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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-03-12
Weekly Artisan; 1910-03-12
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., MARCH 12. 1910
SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY
Catalogue to Prospective Customers. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
The Largest Manufacturers of CHAMBER FURNITURE
EXCLUSIVELY IN THE WORLD
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Have you had anything from The Luce Furniture Co. lately?
Bedroom and Dining Room equipment in profusion.
Time---Now. Place---Grand Rapids.
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luce-Redmond Chair Co., ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
BIrds's Eye Maple
BIrch
ff?.!farttrtd Oak
and
Clrcasslan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS' BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
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GRAND R /\ ,~>,'" P~y
30th Year-No. 37
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., MARCH 12, 1910 Issued Weekly
GREAT BRITAIN'S LABOR EXCHANGES
Plan to Help the Unemployed by Putting Them in Touch With Those Who
Need Their Services.
);"othIng has uccurred 111 the BniIsh 1I1dustnal wodd m
recent years whIch has attracted more attentIOn than the
1I1auguratIOn of the government labor exchanges through an
act of ParlIament pa~sed last year The royal commISSIOn
on the poor laws recommended unammously the establIsh-ment
of the exchanges whIch are not deSIgned to furnIsh
temporary aId to the un employ ed, but to dIrect labor where
It IS needed The central Idea IS that the informatIOn of
"wants" and "wanted" shall be perIodIcally sent fJ om branche~
to central offices, and thence transmItted to other localIties
\;\Then necessary advances wIll be made to pay fares of un-employed
persons to pOInts whel e theIr labor is needed, such
advances to be 1efunded from wages
The UnIted KIndom has been dIVIded for the purpose of
these exchanges into 11 mdustrIal areas In each of these
there is a clearIng house for labor applIcatIOns, whIch IS In
dIrect contact WIth the natIOnal clearIng house In London
I1hree c1a"ses of exchanges are prOVIded for In each drvIsIOn,
accod1l1g to populatIOn of the CItIes It IS belIeved that the
system Inaugurated WIll re"uIt in IntellIgent CO-01dinatIOn of
supply and demand in the BrItish labor market
On the openIng day, February 1, nearly 80 exchanges
were 111 operatIOn and thousands of applIcations for work
were receIved These represented all classes of labor, and
did not seem to come to any conSIderable extent from the
shiftless and mcompetent Employers also made use of the
exchanges Separate departments have been organized for
women, designed mainly for those who possess skIll in some
partIcular Ime, and It IS thought that this feature will en-courage
younger women to fit themselves for mdustnes re-quiring
skIll The Central (unemployed) Body of London
states that during the last three year'3 the demand for expert
women worker" m the more highly skIlled handIcrafts, such
as dressmakmg, taIlonng, l1ullIneI y, artIfiCIal flower making,
and fancy box makmg, was greatly 111 exce.,'3 of the supply
Rules for Applicants.
The regIstIatIOn of applIcants for employment IS to hold
good for 7 days from the date of regIstratIOn The officer m
charge of an eAchange, 111 notIfvmg applIcatIOns for em-ployment
and vacanCIes to employeI'3 and applIcants, 1espec-tlvely,
1'3to undertake no responsIbIlIty WIth regard to wages
or other condItIOns beyond supplymg any mformatIOn 1ll
hIS pos~ession as to the rate of wages deSIred or offered
CopIes or dlmmalles of any agreement,., mutually arranged
between assoclatIOn'3 of employers and VI orkmen for the
regulatIOn of wages or other condItIOns of labor 111 any trade
may, WIth the consent of the vanous partIes to such agree-ments,
be filed at a labor erchange, and any pUblIshed rules
made by publIc authontIes WIth 1e~ard to lIke mattel ~ may
also be filed Documents so filed are to be open to 1l1SpectlOn
on applIcatIOn 1\0 pe1son IS to suffer any d1squalIficatIn or
be otherWIse prejudIced on account of refus1I1g to accept
employment found for hIm through a labor exchange where
the ground of 1efu'>al IS that a trade dIspute VI h1ch affects hH
trade eXIsts or that the wages offe1 ed are lOwer than those
current 111 the trade In the dIstrIct where employment IS found
\Vhen an applIcant for employment has been engaged
through a labor exchange at whIch he 1'3 regIstered to take
up employment at any pnce removed from the exchange or
from hIS ordinary residence by more than 5 miles by the
quickest route, or by such other dIstance as the Board of
Trade may dIrect from tIme to tIme, eIther generally or as
regards any speCIfied d1stnct, the officer m I charge may, at
his discretIOn, make an advance to the applIcant toward
meetIng the expenses of travdIng to the place of employ-ment.
The advance may be made at the request either of the
employer or of the applIcant The person at whose request
the advanCe IS made mu;"t gIVe such undertakmg WIth re-spect
to the 1epayment of the advance a" the Board of
Trade, WIth the consent of the treasury, may from time to
tIme prescllbe, eIther generally or as regards any speCIfied
dIStrICt Or class of applIcant'> In making advances care is to
be taken to aVOId unduly encouragmg rural laborers to
mIgrate from the country to the town;" or between Great
BntIan and Ireland The advance 1'> not to exceed the
amount reqUlred to defray the applIcant's fa1 e to the place
of employment, and IS to be made by the provision of a tic-ket
01 pas'>. or, 111 exceptIOnal cases, Ul cash The officer m
charge of a labor exchange IS to consult the central office in
London before notIfyIng to the applIcant for employment
vacancies at any place outSIde the BntIsh Isle'>
Strikes and Lockouts.
The Board of Trade, under who~e general management
the law places the exchange~, may f01m local adVIsory trade
committees vvhen ever deemed deSIrable, the'>e to coni'iist of
employers and workmen In equal numbels The duties of
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted celluloid as a hase for our Caster Cups maklllg the
hest cup on the market CellulOId IS a great Improvement over bases
made of other matenal When It IS necessary to move a pIece supported
by cups with celluloid hases It can be done with ease, as the bases are per
fectly smooth CellulOId does not s"eat and by the use of these cups
tables are never marred 1hese cups are limshed In Golden Oak and
White Maple linlshed Itght If you w,ll try a Bampl, order of thu,
goods you w,ll du,re to handle them tn quant,tIeB
PRICES: Size 2~ Inches $5.50 per hundred.
Size ZJi Inches 4.50 per hundred.
I'-.jO_b -G~ran-d R-ap-,ds----_._---TR-T-A-SA-MP-LE--OR-DE-R--
~--_._._._._---_._._._._.-_._- ------_._----- ;
We Manufacture the
Larllelt Line of
rOlDlna
(nAIRS
In the Umted States,
sUltable for Sun day
Schools, Halls, Steam-ers
and all publtc resorts.
We also manufacture
Brass Trimmed I ran
Beds, SprIng Beds, Cots
and Cribs In a large
varIety.
Send for Catalogue
and Prices to
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO ....... I ..~
ment ~o filed notlfie~ a labor exchange of a vacancy or va-cancIes
for workmen of the class affected, the officer in
charge shall Inform hIm of the statement that has been fil.~d,
and l?;l\ e h1lll an opportunity of making a written statement
thereon The officer In charge, 111 notifyIng any such va can-lle~
to an\ apphcant tor employment, 'ihall also Inform him
of the .,tatements that have been filed.
The X ottIngham labor exchange, ..,lmultaneously with
others throughout the country, was opened February 1. Ap-phcanb
for work numbered 557, and 120 firms wanting help
Dressers
Chiffoniers
Dressing Tables
Suites
Wardrobes
Sideboards
Buffets
Etc.
Made in
Oak, Bird's-Eye Maple,
Maho~any, etc.,
and
All Popular
Finishes
No. 2240 Bed
COMPLETE CATALOGUE
STAR CASTER
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
these commlttee~ wIll be to advI-.e and as:ol~t the Board of
Trade 'Ihe qu~e,tlOn of "tnke.., ,mel lockont'i \\ a.., gl\ en \ er:
careful con"lderatJOll by the tramel'i of the general regula-tions,
and the follow1I1g- rule" ha\ e been adopted gO\ Cll11ne,
thIS matter
Any a'iSOclatlOn of employer" or \\Olkmen may file at a
labor exchange a e,tatement WIth legard to the eXhtence of
a stllke or lal'kout affect111g then tlade 111 the dhtnct \n\
such statement "hall be -'lgned by a per'ion allthOI 17ed b\ the
a'iSOclatJOn fm the purpose Such statement shall only be 111
fOIce for 7 days fJ 0111 the date of fil111g, but ma: be rene\\ ed
wlth1l1 tJhat penod for a like penod, and so on from tIme to
tme If any cmployel who appear~ to be affected by a state-
UPHAM MANUFACTURING CO. MARSHFIELD, WIS.
No. 2241 Dresser
SEND FOR OUR
WEEKLY ARTISAN
were registered, some of them requlrmg large numbers, one
even 60 sktlled workmen The net result was that most of
the skIlled workmen were engaged, but the applying firms
were only partly satisfied On the second day 580 workmen
and 87 firms regbtered If these two days form an index of
the permanent workmg of the exchange, expectatIOns wIll
apparently be fully reahzed The proportion of skilled work-men
regIstering wa~ unexpectedly large The"e con~tltute
the cia"" whIch the exchange particularly wlshe" to aid.
Practically every trade wa~ repre~ented
At Derby 355 workmen and a few employers regIstered
on the openmg day, and at Lelce~ter 500 workmen, and many
apphcatlOns from employers, especIally for skIlled men for
shoe factones, were receIved Employment was found for a
con"lderable share of the apphcant'S
Reports from Glasgow are to the effect that the develop-ment
of the labor-exchange movement throughtout the Ulll-ted
Kmgdom, IS assummg proportIOns that warrant the be-hef
that these agencIes are bound to play an Important pat t
m the efforb of all parties to solve the soctal problems of
today The scheme has been orgam7Cd on a broad basis
Bntam and IrelanJ have been dIvIded mto 10 dlstncts, each
dIVISIOn bemg a umt, complete m Itself, but under a central
office and contammg a network of les~er exchanges
The Scottbh headquarters ocCUpy three floors of a hand-some
new bUlldmg in a central parton of Glasgow The
various department" are well appolllted and equipped, and
are arranged and dIvIded mto sepal ate regIstratIOn looms for
men, boys and gIrl'S In the men's dIvision there are sepa-rate
departments f01 skilled and unskIlled labor
In addItion to the dIVISIOnal officer, at the outset about
I ') aS~lstants were employed at the ScottIsh headquarters,
and there wIll be 24 exohanges thloughout Scotland In
Germany exchanges are muniCIpal, but the fir'St pnnciple of
exchanges III the Umted Kmgdom IS that they wIll each be
a component part of a natIOnal system The reasons why
nalOnal control IS expected to secure better results might be
summanzed a" follows
(l) Unemployment is an industrial problem and in-dustry;
(2) local control would endanger ulllformlty, whIch
IS essential for co-operatIOn. (3) local feehng mIght tend to
check that moblhty of labor, whIch It IS the central ,11m of
exchanges to foster, (4) local government areas are out of
all rdatlOn to mdustnal needs and structure
5
DO YOU WANT
the PRETTIEST, BEST and MOST POPU-L-
AR LEATHER FOR FURNITURE. ANY COLOR. WILL NOT CRACK.
If so buy our
GOAT and SHEEP
SKINS
New Factory Nearly COIllpleted.
The Century Furlllture company's new factory, at Pres-cott
,md South lama street, Grand Rapids, J\1lch, IS rapIdly
neanna completion but will not be occupIed until June 1. b ,
It is a large five-story bUIldIng and WIll be eqUIpped WIth
the best of machmery and WIll have all modern Improvements
and convelllences The top floor will be used as a show room
and will be one of the finest m the cIty
Write for sample pads of colors.
DAHM & KIEFER TANNING CO.
TANNERIES
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CHICACO, ILL.
204 lake Street,
~_._---_._--------- -C-H-IC-A-G_O.,_IL-L-.-~I __ •.•.•..•..•...
The road to success IS long and rough, but the scenery
r------------- . ._.a_t the end IS so f.ine_tha.t few purchase return tickets _ p. _ ••• _- ••
Pittsburg Plate
L.ARGE&T ,",OBBERS ANO MANUFACTURERS
Glass
OF
GLASS IN lHE WORLD
Mirrors, Bent Glass, leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass
WIR~~ GLASS
Plate Glass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tbps, Carrara Glass more beautifUl than white marble.
CENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN ACED VARNISHES.
g For anything in BUilders' Glass, or anything in Pamts, Varnishes Brushes or Painters' Sundries, address any of our branch
warehouses, a list of which is given below' '
NEW YOBX-Hudson and Vandam sts. CLEVELA:ND-143G-1434West Th11'dst.
BOSTO:N-41-49Sudbury St., 1-9 BOWkerSt. OlllAHA-110I-1107 Howard St.
CHICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave. ST. :PAl1L-459-461Jackson St.
cmCI!f:NATI-BrOadway and Court Sts. ATLA.:NTA, GA.-30-32-34 S. :Pryor St.
ST. LOms-Cor. Tenth and Spruce Sts. SAVANl'rAH,GA.-745-749 Wheaton St.
llIDl':NIlA.:POLIS-500-51S6. Third st. XA.:NSASCITY-:Pifth and Wyandotte sts.
DETBOI'J."-53-59La1'JledSt, E. BIBllIDl'GB:.A.KA,LA.-2nd Ave. and 29th St.
GBAlIDBAPIDS, llIICK-39-41 •• Division St. Bl1:E':PALO:N, .Y.-372-74-76-78:Pearl St.
PI'J."TSBl1BGK-IOl.103Wood St. BBOOXLY!f-Third Ave. and Dean St.
llIXLWAl1XEIl'W. 1:S.-492-494llIarket St. PJULADIlLPKIA-:Pitcaim Bldg., Arch and 11th St..
BO~STEB, •. Y.-WUder Bldg., .ain" Exchanll'ests. DAVE:NP'OBT-410-416Scott St.
BALTIllIOBE-310-12-14W. Pratt st. OK:LAB:OlllACITY,OKLA.,lI10-212W. :Pint st. .. . ..- ______ a •• •• •• • ••••• •••••••• .- - ..
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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DELAWARE
CHAIR CO.
DELAWARE OHIO.
LARGEST
"QUALITY"
LINE
of
1 DOUBLE CANE
I- LEATHER
J MISSION
CHAIRS, ROCKERS and SETTEES
CATALOCUE TO THE TRADE ONLY.
~------------------- .-- - - -- - - '~ 4 _ ---. -------- - ~
Chicago Brevities_
C]llcago, Ilalch lO-The :\ev\ton & HUlt compcll1\ I~ the
name of a nev\ concern OIgal117ed to do a gene1 cd ",pecla]
order and contI al t ]ntsme"s for clubs, hoteb, publtl blll]dmg~
etc, 111 connectlOn \\ 1th the gene1a] 1etal1 1\11\11tU1l t1,telC
The personnel I" T R \e\\ ton, tOlmel ~enelal ~ale~ mana-ger
of the 10ld &.. John"on COmpd11\, Charle" '-, HOIl f01
many year" In charge at the d("lgl11n~ department 01 thL
same company and Otto :\1 rl e1el one of the \\ ell kno\\ 11
sale"men f01 the lord &.. Johnson company Office" and ,dIes
looms of the Xc\\ton & HOlt company have been ec,tabltshu]
dt 1414-16 abash a\ enue
The Lpham :\lanufactunng company of :\Iarshheld \\ IS,
have Issued theIr 1910 catalogue It I" pnnted on hea\ \
enam eled paper on pag e", 10 x 13)/2 mches, and make~ a fine
dIsplay of the Fpham plOducts, cOlblstmg of "Ideboard"
buffets, and chambel Sllltes, m oak mahogd11\ l)Jld~e\ e
maple and a"h 'lhe catdlogue IS the hest \ et ploc]uce(] h\
the Upham 11an ufactunng company
The office of "ecletaq GeOlge \\ Jackson ot the \lanu-facturers'
ExhIbItion Bmldmg company, 1319 Illch1gan a\ e-mle,
has heen re\11O\ ed to the \V est end of the second BoO!,
facmg on J\f1ch1gan a\ enue The change of office CJua1tel s
IS a deCIded Improvement affOl dm§; much mOl e room and
ltght than the old locatIon prOVIded The new office IS fin-
Ished m bll ch and mahogany and IS 12 x 2.-J. feet, \\ ll1ch has
been dIVIded mto t\\O departments, one for secretary Jackson
the othtl fOl the use of the bookkeeper A cash1el's desk for
hankmg pUI po",e", has been mstalled, it bemg the mtentlOn of
the :\lanutactm ers' B1l11dmg company to do bankmg for the
hen (fit at pa tlOn s, as hel etofore
\ \ el \ handsome catalogue has been Issued by the Km-del
Bed compa11\ The covers are of heavy Imen and the
t\\ ent\ mSlde pages are of the finest enameled finish Xum-uou
~ cub adOl n the pages togethel WIth condensed readmg
matter mcludmg pnces and descnptl\ e mformatlOn regardmg
the famous Kmde1 products The catalogue IS one of the
finest extant and the best Pl0dllction of Its kmd ever put
out by the Kmdel company
Claude \ e\dou has resIgned hIs positIOn as buyer fOl
the furl11ture department of Mandel Bros, ha vmg pUl chased
an mterest m the John Breuner company of San Francisco
HIS 1 eSlgnatlOn IS to take effect March 15, when he WIll leave
fOl San FranCISco to assIst m the management of the Breuner
company
PreSIdent Joseph S. Meyer of the Manufacturel s' ExhI-bItIOn
Bmldmg company, accompanied by Mrs Meyer, has
!S0ne on a tnp to Mexico and the yVest IndIes They will
also VISIt Gah eston and Kew Orleans and 1eturn about
i\pnl 1
\Vllbam A Dunke formerly connected WIth the Cosmo-polttan
Bank of ChIcago has accepted the position of stenog-raphel
and bookkeeper for the 1\Ianufacturers' Exhibition
Dul1chng company
-------_.-----_._--------~
Pitcairn Varnish Company I
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
...- .... I
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C. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't. Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. J.
Manufacturers of
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Labor_
One of the chIef expenses entenng mto the cost of manu-factul1ng
furllltnre IS labor Probably more than 50 per cent
Anyth111g that wJ11 cut down the cost of labor IS a dIstinct
gam The Grand RapIds Veneer \\' arks operate one of the
largest panel mdb 111the country, and thb I;' what they say
to the Weekly ArtIsan about the co.,t of labOl
"On the sav111g of lab01, here IS our expel iencc wIth the
new kJ1n, whIch we wdl contrast wIth the work of our old
kJ1n "Vlth the old kJ1n we were able to dry about 3,500 feet
a day To load, unload and cut thl'3 lumbel ready for the
Jointmg machmes we employed n111e sa Wj crs, three bUL?
planer men, and two loader." wIth a total pay-roll of $1725
per day, thej were cuttmg 3.500 feet per day
ImmedIately upon the mbtallatlOn of our ne", process, the
kJ1n dned easily tWIce the lumber, and the lumber cut so
easily that we first dIscharged the filer, as we found he was
loafmg, and had practically nothmg to do Then \ve grad-uaIlj
let out the buZL planer men, untJ1 we are not US111gthe
buzz planer today and we ha\ e not only discharged the men
but sold two of the three buzz planers, because the lumber is
dned flat and straIght and does not need as much
hand labor a" we were pre\lOusly usmg The lumber
IS not checked eIther at the ends or around the knot'3. and
hence It reqUlres very much less labor to cut It up, plane and
work through the mIll Tak111g mto consIderatIOn the crew
ImmedIately concerned 111cutt111g the lumber under the old
plan of nme men, we are now doing more than tWIce the
amount of work wIth SIX men, mak111g a Sav111g on our paj
roll of $6 per day on thIs bunch The labor saved on all the
various machmes throughout the n1111I::' hard to compute
"George Stevens, of the Moon Desk company, Muskegon,
--~_._----~----------- - -- --- ------ ..
F. Parthier
7
1034 Grand Avenue
CHICAGO
Manufacturer of
Willow
Furniture
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
}llch , says that hIS expenence 111 thIs chrectlOn is that the
factory force for the same amount of money produces 20 per
cent more output \~' e refer you to hIm m confirmatIOn 6f
this statement"
If the reader wdl watch the advertlsment'3 of the Grand
RapIds Veneer \Vorks each week they wIll learn of the ex-penences
of many of the leadmg furlllture manufacturers
throughout the country, '" ho are US111gthIS ne", process It
makes an mtere"tmg readmg for those lllterested m drying
lumber
Evidence of Canadian Prosperity.
Canada's trade f01 January, 1910, totaled $51,500,102 an
mcrease of $12,322,627, or nearly 30 per cent over the corre-spond111g
month of last year, and constltut111g a record for
the month For the first 10 months of the present fiscal year
(beg111nmg Apnl 1, 1909) the total trade has been $563,986,-
780, an lllcrease of $95,010,931, or about 20 per cent. The
imports 111January totalled $30,253,852, an lllcrease of $7,-
140,225 over January, 1909 Exports of domestIc products
totaled $20,258,406, an lllcrease of $4,871,084 For the 10
months Imports have totaled $302,050,207, an increase of
$60,978,445. Exports of domestic products for the 10 months
totaled $241,375,219, an increase of $31,404,708 Of thIS in-
CIease about $16,000,000 was in expol ts of agncultnra1 pro-ducts,
and $7,500,000 in exports of the forest Exports of
man ufacturers show an mcrea"e of nearly $2.000.000 The
customs revenue for the month was $4.606,402, an increase
of $994,037 For the 10 months the customs revenue has
been $48.692,459. an lllcrease of $10,361,341, or a htt1e over
$1,000,000 a month
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"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER 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 getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories, Sash and Door MIlls, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others Will consult their own interests by using it. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
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MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
Ben] amm Caldwell, furmture dealel of \nm ~tun \ la
ha~ sold out to John Boo/er
Orner Holme" of Clatskame, Ore, ha" "ecurecl a patlnt
on a table of hl~ own m\ entlOn
Frank CIOlJt has purcha"ed the fml11tulc ~t(Jle (It r II
~le",sengel at GIant Park, 111
~athan Roth has ",lllceeded Roth & LIchtman, 1Ull11tmc
dealers at Perth Amboy, N J
The fur111ture fac:tones at HIgh PlOnt," C, ale reported
as havmg "good steady busmess '
The Chtldren's VehIcle compan~ al e mO\ lng, theIr plant
from Gardner to East Templeton, \Iass
Henne & Myers have ~ueeeeded the Rockddle :\IercanuL
company, fur111ture dealer" at Rockdale, Te'-
The Noonan Fur111tme COmpdn\ ot Salnu" Cal hd\ e
opened a branch StOl e at Kmg Cltv, ,ame "tate
A petltton m bankruptcy has been hIed a~dm "t the 11
Harns Furmtm e com pan) of Beaumont Te"
The Culpepper Furmture compan~, dealers, at Cnlpeppel,
Va, have been "ucceeded b} I,\ H Chne & Co
The firm of Kleme BIos, fm mt111e dealeI" 01 Croll/ale L
Tex, has been dIssolved, \I, llltam l"leme ret1lll1g
The Amencan FUl111tm e com pam are bUlldmg alal!Se
three-story adltton to t heIr factor} at \ [al tm "\ tile \ -a
The Standard ::\Itn or com pan} of Plthlmr~ J'a, al e
estabhshing a branch factory at I,I, 111~ton-c;,tlelll " L
Joseph Dav IS has succeeded C 11 (,althu a" uplwl
stery buyer for the ruelst compan\ ot )el",e) Cltv " I
Kussell, Casper & Sachal, fUl111tnl e dedlel" \\ ho taIled
at Pla111field, N J, have started m bus111ess a~dl11 as Sachar
& Sachar.
Albert Mark;:" retaIl fur111ture dealel of ), e\\ BrunSWIck,
:t\ J, ha.s 111corpora ted hIS business a" the Globe rurl11 tm e
company
HIgh Pomt,:t\ C, IS to have a branch <;J()re dnd \\ are-house
of a :t\ew YOlk house that deal"., largeh m glue and
"and paper
H 1\I HIcks late of Thelf Rn er Falls, :\Illln ha ... pUl-cha"
ed the store and retaIl fur111t111e busl11e'-~ 01 L L 1a 111e"
at Verndale, Almn
The Ilyland :\1attress company of I,I, orcestel, :\Iass, an
oIl establtshed concel n has made an a"slgnment for the
benefit of credltol s
C D Buckman, fur111ture dealer and undertaker of Fm-mett,
Ida, has sold the fur111ture part of hIS busme~s to
Hargess & Andrews
The chaIr mdustry at Keene, N H, IS 1eported as 111a ---_._-----------------_ ....
j)llJ"pC10U" condItIOn, the factolle" no\,; ::ohlppmg three to
fi\ e eal load" lJer day
Herman Kertcher ot "ew YOl k Clt} has "ecured letters
patent on d method f01 con\ el tl11g pla111-gral11ed boards mto
qnarter-~ral11ed board" '
lie111~ llelman, an expellenced "ale"man ha~ takcn the
mdnagemen t ot Ln~leman & Lo' s f111111ture "t01 ( on \ Vater
"tt eet, 1\ angatud., Conn
Bankruptc) proceecltngs .,tarted by a dls"atl"fied stock-holder
a~al11..,t the I,\ eek" F111111ture company of I,Voonsocket,
R I, hay e hlen dl,-contmned and the crec1ltOls WIll be paId
m tnll
J C Green, \v ho recently sold hIS mtel est m the furnl-
WI c husme"s of the \Iy ers-Green company of LCJdngton, Ky ,
to R \ Dn"hnell, ha" opened a new undertakmg estabh"h
ment m the "ame to\\ n
1he GeOl ~e \nder"on Bamboo and Fur111ture N ov elty
\ \ 01 b of Se\\ ell." J, has hen mcorpordted WIth a $25,000
cap1tal stock (~eOlge \ndel;:,on, James G DIxon and George
13 II 111 tt are th e mcorpora tors
The t111111ture firm of Hood & \Vheeler, Bllmmgham,
\Ll, ha-, he,cn eh.,,,oh ed, James Hood havmg purchased R
'\ \\ heeler sllltere"t 111 the Bn111mgham store and the Bes-
"lme1 blanch at a (()11'olderatlOn ot $99,500
1he \Ia\o K \T,Jlkelt Fur111tl11e company, dealer" of
l\lun~\\llk.." r h<1\t 111ullporated then bU"111e"" \\lth cap 1-
Ld "tOll hvd at $:;,000 Charle'o and 1,redenck G L Volkel t
and Robelt 'II \Ia)o, appear as the 111corpOldtors
I [el hel t l\. Lane of noston, recen er for J 131est & Co,
11l1111tl1e1 dealer" of Brockton, \[ass, who faIled receni.ly,
has sold the enttre stock to A E O'Helr & Co, of Lowell,
\ [as" , \\ ho \\ 111close out a part of It 111Brockton and move
the 1en1d111del to then "tore 111Lowell
Chatles C Bent for tortv-two yealS a member of the
fil m 01 S Bent K Bro,;, chalr manufactl11 ers, Gardner, Alass ,
has letned from hn"1De~s, leavtng the bus111es::o111 charge of
C Le~1Ie Dent and 1epresentatn es of the estate of Rodenck
L Bent
\t the annual meet111g of the Phoel11x Fur111ture corpor-atlon
ot Chnstlansburg, Va, the factory was reported to
have had a most prosperou" year, WIth excellent prospects
fOl thIS } ear H K Tallant and J E Shufflebarger were
re-elected as pre::Oldent and "ecretary-treasurer, respectively
\ \\ ell dressed man get" mto many a husy man's office
\\ here a slouch}, "ltp"hod fello\\ gets t1red waltmg on the
outSIde See I
~.... --_. . -- . _. ----------...,
I MAnUrA(lU~[R5or ",on o~ADr DrrDIQ[RAlOD5
I Zinc-Lined, Porcelain Lined, White Enamel Lined
and OPAL-GLASS Lined.
I
I-Write
for our beautiful illustrated catalogue and prices. I
The Alaska Refrigerator Company
ExclUSiVe Refngerator Manufacturers
Muskegon, Michigan
New York OffIce, 369 Broadway, L, E Moon, Manager
I !,.,.--._--------_._------_ ..__.__. _.---'-'---' ------------_._---- ~
--PERSONALITY IN RUSINESS"
An Address Delivered by Edward F. Trefz at the Sixth Annual Banquet of the Ohio
Retail Furniture Dealers' Association at Tolf"doon February 15, 1910.
The Toastmaster, Dr. W. H. Mor~y-Every society and
every assocIation has to have Jts 'educatIOn As we go along
m the world, competitIOn IS so close that the affable man
and the pleasant story that he can tell and the goods that he
can present m hIS peculiar way, JS what wins the cu:otomers
vVe have a gentleman here tOlllght who has come all the
way from ChIcago at the solicItation of this associatIOn who
WIll give you a talk upon the subject, "Personahty In 'Busi-ness"
I have the pleasure of mtrodnclllg to yOn Edward F
Trefz, of the Sheldon School of ChIcago; you all know of
that I guess (Applause)
Mr. TI efz-\lr Toastmaster and gentlemen of the OhIO
Retail Furlllture Dealers' ase.;oclatjon I wa", more than
pleased when the toastmaster asked you to be qwet, patient
and orderly whIle the speaker spoke Tl1dl made me feel
safe I don't know but what possibly J might have been
hke the tenor of a quartette travellllg over the country, and
who found after he got IIlto the minlllg camps of the \i\est
that It was ",ell whJ1e he sung to have a bIg sIgn on his
coat button, "Please don't shoot the performer He is doing
the best he can."
I am getting accustomed to talking to furniture dealers
in associations and III conventions I had the pleasure to
talk to the National ConventIOn at St. LoUIe.; lae.;t February,
and then the Indiana Convention down at Indlanapohs last
summer, and I have been lookmg mto the furniture propo-sJtion
and I have come to the conclUSIOn that fnrl1lture JS
:symbohc of civlh7ation Just as :ooon as Ollr forbears, If
we believe the Darwinian theory, changed form walking on
all foure.; to walking on two legs mstead of fOUl, then fulnl-ture
began to be a matter of necessity and demand Chairs
were required to sit down on, tables were required to SIt at,
and beds were required to lie in And have you thonght that
when a chIld was born into the world and gives its solitary
cry to the world into whIch it has been ushel ed, the mother
begins to plan for a beautiful cub? And she does not o-et
b
that crib in a drug store or a shoe store, but she goes to a
furmture store And after the child begins to long for the
fresh aJr, she gets a baby carriage There agalll she goes
to the furniture store And when it gets a httle older and
wants to sit at the table, it must have a high chair, and once
more the fUlniture e.;tore is sought out to supply the desired
article And so on through life Growing mto boyhood and
girlhood, as the case may be, the bed rOom must be furnished
up and fixed WIth dresser and rugs and all the necessary ap-purtenances
for keeping Johnny or Mary off the street at
mght-the IIlfluences of a pleasant loom And then, you
know, when manhood comes, and when the marnage takes
place and the new nee.;t is feathered, why then again the
furl1lture store becomes an index of civlhza tlOn, its upward
development and ItS upward growth. And so the furniture
man, and not the preacher, the furniture man and not the
newspaper edItor, the furniture man and not the President
of the United States or the Kmg of England, the furniture
man and not the great statesmen of the world, after all IS
the gmde to civihzatlOn He IS the man who is leadlllg men
and women from barbarism up to the hIgher knowledge of
intellectual and luxurious development (Applause).
"I am mighty glad to be here tonight to see you people,
because every time that I address an audience of this kllld
it makes me feel that the millenlt1m of peace is more rapidly
approachlllg. There was a time, you know, when men did
not get together III harmonious relatIOns; when they dIdn't
gIVe one another the sum and substance of theIr experiences;
when they didn't come, as the precedlllg speaker mentioned,
. WIth the underlymg pnnciples that made for success in busi-ness
one to another. All competition was carried on along
the lllle of warfare, of actual battle We beheved that we
could only succeed as against OUr competitors by trampling
them underneath our feet We didn't reahze that the very
best sort of a competition was to build up a market and for
people to come to us, bmld up the tastes and desires and
needs of the people, instead of trying to crush and drive one
another out of business And somehow 01 other I believe
that, whIle dIsputing the previous speaker who has said that
there ie.;no e.;entlluent in business, that the greatest and most
wandel ful senbment that pervade" thie.; country and all
clvll!zatlOn today is, not religion, but business, and I will tell
you why You' will notice that thIS eliminatIOn of bitter,
acrid, wicked competitIOn has practically grown less and less,
has been eliminated from our minds and hearts gradually with
the ehmmation of the bitter feeling that sprang from the
Civil \i\ar. Just as soon as we began to get away from the
cnmson tide of 1861 to 1865, as soon as savage authority
\i\as destroyed, as soon as the north and the south began to
reahze that they were brothers really instead of enemies.
\\Then the Spanish American war took place and when this
country was cemented into a whole, then the associations
and conventions of business men in this country began to
spnng mto fuIlfledged power. If you WIll study the past
hlStol y of this country you will observe this: that more
assoCIatIOns and more conventIOns of busmess men have
been held in the last ten years than have been held in fifty
years preceding. And I regard that as an augury of good
feelmg, or harmonious relatIOnship, and a wider, better and
greater development.
"We come together now and beheve in competition, not
in the crushing of our neighbor or hindering him, but in
developing him and in developmg ourselves Just a little bit
more rapIdly than he is able to develop hImself It is told
of old Gen Joseph Johnston, that gallant rebel leader during
the Clvll war, that while walkmg along Fifth avenue, New
York, shortly before bie.; death some time after the Civil war,
'" Ith a friend, they observ ed an old Grand Army veteran
leaning up against a bUIlding, holding a cup by a string
attached to hIS body and receIVing alms. Both of his arms
were cut off at hIS shoulders and hIS legs at the trunk. As
they passed by Johnston's fnend dropped a ten cent piece
into the unfortunate man's cup; Gen Johnston stopped and
dug down m his pocket and haulmg out a ten doIlar bill he
dropped it Jl1 the cup The old veteran dIdn't know the
famous leader of the southern forces, and when he saw he
had contnbuted he wa:o so pleased WIth the phl1anthropy and
he profusely thanked the general and said he hoped that God
would reward him for hIS kindly act, and old Johnston sai d :
'IN ever mmd, sir, I am not gJvmg you that ten doIlars from
any feel1l1g of phIlanthropy or chauty or religion, sIr; I am
glvmg yOU the ten dollars because you are the first d--d
Yankee I have seen carved up to suit my taste." (Laughter
and applause).
"But you see that spirit is all swept away. We don't
take any partiCUlar pleasure in seeing a receivership sign over
~-------------------------------- -
to WEEKLY ARTISAN
FLANDERS
OAK
As Its name denotes, a repro
ductlOn of the Flanders penod,
finished In a deep nut brown
shade, gIVIng a soft, velvety dull
effect. It IS a wmner With the
women.
NOTE: To facilitate prompt reply address Desk No.3.
OUR FUMED OAK
FLANDERS AND
EARLY ENGLISH STAINS
aim was true.
You WILL, if you
EARLY
ENGLISH
An a'Cld stam of proved practIcablhty Gives a correct, um-form
and permanent color Without the use of a fummg chamber.
Should be used whether yOU have a fummg chmber or not Ap-phed
to the fumed product .t adds tone and nchness, enhancmg Its
beauty as well as Its commercial value. Manufacturers now usmg
It are one vOIce m Its praise
Correct III color, durable, pracll-cal.
Has won the approval of
the leadmg fmUlture men by sheer
merit A sample panel IS yours
for the askm g.
MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO.,
have unmistakably hit the Bull's Eye of public demand. We have proved that our
We have again justified our policy of forever fingering the public pulse.
Mr. Furniture Manufacturer, are YOU taking advantage of this policy?
see sample panels of these beautiful finishes.
FUMED OAK
ACID STAIN
the door of a bus1I1Pss place \\ e figm e that It hm h OU1 m\ n
busmes" ultlmatel), that 1t reacb aga111st ourseh e" \ncl I
have noticed, too, that v\hene\ er tl1ls fee11l1g among cl gllat
many people of relatlOnsl1lp and harmo1l\ l "bt~, It tend,
toward the development of the 111stltutJon VI, 1th \\ h1C11 the \
dre connected I belong to the \s,=,oc1atlOn ot Comme1 el 11l
Chicago, the largest body of commerc1al dnd bU::,111es, men
I th111h, 111 the L l1lted States VVe ha\ e somethmg 11ke 3,200
or 3,300 firms 111the CIty belong1l1g to that aSSociatIOn lIe
are work1l1g and bmld1l1g towards a gl eate1 ChIcago ChI
cago 1'-, three la1ge nt1es, ,ou mIght say, m one, the nolth
sde, the west SIde, and the south s1de And our one gl edt
plOblem IS the unIficatIon of ChIcago and make 1t one great
and ,plendld whole That assoclatlOl1 has worked toY',ard
thIS end For mstance, practlcalh e\ er\ tl a\ elmg man gOlng
out of the cIty of ChIcago today 1" told th1:o 1)'. hIs hou"e
I know that e, ery tra\ elmg man connected VI, 1th ,he hou,e"
that belong- to the "\ssoClatlon of Commerce b so told He
I" told that If he can't sell the 1etd11er ant 111the country to
make "ure that that reta1lel WIll buy from a competItor 111 the
Utv of ChIcago [hat I", keep ChIcago the market, keep
the reta1lel com111g- to Chlcag 0, and If \ ou can't sell 01 If I
can t sell, say" \Ir Sale"manage1, ,,'I hy then let" thrcm ou
111f11'ence to\Valcl "ome competItor of OUb, and that IS on the
the(1) that If he keeps on com111g- to ChIcag-o some cIa\ VI, e
\\ III get hIS trade
"That Idea WIll <lpply to the letall bU"111e-,s If \ ou ('"n 1
keep or sell a customer, 1t 1S a great cleal bettel to hd\ e tlIat
customer gn e yOUl competltor 111the next hlocJ.. or a('IU,,-, tht
,>treet the busl11e,", Instead of JllS gett111~ on the iJ olley C,1l
or on the tJa111 01 111l11s aut01110blle and g0111g to "0111e to\\ n
ten, tweh e or fifty 1111le-,a'A ay and bUY111g It IS a f;1eat deal
better for \Ir vVlckens to have a customer go to hIS com
Marietta, Ohio.
Ptllt01 111 Lot am than It IS for hIm to go to Dayton, X ew
): ork, ChIcago or "G111e other place, and that feel1l1g 111
1111cago ha" gra\\ n larg-ely from the fact they have become
,Ie (jua1l1tecl one \\ lih anothel II e are g-ett111g together and
\\ tale bec;1l1111ng10 le,,117e that the man who competes WIth
I1'- aft! 1 ,dl ha-, the -,clme 111St111CtSand the same feel111gs
\nc\ ,hdt 1'- hd\ 111glh eftect on ChlCdgO
, C l11cago has cIe\ eloped along the moral 11ne \\ hy I
J emembel It \\ as only a year ago last ~ovember when I was
clown here talk111g to the Cloak and Garment J\Ianufacturers
111th1" ut}, a gentleman from ChICago, a cloak manufacturer,
telephoned to d fl1end of hI" some twelve m11es distant nght
out hele 111the booth He V\ ent 111and the gIrl called up the
part}, dnd he talked for tv,o or three 1111l1utesand then came
out and asked the operator at the "witch-board how much
It \\ a-" dnd '>he sdld It was a dollar, and he swelled up like
a bOlled 10b"te1, and he says, "A dollar I It IS an outrage."
He sa) s '\\ hy at ChIcago we could telephone to hell and
back fOI ten cent'" She came nght hack at him and says,
11ke a Toledo glll would, I th111k, and she ::,a}s, "Yes, but
that h 111the C1ty l1111lh (Laughter and applause).
"But VI, earl "01 t ot mOv111g that suburb out of Chicago
a little dl"tance aVl,a) , and we hope to get It landed 111Toledo
aftel a whIle \nother 1l1stance One day not very long
i- ------- ~
:
1 II
I I
I ! .. •• __ •• _ _ ••• _ ••• • .J
If your DESIGNS are right, people want the Goods.
That makes PRICES right.
(tlarence lR. lbtlls
DOES IT
163 Madison Avenue -CItizens Phone 1983 GRAND RAPIDS MoleR
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
.....------------------_ ..._._.__._._-------------_. ----_._._._. _. _._._-- -. .. .. .. .... _. - - - - _. ..,
Flat Surfaces, Irregular Shapes
and Mouldings sanded faster and
better than by any other method.
We guarantee to reduce your
sanding costs.
A SUPERIOR Sand Belt Machine
No. 111 Patented Sand Belt Machine.
WYSONG a1 MILES CO.,
ago I \'va.., down to the stockyard", and a lrenchman from
Pans wa" there, and he couldn't get ovel talkmg about the
na..,tmes.., of ChIcago '\Vhy," he says, 'In Pan.., our alley..,
dIe cleaner than yOl1! boule\alcb," He says, "\Vhat is worse
h to thmk that one of the mo"t mJluentlal cItizens hele h a
pIg merchant" \\ ell, that probably \\ ,1" true Some of OUI
best cltl/ens are "pIg melchants" But] noticed thh, that
It vvasn't \er} long after that Flenchman had passed that
aspersIOn befO! e ChIcago vva" senchng money over to Pan"
to clean the "treet" and allev" of Pans after the flood
"It IS the gleat splnt of fellow::,ll1p, you can call It what
} ou want to, expedIency 0' pohcy or affectIOn, or anythmg
of that "art, but somehow 01 other It IS the fee11l1~ that e\ ery
mdn has a nght to be Judged by the \ ery ])e"t that I.., m
h1111and ha" a nght to equal pllde V'vItlt e\ er} boch el"e
Law, not Luck or Chance.
"But I hay e come here to talk to you )Lbt a httle bIt
about pen,onahl y m busl11ess Befort I start m, however, I
wJ1l say that for a time I vvd3 connected WIth the Sheldon
School, ~ut fO! CjUlte a whde I have been 111the bankmg busI-nes::"
that IS, m the bondmg busme"s so 1 am commg to
talk to yOU as one buslUe,;s man to anothel, not commg here
a~ one vvho I'; interested m the educatIOnal sIde of It, but one
who ha" observed and studIed the succes,;e,; of men 111bus 1-
nes::" and has found, as he beheves, the secreb of theIr suc-cess
I thmk the greatest facto! m the succe"s of e\ ery man
m busmess IS that qualIty or that 111tanglble ,;omethmg that
v\ e term, for the want of a better name, the personahty of the
man Ours toda, , a" It always has be('n, IS a wOIld of laV'v
There IS no such a thmg as lUck or chance in the unIverse
The man who talk,; about luck ar about chance IS one V'vho I"
ab..,olutely Ignorant of the manner m whIch nature controls
,..--
II
---------_._------------ ..... --------.,
Entirely Automatic. Instantaneous Adjustments.
Makes the STRONGEST, most ECONOMICAL and
most ACCURATE Case Construction possible.
..... _------------
The Best Square
IIIII
ff
II~--_..-_. ....
No. 181 Multiple Mortlser.
WYSONG a1 MILES CO.,
IIII
I ~
Ash for Catalog "E,"
Cedar St. and
Sou. R. R. Greensboro, N. C.
the workmgs of our hfe and the surroundmg planet,;, and
of everythlllg that spr111gs from them OJ IS produced by
them, because everythlllg I'; conducted, operated and con-trolled
by law It I'; by law absolutely that thp great planets
"heel 111then cea"ele,;s COUI~e alound theIr endless orbits
It IS by law that the great astIOnomel today can tell you Just
lAactly when Halley'" comet V\ III be vISIble to tho,;e who ltve
on the PacIfic Coast, to those who ltve III England, or to
those who 11\e III New York, and he can tell you wlthm 1-
lOOOth part of a second when Halley's comet wIll agam
appear m two thousand year,; from now, because nature's
laws al e ';0 dehcately eqUIpOIsed that they could not pOSSIbly
be dltered It IS by law that the farmer pIa",; and sows and
reaps; by law that the great sea,;on.., follow one after another
111 stately processIOn, and the greater WIsdom and more
knowledge a man has of the law,; that ~overn the l1n1\erse
and hlm,;el£ and all others, the greater IS hIS per"onahty bound
to become And so It I" not a que,;tIOI1 of luck or chance It
I'; a questIOn of 111telltgence and study There are a lot of
men who are "tudymg bookkeepmg, the two ';Ide" of a ledger
they are studying how to stop the leak, whIch IS perhaps
one of the most Important thmg'3 111 the conduct of bl1sllless
They aI e studymg thIS thmg and that thmg and ie other
thmg, pertammg to bad debts and vanous other m" tter:, of
accountmg, but they dre iorgettmg the one great saltent and
ImpO! tant feature that IS perhaps gOlllg to make for theIr
"Ucces" or faIlure, and that IS the 111dlvlcIual who IS gomg
to go from place to place, to find the market for the product
of that establt"hment, the man who IS gomg out and trymg
to sell It m the oommumty And so It IS up to every man to
mcrease and develop hIS own personahty It I" a wonderful
thmg when we stop to thmk of it how some men by develop-
Chisel Mortiser
Ash. for Catalog "J"
N. C.
• ..... - - •• • - - - - --- ----.--.-.--.-.-.--~ • ••• _._. _. _._._. ••• I •••• __ •• _ •• _ _ _.. .....
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Nashvi lIe ~ Mi ch. ~ 5/7/08.
Mr. E. F. Koyl~
c/o Grand Rapids Veneer Works~
Grand Rapids~ Mich.
Dear Sir:-
In regard to the kiln you in-stalled
for us~ we will state we
are satisfied~ we are getting re-sults~
and that is all we want.
Our lumber dried in this kiln seems
to be in very fine condition and
we dry it in so much shorter time.
Trusting to see you again in
the near future~ we remain~
Very respectfully,
LENTZ TABLE CO.
L. E. Lentz.
~_.- _- ._------ _ ..•........ _-_ .._.~
LEXINGTON HOTEL
500 Rooms.
Michigan Boulevard and 22nd Street.
EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE.
New Cafes. New Grill Room.
Offices and Rooms Redecorated.
Absolutely Fire Proof.
"YOU WILL LIKE THE LEXINGTON:'
J. E. MONTROSE l p . t HORACE WIGGINS,
CHARLES McHUGH f roprIe ors. Assistant Mlrr.
Also operating
Hotel Montro.e, Cedar Rapids, la.; Rock Island House, Rock Ialand,lIl. a.. _ ••.••••• . ... ....- - . ......
ing themselves, this internal force within them become con-querors
of every Circumstance, while others who have had
greater advantage m birth and greater advantage in training
or education and opportunities placed in their way, have
failed most miserably in life.
Napoleon as an Example.
"The other night I was reading Lord "Roseberry's Facts
about N'apoleon," a httle book by a great man about a great
soldier and statesman, and when I closed that book along in
the early hours of the morning, my heart warmed within
me to thmk about what a man might accomplish At fifteen
years of age that young man, born in Corsica, in poverty, as
a kmg's pensioner, entered a mihtary academy at Brienne in
France At eighteen he was sittmg in the garret studymg
as to how on twenty sou a week he might be able to complete
his studies to enter the army. At twenty-one he was driving
the EnglIsh out of the harbor of Toulon with his artIllery
At twenty-nine he had made himself the first consul of France
and a few ) ears later he surprised the leader of the Austrian
force" b) hi" milItary genius, displaying a new art in military
"al fdl e \t tll1rty-five he was Impenal Emperor of the
"arId, and" henevel his foot fell all Europe trembled Then
he "as ba111shed to Elba, and Europe sat back and breathed
eas}. and said that the man of destiny was banished forever-more
"\'Ithm a short time it was learned that the man from
Elba had come back Knowing something of the power of
the man they set out to conquer, what? A despised Corsican,
fi, e feet and seven inches m height returning from his
banishment Again at the head of the army of France, he
"ent forth and vanquished and conquered the great army
of Europe, and it was only when God interfered With his
ram storm there at Waterloo that Napoleon bowed his head
m submission, not to man but to eternal destiny, and when
he died at St Helena, Europe breathed in awe and reverence
and felt free once more, but said "Here "as a man who came
forth from pm erty to power" J t was nothing but person-alIt}
(I\pplause)
Rebating Like Grafting.
"And that same force makes for success, because it con-quers
over circumstances But I don't hke to hear whiners
The men you know who are going about and saying, "Well,
I ne, er had the same chance that this fellow had. Some-ho\'.
or other Tom Jones beat me to it and he got the corner
over) onder and that is the best location for business." "This
fellow has got the inside track and he gets rebates off the
railroad" ] ust as if you and I, if we had had the chance
"auld not be glad to exchange places, as far as business
posItIon IS concerned wlht John D. Rockefeller or Carnegie
or anybody else; just as If you or I if we had had the chance
would not take a rebate from the railroad company, if we
could get it Without the sheriff finding out about it When
} ou come down to it It is simply because he has beat us to
It. that IS all Have you ever thought about the fact that
you busmess men are practicing rebate every day You see
l\frs Smith come into your estabhshment and she has got a
111cebig bank roll, and your only, sale, solitary motive in life
for that particular moment, forgetting everything else, your
rehgious duties, your church vows and your ideas on honesty
and fairness, and your sole object and purpose for the mom-ent
IS to separate her from the bank roll That is your one
chief and supreme aspiration. Now you are Willing to make
one or two or any number of concessions that won't im-mediately
interfere with your profit in the transaction to dis-pose
of some furniture to the rich Mrs. Smith in your com-munity.
But you let Mrs. Jones, the wash woman come in,
and perhaps she is unable to pay the price of an article and
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 13 ..- ...
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Waddell
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Manufacturing I
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Co.
These are two of our Latest Designs in Drawer Pulls.
Watch This Space for Others
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
~_...__ ..._- .. ------------------------------------._._._._._._ ..~.--_._.-----_ ..••.•..._ ...-...~
you may think about what means she may have, and somehow
or other you can't go and gIve Mrs. Jones all the concession~
and the same treatment that you afford the rich Mr.;;. Smith.
You are rebating; you 'are grafting in a sense.
Bill Jones and Tom Walker.
"The preacher stands in his pUlp1t, and B1ll Jones, a
leading cItizen of the town, whose stomach stIcks out more
"pabstic" than anything else, comes down the aisle and the
preacher keeps on readmg the lesson for the mornmg and
never raises his eyes or anything else. Bill Jones planks
hum,elf down m a pew for which he has paId anywhere from
$25 to $100 a year The preacher goes through the service,
and after it is over he makes a bee 1111efor his friend Bill
J ones Just to shake hands with him. Tom \i\ alker, the poor
man, came in and the preacher was readmg the lesson while
he walked down the aisle, that preacher would raise his
eyes and he would look at him, and of course everybody would
look at him walking down the aisle, and after the services
the chances are the preacher would stumble over \Valker
to get at Bill Jones to shake hands But you know we have
a deplorable way of thinkmg that It is the other fellow that
has luck, that has had the opportunIty, he IS the fellow
that is getting along, and if he had to get up against the same
things we had, why he wouldn't be 1111t wIth us at all
"Kow, gentlemen, I have ob:oerved th1S, that behind every
great success in business, as I have saId to you before, is the
personality of a single man It may be sheer foohshness, it
may be idlOcy, or water on the bram, I do not know, but I
never go by Marshall Field's reta11 estabhshment m Ch1cago,
but that I always ra1se my hat I look at that instltutlOn
and I think of Marshall Field stand111g there and talking to
Mr Leiter, on what is now the corner of State and Adams
street, after the great fire, when Mr. LeIter counseled mov-ing
either to the far west or may be back to Cleveland, Ohio,
to engage in business, 111asmuch as Ch1cago was w1ped off
the face of the earth, and Marshall F1eld said, "\Vell LeIter,
I think I will fight it out nght here" That institutlOn is
just as much a monument to him as this whole country is a
monument to our forebears through whose energy and
patllotlsm and enthUSIasm it sprung. It I~ founded upon the
personality of one man
"When you go down there and you look at the packing
industry of Chicago, millions of dollars, all that one great
obJ ect upon whIch every impecul110us and pusI1animous poli-tIcIan
hope to make hIS reputatlon, assaihng it for a trust,
when your attorney general and when your Judge of a court,
and I am not in contempt, actually clash as to who shall have
the honor of gett1l1g the scalp of the Beef Trust-when you
look at that instltution down there and you think of the
thousands of men employed there, the great wealth that it is
producing every day, thmk of the lowing herds out upon the
great WIde lands of the west, the farmer who has come into
affluence and power by reason of these establishments, and
then you stop and think that It Issued full-fledged from the
brain of one man, that it was nurtured and brought into life
through the force and power, the fact that it is Ch1cago's
greatest source of wealth, one of the greatest industries of
all the world, behmd thai stands the mIghty personality of
P. D Armour.
"Why, gentlemen, that is the hIstory of every business,
the per:oonahty of the man behInd the bu:omess, and if the
busine:os IS not a success 1t IS usually because It lacks some
such force There IS no partIcular reason why Chicago should
be today what it I~ Th111k of It I It took London 1800 years
to get four mI1llOn of inhab1tants, It took Pans 2,200 years
Dodds' Tilting Saw Table No.8
I
We take plea!ure In mtroductD.gto you our new Saw Table The base IS slmtlar to wha
We have been using on our No 4 Saw Table, only we have made II larger on Ihe floor The
ratsmg and lowenna: deVice IS the same as We have on the No 4 Machmet With lever and
pttman The lever IS made of steel
The .rbor IS made of I 7'f-mch steel, runnmg in long nng OIlingbox.. , and IS for I-mch hole
10 saw. We furmsh one 14~i.ch saw on each machtne It wIll carry a 16-mch saw If destred
Table IS made wllh a center .ltde 12 mcltes WIde wIth a movemenl of 21 Inches It has a
lockmg deYlce to hold It when you do not WIsh to use It, and has a delachable mllre guage 10 be
used when usmg the shdmg~table. Can cross~cut WIth table extended to 24 Inches, also np up
to 24 Inches Wide Table has a removable throat that can be taken out when uslOg dado It
also has two mitre guages for regular work and a two uded np guage that can be used on f:'Ither
stde of the saw, more espeCiallywhen the table ISttlted, alsoa hltlOgnp gauge to be used to cut
bevel work when you do nol WIShto lilt the lable The top IS40x44 mches .. J
Countershall has T & L pulleys lOx 14 mches, and the dnve pulley 16x5 mebes counter.
shaft should run 800 Makmg In all about as complete a machme as can be found' and at a
reasonable pnce Wnte us and we Willbe pleased to quote you pnce! Address,
ALEXANDER DODDS, CO., 181.183 Canal St., Grand RapIds, MwL
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14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
to get less than three l111lllon mhabltants It tooK '\ e\\ York
300 years to Ret about three mIllIon mhabltants, and ChIcago
m seventy years has l?,otten tv>a 1111lhon fi\ e hundred thou"
and of inhabItants 'J0 more I ea~on \"hy ChlLa~o ~hould be
the metropohs of the \\ e~t than why Toledo 01 Cle\ eland CI1
Columbus, or some other cIty should be heLau~e the ~reat
cIties of the world are all mland to\\ n s and don't \ au e\ u
forget that i\nd It seems to me that'the £;Ieat iorce~ 111
these great m~tltuilons and ~reat Cltll~ b the pll ~on,t1lt\
of the mdlVldual It I~ lIke "ale"men Good "alc"men ,He
born and not made, It h ~ald 1\ h} "me ~ale~111en art 1lO111
and not made HO\\ can a "ale"mall come 111tOthe \\ ollel I
don't know of an} man \\ ho chel not L0111t mto thL \\ OJ lrl r
don't know of an} man on earth \v ho clJd nrlt Cu111eL"c CDt 1)\
natural entrance thlough bIrth \nd "ale~ll1U1 hke\\ I~e all
born And per"onahty I" a thmg that can be Inl1 ea~ecl and
be developed by knowled~e It IS a mattel ot ~tuch
The Boy Who Knew
"How man} men } ou kno\\ do the nl?,ht th111g at thc
nght time m the nght place and 111 the lIght \\ a\ HO\\
many men are there 111bU"111e~" ~who \\ ould he male ~Ulce~~
ful If they dId th111£;" 111the way that a }oun£; man clJd \\hu
saw hIS employer who \\as leanml?, 0\ er and had on a shOl t
coat, and the young man "hpped up to hll11 and handed hl111
a note, the stenographers we, e all slttmg alound and he
opened It and read "Honored SIl, \ OUI pants h lIpped '\ 0\\
that boy IS gomg to own that busmess S0111eda\ He 11cl~the
faculty of domg the nght thmg at the Ill?,ht time 11\ the II£;ht
way, and m the lIght place If he had called hh bCh~ ~ ,ltten
tlon to It m a loud tone at \ OIce, e\ el \ l?,III \\ oud ha \ e ~cen
what was the matter It the ho~':l had been ~ttt1l1£; dcm n It
would not hay e been the lIght tl111e So he chd It at thc lIght
tIme and m the n~ht place '\nd that I" the \\a} It ou~ht to
be And there I" one thmg you and I Lan tl am our~e h e...,to
do, to know jU"t eAactly, as that ho} chd, when and \\ hue
and m what way to do certam thmg" that make fOl OUI ~uc-cess
\Vhat IS busmess)
Sale a Mental Victory,
"Busmess IS a transactIOn It b a barga111IDg \ ou ,l' C to
sell 111 order to prosper Toledo ha" to "ell the £;ooel~ ~hl
manufactures m order to mu eao,c the Lonhne~ ot the CI1\ and
the populatIOn You hay e got to "ell anel so 1 take It that
Lhe fundamentdl pnnclple upon whIch all bus111ess IS founded
IS the power to sell and sell well \0\\ a sale, gentlemen IS
a mental thmg You go to work and "ell a man a chdll yOU
don't sell hlln a chaIr That IS an 111clclent of the trano,actlon,
of the real thmg that takes place Perhaps that has not oc-curred
to you, but you wl1l find that that IS absoluteh true
and that IS thIS that \\ hen an mdlvldual comes mto \ OUI
estabhshment and buy s an article of furl11tUI e there IS a con-quest
of the intellect Your mmd has predom111ated and a sale
IS the result \Vhen yOU sell a customer somethmg, } ou are
domg just exactly what Gl ant dId at \ppotomax 1: ou are
dOl11g the uncondItIOnal 'iUl rendel act, and 1I1stead of tak1l1g
a SWOld, you al e takl11l?, a bank note 01 check \ ou arc
conquer1l1~ the m1l1d of the other 111dl\Idual \ "ale IS d
mental th1l1g, and the more onc ~ m111d 1'0 held 111 SUbjeLtlon
the more yOU can eAerCIse thIS faculty 0\ el } our customers
that come 111,Just to that eAtent 10,} our bus1l1es~ ~Olng to
"ucceed So don t } ou bee It IS up to } ou and me to de\ clop
the quahtles of the mllld and heart and bod} that make that
large pel sonahty 111 ordel thdt we can dom1l1ate the situatIOn
Personahty IS merelv the development of the quahtles of each
indIVIdual
"You Will aglee vvlth me that the more you can develop
the manufacturer the better the manufactUl er and the bettel
the bU'omes" mdn 1£} au can lemember the names and face'i
and the \ allOU" Illcldent'i 111 connectIOn WIth people WIth whom
\ au C0111C111 contdct It 1" of great a""htal1ce 1 ,'1I1e...,G
Blame had a mal \ elOLh memory, and that IS what made hIm
-"0 POPUldl \\ Ith people every"" here II Ilham Alden SmIth,
~cnator flOm \llchlgan, \\on hIS populanty practlcally upon
that \\ ondel tul attnbute of the man that made It po"slble fOl
111111tu recedl the name'i and face'i of ptople whom he had
met no mattel ho\\ Ion£; 'ieparated \lemolY I.., a '3plenchd
th111£;
FaIth is the Engine
J uhn [) "'harp, the pre"lclent of the ;\ldr"hall FIeld cum
pam ~alcl that he \\ ould ~I\ e an} mdn $100,000 a veal ""ho
lould ~lt h\ hI" ~1Cieand gl\ e hIm rehahle judgment 111 e\ el \
pI <lblem thdt Cdmc before hlll1 Yet Judgement IS developed,
a taculh II t "ay faIth b a Sunday ...,chool wodd \\ h) thele
I~ 110th1l1g hke faIth 111 bU"1I1es" \\ hy, bles'3 your heart,
110tll1ng 111 the \\ ollc! has heen dccomp1lshed unles" faIth hao,
hcen hehmd It That has been the turhmc engme that has
c1l1\ en anc1 1" drl\ 1I1g u" on I am gOIng to my home on a
tlalll t0111l?,ht to Chlcdgo, and I go, plac111g ah'iolute faIth 111
thc eng-llJee' l?,ot to do It II hen Columbus cro~sed the ocean
he placed tdlth III hIS blea"t, III hiS knowledRe of naVIgation
\ ou al e placmg faIth 111 your commu111ty by putt1l1g money in
to \ (\11 bU~111es-" 1\ hen a man gives yOU hI" check, you c'ere
pldlln~ tdnh m It 1alth IS cne of the great underlymg
plllJclple" oj bU~1l1e,,~ If It were not for our faIth, we could
not ~et along \ el \ tal '\nc\ then, I take It that there IS one
tIllng that ha~ been 0\ edooked and that 1'3the de\ elopment of
10\ alt\ \\ bILb h jU"t a, e'isentlal a qua1lficatlOn or faculty
111 hie d" amthmg el"e You "top and thmk of It Kow I have
the control ot ahout one hundred salesmen, and vOU WIll
paldon thl" pel'3onal refelence \\ e usually let out a man
e\ en SIX month" unle,,~ he can 'ihow us that he can make
at least $5,000 a year, whIch gIve" u" a tall profit '\ow WIth
all the"e men, I \\ ould rather ha\ e loyalty stand out than
any thm~ el ~c r don t cal e ho\\ ~ood a "ale'3man IS I don't
lal e ho\\ much busme"" he can produce If we :find that a
man IS not ab'iolutel) loydl to hI" 111stltutlOn, he gets separ
dted from hh payroll beeathe that IS one of the great th111gs
tha t I~ hOUl1d to cIe\ elop and met ea~e your pel sonahty
<....,omctll11e~,\ ou knov\, when we do, as douhtle~s men out
~Ide of thl.., 1Dam do, nonc of u" 1I1"lde, but once 111a whl1e a
mdn become" ch~loy al to hl'3 domestic yows He forgets
thIS fact, that no man can be dIsloyal to anyth111g concerning
d mdn 111an\ \\ a}, shape or manner, but that It reacts m-
\ allabl} and practlcall} trreslstlbly
Arnold and His Grouch.
"I hay e often thou~ht ahout thIS th111g-, chc,loyalty, to
-.,jamp It UpOll the nllnd" and memory of y0111 employ es I
~a", m the Rotunda at II ashmgton one day, the fil 'it tlme I
\\ a'3 there I \\ d" a young fellow and I asked the Sergeant-
'3.t- \11110, d'i I looked over the 11st of generals of the Revolu-tlOnal}
II aI, what the blank 'ipace there wa" fOl Of cour"e
Clt the heae! \\ as 1\ a'3hlllgton, and then Lec, and the I est of
them, dnd I a..,ked the Sergeant-at-.'\Ims \\ hat the hlank
'ipace wa" fOl lIe saId, "That l'i the pldce that Benecltct
-'\rnold''3 name ou~ht to have l?,one 111" Then I got mtere'ited
111 the character dnd I saId "\\T as Arnold, was he do\\ nngh t
lust a mean contemptIble cn'3s," and I mdde a careful stndy
of the Re\ olutlOn, and I fonnd out thIS, that the most bnl
bant figure at the Rev olutlOnary Vv ar wa'i, not Ii\[a'ih111gton,
but BenedIct .'\1nold That IS the 0pl111on of Van :\Ioltke, of
Germall}, of LOl d Roherts of England and General Mtles of
thIS countn, that the most bnlhant figure of the RevolutlOn-dl}
II ar, not bal1l1~ even the German or the Flench 01 the
WEEKLY ARIISAN 15
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These Specialties are used all
Over the World
- _ ..----~
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Veneer Presses, different kinds and sizes (Patented)
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc" Etc.
~ . ~-=-=~--~ -----~, '\0..,_ Hand Feed Glueing Mach;;'e (Patent
pendmg.) Many styles and sizes.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
Power Feed Glue Spreadmg Maehme, SIRgle,
Double and Combinntton. (Patented)
(Sizes 12 m. to 84 m wide.) IIII
~-----------_.
LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. No.6 Glue Heater. -------_._. -- - - . .- ------------- --------~
Lng1lsh officer'3, was BenedIct '\rnold He was the man who
planned the one great mOvement that made England '31t up
and take notlce that "he had a revolution 111~tead of a 1ebel-
1Ion on hand That wa" BenedIct .\rnold, and that man dId
more than vVash111gton for hl'3 country, he '3hed his blood
C p there on the heIghts of Quebec, his blood sta111ed the
whIte "nows of Canada He loved the Colomes a" much as
anybody ebe dId, but '3omehow or other he got a grouch,
'3ame k111d of grouch that you get against the commumty
once in a \VhJ1e that yOU get aga111st the assoc1at1On perhap'3
once 111a whJ1e, only he dIdn't '3tlfle It, and by and by It
blOught hl'o 1U111 and a'> I read the '3tory as tladlt10n has It
of hI-, last day '3, teal:O actually came to'my e} e'O, so mucl~
power, so much strength-there 111that rude ganet 111London,
IY111gupon hIS couch, emacIated, the pnest cOm111g to shroud
111m 111hIS last hours, and help111g hIm to "tagger aclOSS the
flOOl, and g0111g to an old chest, he opened It and pulled out
of It the colonel's umform of the revolut1Onary army of the
colomes, and he put the coat upon that fOlm, and then he
~)UIIed out a flag, tattered and torn and COvel ed WIth b1O\Vn
spot,>, and then he saId to the pnest, 'You \\ ant to kIll me I
Look you, pnest, vou see those bro\ivn spot", on that flag?
That flag was wrapped around my leg 111front of Quebec,
and that IS my blood l\Iy men laved me and \'Vash111gton
laved me, and they saId that some day I would take a seat
01 power 111the colomes, but, pnest, the babes 111the cradles
0'1 e1 there now are tdught to rabe the11 v Olces and hISS and
cur'>e the ment10n of my name" \nd dIsloyalty acts that
wav Alway '3 \\Then I say loyalt) to Jour COmml1J1ltl, I
mean thIS gn 111g} our custome1 the same k1J1d of a chance
that you would v.ant to have The statement \Va" made
tOl11ght that the man who succeeds has got to gn e hh
custome1, the person who buys from hun, more goocl~ 01
better gooe!'> ]n other \'Yards, If vou are 0'01110'to succeed 111 • ,." b
'au bU'3111es'3,}au have got to remember that the t'A a funda
mental pnnClple" of '>ucce'3S are the..,e (jua1lt.: of good'3 and
e'Ccellence of "en Ice JU'3t as a man 01 \\ oman bel;111s to
rea1lze that they Cdn have 1mp1lclt faIth and t1 U'3t In 'au,
then the, are gOIng to gne yOU then hU'3111e'3'3 ju"t a" long
a,> the good':> you have are the be'3t that can pos,lbly be pro-duced,
and Just a'3 long d'O yoUl se1 vice 1'3the \ ery best that
'IOU can gn e or 1:0 given 111your com 111U111t),then ) ou are
bound to '3ucceed, and you can't work that out unless } au
111crease your own powers w1th111 you Study not alone the
material things around you and about you, the cond1tlOn of
trade and the market, what furnIture IS made and such
tl11ng'3, thIS and that and the other, but study y OU1'3elf and
develop all the force':> wth111 you, '30 that when you go into
the market to buy, the man who sells to you knows he IS deal-
111gWIth a dom111ant torce and he cannot qUlte conquer, you
learn to do those th111£;s, and somehow or other that leaves
you Just a httle bIt above the rest, and the customers are
w111111gto pay the pllce
> The World as a University.
~0\V, gentlemen, I want to say thIS 111conc1U'3lOn. that
to me one of the greatest ~and ChOlCe'3t thing.., 111lIfe IS to be
able to succeed 111the th111g I am undertak1l1g, and somehow
or othe1 I hd\ e found It Just as you have found It, dnd thC1C
d1e some of you here, who are a httle older than I am, who
wJ11 bear out the '3tatement, that thIS old world of ours IS a
unn e1'31t}, that the teachers a1 e hard knoc1.. '0, and that '3ome-hmv
01 other the £;raduat1l1g P0111t IS reached \Vhen \\ e have
accom phshed a th111g that 1'> 1eall) v'V01th domg And dfter
all It 1'3the hare1 knock'3 that.: ou get 111vanous ways that a1e
de'l dOp111g your per'3ona1lt} more than anyth111g el':>e, and the
man who goe,., up aga111'3t It hdlC1est and shut'3 down hIS teeth
the :otrongest, and keep:o on h1tt111g the l111e ':>teadfastly and
cont111uously 1:0the 1l1chv1dudl who IS 111ereas111g hIS person-a1lty
and mak1l1g hImself a gl eater pO'Aer every day So I
",ant to tell vOU that the gleat earthquake at San FranClsco
WIll do more for San FranCISCO 111 the next twenty years
than If '>he hdd mJ1hons of people and mJ1hons of dollars
The fire of 1871 made Chicago, and ,.,0 It IS that the th111gs
we have got to conquer and ove1 come a1 e the th111gs that
are develo))111g- u:o and mak111g OUl pel '3onahty, and there 15
noth111g 111the wOlld that cIevelops a man ..,0 much as d sale.
the conquenng- of anothe1 m111d, and to get anothel 111tellect
lookIng at a matter 111the :oame \Vay \\ e present It
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
Citizens Telephone 170~.
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
~UBL.ISHEO EVERY SATURDAY BY THI!
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRI"TION $1 00 "ER YEAR ANYWHEREIN THE UNITED STATES
OTHERCOUNTRIES $Z 00 PERYE"'R. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS.
PUBI.ICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NORTH DIVISION ST, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH,
A S WHITE, MANAGING EDITOR
Entered as second class matter, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapids, Michigan
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVEE LEVY
An eastern corporatIOn Ovvnmg and opelat1l1g "e, elal
woolen mills have taken out msul ance policies fOI S50000
each, on lives of some of their most succe"sful manag el"
with a view of protect1l1g the stockholder." emplm e., and all
others connected With the busmess from losse" that l111ght
follow the death of the head of a successful concel n From
a busmess standpomt the Idea seems to be all nght It
might be used to advantage by man) manufactt11 m£; and mel
cantlIe insiltutions There al e "ome furllltt11 e manufaciur
ing compallles and some !Sleat letat! houses that hay c becn
bt11lt up by the efforts and abllib of a mdn \\ ho~e death
would cause large loss to the stockholder" 1n such case,
$50,000 or $100,000 Vvould not co, er the 10--'0 but Ii \, ould
help some and mIght prevent a complete collapse of thc
business
The movement b) rallt oad com pal11t" dnd others to I e-claim
abandoned farms m );"ew YOlk state and \e\\ Lngland
may not have any perceptIble effect on pI Ices of farm pro
duets, but it WIll surely call attentIOn to the pOSSible utIli-zatIOn
of the waste lands and result m the adoptIOn of bettel
methods for mamtaillln~ the productn ene--s of the farms not
only in New YOlk, l\ew England and \ llglllla but mother
sections of the country I\s a I ule the I\mellcan farmer" al e
too greedy They take out of theIr lands all that It IS pos-sible
to get without thought of the future and m:1ln of the
farms are run down-worn out-m a few ,e:1I" The \\ 01k
of the ratlroad compallles WIll show that I\mellcan tal 111",
can be made as perpetually productrve and profitable as al e
those in Europe
Rarely does a merchant gam an) thl11g b) puttmg out
leaders-selling some goods at cost, or less, and ac1d1l1g e"
Olbitant profit" to others to make up the ,n erage Thc
practIce IS not fall to bU) CIS and It b 11cqucnth bdd f01
sellers. For eAample, e,uppo:oe a pelson In1\ ~ onl) hIgh priced
goods, and does not happen to need any of the 10\\ -priced
ones; he gets the worst of It, m spIte of the slichng "cdle
whIch is supposed to adjust the difficulty Then suppose the
customer buys only the low-priced goods and none of the
high ones, the merchant gets decidedly the worst of It and m
most ca:oes hIS losses are gl ea ter than hIS gams, e, en when
the advertlsmg ,alue of the scheme IS considered
The corporatIOns that have neglected to file reports re-qUIred
by the mcome tax lawaI e settmg a bad example The
law may be knocked out by the courts and thus they can not
be penalized, but If the COUlts "U'itam the law they WIll not
be III an cm lable posltlO11 Neglect or I efusal to file 1eport"
h had bccall"e It mdlcate'i lack of I espect f01 law Even a
hdel la\\ "hould lx 1 espected and obeyed untt! It IS repealed or
111\ altc1ated b) the courts Dlsle"pect and defiance of law IS
lalgel) lespoll"lhle for the public Ill-fee1mg agamst corpor-
,ttlOn" and for the laws that hamper bllsmess combmatlon'i
BuHalo, \ 1, hdc, deCIded to estabhsh a smkmg fund
tel be u~ed to leplace or lepall city bUlld111gs that may be
lamaged b) fire, and cancel insurance poltcles on such but!d-mg'
1he InSUlance authOrities denounce the scheme, de-clal111~
that It WIll lead to muniCIpal insurance of pnvate
plOpert) 'Yell, why not ktll 1t by cutting out some of the
e"tra\ agant expenses and thus enabling the insurance com-pal11e"
to offer lower rates?
\ mathematIcal "harp of PIttsburg reports that, accord-
111g to fig ures, \\ hlch \V e all know, never he, the 1etail meat
dealel \\ ho sell" out h1S entire stock twice a week and makes
.20 pel cent on his sales ,makes 40 per cent a week, and in a
,Ldl 2,080 per cent It IS certa111ly easy to make money.
The man \\ ho hao;, let us say, started in with $25,000 capital
and thoLH:;ht he had made about $5,000 in a year is mistaken
He has made $S20,000, but he can't "how the money or 1ts
equn altnt It I" ea.,) to make money wlth figures
ldllcatull" mad, ertlsmg are of doubtful ,alue They
111.1, a ttl ad attentIon and bnng a laugh, but they should not
be ot the k111d thdt lea, e", a St111g behind For instance,
ne\ el hd\ e a llcllcu!ouc, pIcture of a farmer and hiS WIfe, if
) ou drc appealtn~, e, en 111the remotest degree to the farm-
Ing element ] he ±armers and theIr W1ves may say noth111g,
hut the, do llut hke 1t lust the same
By the \ht) hay e) ou noticed that the ralltoad." that were
to be \\ recked l,y the two cent fare laws are gettmg along
,erv 111ceh 'lost of them are domg better now than they
\\ el e t\\ 0 ,ear" ago The) report mcreased passenger traffic
and are pa) mg bettel dlv1dends notwIthstanding the two-cent
la\\ __ \\ onder 1£ a con'iiderable reductIOn in freight
I ate:o would have a slmllal effect?
Ea'itel tIde doe~ not mean much to the furniture dealer,
but thele 1S no lea"on why he should not take advantage of
the general awakenl11g to maugurate hIS spring season by
arrangmg an i openl11g," making spec1al window dIsplays and
111\It111g mspectlOn of h1S stock Most people are in good
humol and qUlte susceptible at Easter tl1ne
Soml of the ±tade papers 111si"t that the trouble i" not
Ihe 111gh cost of In mg,' but the "eost of hIgh living" They
llld\ be llght 111 regald to "ome people, but thete are very
fe\\ connected \\Ith the fur111ture bus111ess in any way, who
at e affected b, the cost of high ltv111g It is the cost of
a, erage 01 ord1l1ar) IlV111g that bothers most of them
\ \ a tch for \\ a ste and cut it out It is the bane of every
bu Sl11es., It 1S more noticeable 111America than any other
countr) ForeIgn merchants look WIth amazement at the
\\ asteful methods of American merchants as they do at the
wastefulness of Amencan housekeepers, cooks and farmers
There IS some excu"e for some of 1t, but not for all
WEEKLY ARTISAN
6 CARS A WEEK
is our capacity during this
year on
POPLAR
CROSSBANDING
Cut to dimensions if desired.
'Write us.
-
Walter Clark Veneer Co.. Grand Rapids, Mich.
17
18 WEE K L Y A I~TIS A N
~Iinnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture
Association
OFFICI:RS-Presld<nl T R Tador I ake Benton ~11l1n VIce President D R Thompson Rockford, Mll1n
Treasurer B A Scho('nLber~er Perham "lInn Secretary W L Grapp JanesvIlle Mllln
EXECl TI\ f< LO\I\l! fTEE-ChallJnan Gco Klell1 Mankato Mll1n ° SImons, Glencoe Mll1n, W L
Harr <; \llnneapo IS 'lInn C DalllelsOTJ Cannon ralls
BULLETIN No. 102.
PROCEEDINGS OF OlJR FIFTH ANNUAL CONVENTION
SECOND DAY- AFTERNOON SESSIO~.
Committee Reports Continued.
CommIttee on Credentials
\\ e, a~ yOU1 Ulm1111ttce talee pled~111e 111 1ep lUll!.., dlJd
1tLOmmend111g fO! ) OUl adm1.,c,10lJ d~ ll1emhll ~ thl tullu\\ 111!..,
dealers
Crescent Lumbe1 l om pan" L 111tdh, \l111n
Peter Chnst1anc,on, Oldhim, ~ ])
Chnstlanc,on DIO" \ldan ;\1111n
fIllmore lurl11tlll e (Umpdn), (hallutte'>, lllc \ ,l
Pete1 Goenng, Cold.,pnn£;c" \[111lJ
Emd lohn.,gaard, Hottmeau '\ 1)
E K (rl\ te, Ruthton, I,[mn
1 E K1PI), Edgele\ '\ D
L B I df-,on Hallc,tead, \1111n
F 2\loh s II eh'>tel '-, l)
E E '\el~on, Han.,ka \1111n
070net ChemIcal company \lmnedpuh-, \Il11lJ
Spdeth IIa d"are 1 Ull11tlllC and 1mlllemltlt l( mp,l11\
1\d vmond, I,[ mlJ
. \ldrku,>on HalCh\are company (r1CY 1 cH;lc, \1111n
II F t,nge1 ::\lelro'>e \111111
E Kelson, :'lJarcu'>, lo\\a
MIchIgan \Iercantde compan), \11ch1gan, \ D
Langum & \01\ old, lumhlOta \1111n
(I 1\ Lumle\ & Co , Re11\ dIe I,[ I11n \\ r Fngle, Enderhn, '\ D
J :E Pete1 ,>on, Donnell) \1111n
Lotu-; Co\, (Treat } dl1'>, \10nt
II e want) ou to stueh the hst 0\ e1 ldt etulh cl11d nc te
the \ a110US -;tates that the.,e memhe1 C,hlP~ 1cpt e~e11t \\ hlLh
goes to show that as we hnnlS usetulne-;'> to the dedlel ~ the
hve \\11 e-; lSet 111touch vv1th ad\ anced mm el11e11b l hel e-fon
"e want to conlSratulate our cCo-,OC1aUona~ \\ ell a~ out
neV\ members, for assoc1at111g themsehes \\lth "hat \\e he-hey
e IS one of the 11\ehec,t a-;souatlOn-; that £;0 to make up
the KatlOnal a,,~oc1atlOn \\ e want all of Oul ne\\ member"
to feel at home and a"sure ) ou that yOU are mOl ethan \\ c1-
come lYe muc,t reah7e 111d1\tdua11v that \\ 1thout 01£;;m1-
/at'on we would be \ er) much ha~lehcapped 111 tl \ mg to
work out and 0\ ercome the e\ 11 that, th1CJtHsh co-operaUon
"e dre able to correLt
You 1c, 1espectfulh subnl1tted
~ l '-,chle1l h Ll
J I,[ E\ ath,
\\ llham (Olnelt
Report of Commtttee on Advert1smg
The nldttel ot P' epdt111g ach e1t1~l'l£; helJl~ t('1 (Ul ml111
LJer" has been undet c,et1OU'>conc,lderatlOn for mOle tlldn thlCL
\ ears and we have tned uut neatly all tIle pldll" G,uggc,teel
to uc, h"\ our membe1., and finely hay e reached the P0111t
\\ here \\ e hay e adopted d ul11fotm ") .,tem of UUlh \\ hll h \\ l
th111k has soh eel our plOhlem and thus \\ e ,,111 be ahle to
tur11lsh our membe1 s \\ Ith a l11dtenal whtLh It they tncn to
do 111dlv1dualh \\ ould coc,t them "0 much ac, to make 11 P10-
olh1tlVe for th~ a\ e1age dealel
Your commIttee reahzes that the mdttet of ach crtl c,e
ment IS the most Important detaIl conceln111g ) our bus111e"S
and we have put more thought and cale 111to thlS work thel11
appears UDon It::. face \1 e need not tHe you \\lth the eADetl
ence that \\ e hay e to £;0 thru 11101del to get these aeh ertl -;111£;
hcl)l~ dcm n to \\ OtLlllie 'J "tem dppbdhle for all OU1 members,
~ufhc c to -,a\ thdt weal e able to fur11lsh you sC1entlfic hUllt
u111h elt a co"t ot onh olle-thtrd of what It would cost an
111e!1\ 1cluetl membel to get the cut alone and not only that,
1)11111 1~ ~o ptepa1 cd that vou (dn alway, keep these U111i'>
,tin ( dne! up to date ane! b\ then u"e Cdn hudc1 suentlfic ads
(t etlmo~t any ~1/e 111ten 01 fitteen m111ute'>, whIch 1f ongt
nalh atLen1Dtec1 \\ ould take hoUl '0 and c,ometnnes days to
u mplctc and cl~ tune h money, we feel that the time we wdl
a\f' ot11 member~ \\ho ddopt thh c,)c,tem \\111 pay 111 ~tx
1 lUllths Ume mo' ethan d""octatlOn expen"ec, hay e ever LO,t
thLl11
It th1, \\Olk cont111t1e~ to lece1\e the support It has thu-;
1d1 \\ C \\ J1l cont111tte to b1111lSout "uch good head111gs and
-U2,~e--tton~ at sale-- tl1dt \,',111 make thIS Vvork stlll more
\ aluelble and \\ h1ch \\ J1l put Oul members 111a posItion so
that they Lan keep theIr ad\cttl-;ements far ahead of the
'1 (],11at\ aeh et U~el ann thus" dl be able, If he backs It WIth
L.(I'el ~tore ma11a£;ement dnd the \alue" Vve want hIm to, that
t11(\ \\111ll1Ul£; d It\\drd that \OU htde dreelmed of, that 1-;
tr thL~e \\ ho hd\ e not Larne-;tly tllecl out the \alue of en-tlm-
1ac,t1l d11d Ul11tUlUOUS aeh e1tl-;111lS
\ot onh tlldt, hut yOU can keep <theacl of the volume of
deh trtlS111g that "\\111be done In the mall order houses and
\\ e a1 e -;ure that \ ou are far '>lghted enough to see what a
great value good reputatllln of truly meet111g any and all
l atalo£;ue compet1tlOll \\ auld be to you 111 your respect1\ e
lommu111tle~ ()Ile \\ ll1lh can be ha1dlv estnnated 111dollar,.,
and cenh dncl the1 etot c \\ e al\\ avs do urge every member 111
our a"SOlieltlOn to 111dkethe mo-;t of the present good crops bv
~OInlS aHel buc,l11e-;., a'o they ne\ e1 ebd before If yOU \\ 111
lolle\\ OUI lean \\ e \\ dl .,how \ au that when vou come to
Ul dnnuctl meet111£; 111 Janual\ that vOU wdl be able to
1elJ01t the mo~t "ucLe".,tul fall v\ Ith the la1gest profit that
\ ou e\ e1 c,-pet1encecl but remember that unless the matellal
t1ldt \\ e fur111c,h \ ou 1" uc,ed It 1" ac, worthless as a 10comot1vc
\\ 1tllOUt .,team
II e hO\v e\ er teel that) ou all Cdn c,ee the hus111e"s acl-
\ <lnta~e of th1., 1110\ement and that by the time our annual
mcet111g cony ene-; that th1' feature of ,lssoc1atlOn work wdl be
1,lae1e a pelmanent \\ Olk 111our d-;-,oc1,ltlon
YOul c,re~pecttulh -;uhnllttecl,
D R 1hompc,on,
o \ 0 Moen,
IY L Gtapp
From the Manufacturers' Viewpoint.
Tohn Booth, of Peru, 1ncl -"1 ha\e tta\eled a lSoocl
Il1dn~ ml1e~ to be \\lth yOU at th1C, con\enllOn and 1 ha\e
h-tenecl to the d1c,CU.,c,lOnWIth a lSreat cleal of 111terest I
\\ant to ~a\ that from the pOInt of a 111anufaLtUle1, the mdnu-taLturer
1., up agaUl"t th1" Ulatl ordet proposItion 111 about
111L.,ame wd, \ ou arc You Ulay not "ee It Just that way hut
1 hd\ e .,wched th1., problem cOll"lc!erably and the 111vest1-
gdt1lJn~ that L l1d\ e mdde hay e fIrml) Con\111ced me that 1 do
not hke the 111d1lOlder hou~e becau-;e It vvants to gllnd the
hie out of the manuiactUler and doec, when It gets a chancc
II h\ -,0 man \ manufactUl erc, cate1 to them, 1 cannot under-
.,land
\\ hen \\e .,talt a factory, we have to put ollr mach111ery
111\\ hlch co" t" d lot of money Then \\ e hay e a k111dly feel-
1110fot the men who v'vork fOl u'> and we \\ant to keep them
dnd .<..,Y1\ e them \\ 01k but \\ e must hay e some good out of thell
WEEKLY ARTISAN
tImE. It wdl take about $100,000 "Worth of bu::,mess to enablE.
liS to j)a} our eXj)ense~ Therefore, If VI e can do $200,000
"orth we are makml.; a profit \\' e arc sunply paymg our
eApen~es vl1th the first $100,000 I can readJ1y see the gl eat
ten1ptat1On for the manllfactm e' to take on a bunch of busl
ne,,:o at certam tune'3 from the mad ordel house but I VI auld
lather go home wIthout anythmg than wIth a losmg propo-slt10n
It WIll cost SO per ceut for matenal, the labo1 ,v1ll cost
about 20 pel c('nt, the 0\ erhead expenses about 15 per cent
,lno the se1ll11g expen oes about 10 per cent ThIS lea\ es only
~ jJU cent fOJ jJlOfit NCJVIthen, when} ou are domg a $200,-
000 ousme"", It 1" a pretty hard matter to al""a}" !?;et the
IJroper amollnt of orders at the plope1 tIme to keep thmg"
1110\ 1I1g smoothly So at tune~ "1"1 hen a 10bber 01 a mad order
man comes and begms to talk, sa} mg that he WIll l.;lve yOll
from $2=;,000 to $35,000 "II orth of bU::,1I1ess \"11th sellm~ ex-pense"
taken out, It looks l?;ood to you You figm e that If
"IOUcan make 5 per cent on thl" "lolume that yOll are makmg
Ju"t that mllch "Ieh et but are} au ~
"\01"1 h"ten to what happens JUot a" SOOl1as the manufac
turcr makes a speclall)nee to the mall orde1 house Ju::,t thl"
1t plt" the mdll orde1 house m a pO"llIon to thlow out a
b,nga111 whIch h under the market and whIch IS usually 30
or 40 pel cent helow \"Ihat the avelage small dealer can buy It
for Ju"t about the tl111et111';hterature gets well dlstnbuted, the
manllfactllrel find" he IS hegm11lng to he pressed for pnce"
that wdl enahle 111'>customers to meet the verv condItIOn that
he has C1eated '\ O"liVthen, those that kn~w tell me the
mal! order house" (nly u"e about 20 per cent of the goods of
the lac tor) ",Ith ,,111Ch they do husme'3" It has alVla}s been
a source of \"Ionder to me wh'v thl::, \ olume of 20 per cent
dOJ11mates and has the plefe1ence oler the 80 per cent output
of the"e fact011es In Its final analYSIS, you find that the
manufacttuel then takes on thIS extra busmess and th111ks It
IS dear lntt finds m the long 1un that he has C1eated a phase
of c, mpetltlOn whkh u"uall"l pound" dOVln the pnce on hIS
output of 80 per cent \\ hy on edrth thc manufacturer" do
thl~, I cannot understand
"1( ow let u" analy ze condItions If the mal! ordel house
clJd not create competlt1On and the compet1tn e pnces they do
UpO'l "ertam standard artIcles, there would be no demand for
a class of good" manufactured at a pnce that would meet it
Take away the curse of mall order (OmpetltlOn and there
,,,ould be no nece""lty for gllndmg down the manufacturer
to the last notch m order to meet a ce1 tam pnce because
e\ erybody \"Iould be dam')" busmes" accord1l1g to the con-dItion",
wl11ch surround hIm The consumer would be getting
a l,etter article, the dealel would be gettmg the profit he
desel yes and he, m Ltll n, IV ould be wlllmg to gIve the manu
faetu1 er the profit he IS entitled to
"\\ hy on earth so many manufacturers help create the
very condlt1On::, that grmd down the pnce, I never ha" e been
able to understand I hope thp day WIll come, and It wdl
come soon If the peale keep on orgalllzmg as you have at
thIS meetmg, when the mad order house WIll be made to
manufacture theIr own product1Ons JUSt as soon as that
happens we wlll not hay e to face the competIth e pnces that
II e now do At present both the manufacturer and the small
([ca'ers ha\ e thIS pha::,e of comp'tltlOn to meet Whether we
11k( It Ol not
"I ha"l e looked 1I1tO thIS matte! some and I want to tell
} ou what our pohcy h \Ve are not gomg to sell to the
mal! orde1 houscs \\ e are g01l1g to stay away from that
km 1 of busmess \\ e are gomg to stand by the country deal-ers
\\ e want to makc the goods that you dealer" want and
\"llth whIch you can compete a!?;amst thIS mad Older !:;ame
I behe\e, from Vlhat I ha,e !?;athered from the wOlk of thIS
com ent1On, that you are on the nght track and that '\ ou ha"l e
so1"lcd the problem of bnng1l1iY merchand1::,e to you at a pllce
tha t v,l11 enable } ou to do this You nlllst get some factory
hnecl v', \"11th} ou to make the good~ that you want and can
"ell Bv cutt1llg out the "1"1 aste 111 the old tIme methods of
~ettmg your supply and adopt1l1g new busmess method", } au
can put vour:oelf uuon a basJ:o WIth the mall order houses and
still lea, e a faIr profit to the manufacturer who supphes your
VI ants
"I hold that the small dealer represents 80 pel cent of
the "Iolume of any factor} Then the} should make the pI Ice
19
and not the mall order house and that price should be ahke
to dll If such a concht1On can be brought about how mllch
better It would be for all Bu,>me:o::, IS begln11lnl.; to be con-ducted
along "clentlfic lmes more and more
, If you look back a httle, you wdl find that u"ually ce1-
tam e, lIs get so bad that they create a 1emed v for them-
::,eIve::, I beheve tIllS IS the case WIth the mall order pro-jJo::,
ltIon because ha1dl} a day or a week !?;oes by but what
we hedr that th1:o, that or the other factor} has refused to
1ene\"l thell contract::, and why? Bccau'>e busmess alway'>
a"k", 'Docs It pa}?' \\ hen th1'> Cjue"tlOn cannot be answe1ul
111 the affl1matlvt, then "om t thmg happens TherefOl e, I
do not \"Ionder that fa"tOly afte1 factOl y 1::' "IVdk111g up thlU
the sheer force of nece"slty and askmg themselve", 'Doc"
thIS mal! order bu,>meo,> pay?' 1£ It don't aud L do not beheve
that you can find a factor} whIch sa} s It doe", then why con-tmue
such a pohq )
"Therefo1c, I want to "d} thdt I dm v\1th yOll 111thIS
fight agam::,t the mall orde1 hou"es I w1"h from the bottom
of my heal t that all the manufactUl er'o feel 1Ike I do \Ve a1e
gOIng to try 1t out alan!?; theSe 1111e"becau"e I reahze that It
I" light and that the ",ucce",> of any fdcLUly depend" upon the
"ULC'ess of the maJonty of the "mall dedlero 1 am gomg to
::,tav b} you untl! yeu hay e ,"orked out a sueces::, along these
l111e" because I thmk } ou are nght '
C \\ Hanl'3 of Rockwell, Ia- I am tram Io"a It IS
a great state It ha:o a furlllture as"oc1atlOn but It 1" dead and
there IS no undertakel who e\ er had the CaUlage to try to
bur} It I begged of the manufacturer" to 2,lve me some
artIcle to meet catalog house pnce'o 1 tned to !?;et "Olnethmg
irom O'Bnan of ChIcago RIght here you ha\e the gleatest
benefit of YOU1 co-operat1On I got 111::,ome cheap kJtchen
cablllet::, I ad\ e1tlsed them $4 deh'v ered from the st01 e,
lre1e,ht paId I never '>old ,,0 many lot"hen cablllets 'as I dId
dunng the tllne that I earned that "ad" III the local paper
TillS IS slmplv an 11hhtratlOn of the "Ialue of gettlllg leader"
"There IS a bed v\h1ch :\1' Thompson told me about
He sells 1t, at least he used to I ,",ould say, 'Here, thIS IS a
catJlog house sUIte I can sell }OU a better Ol1e-one that
WIll gIve better sat1"fact1On I would take a good one and
show hIm the dIfference I ::,old $95 wurth m competlt1On
WIth "\lontgomery \\T ard & Co, b} domg thIS A gentleman
from Caters\ llle had aI, cady made out hIs bl11 H1S daughter
l)e1",uaded hIm to come to me to see 1f I could meet :\lo11t-gowery
\Vard price" I told hIm what he could have a smte
for I dId not ::,ell hIm that smte That IS "he1e salesmanshIp
comes 111 I sold hIm a $28 one Then I had to meet hun on
carpets He wanted one of tho"e la1l.;e gla"" hall tables I
had one marked $6 There was no competlt1On for :Mont-gomer}
\Vard's ])lICe VIas $575 fhat IS the advantage of
hav111g low pnce goods You can do th1::, If you try
"\Ve want to pay our $5 a "ear to the treasurer and keep
,IllS thIng g0111g The bUy111g commIttee knows where to
buy goods The fauners go 111tOthe legblature WIth strength
behmd them and they demand certa111 leg1"latlon There was
d time when they could not get eli'-'vatol ground Aftenlards
they VI ere asked to bmlrl an elevato' and It 1" a !?;ood th111g
It draws tI ade, bnngs 111money and makes th111g" mure p10,,-
rerous I eAhort yOU to hanl?; to~ethe1 and be loyal to thIS
as~oc1atlOn It IS the commencement of the death blow to
the catalog hou"e
"They offer a premIUm to bu} cheap soap at a hIgh
pnce That you 11111'3stettle 111the future I thank yOU gentle-men
for the attention you ha" e gIven me and I assUl e you
that m} heal t IS vnth you though I 11\e 111Iowa-Grand old
Iowa"
f P, Swart/- I came hel e becau"e I am espeuall} mter
ested 111the a"",OCJat1On and becau"c of a pecuhar sltuat10n
that came up on account of the act10n of many of your
me11'bers You ha, e } our co operatn e blly111g commIttee
hIt \ ou al e not co-opel atlng WIth them 111 your bUY111g
:\Ianv of yOU a1 e bu} lllg the same th111g \Yhy not let yom
as~oClat1On buy It for} ou) :\Iy firm "aId that I should not
state the pnces g1\ en to the :;\I111nesota Retad FurmtUle
Dealers' aSSOClat1011 It took three day s to get them to let
me quote} au Jobbers pnces WIth the freight added If the
~Iinnesota dealers WIll co-opel ate and buy together, we 'v 111
contmue to quote these pnces Tf they ,,111 not, '"' e cannot
,If the dealers "1"1 l!l co-operate, thell busmess \"1111groY,
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
and they will be able to dIctate terms to the manufactUl er
If each one of you here would place dn ordel for one dozen
more beds than you had mtended to bu), look ho\\ mam
beds that would make Don't you ~uppo"e ) our comn11ttcc
could get a better pnce? How much are you, !Ddn Idualh ,
g0111g to co-operate with the buymg COn1111lttee")
"I have talked wIth the buymg committee at ChIcago at
dtfferent times and I find that they are bu) mg' lu~t .1" much
of this cheaper stuff as they thmk yOU need to counter <lCt
tIllS mail order bu"mess I\t the same tune, the' eUC tn ll1~
to get a representatIve hne from our large concell1s \\ 111ch
you can select from If you do not co operate. 'au Me e,01l1g
to force your buymg commIttee to go around to fom DIck
and Harry and then you get the bad end of the 11l1e It
does not mean anythmg to the manu1dcturel ~ lJUt It c!(\e~
mean everythmg to the buymg committee "\ou ~houlc! ~hr)\\
your appreciatIon of theIr efforts and buy \\ hat, au can II um
the goods whIch they select
"This is a small Item but It means ever) thmg to the
success of your buymg commIttee. If yOU WIll do thl'3, these
gentlemen can go down to ChIcago 01 any othel malket m d
year or two and make theIr own terms and that l~ 1\ hat, ou
are after. You want to get bIg enough to dIctate and ,au
can do it if you wil1." o W. Grapp-"I vvould hke to "a) a \\old I am not on
the buying commIttee but I ha' e gone dm\dl even ,ear and
paId my own expenses and I do not th1l1k that am onc at the
bt,) mg commIttee has paId out more tal c,-pen"e In I e~al d
to buymg goods from the home manutdctUler \\ III ~d, I
know the buymg comnllttee ha\ e done all they could to ~et
them !D hne ,,life Just :Olmply must go out and get the gooch
It they cannot meet the pllces \s dn mdn Idual "mall dedlel.
I cannot afford to let thIS co-operatn e bUy!Dg go There are
no Ifs and ands about It
"\Vlth one excepilOn, our lme:o ale thc he~t that \\ e could
find. The Rockford hne IS one of the be~t 111 tht cuunt1 \
I do not see why you call It tra:oh dnd cheap ~tuft \\ t ha' c
no cheap stuff It Ib all nght to patI on1L:e the home manu-facturer.
vVe made them offer;;, about 1Ivo ) eals .1gO but
they could not b('e It that way It IS 1eally am duty to help
home indus tires but the catalog hou;;,es h.1' e Cl ept mto am
bUSllless so that we cannot 'otand It an) lon~el and" e mu~t
do somethmg If \\ e are gOll1g' to compete ,\ Ith them It \\ L
can buy goods Just a" cheap a" the) can, \\ hat can the, do"
The way thmgs now stand somethmg' mUbt be done Jt
,nay take a few rearb to perfect am sy"tem but v, e IV III eel
tamly do It m time and I belt eve that you WIll all agl ee that
we are already recelvmg some very good results from It I
l,el1eve that we are on the right track 1'\11 IVC need nOl\ h
a Mtle time Re3ults show that all we ha' e to do no" IS to
follow up our advantages.
"I would rather pay a big pnce for goods If I could sell
them for a good pnce. We have made many a tllP to thIS
city to discuss ways and means "ith the manufacturers but
we met with no Encouragement If our home manufacturers
wIll not supply us, we must go v\here \\ e can e,et "hat" e
need I cannot understand why co-operatIve bUyll1g should
meet WIth any oppo"ltlOn The bUYll1g commIttee have saved
the dealers of thIS state $8,000 thIS year They have saved
you $2,500 in cash If the assocIatIon WIll glVe the buymg
committee the backll1g 1t needs, we can patromze the home
manufacturer
"The solution of thl" problem IS thIS The 1l1fluentlal
men who control the surplus, control OUI sItuatIOn and Just
as ;;,oon as our account gets as bIg as then", \\ e can contlo1
our source of supply-but you \\Illne'el cia It v>lth .1 $600,
$5,000 or $8,000 "ccount The"e aLcount', clon't look good
to a manufacture! IV hen \\ e can ~et a $20,000 or $30,000
account, "e can begm to do thmgs .,
THE BANQUET.
Follow111g the usual custom. the assoClatlOn was the
guest of "Pnscl1l3." of the X ell England Promptly at 6
o'clock, 185 members sat do" n to the banquet table" hich
was served 111 the Pnscllla tea loom \\ hleh was tastefully
decorated with be autIful flowers 111 honor of the occasion
The guests were nlacle to feel deCldedly at home ,Ir Harns
could not be present because he was unav OIdabh detamed
but Mr Kellogg, hIS genial right hand man, dId not overlook
the most minute detaIl A delicious four-course dll1ner was
sen ed \\ hlch "as hIghly appreciated by all. Good cigars
\\ el e then passed around The PnsCllla idea was carried
out to the smalle"t detaIl The waItresses were all attIred
m Pn;;,cllla costume and e, ery thmg 111 the room was sug-ge'-!
Ive of the ta~te and refinement characten'3tlc of Priscilla
These annual dll1ners are among the greatest attractlOns
ot our annual meet111gs as they furmsh food for both body
ancl 111md \ftel the tables were cleared E SPIke, Associ-att
Editor at the TW111CIty CommercIal Bulletm, read a highly
1I1tere"t1l1g papel on, "The Shortcom111gs of the Average
Country StOt e," as seen by a publIsher ThIS was followed
lw other speeches all of V\ hlch can tamed good practlcal sug-
~e~tl()ns ancl "ho\\ed that OUI assoclatlOn certa1111y does not
ldck hu~mes~ ab1lIty \Iany thoughts and 111spiratlOns were
hrought out" hlch we are sure wIll prove of lasting benefit to
th()~e ')1 e"ent r H Peterson was the last speaker and though
h1~ talk \\a" not lengthy, every word meant :oomethlng
"The Short-Comings of the Average Country Store as Seen
by the Publisher."
By E SPIke.
The pUhlIsher has been and
b often accused of being a
theolht, a dreamer, a man "lth
a ,('[\ '1I1d Imag111atlon In
~ome m ~tance" thl" IS true, 1n
other.." pal tJall) true, and in
~ome te" 1I1'3tances not tl ue at
.111 "OIv, let'" ~ee what the
short-col11ll1gs are 111the aver-ae,
e country store m the eyes
ot a publIsher who w1ll attempt
to keep 111 111111dthe practlca-hltlt,
ot h1'o theones
I he ell erage l 01111 tl Y store IS
conduded b) men who use
then head" too lIttle and their
leg" too much, men who meet
dllll ch~po"e at the petty hap- E S PIKE,MINNEAPOLIS,
penlng'~ each da, a" they hap- ASSocIaEtedItorofCommercIaBlullettnand
pen. \\ Ith no thoug-ht of the ManageroftheBullettnSerVlcDeepartment.
1110110\\ men who al e the slave of cIrcumstances instead of
makll1g urcumstances theIr slaveb, men who are right 111the
mIdst of nch fields, but when they go with theIr scythes
hung 111the branches of trees, whIle men who are using their
heads \\ ho re'3lde m ChIcago and Kalamazoo, are gathering
111 the "hea, e~, men blll1d to the big posslbllItles that lie all
arcund them, who are eagerly graspmg at the mcke1s that
\\ auld come In the door anyhow, while they neglect the
dollars that are takIng wing m other directions, men who are
un\\ IllIng to spend a mcke1 to make a quarter.
A short tIme ago I went out on a tnp into the interest
at ml department My expenence m one town left WIth me
a most ,lIld ImpreSSIOn ThIS town contained about one
thousand mhabltants, and was surrounded by a nch farming
con·munlty.
Upon 111quiry I found that the firm of-I will call them
SmIth & Brown were doing the bulk of the busines;;,; and
thel e "as a store down on the next corner doing a fair
bus1ness
The department of the CommercIal Bulletin with which
1 am connected has a proposition from only one merchant in a
tu" n In thl" 111stance It 1equited but a short time to do
bUbll1e,,:o WIth Brown, of SmIth & Brown, Mr Smith beincr
out of town After the deal was finished, lYe dIscussed sev~
eral of the mercantIle problems that continually confront the
country merchant, and I was much impressed with the com-prehenchng
grasp that Drown had of the mercantIle business,
eVIdently the result of much thought and study.
IVhen I went into the store Brown was not down cellar
candlll1g eggs nor out m the back room repainng cases; he
was up near the front of the StOI e extend1l1g greeting to a
cu~tomer \\ ho had entered Just ahead of me, and whom he
turned 01 er to a young lady 111the dry goods department
s11Ort1l attel I entered
He spoke pleasantly to me as I came 111-pleasantly, I
said-and after dispos1l1g of this customer he walked over to
WEEKLY ARTISAN
whue I was standmg and said, in the same pleasing manner,
"What can I do for you?"
I saw that I had a busmess man to deal with, not an egg
candler. HIS whole manner breathed a physical vitahty, in
the kind of a body a bram can do Its best work, and his
whole appearance' showed that he was able to grasp any
proposItIOn I had to present Just as fast as I was able to
"hand out" to him.
I was so Impressed with hIS courtesy, and with the brisk,
bramy, alert atmosphere he radIated, that I prefaced my
proposItIon by thankmg him for his courtesy to me-to which
he Ieplied:
"vVe have never lost one cent by bemg pleasant. On
the contrary It has made money. vVe are ready to buy any-thmg
that we can sell to our customers WIth a profit, and are
always open for new, good proposItIons.
In less than ten mmutes we concluded our business, he
had signed IllS name on the dotted hne, and I smcerely hope
has never regretted it.
After concludmg Our business we dIscussed vanous pro-blems
of the general merchandIse business of SmIth & Brown
They were dOIng around $50,000 a year WIth a $12,000 stock.
There were five m the store, the two partners and three
clerk" At all tImes the clerks were loaded up with customers
before the propnetors began clerkIng.
The three clerks were clerks, not slow machmes. One or
the other of the propnetors made It a point to greet
every person pleasantly who came In the door, no matter
how busy they were, as quick as they were in. No customer
wa" loaded up WIth any more goods than he or she .desired
to buy.
All bIlls were discounted. The proprietors drew a salary
Just the same as the clerks.
The business wa<; paYIng a net plOfit of 8 per cent on
sales, outside of all expenses includmo- the propnetor's sal-anes.
For their size town, circulaI advertIsing was considered
the best
Cu"tomers WIth a good rating were allowed to settle ac-counts
once a year. But at any tIme when money was needed
they were called on for part payment of theIr accounts and
nearly always responded in such emergency times.
Poor pay customers were requIred to settle regularly-some
once every two or three months, some once a month,
some were reqUIred to pay cash at tIme of purchase
CredIt was not extended mdiscnminately. All regrets
were usually Indulged in when a no pay customer asked for
credIt, not after a bill had been run up
The stock was kept filled. It seldom happened that the
excuse of "sorry we are just out" had to be gIven a customer
when a staple was called for.
The stock was well kept The store was clean, although
not to the extreme that would cause the rougher class of farm
trade to feel uncomfortable And customers were treated
In such a manner that they felt the proprietors really had
some further interest in them than the one desire of getting
theIr money.
As I wrote this and as I read It I feel that vou merchants
wIll think I am pamtmg a picture rather than gIVIng you
actual facts
Why do I think that?
Just because so many pleasing condItions, all found in
one store are so scarce it calls for special observatIOn; just
becduse one firm in a small town know what they are there for
and are making It pay to the amount of $1500 a week each in
salanes, and $4,000 a year addItional, on an Investment of
$12,000.
I went on down the street to the other store. This store
is one of a chaIn, handled by a manager. As I went in I
saw that the 'itock was about the same amount as carried by
Smith & Brown
There were two clerks In sight, a young woman arrang-ing
goods In the dry goods department, and a young man
waItIng on a customer.
The young woman had the $350 Took; but the young
man had a good appearance, was doing a good job of serv-ing
a customer, and politely directed me down cellar when
I asked for the manager.
I went down cellar-slowly and cautiously. The stairs
21
were two thIrds of the way to the rear of the store. Arriv-ing
at the bottom I ducked my head and went carefully to
the front, where In the dIstance I saw a man sortIng apples.
As I neared hIm he looked up at me and scowled.
I saId "SortIng Apples ?"
He rephed. "I haven't got tIme to talk to you today.
I'm busy."
I turned,-kept my head ducked, returned carefully to
the staIrway, went upstaIrs, passed out of the store, down to
t.he hotel, sat down, thought It over, remarked to myself
what an Interesting story thIS day's expenence In thIS town
would make for other merchants hke SmIth & Brown 111
other tm, ns to read-and gentlemen, you are now heanng it
I wIll call the manager of the second store "Jones."
Now what was the matter WIth Jones? What were,
and probably are yet, hIS short-comIngs?
Before pIoceed111g I WIsh to state that my experience in
thIS town ""hlch expenence I have had other times, before
and since, as pIctured f01 you, IS not overdrawn. This day's
expenence happened Just as I am relatIng It to you WIthout
one iota of exagge1atlOn.
N ow, what wa" the matter WIth Jones ? Just thIS: He
thought that work-hard phYSICal labor was what the finan-
CIers behInd that bus111ess expected of hIm.
He dId not realIze that the1 e i" but one standard by
which we are all Judged 111the bus111ess world today, that of
"results"
He beheved he was fulfill111g hi'i duty by work111g his
hands, hIS legs, hIS back, hIS whole phYSIcal body hard-and
letting the noodle part take care of itself.
It would have been much more profitable in actual money
for the owners of that store if this manager had been para-lyzed
from hIS collar button down, had been compelled to
use a wheel chaIr-and then had to rely entirely on that part
of his anatomy from the collar button up-provId1l1g, of
course. that he had a set of brams on which to rely.
Please do not misunderstand me Here are pIctured two
extremes, and in my op111lOn,I have stated the extreme that
would result better financIally for the busine:'>s.
The well balanced man IS, of course, the Ideal man, and
Brown of SmIth & Brown IS surely a well balanced man
Upon closer mqUlry before I left that town I found that
Smith & Brown were doing about twice the business that
J ones was doing
It is not hard to understand why that is SO-IS it?
I have saId that another short-com1l1g of the country
merchant IS that he dIsposes of the petty happenings each
day as they happen, with no. thought of the morrow; that he
is a slave to CIrcumstances, 1l1stead of mak111g cltcumstances
his slave
Let us draw another picture. ThIS will be a composite
There are so many thousands of merchants who WIll exactly
fit in this frame that It IS not necesc;ary to take any partIc-ular
111stance or man Let's call thIS typical man "W 11son"-
Henry J. vVllson-"Hank" for "hart
It is now 5 '30 a. m. Hank IS stIrring uneasily in his
bed He wakes up. He gets up Mrs. Hank also wakes up
and gets up.
He prods the base burner, starts the kitchen fire, puts
on the tea kettle, washes his hands and face, fi11lshes dress-ing,
eats his breakfast and by 6 '30 is at the store. He opens
up, pokes the fire in the big store stove; shakes the grate;
throws in the bucket of coal blOught up the 111ght before;
shovels the ashes into the empty bucket; emptIes them on
the ash pile, and comes back into the store; waits on the
livery man's httle girl, who hves down at the end of the
street, who buys a quarter's worth of sugar and a yeast cake;
opens up the safe, takes out the day book and bag of change,
shuts the safe; lays the day book on the grocery counter and
distributes the change in the drawer; opens the day book to
the next blank page, writes the date at the top of the page
and charges the sugar and yeast cake;. takes t~e othe.r broom
and helps JImmie sweep, .who has Just arr.Ived-It bemg
about 7.15' stops in the mIddle of the sweep1l1g to walt on
Jake Allen 'who wants a ten cent cut of "Horseshoe," which
he charges as he dId the sugar and yeast bought by the livery
man's daughter; nails up the three cases of eggs ready for
the drayman who will call at 9 '00 to take theJ? down for the
10:10 freight; waits on a couple of school chIldren who buy
I
I
I
I 22 \V E E K L Y "\ R TIS A N
fir e cents \\ ortb of call ell , alld cl penn\ " "orth of cbe\\ Il1g
~um and a fHe cent tdblet open" up the ::,ate agcl1l1, ~eh
out the ledger, take" It back to the "land111g de"k, £;eb the
da} book and beg111~ PO:ot111g-accounh four cia) " old po"ts
awhIle and "alt" on mOle cu"t0111el", thcn pO"h some m()1C
It IS ned' 11 30 He g-oe::, h(,me to dmnu letUln" ,It
1230, dnd JImmIe cmd '->u"le go tll cl1l1nu llc ,d\\In" lu\e~
[11111nle and SU"le 111 the "tme t )~cth(] Ilhcll III ~()(~1 I
mea1s-.,0 that JImmIe \\ III 1\dtch ::'ll"IC clild '--U"IC \\ 111\\ <lIeh
Jll111111e,read" tbe dalh pdper th.lt came 111 on tht 11((Ill tl dIll
f1('111 12 30 unbl 1 30, J l1111111ednd ::,u..,le 1etUlIl £;ch hu ~\
POQIl1g agam untll ..2 30, at 2 10 the Jalmu" \\ II e" he\..,l1l tl
drrn e, bus) vvalt111g on II adc '111tll ,10 Chdt~ \\ llh d CI,uplc
oi fal mer" i01 halt .m IIIJUI llllll~ IlIOUlld Ul1tl1 ; 30 g( c"
home to :ouppel bdCk at () 1; J lllllllle and '-,U~IC go to "up
pel, back at 7 00 chah \\ Ith ft lend" \\ ,lIt-, on 11101C lU..,tO!l1U"
loc,k" 0\ el the "tock "]ll)II' ~(llllC !l101c goud.., t(, "'()ll1t
town "boppu" untIl 10 30 lllunh thc mOllel 111 thc c1J,111el
flna" tbat thele I'" $22;0 111(J!cthdll the c lId.., III thp ll1CJl11mg
-dr)ll't know hcnl !l1ucb ol tht-, \' ,t-, cd"h bLblllt~.., n01 lHJ11
much bU"111e"" \\,1-, clont that eLl\ , Ul ,111\ ()thll day Put..,
tbe money he eAped, to dCpO"'ll 111 thl "mdll dLlIIll t the
left m the "dfe ancl $10 00 clungl 111 thl bdg t I III "t m, 'I n
1I1g, puts day book and leclfiu m "ate, I( ck.., ..,d]C h"L'" hI e
lock" bclek and celldr doCll, tUllh out the hghh gue.., out
tront door, lock" It, goe.., home dnd to bed-and does It all
over again next day, \\ Ith thL I allet\ (It 01cll Img gUIld" ,llld
pa,mg blll" ,\hen (IUl llet [.., TUlt\ \C,l1-, uld thh \C,lI
iOlty-one ne"t ,eal hlt\ \L<lh old t1l1 Ilal, IIOIIl 1,)\1
hft,· five 111 hfte~n \edl~ ,lJ1d "I" \ t\\Cl1tl ,Cdl'" nom n )1\
1f he lives. Sell" out the ])L1"111C,,"b\ th.lt tlmc Jlll hap" tu
JImmIe, and retIre" ft om 0 It the bu Slnl"" melp
Do yOU th1l1k thl" pIcture I.., u\ e elId\\ n' It.., d" truc ,l"
we hve, 111 thousand" of stores toda\
The"e store keepcr", not 11luc1unt.., dlC "LI\e.., ut III
cun1stance" 1I1stead oj malol1!; Cllcum..,tdnCl'" thL11 ,Lllc",
they d1:opo::,e of the peth 11dpplnllls'" ul thL lLII 1\Ith 11
thought of the nwrro\\
\\ hat a lIfe I )u"t a lot ot "Iut mZlch111e clbtl !l)l]tUI.., t)J
whole"alel" and JoblJel" \1 e they lOl1tentCII '\1 e the11
wnes contented' Let u.., hopc "0 Clhc good LOld \CI\
merCIfully take" care of all of Ib, anc! aJtel cdl I'" .."ud-.d]
an} of us get on thl" earth b loud and dothl.., .lJ1d d hUll'L
to hve In, a fe" pleasure", plent\ ot tlOubk, and thcn the
next generatlOn come" on and goc" thlU the "ame jJloce..,,,
whIle we, one bv one, dlop tlll u the <"IC\e \I hel1 \\ e al e "ho' ed
0\ el the mesh that hh
But whIch "ould \ ou IdthcI 1Je-Olll [c,r!orn Illcnc!
,Hdnk," or Olle of thIS b~1I1ch 01 11\C, \\ Idl d\\ ake alu t hu "I
nes'S men who ale hele toda,-\\ho do mOlC ,1ctual h1111!; 1Jl
one day than Hank doe" 111 d yeal-who "hape UICU111"tdllCL'"
to d great extent to SUIt them"elves, and who do ha\ e thou~ht
of the morro", ,,111ch h proyen by } our be111g-here todd \
J hd\ e salcl tl1dt anothu shOl t-com1l1g- of the countl,
melchant I" that hlo scythe I" hUllg on the hmb of a t!ce 111
the mIdst of the hlg ±11l1tfu1 fidel that SUIrounds 111111, \,hl!c
men "ho dIe hvmg 111ChIcago and KalamaLoo ,He l\01kmg
thell bra111s 0\ ertlll1e gathelmg 111 the shed' es
I here de"lre to go on I ecol el \\ Ith the tollowmg- state
ment
The ani} leason that the nUll 111 Chlca~o 01 Kalama700
gather.., m the shen es I" that he h,h the COUlltl\ merchant
heaten to a IrdZ/le "lth brams and energy
The count I , mel chdnt SIb under the "hade of the tl ec
111 v,hlCh hlo "C) thc I', hun~-on all slc!e.., a~ lal ,IS the e, c
can "ee, arc thc IljJpcnccl "hca\ l", I lad}, I IpC dnc1 1\Illmg to
bc gathered
lIe docs gdthel the: laJ(~e..,t nal t of them, 01 Llthel the,
fiather themselv e" fOI hl111, but \\ hat doe" hc do about thc
..,hea\ e.., that are shppm2; away hGJ11 111m-that thc (Jthel man
g-oe, boldlY out ancl eral nel S '
Doe" he \lhet hIS "c,the \\Ith the "dll1e "ort oj ,I \\het
"tone, dnel then ,,\\ m~ Ih~t "CI the 111the ",lme m.ll111el d.., hc
..,et" the othel man clOlng 1\lth "uch cleadh e"ceut1LJI1'
1\0, he c!ue"n't \\ hI c!oL"n t he' I'll gIve It up.
\\hdt cloe" he cloe 1111" h \\hdt he c!oe,,-lIL dl.:?,'"UjJ
good hard co 111 , and hand::, It over tu e\ ery "mouth tongued
mdl\ldual \\ho comes along- and Sd)::', "Ilelc I" a plan to
put a 111ck 111 the K.tla1l1azoo man's e;c\ the So dnt! "0 'clllfi
LIp, dnd dl so :oo.and "u '\ ow, vou abo dIg' and we'll fix 'em
\\ c 11 ha, c ,1 ~Icuth prO\'\1 around m theIr back yard and
II ell "ee whel C they get the"e scythe" and whet stones, and
thln \Ve \\ on't ])u' dnV SCythes and whetstones where they
1) n them"
\\ hell a tcuh"hnes" I
\\ hll dl( thl~e "C\thes and ,l1ut ale these whet-stone,,'
\nc1 hUI\ can the Lonntl, merchant get ,," £;ood ::,cythes and
, ,;ood \\ het ..,tl,nL'"
] he "'C)thc" dIe !;ovd, dnd tLl whet "tones al e lorrect
8 clvertl-"111g
1oda\ m many a "tore goods ot equdl OJ bettel quahty
Il hew£: "uld 11)1the Sdme or les" monel
Ihcn \\hdt, the tlC)nble'
I he !luuhle h pill I 0, no arllutls111g The tJoub1e IS the
l 'unt! \ JI1ellhant cloe, not know-does not nnder::,tand tbe
Jlcople V\ ho deal \v Itb hlln
\\ e luok dt a human bem!" fOlty }ealS of age, WIth
1\hbker.., on hl'-, face 'SIX feet tall, and Wt- hedl hIm "peak 111
1 bea II 100ce \ \ e "a \. Hel e h a 111an He k11lHh \'V hat he
I'" dlJln~ ,ml \\h,lt he \Ian!', and 111U"tbe tJedted hke a man"
\\ hdt doc'" thc dgC of that man, h1" c,17e, hl'-, e;trength,
III thlekne..,.., dncl length at hI" "hlskers 01 the tone of hIS
\ (JlCChd\ e to c!o 1\lth the growth of his mind
11 \\ C \1(nit! all 1edh7L dnd alv\ d}.., keep 111m111d that
111111 ,l11(1\1 1m' Il d C bnt chllrlten ()t .1 lalgel growth, man)
,I thc ll1l(ln.., lit (UI tell m men VlOItld be better underste'Oc!
\\ l1ue d) thc 111,l1n\ l11cn 111lhlcago and Kalama/oo ""111g
Lhlll "'1 \ thl'" \JI1I)J1!; the hIgh office bUlld111~c,ot "\ew York
l 11 e,lJ,l) '-,1 LoU!.., .1l1d l""an"a,, lIb' i\ ot thdt \\ e have ob
"el \ ed
J he c111]dlen thue hd\e glOVlIl a httle too large for them
\\ hele do they '.\\1110 theIr scythes' You know and so do I,
'-,l1lh he111g the ld"e \\h) does not the country merchant
"':11c hI'" leg.., ,Ind bdcl a le..,t, get bus} \'\lth hh bra111s, SW111g
thc "',llnt- "01 t at d ..,l\ the that he pla1111y see" I" domg good
l "L11111011dnrl ~dtheJ 111all the ..,hea\ e"
I he 1ll0"t gl.1l111g and costlv e;hort com111g 111the average
U '11111, ..,tOle t-, the l()J1tracted length, brecllith and depth of
1) 1111101 the ]JI0]111etOl
l du nut medn b, th1:o a",ert10n that he I" mean or
1\Ilked L mean that hc does not reahze there are so many
thmgs he does not know and whIch he must know before he
c,ln pO":Olbh aClomp1Jsh resnlh
Retel ence 1" hel e nude to the proplletOl of the country
-tOl e, v\ho Cdre" nC'th111g 101 the \ lew" of the other men 111the
..,dme blh111e..,s-\\ ho take, no stock m trddc papers, and who
\\ odd lon~](lel hI" Cdl ta' e and hotel bIll de; rnoney dbe;olutely
111,\\n a\\.l\, ,,11CJnldhe dttend ,1 COn\entlOn Itke thIS
LedIn lwm dm hoeh elsc how to run his busmess 111his
tUI'. n' \\ here he ha" It{ ed to! ty odd} ear'S, and knovv'> every-body'
\\ he] e tho"e \\ ho are g0111g to trade WIth hIm, WIll
trc1l1e WIth hIm and whele tho"e who don't Just won't and
never will.
"'pend utteen 01 twenty dollar" to go to a conventIOn, and
II"tU1 to a lot 01 theones' Xot on your hfe I
\\ hat "ould be the development of a clllid born deaf
and dumb and blmd If that chtld ne\ er recen ed an ultenol
Impre::,slOn' Ab"olutel} none beyond annnal 111stmcts
Huw doe" the bearer of the whIte man's burden, the
11dwn} James J J effnes, propose to erase the map of Afnca
oit the face of the earth' By commumng \Vlth hImself out
unGer the ::,hade uf an orange tree on hIs Cahforma rdnch-
"Ilellth and alone J
Doe" he sa, -' T kll0\\ m\ gamc' \\ ho I" there that
Cd 11 tedch me'
'\ at dccorc1111P'to the 111te1est111g p111ksheet I peruse every
SUlJeld} mOl n111g
On the contrary he proposes to ::,pend no time whatevel
under the ..,h,lde of that Olange tree Instead, he WIll attach
to hI::' 1et11111ethe "hlft} , C]l1lck-hmbed Pompadour JIm, who
II III be 111"tll1cted to 111t hl111 qmck and hIt hIm often-if he
can
1\1"0 111that I et1J1ue WIll be \It Gotch who hdll" from
the "tate of buHu, pIg" dml pObtlC", to the south of 1b-who
h \'vIcier than he I" long-and who WIll be 111e;tJ ucted to get
'lh "toe hold' on 111111-1fhe can, and to tIe hIm 11))111a knot
-If he can.
I\lso 111 that ret11111e \Vtll be bo"ers of renown whom
WEEKLY ARTISAN
James J wIll u"e f01 punch1l1g hage;-dll for a good -,lzed
con-'Ide1at1On. of COUl'3e
~nd t11lle;11111]ame.., pI eparc fO! the battle he mll,',t fight
Lan any man 111 that whole tra1l1111g camp whIp the
1 edollbtahle J ame'3 J )
If they th111k ~o they ment10n It 111a \vh1Spe1 out alone
bchmd the barn, then w h v "ueh a fuse;)
Beeaue;e III one pal tKula1 P0111t one trd111er excel~, 111
dnuthel pal tlCltlal pOInt another tralllel excels, 111 anothel.
dnother, and ..,0 on. and am 'Burden heal er" knows that he
mue;t not bp nanoV\ mll1ded-must not be contented vIlth
Illm"el£ a,', he I"-nnbt not "ay-"I know my httle gdme and
nobod, can teach me anyth111g
He know.o that certa111 and sure defeat would 01 envhelm
111m..,hould he re~t contentedh un del the 01ange tree
~h()uld not the man II ho frght:, J1I', hdttles IV 1th Ill~ head
keep that head 111 tlam111g-) ~ hould he nUt develop that
bralll by wre~tlmg II 1th other hralll" 1\ ho a1e ,upenOJ to hIS
111 different pomts.
\\ 111It not de\ elop Ill" fi£;htmg- quaht1c.., and ll1"Ul e hm1
gre<lte1 e;ucce"" 111hu"mes" hfe If he v,rtstle~ out the many
tJU'1TIe~" prGblem" of the met cdntllr hfe vvlth othel hr:'lll1y
bllSme'3e; men)
There I" only one lJO~"'Ible <In,,v\el to tIll" a..,suLJoll
v\ e, who are hel e, know that It pay s bIg to get togetheI,
and ,',tud} all the j)mnh uf our g-dme. learn111g, one trom an
other, "tud
'
111g. alNJrbll1g. th111klll£; cll1d thu" dn clopmg
an d w1den111~ our 1e"ult p10du"lIlg powe1 s
::'uch d gather111g d" th1" has paId e\ ery one of th ten
tolc1 If It has mdde u~ do hut one th111g-th111k
Discussion.
:\Ir \\ 11eelock, ::"ecretary to (,,01 "\ C Eberhart -"I
"eem to be the goat on thI" OCCdS1On In the first place, I
had no notice that I V\ as expected to say anythlllg I had
no time to prepare d \vell wl1tten d1,cour"e such a" :\Ir PIke
has entertamed u" "Ith In the second 111 my offiCIal reld-
11on"h1p \\lth the gme1nur of the state, V\e hdve but one "peeeh
hetvveen us \\ hen 1 am out WIth hIm, I have no chance and
lu"t now he has the ~peech WIth 111m c1ehverlllg- It at ilvo
place" at the "ame tIme
"c\" an old new "paper man, I hare1ly agree \v 1th :\lr
PIke about advertlslllg I thlllk It the foumlatlon '3tone of all
lJU'imess '3ucce::,,, "~JIthe same I thmk 1lank \\ 11son had a
'inap~wlth d11 the drawbacks pIctured, It seems to me he
has the best of us He knew when he had enough and knew
how to dIVIde hIS time If you gentlemen are gomg to fo11o\\
the adv lee of :\Ir P1],e to '\lJ fa) lOJ, 1 do not see v\hen) ou
dre gom~ to get any chance to re"t 1\t the nsk of bemg m
a hopele,,'3 mmonty, 1 am gomg to stay WIth Hank for
clwhde Those "ent1J11ents dId not m"p1re a responsIve throb
m my hea1t
, v10m v\ hat 1 have learned of th1" ,ls::,oc1atlOn, you are
all prepared to follow 1\J1 PIke's advIce to the 11J111tbut I
have not heard of any mal] Older house gomg to the wall
111spIte of yOlll VIords of last year I am gomg to steal thIS
"uggest1On from my good fnend, the o"her :\Jr Taylor of
Lake Benton before he gets d chance 10 "pring It :\ifeet
cat;cdoo- comj)etlt1On WIth Its oVln ammurutlOn-w1th a cata-log
covenng the ,',ame lIne of stuff Thb wIll be cl moe;t
effectn e argument to place betore the country buye1 I
spent twelve ) ean m Dakcta 1 unl11ng a da1lv paper 111 a
country to\'\ n \Ye formecl d httle combmdt1On at our 01\ n
dgreel11g- to buy nothing away from home that we could get
at home I ha\ e hdd many cl good old fal me1 fl1end ae;k me
Ivhat I thought about tIll", tl1dt and the other article offered
t01 sale I "d1d, 'well, 1L 1'3 d good pIcture and It 1edds IVell
but I e;uggest that you go daVIn town to OLr fnend Logan
and look 01 e hI" "tOle Compare the qualIty of hh goods
vv1th the advel thed qUdhty of these artIcle", add the freIght
"nd the 111cldental expenses of exchangl1lg "tuft that V\a" not
what au ordered and "ee If ) au Cdnnot do ]U'3t as well by
t1aelmg at home" It ~eems to me that If yuu '3tart at thh
"tage of the game and do the mI""IOn<ll v \\ ork at home that
vot1 WIll ~ucceed 111 entennlS a \vedge 'LIve and let 11\e"
1t 1'3 the most comfo1 table polIcy to II'v e by See If yOU
cannot convmce the farmers that 1 he savm~ of a [ell dolla1"
Ie; Ivorth nothmg compa1ecl WIth the be"t 111te1e"t:, of Y0ul
tello\'\ men
23
"I kno\\ thd1 It 1" pI e"umptuou" for me to adVIse tramed
bU"llless men "uch <I" VOU all' hut speak111g' flam my oVln
e"penence, It ~eeJ11Sto me thIS 1,',one of the factors that mu"t
enter mto competItion wIth the outSIde octupus 1 am sure
that 'our work I~ bllngmg you the greatest benefit from
} eal to yecl1 a" ) our attendance here tOl11g-ht mcIJcates I
thank ) ou "
] R Ta} lor- I under"tand that I was elected p1e'31-
dent of thIS a,,~oc1atlOn vvhde 1 \'>as out thIS afte1 noon I do
not know \I hethe1 to tl1dnk you or not \\T e have one good
"trGng thmg to do Your bu) 111" commIttee ha'3 found out
where to buy goods E\ ery famIly m the country has all
kmds of advertIsements f10m \lontgo111ery \\ aid and SealS,
Roebuck \\I]1dt are vie g0111g- to cia? \\ e can fill up UUl
stOJ e WIth $298 beel'3 and $2 mattl e""es the e;ame a" Seal ",
Roc buck and \Iontgomerv \\ arc! &. La, but how are we
gOll1g to let the farmers know v\ e have the"e gooc!s? T]11s has
bee11 bothellng me fot some tnne Ho\\ are we g0111g to let
the people kno\\ that we can meet catalog competltlOn \ V e
must settle that thb year and J beIJeve our ad, ertls111g com-mIttee
can do It fOJ th
"It ~eem" to me thelt our 1m) 111g commIttee anc! you 1
f01mer preSIdent ha\ e done nobly ] heIr work has shown
the membe1 ~ what \ve can do and how VIe can buy of OUi
Ov\n dealers \ \ e could not do It two or tIll ee year~ ago
"\Ye heard a few thl11g" thI" .tfte1 noon 111oppoe;lt1on to
co upe1at1\e bUymg That h what ha" mdde e\e1ythmg
E, Cl} th111g 1~ <..-o-ope1atn e People even agreed not to eat
meat for 60 da),', [hope that every member of thIS aSSOC1-
at10n wIll feel perfectly free to buy good" at OU1 aSsoc1atlOn
If you Cdnnot get what you want thru the aSsoc1at1On. help
out the buy mg commIttee and ,Ve V\ 111aecompllsh more than
we have m the pa'3t year 1he dealers and manufacturer" of
lh1' cIty hay e alway~ u"ed me well I am no talker but If
I V't-re out on the ~t1eet corner, I could probably talk for an
haUl Our fnend Taylo1, (1\ er there makes hIS lIVIng by
talklllg-talk s dll the time
fhere IS another gentlem<ln he1 e from South Dakota
lust aClO,,~ the lIne from me lIne pretty near there Ot
CGu~se It WIll take hIm some tIme to get up WIth the rest
d us tellows You can see b\ 11l~loob he IS lazy.
"In regard to thI" cdtalo~ bu"me"s, I beheve there is one
thmg we ought to get out a ul11versal catalog There
arc 77 pages of furl11ture 111Montgomery \Vard & Co's cata
log- rl hey have cheap and medltlm furl11ture If we had a
cataloo- of that kmd whIch every dealer could send out to
the farmers, It would only take 250,000 to send one to every
farmer One fellm'> "aId he would take 50,000 I wlOte your
~eCletary about It, ask111g what It would cost but he could
not find out 111that short tU11e I thmk It would be well
to look 111tOIt thIS com111g year Gentlemen, I am g0111g to
do the best I can for you but) au must all help lb E\ ery
man has got to take hold and help
~----------------------------------------------~
~IKCl~ou INTERESTING PRICES g~'i~~.vk~~g
SEND SAMPLES, DRAWINGS OR CUTS FOR PRICES
I ~~~i:,~E::..P:. ROWE CARVING WORKS, I~---- ..-----_. . - -.--
,II
-~--_._-~ __ ..a
ALLEGAN,
MICH.
24
.... _ ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
• •• ••••••• •• r _ ....
~ran~DapMs Dlow Pipe
an~Dust Arrester (ompanJ
THE LATEST device for handling
shavings and dust from all wood~
working machines. Our nineteen years
experience in this class of work has
brought it nearer perfection than any
other system on the market today. It
is no experiment, but a demonstrated
scientific fact, as we have several hun~
dred of these systems in use, and not a
poor one among them. Our Automatic
Furnace Feed System, as shown in this
cut, is the most perfect working device
of anything in this line. Write for our
prices for equipments.
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETAIL WORK WITHOUT EX~
PENSE TO OUR CUSTOMERS.
EXHAUST FANS AND PRES-SURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN
STOCK.
Office and Fe.ctory:
208-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
em.ene Phone 1212 ... u. M..ln 1804
OUR AUTOMATIC FURNAOE FEED SYSTEM
• • • •• • ••••••• - ... • • • •• I • • • • •• •• "'_. _s .. .. _ , .
WEEKLY ARTISAN
New Furniture Dealers.
Hes:,er & Boyles are new dealers at Marllll, Tex
C B J\'elson IS a ne"" dealer at Portsmouth, Va.
E \1 Deel,} has opened a new furllltUl e 'itore at ~ eese",
S C
The Home FurnIture company are new dealers at Alex-andria,
La
E E Hunt has opened a new fl1rnitUl e stOl e at El
Campo, Tex
Mason & Son have opened a new furlllture store at
Junction CIty, Ore
H Vlllcent & Father have established a new furniture
,tore at Estell, S C
'1he Ross Hardware company of Fort Gaines, Ga, has
added a furllltLue department
Bro" n & Regan-Rush Brown and BenJamlll Regan-hay
e openeJ a new furnitnure :,tore 111\tI1tchelI, S. Dak
::\lcCrary & Tubb'i wJll open a new furllltule store, with
an undertakmg department in the buildlllg formerly occupied
by J \;\T )'1cCrary, LeAmgton, Ky
HarbIson & McGee are new furlllture dealer'i at Russell-vJlle,
Ark Both members of the fil m were formerly with
Patrick-Leonard Hardware company of that town.
\i\!JlIiam H Stewart, Allen B Endicott and !\bel Spencer
haH incorporated the Stewart & Endicott company to deal
m furniture m Atlantic CIty, N J CapItal stock, $6,000
Shaenfield Bros & Co, of San Antonio, Tex, dealers in
lllstallmel1t ",peclaltles announce that they WIll "hortly open
a fUllllture store Manufacturers al e requested to ..,end cata-logues
H ] Bloomburg, C Lopinsky, Rosa L Bloombury, ] ul
1U.., and P SI1verman have incorporated the Ideal Furniture
company, capItalized at $10,000, to do a wholesale and retaJl
furlllture bus mess m Charleston, W. Va
New Factories.
J E. Shone is promoting a company to e'itablish a new
furlllture factory in South Bend, Ind.
Joseph BaJley and others have orgalllLed the Surry ChaIr
company to establish a new factory at Elkm, N C CapItal
stock, $25,OQO
The :New York and North Carolina Land company are
considering a proposition to estabhsh a furmture factory at
Brevard, N C
The Eureka Manufacturin~ company in which H C
Land, T M McKee and J A Royer are the principal stock-holders,
will estabhsh a new table factory at New Castle, Ind
The \Vyhe ManufactUring company has been lll~orporated
to manufacture the \N'ylie metal foldlllg bed 1ll DetrOIt W 11-
liam ] Lawrence IS preSIdent, George \V Sharpe, vIce presI-dent
and W Jlham A \i\Tyhe, ..,ecretary and treasurel The
bed that the company WIll manufacture was m\ ented by
Mr \\Tyhe about two year:, ago The new factOly WIll be
located on Duffield street
Furniture Fires.
The furlllture store of J G Mertz & Sons, Hastlllg'i,
Minn, was :,hghtly damaged by fire that de..,troyed the ad-
]oin111g btllld111g, recently
The Grady Furlllture company of 1\ew Haven, Conn,
lost about $300 by a bla7C 1ll the ba",ement of theIr store
on March 4 FUlly 111sured
FIre start111g m the dry kiln, damaged the plant of the
Fond du lac (WIS) Church Furlllture company to the ex-tent
of about $21,000 la:,t Sunday evenmg
sured.
Arthur A \\ heman, upholsterer and furniture dealer of
Grand RapIds, J\Ilch, lost about $400 by fire in hIS uphol-stering
department on March 4 Fully 111sured
G B Allyn & Co's furlllture store, LYl1donvJlle, Vt, was
de..,Uoyed by fire 011 March 1 J\lrs Allyn escaped from the
blllldmg by Jump111g from a second story wmdow and landmg
In a snow bank Los.." $7,000, ilburan
- Date Created:
- 1910-03-12T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:37
- 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/143