- Home
- Weekly Artisan; 1909-08-07
Weekly Artisan; 1909-08-07
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• AUGUST 7. 1909
THROW OUT.
ALL Disk, Drum, and Spindle Sanders are money wasters.
There IS not a piece 01 sandmg that our
Patented Sand Belts will not Polish Better and Faster
400 machmes already m operation. Why
~1Veyour competitor an advantage over you
m thIs department? WIll sand and pohsh
flat surfaces, all irregular work in
your sandmg department. Ask for cat-alog
E.
PATI<N fED
Januar) 12th 1907
'\lay 17th 190~ "0\ ember 14th 19m
Febt nary Bth 1906
October 2nd 1906
Best Truch.-- The Strongest TrucK
WYSONG & MILES COMPANY, Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., GREENSBORO, N. C.
~~i'cThe
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No 171 Sand Belt Machme
This is the famous Gillette Roller Bearing Factory
Truck---the truck on which it is said, "One man can
move a load if 3000 pounds while with the other trucks it
takes three men."
This is the truck that is strong where others are
weak---the truck that has an unhreakable malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are looking for if you wish
to invest in rather than waste money on factory trucks.
Gillette Roller Bearing CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
I The Lightest Running, I Longest Lasting Truck
A BIT OF INDUSTRIAL HISTORY
Are You Running an 1860 or a 1910 Plant?
In 1860 cottonseed removed from the boIl by gInnIng was gal bage-thrown away.
By 1870 gInners managed to conVInce some people that cottonseed was good fertilIzer.
By 1880 It was consIdered good cattle food and In 1890 It ""as beIng used as a table food.
By not utlhzlllg all tlIe cottonseed 1I1 1900 (one ) ear) twenty-sIx mIllIon dollars that someone
could ha\e had, ""as thro""n away
The CIty of Gla'go\\. Scotland, gets 9,000 horse-power every day-free - by catchIng and utIi-lZlng
furnace gases formerly"" asted
The steel corporatIOn will lIght the town of Gary, Ind , and run all street cars wIth energy that
would otherwise be \\ asted and belched out of furnace stacks
JJetrolt" Keturn 1 rap
PATENTED If you use steam for heatlllg and dryIng and you allow any conden~atlon to go to waste-you
are losing money.
Put all your condensatIOn back Into the boIler ""Ithout pumpIng-and hotter than a pump \\Ith lIft-wIth
"DETROIT " Automatic- Return Steam Traps
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Manufactured and Guaranteed by
General
OffIces AMERICAN BWWlR COMPANY
DETROIT, "SIROCCO"
MIGH. KADE MARK
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SLIDING SHOE FOR USE ON DESK LEGS
This shoe does t be work of a casttr 3' et allows tbe
desk legs to set close to floor. Fastened wltb flat bead
wood screw and furut"hed In tbree sIzes
SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES
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No 1493 PULL
A very fine handle for desks in tbe square effect.
Somethmg different from the regular bar pulls.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Works'
DETROIT,
MICH
and
TROY, N Y
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PUBLIC LIBRA~y
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A Perfect Case Construction
Makes the
Strongest
Most
Economical
and Most
Accurate
It ISentIrely
Automatic
It Clamps
MortIses and
Releases,
Completing
the Post m
Less TIme
Than the
Matenal can
be Clamped
on Other
Machmes
Case
Construction
Write
for
Calalog
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Write
for
Catalog
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No. 181 MULTIPLE SQUARE CHISEL MORTISER.
Wysong & lliles Co., CedarSt.andSou.R.R., Greensboro, N. C. !
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I aran~ Ra~i~srurniture Manufadurers'Association
"ere are the Exact Shades adopted by the
Their "Golden Oak Oil Stain" is our No. 3424.
Their "Early English Stain" is our No 3425 Oil Stain.
Their "Weathered Oak Stain" is our No.3426 Oil Stain.
Their "fumed Oak" is our No.3427 New Process fuming liquid.
Their "light Mahogany Stain" is our No.3428 Dry Mahogany Stain soluble in water.
Their "Dark Mahogany Stain" is our No.3429 Dry MahoganyStain soluble in water.
Send for Samples and Information.
WE SUPPLY EVERYTmNGNEEDEDIN THE fiNISHING ROOM.
NEW YORK
THE AO-EL-ITE PEOPLE 60_. ••••• ••• •• ••••• • • ••• •• ---.--- ..I.
THIS IS THE MACHINE That Brinl!s letters Like the Followinl!:
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BUSS NEW No.4 CABINET PLANER
Holland, Mlcl1.
We wish to comrlimen JOe.. on t'1.e WOl".I{lpgor our nail #4 Planer
Ju.s If'stall d fer us
nis machine does "he bes~ wo"'k of an; pl<.llle'" e have eve'" seen. ana
we ure f a lk to sa so mut"h be"t"'l" thall e axpec ad, tnw.t OtL""forelllar
solid ile simplJ co.tld not get. along Ithout. it,and wag sU!'e 1'[,woulo
paJ he price of 1tself v l1,h '1. a yeoll" 1'1 or'k »a ad on maC'11neSf'ollolV1ng
Wishing JOu dElse ved success witn. th1S 'leT pdttern. va relll<..ln.
yo....5 va"J truly,
Bus M C'l.l.ne Works,
GS'l lemen
Robtl ns Tabla Co
The Buss Maehme \Yorks are havmg marked sue ee~s wlth thiE:>new design of cabinet planer. The new
method of beltmg-teed gears machme cut-together wlth the steel spnng sectional front feed roll and the
late new sectIOnal chlpbleaker, make a cabmet planel second to none on the market today. The Buss Machme
vYorks are old manufacturers of cabmet planel s and other woodwork111g tools, and keep abreast wlth the
tlmes wlth machmes of great effiClency Woodworkers of all bnds wlll not make a mistake by wnting dlrect
or to then nearest sellmg representatlVe regardmg any pomt on up-to-date cabinet planers. These are the
days when the hve \\ood\\orker \\ants to cut the e:Apense of sanding
HOLLAND, MICH. BUSS MACHINE WORKS GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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HAI\D CIRCULAR RIP SAW MORTISER COVlBINED MACHINE
Complete Outfit of HAND and FOOT POWER MACHINERY
WHY THEY PAY THE CABINET MAKER
He can save a manufacturer" profit as "ell as a dealer s profit
He can make more money \\ Ith less capital ltlvested
He Cdll hold a better and more satlslactory trade WIth hIS
customers
He Cdn manufacture 1Il 1..~ good £tyle and finIsh and at as 10v.
cost aq the factOlles
1 he local cahme-t maker has been forced mto onh the dealer s
trade atld profit because of mad'me manufactured goods of factones
An outfit of Barnes Patent Boot and Hand Power MachInery
remstates the cabInet maker WIth aCl\ antages equal to hie; competitors
If deSired these machme' wl11 be sold on tnal The purcha,er
can have ample time to test them III hie;;own shop and on the work he
"!shes them to do Descr,pt,u catalogl" and prtce itst f1 ee
No .t SAW (read, for cross cuttmg) W f. &. JOHN BARNES CO, 654 Ruby St., Rockford, III.
.....,
No A SCROLL SAW
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FORMER OR MOULDER HAND TENONER
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No 4 SA\v (ready for nppIng)
No 7 SCROLL SAW
WEEKLY ARTISAN
~. - _ --_.--.-.----_ ----_._ ..- ~ .._---------_ _- These Specialties are used all
Over the World
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Hand Feed Glueing Machine (Palent
Veneer Presses, d.fferent kinds and s'zes (Pstented) penchng). Many styles and sizes.
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc., Etc.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
Power Feed Glue Spreading Machine, Smgle,
Double and Combmation. (Pstented)
(S.zes 12 In. to 84 In wide.)
LET US KNOW
I YOUR WANTS
I..-._. _.._-----_._._---_._-_. ---_._. _. -_._. _. _ _---._. -- ._.-- -----_.._-------- CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. No 20 Glue Heater. No.6 Glue Heater • ....._- _ .._ ......
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MARIETTA
FUMED OAK ACID STAIN
To the finisher who has been using the fuming chamber to produce his
fumed oak our Fumed Oak Acid Stain is a revelation. This stain is in no
wayan experiment but practical working stain, producing a more uniform color,
and giving to different grades of oak the same shade. It is a strong, penetrat ..
ing stain, going into the wood and yet it can be used without injury to the
hands. This is not a substitute for fuming. The stain actually fumes and is
permanent, but it fumes in obtained on red as well as
a different manner .....s.aving' white oak. The most can ..
the cost of a fuming cham.. vincing evidence of the per ..
ber and the time required feet working qualities of this
in fuming by the old pro- stain will be manifest in a
cess. Unlike the Fuming single trial. Write us for a
process good results can be sample.
THE MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO., Marietta, 0, THE MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO" Marietta, 0,
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I THE LYON FURNITURE AGENCY I
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CREDITS AND COLLECTONS New York
Grand RapIds
Philadelphia
Baston
Cincinnati
Chicago
5t Louis
Jamestown
High POint
ROBERT P LYON Ceneral Manager
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
OF THE
FURNITURE, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY,
UND~RTAKING, PICTURE FRAME, MIRROR,
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES.
Capllal Cred.t and Pay Ratings
Cleanng House of Trade Expenence
The Most Rehable Credit Re porls
RAPID COLLECTIONS.
IMPROVED METHODS
WE ALSO RE'PORTTH£ PRINCIPAL DRY GOODS
DEPARTMENT AND Q£NERAL STORES.
GRAND RAPIDS OFFICE 412-413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
C C NEVERS, M.ch.gan Manager
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
HAND SCREWS THAT STAND
THE TEST OF TIME AND SERVICE
Good strong, easy working handscrews---the best
that it is possible to make. In fact there are none bet-ter
made than the "Grand Rapids."
Twenty-five per cent greater strength is secured by
the special saw cut threads on second growth hickory
spindles---more lasting, greater endurance and less strain
on the wood than those of any other make.
Our spindles show, under actual test, extraordinary
twisting resistance; they are tough and practically un-breakable.
The pws are sawed from the best of Mich-igan
hard maple, sanded smooth and oiled. It's poor
economy to use any but the best.
Write for our catalog 14. It shows a "full line of
benches, clamps, hand screws, etc. Yours for the asking.
GRAND RAPIDS HAND SCREW COMPANY
918 Jefferson Ave, Grand Rapids, MICh.
BntIsh RepresentatIve Ohver MachIne Co. Ltd. 201 Deansgale \lanchester Eng
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J. BOYD PANTLlND, Prop. :
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I M orton House I - (Amencan Plan) Rates $2.50 and Up. II Hotel PantJind (European Plan) Rates $1 00 and Up.
I GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I
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A~ only the edge outhnes of the
Cutler comes IUto contact With the
lumber, there ISno fnctlOn or burn-
Ing of the mouldIng~ when made
\\lth the ShImer ReverSIble or One-Way Cutters These Cutters
are careful!) moulded to SUIt your work, and are very complete,
mexpenSl\e and time-savIng tools vVe supply specIal Cutters of
an) shape deSIred and of any size to SUIt your machme spmdles.
Let us haH' your speCifications. For odd work not found In our
c<ltalogne send a \\ ood sample or drawlllg.
The Noon Dmner Served at Ihe Pantlmd for 50c IS
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD SI\MUEL J. SHIMER &. SONS, Milton, Penn.
l\lanulacturers ot the Shimer Cutter Heads for Floonng, CeIling
SIdIng, Doors, Sa~h, etc ' - ...-..
.... . . --- .----- . - .----- ------ ... --- I .'---"" "THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST" i
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER I
Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot, make tests, you WIll then know what you are gettmg WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and ChaIr F actones, Sash and Door Mills, Railroad Compames, Car BUIlders and others WIll consult their own IOterests by using It. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished m rolls or reams.
M~Nl ~ <\c I LkI lJ B\:
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
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, I ! The Capaci!L of Your Jointer is Limited :
!, to the Cutting Capacity of the Cutters. I•
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II Unle<;s you are usmg the Genuine Morris Wood & I:
Sons 20th Century Solid Steel Glue Joint Cutters
you are not gettlllg the full value out of your machme.
II They are hdrder and reqUire less gnndmg than any other ! make, and when they do need gnndmg the cuttlllg surface
IS <;0small that It only takes a few mmutes to put them III II
I! order agalll Wnte for catalog No 35A It tell., all about the cutters I
and WIll help you to lllcrease your profits. I I
II MORRIS WOOD & SONS I 2714·2716 W. LAKE ST, CHICACO, ILL. :
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
CHOICE TOOLS FOR FURNITURE MAKERS
If you do not know the "Oliver" wood workmg tools, you had better gIve
us your address and have us tell you all about them. We make nothmg but
Quality tools, the firSt coSt of which IS consIderable, but whIch Will make
more profit for each dollar mveSted than any of the cheap machmes flood·
mg the country.
UOLIVER"
No. 16. Band Saw
36 Inches
Made WIth or without
motor drive Metal
table 36"x30" W,ll
take 18" under the
gUlde- bIts 45 degree.
one way and 7 degrees
the other way Car
fIes a saw up to I%/I
Wide Outside beanng
to lower wheel shaft
when not motor dnven
Weigh. 1800 lb. when
ready to shIp
Oliver Tools
Save Labor
Tempers
Cost
"OlIver" New Variety Saw Table No 11
W>l1 take a saw up to 20" diameter Arbor belt l' 6" WIde
Send for Catalog "B" for data on Hand Jomters, Saw Tables, Wood
Lathes, Sanders, Tenoners, Mortisers, Trimmers, Grinders, Work
Benches, Vises, Clamps, Glue Heaters, etc., etc.
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.
Works and General OffIces at 1 to 51 Clancy St
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH , USA.
BRANCH OJ. FICES Oliver Machmery Co Hud'on Termmal 50 Church St New York
Ohver Machmery Co F"'ft Nahonal Bank BUlldmg Ch,cago III Oliver Machmery Co
PacIfic BUlldmg, Seattle, Wash Oliver Machmery Co 20 I 203 Dean,gate, Manche.ter Eng
/ 10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALSO MADE WI I H 12 1') 20 AND 25 SPJNDLe <;
GEAR
MACHINE
DODDS' NEW
DOVETAI L IN G
ThIS ltttle machme ha.s done more to pelfect the drawer work of funl1
ture manufacturers than an)-thmg else 1Il the furnIture trade For fifteen
\ears It has made pertect fittIng ,ermm proof dovetaIled stock a pas'Sl
bIlfty fhlS has been accomplIshed at reduced co"-t a<; the machme cuts
dove taIls In g-angs of from 9 to 24 at one operatIon It s what othe15 see
dbout your bUSllleS'5rathel th'1n wh'lt 3- au sa) about 11 that connts In the
c~'-,h dr l..\\el It <; the th1111ot enthll~lasm and the true nllg of truth, ou
feel and he1.r back of thf' Lold type that makes yOU bu) the thlllr;ach eJ tJ':;ed
ALEXANDER DODDS, GRAND RAPIDS, MICHICAN
Represented by Schuchart & Schutte at Berlm VIenna Stockholm and St
Pf"'krsburg Represented by Alfred H SdlUtk at Cologne. Brussels Ll~ge Pang
MIlan and Hllboa Reprelcnt("d m Grt"at Bnttan and Ireland by the OJlve-r MachlOery
Co. F :, Thompson. Mgr. 20\ 203 Dean.gatc Manche'ler, r.ng\and
3
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4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~
E.ach
Net
$2~
E.ach
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND us YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &, DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
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•I MUSKEGON
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Palmer's Patent Gluinl! CIamps MUSKEGON VALLEY FURNITURE COMPANY
UOlOmOISUlles
Tall POSI 8Ms
000 Dressers
enlllOn/ers
wororones
laOIeS' TOlielS
DreSSing
Tables
MonoOOny
InlmO GOOOS
The above cut is taken dIrect from a photograph, and shows
the range of ODe size only, our No 1, 24-inch Clamp. We
make sIx other sIzes, takmg In stock up to 60 Inches wIde
and 2 Inches thick. Ours Is the most practIcal method of
clampIng glued stock In use at the present tIme Hundreds of
factories have adopted our way the past year and hundreds more
wl1l In the future. Let us show you Let us send you the
names of nearly 100 factories (only a fraction of our list) who
have ordered and reordered many times. Proof positive our ,va,.
is the best. A post card wIll brlug It, catalog Included. Don't
delay, but wrIte today.
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WRITE FOR CATALOG
---_'II-'ll'll ... __.,
AI E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
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: Crawfordsville, Indiana.
Montgomery Hardwood Lumber Company
Manufacturers of all kmds of
Foreign RepresentatIves: The Projectile Co., London, Eng-land.
&chuchardt &; Schutte, Berlm, Germany: Alfred H.
Schutte, Cologne, Paris, Brussels, Liege, Milan, Turin, Barcelona,
and Bilboa. •..-- .I. ...... . E. S. STERZIK. Pre ...-.., . ----._-- -_ .....
NATIVE FURNITURE LUMBER
30th Year-No.6 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., AUGUST 7, 1909 Issued Weekly
GRAN':' RA:-'I~·
PUBLIC LIBRJ RY
TRAFFIC BUREAU FOR GRAND RAPIDS
An Institution That Should Be of Great Benefit to Merchants, Manufacturers and All
Others Affected by Freight Rates
The estabh~hment m Grand RapIds of a permanent
traffic bureau to be conducted by a traffic managelr of '" Ide.
practical expenenco 111 fyelght transportatIOn mattere,. for
the bo.nefit of shIppers who do not, Individually, employ a
traffic manager and to represent Grand Rapids mterl!sts m
cooperatIOn with other commerClal orgamzatlOns m the en-deavor
to arnve at "olUtlOtlS of the vanous problems of trans-portatlOn
that confront the carners and the shIppers of to-day,
will be m accord With actlon taken by the merchant"
manufacturers of many cIties that competQ WIth Grand RapId",
m the common markE1ts
At the la"t meetmg of the National ASSOCIation of l\Ian-ufacturers,
the transportatlOn commIttee of that a",soclatlOn
strongly recommended the estabhshment of -"uch a bUI eau
m New York City In Chicago, St Lams, Pittsburg, 1n-cltanapohs,
MemphiS, Dallas, Rockford, Ill, Qumcy, Ill,
Evansville, Ind, Des MOlnes, Ia, LIncoln, Nebr. Kansas
CIty, :1\10, and numerou,", other CItIes, such bur~atb have long
been estabhshed and have proven successful m geittmg satIs
factory re,ults for thetr suppQrters
The more Important of the transportatlOl1 problems that
confront the carner" and shippers may only be solved by
cooperatIon The mtere"t" of the carner and the shIpper are
mutual FnctIOn and controversy represent total loss of
energy IndIVIdual effort IS largely meffectual
For the proper handhng of freight matters a speCIal
knowledge of freight transportatlQn affaIrs IS essentIal and
such knowledge may not be obtamed from text book" but
only through actual ratlroad expenen-::e and by close ::Jbser-vatlOn
and study of the rapIdly changmg conclItlOns that SU!-
round the transportatlOn busmess
Such a bureau should not be conSidered as a claim collect
l11g or a claIm creat111g agency. In exercismg a general su-pervIsIOn
over the transportatlOn affaIrs of ItS membel s, claims
of every de"cnptlOl1 would nece"sanly receive their share of
attentlOn and an endeavor to secure a more prompt settlement
of claims should be one object of the e"tablIshment of the bu-leau,
but Its mamtenance should not be dependent upon the
number or amount of the claIm" presented and collected
The efforts of such a bureau should be directed towards
secunng for Grand RapIds shIppers the lowest pOSSIble com-bmatlOn
of freIght rates and cla":olficatlOns, WIth especIal atten-tenL'on
to carload 1at111gs, 111ll11l1111maSn,d loadmg restnctlOns,
il10 best of serVICe, representatlOn at meetmgs of the State RaII-load
CommissIOn, the Interstate Commerce COmmlSSlOl1, clasq-ncatlOn
cormmttees and legIslatIVe bodies when any actIOn IS
contemplated that WIll affect the mterests of ItS members and to
aSSt mblmg and dlstnbut111g traffic mformatIon pertment to the
bU"l11ess of ItS membel s
In cooperatIOn WIth the carner" and SImilar orgamzatlOns
of shlppel s Gl and RapIds may accomph",h much towards the ad-
Justment of matters of common 111terest such as the proposed
11l1lform code of demurrage rules, the proposed umform classl-ficat!
on, the Ul1lform bIll of lad111g, ul1lfornllty and harmony be-tween
state and natlOnal laws govermng carners, the "ecunng
of carload rates on ltllxed carloads of freIght of the same des-cnptlon,
the placmg of re::.ponslblhty upon the carners for er-roneous
rate quotatlOns and such other problems as may de-
\ elop 111the future as m the past
It IS 111thIS dlrectlOn that the efforts of "m11lar orgal11za-tlOns
have obtamed results that have 0ufficiently demonstrated
theIr value amI effiCIency
There IS nothmg of greater Importance to the manufacturer
01 the wholesaler than hIS transportatlOn faCIlItIes and cost" and
haphazard, spasmodIC or l1l-advlsed actlOn 111 connectlOn WIth
same IS detnmental and lUlJUSt to hUl1self and the carners Ex-pert,
practIcal kuowledge of traffic matters is becom111ng recog-tllzed
111 the busmes" world as of great value and many other
Cltles of less ul1portance have made greater progress towards
the applicatIon of :;uch knowledge to their transpo'rtation prob-lems
than has Grand RapIds
The prestIge enjoyed by thIS city as the center of fur11lture
manufacture and sale demand::. that It gIVe transportatlOn mat-ters
attentIOn equal to that of ItS competItors Wlth1l1 the past
SlAt) days the Interstate Commerce Commb01On has passed up-on
dlmo"t one hundred compla111ts dealing WIth freIght rates
and carload mltllmUl11S on furl11ture shIpments from Chicago,
Dalton, Ga, Carolina terntory, Decatur, Ill, -Brighton, OhIO,
and Keno"ha, '"Vl"COnS1l1 Any actlOn by Grand RapIds manu-factnrers
towards obtam111g more favorable transportatIOn con-ditIon-
or lesser cost", 111the 111terests of theIr customers WIll
certamly be noted and \\>111 matenally strengthen the tIes that
bmd the trade to thIS market
The Interstate Commerce CommISSIon and a maJonty of
the members of the can lers are favorable to the placmg of such
matters 111the hands of tra1l1ed experts and to the establishment
of such bureaus EXbtIng condltlOn0, pecnbar to the geo-graphical
10-::atlOn of Grand RapIds and to the products of its
111clustnes, are such that the establIshment of such a bureau
"hould not be clelayed and in thiS dlrectlOn it should be imme-dIately
demonstrated, byond chspute, that ('Grand Rapids Knows
How"
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Allt>gOIl Not(·io.and V(·,,~olluliti(·~.
Allegan, \ugust 6-C B Bakel ot lhkel &.. (0 ,lel (JIll
pdl1led by IllS fdlml), hds been spend111~ the IMst n\ 0 \\ ceb ,It
Crunn lake \Vhl1e thele the) lu\ e been "topp1l1g ,It the
Plaimvell-Allegan Gunn Lake Cluh
\V J Oln ~I of 011\ ~I 8.- Co 1'0 anothel ot the \\ ell kno\\ 1\
manufacturels of Allegan \\ ho \\ Ith hI" lam11\ IS "pell(hm; t\\ (l
\\ eeks at Gunn lake
1'1 easurer F I Chlchestel of the Phoem, COmpall\ b e,-
pected to return September 1 hom a n\ 0 mOllth" \ ISlt to the
PaCIfic coast Whl1e thel e he \\ 111 \ ISlt the Ala"ka- Yukon-
PacIfic exposItIon
The Phoell(x Company, IncOl pOl ated 111;(0\ embel 1908
wIth a pdld up capItal of $9,000, h,n mg tdken 0\ el the olel
Rowe plant, has not as ) et c0111menced opelatIon" The com-pany
I" officered as follo\\" PI eSldent, DI 1oung, \ Ice
presIdent, vV E Ro\\e, seCletary, 13 13 Sutphm, tleasurel,}
I ChIchester
Oltver & Co, manufacturers of combmatIon desks, ltbral \
cases, ch1l1a closets, ladles' desks and buftets ha\ e Just added
d l111eof mlSSIQn goods GeOl g e 011\ er I epOl ts a qtbLlCtOl \
tl ade for the past Sl, months, commg pnnclpalh 110m the
east and the mIddle \\it" t The film ot 011\ er &.. Co \\ dS e~-
tabhshed III 1855 and about tl11ee \ ealS a~o a clMn~ C \\ d~
effected, at whIch tnne George 011\ er, Sr , and "~ndrew Oln el
who wel e brothers, retIred, bong succeeded b\ \\ 111 T 011\ el
and George Oltvel, Jr
Bames, MOSler & Co, manufactul ers 01 blltteb and hU?,h
gl ade cab1l1ets, announce that the) \\ 111dl "contlllue the nMnll
facture of buffets, and \\ III de\ ote theIr tIme e'Ccltbl\ eh to
cdb1l1ets Heretofore they ha \ e made then cablllets 111 bn d -,-
eye maple;bllt they w111now add a hne ot oak Bames, ~Io"lel
& Co are a MIchIgan corpOl atlOn, \\ Ith a paId up capItal ot
$13,000, orgamzed five yeal s ago Then trade comes ldl ~eh
h om MIchIgan The company IS officered a" tollo\\ s PI e"
Ident, Gustav Stern; vIce pI e"ldent, C R vI, l1kes, seCl etal) .
Dr C W Young, tleasmel, J F )'10s1er, manager Hem)
Bames
One of the be"t known manufactuung concelns of A.llegan
IS that of Bakel & Co, e"tdbhshed about eIghteen} eal ~ dgO.
and conslst111g of C 13 Bakel and George dnd HIram De Ldno
The firm manufactm es a hne 1111eof buffets, chma closet"
combmatIon bookcases, ladles' desks and hbral} cases The
lIne 111cludes about one hundled pIeces
E CRowe, propnetor of the E C Ro\ve Can 111g\ \ Olk"
h,l" been vlsltmg hIS brothel Henry of the RO\\ e :VIanufdctl1l-lIlg
Company, Newaygo, Mlch, the pa"t \\eek Dml11g hl~
\ l"lt Mr Ro\ve has been tdlong a httle I ecreatlOn dt He"" T ,lkt
The I~ CRowe Cal V111g\Vorks ha\ e Ju-,t gotten out d
new catalogue, whIch they are nov\ maIlIng to theIr trade
The catalogue shows a complete lIne of cal \ 1I1gs fOl furl11tUl e
and casket manufacturers 1\11 RO\ve Iepm ts that buslne""
has been very good, espeCIally from the11 ea"tel n tI adc the
pa"t SIX months 1)
-------------------------------------
Mahogany
Circassian Walnut
Quartered Oak
Walnut
Curly Maple
Bird's Eye Maple
Basswood
Ash
Elm
Birch
Maple
Poplar
Gum
Oak
The Luxury Chair Company.
Under the management of Geo K Mead, the I U"\.Ul\
ChaIr Company of Grand RapIds has made gleat stude" :\11
Mead IS a practical chaIr man and looks closely to evelY detaIl
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Foreign and
Domestic Woods.
Rotary, Sliced, Sawed.
III till lJtl~lJ1l~" \\ hlll hc tool, dUlgc the compdllY Wd" P,l\-
111~ ;-,.J- ;0 pel thouo.,lml 101 ell} 11llSlumber; now he has a dl)
kl1n that dlle" It 101 50 cents TIe has also btuIt a two-e,tCJ1)
1)1lC]" dd(htlOn that 1I1Ueases the f1001 space of the pld11t at
ICel:'.t.J-O pel cent .\h l\Ieacl also looks carefully after the wel-tale
01 1110.help, and has plo'lded shower baths, lavatolle",
clo"ets and e\ el \ com elllcnce for both the men and wome11
111 hIS employ ~ e\\ machl1l es ha\ e been added, and they make
all the11 ft ame", The 11l1e conslst1l1g of the Luxury patent
J oc]"el flam I ockel s ell\ ans, stools and chall s, IS one of the
beo.t made 111GI and RapIds, and bUSIness glows every seel"on
There I:'. not a s1l1g1e old pIece 111 stock, dnd ordel s are on thell
books 101 e\ el \ th1l1g that I." made or In course of constl uctlOn
\11 :.\Ieeld has ~no u~e t01 accumulatlOns- 'A warehouse IS next
th1l10 to a mOl 0 uc Keep the !:\ oods mov1I1g" IS hIS motto,
b b " then) ou \\ III not be troubled" Ith close-outs
Inyited to Fly lor the Siegel. Cooper Company.
1rem \ SIegel, the pI eSldent at the SIegel-Cooper Company,
ha<.. otteled the \Vngltt brothers C:;7,5oo to make three flIghts
In el11 aelOplane tlOm the 100f of the ChIcago store l'hI:'.
])IUlect edlp"1I1g, In the 0])11110nof some, the entelpnse of H
CT '-,eltlldge" ChICago Idea" dep,lrtment store In London, hel"
lKUl undel consldel atlOn for some tIme by the VVnght broth
Ch aec01 dIng to 1I1f01matlOn whIch leaked out 111 Wa"h1l1gton
[he London mer clunt eAhlblted the Blenot heavler-than-all
th 1I1g nuch1l1e 111 hI" "tale, but :.\/[r SIegel, who has become
dn enthu"'lelst about denal naVIgatIOn, IS strl\ 1I1g to have the
hte "'lzed pa"",engel Cdll) 1I1g aeroplane eAhlblted flam the top
ot hi'" "tale \\ Ith the fdmous vvnght brother" themselve:'. to
make ha/drdous fJtghts and CIrcle over the cIty streets
[: C Tal g ensen has blOught suit aga111st Tull & GIbbs,
tht \\ ell kno\\ 11 turmture dealers of Spokane, Wash., and
PUHland. 01e He asks Judgment fOl $2,088 on the ground
thdt hetore surrendellng possession of the Lenox hotel in
POI tldnel Idst T anual \, thev neglected to shut oft the water,
\\ hlch fro/e al~d damaged the pIpes, walls and floors
~• ----------------------- II
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THE
WEATHERLY
INDIvmUAL
Glue Heater
Send yonr address and
and recc.ve deSCriptIVe
Clrcnlar of Glne Heaters.
G1ne Cookers and Hot
Boxes Wltl. prICes.
The Weatherly Co.
Grand RaPid •• Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
---------------------------------------------------- .~
Oak, Poplar
LET US QUOTE YOU PRICES ON OUR OWN MANUFACTURE OF
I Circassian, Mahogany,
I
I and
Ii
tI... .
Gum
The Albro
Established IB3B.
Would Give Long Hauls Lowe1' Rates.
lor many yeal s one of the popellal p1muple" of 1ate 111ak
1I1g-ha~ been that a thlOUe,h rate 111mt not be le,>~ than the J ca1
I ate cOl1lb111ecl The Inter,>telte Commerce C01l1l1l1~"l()n lJ'l'>
,lttempte(l to 1epuchate that pr111c1ple b) authOt J7t11g 1ates ht
tween \tJantIc port~ and the we~t Jowel than the cOl1lbtlled 1,ltt '>
hetV',een local term1l1ah RaIlroad men cJeclare that th1" \\ ould
1evolut1OI11Ze a methocJ that ha" been In gene1al u"e for more
than JO years and they do not propose to accept It Two de
CIS1On" of the commISSIOn embodymg th1" pl1nClple, the ;\11'>-
soun RIver case and the Kmdel case, mvolvmg rates to Denver,
have been temporanly enJOIned, and are now pendll1g befure
Judges Grmscup, Baker and Kohhaat of the Ul11ted St2tt"
C1rcUlt court fOI adJuchcatwl1'i The ra1lroa(ls ale now pI e-panng
to apply for an 111Junct1On agall1st the thl1 (I ~ncl1 de-
CISIOnm the case of the Greater Des .Momeo>comrl11ttee a~am,>t
the Rock Island and other webtel n roads
The roads have repeatedly declared theIr deten111natlOn to
cOl1te<;t the pn11c1ple to the last dItch i\s the fil1cImg of the
Judges m the cases mvolvmg the rate" to the -:\11ssoun RIver
and Denver WIll not be reached untl1 afte1 September 1, when
the Des Momes order goes mto effect, the only way m ,vhlch
the roads can prevent the reduct10n of theIr revenue" IS by an
mJunctwn, unle~" the commISSIOn b prevaIled upon to postpone
ItS order
The Penusylvania Buying Cars.
Official announcement was made at Pltt"burg last Monday
that the Pennsylvama Railroad has placed orders for about $8,-
500,000 worth of new car eqmpment This IS saId to be the
biggest order for cars ever placed at one time The number
of new cars ordered is 8,000, and the cost will be more than
$1,000 aplece ·While the entire order has been placed, the
apport1Onment only for the lines east of PIttsburg and Elle
IS made known There will be 4,845 cars for the hnes east
of PIttsburg and Ene, leaving, presumably. 3,155 for the
Pennsylvama hnes west of PIttsburg
Orders on car" for the hne::. ea"t have been apport1Oned as
foIIows: Pressed Steel Car Company of PIttsburg, 350 box
cars, 350 hoppers, 500 coke cars, American Car & Foundry
Company, 500 box cars; Standard Steel Car Company, 750
hopper cars; Cambria Steel Company, 500 coke cars; Penn-sylvania
Railroad Altoona shops, 1,895 car" of all kinds
In addItion to this order the company announces that in
the very near future It wJ11 place ordel s for about 5,000 more
freight cars, and, as Its recent orders prey lOUS to today aggre-gate
about 5,000 cars, it wJ11be seen that the rallroad i" makl11g
Veneers.
Veneer Co. II ..
CINCINNATI, O.
._-_. ---- ---------
~OOellt<; pron11',e tn get a 11e" ftelg-hi eqUIpment of somethmg
lt1-..e20,000 carli
\ c;ood part of the mele1s Ju"t placed <lfe of a rush l1atUle,
e,lch of the compa11lc'> cIcdH \\ Ith hay me, ,lgl ('<eelto have "ome
ne\\ Cdl., on the t1<lck., ll1'-,lde of 10 cIa) '-,
Turpentine Trust and Timher Men Alarmt"d.
Ownel" of '>outhern hmber land" and manage1 s of the so-called
naval .,to! es tru"t, are protestll1g v1gorout>ly agall1st
the pa "'>age of a blll now pendl11g 111 the Alabama legIslature
The trust, whIch seems to be more mterested than the tlmbe1
owne1", has mduced dealel S m naval stores-turpentme and
rosm-to flood the leg1"latl11 e WIth letters askmg that the
bIll be defeated OJ that actlOn be po"tponed untIl more thor-ough
1m estlgatlOn ha., been made "\s a result of the PIO-te"
b the commIttee hav111g the bIll 111 charge has decIded to
hold pubhc heanngs and mV1te all mtere"ted to present the11
\ 1evvs
The tlmbel, or forestry bJ1l, as It IS knov\n, plovldes that
no tree of less than 12 mche" 111dIameter can be cut, and no
tI ess le<;s than 15 111ches m dIameter can be tapped for turpen-tme,
and carnes WIth It the creattOn of mspecto1 s for the
::.tate, who shall receIve fees for m"pectmg rOS111and turpen-tme
The grade estabh"hed by the 11lspector IS to remain,
thus makIng It ImpossIble for the purchaser to buy as one grade
and move up to another, as members of the trust have been
dccused of doing.
The bIll, If It becomes a law, IS expected to prevent waste
and to decrease the lumber cut and output of rosm and tur-pent111e
111the state
The Coalmga (Cal) hotel IS to be remodeled anel reful-
11lshed.
" .- .
I FOX
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I
SAW DADO HEADS
GREATEST
RANGE
QUICKEST
ADJUSTMENT
LEAST
TROUBLE
PERFECT
SAFETY
SMOOTHEST
GROOVES
FASTEST
CUT
LEAST
POWER
LONGEST
LIFE It
II
Also Machine
Knive.r. Miter
MachInes. Etc.
We'll gladly tell
you all about
it.
PERMANENT ECONOMY
FOX MACHINE. CO. 185 N. Front Street,
Grand Rapids. Mich
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
If You Want One Crate or a Carload of
Rotary. Cut Plain Oak Veneer
Write us. We have it, red or white, crated
and ready to ship.
Walter Clark Veneer Company 535 Mich. Trust Building
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
II II
New York Market Reports.
i\ew YOlk, \ugust 6~netter demand t11a1 \\a, noted le"t
week IS the onl} teature \\ ortl1\ of 111entlon m market 1ep J1
that are supposed to he ot mteres t to turm tUl e men 1hll e
has been no ad, ance 111 pi Ices eAcept on turpe,ltme \\ h1111hel"
gone up anothe cent, the II~e bel 19 due entlrel} to leghlatl) 1
pend111g 111 \labama, \\!1l< ..Jl thleaten~ to Ie tnct the output ur
the state It IS now quoted here at ")2@")'2Y2 cent- tor (I Ill,
dehver}
dehvery
L111seed 011 IS stlll dull ~ale, thb \\ eek hd\ e been t "-
ceedll1gly small at last week s quotatlons-I\ e",tern rel\\ (JO@(d
cents, CIty. law, 61@();! , smgle b,)11ed, 62(aJGJ and double lnl]u]
63@GJ, m 110t les", than flVe ball el lots
Shellac IS mo\ 1l1f; mOle treelq than last \\ eek, the iran'dl
tlOn.., In some grades bemg of seasonable \ o]ul11e bllt pillt ..
while firm, ',]lOW no 111atella] cnan~ e T X 111 t ,lSe, h ljuoted
15@15.Yz, bnght 01ange ~Tacle, 1"l((1::91, fane \ ,hade, 20@!!
and DIamond I '2 ')((1:2:b cent r1 e~h bleached 1b 12 (it 1:
dned. n@21Y;; l enb
A bettel dennnc1 t01 COIdafSe IS noted, but It hd' not elt
fected pnces B ( tv\ me "0 18 b quoted at IlJ t enh pel
pound, Incha l\, o~ J,::,i to () at 1@7.Yz, hfSht, 8@SY;;, fi,le "0
18 at 11@1172 cents
Goat Sk111Sare more actlVe and pnces are filmer on the
better quaM) of ::\Iex1~ans which an 1\ e 111small lOb Dag-utd'
and Haytlens are quoted at 51@'58 cenL, Poytas -i l@-i ~ \Ic",--
lcans, 4,,@±4, MeAlcan frontiers, 33@35 cents
Leather of all kll1d~ rema111" 1emarkabl} qmet not\\lth,tand-
111~the tanff ag1tatlOn 111congre~s
Good Demand for Lumber.
The 1110stplOm111ent featnre at the lumber market at pi cc,-
ent IS a marked 111C1ease111the numbel of 111qmne~ \\ hIle
an 111qmry does not con:.tltute d demand an unusual number of
them 111(11catethat they \\ III 000n be follo\\ eel b} an l11Cred"eel
demand, and when they come from large consume! s the} show
that the 1I1qUllers expect to place order, soon IIIthout ret-el
ence to the future the demand 1s much leuger than at thb time
last week I\t 1110StpOints It IS better than IS expected 111 c\u-gust
Ma1ked Improvement \,1 the tone of the lumber bUSI-ness
IS reported from all p0111tS
Hardwood lumer IS 1110V111g111 greater volume than 111
July and much gl eater than 111 Aug u~t last ) ear Pllces at e
firm, e"'-ceed111gl) so for the better grades of oak The hlghe1
grades of other vanetles of hardwood are reported scarce 111 first
hands and there IS 110 sIgn of weakness at any pomt eAcept 1ll
the demand for culls at some of the Southern mIlls
~----------------------------_._ ..._--_ .._-
THE NEW GRAND RAPIDS
MACHINERY STORE
Wood Working Machinery
Factory Equipment
Machine Knives, Bits, Etc.
Everything in Equipment for the Woodworker.
McMULLEN MACHINERY CO.
GRAND RAPID, MICH ---~
, ••• a ••••• ._ ---_. •• ..,
j STANDARD UNIFORM COLORS I : Adopted by the Grand Rapids Furniture ASSOCiation are produced With our:
II
Golden Oak Oil Stain No. 1909, Filler No. 736.
I Early English Oil Stain No. 55, Filler No. 36.
I Weathered Oak Oil Stain No. 1910.
I Mahogany Stain Powder, No.9, Filler No. 14.
I Fumed Oak (W) Stain No. 46.
II
II GRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHING CO. 5559 Ellsworth Ave ORAND RAPIDS, MICH
'- -~---- .. _..- _.- ..-- . -- "
ROLLS THE "RELIABLE" KIND
THE FEllWOCK AUTO & MFG. CO.
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA.
-.,
\V E E K L Y ART I SAN
LUCE~REDMOND CHAIR CO., Ltd.
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BIG RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGH GRADE
OFFICE CHAIRS,
DINING
CHAIRS
Reception Chairs and Rockers,
Slippers Rockers,
Colonial Parlor Suites,
Desk and Dressing Chairs
In Uark and Tuna Mahogany, Buch, B,rd',-eye Maple,
Q!!artered Oak and Cuca<Slan Walnut
You will find our Exhibit on the Fourth Floor, East Section, Manufacturers' BUlldmg,North Ioma St , Grand Rapids.
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ExhIbIt In charge of J C HamIlton C E Cohoes J Edgar Fo'ler
Good Demand f01' Ru~s.
9
----------------------------------------------------~
~a:>tern manufacturers, 1mporte1s and Jobbe1~ It'port a
b11Sk demand for 1ugs - an unusual demand fc)! a pellOcl
~o late 111 the season \\ hat IS known as the cluphcclte
demand IS much larger than has been expenenced f01
mallY yeal S :\10re buyer~ al e 111 the market plckIn:S
up spot supphe~, vvht{rever the) al c to be found, and
111each Instance are askIng qmck Shlp1l1ellt~ ot the good'> pm-cha'oeCl,
In adehtlOn to thb, buyer~ are also askmg for prompt
111)),j, 'lts of all good'i on ordel, a'o then summer trade has
heen of larger volume than was expected RetaIlers startec1
the 'ieason vvlth very small ~upphes of old good'i on hand and
'ill1ee that tIme have been purchasll1g "teadlly It was beheved
that the heavy bUY111gwll1ch took place Ju:>t hef01e pnces were
,tdvanced, '''ould fully cover all 1eqUlrements f01 the balance of
the season, but eVIdently buyels have found theIr purchase'> too
~n1.lll to meet reqUIrements, as they are back 111the market f01
adclttlOnal supphes, vv1th whIch to meet nearby futUl e 1equlre
n en is
\lanufaLtul er, dedal e that the advance 111 pllces letst
month-about 5 pel cent-v. a'i nOl enough 10 cover the lll-
Clea-;ed co-;t 111matenal and llltlJl1ate that a further advance
mU'it come soon
Carpets are lllO'lllg mOle freely than a month ago Bu) er~
arE sald to be duphcat111g thelr ordel s for \XUl111ter'i Brus'ic1s,
\\; lltons and tapestI le'i Jngra111~, however, are reported hfele'i~,
"lth no hope of 11llprOvel1ent l1l thelr very unsatlsfacloq sea'iO 1
Henry Explains.
Llttle Hem), ,I comtant source of JOy 111the hotlSehole1 of a
f 11I1l1111l e 111.\11 hVl1lg III Gl a11c1H.,tplC1~ swallo\\ cel ,I bt1l1 \\ !tIC" he
had detached from a bolt WIth whIch he wa:> plaY111g He im-mcehatelv
111formed the dot111(2,p"al ents that he had "swallowecl
~Olllethln:s but wa" unable to cles-::nbe the sIze and nature of
the tll111g '\ el vou~lv the fatlle1 pulled aSlde a commode III
the hope of alchng Henr) to nallle the mls~111g al tIde, when the
httle bcn ex,-lalllled
IOh papa It wa llot ,t~ lal (2,"Ca~ that
Made by Grand RapId, F anc)' rUIDltur~Co, Grand RapId" Mlch
"
10
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A DEPARTMENT OF HELPS FOR THE ADVERTISER
WEEKLY ARTISAN
RETAIL FURNI1.'URE ADVERTISING
Conducted by
Chief of the "-dvertisina Department, Furniture City Enara ...i.na CODJpany
MARLIN L. BAKER
No, thIs IS no furl1lture ad But why b It the furl1ltnrc No' HIs readers are no dIfferent
houses don't put out a furl1lture announcement that IS as 111- one \\111 mIss secmg hIS ad if It Isn't the
viting as thIs department store page? mess 111the paper
Each sub-dlvlslOn has a dlst111ctlve heacltng of ItS 0\\ n· Just imagme the page of Rothschllds & Company, a fnrl1l-
Really now, doesn't It do your heart good to look at an ad so tnre ad, cuts of furmtUl emplace of the figures and dry goods.
well displayed, so clean 100kll1g, and so easy to read) :\ote \\'ouldn't "ou rather read that kll1d of a furmture ad than the
the lower quarter of thIS ad, nearly all the sectlOns belong to ones) ou usually find m any of the newspapers? I rather thmk
the average furniture store It Isn't crowded wIth bIg cuts and \ au would
black face type. Good fnrl1ltnre advertlsmg is a mIghty scarce article and
Note the clear open appearance, the perfect balance ot 11- It IS the ad \\ nter s O\\n fault He walts 'ttll the last minute
lustratlons and the excellent typography, m short It IS an ad- before prepdnng hIS COP), wntl11g "any old thIng" to fill space
vertlsement that commands attentlOn \\ hlle thc ne\\ ~papcI soltutor ~tands dt IllS elbow, punchl11g him
Why don't the furl1lture advertlser produce copy that com along
mands attentlOn? Are his reader~ any dIfferent from those Is it an) \\ ondcr dverage f11ll1lture ads look as they do?
who read department store stuff; must he use a conglomera-tion
of line etchl11gs, worn out electros and fine screen halftone
cuts (when he should use all 1111ecuts 111hIS ads)? Is that
any reason why he should use the blackest type 111the pnnter\
case?
He only thinks "ome
blackest, Jumbled up
Advertising Value
::\Ir Theo. Fettl11ger, Adv, .l\1gr for Hahne & Co, Newark,
)J J, 111a recent address on advertlsl11g, said: "It IS a posltlve
creatIve force, and the world would lose much wIthout It
"It multlpltes human \\ants," J\Ir Fettl11ger asserted, "It 111-
tenslfies human deSIres, makcs fashlOns, encourages constant
change, leads people to dress better. to build better homes, to
furnIsh them to bettel taste, and to make them more comfortable
and sal1ltary.
".-\dvertlsl11g IS one of the sImplest, yet one of the most
complex factors 111 the promotlon of bus111e"s It IS an essence
glv111g pubhClty to the object you \\Ish to promote, or the th111gor
servIce you have for sale Just how this pubhclty can best be
secured IS, and al\\ a) s WIll be, a problem, because of the varY111g
condltlons 111whIch man finds hmlself as times change and the
people change wIth them"
The nnvspaper IS beyond question the best of all adverttsing
mecltums, not only became It facilitates the dissemination of in-formation
to the pubhc at the least pOSSIble cost and in the speed-
Iest manner, but also for many other reasons
"Perhaps the most cogent reasons why the newspaper should
be patrol1lzed above all other mediums i" the fact that the press
IS so helpful in the upbuilding of the city, in the furthering of its
enterprises, and became the city is so apt to be judged by its
newspapers, and its bllsiness men by the advertising that appears
in the ne\\ spapers
"\Ve should not count merely the earninlSs that come direct
from our advertlsing investments, but the asset consta'ltly being
created for every b lsiness instihtion and every property-holder
in the cIty thr011gh the newspapers' activities Every dollar P'lt
into the ne\\ "paper advertising strengthens the newspapers and
enables the publi"hers to gIve to the p~ople, practically witho"t
cost to the readers the wonderful purveyors of news and molders
of public opinion for which the country is famous"
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Eight Good Reasons Why Cook Can Serve You Best
Everv Une a Convincing Argument. Read Carefully. Then Come and See For Youraelf.
[PA~"~,:~:;:::~~ ..~:,_ I \LO:~p~~~:...o:.,~~~R~NI5H1NG- I. ...,
IIN CASE OF DElI TH All. PAYMENTS CEASE- I IQUAUTY FIJRNlTURE ADDS TONE TO YOUR HOME-I coo ................ <1 .... ""' ,......Idb fe, It.. It .. ~, III 1M, ~ .~ llad __ d ... W.
ITHELARGI!STANDBESTSELECTEDSTOCK GOLD RING FOR THE IlA!lY WITH
Mote ........ eotDIeftll ",!Mlred ...,. _ I'0OI 1baa .. ..., EVERY CARRIAGE
otbN woouaeUt tvIdla ...._ ::.::=:.~ ~:::a~'":~,=,:,,,CIw -- mat , FRE1l DELlVERY-A~
U.~.~PIa.cnlo!d4I.,....l.-- .. .. <na .. O'W1IU~ or;i6"I"'of...'_-'*'t.1'"
..,...,.... wK1l~Jl8I?Ar
AND '.AT\. RPAl':
£Vll.IrrIL'1QS.
THE FURNITURE STORE
A. S. COOK COMPANY.
67-69 MAIN STREET, WOONSOCKET, R I
......
....",,'C
CAR
"an08 \ot:
TO 01.8 DOOR
The above dd\ ertlcement of A S Cook company. Vlooll'iock-et,
R I, may be cntlC1seel by a number of ad writers, but there
are surely a number of POl11ts descnbed that will not fall to
bnng trade to the store It lS eleservl11g of commendation on
arrangement, descnptlOn and pnclllg Whlte space is used
to good ad, antage
Here are some gooel, senslble sales talks, full of reason why
COpy Some ad-wnter~ nllght cOll'ilder them rather lengthy, but
there lS 110 c10ubtlllg that good results dre more often obtallled
from thiS kllld of talk, even 1£ lt l~ lengthy, than the common
"hot alr" stuff usually used
Successful copy wlltel s do not fill their space wlth \\ orthless
"hot air" but tells the reader 111 a plaln, stralghtforwarel, senslble,· .
way statlllg facts He gives them a leason for offering goods
under value, trnthful descnptlOn talks to his reacler~, as he would
to a customer on the floor
Read these talks from the pens of real aelvertlsers, study
th('m, it wlll be time well spent
CARPLTS \ \]) RUGS
\ld~Jl1ficent chsplav of Tngll',h Axmln,
ter carpets In the range of selectIOn thb
:L,ton C8rpet store neve" presented d better
chOlce-vVl11l11peg 11ls never ,een Its equal
bel ore We h'n e made c1Jscrlmll1atll1\!;se
lectlOn among- the world's prettIest patterns
and colOrings of the ,,,,orld's most noted Ax-mInster
loorrs and rvany patterns have been
woven exclusnely for thIS store Fvery style
an I period of decoratIOn can be m8teher\ and
£01 cuch be lutlful carpets-the values are
truly extraordmary In Axmmster rug-s
too, there IS a handsome shoWll1g I1lustrat-m~!
the run of values we clescrlbe one ,pi en
dId lme TIere IS a 101ely green, WIth a rich
or ental effect that would look well m h-br
lry or den, another IS a hm d~ome effect 111
blue and gold dnd shll another 111 brown and
gold These rugs hdve a deep IIch pIle of
hnest worsted and all makes of the leadmg-
Fng-hsh ancl Scotch AXl1l1111ster mlll,-
r etton's, Wm11lpeg, Can
MATTI l\f GS
Floor coverings for summer u~e Crex
Iugs and mattmg-s The C, ex fdbrlc IS a neat
attrachve and firmly \\ 01en floor covering-made
m a number of very n etty de'ilgns that
enables one to obta1l1 a htg-hly artbtlc decora-tIve
effect at a very moderate prlce-costmg
as It does les~ than an Tngram carpet It may
bE hacl m the form of a mattmg, 36 1I1ches-
WIde, WIth whIch a room can be covered all
over It also comes 111 rugs of all sIzes from
lEx36 Il1ches un to 9x12 feet These are used
largely for porch rugs Al'd then there are
the Crex porch runners whIch can be had 111
all WIdths up to 9 feet ancl any reqUIred
leng-th -Schuneman & Evans, St Paul, Mll1n
HAMMOCKS
Swmg- a hammock and enjoy outdoor
summer hfe to Its fullest Buy a Palmel
hdmmock r1', the be~t fhe unci a ,hdcly
nook somewhe e ,lIId take summer hfe d bIt
ea sy when yoU em Nothmg lend, so much
to the enjoyment of outdoor comfort as the
jU"t rI~ht shdped, just right hammock Hel e's
a Palmer hammock WIth a close canvas
weave 111 Per~lan stripes concealed snreader
at head wood bar 2t foot, WIth patented tlp~
and adlnstable hItch end rings, WIth pIllow
~nd valance a dozen color combmatl011"
$1 2S -S P Dunham & Co, Trenton, N J
Get one Now IS the tIme Summer hav
Il1g now set 111 for good you should put up
a hammock, whIch you WIll find enjoyed by
all, as a great ple'lsure, and comfort Ham-mocks
occupy d very small space, and WIll
add to the looks of your lawn, or porch, that
IS If "elected from our WIde as,ortment all
of whIch dre of the best selected matellal
havll1g orlg-ll1ahty m deSIgn and color Our
$2 hammocks al e not as hI ge 1'ld hand
somely made as our $7 ones, but fOI service
and long- wear they VI 111 answer your pur
pose Weare ,howll1g numberle." others,
between the,e pn cs, \\ hlch WIll appeal to
you as rm e selectlO'lS These we-e bought
for your mspechon so look them over-
Snowr-Tulhs Hardware Co, Montgomery
Ala '
New Hammocks 111 attractive colonngs
The smal test Iange of attractive hammocks
IS Illcluded 111 the new lot offered to the
pubhc comJllencm" to day The m,l" c"
cent blendll1g, of the gorgeous colors WIll
forcefully appeal to all These hammock,
are "wll1d, ram and rot proof" and g-Ive the
best wear because they are made from the
most rehable mdterlals 111 a very superior
way
PORCH SHADES
Porch comfort You WIll never know
the real luxu-y, comfort and enjoyment to
be had from YOUIporch until you fit It WIth
/' /
11
~ t~ ~ at £!ices ~ ~ ~ ~ ex
An odd let 01 CriI>o found on lnvcnlol'Ylnf sto<k. all marked .,
savfng Flees to Insure thCU' Soak and .ttra ... t businc.ss mJ:s w«k..
..I
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A
THE FURNrTUR.E STORE
S COOK COMPANY,
67-69 MaIn St .. Woonsocket.
W--e W--an-t -Y-ou-r -C-a-sh-! ~
VudOl pOlch <-h,t<k, Wood h one of the
best non concluc101s of heat known, therdore
Vuclor porch shdCle, are made of wood flbrc
-11l1deli wood Your porch-the part of
yOw house whIch IS entirely out of JOOlS,
you would utlhze all summer long If It were
not for the unendurable summer sun \Vlth
Vudor pOlch shades your porch 10 made
habItable Vudor shades are of the hIghest
g-rade of matel'lals and workman~hlp, are per-fectly
made III eve y detaIl and are so I1Icelv
stdll'ed thdt they harmom7e WIth the finest
homes Colors-brown, green and mottled
effects -Kaufmdn's, Trenton, N J
RErRIGERATORS
Leonard cleanable refrigerator" actu~lly
"ave Ice They co~t just about the same as
the ordll1ary sort", and only a httle more
than the re'llly poor one" The ddference m
the Ice bIlls pays for them There are no
places III the I eonal d that can not be eaSIly
cleaned-no mold, no rhrt accumulation
1\11 the mSlde pdrts e ,slly removable -Crew~-
Beg\!;, Co, Pueblo, Colo
Some I efng-el, tor facts that are worthy
of your thoughtful consIderatIOn Refng-erator
we~ther IS WIth us We are prepared
WIth a fine, Idl ge stock of really dependable
most 'i'ltbfactory food pI esel vers at the
lowe"t price, thdt hlghe<-t quahty WIll per-mIt
Among- them IS the "Eddy"-and we
are the sole Trenton ag-ents In these re
frlgerdtors and Ice chests the ust.lal dead
aIr space b rel11forced by an effective Insula
tlOn of 'Eddy" mventlOn The doors fit
perfectly, and dre eqUIpped wlth strlP~ of
feltll1g, makl11g a practically mr tight
refrigerator
The ArtIsan VI 111 be .;;1d9to receIVe "am-ple
of ~ood furmture ads and reproduce anv
that a-e worthy Addre'iS all matter to
'\1ARLI~ A BAKER
423 MUrlay BwIJl11g
IllOI11l11~ ot thc fil ~t etlY ot \[ay III c,ILh \ e,l1, until ~ 0 (lock all
th( IllotlllJlg 01 thc jtl~t dd) OJ Odohel lIi cdch \Cdl, the ,tdll
d<1)(1 tll11C ,hdll h( O!1l hOUI I1l ,lC\\ dille of the ~tandd1(l tltllc nOyl
III u~c nl1~I' to hL 'lLL0l1lphshcd by ddv,lllllng the hdl1d,
o t 1hc cloc k onL how Oil "IdY 1dnd may Illg thC111 hdCk om hum
on Octobel 1.
•'\0 l,ullOad \HJl1ld be compelled to change d ~ll1gle ~Lh(' 1-
uk tlOI dn) fddOl \ I\-" ham ~ of work People would ,0 (IUlCk
h M1Jll~t themsehe, to It th'lt It would be forgotten m a day
01 1\\ 0, fOl the wOlld hves by the clock ~ol11e of the I e,ulh
to be attained arc:
'1 Health anel ph\ 'lLal \\ elf,ll e al e pro111oteel tf the dL
111111 , ot hte he~m call) III the clay as nature 1l1tends,
'! \dchtlOnal tIme dunng ddyhght I~ gamed fat I est and
1II 1, \tlo 1 thL u'c ot pal ks ami playglouncls dunng the hot
months \\ auld be mCl cased and d11 fOll11s of I ell eatIon Lould
h( plOleltecl on larger hne~
.3 'I hl tal mel, \\ ho I ept e~ents dlmo,t one-half of the pop
1'1(1)( 11 ,111clII ho pi a( tlLalh h,e, b) tll1~ ~ummel schedule, would
he LJldhlul to 11am act hl~ bus1Ue~, wIth the (ItIe~ that mULh
C,ll her
'VOULD UTIL1ZE ~10REDAYLIGHT
Turn the Clock Allead and Start Work an Hour Earlier in the Summer Thue
J h( plOpO,ltIOl1 to qc,tl ,l1I houl [10111 thL 11J(~ht III t'llll
Illg the clOLb dhead 'CUll', hkeh to h( ddoptul III \mLlI( ,I ,I'
It 11.l~ been by nMn\ manllt,ILtl1lel, ,l11(l 1)\ ~0111e lllul1lujJ.\huL'
In Eng]'lllcl The pldn h,l' been dhLlls'ul h\ the nCII~]J Ip I'
\\ Ilh genel,d applO\ ,d but ,0 [,11 Llllunll,lll I' thL onll \ml! 1(,\ 1
nt) that has fOllnalh e,,"ples,e(1 an Intention to 'Idopt thL ,nc:
gestlOll '\ few 111dllufdctl1lel' hay e adopted thL e.ll hu 11111e
~Lhedulc not by t11ll1lllg thell clock, ahead but b\ '1111pll ,t,lI t
mg wOIk an hout ealhel~,lt '1'( 1l1steael ot ~ 0 dock tm 111
'tal1ce~anc1 thele ale man) \\ho thmk the IcfOlI11 ,honld k
,'ccol11phshed 111 that \\ d\, but It IS eVident that thl 1110\ ell1enl
\\ ollid he mULh mal e ~enel ,d ,md tl1<.'1efm e ldtbL \C," con tU"j<\11
hv tlll mng the cloLk '\he,1(l 1he ol1h II ell fOllndul Oh]lll1otl
Lo the pletl1 comes flom the astI onomel ~~thc ,dl11dn,l( llMkll ,-
Made by Grand Rapid, Fancy F urmlure Co , Grand RapIds. I\1lch
\\ ho have trouble Lnough 111 I edullng 'sun tune to ,t,l1Ida 1 d
ttme
The 1\atlOnal Ddyhght -'L~o' latlO11 ha, been orga1l1zed to
ll1dllCe bus111ess organl/atlOn~ and mumclpahtles to ddopt th
I eformed time schedule and has ~ent out mlSSlOnane~ to e "-
plam Its advantage~ One at them I C Rose a bU~1I1e'-" Il1dn
of C111C1l111ati wa, a guest of the -\~sOC1atlOn ot Commel LC .It
, " ,'1(z,n the othel dd\ \\hen he dehvered an adole', \\ hlLh
I, lOIn el tcd dll \\ ho heal d hUll 111 the (011 "e ot
, t Gl\ e them bettel opp II
F\ CI\ thIng el"l
I I 1 'I, ,t th
"
I I II !l , I ' Ii
"" 1'"11\1 11' \!.'l(' Ih( <!(),k f"f"d"l It
hom betl\eLl' \1(1 I [11 I) 1 oft'lt!1 1(11 lI1dlllt"otl
,]111011of all the \vOlkll~ 11 Ill' II1lltn II 111 1)( 11'1]'1 e e(l
'h<;OCl.ltl011 whIch Wtll ,oon hl\( I' 1\ 11 il' '.I "-
, 'I 'l' lh,tt flom A11d ,dlll 2 J elil< I, "I, 'h'
I hI) L emplo) ed 111 1111ll" £.tclll! Ie, dlld office', 'l11d c~
1'(( tdlh IhL t11111I011sof hOl1~e\\ Ive", \\ 111IMve mOl e tUlle ,it thell
UIIJI uHllmdl1d dunng dayhght
'") ] he people of England and Scotland lnJoy long ",nll
1 l \ l 1111~' b\ I ca~on of then nOl them altltude, and we should
h'l\ C \d1dt the} hay e ,IS It can be done Without cost OJ 1l1tcl-j(
ll'llLL \\ Ith eXI~tlng condItIOns
"Il It dftect~ 1I1tl1l1ately the prIv,tte and pCIsonal hfe ul
l \ Cl I mdn, \\ oman dnd c11l1d, and IS thel efore of mOl e p~1 '011.1\
l11ll I c,1 to all the people than tanff or the Panama canet!
UI dl1\ of the natIOnal questlOll" now penchng
[he change IS as 'Imple a~ turmng yOU! watch fOI Wdl (1
II 1 11 \ au go tlom here to ;\ eVv York A number of fac-
1 " th! oughol1t the (ountl y, 111fiuenced by the welfare of all
the \Yorkers have already been lunmng on what they call a
"'Il1Il111 "Lhedule Tho~e schedule" amoul1t eiAaetly to what.
the plan here proposed advocates Let me quote to you the
\\ OIds of Thomas :\[oore, the poet.
'lnL! thL be't ot ,l1l ",[\,
1" Iengthcn alll cld\'-
T, t" ,te tl I fc\\ hour, tI am thc 111ght
'II hy the ~avmg of lIght bIlls alone WIll IClompense ovu
and 0\ er agd1l1 for the httle tWist of the thumb t\\ Ice a ) edl
"hlch IS all the trouble the new scheme mvolves Do vou thlllk
II e claUD the plan ongmated m thiS country? It did not. It
ome, f1 am England where they have even more twthght than
\\ e h'1\ e TInt beLdu,e It I~ EnglIsh I, no reason why \mcII-Lan'-
~hot11d not adopt It, If It can he ,hO\\11 to be et gent11lJC
111pI 0\ ement
1n bllsll1es~ } Oll l,l11 ne\ er tell wlllLh lIttle cOllrte,,) I~
~011lg to pa~ the highest Idte of ll1terest
Those \\ ho "nevel know when they are beaten" don't get
l ld ( 11
'" '11<' I'H\l' ("( "(\,, "., II' ~ r ~ 11ouhle, and are not
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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SLIGH'S SELECT STYLES SELL AND SATISFY
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Many New
Features Added
for the Fall Season
Everything for
the Bedroom
[ MedIum and Fme QuahlY J
Office and Salesroom
corner Prescott and
Buchanan Streets,
Grand RapIds, Mlch
WHITE fOR CATALOGl'f
SLIGH
FURNITURE
CO.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
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Raihoad Traffic Rapidly Gaining.
The car efficIency commIttee of the Amencan RaIlway
A..,,,oclatlOn reports that Idle freIght cars are L apldly l;0111g
111tOservIce The report fOl the last tv,o weeks 111July show'"
a decrease of 16,873, or nearly 7 per cent 1t1 the numbel of
..,utplus car", the la~t report ~hoWIng a total of 2-+3,354 Idle
cars Demands for box and coal cars, especIally the latter,
reduced the aggregate surplus of the"e 12,292, and flat cal s
decreased 756. Local demands caused a shortage of 339 cars,
which is 211 less than two weeks ago.
Throughout the central states and extendIng up into the
northwest, gaIns in freight traffic were most pronounced, whIle
on the laIlroads In the southwest steady improvement was
manifested.
Traffic fell off somewhat In the :'-Jew England states and
through the gulf states, largely due to local conditions, but
was not pronounced enough to offset the larg e gaIns 111the
other sectIOns of the country. The surplus of Idle cars in the
far west and 111the Virg111ias and CalO1111aswas unchanged.
\Vlth the extension of the grain movement, there should
be a matenal reductIOn In the present large surplus of box cars
111the eastel n and central sectIOns The coal car situatIOn
contl11ues to Improve 111the ea..,tern, nllddle and northwestern
terntoneq, although thel e IS stIll a sub..,tantlal e"{ce"q of cal..,
Big Crop and High Prices.
The Northwestern MIller figures that the farmer~ of Mlll-nesota
and the Dakotas vvill receIve over $300,000,000 fOl then
crop of wheat, whIch is the largest In the lllstory of those
states, and is now ready fOl haIVestIng ThIS estImate, of
course, is based upon current prices The MIller places the
total wheat acreage at 15,297,000 in the three states, and the
) Jelel at 23S,OOO,OOOhu",hel..,. the ~re<ltL"t wheat ClOp e\ CI
lal:oed by theqe state.., The estImate.., ale based on leporb
hom more than 3,000 I e:oldent dgenb of the M111neapoh'i Ele-
\ ator Company, CO\enng every nook and cornel of the entn C
wheat belt
Based upon the pnce of \\ hedt today on the Mlllneapolt-,
dumber of commelce, the ClOp IS \\01th $313,750,000, com
pared WIth $140,750,000, the value of the 1908 crop, based 011
the pnces of a year dgo ThIS means tlldt the falmels WIll get
$165,000,000 mOl e thIS yeal fOl then v\heat than last yeal, OJ
an lllcrease at more than 114 per cent
Mr. Brown Dl.·ew the Macey ""Kitty".
E C Brown, who returned Monday morning from a bUYl1ll:;
tllP in the East for French & Bassett, the bIg houseftlf111shll1g
store, was pleasantly surpnsed thIS morn111g by the receIpt
of a check for $100, payable by the Macey company of Gland
Rapids, MICh, says the Duluth (Mllln) Herald of July 28
As a special courtesy to ItS buyel s the company provlded ,1
"kitty" into whIch all vIsItIng buyers dlOpped sIgned cal d"
The first card drawn out, whIch was l\Ir BIO\vn's, drew the
check The "kItty" contained several hundred cards
On Monday mor111ng, July 26, M H Meyers, mandgel of
the Henry SIegel Company, Boston, plomised the sellll1g
force that if the day's business exceeded the store's record, he
would buy a dll1ner for the employes, all of whom are member"
of the SIegel Fur111tme Club. The salesmen won the dll1nel
and Mr Meyers made good on hIS promIse Immedlately ..lftel
the 1e1Urns had been made
The Alexandna hotel 111 Los Angeles will be enlarged and
Improved at a cost of $1,000,000
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14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
SUITE No 1233
MADE BY
SLIGH FURNITURE CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH
WEEKLY ARTISAN
NEW YORK~S
NEW FURNITURE EXCHANGE
BUILDINGS
Covering the entire blocks from Lexington Avenue to Depew~Place. 46th to 48th Streets
Each building 200 x 275 feet in size and 12 stories high
1,300,000 Square Feet or Nearly 28 Acres Floor Space
THE LARGEST AREA WHOLLY DEVOTED TO WHOLESALE
SALESROOMS IN THE WORLD
WILL BE READY FOR OCCUPANCY DECEMBER 1st, 1910
Applications for space should be made to
CHAS. E. SPRATT, Secretary
NEW YORK FURNITURE EXCHANGE
15
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
F-UBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR IN ALL COUNTRIES OF" THE: POSTAL UNION
$1 50 PER YEAR TO OTHER COUNTRIES. SINGLe COPIES 5 CENTS
PuBLICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NORTH DIVISION ST GRAND RAPIDS, MICH
A S WHITE MANAGING EDITOR
Entered a') second class mattel ]ul) ), 1909 at the post office at Gralld RapId", \llcllI~an
unnet the act ot March) 18'79
Portldncl, 01 e£;()lJ dltlll~ UpOll the "uggestlOn ot thc \1 tl
'dlJ \\ III hold a ft1111ltt11c expoqtlon It \\ III not he ,lll 1'1
pO~1I1gaffall but of the' httle one tOI a cent ,,01t Onc thOll'
,tIld samples fr om the factor Ie ot the Uregon 1, urmtllrc \till
ufactt11llJ£; (ompal1\ thc Olegon (hall Compal1\, the Por tlalJd
l'ur11lture lJanufactunng lompdl1\ dnd the Radgear- \Llrle\
• compan\ \\ III be a~sembled and 111\ItatlOn, maIled to dealer~
throughout the Paufic '\orth\\ est to call and m~pect the same
The 1111tla1shem \\ III plObabh eXCIte great 1I1terest 11l the tran,-
ll1ot111t,11I1tl aell and It dealel' shall I espond 111 con,ldel able
llllmbel to thc llT\ItatlOn 111 pel 011 the coopcr dtlOn ot othu
1l1dnuLllt111CIs 111 l1lakJn~ futme CXpo,ltlOn, "mlc",t111 h ,h-
"UIccd
Thel c " ment III th,lt PlOpo~ltlOn to hun tin L10lk dhldd
an hom ,I, must h" deh111ttcd b\ ,lll) m,\I1 \\ ho \\ J11 IhC \\ Ith
the ~un ,1l1c1 note thc t1l11e-1 call} the be~t part ot the da\ -tl1.lt
Ie wa~ted be±Ole he hcals the tdCtOl) whIstles \nd hc \\hu
~et'i up at ~ 01 b 0 L10ck and sees the sun half \\ a\ up to the
l1lelldJan must 1eahzc that he ha~ lch t ,I lal g e pal t ot the dd\
,111dfeel that he ought to ha\c utJ117cd It, e\en though he kJ1()\\,
th,lt 111Snel>;hbOl" al e \\ Ith h1J11-1I1 thh 1atltudc- Jet m1l1utc,
heh1l1cl ~un time Thel e IS no good 1ea"on, howe\ u, \\ h) thc
llC\\ standard should be observed only bctwcen \pnl and '\0
\ ember WIth the clock an hour taster than current standdrd
time most people \\ ou1d use more "unhght dtll1l1£; the \\ IntCl
months than they do nO\\ Ot cOtll 'C ther c I' no red~on \\ 11\
the reform cannot be eftectecl \\ Ithout a (hange 111tlmc ~11\
person 01 any factory may start \\ Olk at (, 1I1steacl ot i 0 dock
If they WIsh to, but It would be chfficnlt to makc such a mo\ e-ment
~enCl al and to havc It only pal tl crllv adopted would cause
,lI1nOY111gconfnslOn
Gelman) 'iCe111'ito ha\c sohed the trelght rate prob1elTl
more satisfactonly than am othel conntl \, bv I1S1l1£;someth111~
hke the postage 'itamp S\ stem ( h el thcI c unl \ three elemenh
entel 111tOthe calculatIOn of a tl elg-ht I atc, ,md they dl e ,0
SImple that any shlppel can reachl) dscer ta1l1 hh I ate tal hIm
,elf WIthout hav1l1g to ask the a'i,I'itance 01 adVIce ot am ral1
load employe 1 herc c1ement'i al C weu.;ht bulk and ch, tance
\11 freight I ates al C figtll ed ft om thesc thrce alone and the
result is that It make~ no cbffel ence to the shlppel \\ hether he
IS on a through loute, 01 111a legIOn ot dense tJaffic, 01 111a bl~
L1ty 01 a httle one, or e\cn out 111 the open eountJy The rdll-road
can only charge h1111for the \\ eIght and bulk and dl"tdncc
of his ~hipment Before Germany adopted thIS 51stem that
country had al! the troubles and complamts about unfalr rates,
rh,L1I111111dt)()l1~lchdtl' etc dBt ha\e plc\allcd III \mencd
dnd othel countllc, but "1I1ce Ih adoptIon all ~uch chspute" at c
,aId to ha\ e dl,appeared The acloptlOn of ~uch a system 111
thl'i countl \ \\ ould be expectcd to nece'iSltate an advance 111the
1,ltc, nm\ enloyed by the most favored clt1es It dId thdt m
Gellll,l1l\ \\ hcn fil q put 111tOpractIcc, but now all rates are lower
them the\ \\ el C11lldel the old ~ystem and the ralh oacb, as a whole,
dl e maklllg £;1eatel pI ofit~
[11(" Intel statc Commerce CommIssIOn ha~ e!emed the peU-tlfJll
ot the Illdllgan Shlpper'i ~ssoclatlOn, askll1g that thc
\lJd1ll~an plan -the average e!el11t1l rage sytem-be adoptce!
tIll oughout the countrv c\CCOIdlllg to the ruhng the "~1Ich-
I~all plan must be abandoned, though It ha'i provcd Itself al-
1110,t completely ,atIsfactory to both shlpper'i and carners III
thb "tate much more so than an} system Jet deVIsed by the
l0111ml"lOn Had It been gIven a tnal 111 other states there
h httJe douht that It would have been endorsed and adopted
101 the entIre countf), but thc L1ter'itate commerce commlS-
~IOllel'" appdl enth l11t1uenced bv tr dffic manag-ers of some of
thl g-redt ral1road (OmblndtJon", hdve ruled otherwlsc and thc
aH'I,lge 'i\Stem IS shelvee\ fOl the pI escnt at lea~t
\\ hen an emplo\ er fall, labor claims are a fir~t hen on
hh a'i'"<et'i lonnelh thIS hen applied only to amounts due
tOl manual labor hut III recent years the laws have been amenderl
01 umstrued b\ the courts, to Il1clucle wages or ,alanes due
delk- tra\ ehng 'ialesmen and even the officers ot corporatlon'i
I hCIe I, one cla~'i of ,alesmen however, who are not plotected
b\ the LlbOl hen la\\" They al e the men who sell on a COlll-
1111'3'310b1a1"I" [n case ot as'ilgnment, bank! uptC} , attacbment
lJI .111\ kInd ot a tal1t1le, thc COmml'3'3lOnsale oman ha~ to take
hh l hance, \\ Ith the general CIcdltors That does not ,cel1l
j,lll The COmmhSlOn man \\olks JU'it a'i hard as the man 011
a ~alal) dnd should be cOlLldered <I prefel red credItor The
lahOl hen la\\ sneed rCVI'ilOn
1he .,entl111ents III le~ald to Juhus Belkey and George \\
(ren expl e,,,ed 1n \\ Ilha111 VI,"ldchcomb, one of thel'r most fOl-llJ1cldblc
lompetltor~, show blOad-m111dedness ancl an absence
ot the ;,elfish Jealousy on the part of the wnter, that usually
eXI"t bet\\ een bus1l1ess Ilvals They also indicate a measure
of mutuaht) and good \\ 111among the furmture manufacturers
ot CJI and RapIds that may have had much to do WIth the suc-
CC'i, ot an 1I1du~tJ} that has gIven the city a name and spread
ItS tame to all parts of the world.
The remarkable record made by the Berkey & Gay FUI11l-ture
company WIll be more fully apprecIated when It IS known
t11dt 111 the past half century nearly four hundred furnittll e
manufacturing projects have been launched in Grand Rapid'i
and only about forty have survIved Ten per cent, however,
h not a bad showmg for the mdustry, when c011'3lderec1in con-
!1tLtlon \\ Ith the fact that less than f011l per cent of general
],thmc~s \ entures prm e succes'iful and that less than eIght per
cent ot them h\ e 0\ el a year
\" early all "capta1l1s' of commerce trade and industry con-fidentl)
behe\C that 1Ql0 wJ11 be one of the most prosperous
\ eal s m the hIstory of the country Now is the time to launch
ne\\ projects and enlarge busmess of all kinds.
Kow the tariff chsputes are settled There',; no eXCU'ie
fOl further postponement of manufacturing, mercantile build~
iug or transportation projects.
The young man was astomshed, and asked the old man if he
1eally meant It
The old fellow, a tnfle Ira~clble, as old men are wont to be--
e~peClally If they have been succe~~ful themselve~-' etused t \
explam furtheI, and told the young fellow to thmk over what he
had saId and Its meamng would 111tune be clear to hIm
The young man had been only a few short weeks 111 the busi-ness,
but had managed to let every othel employe undel stand
that the Jumor partner was an especIal fnend of his father and
had placed hIm there MOl eover, he entertallled the other em-ployees
at lunch each day wIth anecdotes he had heard in 1m,
own home concernmg the fnendshlps, socIal entertainments, etc ,
of the Jll11IOrmember of the firm He cOlFhtuted himself a SOlt
of ready-reference-manual of the doings of the Junior partner
outsIde of the office
In a surpnsmgly short tnne hIS own father called the young
man aSIde and accmed 111mof tellmg tl11ng~ m the office that
dIdn't concern 111m, statmg that hIs fnend, the Jumol partnc!,
had complamed to hun about It In concluslOn the boy'~ fathel
advised-"be a know-nothing- my son, and," he added, more e:>.-
phCltly, "by that I mean keep lour mouth ~hut wIth yom fellow
MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS
\ gooc1 start, mdeed, on the load to success has the employe
who has learned the art of bemg a "know nothmg" Though
thIS statement sounds absurd, there IS truth m It One of the
fil "t pnnclple" of a successful empl-oye IS to keep hI mouth shut
concermng hIS employer's bus111ess \;yhen \\1th other men em-ployed
m a sunIlar capacIty m othel films the natural tendancy
of the clOwd IS to talk "shop"
\ cel tam amount of thIS IS, of course, all nght, andm many
m~tances mutually benefiCIal But the trouble is to know when
to draw the lIne Though an employe of a big bus mess concern,
01 of a small one for that matter, IS not entrusted WIth all, or pel-haps
even any, of the important seCl ets of the firm, there al e
many valuable pomts whIch he I" m a posltlOn to pIck up lIere and
there, "Imply because he I~ m theu employ It may be merely
~ome method that hIS firm has adopted1ll some branch of its bUSI-ne"
s that he tells hIS fnends about-wIth pude, perhaps, or WIth
lOndemnatlOn Those fnends may be perfectly good fnends and
~mcere, but If they are "alIve" the chances are they WIll straIght-way
mention the matter to theIr own employers It is foolhardy
mdeed to tell outSIders of the muer \\ 01 kmgs of one's firm and
e'<pect them, WIthout any mcentive, to keep the matter se-
Made by W. H. Gunlocke Chair Co., Wayland, N, Y.
Cl et, If yOU, yOll! "elf, al c unahle to kecp yoU! own mouth shut
about It
Young men al e prone to tell each other of the cutting down
of eApenses and to complall1 of the vanous "tIght-wad" retrench-ments
of their employer~ In many cases these small economies
plactIced by every firm that succeeds, are changed by gossip from
mole hills of practIcal bus mess acumen into mountains of doubt-ful
credIt, questIonable financial standlllg and implied faIlure
Sooner or later, the fact that an employe is telllllg bUSlll(,~'
secrets, however ul1portant they may be, to outSIders is bOlWd
to come back to the ears of the firm. However capahle tl,(' em-ploye
may be, no employer is going to stand for a thing of that
sort. In self-defense the emplOye must be discharged. A VOLlIlg
man, starting out in the bUSllle~s world, once went to an older
man, who had been pre-emlllently successful in the same line, and
asked hIm for adVIce
The old man paused a mmute and looked at the young boy
ImpreSSIvely
"I've got but one thmg to say to you, young man," he 'Said,
"and that is-be a 'know-nothing."
employes about the firm and its business, and know absolutely
nothing that is gomg on m the office, nor any of the office pohtIcs,
except the requirements of your own individual work"
As Seen by a Buckeye Dealer.
Charles Daehler, a furniture dealer of Portsmouth, OhIO,
second vice president of the Ohio Furmture Dealers' Associ-atIOn,
seems to have had his ideas greatly enlarged by hi~ VISIt
to the markets last month He attended the meeting of the
National AssociatIOn m ChIcago, and on hIS return home IS re-ported
to have said
"Business has been favorable and is growing bettel all
over the country and the dealers in general have pronounced
their satisfaction There were in Grand Rapids at the time
of the furmture market 1500 buyers, repre~enting furniture es-tablishments
from every nook and corner of the globe."
It' a treat to listen to a !pan when he asks you what you'll
have.
ARTHUR S WHITE. PreSident
ALVAH BROWN. Vice President
HARRY C WHITE. Sec y Treas
• WEEKLY ARTISAN 10
SUBSCRIPTION OFFER TO· FURNITURE
=========================E0ALERS====================.==:=::
Through our ability to dispose of a large number of these books we have been able
to obtain a price which enables us to furnish this fine work on Decorating Show Win-dows
and interiors and send the WEEKLY ARTISAN one year at the price of
the book alone.
The Regular Price of the Book is $3.50
The Subscription to the Weekly Artisan one year is 1.00
Total, $4.50
We will send the book, express paid and
the Weekly Artisan for one year for $3.50
Address all orders and inqumes to the
WEEKLY ARTISAN,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
PartIes desIring to examine the book before purchasing may do so by forwarding $3.50 for price of book. If after
examination it does not prove satisfactory, upon the return of the book, express charges paid, we will be pleased to
return all of the $3.50 The book consists of over 400 pages, bound in cloth and is profusely illustrated. The
two opening chapters of the book are reproduced on another page of this Issue.
PRIZE CONTEST
The Weekly Artisan wIll give away $32.50 in money each month for the best Window and Floor Displays of Furniture
Contest open to both Subscribers and Non-Subscribers.
Are you good at arranging window and floor displays? Then here's your opportunity to capture from $1.00 to $10.00
every month. Beginning with this number, the Artisan will conduct a series of prize contests for the best window and floor
displays of furniture. The rules are simple. Anyone conducting a furniture store may enter the contests, the only provi-sion
being that each contestant must enter a GOOD plate of his exhibit and a brief description of how it was accomplished,
especially where technical or mechanical contrivances are used in pI eparing the display. That is all.
The decisions will be rendered by a committee selected for the purpose, and all awards will take into full considera-tion
the natural difficulties which it was necessary to overcome in order to produce the results shown. For instance, the
s:nall or medium sized stores will not have the advantages of the larger ones, and the excellence of the small store work will
be judged accordingly. Thus all will have an equal opportunity and an equal chance in the distribution of prizes.
4th Prize
5th Prize
Next 5
$2.50
2.50
1.00 each
1st Prize
2nd Prize
3rd Prize
$10.00
7.50
5.00
Each month the winning displays will be reproduced in the Weekly Artisan, which will afford an excellent oppor-tunity
for readers to study each other's store methods.
We aim to make these contests of more than monetary interest; they are designed primarily to stimulate superior
effects in display and to offer a source of education along these lines.
Good window and floor displays require serious study. The advertising value of welI kept windows and floors cannot
be over estimated. If you present to the multitudes who daily pass your windows, an attractive setting, you will arrest their
attention and admiration, and while they may not draw every passerby into your store at once, they are nevertheless doing
a helpful work, and one which pays in the long run. When space permits, it is a good plan to reproduce room scenes, thus
suggesting to the prospectlve purchaser how she may obtain good effects in her home. This plan is carried out very suc-cessfully
in large cities.
Now, then, brothers, send in your photos, and go after the prize money. All who wish to enter the September con-test
must have their photos in by August 25th.
Address WEEKLY ARTISAN, Grand Rapids, Mich.
J F Bomer, general managel of the Standard Furnitm e
Company of Kashv111e, Tenn, reports a buoyant feelmg m the
furmture trade, e::.peClally m Alabama, where his company's
"ales hay e l11creased rapidly dunng the past three mon1fhs
\11 labol claims agam"t the Chippewa Falls (\VIS) Fur-
11lture ( ompan), bankrupt, have been paJd 111 full by the state
lOmn1l'3"IOnel ot bankruptcy A payment of 25 per cent on
othel claims I::' expected soon, and further dividends later
IJ dnk I erdll1dncl, mcOi porated, has bought the stock of
11l~h grade turmture that wa..., a part of the asset;, of the Lott-
Lngh"h } ur11lture Company of Boston, recently declared
bdnkrupt and \\ Jll mm e Jt to hiS store at 251 Causeway street
1 he toundry men employed by the Simmons Manufactunng
Company went on stnke recently and threatened to shut down
the entll e plant Imt v\ ent back to v\ ork when the company
"l1~~e..,tecl that the\ do "0, and alSreed to settle the dJspute b)
dl bltratlOn
1he Comstock- \ \ el) Compan), which has sold furlllture
In l'eolla 111 fOi more than forty years, Will go out of busI-l1e"..,
at the end at thl::' \ eal The company wl1l be dissolved
,111d the htllhhng Iemodeled VI III he occupied by the FIrst
\ dtlOnal Dank
J Ildndlev, \\ ho ha" been dOing busmess under the name
ot the L mon FtlI111ttll e Company at Lancaster, OhIO, £01
dbout a \ eal, ha::, made an assIgnment ~\s"et'3 and habdltle"
h,t\ e not heen repOi ted hut the asstgnee was requB ed to gl\ C
d bond of $35,000
The ReacbbOio Chan (ompany of Adams, ~Iass, ~ \\01k-ln~
on an Older at 2,228 seats for the new Boston opera hou"e
dt Boqon, I 730 al e to he spnng upholstered "edt'3, 294 to he
t1dt uphohtered and the Iemamm£; 20-1-"lat "eats, all to be de-hI
el ecl he to! e \ u£;u..,t 1::;
\d\ Ice.., flOm Gleen BdY, \\ I::', are to the effect that the
1'lldlH lal "ft,lIr" of the TheodOl e Keml1lt7 Furl1lttlle (ompam
II III "oon be acl]tl"ted and the Ltct01Y w1111e"ume operatIOn"
\ 11ldJont) ut the (J e<lltol" hd I e ,l~ I eed to accept 50 cenh
"n the dollctt a" ...,ettkment at thell claims
\. lem1l1del of the liadll1g "tamp cra7e comes from De'3-
,fumes, J a \\ here a cal d I eadmg "'vVe Give TI admg Stamp""
\\ a" tacked to the slg"n on the dOO1 of the coroner''3 office It
I..., supposed to hd\ e been placed there by somebody who
\\ hhed to llchctlle the tradl11g stamp busme%
C T Ellcksen at La\\! ence, Kan, on returning from the
(TIdnd Rapid::, and Clllc<igo furmtme markets, reported that
the bu) l11g \\ dS heal ler than It had been for years, especIally
h\ dealel::' 111ts.e middle west, nearly all of whom left larger
01del" than m an) season smce the summer of 1907
rhe Venty-Caswell Table Company of Portland, MICh,
has been placed 111the hands of \'\ \\ Ternft as receIver. The
company has been m financial straIts for some tIme, and 111 rnne gave ~lr Ternff a chattel mortgage on some stock and
machll1ery The liabIlitIes are about $20,000, asset'3, esti-mated
at $30,000.
That bus111ess IS good with the furniture factories of Rock-ford,
Ill, is indicated by additions to the plants The Rock-fOi
d FurnIture Company and the Co-operatIve Company have
I ecenth completed new hUlldll1g'3, and now the Excel Manu-factUring
Company IS bmldll1g an addItion, 40x60 feet, one
story and basement
\; egotIatlOns are pencl111g whIch may result in the removal
of the Mal vel Manufactunng Company from Ionia, Mich, to
some other town 111the state, probably Augusta, on the Mlch-
I~an Central raIlroad between Battle Creek and Kalamazoo
-\" \\ as stated last week the Man el Compan) suffered a heavv
loss b) fire on July 25
Reports pi esented at the annual meeting of the Waterloo
(Ia) Casket Company on July 28, showed a steady growth
111 the bus111ess during the past year Officers for the ensuing
yea1 were elected as follows President, Theodore Meyers;
\ Ice preSIdent, Ernest Kehe; secretary, Fred L. Eickelberg;
treasurer, Charles Hollnagel; manager, Morris Wilson.
A company has been orgal1lzed at Charleston, S. C , with a
capItal stock of $200,000 to manufacture imitation mahogany,
maple, oak and other woods used in the making of furniture
and office and cabinet fi'Ctures The company will use a new
process of staining the log, so that when sawed or cut the
gram of the desired wood will be shown through the sections.
~IISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
W F MIIlel succeed::. the )Jew L111e Furmture Company,
dealel s, at Tarban, .0few :vI:exlco
J D Sturg eon has pm chased the stock ot tml11ture carned
by the Notion Store of \orfolk, '\ eb
Chas H Randall, the pIOn eel tur11ltl11e dealer at ~Lhon
Clt), Ja, died of tuberculosl" on Jul) 29
The DIXie Cotton Felt ~lattres" Compam ot ChIcago 11<\"
ll1Clea"ed the capItal "tock f10m :';2500 to S;O 000
The ftll11lture and undertak111g film of \cldm" &. DIl~dl d
Albion, Ind , has heen dts"o!v ed. ~It \dam'3 retllll1g
Chas Vander Ploeg has purchased the fUrJ1ltule andundel
tak111g bus111ess of R C J ongevv aard, at SlOU~ (It\ J0\\ ,1
The Peck, Dahlberg & Shaw Company, tur1l1ttll e manutdct-m
el '3 of Mll1neapolIs, has been ll1corporated Capital 'itock,
$50,000
'vVlchman &. KlOnsel, fm11lture deale", ot \ppleton \\ '"
,t! e bulldll1g an additIOn to then store, 2-h-1-0 teet t\\ 0 "tOIle"
and ba'3ement
The Orchal d & \VIlhelm Com pam ot Omaha :\ eb, \\ III
establIsh a branch 111 Desl\loll1es, ] a, '3UCceedl11g the (ollin"
& HeaslIp Company
F P Vorhls, formed\ of the fil m of SIl\ el & \ 01111",undu-takers
of Eaton, OhIO, ha" pUlcha"ed an 111tele..,t 111 ,1 tUl111tUIC
..,tore at Jackson, 111the '3,lme state
The CheshIre Chall Comp<im at Keene '\ 11 II l11eh be~dn
to make office and vel amlct chairs eady 111 the '3pll11g, h,h ,t!
I e,tdy found It neces"ar) to enlan.;-e the plant
The Long Deach (Cal) Immtme Compam h 1epm ted ,1"
makl11!S a great '3ULce..,'i111..,elling ml'3"IOn tur11ltulc On the e,hl
pay ment plan, "hlpPl11g good'3 to man\ I11tenOl to\\ lh
Knau'3 1310'3 & Anl/l11e of SYI acu'ie,:\ Y, are IepOi ted tll
ha\ e bOlH;-ht the old Seymom chall plant 111 'L 10\ :\ Y II It h
a \ lew of convertIng It I11tO a mlS::'lOn fUIllltUI e Lletol \
\Vlllar<l J:<.-Fletchel, 'iupellntendent of the Fall1e lUlllltUH
( ol11pany, 1'3 spencl!n2; 111'3\ aeatlOn b) \ 1"llJ1H~ ht" old h'lmt
nedl S1 Tohn", Ne\\ I1lun"wlck, fOl the 1ll"t tll11e 111 tllcllL
\ eals
. The well known n"D at Smith, \clam.., tIC GIbbs fm111ttlll
dealel", of noston, l\la'i'i, ha,e heen InL01pnlated d" the
Smith, Adams & Glbb'3 Compan) Capital "tack <:;50,000, all
paid 111
\Vithout SOltCltl11g the hon01, He111y Kohlel ftu111tm c
dealer, has been named <i'ione of the candIdate" tOl the Repnb
hean nom111atlon fOl alcle1man 111 the Sixteenth \\ ,ll cl ot TIuh d-
10, N Y
The Fostel TI10'3 :vI:anut,tctmlng Com pam ot c,t LOIn"
Mo, makers of bed '3pll11g'i, 1'3bmldl11g a neVI bllck and qone
factory, 100 X 125 feet, tll1 ee stolles dnd hasement, at an e,,-
timated cost of $40,000
AI thur c.;chumachel ot the Leiehel rurnlttll e Compam
Green Bay, Wis, must ha\ e been one of the late al rI\ al" 111
the Chicago and Grand RapIds markeb He did not leal c
home for the trip untIl July 28
The Herzog Art Fnrnitm e Company of Sag 111a IV, "\llch
WIll hereafter show their products in the GI and Rapids market
They have taken a lease of the entIre top flool of the Leonal cl
huilding for a term of five years
The Snyder Chair Com pan) of GI and RapJds, Mlch, has
leeently changed ItS name to the Sll11plex Furnitme Company,
A. J Snyder having retired The Snllplex Furl11ture Company
i'i now located at 984 Hall street
Manager Oscar Whybark of the Pittsburg (~10) FU1111-
ture Company is taking a vacatIOn on account of hl'3 health,
leavl11g the store in charge of Raj mond ~larsh of J opll11, "\10
Mr Whybark is not dangerously III
James T. Hargrove, furniture manufacturel and lumbel-man
of Gainesville, Ga, died suddenly on July 29 He had
been superintending some repairs in a saw mill, drank a cup of
water, and expired a few minutes later
The Sternshein furniture store, Waterloo Iowa IS beina
enlarged to accommodate a rapidly increasing tr~de Th~
proprietor, S Sternshein, placed heavy orders in the Grand
Rapids and Chicago markets during the past month
The Stork Folding Crib Company, wltose factory at Vel-mi!
li~n, S Dak., was destroyed by fire recently, has leased a
buIldmg formerly used as a starch factory in a suburb of
Sioux CIty, la, and will abandon the Vermillion plant
'WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
TI KI
THE EMBLEM OF SUPERIORITY
Two Winners
• Varnish In
This is the verdict of the
manufacturer who knows.
Paradox Rubbing
Is the best high-grade, quick-rubbing varnish ever pro-duced.
Can be fe-coated every day and last coat
rubbed safely in three days.
Ti-ki Lac
Is our high-grade first or second coat varmsh. Dne~
hard to sandpaper over night. Last coat can be ruble:!
in twenty-four hours.
The man who knows
is the man who wins.
VARNISH DEPARTMENT
Acme White Lead and
Color Works
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
~IISSION
LIBRARY SUITES
aloe 01'1(' of the attractions ('ontaiued in the new
line of the
II,•
I
I•
I•
,I,,
I
-- - - - ------------------------------.
Hotels That Will Need Furniture.
The Stratton e~tate IS to llwest $200,000 m improving the
Brov,n Palace hotel. Denver, Cola
::\llllel & Pay ne have purchased the Lmdell hotel m Lm-coIn
"\ ebr , and will make extensive improvements The house
now has lGD rooms
The Turkish Bath Hotel company has hun orgamzed to
buIld a hotel \\ Ith 100 rooms m Spokane, Wash N P NIchols
h p! e'ldent of the company
Re\ Ised plans fOl the new DavenpOl t Hotel at Spokdne,
\\ 'hh \\ III bl11lg the co~t up to $2,~100,000 ntstead of $1,700,000
1 he 'trndm e \\ III he b\ elve stories high and each of the 300
~lIest rooms "\\III ha"\e a pnvate hath Work on the foundatIOns
\\ III be started next week
The rarest CIb Hotel company of Savannah, Ga, IS to
build a t\\ eh e story fire-proof hotel on the site of the old
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Evolution of the Martha Washington Rug.
Among the coolest summer floor covermgs are the wash
able home made rag-carpet rugs that make their way throm;h
the world under an assumed name, borrowed from the mothel
of our country, says the vVashington Star. Martha Wash1l1~
ton may have made rugs or may not have (she probably clId
tOll and spm, bemg a dame of the olden tune), but whether she
did or not, they bear her name Annually they take on ne\\
colors and patterns 111 a shamele~~lv model n fashIOn and some
of them are now so gay as to be be1ter fitted for the n 'bClI
than the serious and full-grown d01111clle
The gray-mixed rugs are borde! ed \\ Ith a whole "\Illd~ C
scene, showing an array of houses, fence" and \\ eep1l1g WI1!O\\
trees Thirty-SIx inches of scampellng rabbIts 111 dull color,
are woven across the ends of red rug~, and a pageant of squa\\ k
Made by Grand RapIds Fancy F urmlure Co
ing white geese, the bordel of a dehcate blue one, \Vould d11M7e
any bdby ~eated suddenly 111 the center of thb bal ny ard scene
A quaint blue pa1l1ted pump by the waySide, \\ Ith a httle land-scape,
has made Its appearance on one of the ne\\ cst
The rag-carpet rug IS qUIte apparently 111a state at e"\0-
lutlOn It also has been noted that differences 111the \\ ea"\e
are now beginmng to crop out, but the mventn e powers of \\ o-man
are not on the wane, and we probably shall hdve stIll others
to amuse us and, 111cidentally, the chIldren 111 the nursery
Special Hotel Orders.
The John D Raab Chair company, Grand Rapids booked
orders m July far ahead of any former season They have con-tracts
for furmshing chairs for a new hotel at San ~ntol11o
Texas, the new Lee Huck111~ hotel at Oklahoma City, the Hotel
Plaza, Chicago, and for a new sanitarium at Waukesha, \VI
\lade by Warren Table WOIks, Warren Pa
<""UC\Ul liuc1 ~ 111 thdt city 1, II DurlLn I~ IJle~ldent of
the company
Dr De~Il"\ el 11d~ purchased the Harper House 111 Roek
I,land, ] 11 and \\ III spend $50 000 111 rem a Id1l1g and refur-l11shl!
1g the bmld1l1g
\V L Brown, les"ee and managel of the Colu'11blan hotel
of De~ Ilomes, 1a, IS to bUlld a ten story hotel on the slte in
the real of the Columbian
\\ dlttl eLn ton IS to convel t the l'el el a bmldmg, PassaiC,
'\ J Into d 1110cleln hotel and call it the Hotel Capitol
J meph PKkelll1g IS makll1g arrangements to build a mocl-clem
hotel on \llegheny street 111Jersey Shore, Pa
An Important Insurance Ruling.
Supenntendent of 1n~urance HotchkJ~~ of 'Jew Ycnk has
ruled tl1dt an 111~11rancepohn IS not IS'i11erl untIl the books
of the compan), or of one of Its dgents, show that the prem-
Ium has I-een paid The rullng "as made 111 the case of the
"ell York Life 1nsl11anre company "hich IS Inmted by law to
$15 oon 000 111 nell 111smance per year and has had chfficulty 111
detenmlllng IIhen that lnmt has been reached, but insurance
men generally declare that It Will apply to fire as wel1 as hfe
pohCles and that unless the ruhng shal1 be annulled by the
courts, no polle\ wJ!1 be in force until the premium has been
paid m cash or m someth111g that the company accepts as an
eqUIvalent Heretofore the slgnll1g and dehvery of a pohcy
has been considered all that was necessdry to put it in farce
WEEKLY ARTISAN
,.. . _--------_._.--_. _. _ -._._-_.- --_. --..---_._._.------------_._.--.,
23
OUR LINE OF CHINA CLOSETS, BUFFETS AND BOOKCASES
IS
MORE COMPLETE
I
ROCKFORD STAZ:!£~~F8UsRNITURE CO. I
• .. a_a all .. _.... ... • II ..... all _ ......... __ "Il .... --- .... ~r
AND
THAN EVER BEFORE. SAMPLES
SHOWN IN CHICAGO ONLY, 1319
MICHIGAN AVENUE, MANUFACT.
URERS' EXHIBITION BUILDING,
IN CHARGE OF F. P. FISHER, N.
P. NELSON, AND FRED LUGER.
THE
Wellin~ton notel
Cor. Wabash Ave &
Jackson Boulevard
CHICAGO
Remodeled at a cost of
$150,000
Hot and cold running
water and long dis-tance
'phones In an
rooms.
ZOO room, 100 With
bath Smgle or en sUIte.
Rate, $1 00 and upward,
One of the most umque
dmmg lOoms In the country
Our famou, ludlan Cafe
NOTED FOR SERVICE AND CUIS NE
McClintock and Bayfield
PROPS.
j..- •••••••••• • •••• - '" _ . ....._.. . ... ~
These saws are
made from No. 1
Steel and we war-rant
every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
WrIte us tor
Price Ll.ot
aud dlscount
31-33 S. Front St., ORAND RAPIDS, MICH.
a._a •. .. 'lit. .... • _ ....
IIIt
II
•
BOYNTON & CO
Manufacturers of
Embossed and
Turned Mould-
]ngs~ Emboss.
ed and Spindle
Carvings, and
Automatic
Turnings.
We also manu
facture a large lme
01 Embossed
Ornaments for
Couch Work.
4'9-42' W. Fifteenth St., CHICAGO, ILL.
f .... ~~B; ~N·DETROIT
STOP AT Hotel Tuller
New and Ablolutely Fireproof
Cor. Adams Ave. and Park St.
In the Center 01 the Thestre, Shop-
PlOK, and Busmess Dlstnct.
A la Carte Cafe
Newest and Fmest Gnll
Room 10 the City
Club Breakfast - - - 40c up
Luncbeon - - - - 50c
Table d'hote Dmners - 75c
MUSlcfrom 6P M to IZ P M
I.....
Every room has a private bath.
EUROPEAN PLAN
Rates' $1 50 per day and up.
L W. TULLER, Prop
M. A. SHAW, Mgr I . _-.
. --.~
I . II
Ii
...
to conn tel telt the "'Ide of a dl awe1, the top of a tdble, the hot-tom
of d d1d1l , 01 pel hdp" ~ome other pdl t of the IHece
1 he l hal aLiel abIlity dnd method" of the founder'i and
fOl mam yed1S controllers of the Berkey & Gay Company
11CIe \\ ell desCllhed bl \\ Ilham \Vlddlcomb, One of thell
dble",t, mo",t !Jromment ~nd most succes..,ful competitors, m dn
Mtlde on G1and Rdplds F111l1lture," 1ecently publ1~hed, III
\\ 11lch he \\ rate
It IS one of m 1 theolle'i thd tit I" not 'iO mnch 10catIOtl
UI natural acll antage that "ecure" exceptional bU"lness suc-
LL"'''' but I athel, tl~e per'iOnd1lty of the men who happell to
u11~lnate and del elop It and to thiS very feature do I ascnbe
the lmportdnce \\ hlch Grand RapIds has achIeved III furl11tm e
l11anutactunng Fortunately for Grand Rapids, ItS plOneel
tUllllture lllan ufactUl ers 1\ ere the happy po'i'ies'ior'i of those
Important charactenstlc" reqmred for "uccess III thel1' own
1l1dustr), and among them no one man clisplayed such pi e-e111111ence111energ)
, llldu~try, ongllla1lty and busllless pI ud-cnce-
all the factors that a1e demanded for our bus1l1ess-a"
1u1lus Hel kel ::\11 Berkey had all of these to a marked degl ee,
<ll1d J doubt IV hether he knew the meamng of th~ word 'd1S-couragement'
George \\ Gay \\a::> eqnally capable \,yhlle Mr Gay
mal hal e had at first but ll1ddttrent techmcal knowledge 1n
manufactunng, he d1d possess the talents which make men
promll1ent among the1r fellows He had shown energy ann
ealnest zeal III busll1ess affalr'i up to the tlme he entered the
Berkey & Gay Company, and the years ImmedIately followlllg
::\ill Gay''i entry were epoch mak1l1g for the 1I1dustry which
was to rendel Gl and RapIds so famous Wlth1l1 a short tlme,
tram 1866 to 1873, Bel key BlOthers & Gay developed 1I1to an
ll1"tltutlOn of such mdgl1ltude as to warrant capltal1zatlOn
,lt a \ ery large fig Ule
\\ hen r glance back 0\ er those days-day" that covel
the earl) 'it! uggle" of OUI ll1du~try-1 can not refra1l1 fro111
am<17ement that <"lll h \\ ork could be accompl1shed so rapidly
I "'ee them OClUPl 111Q, the ol1gl11al factory on the canal, then
IllllljJ\ mg the UppCI floor" of the blllld1l1gs now used bv
(Jdrelnel ~ ]:d \.ter tlom the'oe to "e\ eral bmldl11gs on Canal
",tl eet OJlpChlte ] (Ion"'on. 1ecell Ing ill "t pI em111m at the ~tate
r,lll npel11n£; <l bl d11lh III '\ e\\ York CIty, takmg a high POSI-tlO11In
the Ed"tell1 bdde, dnd dll thl" pnol to 1875
~I I Berke) posses"ed the 111St111Ct"of the manufacturer
to d maIl,ed degree, and Mr Gay gave el1dence of equally
keen 1I1sIght Into the mel cdntIle portIOn of the bU'i111eSS,whtle
I apldh aCCjulll11g sbll and exceptlOnal Judgment 111the artistic
cle"l~n" for \\ hlch the) \\ el e wlelely known They also had
that qualIty of humdn natUle whIch enabled them to employ
men successfully, 'iecUlll1g theIr good Vvlll, theIr earnest co-uperatlOn
111 fact the) \\ ere mdefatlgable 111 theIr attentlOn
to all the eletdIl" 01 the hU'ilne'i"', noth1l1£, too large to grasp,
nOlh111g '00 "mdll hut Jt 1ecel\ eel dttentlon
for tho')e eaIll <.,tage" both ::\Ir f\erkey dnel ]\Ir Gay de
\ eloped eXl eptlondl on£,111alit\ <lnd entel pnse They were the
hI ",t to mtroduce e"pen"l \ e lmpl 0\ ements 111 machll1ery, the
111 ",t to dl<.,pla) on£,111dht) 111de~lgn, the fir'it to employ ~klllecl
de"l~ner' anel the fil ",t to bllng "kIlled mechal11c'i from othel
"'ec11011"ot om countl \ <lllrl e\ en from foreIgn ldnd" no dJfh-ll1ln
el el dete11 ed them "hen the} had once deCided thel1
hU"1I1es') I ellUll eel 11l1prm eme11t and ..,kIll beyond Vv l11ch 011
01\ n \\ orkmen could furl11sh 1he1r dbllity and progres'i we1 t
<\ "tl111ulu" to el er) othel manufactunng concern In Glan(1
!\dPlel'o thell competItIOn of that "tralghtforwdrel bUSIPC',
dldl acter el el \ fall mlncled man 1" vvIllmg to meet ] gl\ t
t "'pcCldl ue(ht to th<lt fil m f()l 0111 de' elopment m tho"e earl \
lIen" '
'10cld) the "'tand111g 01 the UeJ1<ey & Gay Company IS bettt'l
1111 an Clally , better 111 the ,olume of busmes'i, better m tl e
Lhdl dctel of Its ploducts, dnd better In It'i general Chd1 al tel
,111dleput<ltlon thdn at an, other time In the fifty yedrs t111.1
hdl L eJajJ",ecl "'lnu' It 1\ a'i 10unded And every mdicatlOn
pOlnh to ,l lU11tl111l,ll1le of Its 'iUplemaCy, as d leadcl III the
fUlllltme 111duslt) 101 dnother half century or more
BERKEY & GAY'S GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY
Outline History of an Institution That Has Stood AInong Leaders of the Furniture
World for Half a Century.
'1 he C1111ellt 1 eal IOl1IH!'" put ,111 e\ en half centull III thc
hlstor) of the 13~1key ~ Gd \ hll mtl11 e Comp<111), one ot t hc
largc"t <111clmo"t Imp01 tant mdnufactullng 111",tltutlon" ot
C-:;rancl Rapld<., The company has had a lemarkllble Cdleel
\1 \\ dy" a leadel In It<.,ll11c, It 1~ saId to be the onll 1111l11t1c11
111"'tltutlOn In /\menCd that ha::. eXl"ted tor fifty ) cal ') "ltholl1
dny 111atenal change 111 0\\ nershlp, WIthout dnl chdnge I1l
pohcy, and Without fatllllg to meet pay lOlls and othel 111debt
edne~::. promptly
The bU"ll1es~ now conducted by the Belke' &.. Gd\ Com-
Jldny was estabhshed bv ] Uhlh Bel kn ldte 111 1859 Lall1
111the follow111g year ]\11 Belkey took In Alphon"o Hdl11111d'"
d pal tner, but the latter" a <.,too slo\\ to match the energetic
chdracter of the 10lmer. and the partnershIp dId not la'it mOl e
than a few months The fUll11ture facton \\ as then located
on the top flOO1 of a frame huddl11g erec"ted by \VJ11Jam A
Bel key, who used the lower floor a~ a plamng lmll, and al"'o
made sash, doors and bhnds The bmldl11g, long Sl11ce gone
..,tooel on a part of the sIte now occupIed by the Berke) &.. Gd\
fdctory The fir'it plOduct of ]uhu::, Berkey''i factor) \\ a" a
tdble, whIch was so well made that It gal11ed an em lable
1eputatlOn and was WIdely known a'i the "Berkel table"
After \11 Hamm'", retllcment '.[1 Berke- l0l1t1l1nt'(1 thc
lJl1::.l11essalone f01 a yeal or more, and then fOlmed <U1othel
partnershIp WIth Eha'i Matter, IV ho later becdme <tmembel ot
the firm of Nelson, Matter & Co and dId much to build up
the busl1less now owned by the '{ elson-::\Iattel Company
another of the concern'i that hay e made Grand Rapids famou'i
Mr Matter retired from the firm of Bel kev &.. ;yll:atter 111 1864
and was succeeded by \V Ilham A Berkey, who put In the
hmldl1lg and the mach111er) med 111hiS plal1lng mill and the
name of the firm Vv as changed to Berkey Bro'" &.. Co t \\ 0
) ear'i later, 111 1866. George V\T Gay entered the firm <U1elthe
name was changed to Berkey Bro'i &.. Gay
Early 111 1870, Wilham A Berkey ha'111g been mdde a",-
"Ignee for Atkins, Soule & Co. a firm that made chambel tm-
11lture, found that the affalr'i of the bankrupt concern reqUIred
all his attentlOn and somethl11g mOl e He therefore \\ Ith(1I e\\
from the firm of Del ke' BIOs & Ga) thoul;h the name 1\ a", not
changed untd 1873, \\ hen the Berkey & Gal Fl1l11ltnlc lOI11
pany was I11corporated '-,l11le the 111COpIor dtHlll thel t hel"
been no change 111 name, dnd no matellal chdn~e In the pel-
'oonnel of the management, eAcept Vv hen made neCe'i"'dl \ b,
death Juhus Berkey was ples1dent, Geor~e \V (.:rdYtrea"Ulel
dnd A J. Holt secretary John"" Covode bought an I11tele",t
m the compdny in 1882 He became ')ecretal) 111 J nnc of thdt
year, and has filled the pOSItIon fOJ 27 years He took thc
posItion from \\ II Beal, II ho had succeeded .:'IIr Holt In
1879
Geo \V Gay ched abont ten years ago, and 11<1')'iucceedecl
b) Geon;e G \\I11b\orth a'i tlea<.,urer. "ho ",till hold'i the
])()"ltlOn Juhu'i Berkel dIed about a ) eal a~o and IS "uc
ceeded a'i preSident by \Vl1hdm H Ga), 'ion ot the fOlmel
tl ea~m er There IS d hoal d of d1reLt01 s of cour"e, but thel
al e rarely called upon to act, the affalr'i of the comp<ll1 \ bel11g
controlled and harmomou'ilv mandged hl '.Ie'iSl" Gay, COl ode
dnd \Vhlh\ orth, wlthont any £;eneral managel
The pohcy of the Berke) & Gal Compam ha" alII d' '" helll
to make only hIgh cla'is goods Thot1l.~h otten tempted to do
so, thIS pohcy ha-; nel el been ahandoned Thel e have been
times when the company ml~ht h<t, e nude mOl e mone\ <U1c!
worked thlough pelloel" 01 hal c1 t1111e" h\ pntt111~ ont l heap
products, but the succe% would l1d' e been onh tempol dl \
and would hal e tended to I11Jure the company''i leputatlOn
which hds become one of ItS mo",t \ aln<lble dS'ich
For se\ eral years e, ery pIece of fur111tme ",ent ont tJOlJ1
the factory has carlled the company'" 'ihop mdd>c dnd an db",o
lute gual antee, COlenng matellal, con~tructJOl1 and fil11"h The
"hop mark IS not a card or pIece of papel tacked or pa')ted on
nor l'i It made l\;lth a stencil or bland1l1g 11on, but IS of \\ood
1l1lald 111 <.,ueh a \\ a, that It cannot he 1emo\ ed, e\ en h,
(h e,,"111~ down, 'v Ithout le<n I11g eVidence of the <lHempt ] u
conceal the Iemoval of the shop mark It would be nece,,'ial y
WEEKLY ARTISAN 25
------~~~---------~-----~-----_.__---._-.---------_. ----~~---------- ""••• a.a • _ •••
PLATE
L-ARGiEST .JOBBERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
GLASS COMPANY
GLASS IN THE WORLD
Mirrors, Bent Glass, leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass
WIRE 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.
(j[ For anythmg m BUilders' Glass, or anythmg m Pamts, Varmshes, Brushes or Pamters' Sundnes, address any of our branch
warehouses, a list of which IS gIVen below'
NEW YO:BK-Hudson and Vandam Sts.
BOSTON-41-49 Sudbury st., 1-9 Bowker St.
CHICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave.
CINCINNATI-Broadway and Court sts.
ST. LOUIS-Cor. Tenth and Spruce Sts.
MINNEAPOLI8-500-5l6 S. Third st.
DET:BOIT-53-59 Larned st, E.
G:BAlII'D:BAPIDS,MICH-39-41 N. Division st.
PITTSBU:BGH-lOl-103 Wood St.
MILWAUKEE,WIS.-492-494 Market st.
:BOCHESTE:B,N.Y.-WllderBldg., Main &; Exchange sts.
BALTIMO:BE-310-l2-14 W. Pratt st.
CLEVELAND-1430-1434 West Third st.
OMAHA-ll01-1107 Howard St.
ST. PAUL-459-461 Jackson st.
ATLANTA, GA.-30-32-34 S. pryor St.
SAVANNAH,GA.-745-749 Wheaton St.
KANSAS CITY-Fifth and Wyandotte sts.
BI:BMINGHAM,ALA.-2nd Ave. and 29th st.
BUFFALO,N. Y.-372-74-76-78 Pearl St.
BBOOKLYN-635-637 Fulton St.
PHILADELPHIA-Pitcairn Bldg., Arch and 11th
DAVENPO:BT-410-416Scott St.
sts.
---- ... ... -- •• • • • r •••• _ • • ----------.-- _ ••••••• - ••••••••• -.... • ••
Furniture Losses hy Fire.
C E \"rells of Doon, Iowa, lost about $4,000 by fire III h1S
furlllture .store on July 26 He carned $2,000 lllsurance, cov-enng
the bmlcltng and contents
J L R1ppeton, furmture dealer of vVaterford, Texas, "uf-fered
a lo:-,s of about $3,500 by fire on July 24 Half lllsmed
Sm1th & Moore, furmture manufacturers of Ntles, M1ch,
wffe1 ed a lo:-,s of about $4,000 by fire III the1r factOl y recently
The loss 1S pal hall) cOvered by lllsurance
S A Fltppen, undertaker of Gordonsvtlle, Tenn , lost $1,-
:;00 by fire on J ul) 29 Insurance, $1,000
Inlllg & Casson, furmture dealer" of Camblldge, Mass,
suffered a small los'> by fire on July 31.
New Furniture Factories.
Mr Bnlmeyer of Ch1cago, who establt"hed the Phtlltps
Manufactunng Company and the Altar Company at Dubuque,
la, both hav111g been succes:-,ful, p10poses to establtsh a fac-tory
to make church furmture 1n or near Omaha, Neb
The Cleveland (OhlO) Swmg Cha1r Company has been
111corporated to manufacture a patented sW111gcha1r Cap1tal
stock, $20,000
The Peoples Funeral Company, cap1taltzed at $25,000, has
been 111corporated to manufacture coffins, caskets and other
undertakers' suppltes 111Newark, N J George We1ssel, Otto
Harmch and Joseph F Retlly are the 111corpordtors, and the
office w1ll be at 374 Broad street, Newa1 k
c\ new furmtm e factory w1ll probably be located III Oro-
\ tlle, Cal
Orpha II Stucki, Robel t J Kemp and Janet D Puls1fer
have 111corporated the Damel K Stucki Company to manu-facture
and sell furmtme, hardware and tools 111Buffalo, N Y
Cap1tal stock, $2,000
Residences to he Furnished.
Southern Cahformans cont111ue the mak111g of hberal ex-pend1tures
for fine re"ldences Among those engaged 111or
about to commence the erectlOn of home bU1ld111gsare the fol-
10w111g.
At San Bernard1110, Mrs J G E1ckelman; at Los Angeles,
F L Bradshaw, C A Le1ghton, Henr) \\'tldey, Mrs E A
Covell, I A Burton, Ahce S McKevitt, Clara W Gnes, J
Clyde Powers, at Pasadena, J Hoyt Sm1th, Vv M Shaw, at
Redlands, Fredenck Dunham, at R1vers1de, H Neills Fraser,
at Pomona, D D Schlatter All w1ll need furlllture
Lake Traffic Shows Large Increase.
Notw1thstand111g the seamen's stnke, which has been on
S111ceearly III May, traffic on the Great Lakes shows an lll-crease
of over 40 per cent, as compared w1th last year Re-ports
for the month of June, Just pubhshed, show that the do-mestIc
sh1pments from lake ports of the lead111g classes of
commoditIes were 10,179,633 net tons, compared w1th 7,427,616
net tons sh1pped III June, 1908, and 10,690,632 net tons sh1pped
III June, 1907 As the lllfluence of the stnke was felt much less
111July than 111June, the sh1pments dunng that month are be-heved
to have been fully equal to those of July, 1907
A large first class hotel w1ll be erected III Santa MOl11ca,
Cal
The E L Sm1th Cha1r Company, Evansv1lle, Ind, has
prepared plans for an add1tIon to the factory to be used as a
warehouse and varmsh room
~, --- --- ..- . ..~
~------------------ - - - ..-- - .- - .- .I
26
p,. -.-.-._. -_._-'.-- -_._._------
WEEKLY ARTISAN
of ExcelIent WorkmanshIp
and FInIsh, consIstIng or
Parlor Cal>inets, Music Cal>inets,
Hall Trees, Hat Racks,
Shaving Stands, Buffets,
China Closets, Gilt Mirrors,
Dressing Tal>les, Chairs,
and AdjuSlal>le Fixturus
DISPLAYS
GRAND RAPIDS-Second Floor, Fum
Iture ExhIbitIOn BUIlding
CHICAGO-All the year round, Chlca
go FurnIture Exchange, 14th and
Wabash Ale. and In the New York
Furmture Exchange
- .- ....
The Celellrated EFFand EFF Line
j
••!
•
ROCKfORD fRAME AND fiXTURE co., Rockford, III. I
.. • •• __ - • _. _. __ • _ ••••• - - • - - _ - _... -01
N
? - --- - _- ......~. .tlllill ..-:- : .:-~
~~~ ~~_~_l~lllU' -~r~r~ _. /r -:...-:__ r~/"'-:: ,
\ll'f...., - -- ,~ 'I
Uill -
. liili!
f3~
, r Y_~~)
l .... ,1\,--:"'/)7 )
~~r'~: )
oJ .... \,
"
FILLER
The PILLER that FILLS.
The L. Mac. E. Fillers are noted for their Uniformity.
They work properly, packing well under the pad.
They dry hard over night They will not Shrink as we use a
water floated Silex.
WE CAN MATCH ANYTHING.
The Lawrence-McFadden Company
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
EVERY FURNITURE
MANUFACTURER
should have the Weekly Artisan List of
Dealers and Buyers. It contains the
names of all dealers in furniture rated from
$1 ,000 up, satisfactory pay. Approximately
15,000 DEALERS
are listed. The list is revised semi..annually.
Costs $ 1.00 for the two editions. We are
sending it as a premium for subscriptionsto the
Week'y Artisan, the only Weekly Furniture
Journal at $1.00 a year. Think of it!
52 COPIES OF THE ARTISAN AND 2 REVISED
LISTS ALL FOR
$1.00
Can you afford to pass up this opportunity?
Send in your Dollar. You'll not regret it.
WEEKLY ARTISAN GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
27
28
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-_._. _. -_._---_._._._------~-------------~-._----- ••••• ·11
I
WEEKLY ARTISAN
I WKITE FOK IT
~---------- - ---------------------_. - .. .
riE-Nfz .TASLE
COMPANY
A Few Patterns
from our last
Catalogue.
FIRE INSURANCE DIVIDENDS
The Figures Suggest That a Reduction in Right!'>
Might Be in Order Soon.
The book and mal ket ,alues of the "tock ot Harttord fil e
111surance compal11e" S111cethe '--an 1ranclsco tn e 111 1 (JOG h
pro, ok111g dlscus"lOn among 111"t11 ance men 1t h cd "0 I ecen -
111gattentIOn from pohcyholders many at \\ ham th1111-that a"
the compa111es ha,e reco\ eled from the ettect" ot the ~Ieat
dIsaster, a reductIOn In I ates should come "oon
In January of the yeal of the great file ,\ll1ch nCllllled In
A.pnl, the Aetna e"tahh"hed a dn Idend I ate OJ 1G pel cent III
quarterly lllstallmenh and \\ a:o not att-ected b\ the hl~ hI e
The stock earl) In 190b \\as quoted at flam -1-1; ,:; to -1-20 The
stock h held now at ftom 317 to 325 tor ",hale.., ot S100 each
The ConnectIcut 111e, at the t1111eof the dl sa "ter 1ed uced
Its capItal of 3'1 000.000 to $500000 and then I ahed It d~dlll
by IbSU111g$.:;00,000 of ne\\ "tack at S200 a "hare Ih dn Hlend
late of 12 pel cent annually In seml-annudl lll:otallmenb \\ a"
contlllued, but for a tlme It paId anI) on a capltdludJlOn at
$500,000, together wIth 111telest on bUb"CllptlOlh tal ne\\ "tad.
At the tlme of the fire the stock \\ a" quoted at 370 1111" \\ eek
the figures are from 293 to 305
The Hal tford hre had a capItal at Sl 2;0000 palrl In dt
the beg111111ng of 1906, and at that tlllle paId a "enu annudl
dn Idend of 10 per cent and an addItional 15 per cent II hen
the fire came the capltdl was 111creased to S2,000 000 by I"smng
$7:;0,000 of new stock at :1;500 a shale [he quotatIOn d week
hefOle the fire \\dS 1,100 bId, and It sold alouncl 1200 I he
pI esent quotatIOn" are 550 to 560
The NatIOnal FIre "tarted the pavment of 7 pel cent "0111-
dnnual dIvIdend" 111January, 1906, on $1.000,000 at capltdl '\t
the time of the dl"a"tel It "u"penc1ec1 c1n Idenc1 pa\ ment tm
the rema111der of the year In 1907 It paId; pel cent dnd then
6, mak111g 11 per cent fOl the yeal The 6 pel (ellt "enll-dllIJUdl
rate was cont111ued untIl thIS month, \\ hen 7 pel lent \\ a" paId
The stock was valued a week before the contldglatlOn at -J..?;
bId The latest quotatIOn IS 380 bId
The Phoel11A was pay 111g 12 per cent on Ib $2,000000 III
1906, and the stock was quoted at 342 to 348 After the fil e
It suspended the payment of one quarterly dn Idend and then
resumed at the late of 2}i per cent quarterly It Ib no\\ pa\-
111gat the rate of 14 per cent annually, and the latest quotatIon
IS 265 to 275
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Carpet Maker's View of the Tariff.
DhCU"s111g the tallft bl1l, Fred A Booth, secretary and
manalSel of the FIrth Carpet Company of Flrthchffe, N J,
Ib I eported a" declanng that the wool schedule IS not at all sat-
1Stacton to the carpet manufacturers Speak111g of what are
kno\\ n as carpet wools, he saId
Of course there are no wools of thIS character grown 111
thl:O country, and the carpet trade IS open for some rehef 111
the ne"t tallft measure But we are belIevers In protectIOn;
\\ e belIe\ e 111bUppOI t111g, or rather help111g the government to
Pd\ Ih e"pen"e". and so forth, but thIS class of wool does not
enter lllto competItion Vv Ith dnyth111g grown 111thIS country
rl he I efm e. \\ c are open tor some reduction The house meas-ure
a" ple:oented \\ a<ofdlrly satisfactory to us, but when the
l)lll got to the "enate the) put back the old rates aga111
II hat \\ e compla111 about IS that when wool gets up to
12 cent-, carpet" ools pay 4 cents per pound duty; but Imme-chatel.'
It geb dbO\ e 12, they charge us 7 That is what we
dl e compla1l11l1g about a" unfaIr, as one-eIghth of a cent more
\\ auld compel us to pay the three cents addItIOnal duty."
1'he :'IolIne (Ill) Furl11ture Company has been awarded
the contract tor 1ur11lshlllg de:ok", chaIrs and other eqUlpment
tor the lectul e room and lavatones 111the new HIgh School
hl11ld111e,at Da, enport, Ia TheIr bId was $11,035 ~_ --- . - . _ _.~
I Grand2P~:~J~~.•£~~~~!M~C.UO.PI
We are now puttmg out the best Caster Cups WIth cork bases ever
ollereG to the trade. These are fimshed m Golden Oak and WhIte Maple
111 a lIght fimsh These goods are adnurable for pohshed floors and furn-
Iture rests They will not sweat or mar.
PRICES:
Size 2)( mches ..... $400 per hundred
SIze 2}.imches .. 5 00 per hundred
Try a Sample Order FOB. Grand Rapids.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
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MOON
SANITARY
TYPEWRITER
AND
OffiCE DESK
ALL IN ONE
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MOON
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MUSKEGON, MIC".
Variety Bench Saw.
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'1he abO' e machmQ IS bUIlt by the Crescent :\lachme
\ \ 01k s, (Irand Rapids, \llch It IS the \ el y latest thmg 111
thiS type The table alway~ remams the ~ame height from
the floor The arbor yoke ral~es and lowers, tray ehng In
an arc conc~ntnc with counter shaft Thus the belt Ie-always
tight, regardless of the posItion of the saw blade
with respect to the table The table tJ1ts eaSily on hea\ y
h1l1ges and I" pro\ Ided with gl aduatlOn and l1ucrometer ad-
Ju~tment for accuracy The beanngs are full SIX mche, 111
kngth, hned with ge11Lllne babblt and self m11l1g ThiS
machine complete With two ~a""s, four gauge~, counter shaft,
etc , sells for a very 1110de:t-, pnce
New Dealers in Furniture.
The Reichenbach-Deming Company ha" been orga111Led
With H J Dem111g as preSident, and Albert Reichenbach sec-retary,
to deal 111fur111ture at McKeesport, Pa
The Opel Fur111ture Company, 111corporated by James A
Brud111a, Albert and J E Chlmene, wJ1l sell fur111tUle 111Gal-veston,
Texas Capital stock, $10,000
GJ1lette, Eark & Co have opened a new fur111ture store at
Good111g, Idaho
The Anchor Fur11lture Company wJ1l open a new store
about the first of September In P1I1e Bluff, Ark
The Empire Home Fur111ture Company, capital stock
$5,000, Will open a new store at Yonkers, N Y
The Meagher Company, 111corporated With capital stock
fixed at $20,000, Will sell furniture at retaJ1 111:\ ew York city.
The Spencer-Hunter Company, With capital stock amount-
111g to $20,000, wIll engage in the fur111ture and undertaking
bus111ess 111Tiffin, OhIO
DoVi-ney & Jamieson are new fur111ture dealers at X ewport,
Vt :\Ir Jamieson IS pnnClpal of the graded schools of Lyndon-
\ Ille, Vt , and Mr Down owns a fur111ture store m LyndonvIlle
Crocker & Owens hay e erected a handsome, commodIOUS
bUlldmg m Aberdeen, S D, 111which they Will soon open a
new fur11lture store
.Furniture Dealers at Law.
The Lester Fur11ltUle Company of Napa, Cal, ha:-, brought
SUIt aga111st the D C Treadway Company, clalm111g damages
to the amount of 9;20,000, on account of an advel tlsement pub-h~
hed 111a newspaper offenng "Leggatt" Spnng Beds for sale.
Pla111t1ff claims to hay e the sole agency 111Napa county for the
'Leggatt" beds, and that defendant ha~ falsely represented
to customer~ a bed known a~ the "Simmons' as a genu111e
Leggatt" bed Should pla111t1ff reco\ er the amount of dam-ages
claimed, no argument wIll he nece~sary to pro\e
that It pays to advertl"e
The Colorado Furniture Company, a cOlporatlon that con-ti
ols several fur11lture stores 111that state, has hought the fur11l-ture
departUlent of the CreVi-s-Eeggs DiY Goods company, the
fur11lture store of the C \\1 Da11lels Company and the stock
of the \Vhlte nro~ Fur111ture Company, all of Pueblo The
three ~tore~ wJ1l be con:-,ohdated
..~
I
In the UOIled States,
SUItable for Sun day
Schools, Halls, Steam-ers
and all publIc resorts
We also manufacture
Brass TrImmed I r 0 n
Beds, SprIng Beds, Cots
and CrIbs In a large
varIety
Send for Catalogue
and Przces to
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO It
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30 \ \ EEL,," L Y A R 'lIS A N
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I THE BIG WHITE SHOP i I I
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I THE BIG WHITE SHOP III
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We Furnish Every Article of Printing
Needed by Business Men
WHITE PRINTING COMPANY
108, 110, and 112 North Division Street,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 31
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How to Make Your Ads
Attract Attention
Good Cub dl e 80% of the pulhng po\'. el of dny
dd, ertIsement You wouldn't care to enter d fur111
tUle store, for 111;,tance, that displayed old, bdck-style
fur111ture 111their w111dows would you? No,
you v. ould pa~~ It by and pick out d store that had
an attractIve display of New Styles
Just so with the woman who reads your ddlly
announcements She IS attracted by the Illu,tra-tlOllS
of pretty fur111ture She IS 111terested m fur
111ture, and reads the descnptlOns, which bhould
be followed by the prIce
If you are unable to give proper care and thought
to your advertIs111g, let lib do It for you We will
produce copy that will pull,
We employ the best copy experb to be had-pay
them high salalles You can have their per-sonal
service at a hgure so low you really can't
afford to neglect the opportunity
Wnte us about this serVice, telhng about your
desIres, the class of goods you carry and the amount
of advertIsmg you do We will send you some
mighty mterestmg mformatlOn
FURNITURE CITY ENGRAVING CO.
403 Murray Bldg. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
OCTAGON PEDESTALS AND
TABLE LEGS
That IS the questIon and a big one. too How
do you rnake them? How much do they cost you"
How good are they and are they unlfOl m? Just
take a llttIe tIme and let these questIOns soak In
Because you ma)- be wastIng on the manufacture
of the Pedestals ann. Legs what you sa"\e by eco-nomIcal
Manufacture on the Tops Your profits
are then cut down M'lke the cost of the different
parts balance One man '\ lth our
LEG AND PEDESTAL MACHINE
WIll make Octagon and Polygonal shaped turnings
at one-tenth to one t\\ entleth of what It costs by
hand round ones at one sIxth to one· tenth The
saVIng In time and labor IS what makes that bal-ance
,\e \,ere~ust talkIng about Now, don't say
that sounds pretty good and let It slip your
mInd Just wnte us to-day
C. MATTISON MACHINE WORKS
863 FIfth St, BELOIT, WISCONSIN.
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~ MUSKEGONEX,clMUSlivceHR.efrigerator~anEuf::~:,e::w York M.D~ger. t 35 Warren 5t, New York CIty.
IF IT'S THE BEST REFRIGERATOR
IT'S AN ALASKA
Over 850,000 Alaska
refngerators sold sin c e
I 878 DeSIrable features
of an Alaska Refngerator:
Small consumption of Ice.
Maximum amount of cold,
dry air.
Absolutely sanitary pro-vision
chamber.
Simphcity of operation.
Perfect preservation of
food.
We sell to dealers only.
WRITE FOR
CATALOG.
The Alaska Refrigerator Co.
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OFFICES:
CINCINNATI--Seoond National Bank Building. NEW YORK--346 Broadway.
BOSTON--18 Tremont St. CHICAGt)--14 St. and Wabash Ave.
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Bldg. JAMESTOWN. N. Y.--Chadakoln Bldg.
HIGH POINT. N. C.--Stanton.Weloh Blook.
The most satisfactory and up-to-date Credit ServIce covering the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
The most accurate and reliable Reference Book Published.
Originators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System:'
CollectIOnServzce Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Drafts.
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Miscellaneous Advertisements. ,I
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WANTED
WANTED.
CommissIOn man for Misssoun and Kansas representmg five
furmture factones. Splendid fixed carload hnes. Address,
Ballman-Cummmgs Furmture Company, Fort Smith, Arkan-sas.
Aug 7, '09
WANTED COMMISSION MEN.
I "iFor Indiana and Illinois to sell our SUites, Dressers, Chlffon-lits,
Stands, Beds and Wardrobes. McKim & Cochran Fur-niture
Co., Madison, Ind. 7-3-4t
WANTED-WOOD SEAT CHAIR FACTORY
To locate on our property at Columbus, MissIssippi; unlImit-ed
supply of red and white oak; red and sap gum and beech at
extremely low cost; plenty cheap labor; fine factory site, un-excelled
shipping faCIlIties and low freight rates to good mar-ket.
Might take some stock In well managed company. Ad-dress
Interstate Lumber Company, DOWllmg BUilding, Ene,
Pa.
WANTED-TRA VELING SALESMEN.
To handle a lme of Extension Tables, Pedestal Tables, Ward-robes
and Kitchen Cupboards, on commission. State what
other lmes you handle and Terntory deSired. Address
Koenig Furmture Co., 2620 N. 15th St., St. LOUIS,Mo.
WANTED
A good cabmet maker; one who can detail and make clothing
cabinets. Address B. S., care Michigan Artisan. 6-10-2t.
WANTED-POSITION AS MANAGER.
A practical busmess man, familiar with the manufacturing of
bed room furmture and who has a few thousand dollars to
invest; can assume charge of one of the best furmture plants
m the South. If interested, address "Busmess," Box 853,
Greensboro, N. C. 6-10-4t
Chas. E. Spratfn.An Acrostic.
Care untroubled, jO\ unbounded.
Have a me1f\ toa:,t v\lth me
All your ffIe;1d'3 b) ) ou surrounded
See your W01k 1,\Ith greatest glee
Exchange I Esto perpetua
Sunsh1l1e days of JO) and plea:,ure.
Pay you well for time eApended
R1l1g the" elkIn f01 full measure.
As the scheme progresses splenchd
Take the lam el "on so ra1 eh,
Till Jour ffIends can pral<,e :You falll)
-Bes:01e Richard, bOlD Feb :J, 1899
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STAR CASTER CUP COMPANY
NORTH UNION STR .... T "" a"" RAPIDS MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted cellulOid as a base for our Caster Cups maklllg the
best cup on the market. CellulOId IS a great Improvement o\er bases
made of other matenal When It ISnecessary to move a pIece supported
by cups wIth cellulOId bases It can be done wIth ease, as the bases are per
fectly smooth CellulOId does not sweat and by the use of these cups I tables are never marred These cups are finIshed In Golden Oak and
White Maple, finIshed light If you w,ll try a 8ample order 0. these
I f O
gOoOda8rYaOPnRUIdCWERS'l:alpSdt,oIezdeh8a82n,r%deteIncthheems tn qu$a5n.t5,t0u8 per hundred.
SIZe 2)( Inches 4.50 per hundred.
TRY A SAMPLE ORlJER
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ARTISAN
INDEX TO ADVERTISERS.
Acme WhIte Lead Works
Adams & Eltmg Co.
Alaska Refrlgator Co
Albro Veneer Ccmpany
Amencan Blower Co
Barnes, W. F. & John Co.
Bartcn, H. K. & SOll, Co.
Boynton & Co
Buss Machine Works
Dodds, Alerander
Edge, Frank & Co.
Fellwook Auto and Mfg Co
Fox Machllle Company
Furnlture CommerClal Agency Co.
FrancIs, Chas. E Company
Furnlture C,ty Engravmg Co.
Glllette Roller Bearlllg Co.
Grand RapIds Brass Co.
Grand RaPlds Caster Cup Co
Grand Rapds Electrotype Co
Grand Raplds Hand Screw Co.
Grand Raplds Wood Fmlshlllg Co.
Ho den Veneer Company
Hotel Pantlllld
Hotel Tuller, Detrolt
Kauffman Mfg. Co.
Lawrenoe-McFadden Co.
Lentz Table Co.
Luce-Redmond Chalr Co.
Lyon Furnlture Agency
Marletta Pamt and Color Co.
!4athlson Machlne Works
MoMullen Machlllery Co.
!41chlgan Engravlllg Co·
!4Icellaneous
!4ontgomery Hardwood Lumber Co.
!4oon Desk Company
Morton House
!4uskegon Valley Fur. Co
New York Furnltura Exchange
011ver Machmery Co
Palmer, A. E. & Sons
Plttsburg Plate Glass Co.
Rockford Chau and Furnlture Co.
Rookford Frame and FIxture Co
Rockford Standard Furnlture Co.
Schmlt Henry & Co.
Shlmer, Samu.el, J. & Sons
S11gh Funllture Co
Smlth & Davls Mfg. Co
Star Caster Cup Company
Ward, 0 A.
Walter Clark Veneer Co
Weatherly Company
Weekly Artlsan
Weillno-ton Hotel, Chlcago.
Whlte Pnntmg Co.
Wood, MorrlS & SOllS
Wysong & :M1les Co. (<I)
21
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31
7
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Cover
2
23
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3
23
8
7
31
1
31
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Cover
28
25
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86
:0
23
29
26
28
9
1
1
31
8
18
32
4
29
2
4
15
3
4
25
21
26
23
32
2
13
4
32
25
86
19-27
23
30
3
Cover
A Few from Holland.
Holland. ,Itch \ugu"t 6 -The Bay VIew Furlllture Com-
)1dll\ ha'l a "ttOIl~ 1111efor the fall trade, the hne be111g made
up at olle hundred pattern"" of "hleh forty are enttrely ne"
dnd at the fine"t cla"" ot goods VIce Pre<,ldent H G Pelgnm
h at the op1111OntIut the tall trade Will be very good The
Ba\ VIe", 1Ine I" made up of J acobeans, Colomd]", L1bertte<,
dnd :\Iodern Lng1l"h
R H Ruppel, manufacturer of maeh111e and sp111dle carv111g
tool" report" d '3dtl"factor) \ olume of busme:,s, and m response
to the demand" at hI" hade 1,\,111probably get out a catalogue
,,0111e tIme clUl1l1~ the early fall
1h01 nton I'l Co, manufacturer" of furlllture, are puttmg
out a 11l1eof chall s III the knock do"" 11, the ~oods bemg 111sohd
oak of "tlon::; dnd substantial constructIOn, and made In m1s-
"Ion and \\ eathered oak
1'he lJolland \ enee1 \\ Olk:o have orders to keep them gomg
011 \ ellee1.., tOI ChIcago manufacturer'3 up to next January
<"'euetary-:\Iana~el Par:oon" sa) '3 the Company 1" also gett111g
out \ eneers for automobtle manufacturers
]t"" all \\ ell enough to take the bull by the horn:o, If the
bu1l "Ill stand for It
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Henry Schmit (5 Co.
HOPKINS AND HARRIET STS
CinoInnatl, Ol.io
makers of
Upholstered Furniture
for
LODGE and PULPIT, PARLOR,
LIBRARY, HOTEL and
CLUB ROOM
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- Date Created:
- 1909-08-07T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:6
- 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/74