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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-01-22
Weekly Artisan; 1910-01-22
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS. MICH••JANUARY 22. 1910
~~ALASKA"Refrigerators
The' Alas~a, Refrigerator Co.
Muskegon, Michigan
No Matter How Hot the Day
it is Always Winter in an
"Alaska" Refrigerator
We make them in all sizes and styles, with Zinc,
Enamel, Porcelain and Opal-Glass linings.
Sell to Dealers only. Give them exclusive sale,
refer all inquiries to them, and supply them with ad-vertising,
matter and electrotypes liberally.
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Write for Our Illustrated 1910 Catalogue.
Exclusive Refrigerator
Manufacturers
"Alaska" Circulation
New York Office, 369 Broadway
L. E. Moon, Manager
A
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i ;;
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Qran~DapMs Dlow Pipe
an~Dust Arrester Compan}
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 Factory:
208-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CUI.en. Phone 1282 Bell. Main 1804
OUR AUTOMATIC FURNAOE FEED SYSTEM
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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3
No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
New designs in the Louis XVI Style.
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS co. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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Good Equipment Means Better Work
Equip your shop or factory with G. R. Handscrew products;
you'll note a vast difference in the quality and quantity of work
turned out.
All of our factory trucks, benches, clamps, vises, etc. are the
best that money and skilled labor can produce. We use nothing
but the very best Michigan hard Maple in the construction of all our products. It is not
possible to turn out better goods than we now manufacture; years of manufacturing has
taught us that it pays to use nothing but the very best material possible in the manufactur-ing
of our product.
WRITE FOR CATALOG SHOWING THE
COMPLETE LIST OF FACTORY EQUIPMENT.
Grand Rapids Hand Screw Co.
618 North Front St. Grand Rapids, Michigan
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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• Have you had anything from The Luce Furniture Co. lately?
Bedroom and Dining Room equipment in profusion.
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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
Btrds's Ey Mapll!
Btrch
!i!.!fartered Oak
and
Ctrcasstan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS'BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of ]. C. HAMIL TON, C. E. COHOES, ]. EDGAR FOSTER.
GRAN)') R/\PT~
Dnnr
30th Year-No. 30
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• JANUARY 22. 1910 Issued Weekly
GIVE SALESMEN DECENT TREATMENT
Mr. Guenzel, of Lincoln, Nebr., Lays Down Some Good Rules for His Force
of Buyers.
Carl Guenzel, the manager of the bIg department store of
the Rudge-Guenzel company of Lmcoln, ;\f eb, is entitled to
the thanks of every travelmg salesman and every house rep-resented
by travehng salesmen m the Ulllted States vVhat a
nice appreciation it would show of his service by the 800,000
tradesmen of America and their employes If a properly en-grossed
resolutIOn of thanks could be signed by each indi-vidual
and presented to him
"What has Guenzel done?" in the mterest of trade is
a natural inquiry Listen, young and old, whJ!e the writer
tells you about It.
The Rudge-Guenzel company employs eighteen buyers-one
for each department. Several months ago a young man
approached the office of manager Guenzel and asked for a
few moments of the busy manager's time.
"Proceed," Mr Guenzel remarked in kindly tones.
"I am the representative of a large firm in New York
engaged m the ImportatIOn and manufacture of mllIinery
goods 1 arrn ed m the cIty thl" morning and following the
usual lme of procedure m my trade I calIed at the large stores
to a"certam If the buyers would be mterested m my sample"
before ordering my trunb dehvered to the hotel I met wIth
no encouragement untJ! I calIed upon the buyer for the mJ!h-nery
department of thl" company In respon"e to her sug-gestIOn
I took rooms and opened up my samples, which IS not
a sImple undertakmg m my lme of busmess The lady saId
she would calI at two o'clock I asked If "he could not make
the hour a httle earher as I deSired to take the tram for
Omaha at 2 30 and would not have time to pack my samples
and make the tram She declmed to change the hour for my
accommodatIOn I waited at the hotel untJ! three o'clock but
she dId not appear She made another appomtment for 4
o'clock-too late for my departure from Linclon that day The
lady dId not appear and I am here to pohtely protest against
such treatment I have lost a day's time and put my house
to an expense that should not have been incurred"
"My good man," Mr. Guenzel remarked, "I appreciate
your sItuatIOn and thank you for calImg my attentIOn to this
matter. When you come to Lincoln agam caII on us; I wiII
promIse you decent treatment"
The salesman retired and the buyer for the mJ!lmery
department was summoned to appear before the manager
"Did you make an appointment wIth a salesman from New
York today?" Manager Guenzel enquIred
"I did," the buyer responded
"Why dId you not keep that appomtment?"
"We do not need any goods"
"Is that your reason for treating him so shabbily?"
"I thought perhaps I mIght look at his samples dUring
the day, but I was unable to do 50 "
"Stop at the cashIer's desk when you go out and receIve
the pay due you for serVIces \iVe shalI need you no longer."
On the foIIowmg day Mr. Guenzel noticed that a buyer
m another department had kept a representative of an eastern
house waltmg alI day wIthout lookmg at hIS samples CalI-mg
the buyer to hIS office Mr Guenzel learned that several
appomtments of an hour when the salesman would be al-lowed
to show hIS samples had been made and broken,
and he receIved orders to gIve the "Isltor hIS time immedl
ately
"But we do not need any of hIS goods," the buyer ex-plamed
"Then It was your duty to telI him so and not keep hIm
awaltmg your pleasure alI day"
A day or two later the buyers m alI departments were
summoned to appear before the manager, when he related
the inCIdent whIch had caused the dIsmIssal of the head of
the miIImery sectIOn and contmued
"I deSIre to have the fact understood that it is the duty
of every buyer employed by this company to make appoint-ments
wIth alI travelmg salesmen commg mto thIS estabhsh-ment
and to keep those appomtments right on the minute
Further I deSIre that you fix the time for meetmg the sales-men
wIth a vIew to theIr convelllence whenever It IS possible
If you can assIst them in expedltmg their business do so
The manufacturers and Jobbers WIth whom we deal are put to
a great deal of expense in sending their salesmen to this town.
They are entitled to every consideratIOn and this company pur-poses
that they wJ!1 have the same"
The pohcy outhned by the manager is now carried out
to the letter Hundreds of salesmen speak of the splendid
attention the} receive and from one end of the United States
to the other they telI of the story of the effiCIent service
rendered in the establishment of the Rudge-Guenzel company.
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6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Who
Feeds Your Pigs?
Every factory has Its pigs-razor backs, most of them-feeders
but never fat nor marketable.
There are steam eaters, glue eaters, etc, but the mOot I a-pacious
of them all IS the lumber eater, commonly kno\\ n ao the
WASTE BIN.
In most plants thiS pig eats from 2570 to 50% of all the
lumber the over-worked manager can buy and gl\ e-, m I etmn
a very low grade of refuse-fuel.
If you will watch this pig for a week you will discover that
all the feed he gets IS the result of poorly dned lumber-lum
ber that is checked, warped, casehardened or hone) combed 111
the dry-kl1n-knots al e dned or baked "0 hal d and crooked
that a planer tears them to pieces
When you have decided that a suffiClentl y lal ge hole has
been eaten into your bank account, write the Grand R,lpld-,
Veneer Works, Grand Rapids, Michigan, and learn how hun
dreds of wise managers are CHE \ TI\ G THIS PIG
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Proper Way to Advance Prices.
"The proper" ay for manufacturers to advance prices is to
make entnely new pieces," '3a1(1T A,.cshley Dent, the well known
salesman, who IS also a manufacturer "The methods pursued by
the case goods people m advancmg pnces shortly before the sea-
~on opened, \\ ere very unWise, IS seems to me. The less said about
rals111g pnces the better, It certamly does not stimulate business
to advertise the fact far and wide The extensive talk has mdm:ed
buyer" to do more looking alound, and you cannot blame
them for that A dealer cares very httle about prices-indeed
he \\ elcome" the reasonably high figure, which he knows
means a fair profit to the manufacturer-but the thing he
does \\ an t to knovv IS whether he is getting his stuff as
cheaplv as does 111''; competitor m business That is the crux
of the matter To pay more means a serious business loss to
111111 The manufacturers are not parties to an ironclad
compact as to pnce schedules, therefore the buyers have
thought It WI"e to do considerable shoppmg for case goods
thiS "eason The) have not bought very heavily of thiS line
at goods
I do not Clltlclze the manufacturers for wanting to get
a more I easonable profit on their goods, hilt only the methods
pm "ued to Ieach that end"
Boosting Business.
Drummel-"You boosted fOi the school committee to get
a pretty school teacher from the town. Why you haven't
any chddren I"
StOi ekeeper Jason-"N 0, but, stranger, I had an eye on
busmess As soon as the pretty teacher arnved all the big
boy s began sneakmg down here and buymg hair-oil, clean
collal s, and scented "oap by the wholesale
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The latest Improved Sander I
No. 194 Patented Sand Belt Machine.
You are wasting time and money, if you are
"anchng by hand, dl um, dIsk or spmdle
Y OUI competitor IS dOlllg more and better
\York on our machllles
Let 11" show you ho'v'v to sand flat surfaces,
Inegulal shapes and moldmgs m a practical and
profitable manner
\\ e guarantee results
Ask for Catalog "E"
Wysong & Miles Company
Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., Greensboro, N. C.
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..- .. -a__ . .. WEEKLY ARTISAN 7 ~_o •. 0_. . _ •• _ .. __ ~ . ~__...
In GRAND RAPIDS Only,
January, 1910.
OLD SPACE,
I Furniture Exhibition Bldg.,
Fourth Floor. I The UDELL Line
I MANY NEW ONES in
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Library Bookcases, Medicine Cabinets,
Ladies' Desks, Commodes,
Sheet Music Cabinets, Folding Tables,
Piano Player Roll Cabinets.
A Lme whIch JS wen worth gomg to see A Lme that you
should have a complete catalog of. fhe fact that you have not our
catalog can only be rectIfied by writIng for your copy to day
THE UDELL WORKS
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
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REVISING HIS PLANS
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Pitcairn Varnish Company
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
Mr. Klingman May Make His New Building a
Morton House Annex.
P. J Klmgman 13 revising the plans for the new buildmg
that he 1Sto erect on the D1\lSlOn 'ltreet side of 1113reta11 build-ing
Like many othel s Mr Klmgman feels the need of addi-tIOnal
hotel capaCIty for Grand Rapids, durmg the furniture
sales seasons, and he may deCIde to use the projected budd-ing
for that purpose If he deCides to use the new bl11lding
for hotel purposes it IV ill be constructed wIth an arcade
through the m1ddle whIch WIll contmue through the retail
furniture bt.1llding and under Ioma street to the corndor of
the Morton House ThIS would make the new building es-sentially
an annex to the Morton House
As to whether any proviSIOn would be made in thi'l
bl1lldmg for exhIbItIOn purposes IS somewhat doubtful 1£
these plans al e carned through. The annex would provide
200 rooms and by a senes of hght shafts every room could
be gIven a proper measure of naturalhght. The upper stories
for a time would be utlh7ed for banquets, conventIOns and
sllnilar large gatheJings wIth opportUl1lty to increase the
annex capacIty to 300 rooms when thl'l accommodation shall
be heeded and yet retam loom for some of t.he other special
features noted
Nothmg regardll1g a COSt estImate has been made, but
the financll1g of the pro] ect IS practIcally plovlded
Mr. Klingman's plans for the new bl1lldmg, as preVl-rII
C. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't.
- ~_o_o __ o _0 . • ~_____________ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .. Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. J.
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ously announced, contemplated some roomIng accommoda-tions
on the upper floors Smce then his ideas have taken a
more definite form, and the plans may be changed so as to
make the new structure more hke an annex to the Morton
House than a new furnitl1le exhlbltlon buIlding
Racial Taste for Fu.rniture.
"We furmture men," saId a Twenty-third street, New York,
dealer, "see slc1es of human nature that escape the ordinary run of
people. For instance, when it comes to furnishing a house a Jew
spends mne-tenths of hIS money on his dll1ing room, while an Ital-
Ian laVishes the same attention on 111Sbedroom. Americans and
German;, put most of theIr money mto parlor furniture
"vVhy, \\ hen a young couple come m we note theIr racIal ear-marks,
as It \'V el e, befOl e they are \'Vell inside. If the Jewsih
type betra} s Itself we hustle the young thmgs back to the
c1mmg room furl11ture w1thout delay Massive claw legged
tables they demand and leat.her chairs. These once selected,
the furnl'ihmg of the rest of the house IS a small matter.
"If our customers have the soft Italian accent we take
the elevator to t.he bedroom furniture on the second floor.
A great four poster is usually chosen, with elaborate furn-
Ishmgs to match; and the troubles of fUll1iture hunting are
Jretty well over.
"In the same way the Germans and Americans concen-tlate
on their parlors, givmg the rest of the house more atten-tIOn,
perhaps than is gn en _111~th_e oother two cases~. ..
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Manufacturers of
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
EVRNSVlLLL
EvansvIlle, J an 20 -The mal1ufactm er~ of L" ,Ub i Ille al C
eIther malhng catalogs or preparmg to do so 1hose recen ed
from the pnnters show largely mcreaseel anel Improved hnes
That of the Bosse Fur11ltl'te company not only Illu~tratcs and
descnbes the excellent lme of fifty-two patterns of kItchen cab-inets
and fOIty-eight wardrobes manufactmeel b) the comp 1m,
but a consIderable numbel of pIeces turned out b) thc sei el dl
members of the BH; SIX Car Loadmg I\ssociatlOn The Hen-derson
Desk Company's desks, the mantel foldmg beds of the
Worlel Fur11lture company and the Globe's ~peclaltJes m sIde-boards
have a place in the book.
The EvansvIlle manufacturers have been \i ell I ept escntecl
in ChIcago dunng the past month Among tho~e \i ho made the
Journey wel e Benjamin Bosse, \V '\ Koch, Chatles \1 rll",se
and Edward Ploeger. They brought encouragll1g I epOl ts of the
outlook for trade to the home office,
EvansvIlle's mIxed cal load busmess IS gIO\\ 1l1e, ,tcdchh
Dealers located in all parts of the "Cmted States kno\\ that ei-eryth1l1g
needed fOl the house and office ma) be had ot the
EvansvIlle manufacturers and that quahty, pl0mpt shlpment'"-
and moderate pnces may ever be depended upon by patrons of
the local manufacturing houses.
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-John Mess1l1a, LIbel ty ~treet dnd Frankhn ave-nue,
New Orleans, Ala, $3,383; Mrs. S. Gumbel, LIberty and
Iberville streets, New Orleans, $3,500, M A. Beck, 2cb38 Euchcl
avenue, Kansas CIty, Mo, $5,000, G C Peterson, ±?09 Camp-bell
street, Kansas CIty, $4,000, Harns C \nderson, 416 La\\ n-dale,
Kansas CIty, $3,000, E J. Moore, 331') Xorth Twent)-
fifth street, Omaha, Kebr , $3.000; EmIl DavIdson, 2621 Camden
street, Omaha, $3,000; H. BRIce, 188 Preston avenue, Houston,
Texas, $16,000; James Muckle, Belmont and Seventh streets,
Portland, Ore, $5,500, A M. Je11lson, Houghton street and \Ic-
Kenna avenue, Portland, $3,;:;00, F 1\ Dlundon, 1118 ::'IIol1toe
street, N. W., Washmgton, DC, $2."),000; LOUIS C Fetrell
1120 Eighth street, N. IE, Wash111gton, $10,000; J. M. Berry,
Wasco and E. SIxteenth streets, POl tland, Ore, $6,000; Charles
Pinkney, Brazee and E Twenty-fifth stJ eet, Portland, $-1,000,
VVtlltam R. N utherton, Howard and Lee streets, Inehanapohs
Ind., $6,000; W. F. Peet, Kent and Laurel streets St Paul
Minn, $6,500, O.\Vahlbure, Case and JessIe streets: St Paul:
$4,400; Mrs. Anna Postcwka, 240 Rondo street, St. Paul, $3,000,
EUROPEAN PLAN
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
Runnmg hot and cold
water, tel e p h 0 n e,
clothes closet, electrIc
lIght, steam heat, etc
In each room
Immaculate tiled de-tached
and p rt vat e
baths.
Artistic and perfectly
appomted Bllhard Hall,
Loungmg Den, Rarber
Shop, Etc
Old English. Mis·
slon. and
Colonial Cafes
ServIce a la Carte
6 a. m to 11 p m.
Table d'Hote Dmner
530 to 8 pm., dally at
50 cents.
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RATES: $1.00 to $2.00 PER DAY
Take south bound Wealthy· Scribner car from Union or Grand
Trunk stations. Five Main car lines reach the door.
] 1\. HIll 1::''3 E~telle street, JacksonvIlle, Fla, $3,500; Calvin
Cole U,1k ,111d '-ltone\i all streets, JacksonvIlle, $3,000; W. V.
Ulg etree 11/4 Dekalb avenue, Atlanta, Ga, $3,000; Mabel
Pal khm ~t, 229 lIellcltan :>treet, Indlanapolts, Ind., $4,500,
1I ank Cones, CapItol avenue and Thll ty-elghth street, Indlan-
"pOlh, S 12")0, I ~ RomIg, :336 West Manon street, South Bend,
lnel S 3 bOO, I1enn L rbahm, 714 \;V est Manon street, South
j ;end S 1,00U, B em \ 1\ tllenbrock, Watertown, WIS, $3,000;
U C RIebe, 1\ atertov-n, \VIS., $3,000, Charles Kadmg, vVater-tcml1,
III~, $J,300, ~1Jce L. Jones, 4023 Lexlllgton avenue, St.
Locm \10 $3,300, 1\. ~ Howard, 6327 Southport avenue, ChI-cago,
S1il 000, Ol,lf Larson, 3747 South Sangamon street, ChI-cago,
Sb 3UO, Jere1l11dh IIhelan, Avenue North and UtIca ave-nue
Brookl) n, ~ Y., $7,500, Lawrence A. Brennan, 1625 E
I lfteenth street, Bl00klY11, $18,000; Mrs. Flora Legler Hawk1l1s,
EIghth and Brooks stleets, San DIego, Cal., $4,000; W. B. Wes-
~on estate, Jefferson avenue and Baldwm street, Detroit, MIch.,
S" J oco Thomas Roger, corner HamIlton and Lathrop streets,
DetlO1t S,J,300, 1 J Gorman, Woodward avenue and Pallister
stl eet, DetrOIt, S7 ,300, \\. 1\ Drolet, Pmgree and ThIrd streets,
DetlO1t, $4 500, Herman ;\IalOhl, PIerce and Dequindre streets,
Detl Olt ~"),300, Andrevv Lanmer, Lawrence and Second streets,
Detroit ~(),OOO, ::'IIr, S H Bohne, 412 Cherokee street, New
Utlean~ Ld, $8 100, Jane P Tmner, 3 South Bnghton avenue,
\tLmtlc CIt), ~ J, $10,000, A IV. DeBevOlse, JamaIca, L. 1.,
$12,000, ::'I1rs C. B Armstrong, G4G Lafayette street, Buffalo, $6,-
X. Y, $::',000, Charles Braun, 459-63 Koons street, Buffalo, $6,-
OOO,.:\Irs \. W. Sanmons, 2cb3 ThIrd stret, Atlanta, Ga., $3,-
clOO, 0 1, Grover, 77 Nmth street, Atlanta, $3,500; Morns
<"'tlOhm, I-Ll1ll~burg, Pa, $]2,000; James W. Spratt, 220 Lafay-ette
street JacksonvIlle, 1-<la, $4,400; Howard Ellison Jr., V IlIa
::\ 0" a, Dloughton, Lane, PhIladelphIa, $22,000; Peter Keller,
ncl3 South \\ esteln avenue, ChIcago, $7,500; H. B. Shoemakr,
l p~al stleet and IVl'Jsahlckon avenue, PhIladelphia, Pa., $14,-
000, haac :h II allons, Jauncey and Hampton streets, PItts-burg
Pd , Si ,000
Miscellaneous Buildings-The Mutual Realty company
IS blllld1l1g a $30,000 hotel 111Atlanta, Ga. Henry Meyers has
the contract for buildmg a court house at Kern, county seat of
I"ern count), Cdl, for $330,000 The Masons of Albuquerque,
" \Ie,- are acheltJs1l1g for bIds on the contract for a Masonic
temple ot \i h1ch the estImated cost is $60,000 Hemet, Cal,
has voted 5JO,OOOm bonds fOt a new hIgh school bUlldmg.
The PentJcostal chm ch of the ~ azarene, IS to estabhsh a college
\\ Ith blllld1l1gs cost1l1g $500,000, at Pasedena, Cal. The Elks of
\Iontpelter, \ t, are prepanng to budd a temple at an estimated
Uht of $30,000
New Furniture Dealers.
The Rex FUll1lture & Undeltaking company will open
a new store at B1g Spnngs Tex
A l\l DelhI of l\Illledgevtlle IS making arrangements to
open a new furl1lture "tore at Eatonton, Ga
Ketlson & Stevens are to erect a bUIlding at a cost of
$50,000 on Idaho street, BOIse, Idaho, and open a new furni-tUl
e StOIe
H \ \ arner and others have incorporated the Vander
Doss f'url1lture company and WIll estabhsh a new store at
JIugo, Okla
J C May, Charles E Adams and John L Snead, under
the name of the VIdalia Fur11lture company, WIll open a
new furl1lture 'itore at VIdalia, Ga
The Thompson-Huggl11s Furl1lture company are new
deale! 'i, untIl recently 111bU<;l11ess at Apalachicola, Fla, will
open a new 'itore 111 Brunswick, Ga.
Lentz Big Six
No. 694, 48 in. top.
No. 687, 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHlGAA
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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FAVORS A FURNITURE MERGER
A Southern Manufacturer Says It Is the Only
Remedy for Present Conditions_
"Yes, the volume of our busIness for the last six months
has been very good, but prices have not been satIsfactory and
when the statement for the year 1909 wa~ completed the re-
~ult,,> were very dl<.,app01l1tmg, m fact, the year 1909 was
wor5,e than 1908 a<.,far a~ profit.:. are considered," saId a well
knov, n ">outhern manufacturer "The facts are," he contin-u<.,
ed,"there are entIrely too many furniture manufacturers and
entIrely too many good" are manufactured. Competition is
fiercer.
"It IS really amu~J11g a" well as annoymg to hear some
of the retaIl dealer"> say that they are going to combat the
"mall advance that the manufacturers have put on their
goods and that they wIll not buy at present pnces, but will
walt and get the "mall advance of 5 to 10 per cent off. Yes,
I ha\ e been in the manufactunng busmess for 30 years and
I thInk I know the condItIons confrontmg the furmture manu-facturers
today The 1l1dustry has not been m as bad con-dItion
for 14 years and the only rehef that I see for the
furmture manufacturers IS to form a merger-on hnes that
wtll not confhct with the Sherman antI-trust law It IS now
about the only great mdustry that has not comb1l1ed Sure
there wIll be 0pp0'3ltton to its orgamzatIOn, but from a manu-
I,.. _..... .'. . " "THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER
--------------. a a.. •••••• _••
facturing standpoint It IS the only thing to do It will be best
for the consumer and wIll not affect the dealers injuriously.
I happen to know of a group of financiers and promoters,
who look WIth favor on the pro] ect; in fact, some manufac-turers
have already been approached In regard to the sub-ject
and, of course, are interested. It is not necessary to
point out the advantages. They are too many and every
manufacturer knows them, but I will say that the greatest
savmg would be in the manufacturing cost As an instance
look at the 1mes shown m thb market and note how many
manufacturers are makmg full and complete lines of bed-room
furmture, in all penod'3, styles and prices Would it
be better to dIVIde up the lll1e", cut out the factories and
specIalize? Then in buying the supplies and loss in market-ing
the goods, much would be ~aved.
"I just read an ASSOCIated Press dispatch from Wash-
Il1gton saying that 'a delegat\On of mdElpendent tobacco
manufacturers were there to go before a congressional com-mittee
in regard to a bJIl that has been introduced in con-gress,
and the statement was made that It cost the American
Tobacco company, two cents a pound to manufacture their
goods, whereas it costs the Independent manufacturers nine
cents a pound. Why? The Amencan Tobacco company
speclal17e Each factory IS run on one thing The Inde-pendent
manufacturer IS compelled to make a complete line-
Everything 111 the tobacco line
"Mark my predictIOn. It is com1l1g-A merger of furni-ture
manufacturer,,"
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.
9
..
A._a •• ....,.. .. .. ..... "
b
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Ready to Fight the Parcels Post.
"1 haven't heard anythmg III a ) ear or more about thc
parcel'" post propo"ltlOn and If any natlOnal legl'-,latol I"
tl1lnking of llltroduClllg "uch a mea'-,ure } au may depend
upon It Omaha WIll be m hne to defeat It 1\ e ha\ e a
hve board of trade wl11ch placed Itself on record 1e~al d-
1l1g thIS proposltlOn a year or mOl e ago dud It I" \\ ,1tLhlllg
all mea'3ure" and movements that WIll ha\ e an effect Uj)ll11
trade You can re"t a"sm ed we ,,1MB J0111 hand~ \\ Ith
other commercIal orga111zahon" to pI e",en e the lIlteg
rity of the general bu"mess meu Congre"" may not
have been amenable to the protests of lllehvlduals 111 the
past but they wIll SIt up and take prompt notice \\ hen
an influentIal orgamzatlOn tells them what IS \\ hat fhh
is about the only way the people's interests can be comerved and
we realize it as fully as do you in Grand Rapids You can set
it down as a fact that the business men of Omaha are a unit in
their opposition to any parcels post measure, whIch they beheve
is directly in the 1l1terests of the bIg mall order houses and the
express companies as to the same extent It IS milTIlcal to the 1l1-
terests of the business men as a whole."
Such is the expression of 'vV G Brandt of the Orchard &.
Wilhelm company, Omaha, a young man but a veteran as a
buyer, who is keenly ahve to all that is for business interests in
his home town and the country at large
"I have not gIven a lot of thought to the pnce mCIcase, '
he contmued, "but I beheve the manufacturel s \\ould not ha\ c
made It If they had not felt it was fully justIfied by condltlOns
I have an impreSSIon the manufacturel s do bUSllless upon a nal-row
marg1l1. \Ve know they have to pay a nsing scale for then
raw material and under the hIgh cost of livmg It may be assumed
their labor costs more That is a matter \V hlCh 11101 e nearh
touches the consumer, and he will tell what he thinks when he
comes to buy furl11tme at the new price That IS, if he realizes
any 1l1creaSC, \\ hich I am rather mclmed to doubt. In any event
It IS ;,0111ethmg that \\ 111'3ettle Itself For my part I will not
he 11111l1erhateh affected, for hke other dealers, I dIscounted the
aeh ance b\ 10adlnlS up hea\ Il) \\ Ith1l1 the last few months at the
old pnces .,
REBUILDING THE EXCHANGE
Contract Awarded and Work of Removing the
Ruins Already Started.
The contract has been awarded to Hauser, Owen & Ames
for erectlOn of the new Furniture Exchange and the work has
already been started The new structure will be ready for oc-cupancy
June 1 and 0 B. RoVvlette, manager of the bmlding.
states that all of the old tenants WIth one exception have re-newed
their leases. The new building WIll be fire proof and wIll
occupy the ground space of the old one. It will be at least SIX
stones in height, and possibly eIght, provided safe footings al e
found when the debris is cleared away. The entire north wall
will be torn down and probably the east wall as well. Cement
WIll be largely used in basement and the rear and the buildmg
WIll have a cross fire wall in the center. The contractors have
aSSUIed ~Il Shepal d, the owner, that they can get the neces-sary
steel, lumber and other materials and that the bmlding WIll
be completed on time.
1he httle "tOll ha~ d SOli of l1nCel tam e"\.l"tellc(, '1 helle
,11L lot, ut httll ~t01lS but elthel they fall dlld fdele awa) or
d"c the\ (?,IU\\ mio bl(?, "tares Thele wIll never be la"tmg
teatul es I" am trade sa, e a few \\ hich lend themselve" peCltl-larl)
to small "pace
5
COMPLETE
LINES Of
REfRIGERATORS
AT RIG"T PRICES
CUALLENGE REfRIGERATOR COMPANY
GRAND HAVEN, MICH., U. S. A.
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE
AND LET US NAME YOU PRICE.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
.... _ ---- -_ _ --._-- _._.------..--__ -••-••• --_-_ --------------a
DELAWARE
CHAIR CO.
DELAWARE OHIO.
1 DOUBLE CANE
~ LEATHER
J MISSION
CHAIRS, ROCKERS and SETTEES
LARGEST
"QUALITY"
LINE
of
CATALOCUE TO THE TRADE ONLY.
~------_ - ---------------- ._ ..... ------- ...- .- ...-- ... .~
Mr. Lowman Has a Side Line.
DavId II Lowl1un of the Penn FurnIture company of
PhIladelphIa, ha" a thIrty ) ear record as a furmture buyer
"I've got a new talk111g point thIs tIme;' he continued
"and whIle It may 111terest you and your readers a httle men-tion
of It won't do me any harm I have an interest with the
Philadelphia Hardware company whIch is making a double
acting four tumbler mortIse lock, that IS absolutely new and
something I consIder of supenor ment It works surely
and the posltlOn and shape of the tumblers make it absolutely
ImpossIble to tamper V1lth 1t There IS but one way to work
It and that IS with the key It is the thinnest mortise lock
made and the smallest knoVln to the trade vVe have had
great succes" with It Sll1ce It wa" fil st introduced and I feel
a"sured that so soon as its ments are made known to the
trade they WIll be using It generally
"Gettll1g down to bus111ess propositlOns, I WIll say we
have had a splendId season. 'life didn't expect anything else
and whIle we looked for good returns the trade came so fast
and increased in such a manner that VI e were rather startled
to find out what we had accomplished when the totals were
made up at the close of the year All th111gS 111the Quaker
CIty are in fine shape WIth our industries running to full
capaCIty and a healthy tone pervadll1g everything Unless
something absolutely unforseen develops we should have a
brisk spnng business I look for this early winter to give
way to an early spring and this will keep us stepping right
along to keep up WIth the procession
"I regret that I am unable to make a longer stay here
but bus111ess affaIrs call me away. I am not the arbiter of
my own movements, this business rather blO'ing my m'aster
no\v."
New Furniture Exhibition Building.
PhIlip J. Klingman, the pioneer promoter of furmtUl e
exhibition build111gs, in Grand Rapids, has decided to erect
a mammoth fire proof bUlldll1g on North DIvision street. Im-mecltately
in the rear of the Khngman Sample Furniture com-pany's
store. The bmldll1g will have a frontage of 150 feet
on DIvision street and WIll be fourteen stories high. It will
be a fireproof structure and contall1 many conveniences and
features never introduced in a furniture expositIOn building.
An arcade WIll be constructed through the Klingman-vVaters
bUlld111g permltt111g buyers and salesman to pass directly
from the Morton house to the sales floors.
•
The enterpn"e has been financed and Vlork will be com-menced
when the details of the plan shall have been worked
out and the contract awarded It is believed that with the
as"embl111g of practically all lines worthy of consideration
by a dealer whIch the erection of the new bUllding will as-sure,
the future of Grand RapIds as the one great furniture
center of the wOlld will be established. Mr. Klingman takes
thIS Important step after receiving pledges of support from
capitahsts and manufactUl ers of furniture.
SalesmanshIp 1" not measured by the number or the sIze
of sales but by the profit'> on the goods sold
No. 537. 28x42 top.
Quarter Sawed Oak, Cross
Band Rim, Polished, $7.50
You can't make money faster than by buymg thIS line library
Table by the dozen, unless you make up a carload out of thIS and
other good thmgs we have to show you.
PALMER MANUFACTURING CO.
1015 to 1043 Palmer Ave., DETROIT MICH.
.. .
12 WEE K L 1. "\ R l' I SAN
~ --- .--------- -_._---~.~--.---_._---
:ffl~ou INTERESTING PRICES ON CARVINGS
OF ANY KIND
SEND SAMPLES, DRAWINGS OR CUTS FOR PRICES
CWarittaelofgorue.rI E• P• ROWE CARVING WORKS, ALMLEICGHAN,
........ I ,. ._- ... --
"Gene" Goodrich.
'Most everybody knows "Gene" Anybody \\ ho doe'3 not
know "Gene" has missed knowlllg a gentleman WOlth knO\\-
lllg The oft quoted CarnegIe h Cled1tec1 \\Ith the 1ema1k
that "an acquallltance wIth a good bU~111ess man 1S an asset
worth $1,000" An acquallltcll1Ce \\ lth "Gene" 1'3 \\ 01th 11101e
than that"
Twenty-five or mOle vealS dgO '0Ule nLlc1e hI:. fibt
appearance 111 th1S furl11ture to\\ n III has "did that 111thd t
yeal of hlS :youth ,ll1d strength he could c1btl11gl11sh the chf
ference between a 11111k'3dfe and a French cItesse1 and he
d1dn't Cdre who knew he WdS posse"'3ed of so much llltelIt-gence
"Gene's" mission to thl" f11111lture town was to P0111t
out the value of the stone taken flom the ed1 th at ~J ed111d,
NY, for 11'3ein the el eetlOn of bl11lchng" and the const! uc-tlOn
of sidewdlks ] he reader 1111ght ne\ e1 tll1nk about lt,
but he could not walk HI j far on the "il eets of G1,I1H1RapIds
w1thout treadl11g upon stones that "Gene" caused to be sent
here
"But how d1c1 he get mto the fur11lture trade")" 1S the
most natural inql11ry III the wOlld Why, he married a very
lovely young woman, the daughter of a furnitUl e maker
Havlllg acqulled such a close l11t1macy "Ith the fur11ltl11e
trade It was but natural that he "hould deSIre to advdnce to
the higher ranks of the 01der
It is not necessary to WrIte a long StOly, leC01.mtmg step
by step his advance to the very '>ubstantlal and highly re-
-~
•III
~-----_._------------_._-- IIII
I•
I
IIIIIII
II
•I
II
I
I
III
~--~-_._~--_.~-----~-----~-----.
--~
I HOTELRNORMANDIE I
CONGRESS STREET
Near Woodward Avenue !It
I
I!IIII
..I.
Amencan Plan, $2 50 per
Day and upwards.
European Plan, $1 00 per
Day and upwards
Hot and Cold Runmng Water
m all Rooms.
Rooms WIth Bath extra.
A High Grade Cafe.
Restaurant and Buffet In connectIon
GEORGE FULWELL,
Proprietor
I
•II
••
"pectab1e pos1tlOn he occupies 111 the busmess world. Let it
be known by those Ignolant of the fact that "Gene" has been
the chlef trade promote1 of the Rockford Chair and Furni-ture
company longer than two decades-that he possesses
the abJ11ty to sell goods in spots where othe1 s might fail, that
he 10,a bIg warm-heal ted compamonable, jovIal gentleman, a
lo} a1 CItIzen of Gland Rapids, a "way-up' secret SOCIety man
and a 11 edlt to hI" age and generatIOn Thel e are no fly
"plcks on "Gene" In 111Spal i.Jculdr field of u'>efulness, he is
thc hec,t e\ C1 '
MEN THAT GET ON
Those Not Afaid-But Your Courage Must Be
Mixed With Brains.
SomE. men ' "aIel a husmess manager, "arc afraid of
1c"jl0I1"lbJ11t}, "ume mcn welcome It, elthu '>01t of man may
be ~ooc1 and 1.1"etul 01 bad and harmful, according to h1"
"pellal de\ dopment
, fhel e a1e tl111Hlmcn \\ ho need somebody always to lean
UpOI1but \\ lw 111lcIel~l1ldance al e faIthful anel effective work-el",
and the 11 tho e a1 e men ,lf1aId of respon "Ilnhty who are
ah\ a\, 1n ec,01ute and lllLftectn e, who never can be prodded
llltO ::I11} thm~ but the clulle",t of dull routme work and who
mu"t always stay elm\ n close to the ground. men of small
account
'Then among men not aftald to take responslblhty you
find some \\ ho are too cocbure about lt, ready to settle any
que"tlOn that comes up to tbem rIght off the bat, blg or lIttle
gOlllg ahead Ftmi.Jly, slapdash, not a sort of man to have
at a responsIble post
\1..,0 '\ ()n ha\ e the man nl't afraId who thrIve" on re
"pon,l])JlIt\ dIH! U1JO\" the 11K ea"e of power, but who b cool
ane! dt.ar headed, a man of keen al1d tl ue dl"cernment who
kllO\\" 1l1,1111dn ell and lo~le,tll} \\lut I" the llgln tlnng to do
and \\lw thcn fcd1kc,,,ly ~()ec, ahead and dOL" lt, a man of
b1alllS and C0111age AlaI e e0111b111dtlOntIl1S, and the mdn
that posse'3'3es It geb fa1
'rOl courage of the mdnly attllbnte that men most ad-m11e,
\\ e'd dearly 10\ e to be courag eous, to dare; and the
man not dfrald to take the responsiblhty and who has also
the downllght abIlIty to make good we cotton to, and him
most of Us a1 e wIlllllg to follow and obey He can have
\\ hat he vvants 111 thl" world, and 1f he should want 1t he can
have the bIggest palr of wmgs III the wodd to come
"If ) ou expect to get anyv\hele don't be afraId to take
thc 1e"pon "Iblht} But really to get on you want to mix
j0111 eOl11age "lth blalllS"
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13 -_._.__._--_.-------------. .. .--_._---._---------------------------- I ,.. I,. •••• _ •• __ '"
RICHMOND RICHMOND TABLET ARM CHAIR
CHAIR CO.
Catalogues to the Trade.
RICHMOND INDIANA
GENUINE
LEATHER
SEAT
DOUBLE CANE LINE
"SLIP SEATS" - the
latest and best method of
double seating.
No. 70
...... -------------- ----------_._------~---_.__._._._._._----------_ ... •• T •• c._a •••• ~
BEDROOM FURNITURE
Sligh Furniture Company Has a Strong Line This
Season at Factol'y ShowroonlS.
HE, erythlllg for the bechoom" has been the slogan of the
SlIgh Fur11ltUl e company fOJ the past 30 years, and 1t has
been successfully mallltallled dunng all this t1me de.sp1te the
strongest kmd of compctltlOn The factory vvas small at the
beginl11ng and steady expanslOn to take cm e of its growmg
t1ade has been the order of thlllgS nght along. Even now a
four-story add1tlOn is almost under roof and w111be completed
in the spnng The factory showrooms wlll occupy a portion
of the new buildmg next July and the1 e will be an incredse
of 50 per cent in floor space de, oted to a display of the new
goods There w111be a large receptlOn room on the first floor,
a dinmg room, cafe and salesmen'.., offices The new show-rooms
on the o,econd fl001 wIll be opened on the thirtleth
busllless an11lversary of the SlIgh FUl mture company
The new hne mcludes about 1,400 inclIv1dual pieces and
much of 1t 1S bnght ne,,; stuff that is sure to interest the
trade The SlIgh c011lpany wa.s the first to use C1rcass1an wal-nut
and the d1splay of th1S beaut1ful wood this year is probably
unequalled anywhere J\Iaho~any and walnut are the leading
woods used, although smteo, are stlll made m bud's eye
maple, birch and some other ,,;oods Two smtes in rosewood,
pohshecl, are lllclucled m thc new pieces brought out They
are of the Louis XVI penod and the rich coloring of the
wood glVe them extraordmary "life" and beauty Last season
the lOsewood ,,\ as shown lU dull finish but 1tS beauty seems
enhanced when polished, at least the trade has been takmg
very kindly to 1t this season
A featm e of the 1910 llUe are the Sheraton and LoUls
XVI suites III walnut and mahogany, with high dre.ssers,
beds and twm beds to match Buyers have shown the1r
warm approval of th1S new stuft, even though it has a novel
appearance It 1S slmply follovv mg out the sanitary leg 1dea
that has been so successful m the office furniture trade and
carpet sweepers and vacuum cleaners may be used freely
under each piece T11ple m1rror dressers are also being
shown for the first tune and are selling well
Each sea.30n the Shgh hne 1mproves, usmg more and
mOl e solid mahogany, clean, pI am stuff of correct design l _
The
Best
Value
and
Greatest
Service
for
the
MODey
The old rococco carved goods are passing out. In fact, but
one Sl11te of this is left on the floor th1S year. There has
been an advance in constructlOn and finish until now it is a
question whether any local case goods concern can show bet-ter
work For example, eve1y drawer bottom f10m cheapest
to most eXpen.,lve case, is neatly bOAed m, and no unsightly
glue blocks ale used
The new hne of Colomal post beds is exceptionally
strong, also the Napoleons The d1splay of suites in room.s
includes six new Sheratons in two woods and beautifully m-la1d
Then one comes to a Sheraton suite, inlaid in line and
broad band, that cannot fad to appeal strongly to everyone
vis1ting the space The ornament used is effective yet not
overdone and shows espec1ally well on the walnut New
sUltes that are mOo,t attractlve are shown m Louis XV, XVI,
and Emp1re, both in mahogany and walnut, and down through
the cheaper end all woods are u'3ed The exhiblt includes
bed.s, d1essers, ch1ffo11lers, t01let tables, washstands. cheval
glasses, pnnceo,s dresse1 s, somnoes, tables, desks, stools,
chambe1 cha1r.s, rockers, and trunk stdnd.s
The corps of salesmen carrY1l1g' the lme this season 1S as
follows. Walclo M Ball, metl opolltan and east; Geo. F.
Keck, middle west, Geo T \Vnght, New England; M. D.
Blum, .south; Eany 1\1 Story, mterl11ediate west; T. E.
Camp, PaClfic coast
r-HOFFMAN~~I~~~~:"I:y~~~
I HARDWOOD LUMBER
SA~~D l QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS • SLICED fAN 0 MAHOGANY I ~--_.. .._---..... ..
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
NELSON-MATTER FURNITURE
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
co.
BED-ROOM and DINING-ROOM
COMPLETE StUTES
in Mahogany, Circassian Walnut and Oak.
If you have not one in yonr store, a simple request will bring you our magnifi.cent new Catalogue of 12x16 inch t>a~e groups, show-ing
suites to :match. With it, even the mo~t Dloderate sized furniture store can show thp best and newest fu.rniture satisfactorily ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
Under till::' plan the manufacturer enjoys quick settlements
and the retaIler is called upon for settlement only as the
pleceio shall be dIsposed of This salesman never looks for
the old oak tree before sounding hIS whIstle
DON'T DEPEND ON OLD LANDMARKS
New Methods and New Ideas May Be More Re-liable
and Profitable.
Mr. Scarritt Takes Times.
Col Charles H Scarntt of the Scarritt Furmture company
proceeds through the lmes dehberately and carefully HIS meth-od
IS far different from those of that eccentnc Inshman, "Great"
Scott of BaltImore, who frequently purchased a car load of mixed
goods m less than five mmutes No two salesmen could take
Scott'.., orders a" fast as he could call off the items he had se-lected.
Col Scarntt frequently draws a chaIr before a chamber
sUlte and stuches It 111 sIlence Then he goes over it m detaIl ex-amUl1l1g
the drawer work, the fi111Shand other features that count
for much in the retail furniture business. HIS assistant is
consulted often, and in Mr. WIlhoit he has a good one
Col Scarritt has been a market buyer many years and his
entry upon an exhIbit is always the source of pleasure to the
selling agents. During the 1iots in St. Louis a few years ago
a regIment of mIlitia was organized for emergency serVIce.
Under the command of Col Scarritt the regiment rendered
important work in restoring order .
In the days when rallroadmg was young in the state of
Michigan a certam locomotIve engineer whIle approachmg
Dutton statIon from the south sounded hIS whistle when a
brge oak tree standmg near the track was passed One day
thIS man ran IllS tIam through the station WIthout whisthng,
and whFn asked to explam the cause of his mIstake, by a
supellOl, reohed that some one probably cut hi::, tree down
An mvestIgabon venfied thIS sunTIlse, the tree had been cut
down ThIs mCldent pro, es that one cannot be gUIded by
old landmarks, because they unexpectedly dIsappear In
the CIty of N ew York there Ii, e" a furnIture commIssion
sale"man who has throvvn aside the old method of sellmg
goods He IS wIdely knovvn and popular WIth the buyers
BesIdes he has accumulated a comfortable roll of money He
buy" a hne of "dmple-, outnght froUl the manufactl11 er and
places the goods on the floor of a bIg 1etail house on con-
"Ignment He, iSltS the line or hnes so placed e, ery day
and when a pIece h sold leplaces It promptly WIth another.
..- _. . - - -- ..- .- - .. -----------_._-------_ ..-----~-----~-------------.-......-
•
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Pl'UBL.ISHI:C EVERY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCR'P'T10N $1 00 P'ER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES $Z 00 PER YEAR. SINGLE COP"E. SCENTS.
PUBL.ICATION OFFICE. 108-112 NORTH DIVISION ST, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH,
A S WHITE, MAN"'GIN<o EDITOR
Ent"r"d as ."cond class matter, July 5, 1909, at th" post office at Grand Rapids, ~llchlgan
under the act of March 3 1879
The Idea of mergmg the furmture manufacturmg mteI-ests
of the country, as advanced by "a well known southe1l1
manufacturer," on another page may be feasIble and may
'Seem de.slrable to many furmture makels but It 1" not hkch
to be adopted m the near future The .scheme wa" tneJ
out by Charles R FlInt, an expert in the orgamzatlOn of
trusts, a few years ago and It faIled. Smce hiS faIlure con-dltlOns
have not changed matenally and It IS doubtful that
any man or men can be found wIlling to undel take the man-agement
of a project in ~hich Mr Flmt faIled And It h
still more doubtful that they would succeed If they ,vel e to
try it Mr. FlInt's plans were defeated by the opposItIon of
two Grand Rapids companies and they would certamly
oppose the scheme If proposed by others as would most of
the other Grand Rapids manufacturers, because they are wise
enough to see that It would tend to destroy the supremacy
that Grand Rapids holds as a furnIture manufactunng center
The proposed merger may be deSirable to man) turnltme
manufacturers, but not to those in Grand RapIds
The merchant should have an understudy. On the stage
most actors have understudies who, in ca"e of SIckness, accI-dent
or other emergency, may step into the breach and prevent
a fiasco. For the merchant an understudy IS Just as Impor-tant
as for the actor The man who is beanng the weIght of
all the responsibihty of a large business IS domg something
which may result in his own defeat and the crashmg of 1m
business about his head Suppose he gets SIck Suppose he
breaks a limb. Suppose his health falls entIrely and the grave
physician orders him away to rest, predictmg death If he does
not go Who is to take up the work in 111Sstead?
A "collectlOn" of fine furmture is one of the featm es of
the market vVhIle It contams many pIeces, It IS not a lIne
m the usual acceptatlOn of the term About all the penods
are I epresented. A piece or two of SheratlOll, three or four of
Jacobean, a few representatIves of ElIzabeth and here and
there an exponent of Cromwell and ,,0 on to the end of the
list, fills about 3,500 feet of floor space The "collectIOn" IS
not graded m pnces It IS of great interest to the decorator.
but IS not so much of an attractlOn for the carload buyer
Old salesmen, superior and skilled, often speak about the
selling point. They have realized that there IS a certain place
where the selling point is reached, and beyond which it is not
wise to go in argument or persuasion. That this is true, all
experienced clerks will admit; the hard thing about it is to
knoVi Just when it i.s reached Talk past the selling pomt and
you generally lose a sale. You must read it in the appearance
and behavior of the customer.
The lut-or-mlss pohcy of merchandlzmg wares is still domg
ItS destructIve work A man who knows nothing about profit
and nothmg about cost, and yet insists on guessmg at it,
usually adds hIS percentage to the tables of percentages of
faIlure" m the bus mess mortuary lIst As soon as no dealer
IS allo~ed to enter busmess untIl he knows something about
It, the percentage of faIlures to busmess openings will begin
to gro,v smaller.
New ideas are the 11fe of business. When a new idea is
presented to a man, he is foolish if he casts it aside merely
because he never saw It used before. If this policy were fol-lowed
out m the world, the result would be dead sameness-no
change forever Besides taking the spice out of life, it
would remove all the advancement out of business Civili-zatIOn
'v ould be v, here It started
::\1r" Keppel, a fa, ante of the EnglIsh King, will spewJ
$200,000 m fittmg up a home 111 London. She will use furni-ture
representmg the periods of famous English designers
and decorators, hke much of the furniture made in Grand
RapIds "Phtl" Klmgman has promised to supply the dis-tmgl1l
sheel lacl) catalogues of the lines he sells.
If, fO! <I11Y reason, competItor can sell a certain kmd of good'S
cheaper than you can afford to sell it, have the nerve to admit
it, at least to ) ourself, or set about to correct the deficiency in
) our busme'Ss that creates the condition Don't persist in
allo" mg competItlOn to make your prices, merely because you
are pamecl at the prospect of losing sales.-Ex
Retailers are not dlscussmg the net weight invoice as
11l Jul) last It IS generally admitted that entry upon the
1m Olce of the exact weight of each package shipped by the
manufacturer would be information of value to the merchant.
but there seems to be lackmg the interest necessary to bnng
tlll.s sen Ice mto use
There is a certain indefinable something about the natural
color of wood which cannot be imitated However fine the Im-
ItatIOn may seem, It looks dull and lIfeless when placed close
beside the real thing.
Good show cards should be in all windows where goods
are displayed. It is not always vital to have prices on them,
but a few snappy words of comment will sometimes sell the
goods.
Keep On Pushin~On.
If you trade looks kinder gloomy
An' your bU'iiness kinder slim;
If your Situation's puz7hn'
An' the prospects awful grim,
If your creditors keep pressin'
Till all hope is nearly gone,
Put your faith in advertisin'
An' keep on push in' on.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Nicest Store in Kansas City.
C W Meholnay of the North-Mehornay FUllllture com-pany
of Kansas CIty, and his son who have been in the mar-ket
for a number of days have gone to the ChIcago market
to look at the hnes there Mr Mehol nay IS one of the
veterans vIsiting the Grand RapIds market, coming here
years ago as a buyer for the J H. North Furniture and Car-pet
company, then one of the very important firms in that
CIty When Mr North retired Mr Mehornay took over the
business and IS prospering On January, they moved into a
handsome new store at Eleventh and McGee streets, built
especially for them and Mr Mehornay says it is the nicest
t>tore he has ever seen It IS 50 feet by 125, five stories above
the basement and ha" a double row of show windows, or
more show window space than any other store in Kansas
CIty. Among other thmgs the store IS saId to have the
largest electric sign m the state It is eight by fifty-two
feet in SIze and can be seen from four streets. Mr. Mehornay
has nothing but good words to say for Kansas City and its
r _.. _........ •••• • ....
THE Hindet KIND
THE GREATEST HOUSEHOLD INVENTION OF THE AGE
Need nol be moved from
the wall
Protects covering by turn·
Ina cushIons.
Is so sImple and easy a
child can operate It.
Has roomy wardrobe box
under seal
ComprIses three artIcles
for the price of one.
Is fltled With felted colton
mattress.
Has Luxurious Turkish
Sprlnas.
Is always ready WIth bed.
ding In proper place.
Is absolutely safe-cannot
close accidentally.
Saves rent by saVlnll space
17
- • -------.-.---. --- --..ol
business. "We certamly are boommg," said he; "and no
mistake. I think thIS will be the best year for business the
city ever has had and we expect to be in it with the rest."
Lady Auckland Deals in Furniture.
Lady Auckland IS a peeress who keeps a store. She
trades under the name of Morton & Edwardes', a furniture
store in Baker street, London, Eng , and personally attends to
customers She went into trade to rehabihtate the family for-tunes
after being reduced from a rent roll of $100,000 a
year to comparative poverty. Her artistic shop, where one
can obtain seventeenth century silver, a Sheraton suite or
advice on the best way to furnish a flat, is very successful.
Lady Auckland is always at work by 10 o'clock in the morn-ing
and rarely leaves before 6.
Th6 MRNISTEG MRNUFR5TURING 50. MANISTEE, MICH.
!I
_._----No. 355. Top 22x42. Glass 24x30.
We t\re Making
t\ LOT Of
NE,W THINGS
In Golonial
and Mission
B~aroom and
Dinino Room
furnitur6
Our new supplement is now ready
to mail. Let us have your inquiries. No. 157. Top 20x33. Glass 14x24. --------------------------------_._. -------_._----- .- - ..--------
We can mlerestyou If you Willcall at 1319
Michigan Ave., 6th floor, where our full Ime Is
showntheyear round.
----~
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Complete lines of samples are displayed at 1411Michigan Ave ..
Chicago, and in the Furniture Exhibition Building, Evansville,
III THE KARGES FURNITURE CO. Manufacturers of Chamber SUItes,Wardrobes, ChIffomers, Odd Dressers, Ch.fforobes.
I THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
I Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K. D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, In ImitatIOn
golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Foldmg Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plain oak, imitation quartered oak, and sohd quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers in mutatIOn quartered oak, imitation
mahogany, and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, Dming and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs, Wue Springs and Cots.
Made by The Karges Furmture Co
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association.
... ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Made by Bosse Furmture Campau)
Made by Globe Furmture Compauy.
Made by Bockstege Furmture Co. Made by Bockstege Fun tture Co.
=
19
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Did He Back Down?
I have been workmg pretty pers1stently, overlookmg no
bets and pluggmg down the p1ke to the besl of my ablllty
Whe1e I haven't made good the trouble vvas not vv1th n1\
intentIOns, but mtentIOn" don't count \VOlth a lap \\Ith '1 he
House They expect U'3 to be hC)/1e"t, com teous, "Cjuare, \\ he
as serpents, harmles:; a'3 doves, and then, \\ 1th that C;01t at a
handicap to commence w1th, they look f01 bU~lI1ess and late;
of it. They have the as"tlrance and ne1 ve to e"pect order,
big, jUlcy orderc;, order~ of the kInd that maLe money for
them, and yet they ba1 stealing, lying and thugging Thev
don't want much I
I started out last New Year's Day with the resolve to
break not only my own record, wh1ch wasn't much or lon~ up
to that time, but also to show eve1 y bloommg salesman 111
the territory my smoke, and make h1m take my dust I find
that I have not done so. That is, I have surpassed my own
previous record, but there are a few stars on the road \\ ho
have done a darn slght better, and you can bet, the B1g Doss
has not hesitated to call my attention to them and \\ hat the)
are doing. It 1S a heartless world for a young fellow Without
a pull, but still there 1S a lot 111 It for a fellow \\Ith a P1hh I
do not care who says 1t, I have push and ene1 g} The1 e a1e
smoother articles than me, there are some of them \\ ho have
wisdom in gobs where I haven't leal ned all the rucl1ment~ of
the game, but when it comes down to brass tachS, none of
them can back me off the boards when 1t comes to \Vtllmgne,s
to get down in the traces and pull as hard as my feeble under-p1l1ning
\\ ill pen111t
I got a nice letter from The Old :Man tll1S morn1l1g I
presume every man on the road got one, but 1t was a sort of
personal letter and 1t makes me feel cheerful anyhov" He
said he was \\ ell pleased w1th my past record awl looked
forward to the time not so many yealS hence, \"hen I "auld
be ranked as one of the top notchers m the \\ ark Thai's one
mce thmg about the Old :Man, he keeps m touch \\ 1th us,
even if he does hand us a raw one occasionally He remmel,
me of a father who 1S expecting h1S sons to make good He
w1ll rip them up the back, and down the heel but all the tIme
he 1S hying to help them. The lette1 VI as chuck full of good
adv1ce, too Let me see-what have I done w1th 1t-Oh, yes,
here it is-let me Jot down the mam points of good ach 1ce
Wh1Ch he handed me
1 )J" ever g1\ e up tIll the last ca1 d1'3 played Man, a man
\\on out on the last play
2. Study every man you have dealmg'3 v"lth Learn men,
and you w111have the first prinC1ple of successful salec;mamh1p
3 Learn to approach a man plOpe1ly. There is no one
way-there are thousand", The one you want to Use 1S the
('Jne that will make a good impression on the man you are
trymg to mterest
4 Flummery and flubdub may be all llght m h1gh
'30Clety, but my expenence \\lth bU'3mess men 1S that they
would rather talk busmess
5. A brisk, frank, pleasant manner is a fine thing for a man
on the road. Never let poor meals and bum beds show in your
face N ever let your pnvate troubles crop <Jut 111) our conve1-
sation.
6. Look as though you were g0111g to sell goods, and feel
that way, too, and the chances are bigger in your favor
7. Perc;lstence is one of the most important charactellstics
for a good bull dog and a good traveler, but unhke the bull dog,
vvho does not need it, the traveler needs as much tact as perS1st-ence.
8. Have some system about your selling talks. Try to
find out what i~ needed and what is not, and then you have the
basis for securing trade.
9 If you fall down m n111e(hffel ent stores, pick yourself
up and ~o after the tenth w1th as much v1vacity as though you
had captl11 ed eve1 y one Th1s is a hard th111g to do, but a good
t1avc1e1 can do hard things.
10 Remembet,) au mL1st make good. We want you to
make good, for our sake and for yours. Never get to feeling
that} 011 are dO\\ ntlOdden and abused Everybody is downtrod-den
and abused If he stops long enough to get sympathetic about
11111belf
11 Don't get self-conscious. This is especially hard for
\ oung fellows It blls your approach, 1t destroys the effect of
}our sellmg talh, and makes the man you're talking with as
a,vlmald and 111at eaSe as you. This makes him cross and 1r-ntable,
whether he kn<Jws 1t or not and your chances for dOl11g
bus111es" \V 1th h1m a1e much reduced Think about him and
the g ooels and forget} OI1r<;elf.
That \\ as the h,t and, come to thl11k about It, those will
make a fine set of 1esolutlons to adopt for the year just peeping
thlou::;h the C111 talll~.
ye,terd'l\ I \\ ,h fed111g' "01t <Jf off my feed, I guess, I went
111tO,I "tUIl and the III opfJetor, a little sandy headed fellow, snap-pul
out at me
(If )au travel f01 that house," said he, "you might as well
pack up }our gnps and h1t the dusty. Their goods are rotten"
I d1dn't know I was so loyal to The House, but the m111-
ute he sa1d that I fla1ed up
"\Vhat " the matter \\ Ith The House?" I came back at him
, L\ er} thmg but nerve," rejoined he.
"\\ ell, befOl e I go, I want to tell you that there never has
been a fa1rel, squarer, more upnght, honec;t house 111 the trade,"
sa1d I, not loud, }au knO\' , but very forcefully. "And what IS
male, 11 It hadn't been for The Houc;e, a lot of merchants would
ha \ e ~one blOke lon~ ,Ig 0 and a lot mal e \\ auld be gett111g the
1ottene~t goods put up 111the world, and if you knew it, The
House stands bet\Veen }au and a lower standard of goods all over
the hst I don t mmd ) our not hking my looks, and I suppose,
as I make m} busl11ess g01l1g around the reta1l stores, I must
not mmcl an occaslOnal har5h word for myself, but The House
15 all nght I hay e v\OJ ked for them for some tune, now, and
11 } am salesmen \\ 111 speak as well of you as the employes of
The House speak of 1t, } au have a darn good reputation."
1 \\ as eApectmg h1m to turn red and throw a pound weight
at me Instead, he begged my pardon. Said he:
"I m rnshed to death nght now, WIth all sorts of things.
1 have dealt w1th your hou5e and found them all right, and I
d1dn't mean what 1 sa1d I was ]U5t trY111g to get rid of you.
If I wanted any goods, I d talk w1th you, but Idon't-not a thing."
"That's wh1te of you, and I w111have to ask your pardon,
too old man, for l<)smg my tempel," "a1d I
Oh, we got qll1te chummy, and I took h1m out to lunch-but
I d1dn't sell hun any good~. However, I may get '3ome
later \vhat I'm wone!enng IS, did he back down from my
bluff, or chd he really mean 1t? After si7ing h1m up, I think he
meant 1t He \\ a" broad betv, een the e} es and talked tIue
I pI e"ume 1t 1" a good thmg to brace up and stane! on one's
ll~hts occa <.,lOnally.
Will Manufacture Dining Room Furniture.
The Allegan Furniture company, orgal11zed three years
ago and operatl11g as a Job shop, the commodIOUS factory
erected by the corporation, has acquired additional capital
and are bnngmg out a hne of d1l11l1g rOom furniture for the
fall season of trade
GREAT IS THE WEST
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
---_._--------_._---_._-_. _. -----------_._---~------------------._------------------...,
III
II
I - ..
And Especially So is the City Near the Great
Salt Lake.
George P Peabody, VI' ho loob aftel the whole~,tle end of the
Sorenson company's bus1l1e~~ 111 ~alt Lake Clt) IS dt the Llvmg-
'iton concludl11g a rather long stay a>ld a bIg bUY1l1gcampaIgn 111
the market 111 company ~Ith ]\[r ""oremon and >\ 1 Robbm~,
who has charge of the BOIse 'tOl e It\ cert'llnly hard work nuk-mg
the round,," he salcl ",\'e handle a bIg lot of fllr11ltnre m
the cour'ie of a year andlC'i ab'olutely nece,cary when com1l1g to
such a market as tll1S ) ou ~we attentIOn to ever) Ime whlch might
hold posslbJllttes fOI you as there is danger in shghtl11g any
of them You 111lght ml,,, stuff whIch would mean a lot at
the end of the year I am out of the city much of the tnne
and even when there have my ml11d upon the outside work
which we do Sttll makl11g my home there and keepl11g in
touch as a busl11ess man wIth all that IS takl11g place I have
the nght perhaps to dIscuss the retaIl end of the busl11es'i
whIch IS what you are dIrectly concerned wIth That from
all that I have seen and heard has been good not alone with
us but wIth evelY merchant 111 Salt Lake CIty regardless of
hIs Il11e You would be surpn'ied at the immense amount
of bUlldl11g which IS going on there It sounds Itke a faIry
tale to one not personally famlhar wIth the facts and I don't
care to dJlate upon It but you may rest assured that Salt
Lake CIty is today expenencmg one of the most general
bUlldmg penods it has ever known. With a lot of new build-ing
and many of them new homes there IS created a great
demand for hou..,ehold goods and we try to get our share of
the bu"mess
"'I hel e IS no place m the country hke the great west
for mcrement m the valuatIOn of real estate and none of our
we~tern cItIes can show more rapId mcreases m value than
can we A.., an mstance of thIS I WIll cIte the experience of
a fnend of mme who was a railway clerk and I suppose not
gettmg more than $75 a month He wanted to better hIS
condItIOn and saw no possibihty of so domg by sticking at
the old Job He had a httle money and I told him to look
over the field suggestl11g real estate as a prospect. He m-
ClUl1 ed mto the matter and "hortly afterward told me he had
mvested m some outlymg lots Mmd you I wasn't advising
h1Jn m thIS regard only so far as to suggest that he investi-gate
I ~aw nothmg of him for t",o months when he turned
up and told me he had dIsposed of those lots at a price which
had netted hun $1,200 111 profit and he liked the business so
,vell he had turned around and reinvested elsewhere. Now
the outcome of this I cannot predIct, but he is exercismg
caution in hIS inv estments and only placing his money after _._----
Mahogany
Circassian Walnut
Quartered Oak
Walnut
Curly Maple
Bird's Eye Maple
Basswood
Ash
Elm
Birch
Maple
Poplar
Gum
Oak
due I11ve~ttgatlOn 1 firmly beheve that he i:> on the right
cour~e and that ~ Ithm a few years he wlll be a man of com-petence
HIS hlstOl y a" to rapid mane) -l11akmg turns with
I calt) IS but a C0111l11onoccurrence.
. I vva" brought up m ChIcago which I sttll contend IS a
gl eat place but early struck out for the west I have never
I e~retted It I have had my bumps and I have been m many
places Kal1'-,a~ CIty 1b one whIch I thl11k is great but Salt
Lake CIty SUItS me and I would advise any young mdn,
possessed of health, Judgement, good habIts and ambItIon.
but WIthout means to get into one of the gJ owmg westeln
cItIes Advancement '.'I III rest then solely WIth himself fOl
the west IS welcommg the energetic youth and will give hl111
all the opportuntttles he deSIres."
WOULD BRING MORE BUYERS
Mr. Hawkins Talks of the Needs of the Grand
Rapids Market.
"Crand RapIds needs more bUlldl11gs, and more buyers
I am 1I1cl1l1ed to empha"lze the need of stimulating the at-tendance
nght now," saId E V Hawk1l1:" the level headed
preSIdent and manag er of the ConnersvIlle Furmture com-pany
to a repre"cntatIve of the Dally Artban-Record "Grand
Rap1d ~ 1::,now a 'itrong and well establt'ihed market, but the
mCI eaSe 111 hnes shown seems qUIte out of proportion to the
growth m attendance \Ve need more buyers How shall
We get them? ",Vhy Isn't It pos'ilble to have concerted action
by all the manufacturel s showmg 111 thIS market-local and
outSIde as well-harmol11ouo., actIOn toward secunng raIlroad
rate conce~slOns and along PUbltClty l1l1es, to Jet every dealer
know what a feast of good thmgs he WIll find m Grand
RapIds If he will only come
"Really It seems to me that the dealer need~ the market
almost as badly as the market needs 111111 He needs the
personal contact WIth market condltion'i, the educatton as to
pnces, dbplays, styles, woods, fil11she:>, etc, that the market
afford:> The dealer who comes once IS pI etty certain to come
evely season and what we need to do IS to g<'t these dealers
started The attendance mIght be easily doubled If we would
only set about It m an I11telltgent, co-operatIve way"
A Gilded Youth.
"I beheve 1"11 go in for balloomng a bit It seems to be
the thing"
"What kind of a balloon shall you buy;"
"Oh, I'll have a touring affair, a cloud-clImber, a bal-loonettc,
and a ltght Byabout for town use"
Foreign and
Domestic Woods.
Rotary, Sliced, Sawed.
&0- _ '-----_.----------_._--_.--------------_._- ------_. _. --------
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
--~-----------_._._------ Gloucester and Her Fishing Interests. ----- _. .- .- ------ --- _ ....,
"Gloucester has Ildd the best fi::,hing "eason m Ih hl"tOl \,' ~aJ(l
George M Blbber of A 1\1 rdtlllo & lo at the Ln 1l1g"ton
"Thl::' is saymg con::'lderable I know for It hd' had the reputa-tIOn
of bel11g the gl eate~t fi~hl11~port on the \tlatltlc COd~tfOl I
don't know how many years There ma\ he othel pOl h \\ 1l1(~h
may and plObably do ,11lp out more fre,h £1,h thdtl OUI \1 d"'ldm-
-,etts COm11lUtllt),but when It comes dc)\\n to "tit \\ atel h"h \\ c
stand head and shoulder::, above every other port 111 the \\ odd
That is our one industry and it has to be a bIg one to care tOl
a cIty of 26,000 souls
"No, we do not grow much, in fact scalcely at all OUI
populatIOn 1S practlcally fixed and all centers about that
fishing industry We have no mIllionaIres there but we hay e
a number of men who are more than comfortably off I
should say the fleet we sent to the Grand Banks last yeal
comprised about 300 vessels and they all came back with
good hauls, That is, all that returned for ne\ er a season goes
by that there are not losses of ves:;els and men Thb 1.1:ot
year we were extremely fortunate, the vessel loss bemg only
five and the men forty, That forty looks bIg to you but not
to us where we are accustomed to these thmgs, The average
loss yearly 1U thIS fishmg IS eIght) men, the toll paid by our
fishermen m the pursUIt of a lIvelIhood and a cost that the
consumer of cod and mackerel probably ne\ er think of It
i"n't brought home to them
"All things are comparative and I do not call our sea "on
good with ItS loss of forty men because we hay e become
calloused to the tragedy whICh the pa~smg of these men
means to family and fnends \Ve are keenl) aln e to the
price they paid and each October at the close of the £1"hmg
season, when all the vessels are home and then' cargoes
stowed away the 1011 is called at the memoridl meetmg held
in the cIty hall The In e re"pond to then names, the dead
are answered for by shIpmates who tell the manner, the place
and the time of their death At the close of the servIce young
girls go to the wharves and strew flowers upon the waves
for those who never agam wIll take theIr places among the
living, A vivid descnptlOn of thIS custom can be found m
KIpling's "Capta1l1s Courageous" whIch you doubtle,s hay e
read.
"We have some very fine homes for our moneyed people
although not of the wealth which is common to leaders m
other cIties, like well kept places and dwellings tastlly adorned
Our general business is along the medium grades and yet we
have some call for the high grade goods, my house handlmg
a growing amount of the best products of your home fac-tories
As a summer resort we hay e a high standmg and
some of you Grand Rapids people al e ~egular ~Isltors
Among those who have been commg to us fOl ) ears are ::\11'
John T Bylne and Dr Schuyler C Gla\ es The sum
mer visitors augment our populatIOn h) fully 25000
persons in the cour"e of a sedson dnd that makes a heavy
demand upon our furl11tUl e dealers for summer goods If
It was not for this demand we should hardly make the tllp
mto the market although I apprecIate ItS educatIOnal value
It 1S not all certainty in the fi~hmg busmes., e\ en after a man
has made a small fortune at 1t He may lose all m one year
I have such a case in point A fnend of mme had $40,000 in
the bank and in his vessels He sent out after hen mg losing
his vessels and ruming hIm He IS agam clImbmg the ladder.
Such mstances al e not at all uncommon and may be the
reason our people never lose heart but gnmly start m again
after a loss of their all, frequently recovenng their former
standing and property.
"I should like to tell you what the catch \\ as this year.
Here is
a Rocker
That's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
GRO. SPRATT
8 CO.
SHEBOYGAN. WIS.
No, 592. ~--_ - .------ _ ...
1 hedl d the annual I epOl 1 but am afJ aId of overstatement. I
can I ecall one mC1dent of the last season though which I can
state WIth assurance One vessel returned from the banks
WIth 500,000 pounds of fish, splIt and salted, a stock valued
at $26,000, which IS the record to date for Gloucester and the
\\ orld m one season
The ..Atmosphere" is English.
In the gallenes of Charles & Co, 251 FIfth avenue, there
al e some lovely quaml EnglIsh rooms in old English oak.
\11 the Charles rooms are made of origmal matenals. Eliza-bethan,
Jacobean Georgian, Queen Anne, Adams panelmg,
\\ood\\ork, etc, \\ ere gathered from all parts of England for
thIS purpose The pnme result IS genume atmosphere, the
atmosphere that exhales so gratefully from early EnglIsh art
and lIterature We know of no other such successful re-hablhtatlon
of vanous penods as may be seen in these gal-lelie::,
--N Y, Sun
Advanced Fifty Thousand Dollars on Orders.
The \Ia"ka Refllgerator compan) of 1\Iuskegon, recently
do,ed a contract for nl11e thousand Iefngel ators to be delIvered
tal h 111 the cun ent year The sdle dmounh to over $100,000
l pon thl', contract the purchasers voluntanl) advanced the sum
ot $50,000 These facts emphaslze the value of a reputatIOn
\Vlthout It the sale would not have been made and advanced pay-ments
1enlltted whIle the lumber of whIch the goods WIll be made
IS m the company s yard Thl::' 1::' probably the largest single
transactlon 111 refngeratOl" on record The company has grown
from modest to enormous proportIOns under the able m,wage-ment
of J. H. Ford.
WEEKLY ARTISAN rI
II
I
I
I
The season
for banquets
is here.
Get a stock
of our
Banquet
Table Tops
so as to be
ready to
supply the
demand.
I
'-.-- -.----------_._----_._---
.---_ ...._--...,
Our Large New Line of
DINING and OFFICE
TABLES
are the best on the American market
when prices and quality are considered.
STOWit DtlVIS fUKNITUKG 60.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
._------_. - - .... City Salesroom, 4th floor. Blodaett Blda.
Mr. Wernher's Reminiscences.
Ernest Wernher, the popular eastern representatIve of the
Muskegon Valley FurnIture company, was 1ll a remmiscent mood
the other day and recalled ~everal amUSlllg mCldents 1ll hIs
"blooming" career J\Ir Vlernher and "Sam" Stell11ger occupy
a suite 1D one of the "ky scrapers or ); ew York One day a very
fussy young fellow, elaborately attired, entered, thrustmg a bIt
of paoieboanl 111to::\Ir. 'vVernher s lund excI,timed' "my cal d '
J\Ir. 'vVernher ~lowl} read It "Wllham Armour B Burns, deco-laiur"
lIIr \Yernher looked the fellow over and mentally ad-
Imtted that the mdn Idual before hIm mIght be all that he
claImed "I deSIre to in"pect a LOUIS Seize sUIte in white
enamel," said the caller Mr. \V ernher opened his photo
case and produced a fine pnnt of the article deSIred "Oh,
this wlll not do I could not use the caned panels," saId the
decorator
J\Ir vVernher suggested that VV A. P B. call upon Mr
Ste1mgel m an adJoln1l1g room \\ A P B consented to
see J\fr Steinger "I wIsh to see your LOUIS Seize ~llltes 111
whIte enamel," he saId, after be1l1g introduced, Mr Stei111ger
reluctantly drew forth photos of the suites deSIred. \iV. A
P B selected a pattern that appealed to 111Sartislc taste
"I ~hal1 have to take thIS photograph wIth me and make a
drawmg from It," he saId Then If the sketch meets the
apprm al of my customer and the pllce IS satIsfactory I may
gIve you an order"
Mr. Stemlger gathereJ up the photos, shpped them into
23
.- ..- ...
his case and assum1l1g a d1gl11fied pose exclaImed "Mr. \V.
P -What you may call yourself,-we do not care to do busi-ness
wIth any man whose office 1'3 located in his hat. Good
day, get out."
Mr \Vernher was an aId on the ~taff of Co!. Baldwin,
quartermaster general of the Umted States army, during the
war in the Phllhpines, statIOned at San FranCISco, Cal, Bald-win
was a fierce dlsclp11l1al ian and 111the conduct of his
lmsmess u~ed but few words, uttered qmckly and wIth warmth.
To put it mildly Col Baldwin wa" not as sweetly d1spositioned
as PreSIdent Taft One day a gentleman from whom the
colonel had purchased large quantltes of ~upphes for the
army arrived from New Jersey and g0111g to the office of the
colonel asked to be admitted to his presence The entrance
to the office was gnalded and ",hen the viSItor plc"cnted hI"
cdrd it was carried in.
"\Vhat does he want?" the colonel asked.
"He said he would hke to see you," the orderly rephed.
"Let hIm come in," the colonel ordered.
vVhen the stranger had passed the guards and was about
to cross the colonel's threshold, the loud command, "halt,"
brought him to a standstill
"You have seen me Back to Jersey," the colonel com-
Ulanded
The VIsItor retired so "dodgasted" that he spent a week
111rtmnmg through San FranCISco seekmg a place where he
could thmk over his expenence
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dining Room Furniture
BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSETS and TABLES
Library Furniture-Library Desks,Library
Tables, Library Bookcases, Combination Book.
cases, Etc.
Our entireline will be on exhibitionin January
on the third floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
UNCLE HIRAM TO HIS NEPHEW
On the Inadvisability of Nursing a Grouch-The
Boss's Troubles.
"Don t Henry, ' saul Lncle Ihram to 111'0 hopeful \ oun!; neph
ew, "don't nurse d grouch ~ obod) has an) use lor a mdd 01 cl
boy WIth a grouch.
"Suppose you \\ el e the base and) ou had 11l IOl1! emplo\ cl
boy who thought he wasn t gettl11~ pay enough, and ,UP])lhC tll1'
boy should get '0 (h~satlsfiecl over thiS that It made him !;rol1lln
Then you d see hU11gomg around attemll11g to Ill" WOlk ,ll! m.;-ht
maybe, but all the tlme half <'ullen over It, sour faced. gnm dh-satlsfied
and showl11g that he was dbsatl"fiedl11 ever) thl11g he dId
grouchy and nursmg 1m, grouch all the tIme and making It plalll
to e, erybody and mdk1l1g everybod) 111 the plaee um omtortahk
"To be sure he'd be only a boy and you d be the boss amI
you could fire hIm If you wanted to, but you V\ouldn't \\ ant
to do that and so you'd help hIm along, but It \\ ouldn t be
pleasant to have hI111 around, and If he dIdn't get 0\ el I11S
groUCh, why, soonel or later you'd be prett) SUIe to let 111111
go Isn't that so) You V\ottldn't want al0und )oU an)boch
that was nur::-'1I1g a glOuch
"N ow take your own case, Henry. You are a ) oung fel-low
Just ::-.tart1l1g 111 and you haven't had much e'Cpenence, hut
yOU are learn1l1g fa::-.t and you are work1l11S falthfulh and
work1l1g hal d, Ju"t a plugg1l1g avVe!) the oe-,t IOU kno\\ ho\\
and you've learned enough about the bU"111es,, no\\ <"0 that
you th111k your work 1::-' really of "0 \ lle to the concern, and
maybe It IS, and you th111k )ou don't get enough pal
"That'" all nlSht, Henry You can a..,k fO! mOl( pal It
you want to, but I'd ad\ be) ou to l2,O ,,10\\ about that IJeHu
to keep plugg1l1g a whtle longer as you are and pile up a
bIgger credIt fOI yourself 111 yoU! employeI's esteem.
"Hut wlldte\ er happen" don t get grouchy That would
CjUeeI the whole bU"Ine"" and up::-.et all )ou\e done
'You see, HenI}, the bo"s ha" Ius trouble::-. that maybe
) ou don t know anythlllg about, and they may be greater
than.> ours, but he ha'3 to put up a good front and look cheer-tul
and he thlllk" } ou ought to. As a matter of fact we all
hd\ e OUI uouble", and nobody has any u::-.efor the man WIth
a !;lOuch, \\ ho Hunk" 111"petty troubles are more Important
th'll1 an) bod) ebe'"
"In fact you wIll dbcover as you grow older, Henry, that
let alone the grOUChy men, nobody cares much for a man with
a gne\ ance of any <;ort, not even if It has a good ground,
the man that comes to us complamlng is apt to tIre us
"So, Henry, remember If you thmk you are not gettmg
all that's comll1g to yOU or that yOU are not apprecIated, don't
get grouch) over It, that <., the very worst thmg for yourself
\ ou could do Gn e the bo:-.<;a chance and If he does'nt rIse
to It m a reasonable tllne, why, then you can kIck If you want
to, but.> ou mu<;t do th1S m faIr good humor"
Berkey & Gay Annual.
1he annual 11leetm~ of the Berkey & Gay Furniture com-
Jldn) \\ a" h elel on \ Vcelne"ela y of thI::-' week. The reports
"ho\\ ed that the c01l1pan} pI o"pel eel elurIng the past year.
Dll ector" anel office" WCIC clected as follows:
Dlrector,,-\VIllta1l1 H Gay, John A. Covoele, George G.
\\lI11t\\orth, Joseph H l\Iartll1, J C. Rickenbaugh, E. A.
\Vallace and \J\T J ·Wallace
Officels-Plesldent, \Vtlltam H Gay; secretary, John A
C 0\ oelc. tl ea~lll el, CCO!gc G \lVhitwO! th
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~
E.ach
Net
$2~
Each
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
Lloyd Sm1th is a new undertaker at Las Vegas, Ca1.
S Block, fmmture dealer of Parkersburg, Iowa, has sold
out to S. A. Foote & Son.
The Melton Furntture company, dealers of ThomasvIlle,
Ga, has been declared bankrupt.
E. E. Althouse furntture dealer of Nelson, N ebr, hail
sold hIs busmess to Roby & Lapp.
C M. Hicks has purchased the Van Allen furniture store
at Sebastopol, Ca1., and will enlarge the stock
H. C. Kennedy has succeded F. 'vV. Orgram in the hard-ware
and funuture business m Eugene, Ore.
Phaon DIehl, furn1ture dealer at Allentown, Pa, who
was burned out recently is rebuildmg hIS store.
Croatt & Blong, furntture and hardware dealers, of vVau-coma,
Iowa, are succeeded by Blong & Kolbert.
J olm Czerwinski, undertaker, of M1lwaukee, \Vis, dIed
of typhOld fever on January 17, aged 31 years
F. W. Dent, a dealer of Quincy, Mass, has retIred from
the furniture business and 1S repainng automobiles.
The W111iamsburg (Ohio) Furniture company have m-creased
their capital stock from $25,000 to $52,000
The United Furniture company, dealers of LOUlsville, Ky.,
have mcreased their capItal stock from $2,500 to $5,000
The Wlsconsm Furntture company of Milwaukee have
mcreased theIr cap1tal stock from $75,000 to $150,000
Baldwin & Co. furniture and hardware dealers at Tenaha,
La, are succeeded by J. 'V. Caraway, from Logansport, La
The People's Furniture company, dealers, of Anderson,
S C, have declared a dIvidend of ten per cent on the busmes"
of 1909.
The DaVIdson-Clay Furniture company, dealers of Tem-ple,
Texas, have incorporated their busmess CapItal stock,
$25,000
C A. Harwell, the most promment furniture dealer and
undertaker m Covmgton, Ky, has sold hIS business to T J
Harwell
Mrs Vlrgmia Tabb is to erect a five-story buildmg that
WIll be occupIed by the Harvey Furniture company at N ew-port
News, Va
The S \\ vVooden Furniture and Undertaking company
of Woodlawn, Ala, has been incorporated. Capitdl stock, all
paid in, $15,000
Burglars VISIted the furniture store of Marking & Ruet-tgers,
at Slay ton, Ore, recently, "blowed" the safe and got
away with $231.
The Moore Manufacturing company of Muncie, Ind,
manufacturers of bedroom furniture, has been incorporated
Capital stock, $100,000.
The Drumheller Furniture and Hardware company of
Walla W alIa, Wash, have sold their stock of furniture to the
Morrow-Drew company.
L. H. Merrill, furntture dealer of Garden CIty, Kan., has
sold out to Charles I Znkle & Co, who will remodel the
store and enlarge the stock
The Tom C AdaIr Furmture company of Little Rock,
Ark, are about to move into larger quarters m a more desir-able
location on F1fth street
The Ouachita Furniture company of Monroe, Ala., has
gone out of busmess The stock was sold to the Monroe
Furniture company-competitors
Adolph Roth & Co, furniture dealers of New Rochelle,
N. Y , have incorporated their busmess under the name of
the Adolph Roth company. Capital stock, $25,000.
L
J A Archer, manager of the Rhodes-Wood Furniture
company's store m Atlanta, has been transferred to a SImIlar
po"ltlon m the company's store at .'\ugusta, Ga
The Bellmgham (\Vash) Beddmg company have ab-sorbed
the1r competttors, the Altrose Bros company, and
have mcreased the capItal of the combmatlon to $25,000.
R S Garnett & Co, furmture dealers of Brownwood,
Tex, w111 be succeeded by W. D Curner of San Angelo, on
February 1 The stock may be closed out or removed to San
Angelo.
Aronson Bras, of Boston, Mass, manfuacturers of
couches, sprmgS and stove pIpe, have filed a voluntary peti-tton
m bankruptcy They schedule theIr habittttes at $6,931 ;
assets, $4,655
Mrs Annie M. Pafford and V-l. A. Johnson, furniture
dealers of Albany, Ga, have mcorporated theIr busmess un-der
the name of the Fltnt Installment company, capitalized
at $6,000, all pa1d m
"That the labor problem is the most serious of all con-frontmg
the furntture manufactunng trade in Boston and its
vlclmty, and that unless a satisfactory Solut10n of it can be
1 eached soon, the prospects of the trade are not reassurng,"
"ays the Boston Amencan, and the other papers of that cIty
endorse the statement.
Remarkable Doll House.
Trenton, N. J., Jan. 20.-0ne of the handsomest toy or doll
houses ever put together your correspondent saw on exh1bitlon
here at l\Iannmg's store. It was made by the firemen of Engine
Company No 2 and wa" presented to little June Crossley, daugh-ter
of Prosecutor vVl1liam J. Crossley. Captain Harry Penning-ton
was the ardl1tect of "June Cottage" as 1t 1Scalled, and he sup-pIled
matenal and paint for 1t. Dav1d Ziegler, haseman, an ex-pert
cabmetmaker, did the carpentry and furniture work, as-slsted
by Walter Tettemer, the engine driver. Harry Stannard
dId the electric wlflng, Walter Compton made the battery, Rob-ert
WIttenborn la1d the carpets and hung the shades, WIlliam
Day ton dld the papenng, 'vVllliam R. Gamble gramed the doors,
Edward Rose and James Farley put on the paint, WIlliam A.
Cubberly made the sIgn. The house is complete in every detail
and 1S a fine specimen of work. There are 3,000 separate
shmgles on the roof and it took seven weeks to complete the
house. A complete set of furniture was also mstalled. The
house is about five feet long and about three feet high.
James O'Malley Jr., has succeeded his father, James O'J\Ial-ley,
1etall furnIture dealer at Broad and Bady streets.
Mr. Hoy, who vvas manager of the Ogden-Bailey company
store here, has gone to take charge of their store at WIlming-ton,
Del.
Peter O'Farrell has gone out of the retaIl furniture busi-ness
through foreclosure proceedmgs
H. M. Reld, fUflllture dealer at 116 South Broad street,
has di sposed of a large portlOn of the stock.
The Ogden-Bailey company will more their big furniture
salesrooms to the O'Fal rell budding, 140-144 North Broad
street, as soon as alteratIOns and Improvements are completed.
A clearing sale is now bemg held The new store is a four
story bmldmg and thIS firm has bought 1t. The improvements
are to cost $15,000. Thls firm 1S also interested in the Newark,
N. J., store of the J W Greene company and in WIlmington,
Del, of the Ogden-Howard company. Mr. Ogden of the latter
city has come here to take charge of the local store.
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
FURNITURE REMINISCENCES
Boyd Pantlind. "Charley" Brown and Marshal
Wait Talk of the ""GoodOld Days."
Around a table In the new Morton House gllll the othe1 dal
were seated J. Boyd Pantlmd of the \lorton and Pantlll1d hatch
and Charles J. Brown of the Bnwd1 & Slmonds camp an} at Som-erv1lle,
near Boston It was a httle chnner at wh1ch Boyd IVas act-mg
as host, wh1ch he knows so ac1t111rabt} how to cIa He and
"Charley" Brovvn have long been fct<.,tf11emb \ ea1" ago \\ hen
Boyd and h1S w1fe began homekeep1l1!?;, for a year 01 h\o ,He1
they were marned they hved m the .:\lorton, "Challe,' made them
a present of a dllune, table It 1S st111m dd11} me, and <\t the
dmner the other dav, "(hatley' asked Bo,el 1f he clHln t
want to trade it for a lotmd mocle1n table "\ at all
your hfe," sa1d Boyd, "I would not t1ade that for a 10und
table or any other kll1d 111 the I\odd" Of cot1l~e thel gre\\
rem1mscent and the newspaper man present had seen hventy-two
yea1 s, forty-four seasons, come and go without m1ssing
one, and he had some rem 1111 scences too Accorelmg to "i\Ir
Brown. Freel D H1lls 1S the oldest tl avehng man commg to
Grand Rapids. By that 1Smeant the man \1 ho has been com111g
to the Rap1ds the greatest number of } ears He h1mself 1S
next, he first havmg come m 1879, tl111t} -one years ago
Soon after came "J1m" \\ heelock, "Ed" Morley, "Sam"
Steiniger and the other old tuners, some of \\hom have pa-"ed
over the great d1V1de, anel some of \\ ham are Ju"t as much
in evidence as they were at the fi1st
Boyd Panhnd told of the old clay s ",hen the jlorton House
was plenty large enough to "helter all the fmmture men hath
sellers and buyers "Ii was Juc;t hke one b1g famlly," sa1d he,
"In the old days \\ e were all together and of course I knell
all the boy s, all of them \\ ere m\ perc;onal fnend., '\ 0\\
the game has got allay from me c;o fa1 as l,no\\mg them all
is concerned Then the aeld1tlOn \\ a'3 put on the 110rton
giV111g us the new smtes vv1th baths and the enla1ged d111mg
roam and we thought we had 100m enough f01 all tllne 111
Grand Rap1ds I often w1sh for the old day s, the days of
Wheelock and Pullman and "BJ1I" Sheare1 and all the 1est
of the old timers Yes, I have had an amb1tlOn I ha\ e tlled
to do the best I could for the the boys 111the two houses, the
l\f orton and the Pantlmd, and some of them have not under-stood
the conditions and blamed me, hut I would hke to
round out my caree1 as a landlOl d m a fine new three hun-dred
room hotel, Just to show the boys I \v ould hke to take
care of them 1f I could"
Let us hope that Boyd Pantlind, who has done as much
as anyone c1tlzen to bmld up Grand Rap1ds can 1eahze h1'-
ambitlOn and round out h1s career 111the way he w1shes
In a httle whl1e after th1S lIttle dmner, Flank \V \Va1t
of Sturg1s, Umted States Marshal for the we'3tern d1stnct
of Mich1gan sat in the lobby of the 1\lorton, and looked on
the great crowd of furniture men gathered there. "I know
Just occasionally a face," sa1d he to the ne\Vspaper man who
1S gettmg h1111self to be a \ eteran Once 111 a whl1e a man
passes me whom I 1emembe1 but thel e a1 C on1, fi\ e or SI"
at 1110St Thirty or more) eab a!S0 I useLl to come to the
market w1th my father \\ ho \\ as 111 the f url11ture bus111ess 111
Sturg1s, I fell he1r to the busmess \\ hen he d1ed, and then I
used to come myself In th1S connectIon I remembe1 a good
Joke on "At" \Vh1te, the man wh() made the \rtha11 and
who has done so much for the 111du_tr) 111the C1ty Fathe1
left me a lot of odds and ends 111 the \Va\ of \\alnut \vash-stands
I gathered this matenal together, fixed them up w1th
marble tops and backs and murOl splashers and sent an
advertisement to "At" advert1smg them In about a \\ eel
after the \1 tlsan lIas out, my factory caught fire and every-th1n~
\\ a" burned out slIck and clean I wrote" At." a letter
1ll \\ 111ch I called attentlOn to the great value of the Artisan
as an ad\ e1th111g medlt1m 'I put an ad 111your paper,' I
\\ late 'one m'3el tlon and my entlre stock is cleaned out.'
'\t cont111ued the Joke by publIshmg my letter. Those
\\ele ~leat old day '3, I tell you"
Limited Prices.
\ltbough tIllS questlOn was d1scussed some tU11eago, partlc-ulal1}
among the t1 aele papers, yet only untIl the past few months
h'b It come to be one of the thmgs of real interest in the trade.
\.,soClatlOlJS have taken 1t up enthus1astIcally, d1scussed it over
and ove1, arg ued about 1t and considered 1t flOm all four compass
llomts jlan} of them have declared f01 1t fervently.
The manufacturers are also wakmg up in regard to it A few
ot them, speakmg comparatIvely, have tried 1t, and have persisted
in it. Others are experimenting with it,. and still others are
regarding it with interest, to say the least. In reply to letters
sent out by an eastern paper, many manufacturers are
replying, and there is no unanimity in the replies.
One firm regards it as utterly impossible; another sells
to jobbers only, and regards itself as disinterested; still
another says that it is experimenting in part of the territory,
and 1tS future polIcy depends entirely on results. It is true
that some articles can be handled in this way with much less
tl0uble than others Take, for example, an article whose
cost does not vary, and consider it alongside of another which
unde1goes frequent market changes. All persons consider-ing
the subject, however, seem to be openmmded and willing
to h~ten
An Economical Man.
Ee 11ved on tl111teen cents a day,-
Ten cents for milk and crackers,
One cent for d1ssipatlOn gay,
And two cents for tobacco,
And 1f he w1shed an extra dish
He'd tdke IllS pole and catch a fish
And 1f his stomach 1atsed a war
'Gamst th1s penUllOUS hab1t,
He'd go and k111a woodchuck, or
Assa'3smate a rabb1t,
And thuc; he'd live 111sweet content
On food that never cost a cent
And, that he might lay by in bank
The p10ceeds of h1S labor,
He'd happen round at meals, the crank,
And dme upon 1115neighbor;
And then he'd eat enough to last
Until another day had passed
IIe bought no pantaloons nor vest,
1\or nch, expensive jacket;
He had one smt-his pa's bequest-
He thought would "stand the racket."
He patched 1t th1rty years, 'tis true,
And then decla1 ed 'twas good as new
IIe 0\\ ned but one SL11tto his back,
And mmus cuffs and collars
IIe d1ed, and left h1S nephew Jack
:0Jme hundred thousand dollars'
And Jack he run thIS fortune th10ugh
And only took a year or two
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Detroit Threatening Chicago.
"If the parcels post measure is aimed at the express compan-ies
and wlll cause them to revise some of the burdens they have
placed upon the business man, why I am in favor of It," saId Geo.
P. Engel of DetrOIt at the Livingston. "Thus far I would favor
any such measure but noth111gm the way of legblatlon \"hlch
would benefit the bIg mail order houses. I know the latter are
here to stay and that they wIll not only stay but increase
their busi~less regardless of anything merchants can
do, but stJl! they are an ever present menace to the merchant
with the local business I am not WIshing them any harm
but I am not wishing them any favorable legislation either
Personally I have given this matter little attentlOn and per-haps
am not justified in e:xpressing any opinion but with the
commercial organizations of the various cities on guard I
guess they will see to It that the merchants are protected
That's what they are 01 gal1lzed for and that is why every
merchant should be a member of his board of trade
"The automoblle industry has done a wonderful lot for
Detroit but you must not get it into your head that they are
the only industries which are helping to build us. We had. a
lot of birr ones before they entered the field and we have stlll
others c~ming since their advent. About the latest big instJ-tution
I know of is a cigar factory which has bought a sohd
block of land and is now engaged in erecting great buildll1gs
which when completed WIll call for the employment of 1,000
hands. It WIll be rathel out of the ordmary as to size but it
is but a reminder that other entel prises than automobI1e-making
is helpinrr to shove Detroit to the front, commer-cially
and as a c:nter of population The city has an ide~l
locatIOn and it would not surpnse many of us If some day It
surpassed Chicago in population. That seems perhaps like
a wild dream but we have certainly made immense progress
and growth within the last few years
"We have a nice store and we do a fine business WIth a
list of patrons who have confidence in us This we have
aimed to inspire by square dealing and the knowledge t~at
we stand right back of every stick of furniture we sell. WIth
conditions at home as they are now it is almost useless to
say that we have a most satisfactory fall and holiday trade
and that the spring busll1ess looks very bright to us. I ha.ve
ahout rounded up my business here and have carefully m-spected
every line in which I thought I might be interested.
I can say therefore with all smcerity that I have never m
all the years I have been coming here witnessed a better
dIsplay than this winter and one which no live dealer can
afford to miss If he intends to keep abreast of the times"
South Was Never More Prosperous.
D. E. Spencer, superintendent of the NatIonal Furniture
company and president of the Ladder and Specialty company,
Atlanta, Ga, is spendIng a few days in Grand Rapids He
has resided in Atlanta a decade or more and has assumed all
the rights and privileges of a native Geo1gian. He is proud
of his city and never tires in telling of its wonderful growth
and prospenty "The entire south was ne" er in the past ~o
p10sperous as it is today," he remarked. Mr. Spencer WIll
remain seve1al days, visiting his children and old tIme
f1iends.
Ordering High Priced Goods.
Dealer Nelson of Marinette, vVis., has a special order to
fill for a millIonaire manufacturer of his town. He is purchas-ing
the best high grade stuff manufactured. The Berk~y &
Gay Furniture company will supply the chamber furl1lture,
27
and the Phoenix the furniture for the dining room. Mr.
Nelson is also purchasing stock for his store, making the
rounds with his old friend "Gene" Case of Sioux City.
The Rattle of the Dollar.
The aIr It. tastes lIke nectar oozed from heaven's own
labo1atory
And the sunshme falls hke omtment on the forehead of a
king,
vVhen a man feels in hIS pocket, flushed with full financial
glory,
And he hears the 11lckels rattle, and heal the quarters
nng,
Though winter st.orms assault hIS path, and drift his way
and block It,
In his heart he feels the sunshine of an endless summer
time,
For he listens to the music of the money in his pocket.
To the rattle of the dollar and the Jingle of the dime
The famous violinists,
And the fiddle1s and cornetists,
And the mighty organ players
Of every age and clime,
Make a slow and droning mu"ic,
Full of discord and of Jangle,
\Vhen you match 1t WIth the rattle,
With the rattle of the dollar and the Jlllgle of the chme
Then the star of hope anses, and in glIttering ascendance,
It lIghts the rugged pathway and the labyrinth of gloom,
For we feel the swe1l1l1g majesty of perfect independence;
And though the Ul11verse IS la1ge, we shout, ":\1:ore room'
more 1oom 1"
The pangs of penury ale ha1d, howe'er the sages talk It,
And pove1 ty IS penlous-the borderland of crime;
But there's comage in the clatter of the COl11 w1th1l1 your
pocket,
In the rattle of the dollar and the Jingle of the dIme;
LIke the music of King Da\ id
On the dulC1mer and taber,
On the harp whose strings ~ el e many,
In that old melocltou-, tIme,
Is t.he mUSICof the clll1kll1g
Of the jolly hah es and quarters,
And the nng1l1g resonant rattle,
The rattle of the dolla1 and the 1ll1gle of the dune!
And the tIme we hope IS comIng when the millIons and the
masses
May hear thIS merry music \\ Ith no ll1terval between;
Life cease to be an endless quest for meal and for molasses,
And a long unans\\ ered problem of coal and kerosene.
And we hear It in the chstance-woe to hlln who tries to
block It,
Tries to block the onward progress of the struggling march
of tIme,
When all shall hear the mu"ic of the ratthng of the pocket,
Hear the rattle of the dollar and the Jlllgle of the dime
And the patient WIves and babies
Shall not starve for lack of money,
Shall 110t dress in rags and tatters,
In that happy coming tIme;
For the world shall nng with mUSIC
Of a billion bulgIng pockets,
€ach one nnging \\lth the rattle-
With the rattle of the dollar and the jingle of the dIme.
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Minnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture
Association
OFFlCFRS-Presldent LOUISJ Buenger New DIm, VIce PresIdent, C Damelson, Cannon Falls, Treasurer, o A 0 Moen, Peterson Secretary, W L. Grapp, JanesvIlle
EXECUTIVE COM1\1I fTEE-D F RIchardson, Northfield Geo. KlIne, Mankato, W. L. HarTIs, MinneapolIs, o SImons, Glencoe, M L KlIne St Peter.
BULLETIN No. 68.
ANNUAL CONVENTION"FEBRUARY 7 AND S.
"COMING EVENTS CAST THEIR SHADOWS BEFORE."
ConventIOn FebrualY 7th olncl 8th Keep thIs In I11ll1cl \n e,
ceecll11g1y Ilbtructne and 111, Itll1g pi ogral11 ha, been prep, 1vI b\ the
commIttee Vv e shall have an opportul1lty of h"te11ln~ to the c"pcn
ence of dealer, from all parb of the ,Llte On OUI prOlSnm II c mcn
who are a power In the bUSl11ess \\ odd Such l111porLlllt ,ubjt'Ch ,h
Co opelatlOn, LeglslatlOll, Home Trade for Tdx P,y111g De 11("ro, Ltc
\\ 111be dlscu,sed by these men
vVlll you lend your lI1f!uence by att("ndll1g thh COI1\entlOn mcl
thus help to make It 1dl >:;er and better than any v\ e 11'1\e e\ cr held)
We are g01l1g to b11l1g common sense to beal upon the bl:'; pi ob
1ems whIch face evelY dealel You may get pIm, thllC \\lnch yell
can cany out succes,fl111y even If they hIVe pI Ovell I tdI1m e \\ Jth
some one else
No two dealers are ahke nOI are they placed 111 the - \me U1\ 11 on
ment You must not take It fOl granted that Just bec llhe some othel
dealer has had a dlsastrou<; expellence '\1th ,ome pI m 01 method ot
dOll1g bUSiness, the ~dme plan can do ,ou no good "eIther must
yOU thmk that because some dealer h,ls m,lde a sucee" ot some meth
od of dOIng bus1l1ess, tholt method I" the only Ol1e
No s;;eneral rule can be laId do\\ n \\ Ith reg,ll d to the "lue or
tlcK of ,alue of clIfferent methods Dlftel ent bU'l11e" conclltlon, re
qUII e cllffel ent methods Those" hlch al e ,el} 'olluahle where con
dltIons are such dS to \\ arrant theIr u,e mdy do much harm y\hen
they dre not usee! 1l1tellIgently or when condItIons al e not nght
You must prepare advertlo1l1g' matter \\ hlch y\III ,lppeal to the
'elf Interest of the COllsumer All of Ih are male or Ie's "elfish and
you must answel the ole!, eternal questJOn 'What IS There 111 It tOI
::VIe?" Lvery one \\ ,\11t'i somethll1g for nothl11g ane! "e >:;1\ e yOU ad
vertlslng "chemes whIch supply thIS demand There ale many cht
ferent ways of ad, ertIs1l1g and every dealer IS 100k1l1g tOI ,omethlng
that hol' not been trIee! by hIS ulmpetIt01 S <\nythll1g that Y\ III get
people to tallong amI get the name of the stOJ e before the pubhc
IS the lond \Ve dl e pI ep,l! ed to ,ho\\ you chtfel ent \\ a}, ot d01l1l{
thIS
Our Idea of planl1lng thIS con, entlOn IS to pI 0\ Ide ,ou \\ Ith SU
many helps, SUi5ge'itlOns etc, tl1at 1910 \\ III III 0\ e the most pr j-perous
year }OU have e,el experIenced \\ e ale lel,onably Sl11e tInt
everyone who attended the la,t cony entlOn ,\ III be pre,ent at tlno
one, If It IS a pO"'lbIe th1l1g, and "e trust that those \\ho wele not
present WIll mdke It a pOInt to attend our comIng con, (l1tlOn ancl
find out" hat they have ml'osed
Jealousy 111 bus1I1ess h a clare One fellow e!oes somethl11g bettel
than you and you ,lre Jealous but It IS really a beneht for you to
work beSIde a man of thIS k1l1d vVe hope that e, el y member \\ III
come to conventIOn dnd hncl out how S0111eotller member ha'i gone
hIm one better" '1 he best thll1g that C,lll happen to you to to a,
soclate WIth better buslne'S men than yoU! self, If only fOJ a cl \y 01
two We want yOU to study the need'i of ,OUI tl,lcle "0 tholt you
can tell about these necds at the conventIOn Amon\{ so nnny bU-I
nes'i men, there \\ III probably be some one \\ ho can 'iuggest '\ 1emuh
Come to OUI meet1l1g \\ Ith open eye, ,\11d open edr'i and It you thl11k
tlllngs are not gomg light, kIck,' even tho ktckmg to agal11,t
your Pllllclples
Our program 1'1 a very 'itnklllg one, PIO\lcll11g as It does for acl
dresses by some ,ery able speakel s These acldres,e, WIll be ot
speCial Intel est as the speakers WIll gn e VIVId ghmp,es of thell 0\\ n
expcllence If antlClpat10n IS not at fault and to be much dl'iaPPoll1tecl
thiS conventIon WIll be a most 'iucce'iSful and plofltable affaIr
In c1osll1g we Wish to say that the key to real bU'ill1ess success
IS based on "ound pnnclples rolther than money If there IS anyth1l1g
wrong With your bU'3l11e'iS methods, If thC) are nut successful, don t
be afraId to 'oee } OUI l111perfectlon, and shortcom1l1gs
Come to conventIOn "hu e we "Ill be more than glad to extend
Do help1l1t;" hand to you
PROGRAM FOR OUR ANNUAL MEETING.
FoIlow1l1g IS the program for the annual meetll1g of the Mmne
sota RetaIl Funllture Dealers' ASSoclat1On, to be held m Mmneapo
h" on Monday and Tuesday, February 7 and 8 It may be neces
sary to make a few changes If so they WIll be duly announced
As WIll be seen the plogram IS lengthy, but It IS behe, ed that every
number WIll be II1tere~tlllg-lt IS proposed to make It so-and the
man who "takes It all Ill" WIll surely be benefitted a, well as en-tertained
1
2
First Day. Monday. February 7.
Morning Session.
\J eetlllg of the executive commIttee
jIeetmg of the follow1l1g committees to prepare theIr reports
(a) Ad, ertlslllg CommItte
(b) Cooperative Buymg CommIttee
(c) InsUlance CommIttee
(d) Soap Club LVII Committee
(e) CommIttee on Fraudulent Advertlslllg
(f) CommIttee on Open Show Room
(g) LegIslatIve CommIttee
(h) By laws and Con-,tltutlOn Comnllttee
QuestIOn BOA
Payment of Dues
InspectIOn of Co operative BUYlllg Samples
Afternoon Session-l o'clock.
Opemng address of conventIOn by preSIdent
Addres~ of \\ e!come by Mayor J C Haynes
Re,ponse by J R Taylor of Lake Benton
Ple<;lclent's annual message by L J Buenger, of New Ulm,
3
45
1
2
34
\Imn
5 J\ppomtment of COnlllllttees
6 PractIcal demonstratIOn of new method of repalrmg deep
,cI,\tches on hIghly pohshed Iurmture whIch secret IS sold to the
tl ade for $25 You Coln get thIS method WIthout co"t by cOlmng to
the conventIOn The greatest help ever brought to the furmture
dealer
7 "Selltng Goods at a Profit and the best Method of Accom-pltshmg
thl~,' by \Ir Tolle, of the Sheldon School of Busllless,
ChIcago, III
Evening Session-6:30.
'\ \ ISlt to one of the TWill CitIes greatest retaIl stores where
men "ho kno\\ WIl! gIve pI actlcal suggestIOn" on salesmanshIp
DetaJls ot thIS \\ Il! be given later
Second Day. Tuesday February 8.1910.
Morning SeSSlOn-lO:30.
1 PractIcal c\emon~tr::ltlOn of salesmanshIp, usmg methods of
1C dclnng blbme"s men employed by the NatIOnal Cash Register com-p
my ,ales mJn 1gers, whose methods are conSidered the finest 111 the
\,orlc\
2 Paper by a trave1mg man
3 "I:xpenence Hour," led by E H Boley of Wheaton, Mmn,
TOPIC, "What was the most successful bIt of advertIsing that you
ever dId?"
4 Practical demonstratIon of how to repaIr shght damages in
upbohtered goods and the showmg of the actual dIfference 111 the
,arwus grdde of upholstenng leather by Mr Bertsch, foreman of
the Gran Curtis fdetory
5 The I esults of the "Wmona Co-operative Mall Order Cata-log,"
by Geo J HIllyer, Wmona, Mmn
Afternoon Session-l o'clock.
PI actlcal demon~tratlO1I of "Settmg up advertIsements used
by the a\ erage small dealer and the prepanng of cuts and what IS
necessary to prepare cuts," by the head pnnter of the Amencan
'lype FoundlY Company
2 Paper on "The Quicke~t Way to get Co-operatIve LegIsla-tIve
Help," by Senator J oh1l Moonm
3 "vVhy the manufacturers cannot furmsh competitIve leaders
dIrect," by a manufacturer
4 Unfil1lshed and new business
5 Report of secretary and treasurer
6 Report of commIttees
7 "The keepmg of stock and store management," by Martm
Schoen of OrtonVIlle
8 "How to arnve at the proper ov('rhead and runl1lng expen-
"es of a busmess," by MI Tolles of Sheldon's School of Busmess,
ChIcago, III
9 The elect10n of officers and delegates to the natIOnal con-ventIOn
10 Unfil1lshed busll1ebs, mstallment of officel sand appomtment
of commIttees
Evening Session-6 o'clock.
1 Luncheon Compltments of "PnsCllla," Maid of the New
England
2 Address by GovernOl Eberhard
3 'The shol tcommgs of the average country store," as seen by
the pubhsher
WEEKLY ARTISAN
The Oldest in His Line.
Eugene S Gotthold, commonly known as "Gene," is today
the oldest parlor furniture salesman on the road He began seIl-ing
upholstered furmture thirty-s1x year" ago 1D the days when
R. Deimel & Bro of ChIcago, was the largest pdrlor good~ con-cern
in the United States "Gene" handled their hne In the
metropolItan dlstnct, N e", York, etc , dnd carried stocks of theIr
goods. That was In the clays before the east went we"t to "ell
parlor goods l\Ir Gottholc1 then took 111tOpdrtlle1 ~h1P \\1 Ith 111m
"Sam" Estabrook of New York, under the firm ndmes of Gott-
"Gene" Gotthold, Buffalo Lounge Company.
hold & Estabrook That was the start of Estabrook In the par-lor
furmture bus1l1es" "Gene" has been a"ked hl<' age many
tImes He say" If he hves to the 31st of September he wlll be
72 years old, but is now sell1l1g the Buffalo Lounge company
goods.
It i" rcally a treat to go and VIS1t"Gene" on the second floor
of the KlIngman bmld1l1g and hear h1m eulog17e and expound the
ments of the Tmk!"h chaIrs, couches, etc, tint the Buffalo
Lounge company is produc1l1g.
11r. Gotthold 1" a pretty good stm y tellel of hh man)
remll1lSCenCe" and says he 1Sg01l1g to wnte a book", hlch he WIll
d1stnbute complimentanly to hIS many friends He b hv Ing in
Ph11adelph1a and one of hIS hopes In hfe 1S that he W1l! hve long
enough to see "Gene" J r, who is now ten years old, IllS succes-sor
in selling uphobtered goods.
Waste.
Every manufacturer, no matter what h1S hne, IS can
stantly stnving to e1ll111nate waste, for m many cases it
represents more than the profits 111 the busmess, and some-times
it WIpes out all the profits This is pecuharly so m the
manufacture of furniture, and espeCIally so where a great
29
i
is at the HOTEL CRATHMOREt GRAND
RAPIDSt with an amplitude of Bird's-Eye Maple
stocks. Best ever. Heaviest Bird's-Eye Maple
on the market-l ~24" thick. Filled with beauti~
ful eyes and figure.
II
II
I~--_....
CALL, PHONE OR WRITE IIIIII
• • _ ••••• --A
WALKER VENEER & PANEL WORKS, HOTEL CRATHMORE, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
amount of lumber IS used It I" "aId that 111furniture fac-tones
the waste bUY1l1g lumber averages about 33,YJ per
cent Th1s IS '25 per cent more than It should be; 25 per cent
of $20 lumber 1S $5 If you cut 10,000 feet per day It means
$50 -If you run your factory 300 days 111a year 1t means
$15,000-a pI etty large sum to be thrown away in factory
waste when the Grand Rapids Veneer Works system of
dry1l1g w111 qve It to each manufacturer This saving IS
based on $20 lumber If your lumber averages to cost you
mOl ethan $20 the sa v 1l1g Will be proportionately larger. Cer-ta111ly
thIS IS worth l11quinng 111to There are a great many
manufacturel.., who, 1f they could declare and pay to their
"tockholders $15,000 a year In diVIdends would thl11k them-selves
lucky
What to Buy and Where.
The \Valker Yeneer & Panel Works, Chicago, have the fol-
10wl11g "Ize~ of birel's eye maple veneer on hand ready for prompt
deltvery-,\700 piece, of each size:
,'j7x18 5Gx13 60x 8
as x 8Y2 62 x 12 34 x 12
41 x 10 48 x 12 60 x 6
14 x 10 44 x 12 36 x 6
46x 8~ 24x12 34x 11
Length of the gL1in IS first dlmenSlOn named.
New Factories.
A company IS bel11g organized to establIsh and operate
a furniture factory at San Marcos, Tex
Henry DICk, propnetor of the Kew yO! k fur11lture store
in Danbury, Conn, WIll establIsh a mattress factory m a
remodeled office bUlldmg on Lennox place
E l\I Lea'ltt, LCW1S A BUrle1gh and l\t F Sheehan,
have incorporated the Cahee Housefurnlsh111g company, capi-tahzed
at $100,000 and will establish a factory at Augusta,
Me
Furniture Fires.
Morton & DaVIS, cJealers of Bndgeport, Tex, :,uffered a
loss of $1,200 by fire J nsured
The Keyser Table company, capltahzed at $10,000 wtll
establish a factory at Keyser, W. Va
Isaac Rathff's furnIture store at Scottsville, VV1S, was
burned on January 14 Loss $1,800, insurance, $1,000
A trave11l1g salesman proposes to mi11lmlze waste motion
of the right arm by swearl11g off seventy-five per cent of hi,;;
drink habit
30 WEE K L \ 1\ R TIS AN
CAMPAIGN OF EDUCATION
Pennsylvania Railrod Company T1·yingto Reduce
Losses Caused by Improper Packing.
In fm thel ance of Its campdlgn to >,ecm e bettel pdLhlll:::'
of al tlc1es offered f01 shIpment 0'\ er It':>hnes, the Penn", h ,Ulla
1>,to uIstllbute, through It-, flleght deparmellt, thousand" of
copIes of the pamphlet )l1'3t Ise,uec! by the Depal tment of
Commerce and Labor, entitled "Packl11g fOI F"pOl t 1he
Pennsyh anId has 111the last t\V0 years been adoptl11:::, e\ Cl\
possIble expedIent for I educlllg the number of damage cldlms
made by It::, shlppel ~ It eo>tImate" thdt the Penn,,) Iv al1la
dnd damage In the U111ted States to aggregate $20,000,(X)() per
annum, \\ hIle LconomlC loss to the country is vastly greater.
'1 he ~1e,ltest SOlllce of this loss is improper and inadequate
]laCh11l~ The loss 111thc foreIgn trade is not included in the
$20,000,000, but aggI egate a lalge sum Reports from consuls
and specIal agenb Ieceived by the bmeau of manufacturers
sho\\ not only loss 111the al ticles shIpped, but a loss of trade
beLause of carele~sness 111pack111g
.:\1am 1 epO! ts show large consignments of gooJs, placti-call)
1ul11ed becau'oe of 111adequate packing. For instance, out
of 1,000 bags of cottonseed meal shipped to a EUlOpean port,
800 \, CIe badly tOlll and damaged because of inadequate
\\ 1 applllg J\laLhInery IS fJ equently 1eceived at foreign ports
CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE
Showin~ the Progress of the Fnrnishinl! Arts Dnrinl!
Each Period. from 1485 to 1800.
ENGLISH
Compliment. of BARNARD & SIMONDS CO•• ROClhe.ter. N. Y.
FRENCH
Francis I., , , .1515 to 1547 }
Tudor or
ElIzabethan Henri II. ........ ..154<7}
Francis II.. • , ••••• 1559 Henri Deux
James I. 1603to 1625} Early Stuart ~:~::iA::~:.·:.::,~~~~
g~:::~;~e~lth' : : : '.~~~~~~~~:b Jac~~l'Aln } Henri Quatre Puntan Influence Henri IV •......... 1589
}
Late Stuart }
~~:~:sIe: : . :: ., .. l~~~~~~~~ Car~rl'Aln Louis XIII.. . 1610 Louis Treize
French Influence }
}
Louis XIV .. ,1643 to 1715 Louis Quatorze
WIlliam and
Wlllillm and Mary 1689 to 1702 Mary } R
Dutch Influence I LoUIS XV. 17lS to 1714 L egQ<;y
~~~~e i...::.:::.~~i~~~~~~;Q}~'" Ann< ~~:g::~.:':,t:~::3} :;;~o~::e
George II. . . .. 1721 to 1160 I Marie lGeorgian periodl; } Antoinette
Ch~~ie~~C!~thlc First Republic , . . .. 1193 Directoire
George Ill ...•..... 1160 to 1820 Influence
Heppelwhite }
and Adam Bros. Napoleon .... J 199 to I8H Empire
Sheraton
Henry VII. . . J4.85 to 1509 }
Henry VIII. . . .. 1509 to 1541
Edward VI. 15401 to 1553
Mary 1553 to 1558
ElIzabeth. , . . . 1'iS8 to 1603
Francois
PremIer
1898
L' Art Nouvl'AlU
1-------- - -- -----------_"-- _
Present TIme In the United States: Period of Reproduction.
GenealogIcal chart of furniture glV111g dates of thell 01lg111 and the' pedlgI ees" of vanous period styles
reproductions of which are or have been popular
paid out $18S,000 111damage claIms whIch alose from pOOl
and 111secu' e packing Due to the eff01 ts made 111the past
year to impl ess upon shIppers the advantage of bettel pack-ing
of freight, it IS thought, that the losses sustained 1111909
on this account were somewhat smallel
The many compla111ts receIved ham cOnc,ulal agents that
Amcllcan eAporters do not pay sufficient attentIOn to pach-
111iSof merchandI"oc fOl shipment to foreI~n countrIes has
caused the Depal tment of Commerce and Labor to ISSue a
pamphlet descnb111g 111detaIl the so-called packiniS eVlls Tbe
pamphlet is profusely Illustrated WIth photoglaphs of t" plcal
samples of pOOl packing It IS these hooklets which the
PennsylvanIa is to distllbute to the shl ppel salon£; the lines
The raih oad managers have estimated 1 he freight loss
in a ruined condItion because sent in thin pine boxes instead
of hemg- "knocked down" and properly guarded There is a
£;reat loss in cotton bales because of inadequate coverings, al-thou~
h cotton sll1pped from Egypt rarely sustains any loss,
a s It is plOpeI1y guarded and packed
The Penns) lvania has only recently been endeavoring to
ecIl1cate shIpper" tn the needs for better packing, by taking
pal ties of them around to freight stations that they might
see the poor condItion, 111which many packages of freight al e
1 cceived f01 transportation This campaign of education is
to be ('<:tended to co, el the entire raIlroad, and it is to be
followed by the distribution of literature urging shippers to
pack fl eIght securely to insure its safe delivery to their cus-tomel
s
WEEKLY ARTISAN 31
Rice Cuts a Figure in Arkansas.
"Cotton Isn't the only thmg we depend upon in Arkansas,
although It IS a bIg staple wIth US," saId Claudius Jones of
LIttle Rock, at the Marion House "vVe grew and marketed
7,000,000 bu:ohels of 1ice last year and got good pllces for it
RIce IS one of the steadIly mCI easing plOducts m our state as
well a:o one of the mo:ot plOfitable In addition we have our
great lumbel mtelests to say nothmg of the fruit industty
WhICh brIngs great 1 esults to our people and which lIke
the other thmgs I have mentIOned is a growing industry. When
one thmks of the South or, at least, certain southern states in-c1udmg
Arkansas, cotton at once comes into hIS mind. While
the other products are bIg, stIll cotton is something to which we
pm a lot of faith. At present it is conspicuously in the publIc
eye because of the great demand, the limited supplies and the
high prIces prevalhng. In the cotton exchanges the price goes
up and It goes dm ..n agam but the standard of value to the grow-er
IS 15 cents and thIS IS the rate which is prevailmg all through
the south What thiS means a few figures will disclose. Our last
year's crop was 800,000 bales which was 200,000 bales less than
the crop of the precedmg yeaI and yet at 15 cents against prices
rangmg from 8 to !) cents for the previous year it brought us in
$10,000,000 more than the larger crop You see these figures
mean 'Something The present year's crop is far from being
A 1910 ReIUiniscence in 1930.
Look at them now-these old, old men-
How dId they act in :"Jmeteen Ten?
I'll tell you, If you V\ ant to know,
They all took m the BIne Mouse show
"Hcl e C0111C:OJohn Raab," clled the Blue Mouse
"I need a rocker fOi my house"
"I'll throw a kIss to John for fun,"
"And maybe he will ShIp me one."
The Blue J\1on'3e yelled "Hurra I Hurra I"
vVhen she saw Dan of Omaha-
"To think a buyer of your clas:o"
"Would honor thus a modest lass!"
garneled and it's hke your J\llchigan fruit crop, we cannot tell
what it IS to be untIl after the harvest. We are hoping for good
re:oults and as the last yeaI's ClOp was a hght one, we can reason-ably
expect to do as well as we did then.
"Trade with our house has been good recently and we are
all expectmg a good SpI1I1g tI ade. The condItions in Little Rock
and thloughont the state Ieachly gIve us this promise, The
town IS gl m\ 1I1g steadJly and is d01l1g a lot of building. The
most ImpOi tant featm e:o 111 this line are the new half million dol-lar
depot, mto which run all of the MISSOUri Pacific lines. It
IS good enough 111 Itself to warrant appreciation bnt as it re-places
one of the most dIlapIdated depots in the South there i"
stlII more reason for mutnal felicitation.
"DUllI1g the last eight or nine years we have been engaged
npon a new state home at a cost of $2,000,000. This is at length
to be completed, the contract for the last of the building work
hay lI1g Just been let and we hope to occupy it next year. \Vill
I have the fm mshing of It? I hope so and you can rest assured
I WIll make an eal nest effort to land the contract. Another
buildmg soon to be completed is an eleven story, white enameled
front, office buildmg m the heart of the city This will cost
$250,000 and IS about the finest commercial structure in the city.
There i" a lot of other building g01l1g on in the way of homes,
and for general purposes. There isn't any boom in Little Rock
but a good healthy growth."
\Nhcll the Blue Mouse esplcd Dan Blum
She saId "Ah there, my sugar plum 1"
"I want a dresser made by Sllgh-
"I fOI a '::\1ad ox' tablc sigh I"
I ,'Vas as SpOlty a.., the lest,
And went as H J\1c~ichols' guest.
They simulated "»or1.:o, you see-
DId they have anythmg on me?
L'EmOl
Bill Ayer:o dl ew all these V\ auld be sports-
BllI could dla" some from all reports;
And yet, with all his dlawlllg knack,
TIll1 drew hI" pay from J\1ueller and Slack.
32
..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Miscellaneous Advertisements.
WANTED.
Position as commercial photographer of furmture by a prac-tical,
competent man. Ten years' expenence. Best of refer-ence.
Address J. H. Packer, care Times Union, Jacksonville,
Fla. 1-22tf
WANTED.
A good man who thoroughly understands machinery, can
make patterns and devise special machmes, to take care of
the bending department of a plant manufactunng bent wood
work. Address Louis Rastetter & Sons, Fort Wayne, Ind
1 22-29
FOR SALE.
Wood working machinery, nearly all of which IS practically
new. Will furnish exact condition of machmes and prices,
on applicatIOn-One Mattison Leg Machme, 14 ; one 6 Spm-dIe
Crescent carving machine; two Spindle Carvers; one
Dodds saw table; two swmg sawsr, one Houston smgle end
tenoner; one Posselius 36" grainmg machme; one Fay &
Egan 16 spindle dovetaI1er; one 30 x 36 Francis veneer press;
one 18" by 8%' Francis Veneer press; one 30" buzz planer,
quantity of belting and pulleys; one Royal sander; one West
Side band saw; one Clement double cut-off; one 36" Clement
planer; one vertical boring machine; one Hayes double ten-oner,
with copes; one 2-spmdle Clement shaper; one 8
Clement jointer; one Crescent saw table; one honzontal bor-ing
machme; one Amencan self-feed np saw; one 12" R. &
H. sticker. Address W. S. Gibbs, 386 Lincoln Ave., DetrOlt
1-15
WANTED POSITION.
By young man with six years' expenence-the past two as
manager of store in a town of 10,000. Can do anythmg con-nected
with the furmture hne. Not afraid of work. Address
uF. B. P," care of the Weekly Artisan. 1-15
WANTED.
For territory east of Buffalo, New York City, New York state
and New England, one good line of furniture to sell in con-nection
with my present line of dining chairs. Address A. E.
W., care Weekly Artisan. 11-20
WANTED.
Commission men for the states Michigan, Iowa, Missouri,
Nebraska and Kansas. also for the western states or Pa-cific
coast, to carry our line of Library, Center and Folding
Tables on commission. Address Lock Box No. 124, Sheboy-gan,
Wis. 12-25tf
FOR SALE.
1 2" and 1 3" Prmgle & Brodie Variety Lathes. 1 Zoellers
Whiting Mixer suitable for moulding factory. All machines
in first class condition and guaranteed. The Roos Manufac-turing
Co., 16th and Fisk Sts., Chicago, Ill. 12-25tf
SALESMAN.
New York state, outside metropolitan district, is open for a
line for buffets and china closets; also cheap and medium
priced dressers and chiffoniers. Address Box 162, Kenmore,
N. Y. 12-18tf
WANTED.
A first class superintendent to take charge of manufacturing
plant making bed room furniture. Give experience, refer-ence,
etc. Address American Furniture Co., Batesville.
Ind. 12-11tf
WANTED-SALES MANAGER.
A first class experienced sales manager for a concern manu-facturing
a line of woodworking machinery, located in Wis-consin.
Send references with reply. Address W. A. F.
care The Weekly Artisan. 12-4tf
HELP WANTED.
A good furniture man-assistant to buyer or one who has
had all around experience. A chance for man who wants
to leave a smaller town and go into a larger field. Address
Furniture Department, P. O. Box 245, Trenton, N. J. 11-20tf
A Manufacturers' Agent doing a very successful business in
Baltimore and Washington and surrounding territory desires
one or two good lines on commission. Address "Success,"
Weekly Artisan. 11-lStf
WANTED-LINES FOR 1910
Experienced salesman with established trade between Buffalo
and Bangor, Me., would like to carry several lines of medium
priced case goods on commission. Address "EsPI" care
Weekly Artisan. 10-9 t. f.
BARGAIN!
40 H. P. direct current motor, latest make and in first class
running condition. Grand Rapids Blow Pipe & Dust Ar-rester
Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. 8-21tf
New York Markets.
New York, Jan. 21.-~dvices from the ",est are to the ef-fect
that hardwood lumber i" scarce with a tendency to higher
pnces f01 not only the better but abo for mfenor grades.
'-lo!t ,\ ooeb are d]"O reported "tronger at many points An
ad, ance m ) ellow pme IS predicted for about the first week
111 FehI uar) If It comes It may be expected to affect cypress
and other 'iouthern woods
Lm'ieed 011 I" up another cent, quotatIOns now bemg
hd"ed on 76 @ 77 cents for we"tern raw and runllIng up to
70 @; 80 for double bOIled, which has sold at 81 cents in
ChIcago thIS week Flaxseed IS reported as bemg held for
hIgher pnce.s and there IS no dI"count from the card rates
tor 011 Trade IS remarkably lIght even for the mIdwmter
~cason
The shellac trdde Ie, descrIbed as tame and umnteresting.
1 here ha, e been 110 material change" m quotatIOns for sev-eral
v. eek"
Turpentme I, firm at a slight advance over last week'.s
hgure'i Today It I" quoted at 62 @ 62?~ cents here and
59 @ 60 at Sa, al1nah The demand I'i weak.
There h a steady mCI easmg demand for goatskms, sup-phcs
be111g sold up closely Prices have not changed ma-tenall)
dunng the week MeXIcan frontIers are taken qUIckly
at 34 @ 35 cent~, Paytas, 42 @ 43, Duenos Ayres, 43 @ 45,
HdytIem, 50 @ 52, Bra7Ils, 68 @ 73
1 here has been a slIght Improvement in the demand for
bllI laps the pa "t week, as "ome bag manufacturers have been
purchasing, and order" have abo been put through for de-
111 ery 111 other quarters Pnce~ are a lIttle steadier than
tb ey v. ere, although "how1l1g no quotable change The nomi-nal
fi~ure" are 3 50 @ 3 55 for eight ounce goods and 4 SO for
the heavy "'eights
Index to Advertisements.
~I hf,a Refngerator Company
Ihrne" \V F & John Company
111rton H H & Son Company
BIg SIX Car Ioadl11g \"oLl1tlOn
Bock,tege I urlllture Company
Bo",e Furmture Companv
Blh~ \Iachl11e \Vorks
Challenge Refngeratol Company
Dcla\\ are Chalf Company
Glohe Fur111wre Company
Grand Raplcj" Blow PIpe and Dlht Arrester Company
Grand RapIds BI ass Comp,lI1y
Grand RapIds Hand Screw Company
Gr lI1d RapIds Veneer V! arks
Herklmel Hotel
Hoffman Bro'i Company
Holden Henf} S, Veneer Company
H ote I "ormandle. Detroit
harges Fur11lture Company
K1J1deI Bcd Company
I cnt7 Table Company
I uce ]< urmturc Company
Ll1ce Redmond Chair Company
\fa11lstee lVfanl1factl1nng Company
\1 etal FurnIture Company
\llchIgan Lngra\ lI1g Company
\11sccIIaneol1'i
\Ioon De'ik Company
\el"on \[attel }lllmtllle Company
Palmel \fanutactllt ll1g Company
PItcaIrn Van1l',h Company
RIchmond Ch,llr Comp,my
Rockford Chan and Furl1lture Comp,lI1y
R(m e, L P Carvll1g Work,
~chlmmd, ReId & Co
Sheboygan ChaIr Company
SmIth & DaVIS Manufactllnng Company
Spratt Geo & Co
Stow & DaVIS T'ur11lture Company
Udell \>\forks
\v.' aIker Veneel & Panel Company
Vv hlte Pnntll1g Company
Wodd Fur11lture Company
Wysong & \flles Company
Covel
Covel
9
18 19
18
18
Cover
10
11
18
2
3
368
13
21
12
18
17
9
4
4
17
18
1
32
15
14
11
7
13
23
12
Cover
15
24
22
23
7
29
Cover
18
6 ••
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TH
- Date Created:
- 1910-01-22T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:30
- 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/154