple E\ en th1l1g about these garden utles seem to be
pel fectlOn lJ1 appearance and sel' Iceablltt\ The most al tlStJl
nllnds hay e been employed llplll1 thell hl1lldl11g~al chlttLt~
hIJ'1,e fU111lshers and land.,cape-gar lenel ,,-and they arc
beautIful to behold, e\ en the .,1l11ple.,t and humble~t ot the
cottages bung as restful and perfnt 111 lte., all angemeni a,
the fine,t
These fur111ture dl tJ"t" of Lonc1I)l1 hay e ,tuched all the
old deSIgns, and hay e created ne\\ 111'Jdds that arc not ah\ a\ ~
exact caple" but embody all the best pOInts that go to make
fur11ltnre beautIful dnd pI actlcal The men emplo} ed 111the
111aklll2; of these 1'1ece... of furl11tUl c al e 111 'I'll ed b\ thell d1-
rectors to he proud of then WOlk, an,! to put 111tOcad1 pIece
theIr be ...t efforh \\ hen a man doee., an e"peualh fine pIece
of work he IS I ewarded by a small pfl7e 111 mone\ ,l!1C!hb
p1ece of fur11lture IS exhIbIted WIth othel e.,at eel tdl1l tImes
This creates a certam fine ambItion on the pal t of the men and
they put forth all thell be ...t efforts
'\n m ...peeilon of the intenor of these gal den Cltv c'lttag-e'i
"howecl a SImple lIttle sideboal d pureh modern not cOj)lee1
flom an) past penod There 1'0 no metal 111 thell mdkeup, ...d\ e
the hll1ge, on the doors The pIece ... arc JU\ etdded tog-uhu
and the kn'Jbs and huttons for fastel11ng the dool'o dIe ()f \\ ood
Thl' make, fOI sOlJdlty and endurance
The chaIr" show "everal st} les that hay e a deCIdedly
antlque flavor. hecall,e the artIst, sa} that OUI foretathel ~
e.,eem to hay e cOlnel ed all the gllOd Idea' poe.,e.,lhle tOI the
mak1l1g of perfect ehalf" and there ale nu ne\", onee., to he
ueated
AJI pIeces of furl1ltul e are made Jf the ndtul dl colored
oak un"ta111ecl and unfilled, the wood IS lIghtl) v\a'{ecl and 1'-
of a beautiful soft cream COlO1 or ecru. though age wJ1! turn
It a beallttful SIlvery gray ltke the oak In some of the ancIent
manor houses and palaces now to be seen 111England notably
Haddon Hall In the ealllest ttmes 111 Fnglancl oak was left
111 a natural stdte, and the dalken1l1g of the wood with stalll"
ancl filllllgs was an Idea IlllpOl ted latel from Flanclers
When
Marie Antoinette
Was Queen.
WHO that has made a va-cation
pilgrimage to V er~
sailles and Marie Antoinette's
"Little Trianon" but has carried
thence a memory of the daintily
furnished Sleeping Chamber that
was once the Queen's?
This memory may become
an actuality, and the pervading
sentiment of delicate grace be
recalled, by our faithful repro~
ductions of Louis XVI. Bed
Room Furniture.
The Twin Beds, with their
carven garlands and festoons of
flowers and their cane~workpan~
els, the Chaise~Longue, with its
downy cushions,the dainty Lamp
Table, and the Chairs, dowered
with twin virtues of elegance and
comfort,~~~eachseparate piece has
the compelling charm of roman~
tic association and of admirable
craftsmanship.
:1 (!b~Grand 1Rapids
J'ur"f~~r~o~~lllpa""!
34 and 36 West 32d Street
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Between Fifth Ave. & Broadway
New York
A NEW YORK PATTERN.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
TURPS-NO.
The Only Perfect substitute for Turpentine.
Contains No Gasoline, No Benzine, No Headlight Oil.
For use in reducing Varnish.
For Use in CUTTING DOWN EXPENSES.
TRY IT. The results speak for themselves.
Barrel sent on approval.
THE LAWRENCE·McFADDEN CO.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
The chaIrs sell f01 half a gU111ea each, about two dollar:,
and a half, yet they are ",ork'i of art and of a craftsman'ihlp
that guarantees endurance and the harde:,-,t weal The chall"
are of a vallet) ot styles all upon ancIent hnes The bookca'ie
IS after an anCIent model and ha'i no natl" but IS dm etaJ1ed
tog-ethel and secured by wooden pegs
All the pIeces of furmture al e as free from ornament ac;
possIble. TI11S is for a purpose and IS to tea<::h the folk of the
labonng classes to become accustomed to fine sImplicIty It
IS not consIdered safe to permIt the humble of m111dto 111dulgG
m the Olnate, as the taste has not been eclucated m the selec-tIOn
of the ornate, and th111gs that are extraorchnanly bad are
almost invanabl) chosen by the uneducated m111d The pel-fectly
sImple IS sure to be fittmg, and so the homes of the
poor m the Enghsh garden CIties do not offend
Dy thIs It must not be construed that thIs furmture I~.
ROLLS
For Bed Caps, Case Goods, Table Legs
and many other purposes; in Gum,
Mahogany and Quartered Oak Veneers.
The Fellwock Auto & MfJ!. Co. EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
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only for the poor anel humble, for It IS not, meleed :,-,rnne of
these chalr:,-, and bookca"es have been purchased to ornament
the summer homes of members of the noblhty, anel It I~
mo"t hlghl) a ppl eClated by all people of a truly artl'itJc dnd
ta'iteful nature ArtIsts and men of letters hay e delighted 11l
the'ie new, fine Ideas m well-made fur11lture, and the maker~
find that the sales are enormous, and they thus feel that then
work has been appreCIated, and the time spent 111the study
of the excellent n.)t lost b) any means
It would be well for some Amencan makers of furmture
to take notIce, for finely made al tl'-,tlC fur11lture would be
found to be as I em unel atlve as the sham stuff now bemg put
fJrth \iVood of all kmcls IS much more expen Slv e 111Englanc!
than here, and workmen could 'ioon be tra111ed to do good
work and be proud of theIr craftsmanshIp -Ehzabeth Parker
111'Homes BeautIful"
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UNION FURNITURE CO.
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ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead in Style, Confuudlon
and Finish. See our Catalogue.
Our Ime on permanent exhibi-tion
3rd Floor, New Manufact-urers
Buildmg, Grand Rapids.
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30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
May Test the New Rate Law.
Attack111g the constItutIOnal nght of congress to delegate to
the Interstate Commerce CommissIOn such power as IS contem-plated
by the ord111ary constructIOn of the long and short haul
clause of the railroad rate law, the railroads have 111timated to
the comnmslOn that they would challenge the vahdlty of the
new law A heanng on the subject of the enf01cement of the
clause was held by the commiSSIOn 111vVash111gton It Wd"
attended by apploxlmately 200 I allroad officIals and shipper,
The chief argument agamst the law was made by Genelal Coun-sel
l\lfred P Thom, of the Southern Railway.
'\ C01111111tteeact111g for the railroads urged that gene I al
authonty be gIVen to the carners to continue the present adJust-ment
of I dtes and fihng of tanffs untIl the commission shoule!
finally prescnbe preClsely what the carners should do respel tmg -. _
the clause of the law under consideratIOn
The law provides that no greater freight charge shall III
exacted for a short haul than fOI a longel haul on the same 1111e
and mov111g 111the same directIOn Tll1s meaSl11e, hO\\ C\ el, l'
hedged about by several prOVISIOns which, 111 eel tam CHl \1111
stances, confer upon the commISsIOn d\sc\ etlOnan 1,0\\ el to g I dnt
railroads the pi \vllege of chalg111g morc for the shm tCI ha1\1
than fCll the longer haul
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·'.Ageing" Lumber.
1\0 man e\ er studlcd the processes ot natUl e mOl e dose-ly
than the late D \V Kendall The lapp111g of the wa\ es
against timbered docks or pIers, and aga111st the pIle:o dllven
mto streams creates a peculIar figure 111the wood, and the
surfaces of unprotected lumber assume an aged appearance
under the beating of the rains and the I ays of the sun and
the force of the winds. Nature ever works \vIth a pl11pose amI
J\Ir Kendall was not slow to recognize beauty and utIhze the
wood after nature had beautified it. Just what means he emplo\ ed
to reproduce this work of nature is not known, but that he d\d so
the exhIbIts of the 1'hoe111,( Fur111ture prove The age111g pro-cess
IS quite attractn e when applIed to carVlng~, cut 1 ou~hl)
hy machmer) A stam and a lIttle wax IS all that IS nece~-
sary to finish the same An order for an entIre outfit of
"aged" fur111ture and It should be remembered that tillS term
doe" not apply to furnitUle that had been sho\\CreJ \\lth ~UI,
~hot to create artIfiCIal worm holes, was recen ed recentl) b\
the Rett111g FurnIture company EspeCIal mach111el \ and
tools were found to be necessary to "age" the oak \\ ood \
s,lnd blastel vvIll be one of the tools emrl]c) ((I
\\ l1lIam Strothel has pUlchased John R HarJll1g\ un-del
takUlg bus111ess at Cottage Grove, Tenn
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
Bu It With double arbors, shdmg table and eqUipped complete With taper pm
guages ca'efully graduated. Th:s machme represents the height m saw bench con-structIOn
It ISdeSigned and bUilt to reduce the cost of sawmg stock.
Write us for descriptive information.
THE TANNEWITZ WORKS, ~~t:.g::'PIDS,
A Great Plant.
\Vhen the plant of the Luce Furniture company, no\\ 111
course of enlargement, shall be completed, the manufactunng
faCllIties of thIS great corporatIOn will be nearly doubled The
fimshl11g room, for l11stance W]]] measure 140 x 530 feet, prob-ably
the largest Ul Amenca to be used for fimshing fur111ture
1he sample room will be moved from the second to the thIrd
fioQr It wIll measul e 130 x 140 feet. The cabinet, pack111g,
tnmm111g and storage rooms w]ll be greatly enlarged. Man-dger
John Hoult reports that a very good volume of trade IS
COl11l11g111 anJ that the sam pIes of the spnng 1111eare \\ ell
dd\ anced. The general government is bUy111g a considerable
quantity of standard goods from the company's regular line
Cor the navy depa] tment, through Strawbridge & Clothiel
OFFICES:
CINCINNATI--Second NaHonal Bank Sulldlng. NEW YORK--346 Broadway.
BOSTON--18 Tremont St. CHICAGO--14th St. and Wabash A.....
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Blda. JAMESTOWN, N. Y.--Chadakoln Bid••
HIGH POINT. N. C.--N. C. Savinas Bank Bldg.
COLLECTIONS.
The most satisfactory and up-tO-date Credit Service embracing the
FURNITURE, CARPET, HARDWARE and ALLIED TRADES.
The most a.ccurate and reliable Reference Book Published.
Originator. of the "Tracer and Clearing House System:'
REPORTS.
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EVERYWHERE,
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 31
New Furniture Dealers.
Mrs Hattie Archer is a new furmture dealer In Colum-
!bus, Ga.
W. P. Bayes has opened a new furmture store at :'Ietro-polIs,
III
J. C. WIlltngton has opened a "first das<;" furniture st-Jre
at Ada, Okla.
Kepner & Romich have opened a new furniture store at
Pottstown, Pa
H H Eassen is preparing to engage m the I etaJ! hu n 1-
hue busIness at Hinsdale, Mont
J F McCluney has opened a new furmtnre store on
X onh Broadway, Los Angeles, Cal.
E C Settle & Son, undertakers of LawrenceVIlle, Ga.
ha vc added a stock of flll mture to thclr bu sme<;s
R A Harvey & Co have opened a stock of ll1gh ~I ade
ft1ll11ture 111old J\Iercanttle builchng, Alvin, Tex
Charles Pltkm and D. Cohen, under the firm namc of
Cohen & Pltk111, have opened a new fUI nltm e store at 806
Albany street, Schenectady, N Y
Nathan P Corkran, a proml11ent calnage and vva~or:
manufacturer of Baltimore, WIll engagc In the retaIl furnltur~
anel house furmsh111g bus111ess 111that cIty
1:neler the name of the Kensington :t\ovelty company,
J\lrs J Cavanaugh has opened a furniture and house furl11sh-l11g
store at 2456 Kensington avenue, Phdadelphia, Pa
The Old Dominion Furniture and Stove company of
Norfolk, Va, have secm ed quarters in a budding owned by
Dr. Truitt, on Liberty and Poindexter stJ eets, South Norfolk
The Baer Furniture company, a new organization, have
bought the old postoffice building at York, Nebr. They WIll
remodel it and fill it with a large stock of furniture, cal pets,
etc.
Ralph E Kalloch and John O. Stevens have 1l1corporated
t1te Kalloch Furniture company to engage in the retad bUSI-ness
at Rockland, Me Capital stock, $10,000; subscnbed $6,-
000, paid in, nothing
] L Rosenberg, Samuel Strauss, M. M. Roche, G S
Meyers and Edgar A. Hahn, have incorporated the Cleveland
Household Supply company, to engage 111 the housefurmsh111g
bus1l1ess 111Cle, eland, O. CapItal stock, $10,000
Fredericb G. and Susan J\1. Reynolds and Lena G Dlck-
Inut, have 111corpOlated the Perfecto :'Ianufactunng company,
capItalized at $12,000 for the purpo<;e of establtshing and con-ductmg
a genelal house furl11sh1l1g bU<;1I1e<;gIn Providence,
R 1.
The Fannette Manufacturing company of ChIcago has
been incorporated by 1. H. Sdverstone, F. J. Haake and G
Noxon 1heIr ,apltal stock 1<;fixed at $10,000 and the pur-pose
of the company IS to "handle furniture and household
<;upplIes"
Lee G. McIver, Charles P. Rogers, H M Weller and J
R FItzsimmons, who Incorporated the Lee Furmture com-pany
to "manufacture and deal in aU kinds of furniture" at
Raleigh, N. C, have started the dealing part of their busl11ess
with $2,100 of the $25,000 capital stock paid in.
The Bloombe1g-Mlchael Furniture company has b~~i;;'-
corporateJ to engage 111 the retail fUrl11ttlle trade in Rich-mond,
Va. CapItal stock, not less than $5,000 nor more than
$15,000. W. H. Michael is president of the company, :1\1
Bloomberg, vIce president and M. L Bloomberg, secretary
The Bloombergs are prominent real estate men of Richmond
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Here is
a Rocker
that's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
GEO. SPRATT
8 CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
No. 592 II
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Be careful of the dealer who tells you he can
furnish cutters "as good or better than MorrisWood
& Sons." He is imposing upon both you and our
reputation.
If you would have cutters which do the most
perfect work, at the least expense, that wear out on
the jointer and not on the emery wheel, which save
their first cost in a few weeks, in the saving of time,
required to grind and adjust sectional cutters, write
u. right now for further information.
We have made solid steel cutters for thirty-six
years. Is that worth anything to you?
A trial order is our most convincing argu-ment.
Write now before you forget it. I
.I.
MORRIS WOOD & SONS
5108 W. Lake St., CHICAGO, ILL.
32 WEEKLY ARTISAN
p.
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Miscellaneous Advertisellients.
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WANTED
Manufacturer, agent to sell our NO-TUFT maltresse, In Mlchl~an
Also one to sell them In OhIO Can turn over e,tabhshed trade to rIght
men Addres, ManItowoc Maitre" Co, ManItowoc Wb 10 15 22 29
WANTED,
Furniture men to learn furniture deslgnmg, rod makmg and
stock billIng by mall. Our course of instructIOn IS just the
thmg for superintendents, foremen and factory men who
wish to increase their knowledge and salary. Grand Rapids
School of Deslgmng. Dept. L., Grand Rapids, Mich. Arthur
Kirkpatnck, Instructor and DeSigner. 4-9 e.o.w. tf
WANTED
Tl-e McKim & C:chran Furmture company, MadIson Indi-ana,
want commission Ire'. Must be expenenced. 10 1-8-15
WANTED.
Commercial salesman for Indiana and Illinois to sell Parlor
ard Library Tables. State terntory covered and hnes ear-ned
Addreos "Map". care Weekly Artisan. 9-3tf
WANTED.
Travelmg salesman to carry a lme of Reed Rockers and
Chairs in Indiana and Illmols. State territory covered and
lInes carned. Address "Near", care Weekly Artisan 9-3tf
POSITION WANTED.
A salesman of ability furnishing best of references and at
present engaged, desires a change. Thoroughly acquainted
with the trade of New England and New York states and can
guarantee results. Address C. A R., Weekly Artisan. 7-23tf
FOR SALE.
A nice clean stock of Crockery in a live West Michigan
town of 10,000 population. Would also rent store If desired.
Address "See" care Weekly Artisan. 5-28tf
New York Markets.
:"Je\\ YOlk, Oet 1-J-.-Ifen "ho haH: \hlted the tal \\("t
lecently lepOlt dullne~'3 111 the IU111hei tla Ie pilltieulaJ!\ 111
Wa'3hington and Ole£; 11l where thCle ha" heen a con"Hlelahle
dee1Jne 111pllce~ on both lumbel and timber laneL thol1-',h
few of the lattel are chang111g hand" rJ he hal d\\ llcJel lumbel
trade I" still ql11ct ancl steddy 111 all part~ of the c l\lntn "0111e
eorre~ponclents note an 1I1erea~e In ae tl\ It) but the clcmd 1(1 I~
not ~l1ffClent to affect pI Ice" on any ~I acle or \ dllet}
The trade In 11l1~tcel III thlo vvecl~ ha~ been almo~t en-urely
11l111tedto mall orders and c1ell\ encs on ol1hanc!Jng con-tI
ach Pnces are '3tead} at la ~t "eek::, fi~ Ule ~ \\ Inch arc
bastd on 97 @ 98 cents fC'1 \\ e"tcrn ra" and run up to S1 01
@ $102 for city boded Calcutta OIl IS firm at $103
Turpent1l1e IS higher again It" ent up to 800 cellt,
on l\Ionclay, Imt has '3agged '31Jghtl} loelay It I" quotcd at
790 @ 80 here and TSY @ 7() at ::,a\ annah thc man';111 he
tween the two pOInts he1l1g a cent Wider than Lhual
Buyers are not c!Jspo"ed to pay the pnce~ that al e asked
for '\IeAlcan ~oat"k1l1s and bus1l1es" 111those \ anctle~ I~ dull
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BOYNTON & CO.
Manuladurers 01
Emboaaed and
Turned Mould-ina.,
Embo...
ed and Spindle
Carvinp. and
Automatic
Turnin ....
We also manu
fadure a large hnc
01 Embo .. ed
Ornament. for
Couch Work.
I..
1725-1739 Dickson Street, CHICAGO, ILL.
()thel \allctJe" ,lie qUite aetne \!exlcan f1(mtJers are helel
,It )3 @ 3.+ lcnt- San LUIS, Zdeateld~ etc, 44 @ 45, :;\I[on-te
e\ LampIC,t", ete 43 @ 44, Vela Cruz, $48 Payta'3,42,
jJa\tlelh'+; Tlueno" \Yles 38 @ 3J Brazlh 63 @ 67
COl elal.;e 1~ filll1 at the a(lI anced pnce~ recently estab-
1J ,hed the fig-ul e" 011 tW1l1e~ tendll1g upward India tvv1I1e,
\ 0" '+,0 to f) al e quoted at 7% cenh @ 8 cents 1Jght, 8% @
lJ finl \() 18 10% @ 11, B C \0 18, 150 @ 16
LWht\\ eight hurlap, are ll1 hn"k demand \' hde the heav-
Ier vvelghts are 1110\1l1g- sllugglshlv ::,eve11 ounce Calcutta
l.;ood" are sold dt 3 2S, 7Y;;-ounce, 335 and eight-ounce at
) -l-S L en-oune e goods al t quoted at 440, but these figure
elle "h Ided 111 mo"t If the tran~actlOns
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Index to Advertisements.
L\ddms & Elt1l1g Companv
'\la ska Refng el a tor Company
\ melle an Blower Company
! 11'1l" \\ ! &. Tonn Company
l\ennett l harle" lunl1ture Company
1\( ek"tei;e I'llrl11tme (oll1pal1\
l\l "~e I m111tnre lOlllpan\
1\1'" \fall11ne \\ mk"
(hlhta,1~ln C
l hie' -', ) I] lfl 01 a HI '\rt Gla ~s Company
I dh\ C'e1( '\nt a HI \Ianu±aetnf1ng- Company
[ ree 11ddn BH t110::, f'c Co
(,l"hc I 1'r111tnre C 111pan\
(,1 all Raphl" 1l10\\ Pipe and Dn~t '\rrester Company
(,11ml RapId" nla,,~ Company
(r111H] Raplc1" ld,-ter Cup Compan\
(,rawl R,q)J(l" \ enell \\ nk"
Hahn LlUI"
1I( !com] '\ L &. Co
h,ll-',C" I nrlllture Company
1,,1 Ihall Hr ther" Company
J"11](1el l'aIlor Heel COmjMn\
T a\\ reme lId, adden Company
Lent/ ~L ahle Compan\
LH:;ht (,eorge \\ Ifannfactullng Company
T llle Rvlmond Chall Company
1 nc e 1 nrn tm e (e'111pan y
\fanhtee \fanufeletnnng Cc,1111Jany
IIanetta Pa1l1t and Co
- Date Created:
- 1910-10-15T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 31:16
- 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/44