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- Michigan Artisan; 1907-06-10
Michigan Artisan; 1907-06-10
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and GKAND
f ''In 'n, RAPIDS ! ., \. J I" I! {i J")
l'i! ' 'I,:, r01f
j d I
Twenty-seventh Year-No. 23 JUNE 10, 1907 Semi-Monthly
You Want the Best
~WE HAVE IT-----.
g Greatestspeedand highestpolish,
g Pays 200 % per annum on the
amountinvested.
g Will sand with the grain and
requireno retouchingby hand.
g No troubleto answerquestions.
Write for Catalog E
Wysong & Miles Co. Greensboro.N. C.
No. 166 SAND BELT MACHINE CEDAR ST. AND so. R. R.
The Best Truck==TheStrongest Truck
This is the famousGillette Roller BearingFa~t;'~y
Truck-the truck on which it is said. "One man
can move a load of 3000 pounds while with
the olher trucks It takes three men,"
This is the truck fhat is strong where others are
weak-the truck that has an unbreakable'
malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are lookingfor if youwish
to invest in rather than waste money on factory
, trucks.
Gillette Roller Bearing CO.
ORAND RAPIDS, MICHIOAN
The Llghte.t Running,
Longest Lasting Truck .,.---------------rg WHEN PROPERLY USED
heeler's Patent Wood Filler
i. c:heaper than any other wood flUe!' on the market. even if sold for only half ill tlI'ice per pound.
q Thil fa.:! we etaDd teady to prove by actual teSts by Pf*dicalmen rillht in your own factory. fJ If inlerefted ill
obtaining a superior finish at IlII economical COlI, write, Uld we will ao fully rolo tile matter. THE BRIDGEPORT
WOOD FINISHING CO•• New MlllorG. Conn. New York; Chicago: Philadelphia: Boston.
I,
A Final Thought on
1fIII'IIIIII Application __ •__ ........
Finish,
In this serieswe have discussedFinish--:'as a factor in furniture sales,from the
standpoint of Elegance, of Tone, of Character, of Consistency, and last but
not least-of Profit.
And in each of these talks was a distinct suggestion of profit to the manu-facturer
who was alert, progressive and sufficiently receptive to make the
personal application. Of these there have been many.
And thosewho have applied the suggestions and investigatedthe differences
in polishing varnishesare now applying to their furniture output-greater varnish
satisfactionthan they have ever before known-i. e.-
Andrews'
Polishing Varnishes
These varnishesare the application of our more than half a century's
experience in the mahing of fine Varnishes.
There's pleasure in their application, to the workman, in the evenness
and ease with which they .worh and rub-and in the dependable uniformity of
results. He knows when he gets through with a piece that it is done-' a fin-ished
finish.
There's profit in their application (reduced factory cost in the finishing
department), as they do not sweat, nor check, nor crack, nor cloud, nor bloom.
They are completil3lypurified-thoroughly seasoned-rigidly tested-they are
different-'-andyours is the profit-in I
"The Polish That Holds'"
Your inquiry~ill facilitate the direct application of these sound and profitable
"ThoughtsonFinish;" Write uS;this time, if you did not before-and let our
nearby representative.call soon' arid tell you all you want to know concerning
Andrews' Polishing Varnishes.
Pratt' <D.. Lambert
Varnish Mahers
NewYorh
London
Buffalo
. Paris
Chicago
Hamburg
-------------------- ~-----
1
EARLY ENGLISH ART
NOUVEAU
Our Early English Spartan Stain con-tinues
to hold its popularity and has be-come
a strong favorite with both manufact-urers
and dealers in high grade furniture.
In the peculiar beauty of shade is found one
of the reasons for the great and increasing
demand for this finish.
If you have not tried these stains
write at once for sample of our Early
English Spartan Stain No. 830'
This shade has been the choice
of discriminating dealers and manufacturers.
"A New Art" •••The very
newest method in Mahogany
Finishing.
Art Nouveau will produce
in one operation the same re-sults
heretofore requiring four
operations. It is a stain and
liller combined; dries well
and can be shellaced
and varnished same
day if desired.
HAVE
YOU
EVER
TRIED OUR
SPARTAN
TURPS
A
POST
THE CARD
Will bring you detailed
information reprdiIUl allY
wood liniih desired, or if
\her~ is '" ftaill 01 filler yeU woo
to try we shall take pleasure in
IIelldinlll you a salllple with full
imtruc!tion.s for usinll: 88tDe.
MARlETT A
PAINT and COLOR COMP'Y
MARIETTA, OHIO
Sparlan Turps i; one of our
own products and j,:, undeni-ably
one of th", besl thiOl;l5
l:nown to the finisher for reduciull'
Varnishes. Stains Paints. elc. It is
the mo!!: perfeCl: wtvent known.
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Hand Feed GlueJng Machlne (Pat.
pending.) Eight lItyles and. sizes.
Veneer :Presses, all kinds and sizes.
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Elc" Efc.
WnmI·Wnrking
Machinery
and Supplies .~
Power Feed Glue Spreading Machine,
(Patent applied for.) Single, Double Rud
Combination.
LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
419·421 E. Eighth St.
C"AS. E. FRANCIS &. BRO.D CINCINN4TI. O. No. 6 Glue Heater.
The Originality of our work is one of its chief characteristics. Do You Want
Something
Original?
WE BUILD HIGH GRADE
CATALOGS COMPLETE
White Printing Co.
2 to 20 Lyon Street GRAND·RAPIDS. MICH.
ENGRAVING
PRINTING
BINDING
2
Our No. 156 Cabinet Smoothing Planer is the acme of the planer idea. That IS
not "Him flam" but it is founded on obvious fads.
Let us enumerate the points in the coniltrudion of this planer upon which we base .
our claim.
1st. The table is set on inclines
operated by parallel screws mounted on
ball bearings. These inclines have inde-pendent
adjustment so that the surface of
the table can be kept parallel with the
knives.
2nd. The feed rolls are driven
down and every gear is keyed to shahs·-·
no Studs are used.
3rd. The cylinder runs between
Sectional Clamp Bearings which never get
out of order and which never have to be
re-babbiued. Any looseness in the bear-ings
from wear can be instantly taken up
by simply loosening the clamp bolts and pressing down the plates with the hand.
Get full descriptive circular. It will tell you all.
When you know this machine fully you will have no other.
I
The King of Planers
The H'orJd} Stazukrd for Woodwor:l<in!/lfaclainery.
27th Year-No. 23. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., JUNE 10, 1907. $1.00 per Year.
EFFECT OF UNTAXED ETHYL ALCOHOL.
Methyl Prices Down Fifty Per cent and Many Manufacturers
Using the Denatured Article.
The law exempting alcohol from internal revenue tax.
when withdrawn from bonded warehouses, denatured and
used under rules and regulations prescribed by the govern-ment
authorities, has now been in torce nearly six months-since
January 1. That it has been of great advantage to
those who use alcohol for other than medicinal or beverage
purposes, is shown by the fact that the denatured article is
no"", sold at about 37 cents per gallon, while: pure ethyl or
grain alcohol of 180 degrees proof or strength costs $2.55, and
methyl or wood alcohol, which formerly cost 80 or 85 cents,
is no",; sold for 40 cents, the manufacturers having been ob-liged
to meet the lower price of the denatured grain orvege-table
product.
\VhiJe manufacturers and people generally are pleased with
the law 2nd its effects there is considerable criticism of the
manner in ,,,,hieh it is enforced. The law of itself is brief,
but the rules and regulations prescrib~d by the internal reve-nue
offici[lls [lre so numerous, stringent, technical and compb-cated
that it requires an expert on the subject of "law
;'l11d liquor" lo undcrst,and and comply with the requirements.
They are even more elaborate and more difficult to interpret
than are the 1a".·.5., rules and regulations relative to the manu-facture
and sale of whiskey and tobacco.
The red tape-bonding, gauging, marking, mixing, book-keeping,
reporting, elc.-is annoying to distillers, owntrs of
bonded v,rarchouses and dealers and equally or lIlore so to
manufacturers who use tbe denatured article to the extent
of more than 11fty gallons per month. The manufacturer
..v.ho uses less than fifty gallolls per rncnth is not bothered
by the red tape. He lllay buy his supply from any licensed
dealer or distiller anI does not have to secure license or give
bonds, make reports nor provide and maintain a -"denatured
alcohol store room." The manufacturer ".'·.h. o usues an aver-age
of more than fifty gallons per mOll_th, must have a license
and if he wishes to have hi;; alcohol d(>natured \vith any other
formula than tllat prescribed for ge1leral use by the goverl1-
ment-ten per cent alcohol and one per cent henzine-he
must give a bond so conditioned that in case he fails to com-ply
with all the requirements of the law, rules and regula-tions
he must pay the full amount of the internal revenue tax
on all alcohol that he uses during the year.
The manufacturers who use more than fifty gallons per
month of alcohol denatured by the general formula and those
who use that denatured by a special formula must also pro-vide
and maintain a "denatured alcohol stale room" and des-ignate
som('body to act as custodian of the same. They must
keep records showing the date when each order of alcohol is
received, the number aud size of packages in the shipment,
the name and numbc;r of the distiller, the name of the gauge:-,
the serial numbers on the packages, the serial numbers on the
dcnatured alcobol stamps, the number of wine gallons and
the number of proof gallons. All these entries mllst be made
wl1en the alcohol is received and deposited in the "denatured
alcohol store room" at the factory. The st0re rooms in each
revenue district must be numbered and each must have a sign
above the door reading "Denatured AlcohOl Store Room No.
On the other side of the record, under the head of "Dis-posed
of --" the manufacturers must write the date when
the packages are opened for use and repeat the entries, rela-tive
to namcs of distillers, numbers on packages, stamps, etc,
Before the tenth day of each month the manufacturers
must take an inventory of their store rooms, and make a
transcript of their records which must be sworn to by the
custodian and forwarded as a report to the collector of inter-nal
revenue for the district in which the factory is located,
This report shows the numbers of packages received and the
numbers of those opened for use during the previous month
and also the number on hand at the end of the month.
The manufacturers must not mix completely denatured al~
cohol with that which is specia.11y denatured, nor with wood
alcohol. They are not allowed to dilute it, but as the rules
5ay, "it must go into manufacture or consumption exactly in
the same condition as when it left the denaturer."
All permits, bonds, etc., expire with the government's fis-
(Continued on Page 6,)
THE CORRECT
Stains and fiUers.
THE MOST
SATISFACTORY
first Coaters and
Varnishes
4 ·"~MICHIG... .7I7-N - f
Reprehensible Trade Journal Methods.
1\0 stronger evidence of the valuelessness of a trade paper
as an advertising medium can be presented than tbat of soli-citing
upon the strength of sales of machinery or other goods
which may be brought about through the influence 0) of the
paper's representative, says a writer in the Paper Trade J otlrn-al.
It is at once a frank confession of the lack of the essential
qualities upon which the advertising value of any publication
must of necessity depend-a bona fide subscription list ~nd
that influence which comes through prestige.
Surprising as it appears, shrewd manufactur"ers have been
beguiled into signing advertising contracts upon implied or
expre;;,sed promises of desirable business to be secured only
through the personal influenc-c of the advertising solicitors.
Prospects of big orders are frequently held out as bait; dis-creet
reference is made to mills in which the solicitor is or is
to be, interested. The position of purchasing agent in'some
prospective mill is hinted at, as well as various other seductive
references to conditions through which the solicitor can make
it worth while for the advertiser to "sign up." Back of every
such proffer is always the reversal' of the proposition, im-plied
or not, that if the advertisement is not placed the desir-able
business will be received by a rival manufacturer.
Stripped of all imputations of thJ;"eat against the prospec-tive
advertiser, if he does not come in, there remains a mani-fest
injustice to the manufacturer already advertising in the
paper, for obviously if the solicitor of any publication can
influence business of any kind, this influence should be thrown
to the manufacturer who is spending his money with the pub-lication.
The solicit01 who hawks around a prospective order as a
bait for a new advertisement injures the present advertiser
who might have secured the order had the solicitor kept
hands off. Naturally, the representative who resorts to such
CHOICE BIRD'S EYE I
Veneers
CUT RIGHT. DRIED RIGHT.
WHITE
WRITE us. FOR S.AMPl-ES.
GRAND RAPIDS VENEER WORKS, ;,~t~'~A':.·P•.ID
practices is not averse to "turning an honest penny," and sug-gestions
of commissions on orders have frequently been made.
"Part of traveling expenses" in return for good offices which
the solicitor will exercise ""hen "among the mills" has been
proposed,
No publisher of legitimate trade papers sanctions or per-mits
the practice of this buncombe and injustice, with which
many advertisers in this field have become acquainted. Re-ferring
to the matter some time ago a victim expressed dis-appointment
over such a deal. "We cannot recall a prom-ise
of any specific order, but running all through the conver-sation
of the solicitor was certainly an implied promise for
business that we should secure and which never materialized.
Naturally we discontinued our advertisement at expiration of
the contract."
It goes without saying that any inquiry for goods or ma-chinery
which comes into the office of a legitimate publica-tion,
through the solicitor or otherwise, is referred to all ad-vertisers
in those lines, thus giving the manufacturers who
are spending their money with the publication the fullest
measure of service.
Advertisers who are approached with the bait o( "a pro-spective
order!! in trade for an advertising contract will do
well to remember that once their advertisement is secured,
other orders which they might get in the natural course of
business may be drawn away from them, to be traded for a
new advertisement. The publication which cannot secure
advertising patronage upon its merits is certainly not worth
consideration.
Prudential Club Members Fined_
On May 20 Judge Landis of the United State District
COLlrtin Chicago, pronounced sentence upon members of the
Prudential Club, composed of manufacturers of church and
school furniture, who had pleaded guilty to the charge' of
maintaining a combination in violation of the Sherman' anti-trust
law. Before imposing sentence Judge Landis said:
"Tn this matter the indictments contain each three counts,
but there is only one offense charged. In a general w:!.~.- this
offense is entering into a conspiracy in restraint of trade. The
terms of the Sherman law, I had assumed the business men of
the United States were familiar with.
"They used the 'assist' or 'straw" bid, the object of which
is to deceive a seller or a purchaser of property. In this case,
when an assignment of a contract was made by Holbrook to
a company in the combination, the intended purchaser of
church or school furniture was made to believe that there
was real competition, when in fact brother members of the
combination received quiet tips to put in bids, but their bids
were to exceed the one of the company to which the contract
had been assigned by Holbrook.
"To my mind this is the most contemptible feature of the
whole transaction. I have seen that kind of trick in practi-cal
operation, and it is very nasty. When I reflect upon the
methods resorted to I wonder why it is men engage in such
a business to get money."
1<1 find in this case that the real offenders are the big of-fenders.
As for the small concerns, it becomes my duty to
avoid closing up such institutions, and it seems that severe
punishment would force some of them into bankruptcy. To
keep them in independent operation is the only hope the
consumers have against the big concerns."
The court then ordered that the respondents be' required
to pay fines as follows:
A H. Andrews company, Chicago $5JOOO
F. H. Holbrook, "managing director" of the Prudential
Club , ".... 5,000
Superior Manufacturing Company, 1Iuskegon, Mich .... 1,000
Owensboro Seating & Cabinet Company, Owensboro,
Ky .. ..
Southern Seating & Cabinet Company, Jackson, Tenn _.
Cincinnati Seating Company, Cincinnati- .
Fridman Seating Company, New Richmond, Ohio :
H. C. Vaught Sons & Co., Parker City, lnd _
Minneapolis Office & School Furniture Company, Minne-apolis,
1finn. _ , 2,250
Illinois Refrigerator Company, Morrison 111. 1,750
Peabody School Furniture Company, North Manchester,
Iud , ..
Haney School Furniture Company, Grand Rapids, Mich.
Hudson School Furniture Company, Logan, W. Va ...
Cotton Belting All Right in Its Place.
"High speed wood working machines can be driven with
cotton belting very satisfactorily "remarked John Waddell
of the Waddell Manufacturing Company. "It does not run
so well on cones, on account of the lack of the stiffness ne-c.
essary in be.lting in changing the speed by shifting."
--_._-
1,500
1,500
2,000
500
500
1,000
500
500
---------------------------------- -- -
The Pittsburg Plate Glass Company
MA.NUFACTURERS AND JOBBER$; 01"
Pla.in and Beveled Mirrors. Polished Plate. Bent Glass. Plate Glass
for Desks and Table Tops.
CARR.ARA GLASS a new product like poHshed white marble.
Our facilities for supplying furniture manufacturers with everything in plate Glass, rough or poLished, large or small, will be understood when we state
that we have eight glass factories, extending from Pennsylvania to Missouri, and fourt~n Mirror Plants located as follows:
New YOl'K Boston Philadelphia &uffalQ Chicago Clnolnftatl St. Louts Minneapolis Atlanta. Kokomo. Ind.
Davenport Crystal Ci~y.Mo. Ford CIf,.. Pa. Kansas CUy.Mo. High Point, N. C.
Largest Jobbers of Wihdow Glass
in the World
Also, our 23 jobbing houses carry beavv stocks in aU lines of glass, paints, varnishes and brushes
and are located in the cities named below.
New York-Hud!!iou and Vandam 8t8. Baltimore--221-223 W. Pratt Street.
B08t00-41.-49 !SudburY, 1-9 Bowker. St&. Bulralo-372-4-6-8 Pearl Street.
Cbicago-142~452 '\"abtVJh Avenue. Brooklyn-63S and 6'31 Fulton Street.
Cincinnati-Broadway Ilnd Court 8t8, Philadelphia-Pitcairn Building, Arch
St. Loui-Cor. 7th Bnd Market Stij. Hnd Eleventh Still.
Minneapolls-500-MO S. TWrd St, . J)avenport--UO~416 Scutt Street.
J)(ltroit-53-fHi La:tned St., E, Cleveland-14S0-4 West Third Street.
Grand Rapidll, Mlcb.-39-41 N. Divlshm Omaha-1608~10-12 lIarmlly Stl'eet.
St. St. Paul-.'J49-lil MInnesota Street.
l"itbibnrgb-lOl-103 Wood Street. Atlanta, Ga.-30, 82 and 84 S. Pryor St.
J\)i)WHnkee, Wis-i92-494 Market St. Slniannah. Ga.-745-749 1Vbeaton Street.
Rochester, N. Y.-Wilder Building, Main Kausa8 City-Fifth and Wyandotte 8ts.
and Exchange Sts. Ril'minJ(hnm. AIR- 2nd Ave. Rnd 29th St.
Sole distrlbutera of
PATTON'S SUN PR.OOF PA[NTS
Wire GIIU;5Best Protection Against Fire
It needs no argument to show what
advantages may be derived from dealing
directly with us,
AGENTS POR THE CQULSON PATENT CORNER. POSTS AND BARS.
Wood
Forming
Cutters
HOFFMAN
BROTHERS COMPANY
804 W. Main Sf.. FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
MANUFACTURERS OF
HARDWOOD LUMBER &.
VENEERS
SPECIALTIES:
~t\\?iPE'5QUARO.AK VENEERS
MAHOGANY VENEERS
We offer exceptional value in Reversible and
One-Way Cutters for Single and Double Spin-dle
Shapers. Largest lists v,.ith lowest prices.
Greatest variety to select from. Book free.
Address
SAMUEL J. SHIMER & SONS
MIL TON. PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
IndianapoUa, In.diana
Write for Information, Prices Etc.
The Universal Automatic
CARVING MACHINE
==== PERFORMS THE WORK OF 25 HAND
CARVERS
~nd does the Work Batter than it can 11eDOJ'eb)l Hand
MADE BY
Ready for Delivery· ••The Classified White Directory
of the Manutacturer:i of Furniture, Pianos, Organs, Bedding, Interior Finishes and
kindred Trades. WHITE PRINTING CO., G..a.nd Rapid.. Mich. - -
5
(,
-- ----
Power
Saved Cut the Corners Labor
Saved
YOUR DRY KILN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR 20% OF YOUR WASTE.
Our new drying process will cut this percentage in two.
Swirls and knots dried as straight, and planed as smooth as clear lumber.
Warping, Checking and honeycombing absolutely prevented.
All this in half the time, with half the power and half the la,bor now required.
Looks good, doesn't it. And we gua,ra,nteeto make it good, in a,n old kiln or
a,new one. Write us, Your dull season is at ha,nd-just the time to remodel
your old kiln or build a,new one with the least inconvenience.
GRAND RAPIDS VENEER WORKS
Dept.K
Waste Grand Rapids,Michigan
Saved
Time
Saved
(Continued from Page 3.)
cat year-June 3D-and must be renewed the same as liquor
or tobacco dealers' licenses. Some of the Grand Rapids fur-niture
manufacturers who filed their applications last winter
did not receive their permits until after June i-just about
when they should be applying for permits tor next year.
The records in the office of the collector of internal revenue
show that most of them have taken Qut permits, established
their store rooms and otherwise com.plied with the require-.
ments of the government rules and regulations. The fore-man
of the finishing room is usually designated as the cus-todian
of the store room.
Heystek & Canfield of Grand Rapids, Mich, who have
qualified as wholesale dealers in denatured alcohol, report
that it is rapidly supplanting wood alcohol for use in the
furniture factori{'s. Their sales for factory use are usually
in five harrel lots and the pn.>.sentprice is 37 cents per gallon.
They claim that the furniture makers prefer the denatured
article because it "goes farther." It docs not evaporate so
rapidly and therefore there is less waste. They concede
that wood alcohol is the better drier, or, rather, that it dries
more rapidly, but claim that rapid drying is not always desir-able-
that it is 11(1t always conducive to durable finish. An-other
point in favor of denatured alcohol is that it does not
injure the eyes of the workmen who use it. Vi/ood alcohol
is known to have nearly destroyed the sight of workmen who
llsed it without proper care.
W. P. Wllllams, who represents Berry Brothers in Grand
Rapids, says that he cannot see that the introduction of de-natured
alcohol has had alJ~' effect on his trade in wood al-cohol.
';V\Te are seHing just as much of it as we ever did."
he saiJ. "That it is better than the denatured article is
shown by the fact that \ve are ~ettitlg 40 cents a g-allon for
it, white the other is sold at 37 cents. Grain ~lcohol is
oily; the finishers do_not like it because it dries too slowly."
H. B. Fairchild, manager of the ITazeltir:e & Perkins
Drug Company, wholesalers, Grand Rapids, states very few
retail druggists are handling denatured a1c0hol. "They ob-ject
to the complicated rules -and regulations," he Ea.id, "and
when we offer them wood alcohol at 40 cents or denatured at
37 cents they take the wood product, rather than be bothered
with the permits, keeping records and making monthly re-ports."
The manufacturers of and dealers in wood alcohol are said
to be pushing their product more strenuously than ,ever. They
have not only met the price of the competing article, but art'
using every means available to convince conSumers that wood
alcohol is more economical and gives better results than the
grain or vegetable product,
I1
Syndicates Are Not So Popular.
Syndicates of late have been more or less exclusive in
their make-ups, differing materially from two or three years
ago, when brokerage house6, individuals, and all sorts of per-sons
had a part in the formation of syndicates. Many
men who were always on the list for syndicate participations
have been missed from those lists for sor.e time. Certain
brokerage houses were always offered a participation in syn~
di;:ates having their origin in certain banking houses, hut bad
losses in one or two syndicate ventures discouraged them,
~l~dthey have ceased to be a factor in that particular branch
of tre investmetlt or speculative markets. Not so long ago
it was accepted as a certainty that membership in a syndi-cate
meant big profits, somedmes without the necessity of
putting up the full participation in actual cash. As a matter
of fact. a majority of the syndicates in the last year or so
have re~lized profits for their members, but a few spectacular
installces on the other side have operated to elminate the
popularity of the syndicate as a healthy investment.-Banker
and Tradesman.
EXPENSIVE ECONOMY.
Experience of the Manufacturer Who Tried to Utilize Second-
Hand Machinery.
1 have just !'icen the conclusion of a ca!:ie of "smat"tness" on
an owner's part that is amusing, though it has a most serious
side for one of the owners of the concern. Two southern
factories were started within a stone's throw of each other.
made the same class of goods, and llscd the same niachinery
as far as possible. One mill, whose owner admitted that he
did not know anything about the principle of machines, and
only wanted results, took a salesman at his word. and, on a
guarantee that his machine would do certain \\'ork at cer-tain
feed, bought it and pt\t it in. By the way, it was a sur-facer,
for two-side work. The other man laughed at him,
and said be was the easiest thing- for a stick machinery sales-man
that he had ever secn.
So, he, the party of the second part, as it \"ere, invest<:;d
in a second-hand machine, that was "as good as ne..v.," and
had been run only eight or ten y<:;;usby every bum of a feeder
in the tOWll. But he could make any machine eome up to
the work of any of these new-fangled notions on surfacers.
So, he got the second-hand machine. 1n the course of time,
both hctorles were ready to run, and both of the planers had
an even start. They have been running for a year, and here
is the result:
The first factory has had its surfacer running day in and
day out and for the last five months it has heen making the
regular three lJjghts a week with a half night extra on the
surfacing for custom \'Vork. It 118s been running for the
greater part of the time on a feed of 20 icet a minute, the
fast feed of leO fec.t being so fast that the truckers could not
keep it out of the way, nor could the two band saws furnish
it with stock to keep up the feed. It t;.lkes two men to feed
jt, and four to take care of the lumber on the i1nishing end,
and it has co"t absolutely nothing but- the oil ~ince it started
nearly a year ago. The same belts are on it, and, from their
looks, it is fair to assume they arc good fOf' two years more.
That is the simple tale of one of them. Then the other!
"Listen to my talc of woe!"
The first machine "va~ too light, it wa, conceded, but it
was next to nothing in cost, and in dressing }i-inch and 9/s-inch
stock, it was heavy enough. Perhaps. that \>,'as so, but
\-vhen it is retnembered that much of this :hi-inch stock was
from dog-boards and miscl1ts, and the machine frequently
had to cut down I-inch or 1.'ih-inch to %-inch at one run, it
wilt he seen that it took a pretty stout machine to stand up to
the work.
This machine stood for a time, but, one by onc, the
litLk g"ean, \vore out, the teeth broke off, and, one evil day,
with a heavy cut, one of the teeth on an upper gear broke off,
dropped in between the next pair and the machine split in
two clear across the frame, bent all the studs on the gears in
the train and \'v"reeked the machine entirdy. (t is now in the
scrap heap. Another old machine was substituted. and it did
fairly well until the stlHls iri it gave way under the strain, and
after two months of dubious service, it, too, went to the ll1-i1l
bone yard.
:Vleantin::e, the boss had c1iscovered a peach of a hJ.rgain
ill a big surfacer way up in l\lichigan in one of the mills that
had "cut out" and quit. I-Ie got it for ju~t half of what the
JJew machine in the other mill had cost. and, as it was ex-acHy
of the same size, it was just the thing. Big and heavy,
it looked strong etlOugh to stand the gaff of such work, <ind
it elme. Can you imagine what a machine would look like
ami wbat condition it would be in if it had been "laid by"
twenty years ago, -without anytlling having been dOlle to put
it in repair? And it was pnt on skids and shipped just as
it was.
The machine and all its parts had been having a game of
7
hide and seek hy the tin-.e it got to the milL The counter-sbaft
had gone through thc shaving hood and the box of
kniv~s, and they had been gamc enough to hang Onto part
of what w~~nt through them, as they held on to thl:_ rim of
two of the pulleys and cracked thc others. The knives suf-fered
a good deal in the encounter, as they had gaps in them
11ntil they resembled a reape.r blade. V..n,en they were ex-amined
for w~ight, they were five ounces out on one set and
nine ounces out on anothcr set. That was'on "dead weight"
only \vhik tl/(cir differe1lce ill H,idth on the ends must have
mnde them a good pound out.
Can you imagine the condition of a machine laid by for
"bout twenty years? \\,'ith a badly sprung journal on the
top cylinder, the box on that end showing it by being worn
down into the: casting, ridges fully le inch deep in the jour-nals,
gear loo.'ic ill several places, the complicated wedge tog-gle
of the enclosed bottom cylinder bent, and out of the little
clamps holding it in pcsition, the feed rolls worn all out of
line, boxes needing new metal, the whole machine had that
indefinable air of being a "has-bcen."
This was the condition of the machjne whell unloaded.
Further examirJation bore out the \vorst fears for its condi-tion,
the attempt to run it being but a story of trouble and
wony, expense and no results. But the main mechanical
Designed by Otto Jiranek, Grand Rapida, Miell.
man of the factory was clearly "nutty" on the subject of
second-hand machines. He would rather lose money on a
:\ccond-hand machine than to make it on a ncw one if he
could only break even sooner or later.
Yow for results: A stl-aight year of a trial is enough to
tell most any story. The one mill have run their modern
machine. for \...h..ich they paid something like $1,400 before it
was in Ttlnl1ing shape in the mill, getting a straight year's Ser-vice
at a fast feed, :finc work, and no'~ a dollar of repairs.
The second man has had a year of wony,vcxation, loss and
1,0 lumber drcssed. T",·,o machines ot a cost of $900 have
been totally mined. Anolhcr machine at a cost of nearly
$700 has taken their place, giving intermittent service, spend-ing
a good part of the time between the mill and the shop.
It has C01-1t over $100 to get it to its present conditiori, in ad-dition
to its original pt-ice. And there is nothing to repre-sent
it but a complicated pile of ",'(Jrn-out machine that had
better he in the junk man's hands.
To sum up, the Erst man paid ab6ut $1,400 for something
that has p"id him well, because he wa" satisfied he did not
kllo\- .... enough to tell an "ble me(:hanic what was best for a
n".ill, and the second man lws nothing to show for it but a.
pilt:' of scrap. One man has as smooth a running factory as
you could find in the !;tate, though he seldom goes into it,
while the other one has a junk shop, with an assortment of
every conceivable sort of pulley, size of shafting and freak of
drive that can be imag"ined or constructed. The first mill
waf; put in from a well-defined plan, and is still running that
\-V,ly, wbile the second has undergone its third complete trans-formation.--
Exchange.
Vose & Everett haVE:closed out their furniture and carpet
bttsi!H~sS at Compton, Cal.
8
Envelope Slip Is a Nuisance.
"Advertising is good in its place, and a necessity in busi-ness
all 'l"ight/' said the treasurer, " but there's such a thing
as carrying it too far.
"Look at this envelope. A few days ago I wrote this firm
asking if they would not send us a check for the money due
us. In reply I received this answer, There was two cents
postage due on it. Opening the envelope I found six circu-lars
about their different fans and ventilators, a slip advising
us to hurry and place our order. and three copies of testi-monial
letters from Users of their goods. I had to look over
all this stuff to find a short note saying they would remit in a
few days."
"Now what do you suppose they sent all those circulars
to me for? I don't know anything about fans and ventilators.
My specialty is greenbacks and silver dollars, and how to get
enough of them for the payrolls. We have a purchasing
agent, and that firm knows it, yet every letter from them, no
matter what department it is for, is filled with printed matter.
Of course it goes into ·the waste hasket, and is just so much
money wasted."
The above is quoted to call attention to the fact that many
firms are making a mistake in their method of sending out
circulars. It is the rule in soIDe offices not to send out a
letter unless some printed matter is enclosed. Usually a
series of slips are printed in suc_h form as to just fit the en-velopes,
and anywhere from one to a dozen are enclosed in
each letter.
Whether this kind of advertising has a value proportionate
to its cost is a question. When a man receives a letter he
wants to know what it is about, and whether it requires an
answer. His mind is taken up with the subject matter of the
letterj and unless the enclosed circulars are connected with
that subject matter, they receive scant attention. In nine
cases out of ten they are thrown into the waste basket without
being read. 1t '\vould be well to look into this method care-fully,
and fwd out if a large percentage could not be eli.minat-ed,
saving money for the sender and time for the receiver.-
C. C. Prescott,
New York Leads in Bills of Lading Frauds.
At a meeting of the national Commission on Uniform
State laws, held in Philadelphia recently, a proposed act to
provide for uniform bills of lading was considered, It was
drafted by Professor Samuel Williston of the law school of
Harvard University, It has the effect of placing bills of lad-ing,
as negotiable instruments nearly all on a par with pro-missory
notes.
Discussion of the measure by representatives of railroad,
banking, commercial and maritime interests showed that the
consensuS of opinion was in favor of the principles of the bill.
There were, however, differences of opinion regarding ..some
of its provisions, especially in the matter of the definition of
the word "value." F. D. Page and Abram 1. Elcus, represent-ting
the Merchants! Association -of New York, suggested the
substitution of New York's definition.
Pointing out that 30 states of the union had accepted the
definition set forth in the act, Francis B. James, chairman of
the committee, said that the definition in the bills of lading
act was the one used in the sales act, warehouse receipt act
and other uniform enactments. In the state of Ohio, he said
it had received the universal indorsement of the boards of
trade and business organizations.
"But," retorted Mr. Page," the merchants of Ohio are child-ren
in the matter of frauds in connection with bills of lading
and warehouse receipts. While such frauds may be rare in
Ohio and other states, in New York the crime is very com-mon
among the smaller merchants of foreign extraction.
Those immigrants were brought up under laws which imbued
th~m with the belief that they could only succeed by- beating
the law, or, in other words, by fraud. It is remarkable the
ingenuity they display, and the variety of frauds they commit
in New York is greater than those committed in all of the
other states together.
Obedience to Law Good for the Railroads ..
In an address recently delivered at a banquet of supply
and machinery dealers' associations in Cincinnati Judson
Harmon of Cincinnati said that the operation of railroads in
strict conformity not only with the letter but with the spirit
of the law is a benefit to the railroads as well as to the ship-pers
and general public.
Mr.Harmon declared that he spoke not as a theorist, but
from actual experience, and told how he had taken hold as
receiv('x of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton and Pere
Marquette systems, comprising 3,5QO miles of track, and em-ploying
17,000 men, and had made them pay where they had
not paid before, simply by obeying the law while the officials
of competing lines were evading it.
Mr. Harmon urged upon .his auditors as extensive ship-pers
to do their part to aid the railroads to serve the public
properly, by loading and unloading cars promptly. He said
the shippers were to blame, in a large measure, for the car
shortage, and in this connection rapped the so-called recipro-cal
demurrage plan. He said railroads would furnish cars
promptly if they could get the cars! and that demurrage,
to he really reciprocal, would tax shippers for failure to
have anything to ship if it taxed the railroads for failure to
,furnish the cars they could not get.
The Greenfield~Talbot-Finlley-Battle Company, furniture
makers of Tullahoma, Tenn., have purchased 2000 acres of
land near Altamont a'nd will build a saw mill "to cut the fin-est
timber in the state."
9
I
~
Il
Gran~ Da~i~sllDlowcPi~e
an~Dust Arrester CompanJ
THE LATEST device for handling-shavings
and dust from all wood-working
machines. OUf twenty years
experience in this class of work has
hrought it nearer perfection than any
other system on the market today. It
is no experiment, but a demonstrated
scientific fact, as we have several
hundred of these systems in use, and
not a poor one among them. Onr
Automatic Furnace Feed System, as
shown in this cut, is the most perfect
working device of anything in its line.
Write for our prices for equipments.
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DET AIL WORK WITHOUT EX-PENSE
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
EXHAUST FANS AND PRESSURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN STOCK
Office and Factory:
208-210 Canal Street
G~AND RAPIDS, MICH.
Citizen. Phone 1281 Bell. Aobfn J804
Qua AUTOMATIO FURNACE FEED SYSTEM
10
FURNITURE FOR SUMMER HOMES.
Oriental Styles Three Hundred Years Old Are Now Popular
With Rural New Yorkers.
Rattail furniture has rapidly increased in popularity dur-ing
the past two years according to a writer for the New
York Sun, 1\'lallufaeturcrs are making extra efforts to adapt
oriental styles to occidental tastes. The most· popular
:styles are not new. 1n fact, those most popular in New York
now were used by the .vealthier classes in India 300 years ago.
In the year 1600 cane panels decorated the bedsteads used in
high class houses of India, and yet they cattle in style over
here only a couple of years ago.
A salesman in a New York store is quoted as saying:
"This year's dc.signs show a remarkable advance over any-thing
yet ShO'l.V11, both in durability and artistic features, and
as a result in city as well as in country houses rattan and wil-low
pieces are popular. A specialty this season is the intro-duction
of leaf and floral designs· into the rattan weaves,
This is an entirely new feature, confmed principally to the
best grade of goods. Another sl)ecialty is the many new
tones of color shown in rattan furniture."
He waved his hand toward a particular section of the de-partment
where saine of the novelties were displayed in a
suite of Oriental rooms, which in woodwork and wall cover-ings
were a copy of those seen in the residence of a high
class Chinaman. The furniture was not, of course, Chinese,
but it gained by the Oriental setting.
There was a set of pale blue rattan, the seats upholstered
with cushions of white and blue cretonne, in one suite an oval
shaped segment of upholstery decorating the centre of the
back of each chair and settee. Tn another the backs had no
t1pholstery at all. In either case all the rattan not covered
was twisted into leaf designs combined ,vith scrolls, and the
shape of the furniture included graceful curves.
A cream white rattan drawing room suite was noticeable.
In this the backs of chairs and settees were not upholstered.
They were too handsome to cover up, the salesman said.
In the back of the settee. which like that of the chairs, was
high with rOllt1ded edg-es, the rattan, delicately fine, was
woven to describe two large oval fans filled in with rattan lace
work and separated with Chinese scrolls, The same idea
,vas carried out in the chairs. A movable cushion of tap-estry
upholstered the seats. ){eaT that was a similar suite
of bisctiit color rattan ",;oven in floral designs, the upper half
of the high backs and the seats upholstered in cream and old
rose tapestry.
Biscuit color and dove gray arc the very newest colors.
A dove gray suite of four pieces. Queen Anne style, attracted
attention. There \vere nO angles in this suite. The sides
and back of the settee and the two large chairs were of uni-form
height, describing a semicircle, and were without uphol~
stering, the bamboo being interlaced to form a combination
of conventional and leaf design.
Many shades of green and of red never before seen in rat-tan
and willow appear ill this season's output and the varie-ties
of enamelled willow are as plentiful as those of natural
finish. A shade between a turquoise blue and a green was
used in one five-piece suite. Another was of tobacco brown
and a third of canary yellow. In the latter the willow was
braided after the fashion seen in a pony carriage and the
cushions were of white and yellow cretonne. This suite in-cluded
a modified ::I.10rrisrocker of beautiful workmanship.
Odd chairs of various designs were noticed in stock, for in-stance
a Sir \Valter Raleigh chair of tobacco brown willow,
high in the back and roomy of seat and with or without mov-able
cushions. The shape at once attracts seekers after nov-elties.
Prairie grass furniture is in a class by itself and it shows,
if anything, even more novelties than the other summer
grades mentioned. It is used both inside and outside the
house, its toughness making it suitable for verandas and to
withstand climatic changes.
Enameled wood beds arc very popular just now in white
and in all sorts of colors: sometimes trimmed at the head and
foot with panels of cretonne or of cane, but oftener plain.
The dining room furniture most in vogue for country
houses, is not unlike mission furniture in design and is of
quartered natural oak, with cane or rush seated chairs. Rivals
to this are Colonial dining room sets of white enameled wood,
the chairs finished with rush seats and backs.
Lumber Company to Operate in Mississippi.
Congressman Fordlley of Saginaw, Frank W. Gilchrist and
his three sons of Alpena, Mich., have organized the Gilchrist-
Fordney Lumber Company, capitalized at $1,200,000. The
company has purchased 50,000 acres of timber land near Laur-el,
Miss., estimated to contain 400,000,000 feet of logs, mostly
pine, with some hardwood. The company also has purchased
the Kingston Lumber Company's plant at Laurel with a ca-pacity
of 150;000 feet a day,
A House Boat on the Lake.
Charles S. Paine, of the C. S. Paine Furniture Company,
has completed the erection of a commodious house boat
on White Fish Lake, thirty miles north of Grand Rapids.
Everything necessary for the comfort of Mr. Paine and fam~
iIy and their guests has been provided. Mr. Paine will en-tertain
a number of friends in the furniture trade during the
mid~summer season.
FAULT.~:.
point where other casters
refuse to turn is ohe Point with
The faultless Pivot Bearing Caster
The FAULTLESS
reoeived Ihe
Hlghesl Award
allhe
World's Fair,
1904, over all
olher oaslers.
Hissupplied
wit h Faultless
Pat e n t Steel
Spring Sockets.
The Fanltless is
interchangeahle;
will fit six differ-ent
sizesof IrO!.l
bed sockets. :-:
'I'heFaultIess has
no weak spots-n
0 mechanical
flaws--il's Fault-lessin
name-in
action-and as a
seller :-: ._.
If you are after a money maker, write to
75he Faultless Caster Mfg.Co••
Nebraska City, Neb.
They only manufaoture
the
M+I.C,,H. IGAN 7IRTI.5'7I.J"\I e &r'!' . $5+
TALK ON VENEERS AND CORES.
Features of the Largest Plant in the World Re:m::ning Op~
erations at Marshfield, Wis.
"There's little new in the veneer business," s,lid Fred K.
:'inkharn, dealel" in furniture m,11:uf:teturers' 5u:)plies, Grand
Rapids, )jich. "The demand for veneers is good," he COIl-tinued,
"but 1 don't know that 1 C<-in tell you anything- of in-terest
to yOur Haders, unless I tell YDU ::,.bout the new plaut
of the Roddis Lumber & Veneer COHillary at l\larshfield,
whith is to resume operations on June 10. That company's
plant has been burned t\vice-the last tineC in February of
this year. It has been completely rebuilL in it little over four
months and is /lOIN ~he largest and best equipped veneer plant
in the world-it is t,,\,o and one-half times larger than it .Va-S
before the last fire.
"The main building is 84 x 270 feet, three stories. There
is an addition of 24 x 150 feet, in which they have installed a
Philadelphia textile dryer that has a capacity of 120,000 feet b
t'~n honrs.
;;'1'hen there is the power house furnished with boilers ag-gregating
600 horse power and a SOD horse pl)wer engjne. All
the old machinery has been discarded and replaced by the
best up~to-date eql1iprr:ent. They have tbree rotary veneer
cutting machines, a new Linden-,an jointer and a Dennis tap-ing
machint':o The latter, I think, is made, or sold at least,
by the Royal Furniture Company of tbis city.
"The plant i~ equipped with automatic sprinklers through-out
so it is not likely to be destroyed by fire again."
\\1\1('11 the subject of cores or backing fo,!" vencers was
mentioned .:'If r. Tinkham said:
"Lumber bas become so scarce and tlit;: cost is so hiRh
that many manufacturers are experimenting with various
kino:is of wnod for cores. Poplar and chestnut make the best
cores. \Vorm boles ~re not objection;l1Jle if tlJe wood is
otherwise sound-the glue fills them up. The 1>t1pply of pop-lar
and chestnut is scarce, howe";'cr, and many have to nse
other kinds of wood-ash, basswood or anything else that
can be found. }'Iany have tried to usc gUlh, but their efforts
are not 3l\.V:lys stlccessful. The troab!c with gum is its te1l-dency
lo buckle-it warps and twists. There is so much oil
or gum in the wood that it difficult to get it out. In order
to get the gum out, the trees are girdled. That kills them
and then tht;:y are allowed to stand a year or more. A por-tion
of the gum dries out. TJ1Cll the logs an,~ steamed in
vats and in that W<lY nearly all the gurn is drawn out, but it
is an expensive process.
Some of the best material for cores nmv comes from the
veneer mills. The cylinders that are left after the veneer
has been cut off-four, (\ve or six inches in diarneter-arc
cut into hoards, stacked Out and allowed to dry in the air
for several months or a year. Then they are put into the
dry kilns am! they come out all rigllt. The supply of that
k:nd of stock is exceQdingly limited, but it is good so far
as it goes. In the early days of veneering the cylinders \verc
considered waste or were cut up for stove wood."
Southern Lumber Freight Trust "Busted."
The supreme court of tlle United States has decided that
the Interstate Commerce COll'triss;ot1 has a rigH to prevent
an unreasonable advance in freight rates. Tl1e suit invoh'ed
a recent raise of two cents pt;:r 100 pounds on lumber shipped
from Georgia to Ohio river points and wa:;; made a test case.
The advance in rates was made by aJl the southern roads
and ol1e of the chargt;:s was thatche roads had acted in con-cert
to raise prices contrary to the aoti-trust laws. It was
shown that some of the roads had not complained of the old
rate as unremunerative. but had explained the advance as in
pursuance of a desire to share in the "phenomenal prosper-ity"
of the country.
11
These saws are
made from No. 1
Steel and we war-ra.
nt every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
\Vrtte us for
Price List
and dilWount
31-33 s. FRONT ST•• GRAND RAPIDS
IMPROVED. EASY and
QUICK RAISl:NG
Belt, Electric and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Power for Furniture Stores
Send for Catalogue aud Prices.
KIMBAll BROS. CO., 1067 N;,lh SI•• Counoil Bluffs, la.
Kimball Elevator Co•• 3~ Prospect St., Cleveland,O.
108 11th St., Omaha, Neb.; 1~9Cedar St., New York City.
ELEVATORS
GLOBE VISE _AND _
TRUCK CO,
Manufacturers of
Strictly up-to-date
quick-acting_ Wood
WOTk~rs' Vis e s.
They lire time
savers and make II
barrel of tnol1ev for
those that use tllem.
Our prices are the
best. Write for
them. We also
make a complete
line of factory aud
warehouse trucks.
Our circulars aTe
cheerflllly mailed
upon request.
GLOBE VISEanG
TRUCK CO.
Grand Rapids. Mich.
Slep~en50nnr~.(0.
South Bend. Ind.
Wood Turnings.
T umed Moulding.
Dowel. and Dowel
Pins.
Catalogue to Mallufac-turers
au i\pplication.
12
Worktime and Playtime.
The majority of boys and young men waste their off-times.
They use them for mild forms of dissipation, and for a loafing
sort of resting which contributes nothing to anything. On
the other hand, many boys and young men, who work hard
during the day, devote most of their spare time to study and
to what they think will be of intellectual benefit to them,
This shows proper spirit, and they a~e likely to succeed. But
there is such a thing as carrying it too far. There are only 24
hams i.n a day, and a part of the day belongs to sleep another
part to resting, another part to diversion, and another part
to work. Noone can profitably work all the time any more
than he can naturally sleep all the time.
The boy or young man who spends all his evenings for
study or for some other hard work would accomplish more
if he gave a part of each evening or a part of his evenings to
resting and to suitable diversion. One can accomplish more
in an hour when he feels like working than he can in several
hours when he is fatigued. Quality of work is worth more
than quantity of work. l\'1any of us over-work and over-do,
under the delusion that this over-work and over-doing will
pile up greater accomplishments. As a matter of fact, the)'
accomplish less. If the mind and body are not given the
rest which belong to them, they will refuse to do their best
work. The proper kind of rest and diversion restores energy.
A period of rest and diversion with a period of work will ac-complish
more than two periods of work without a period
of rest.
Ivlost of us work too many hours, and for many of us
there seems to be no way out of it, and the great majority
of us carry the strenuousness of the shop, the store, or the
office into our evening life. The life of work should not be
completely separated from the Hfe of home, nor should the
. life of the home he entirely separated from the life of work.
Each is but one branch of a common trunk. But the strenu-ousness
of the shop should nnt be carried into the home. The
time will come, and I hope it will arrive speedily, when there
will be :five days of labor, one day for rest and diversion,
and one day for the special worship of God and the up build-of
man's inner qualities, but until that condition arrives, we
must not ignore present conditions, and we must not forget
that it is our duty to contribute our part toward forcing con-ditions
to anive at a better and more civilized state.
For the present, this over-work will continue, and the
business in the near future is likely to be more strenuous and
more trying to men's bodies and minds, There appears to
be no relief in sight. The boy who enters any calling will
fil"'d it l1ecc5sary to work hard, and often to over-work, if he
would H:eet success. It is for him to regulate his 24 hours
so that he may make the most of them under existing condi-tions.
If his work is sedentary, he should take exercise in
the. open air. He should not devote more than a part of
his evenings to heavy reading 0'£. to hard and systematit:
study, and part of his off-time should be used for restful di-version
and ior those pleasures which are all the more plea-surable
because they contribute to progress.-Kathaniel C.
Fowler.
Case Goods Manufacturers Annual Meeting.
The a.nnual meeting of the National Case Goods Manu-facturers'
Associa.tion of America was held at the Auditorium
Hotel, Chicago, on lVlay 8. withh President George P. Hum-mer
of Holland, Mich., in the chair. The method for figuring
cost adopted at the last meeting, was reported as worki.ng
quite satisfactorily and the secretary reported a considerable
increase in the number of factories repres.ented in the associa-tion
during the past six months.
The constantly increasing cost of raw materials and re-cent
advances in wages were discussed and many members
favored an advance in prices of furniture for the summer
selling season. The matter was left open however. to be
considered by the members who are to report their views to
the Secretary to be submitted to the executive committee,
for definite action at a meeting to be held about the middle
of June.
Officers for the ensuing year were elected of follows:
President-George H. Elwell of the Minneapolis Furni-tUfe
Company and the Elwell Kitchen Cabinet Company.
Vice-PresIdent-A. F. Karges of the Karges Furniture
Company, Evansville, Ind.
George G. Whitworth, of the Berkey & Gay Furniture
Company, Grand Rapids, Mich.
The Executive Committee consists of Geo. H. Elwell, Min-neapolis;
M. W. Coolbaugh, Springfield, Mo.; Geo. P. Hum-mer,
Holland, Mich.; E. H. Foote, Grand Rapids; John
Emrich, Indianapolis; A. F, Karges, Evansville; John
Scott, EauClaire, Wis.; John Horn, Chicago; P. A. Peterson,
Rockford, Ill.; Chas. E. Rigley, Owosso, :"1ich.; A. G. Stein-man,
Cincinnati; Frank Upham, Marshfie.ld, Wis.; Chas. H.
Wolke, Louisville; W. B. Schobe.r, Gallipolis, 0.; J.A. Stein-meyer,
St. Louis; Geo. G. Whitworth, Grand Rapids; E. V,
Hawkins, Connersville, Ind.; R. G. Morrow Memphis, Teno;
A. H. Hall, Leominster, Mass,; Clarence H. Burt, PhHa-delphia,
and R. G. Homer, \Varreu, Pa.
J. S. Linton of Grand Rapids, 1:1ich., WC\S re-ap-P0lnted
Secretary by the Executive Committee.
The Chehalis, (\Vasb.) Furniture & 1\lanufacturing Com-pany
has just completed the instaltation of an important addi-tion
to the plant in the shape of a sawmin and veneer cutting
departme.nt.
THIS IS THE CAN
AND LABEL
NEW YORK,
1iI0STON,
PHILADILPHIA,
IiIALTIMORE.
VARNISH MANUFACTURERS
(ESTABLISHED 185e)
DETROIT CANAOIAN F'ACTOR'(, WALKERVILLE ONTARIO
CHICAGO,
CINCINNATI,
ST. lOUIS,
SAN FRANCISCO.
I BERRY BROTHERS'
II Rubbing and Polishing Varnishes
I MUST BE USED IN FURNITURE WORK TO BE APPRECIATED
THEY SETTLE THE VARNISH QUESTION WHEREVER TRIED
WRITE FOR INFORMATION,
FINISHED WOOD SAMPLES. AND LITERATURE'.
BERRY BROTHERS, LIMITED
13
It's a Case of "NO CURE. NO PAY" with Us in the Matter of
DRYING LUMBER
This Cut Shows flow Lumber
.6 Comes Out of Our nUns .6
No.1. An oak center showing that knots after be-ing
dried bv our process, plane as smooth "as straight-grained
lumber.
No.2. A big oak knot center of board and near the
end. Note that board is not checked either side of
knot or on ends and board is as flat as though there
were no knot in it.
No.3. Three knots in a 12inch oak board and at
the end. Note the straight edge, absence of checking
and small waSite required to get into good lumber.
Nos. 4 and 5. Emphasize the fact that knots do not
by au r process warp the wood or check beyond the
knot.
No.6. A piece of oak dried in ten days, green from
the saw, one~half a swirl, Note that it planes just as
smooth as balance of piece.
Compare This to Your Own Output.
OUR PROPOSITION vVewill furnish plans, specifications and instructions to build you a new kiln, or equip
your old kiln with our process and guarantee to jncre.:lsethe capacity of your kiln from
50 to lQO per cent without warping, checking, honeycombing or case hardening your lumber, or refund' your tnoney. We
can save SO per cent of your waste and one-third of the labor cutting up the lumber. Write for question
blank-mention the rvIichigan Artisan.
GRAND RAPIDS VENEER WORI1S
GRAND RAPIDS. MICHIGAN
Concrete Is Not Fireproof.
"The term 'fireproof' is about as much misunderstood as
1S the term 'fire. prevention/ JJ says F. \TV.Fitzpatrick, exe-cutive
otTlcer of the International Society at Building In-spectors,
in Fire. He continues: "In the 6rst case, it is
foolishly imagincd tbat the mere protection ot certain struc-tural
parts of a building produces absolute: immunity to
those and all other parts of that structure. This is as great
a folly as that other that permits people to maintain a few
empty buckets about their premises and hang up a half dozen
glass bottles containing some mysterious liquid and then com-placently
go about their busines~, satisfied that their building
is fuJJy protected, and indeed the protection is so complete
and perfect that they need carry no insurance!
"A fireproof building is one in which the structural parts
are absolutely incombustible, first and foremost, and then
these are to he protected again with some material that in-sures
that at no point can these structual parts be assailed by
fire. Of course, the Jess damageable this protection is in it-self
the less will it cost to repair in case it is assailed by fire
or water. In this connection it may not be amiss to quote
from the report of the Committee of the American Sodety
of Civil Engineers, that has been at work for a year' collecting
data anent the San Francisco earthquake and fire, and that,
referring to the re-inforced concrete buildings so much dis-cussed,
~ldvises tha.t: 'As integral structural parts they (rein-forced
concrete columns, girders, beams and floors) should
be fireproof as well as similar members of a steel frame strtl-ture.
For Concrete is Destroyed by Fire Nearly as Quickly as
Steel.'
"But to continue with our fi.reproof building, not only must
the structure be protected as above described, but it 1111.1bset
designed in a fireproof manner. Its units of space should be
small; its stories absolutely cut off one from another by en-closjng
stairnrays and elevators.; its roof should be as fire-proof
as its floors or walls; its windows and doors should
be wire glazed or otherwise safeguarded against external at-tack;
t11erc should be ample water supply, hose and connec-tions;
a sprinkling system il1 many cases is desirable; auto-matic
fire alarms are not an extravagance, and everything
should be done that intelligence and experience tell us is ne-cessary
to flTst and foremost cut the possibility of fire do-..vn
to the smallest space we can; have it so that only the contents
of that area can be affected and th~t the structure can in no
wise be harmed or used as a vehicle for carrying that incip-ient
fire to the contents of other spaces, and then to have all
the spaces or units of a building so provided and protected
that fire in anyone of them can be quickly and, if possible,
automatically extinguished.
"There, and there only, have you a fireproof structure."
Will Test That Anti_Blacklist Law.
Tbe anti-blacklist la,v, passed by the Texas legislature at
the recent session, is to be tested in the courts. The law is
so stringent in its provisions against the discharging of em-ployes
that many lawyers thjnk it is invalid. The test case
was started by an employe of an oil company who claims
to have been discharged "without good and suft"icient cause."
Lumbermen's Combine "Busted."
The Lurnbermell"S Bureau of Credit, of Toledo, Ohio, has
sl1rn;ndered its charter to the Secretary of State and dis-c.
ontinued business. It was compostd of fourteen retail lum-ber
dealers and had a nominal capital of only $1,000. The
dissolution was due to indir.tments by the Grand jury, for
viol<].tingthe Valentine anti-trust law to which the members
pleaded guilty and paid small fines.
14 .:f'~ JYLI9,.HIG ?IN
TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING.'
On Narrow Lumber a Cir~ular and Planer Beats a Band Saw
and Sander for Re-Sawing.
Don't we overdo the hand S;:lW business. some times? Is
all this effort to\vard "band-s;nved" lumber well directed?
Sometimes the writer thinks this can be pushed a little too
far. Here is a case that has been under study ior three
months.
A concern 'which had been funning a circular resaw and a
planer was "convinced" that they were lostng motley fooling
with a circular. They were funning a 19-9l1agc saw, thick cen-ter
and the kerI was but a little over rJ inch and the output
was sleddy and about as fast as any hand the writer has ever
seen. But good illustrations and some good talk got them
interested in the band saw proposition. Added to the saw
part of it the fact was developed that instead of a
planer that took 50 much thickness to dress onj a double
sander was "the thing," finishing stock right from the saw
w1th both sides snl.Oother than any planer could make it.
It looked good. There is no doubt that the prospect was
alluring. But of the results. As a box maker ,,\'as a mill
man~ the writer wanted to know how this was coming out.
And the results up to date arc about as follows. The band
saw was put in, and the two saws that came with the machine
did good work for a while. But the circular filer was no
band filer, and soon thc work was a sight to behold. The
sander "vas a new thillg, and it took a skillft:l man to run it,
and the work that came from this new outfit was not half as
good in quality nor within two-thirds of the quantity, done
by the old machines, and here was a situation worth studying.
The machine makers sent a "skilled expert." For ten
days that saw -and sander ,vent into all sorts of experiments.
Nothin' doin'. The expert finally went home, and left the
mill man up against this condition. The saw was not doing
within half as good or as much work as the old circular, and
the kerf was more than that of the circlllaI". Then, to keep
from having the machines thrown out, two more experts came
in from the factory, and at present they arc straining their ef-forts
to see what they tun do to beat an old circular that
runs with a 19-9uage sa,,, on stock ten inches and less.
I believe this is all a mistake. The band has its uses,
and it will stand quite a lot of work, but when it comes to
resawing stock ten inches wide or less, and having it done
Citizens' Telephone 1'702.
1Louis 1babn
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 Livingston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
smoothly, the mill or bOK man who thinks he can improve on
the feed or finish of the old cirCUlar resaw is going up against
something that it ,vill cost money to find out he cannot do.
A circular won't cut wide. tumber as well as a band, and
there is no !c)l1ger a question about that, but milts that have a
good circular a11d a man at something like $2.50 a day that
can file them to do good work, arc simply throwing money t:l
the birds in trying this ne'w-fangled idea of resawing with a
band and finishing with a sander.
That work can be done, there is no doubt of that. But
it cannot be done by the n"len who can run a circular and Ht~
tie planer successfully. And the difference between $2.50
and from $4 to $5 a day is a darn sight morc than this ma-chine
combination call show in results.
As soon as anyone has anything to say against a band
saw, there is a suggestion of a "back number." But there
is such a thing as too much oia good thing.
There is no advantage over a circular in feed and not
nearly as smooth a finish to the hand work as there is to the
circular, so it takes more to dress off the saw marks from a
banq than from a· circular and the band makes no more lum-ber
in a given time, with the added expense of high-priced'
filer!'- for the band, when we can get men at a good deal lower
price who can beat the band work all day long.-Pa<:kages.
Workmen's Compensation Laws.
There has been considerable discuss10n in insurance circles
recently of the general movement to secure the passage of
workmen's compensation acts by state legislatures. The
SOMETHING NEW
WE.have perfected a new GOLDEN 04.K OIL
STAIN without the use of asphaJtum OT
acid.
This stain is the strongest and most pene-trating
stain on the market. It entirely pene·
trates the wood, leaving no surplus on the sur-face
to penetrate with the filler.
Samples furnished on application.
CRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHINC COMPANY
65~'il t:\..LS,WORTM AVE .. G'UIND RAPIDS, MICH.
movement seems to be an effort to apply in the concrete the
principle that society owes something to the operative who
is injured in the course of his occupation irrespective of
whether or not the employer was negligent. In fact, it is
the same principle which to a greater or less degree has led
the legislatures throughout the country to set aside ~ome of
the old common law defenses to a claim of negligence, When
this principle is embodied in statutory law, employers will
pay a good deal morc for their liability insurance than they
do today. Speaking generally, the premium rates (as under
the workmen's Compensation Act no\-v operative in England)
will approximate the sum of the current rate for employer's
liability and workmen's collective insurance",.
There arc many employers in the country who make it a
practice to pay at least half wages to an injured employe~
when there is "no liability" indicated. The files of a large
casualty insurance companies show many cases where the as-sured,
under an employers' liability policy, has accepted a set-tlen:.
ent of this kind without seeking reimbursement from
the company. It seems that this furnishes the a.;rent with
tbe best possible material with which to solicit l,vorkmen's col-lective
insurance. The e,tr,ployer would then be enabled to
establish this terr.porary "disability expense" upon a stable
annual basis proportioned to his annual payroll for product-ive
operation. Tn addition, it wotlhl enable him to secure in-surance
to cover the death or permanent disability of an em-ploye
due to an accident covered by the contract,
The broker or agent contrOlling an employer's liability
risk can double his commission by writing a "collective" pol-icy.
It should be borne in mind that, while commission rates
are lower on the Hcollective" line than on employers' liability,
yet the premium rates, on an average, are much higher.
John Wanamaker. Incorporated.
A news dispatch from Harrisbmg, Pa., states that John
\Vallamaker and his two sons-Thomas B. and John R-will
form a corporation to manage the Wanamaker mercantile in-terests
in New York and Philadelphia. The company is to
be known as "John \Vanamaker, Incorporated."
----------------------------- --
/ 10 Spindle Machine
Aliso wade with 12, 15, 20 and 25 Spludlea.
DODDS' NEW GE.AR
DOVETAILING MACHINE.
This little lU~bine has done more to perte<lt the drawer work
of furniture manufacturers than anything else in the fll:rDi~
ture b'Ude. Fol' fifteen YCIUBit hUI!!made perfect-fittiug,
vermin-proof, dove~tailed stock a t>ossibility. This has
!men accomplis-hed at reduced cost, IUI the machine cutlll
dllve-tuils in gangs of from 9 to 2-l at oDe oPeration.
ALEXANDER DODDS. Grand Rapids. Mich.
Repl'esented by SCHUCHARDT &: SCHUTTE at Berlin,
Vienna, Stockholm and St. PetersbUl.'g.
Represented by ALFRED H. SCHUT1.'E at C(liogne. Bms-sets,
Liege, Paris, MUan and Bilbao.
15
USE A
MORTON KILN
IT WI~~ ENO YOUR
DRY KILN TROUBLES
Does not warp or check lumber.
THE MOST PERF"ECT MOIST AIR
KILN ON THE MARKET. \ TRUCKS, CANVAS DOORS, RECOR-ING
THERMOMETERS and other snp-plies.
Write for catalog H which tells HOW
TO DRY LUMBER.
MORTON DRY KILN co.
218 L" SALL& ST., CH'CACO.
The "ABC" MOIST AIR fiILN Improves the
"Worhing Quality" of Lumber
Note the experience of the R.obbin. Table Co.• Owosso. Mich.:
"Re-plviIlg- to yom favor of May 7th-are pleased to advise that th .. dry kilns whkh you built for us are perfectly satisfactory; in fact, we had no
idea that there could be so much difference in the working quality of timber as we find in your moist air systetn over the old system we were using."
Shall we send you our ca.talogue No. 166 MA?
AMERICAN BLO\AlER COMPANY. Detroit. Mich.
NE.W YORK CHICAGO ATLANTA LONDON
Quantity and Quality
SOME peopl. look to QUANTITY without regard to QUALITY
Otb.et5want QUALITY. but can't get it and QUANTITY at
the sante time. The factorY that is equipped with the
Mattison No.5 Table Leg Machine
get> hoth QUAUTY and QUANTITY. Both aro ",.ubalto proht-making
these days. Let us send you our printed matter. It may open
your eyes-may convince yOll lhat your present machines and methods
are not up~t().odate; that is. un!e;s you already have Mattison machines.
C. MATTISON MACHINE WORKS
&63 FIFTH STREET. BELOIT I WISCONSIN, U. S. A.
Asking Congress to Tackle the Timber Problem.
Arthur M. \Vight, manager of the National Association of
Box ~lanufadurers has issue.d a circular to the members of
the organization, which will be of interest to furniture man-ufacturers,
and all others who use wood as material. It reads
as follows:
"The census of I8BO-contained an estimate of the timber
stumpage of the United States at 856,290,100 M. feet. Since
1880, the actual cut of timber, as shown by available stat~stics,
has been over 700 billion feet. At that rate, the entire timber
supply of the United States, which is being cut at the rate
of more than 34,000,000 M feet per year, will be exhausted
in five years! This 'we know is impossible.
"The census of 1900 gave an estimate of the stumpage then
standing at 1,390,000,000 M feet. Others estimates have also
been made showing the standing timber at the present time
to be about 2,000,000,000M feet. AU of them are guess work.
"It is well known that there has been an advance in the
price of lumber of about 100 per cent. in eight years, and
this advance is hascd on the increased scarcity of lumber, and
the increased cost of carrying' it to the central markets, be-cause
the standing supply is now so far therefrom.
" Our greatest source of supply is now 011 the Pacific
Coast. An estimate of this supply made this year shows
that there is 700,658,080 M feet. If the annual lumber cut of
the United States should be taken from this supply exclusive~
ly, it would be depleted in twenty years, at the present rate
of cutting.
I'The National Bureau of Statistics says-'Practicatly the
whole world is asking far American waod and its products."
The United States Forest Service declares that the timber of
the United States is being cut three times as fast as it is
growing.
"Is it not time something was done? Like all good busi~
ness men, should we not know first where we stand? Let
us stop guessing and estimating and KNOW the exact amount
of staqding forest timber i.n this country. The' time to do
this is in 1910, when the next official census is taken. It is
an immense piece of work, but perfectly practical. 'I The ma-chinery
for it already exists in the Bureau of the a,ensus and
in the Forest Service of the United States. To i authorize
these bureaus to do the work is all that is necessi~ry.
"Will you assist in this work by requesting you±- Member
of Congress to vote for a resolution to authorize the Bureau
of the Census and the Forest Service to incorporate!:this work
in the census of 191O?JJ '
,
. Crisis in Belgium Furniture Factories. I
According ta a report from American Consul ~. P. At-well
of Ghent, Belgium, some of the furniture makers of that
country must emigrate or find other employment. IHe says:
\
The furniture manufacturing industry of Malines is the
most important in Belgium, and large quantities of American
lumber are imported each year for use in the factories. This.
industry is now nearing a very serious crisis, caused principal-ly
by the high prices of lumber and other articles necessary
in the making of furniture. The -prices of oak, walnut, and
mahogany have increased from 30 to 40 per cent, according
to species and quality, and the same may be said of supplies
made of iron and copper, such as locks, hinges, and do'or
knobs, all of -which have increased from 10 to 15 per cent;
varnish, turpentine, and glue incrc<lsed from 5 to 8 per cent,
while the price of glass of all kinds increased approximately
10 per cent.
H is thus easily understood that the cost price of all ar-ticles
of furniture has considerably increased. Manufac-turers,
with few exceptions, are without stocks on hand, and
it may be said that the prices have gone Ul} from 30 to 40 ?er
cent. It is quite natuul that with the increased prices pre-vailing
orders afe scarce, the retail dealers deliberately refUS-ing
to purchase at the increased prices. The situation has a
very serious effect on the manufacturers of less importance;
these, fil1dingthemsclves without orders, will be obliged to
close their workshops, and the result will be that nearly 3,000
furniture makers will find themselves without work.
Slander on American Machinery,
Here is someth-ing that will convey a new idea to most
readers and it will not be endorsed by men who are well post-ed
on the subject. The statements are certainly misleading
when applied to wood working machinery:
According to a report furnished to the British Government
by Captain Kennedy, director of the public works department
in Soudan, he finds that British firms are defectively repre-sented
in that part of Egypt, and that all American machin-ery
is "absolutely inferior." As regards the American ma-chinery,
he says:
"A certain amount of special plant has been received from
America, and this, though excellent in design, has been in
every single instance of an inferior quality structurally. For ex-ample,
some well-boring plant-of the American oil-type-though
admirably designed, was of the very worst descrip-tion,
with bulty castings and beariilgs, and unfinished machine
work. Some stearn TOad rollers also, designed for special
work, were found to be manufactured and finished in a man-ner
that certainly fell far short of the ordinary British stand-ard.
Tn consequence of this, it has in some cases been found
advisable in the case of special plant of American types, to
obtain the detailed designs from America and have the manu-facture
of the same carried out in England."
The Kynder Manufacturing Company, capital $100,000,wm
make furniture and fixtures in Chicago.
------- ---- ---- --
I
,
, ~
L.'. ,i
INSIST ON HAVING
Morris Wood ~ ~on5' ~olid ~teel Qlue JOint (uners
for there are no other.r U ju.rt aJ" good."
They cut a clean perfect joint always. Never burn owing
to the GRADUAL CLEARANCE (made this way only
by us). require little grinding, saving time and cutters,
No time wasted setting up and cost no more than other
makes.
Try a pair and be convinced. Catalogue No. 10 and
prices on application.
MORRIS WOOD&. SONS
Thlrt.,._two years at 31-33 S. Canal8treet. CHICAGO. ILL.
Mr. Manufacturer-Do you ever consider what joint gluing eoSl:s?
The sepan,lou and wooden wedges, if you use lhem and many do, are a
large item of expense aCCQunt$; but lhis is small compared to wage ae-c.
ounts of workmen who wear them Qut with a hammer, and then a
large per cent of the joints are failures by the insecurity of this means.
RESULT, has to be done over again, if possible. If you use inde~
pendent screw damps the result is beuer, but slower, altogether too slow.
Let us tell you of something better, PALMER'S CLAMPS. AU
tl:eeland iron. No wedges. no separators. adjust to any width. clamp
instantly yet securely, releases even faster. Positively one~th.ird more
work with ooethird Jess help. In seven .'!izes up to 60 illches, any
thickness up to 2 inches. 200 laetories convinced in 1906. Why not
you in 1907} Althongh sold by dealers everywhere let us send you
p"ticul.". II. f. Palmer 8 Sons, 01'10550. MiGh.
FOREIGN AGENTs: ProjeCtile Co., London, £ngla,nd.
Schuchardt & Schutte, Berlin, Gennany.
---FOR:----
HARDWOOD LUMBER
NOT LIKE OTHER TALLY ~HEETS.
C. A. JOHNSON, Marshfield, Wis.
"u.otary Style" for Drop Carvings, EmbosS6d Mouldings, Panels.
EMBOSSING AND DROP CARVINQ MACHINES.
])[-achines tor all purposes, and at pl'lces within tbe reach of
nil. Every nlucblne bas our guarantee lIgnlost breakage lor one
year.
"'.awral Style" for la:rge CBIl!wity beavy Canlngs aod Dee))
Eml:.Oss11lg8.
We have the Macblne yl)U want at a 8nt18faetory price. Write
for descriptive clnnlaJ:08. Alsl) make dies tor all makes 01 Ma~
chinel;.
UNION EMBOSSINO MACIiINE CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
17
18
ESTABLISHED 1880
,','
~/~~~ ~ ~
- -
PUBLISHED 1ST
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
ON THE: 10TH ANC 28TH OF lEACH MONTH
OFFICE-2-20 L.YON ST•• GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
ENTERED AS IIIATT!R OF THE IIfCOND CLAsa
In the light of recent eV'¥lts, it does not require a sixth
s~nse or anything like clairvoyancy to see that any organiza-tion
of manufacturers or dealers is liable to get into trouble
with the government authorities and those that are supposed
to operate secretly are in greater danger than those that are
conducted openly or publicly. The Sherman anti-trust law
has been given a wide interpretation by the judicial authori-ties
and under present conditions the members of any or-ganization
that attempts to maintain unreasonable prices or
places restrictions on sales are liable to find themselves in
trouble. This does 11ot,or should not, mean that the organ-izations
must be prohibited or abolished. In these days of
intense competition they arc not only necessary, but, if fairly
conducted, are beneficial to dealers and consumers as well as
to manufacturers, To avoid trouble with the federal or state
authorities all buyers must be treated fairly~all must be
treated alike. It will not do to refuse to sell to certain deal-ers
while others are allowed easy terms and reasonable prices.
The right of organizations to fix rules and terms under which
their members will do bu~iness has not yet been attacked.
It is only arbitrary and unfair oppressive discrimination that
the government is seeking to prohibit. The association or
orgaulzation that fixes reasonable prices and terms and makes
them available to all "vho may apply is not likely to be mo-lested.
In short application of the open shop principle to t~e
buying and selling of products as it is being applied to labor
will place members of manufacturing and trade organizations
out of danger and banish fear of grand juries.
*1* *1* *;* "'1*
Officials ·of the Cincinnati & Muskingum Valley railroad
claim that the two-cent fare law has worked a serious loss to
their road, which is entirely in the state of Ohio. They
figure the loss for last year at 19.9 cents pcr train mile, but
have to admit that the loss was 17.5 cents pcr train mile dur-ing
the previous year, when they were 110t bothered by
the two-cent law. Since the law went into effect the num-ber
of passengers carried increased 3.4 per cent, while the
passenger earnings decreased 3.9 per cent.
*1* *1* 'I' 'r*
The O'~eill-James Company of Chicago claim their estab~
lishment to be "the largest premium hOL\Sein the \vodd."
The house makes it possible for retailers "to g-ive a $25.00
Busy Bee talking machine, free, to every home keeper" with
out cost to the- merchant handling the. same. Every home
contains Ol1e or more talking machines, and the cost of main-taining
the same is sometimes quite appalling. But no one
of sense would live without one, and the castles5 ta\k1ng
machine offered by the firm mentioned would not be con-sidered
a satisfactory substitute.
*1* *1* *1'" *)*
One of the strongest snpporteTs of the exposltion plan
for selling furniture, recently stated that he sold ninety-five
per cent of his output, (which amounts to several hundred
thousands of dollars in value annually) during the exposition
seasons in Grand Rapids. He needs no argument to prove
the practicability of the plan.
The man who invented discounts evidently did it with th~
laudable intention of encouraging prompt payment by mak-ing
it worth while. It has served its purpose very well, too,
but, likemal1ygoodthings.itis frequently put to unwise Use,
and, as a result of this abuse, discounts are somewhat akin to
the dog that kept had company till it lost a certain measure
of respect.
*1* *1' *1* *1*
A "reasonable" advance has been made by the manufactur-ers
of furniture for all purposes. An t1nreasonable advance
at this time might impel the retailers to write to the manu-facturers
of Canada for catalogues and price lists. The Ca-nadians
have cheap lumber.
*1* *1* *1* *'1*
That New York insurance agent is probably right in his
opinion that some day we will have unbtirnable cities, but
when his prophecy is fulfilled what wlll become of the insur-ance
agents? Will they take up the ft1rniture business?
*1* *1* *1* *1*
Many of the manufacturers of Grand Rapids are spending
a con·siderable part of the current month in the taking of
the semi-annual accounts of stock Not always a pleasing
diversion. But the "Kicks Coming" are soft and low.
"'j* *1* *1* ""1*
Wonder just what the real, simon pure, genuine exper-ienced
salesmen think of all the different ideas that have been
evolved during the past two years for' doing away with the
middleman or salesmanship in various industrial lines?
"'1* *1* *1* "'1*
Large- nttmbeTs of jobs have been thrown on the markets
during the past sixty days. To what extent these sales will
affect the July season is a matter only tJ-.~ near future can
solve.
"'1* *!* *t* "'1*
Let's see. Howald will you be when the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company begins to cut ties from the trees that are
being planted on the Allegheny mountains. this. year?
*1* *1* *1'" *1*
The lumber users of today owe a duty to the future that
should inspire them to co· operate in every ra.tional movement
for the conservation of our forest resources.
*)* *1* *1* *1*
Any fool can find fault and create discouragement, but
it takes a wise man to eliminate faults by recognizing and
cultivating the good traits in others.
1111* *1* *1$ *!*
Exhibitors in the exposition towns are putting their lines
in readiness and calmly await the opening of the season.
*1* *1* *1* *'1*
Call the "left over" a sticker no more, It is 110W called
a "spiff" by the high grade merchant.
*1* *1* *!'" *1*
The better the cOf!ditiolls of your plant the better class
of men will find their way to it.
*1* *1* *1* *1·
The "periods" will be strong features of the new fall lines
of furniture.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
The check book is the best guide book for the traveling
sales.man.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
The ollly undignified job is loafing.
Enla.rging Their Plant.
The Valley City Desk Company have had a very success-ful
year, and have commenced the erection of a large addi-tion
to their plant, in anticipation of a much larger business
during the year commencing with July 1. A large line of
office desks is manufactured.
-SEE~~~
West Michigan Machine & Tool CO" ltd.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
fo .. UIGU GRaDE PUNCUES and DIES.
SYDNEY oJ. OSGOOD S. EUGE.NE' OSGOOD
OSGOOD & OSGOOD, Architects.
FACTORY CONSTRUCTION AND
DESIQN'NC A SPEC IA L T Y.
GRANO RAPIDS, MICHIGAN.
lr YOUfDfSIGNS arc right. people want the Good ••
That makes PRICES right.
<tlarence 1R. 1bfUs
DOES IT
163 Madison Avenue-eitizens Photle1983. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
A. L. HOLCOMB ~ CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
OROOVINO SAWS
up to 5-16 thick. - _
Repairfng- •• Sa.tisfaefion gu iIoran(eed.
Citizens" Phone 1239.
21 N. Market St .• Grand Rapids. Mlch.
WHITE PRINTING CO., GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
PRINTERS OF CATALOGUES
and everything needed by business men
R. H. RUPPER /;.\?t~I~1~
ManuElI.d.urerof Machine and Carving Tool8. All
kind~of Woodworking Tools ta ordeI-ShaperHeadr;.
Jointet" Heads, Spindle Carver Cutters and <':Verythinll
in took
Hard Work, Responsibility and Low Wages.
Probably the poorest job i5 that of shipping clerk, write5
Robert Blair in the Chicago Tribune. The men ''''ark hard
and there is EttIe variety to make their day interesting, While
the work seems to be v.nied with the nailing of crates and
loading of ';\.:agans, receiving goods and keeping an account of
the day's shipments, it is a dun grind, the same thing every
day; and the pOor salaries paid make the job undesirable to
those who have push and energy_ 110st of the positions are
filled by men ..v.ho have 105t all ambition for anything higher
and who plod along daily like machines, hopi]]g ior the end
of the week and pay day, ,~..-hel1they may have a Ijttle enjoy-ment
for a time with the small s;tlarjes they earn.
Handling heavy boxes and creates is no easy thing and-the
shipping clerk must be strong and healthy. It happens fre-quently
that telegrams are received by firms from· out-of-town
(:ustomers who order goods and ,"'ant them shipped the same
day. It may be after 3 o'clock in the afternoon that SUch an
order is received and the shipping clerk must halt"" the goods
ready for dclivery in time to get to the freight house before
dosing time. I Nearly every large concern has a head shipping clerk and
f some as~istants and the bosses get the most money and do
L~__
19
We can help you. Time
saved and when done
leavesare bound (by your:-
",If) and indexed by Roo"
or departments.
BARLOW BROS.,
Grand Rapids, MiClb.
WRITE RIGHT NOW_
Michigan Art Carving CO.
-----IFOR
WOOD CARVING of all kinds.
Mention Michigan Arti~an_ GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.
WRITE
M. P. TmfLf &. CO.,
242 S. Front St., GR4NOR4PIOS.MICII.
IF YOU WANT THE BEST
FURNITURE PHOTOGRAPHS
West Side 36 Inch Band Saw Machine,
Gleason Palent Sectional Feed Roll,
WEST SIDE IRON WORKS,
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. s. A.
MICHtaAN ENORAVINO CO.
Grand Rapids, Micb.
EN(JI{A.VBI{S BV A.ll PI{OCBSSES.
the lea5t work. The assistants do the heavy work., but they
have little worry. The head of the department must keep his
eyes and ear5 open at all times, tr-usting no one. If anything
is wrong in the department he is held responsible by the firm.
Such a little matter as pasting the wrong label on height
is a mistake tllat means considerable trouble to him. The
wrong customer gets the goods, and in nine cases out of ten
will open the box or crate and examine the contents merely
Ollt of curiosity_ The goods are damaged when they finally
arE'.returned to the shipping clerk, and extra freight charges
help to pDt the firm in anything but good humor.
It j~ said that anyone who is physically able to stand the
hard work can get a position as shipping clerk with any of
the large [inns. Experience is not necessary, and this alone
is what cheapens the job and keeps the ranks of the shipping
clerks :fined with undesirable men. The good man who hap-pens
into the position soon learns that there is 110 advance-ment
for him and gets out.
The Southland Turpentine Company, with headquarters in
New Orlean5, will build a branch plant at Lake Charles, La.,
,:osting ~15,OOO,
20
OPPORTUNITIES ARE NOT LIMITED.
Effects of Trusts and Department Stores on Retailers and
Those Who Would Be Merchants.
(From an article written by James H. Collins for the Saturday
Evening Post, Philadelphia.)
Kow, how abotlt the young man starting in life to-day; who
fee~....that he has within himself the making of a prosperoltS
merchant? What changes have been wrought in retail con-ditions
since Wanamaker and Marshall Field began? How
large ,,,ill the trusts loom on his horizon?
Fifty years ago it made little odds where the path of
glory led. \iVhere it began was ill a country store, and the
neophyte matriculated by_ sweeping out the place and wash-ing
the windows. Mr. Rogers started there to be an oil king.
Rockefeller started in a commission store. 1Ien like vVan-amaker
and Field became clerks and stayed in the retail
line, and even General Grant's real career dates baek to
his clerkship in Galena. It seems rather curious to find so
much ability coming up from the retail store, until one goes
back and looks carefully. Then it becomes apparent that,
at that time, there wasn't any other place to start, unless one
wanted to be a farmer.
To-day the young man who is not especially attracted
by the retail career can find a number of other cntrance-points
to Life. How about the youngster who really wants
to be a merchant-who is willing to begin by sweeping out,
if necessary-who would kecp his shop in the hope that it
will keep him?
In previous papers it was shown that the trusts have, if
anything, immeasurably increased the nt1.mber of salaried
places and amount of salary. It was showing too, that
perhaps, the independent manufacturer has fair opportunities
to hold his own, even against a trust.
In the retail trade of this country there have undoubtedly
been more radical changes brought about the past quarter-century
than in either of these other fields. The trusts them-selves,
as manufacturers or controllers of manufactured goods,
may not bear so heavily upon the retailer as has been asserted.
Many of them need him in their plans, just as they need the
able salaried man. Other forces, however, are revolutioniz-ing
retail conditions, If one applies this Jnose word "trust"
to everything that makes for concentration, large-scale dis-tribution,
narrowing of profits, etc., then some of these forces
may be classed as trust activities. But other conditions are
far outside, even, of this wide classification.
The retail merchant is certainly facing some ugly facts.
FiTSt, there are pseudo-trust influences, three in number: the
department, store, the mail-order house, and the chain of
stores operated by one management. The latter is eithe.r a
department store spread out over a whole city, with its econom-ies
in buying, or system of shops scattered ovcr the whole
country that carries one line of goods direct from manufac-ttner
to consumer, also with resutant economics A. T. Stew-art
did a gross business of sixty~.five million dollars a year,
but a large portion of this was wholesale. In Chicago to-day
are two mail-order concerns, whose business is of a retail
natllre, competing with retail merchants, and each of them
does nearly as mt1c.h business as did Stewa.rt both his whole-sale
and retail establishments. All these changes in retail
trade are based on natural conditions-the growth of popu-lation
in cities, the perfection of mail and freight service, the
increase in publications, the nationalization of demand.
The retailcr is also a buffer between manufacturer and
consumer. One tri.ms his profit to meet competition in pro-duction,
while the other trims it because the -cost of living
has -.advanced.
He is even tip against what some believe to be the greatest
American problem-the servant question. Thousands of small
shops ill the large cItIes would have no clerks at all did not
the proprietors rear their own. Small shopkeeping has drifted
largely into the hands of the thrifty German and Jew, who
put t.heir wives, sons and daughters behind the counter. The
old-type retailer, too, works harder for his money than allY-
'1ody else nowadays.
Whether there is as much profit to-day in a modest retail
business as a gencration ago is rather a complex questiOll.
Thousa11ds of small merchants still amass comfortable com-petences
in trade. They may not make as much proportionate
to the increase in eost of living. Their rewards appear small
beside those of n,anu{acturcrs, and even of salaried meu.
But they are often men who have risen from the ranks of
wage-camers, and might not have done ~s well in other fields.
For the young feltowwho b.:ls,gennine retail ability there
are unqt1.cs,tionably larger opportUl:1ties ,than ever before. He
must look for them in new places, hpwever. Under some
(":ircumstal1ces his most attractive field may lie in a salary with
a great merchandising organizatifl1l. Under others he mny
build up a far-reaching organization of his own. As tlte pTO-prietor
of a single retail business he may, by unusual ability,
earn a satisfactory profit. And lt is held by most persons
in the wholesale al1d manufacturing' trades that there is still
room for a moderate success where a man of only average
ability cnters retailing.
Perhaps the best way to crystallize this matter is to draw
pictures of two typical retailers-the man of average ability
and the man of unusual ability,
There are abollt two thousand retail druggists in Greater
New York. Their average profit must be very low-five
thousand dollars a year would doubtless be too liberal a
BENNETT& WITTE
MANUFACTURERS OF
==LUMBER==
For Furniture Mfrs•• Car Builders and Carriage Trade.
P)ainallli I Whl'te and Red O..L..- J Plain and
Quartered)" 19l~ I Quarteroed
RED and SAP GUM
Poplar. Cottonwood. A$h. Elm
and Chestnut,
A Full Line of Southi!lrD Hardwoods., E2lPori and Domestic.
WRITE E.ITHER OFFICE..
Branch: Mempbis, Tenn. Main Office; Cincinnati. O.
We sell on Natinnal Hardwood Lumber A9~ociation
inspection only.
l11a:-.::ilrcUiU for all of them, or for any retail line. }';!uch of the
retail trade of every city is mere pushcart traffic. Yet some
of these dealers, by only fair ability, managc to clear from five
thousand dollars to eight thousand dolJars a year, and a few
of the exceptionally able ones from ten thousand dollars up-ward.
Our typical druggist of average ability was an elderly
German, who had kept a' shop in the lower part of Man-hattan
Island for forty years and more. We have figures of
his gross turnover lor a period about twenty years ago, before
the department store became a force. He was back in
what is now assumed to have been a goldel1 era of retailing.
of textiles, and had but two busy seasolls-spring and fan.
In between times there was stagnation, reduction of expenses,
dismissal of clerks, It was the need for keeping busy every
month in the year, and the ne\=cssity for keeping a clerical
force intact- that led to the addition of other departments.
New lines were superimposed on the dry-goods trade, and a
cycle of business built up, by advertising and special sales,
that keeps a great store active the whole year. * * * *
The best season is that around the Chrlstmas holidays.
Jannary i5 made a good month by extraordinary bargains in
housefurnishings and staple white goods. There is no reason
21
Grand Rapids Office, 412-413 Houseman Bldg.
GEO. E. GRAVES, M.anager
CLAPPERTON & OWEN, Counsel
The
TlfE CREDIT BUREAU OF THE FURNITURE TRADE
LYON
Furniture Agency
ROBERT P. LYON, General Manager
CREDITS and
COLLECTIONS
THE STANDARD REFERENCE BOOK
CAPITAL. CREDIT AND PAY RATINGS
CLEARING HOUSE OF TRADE EXPERIENCE
THE MOST RELIABLE CREDIT REPORTS
COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE
PROMPTLY - REUABLY
all earth why people should buy such goods in January, but
department-store activity has made it a great mercantile
event of the year. February, dullest of all months except
August in the old days, is a time for pushing goods that lie
dormant at other seasons-silverware, leather goods, floor
coverings. Then the spring trade comes along, rLlllning until
J UIlC, and another season of forced selling occurs in the dog-days.
August is the month of relaxation, when employes take
vacations. Then follows the fall trade, and this leads again
into holiday business.
This cycle of selling keeps busy at all times a force of
trained clerks. Clerks are shifted from section to section for
special sales, and made a charge On the buyer who needs them,
perhaps for only one day.
Based on such economic principles, the department store
has grown until there are now many establishments that do
a gross business of ten million dollars to fifteen million dollars
yearly. Cities of 40,000 population support such stores.
There arc five hundred with capital of fifty thousand dollars
to two million dollars each, one thousand more dry-goods
stores \'\1ith thirty thousand dollars to five hundred thousand
dollars capital, and ten thousand others, smaller still, \'\1ith
ten thousand dollars average capital. Their yearly gross turn-over
is estimated at five times their capital. Old trade has
been diverted, but the chid effect has been stimulation of new
business. They influence manufacturing, mercbandising a.nd
all activity. One remarkable effect is shown in our newspaper.
Yet his daily sales did not greatly excc,ed twenty dollars gross.
counting Sundays, and thirty dollars was an uncommon day's
business. The gross annual turnover did not reach ten thou-sand
dollars, and profits \,\7ere not much over thirty-five hun-dred
dollars.
This drug·g·ist did a trade that is still done to-day in every
city, and which will probably continue to be practicable for
many years to come-a small neighborhood trade. Prescrip-tions,
medicines and toilet goods made up the bulk of it. His
shop had become a land mark and gossiping place. He was
content, did not think of advertising, bad not kept abreast of
demand, \"iaS not a shrewd buyer. Part of his profits each
year were on the shelves in stock, some of it unsalable. He
took what trade gravitated to him, and had fallen into com-fortable
h8bits of building a fire each morning, taking an ob-servation
on the weather, and wondering 110W tIle next elec-tion
would go.
About twenty years ago this old-time druggist hired a
boy. He was rather an extraordillary boy for three dollars
1 week-quick, observant, interested. He saw a customer be-fore
the customer saw him, and waited on him in a W8Y that
made friends. He took pride itl the appearance of stock, and
put circul<lrs in packages, and brought so much initiative into
this passive business that eventually the old druggist sent
him to take a course in pharmacy. The boy won highest
honors in a class of seventy-one. and came back, not a pbar-macist,
but a chemist. Then the proprietor took him in as
junior partner, and by and by, when he died, the business pass-ed
to the younger mall. The latter has since developed this
neighborhood store in a \-vay that makes it unique. First,
on the mercantile side, he has put in a fine stock of druggists'
sundries and knicknacks-goods upon which the druggist
of ullusltal ability, with a central location, often builds an
enormous trade, his prescription department becoming a mere
accessory. * * * * * * * * *
One of the large Sixtb Avenue department stores in New
York was built up On its millinery department-as a good
many similiar stores have been built in other cities. Taste
and reasonable prices in millinery make a magnet that draws
trade to fifty other departments. The millinery buyer in this
store receives a salary of twenty thousand dollars a year,
it is said-not an unusual one for a department-store buyer
of exceptional ability, for a few well-known buyers receive
thirty tllOusand dollars. This man runs a department that
does a gross business of one million dollars a year-the larg-est
in the country, perhaps. He pays no rent, no taxes, no
insurance, takes no risk. An error of a few thousand dollars
in buying might put our energetic druggist into bankruptcy.
An error of fifty thousand dollars with the millinery man
would mean nothing serious, for the store would move the
goods by a little activity and price-cutting, and make good
any loss a few months later. There are bundreds of buyers
for the great depJrtment stores who receive salaries of ten
thousand dollars to fifteen thousand dollars, and from that
on downward the positions illcrease in number, until we find
many paying twenty-fl\'e dollars a week into which exception-ally
bright clerks are stepping evet·y day.
Here is one great channel for the young man with retail
ability'.
As the youngster who seeks a salaried place in a manu-facturing
company, Or means to be a manufacturer himself
must learn to sell goods, so the neophyte who is possessed with
the ambition to become a merchant must learn to buy.
Let us look at this department~store business a moment,
and find out where it began, and how it is conducted to-day,
and what jt seems destined to become in the future.
The department store grew out of the old dry-goods store.
It is very new as yet. Tbe greatest growth has come in the
past decade. Ten years ago the department business of New
York was perhaps not one-quarter that of to-day. The old-time
dry goods store of thirty years ago handled a few lines.
Growth of afternoon and Sunday papers is based upon their
advertising patronage. A conservative estimate gives thirty-five
thousand dollars as the annual advertising expenditure
of department stores in New York and Brooklyn. The news-paper
publisher now delivers his,afternoon and Sunday paper
to readers belmv cost, taking bis,profit from department-store
advertising. The all~important man in these hUge retail or-ganizations
is the buyer. He it 'is who ransacks the world's
markets for attractive goods, and who studies demand, the
weather, the changing seasons and flitting fashions, the needs
and whims of the purchasing pUblic. A small retailer often
buys several different lines of goods. He must usually buy
at home, He has smal capital, ,a small margin for errOrS, a
(Continued on Page 24.)
22
This Machine Makes the Money
BY SAVING IT===
It makes a perfect imitation of any open grain because it uses the wood itself to print from, and one operator and a couple of
boys can do more work with it than a dozen men with any other so-called machine or pads on the market.
That's why i\'s a money maker. It imitates perfectly
PLAIN or QUARTERED OAK, MAHOGANY, WALNUT, ELM, ASH or any other wood with open grain.
WRiTE THE ----------------
Posselius Bros. Furniture Manufacturing Co., Detroit, Mich.
MENTION THE: MICHIGAN ARTISAN. FOR PRICES AND FULL PARTICULARS.
I
1
----------------------------- -
FOX SAW
SMOOTHEST
GROOVES
FASTEST
CUT
DADO HEADS
GI\EATEST
RANGE
QUICKEST
ADJUSTMENT
GLASS KNOBS
This pattern made in
THREE SJZES.
We will make yOIl
inltruting pria, f Q r
quanli/;es.
JOHN DUER & SONS, Baltimore, Md.
CABINET HARDWARE, TOOLS, Eh::.
LEAST
POWER
LEAST
TROUBLE;,
read this,
Why Worry with
the Roll Question =?= Leave that to us. \Ve
are prepared to solve it
quicker and bEtter be-cause
we have the
knowledge and equip_
ment. We use nothillg
but ~he.blut itl 0Ill'
cores. WrHe!01'prices.
The f~llwock Auto..
mobill!; &, Mfg CO
£VAN5VILLE. IND.
Nothin,l!; changed
Manufacturers of FURNITURE, PIANOS, ORGANS, REFRIGERA-TORS,
CHAIRS, and INTERIOR FINISHES,
LONGEST
LIFE
PERFECT
SAFETY
We'lI gladly tell
yOU all about
It.
Also Machine
Knlve..,.. Mher
Machines. Etc.
PERMANENT ECONOMY
FOX MACHINE. CO. 185 N. Front Street.
Grand Rapids. Mlch
FOLDING BED FIXTURES
Profitable fixtures to use are those which give the
least trouble. They are made by Folding Bed
Williams in many styles and designs, suitable for
every folding bed manufactured. Furniture Cast-ings,
Panel Holders, Corner Irons, etc. New ideas
and inventions constantly being added to the line.
F. B. WILLIAMS
3812. VINCENNES AVE.] CHICAGO
ManufactllfcT of Hardware Specialties for the Furniture Trade.
Established H178.
The Factory Ed~tion
VENEERED
ROLLS
Tbe
"Reliable"
Kind
Fonnerl)' the Fellwock Roll & Panel Co.
but the !lame.
OF THE ARTISAN
It is Not Mailed to Dealers. Our Merchants Edition
is Mailed to Dealers Only.
24
(Continued from Page 21.)
small outlet The department-store buyer, however, special-izes
on a single line, and can go abroad if necessary_ He has
enormous purchasing power, and an outlet that permits him
to take reasonable risks.
Buying goods is. as much a mattcr of human nature as sell-ing,
but, instead of studying a few customers, the buyer·
studies people in the mass. It has been said that a knowledge
of retail human nature is the key to business success in any
line where public taste must regulate one's operations. T}-oe
failure of almost any unsuccessful retail business is frequently
traced to poor judgement in buying, while shrewd gauging
of the public taste often carries a business into success de-spite
lack of capital. Many elements enter into the equipment
of the buyer who rises to a position at twenty thousand doJ~
lars-the output of merchandise is to~day so vast and varied
that even a little news instinct is needed. But the careers of
most buyers, traced back to beginnings, are found to be laid
on a knowledge of goods and the public gained in selling be-hind
the counter.
The logical place to begin in this field is as a clerk. There
is a wide spread notion that department store clerks are a
poorly paid! sapless species of humanity. But it is not borne
out by fact. Under conditions in the old dry-goods stores,
promotion often went by favoritism, as it does still in the
English "living in" system, But few classes of workers in
any field are to-day more inde,pendent or better paid than
efficient department store clerks. * * * * *
With knowledge gained as a clerk, many a bright young
man and woman has become a department store buyer on
large salary. Entering a store as wrapping boy or cash girl
then going behind the counter, there acting as assistant to one
of the buyers, then intrusted with the purchasing for a minor
department, and so on upward-these are the successive steps
of advancement.
A buyer's promotion is in large degree based on actual
showing of results. As the clerk asks for more salary on
his sales record, so the buyer is advanced and given wider
scope according to the grass business of his section.- Some
of the shrewdest men turn stock in a single department a
dozen times a year, and on ca-pital of five thousand dollars
will swing a gross business of fifty tbousand dollars. The ob-ject
in typical bargain stores is to turn stock quickly, and
buyers do so by finding opportunities to purchase stock cheap-ly.
In stores that deal in luxuries, on the contrary, the world
is scoured for novelties, regardless of price.
The s;;Lmeabilities that would make a merchant successful
in his own establishment will, when directed into this new
field, give him a larger money return. He needs no capital,
and takes practically no risk. His independence, too, will be
ample. Anything notable in achievement gets about, not
only in a buyer's own organization, but among other stores,
where keen eyes are open for exceptional purchasing talent.
In fact, the department stores of every large city now employ
"shoppers" who go daily to rival establishments, note the
quality of advertised offerings, the interest aroused among pa-trons,
the new goods on sale, etc. These spies work under
instructions, and their reports shape the policy of the store
that employs them. E...e.r.y little triumph of the buyer is
known in e...e..ry other store before night, and he gets into the
mercantile "Who's Who" very quickly when- his work war·
rants a place there. * * * * * * *
The largest percentage of commercial disaster falls on the
independent retail trade. But statistics show that incompe-tence,
neglect, inexperience and extravagance are responsible
for nearly twice as many retail failures as .1<ickof capital or
unfavorable trade conditions. \i\Then a retail merchant prov£;s
that he has genuine mercantile ability these days, it is much
easier for him to obtain credit from wholesalers than a gener-ation
ago. A surprisingly large proporation of the retail trade
of this country 1S carried on the capital and credit of whole-sales,
jobbers and manufacturers.
The outcry of retailers against department stores and mail-order
houses has been very bitter. Yet, despite the enor-mous
volume of goods sold through these establishments, the
neighborhood retailer can hold his own up to the natural
limitations of his business. Department stores and mail-order
concerns sell pianos by the thousand, yet the retail piano trade
is growing, too, and it is so in practically all lines. Price
competition may be reduced largely to clever offerings of spec-ial
articles when keenly analyzed. For instance, a ma.n went
into a large New York department store's jewelry department
to have his watch repaired. The price asked was three dollars
It seemed excessive, so he went to a small jeweler a block
away and had it done for (l dollar and a half. This jeweler
told him that much of the big store's repair work came into
his own little shop. Country merchants have repeatedly
fought mail-order houses by quoting comparative prices from
catalogues against their own regular prices. * * *
In some W<l.ys mail-order houses press country merchants
closely. Yet they draw only a portion of the cash business
from a community. The local merchant can have the credit
business, and much of the best trade, sneh as that in pianos,
stoves, farm implements and otber lines of considerable pro-fit
per sale, gravitates to him.
Instances might be multiplied. But it is sufficient to say
that, while retail conditions have been wonderfully altered in
a generation, yet the small merchant who has ability, prudence
and industry in his make~up, can still live, and live well, up to
th~ natural limitations of his business. His field has not nar-rowed,
either, but is unquestionably wider than a generation
ago. The youngster with retail virus in his blood may earn
more on salary. Yet, if he wishes to keep his own shop, he
witt have no caUse to quarrel with the world on the score of
opportunities.
Cabinet Hardware
--AND--
Factory Supplies
Wood Screws.
Coach Screws.
Liquid Glue, Ca.ters.
Upholsterer's Tack •.
Large Head Bu.lap Tack ••
Wire B.acls.
Staudard Nails.
Cemeut Coateel Nails.
Elhow Catches.
Door Catcl.es, etc., etc.
New Euglaud Fliut Pape••
Barton Garnet Papel".
Douhte Faceel Fliut aud
Gamet Fiuishiug Pape•.
Bra.. Bott•.
WroUllht Steel Buus.
Cahinet Locks and Keys.
Gold Plateel and Gilt Cah.
inet Keys.
Bench Vises.
Bolts, Washe..., Zincs.
Our large and complete assortment of general hard
ware 15at your service.
Correspondence solicited.
Inquiries for prices will receive careful and immediate
at'entioo.
FOSTER, STEVENS & CO.
GRANDRAPIDS.MICH.
-- -- ----~-~---------
~-------- -- - -
WEATUERED OAK O!!: STAINS·\
Just the thing.
Will not wipe up under either
Shellac Wax or Lacquer.
Popular Shades, No. 1207, No. 1253, No. 1255
EARLY ENGLISU Oil STAIN
No. 1244
Penetrating and Strong.
filled with our No. 1620 filler
Will not wash up when being filled.
SEE OUR
MISSION flA TAll
which is positively flat.
Send fot samples of all of the above to
The Barrett ~Lindeman Co. Wood Finishing
Supplies
FILLERS
STAINS
In consolidation with
The Lawrence-Mcfadden Co.
PHILADELPHIA and CHICAGO
26
A HUMMER FROM STRUmS
Characteristic Features
Massive from with wide and
deep base.
Long and large· bearings for
cylinder.
An necessary adjustments.
Different combinations of tables
from 3 to 4 feet.
Rack frame divided for making
"spring" ioints.
Want more information? Write
STURGIS MACHINE COMPANY
STURGIS MICH.
I
Bill of Lading Controversy Still Unsettled.
As heretofore stated an agreement was reached between the
eastern railroads and the shippers whereby the latter men
would petition the Interstate Commerce Commission to dis-miss
the famous bin of lading cas.e which has been bdore that
body since December, 1905. On the other hand, the rail~
roads agreed to present to the commission a new uniform
bill of lading which contains provisions for only one rate and,
therefore, accepts without question 'the common law liability
for loss and damage which attaches to the carriers.
In view of this agreement, both the railroads find the
shippers in the west will be surprised to Ir am that the com-mission
has set June 15 for the reopening of the bill of lading
case, with a view to making a complete investigation. Both
sides believe this to be a mistake, and declare that the agree-ment
reached will mark one of the most bitter contests ever
waged between shippers and railroads.
The entire question was one of liability on the part of the
carrier ior loss and damage shipments. Twice have the
eastern railroads attempted to rid themselves of such liabil-ity.
In order to do so they put a note in the official clas&i-fixation,
which provides that where the shipper does not elect
to ship at his Own risk he will be charged 20 per cent in ex~
cess of the classiftcation rates. The hill of lading contained
a similar provlsion. The railroads first attellTpted to enforce
this rule in 1889, whereupon the board of trade prevented
it. Again in 1905 an attempt was made and was met by the
filing of a petition by the Hlinois. Manufa,turers' Association
before the Interstate Commerce Commission.
Then the railroad officials and the Illinois Manufacturers.'
Association sign ell a stipulation asking the commission to
postpone judgment until negotiations for a settlement l.:ould
be had. These negotiations have been going on periodically
ever since and were recently successfully completed at a final
meeting in this city. It may be that the commission reopens
the matter to receive the new bill of lading and hear the ap-plication
for dismissal of the old complaint. That any arbi-trary
move is contemplated does not seem reasonable.
Co-Insurance Riders UnhoTF't-d.
The supreme court of Michigan in a test case sent up
from Detroit, has decided that the so-called "co-insurance
riders' used on policies covering large risks in that state, are
an evasion Ot" violation of the state statutes and must not be
used as a basis in the settlement of losses. The "rider" is
simply an agreement by which the -policy holder is granted
a rate lower than ~he regular percentage if he carries insur-ance.
aggregating a certain per cent of the value of his prop-erty-
usuaHy 80 per cent. Formerly the companies im-posed
this condition 3rbitrarily, but in 1895 the legislature
passed a law making such requirement illegal. Then the
"riders" were introduced,. by which the policy holder agreed
to the special pro ...i.sion. This arrangement was supposed
to be perfectly legal and legitimate as it was in the nature
of a contract and the "riders" were attached to nearly all pol-icies
on manufacturing plants and other large risks. They
read as follows:
"Percentage Clause-In consideration of a reduced rate
of premium, it is hereby agreed, that in case of loss, this com-pany
will pay only such proportion of the loss, as the sum
hereby insured bears to per cent of the valUe of the
property insured. Whenever this clause is made part of a
policy covering two or more specifications, it shall be consid~
ered as applying separately to each of said specifications.
But in no case shall this comapny be liable for a greater pro~
portion of any loss, than the a.mount hereby insured shall
bear to the whole insurance, whether valid or not."
The decision of the supreme court was a surprise to the
insurance agents and also to policy holders, most of whom
were pleased with the arrangement because it gave them low-er
rates and did not require them to carry more insurance
than they desired. As a result of the decision a stiffening of
rates is expected. It does not invalidate any of the policies
now in force. It simply deprives the companies of the ad-vantage
they would have in settling losses on the terms stated
in the "riders."
Pennsylvania Lines to be Consolidated.
The Pennsylvania Railroad Company owns about thirty
roads west of Pittsburg that are now operated by separate
companies, some of which use methods and regulations quite
at variance with those used on the main lines of the system.
According to a report sent out from Pittsburg, these lines
are to be taken over and the entire system placed under one
general management. This move will be of particular in-terest
to the officers of the subordinate companies as some
of them will lose their positions, but it is of importance to
shippers who have been annoyed by the lack of uniformity in
methods and management. The consolidation is expected
to facilitate shipments and in some instances it may bring
about a reduction in rates. It is stated that it will take two
years to make the changes necessary to put the consolidation
plan into operation.
The legislature of Wisconsin has passed a joint resolu'-
don asking Congress to abolish the tariff duty on lumber.
New Process of Drying by the Morton Dry Kiln Co.
The Morton Dry Kiln Company, Chicago, Ill. have per-fected
and are placing on the market a new process of sea-soning
lumber for use ill connection with their Morton 1Ioist
Air Kiln. This system is so arrangcd that it is equally as well
adapted to other makes of lI.'foist/\ir Kilns with a few ehang"es
in the constrl1ctioll and the proper a111nunt of heating surface,
and from results reported on the new system, it is calculated
to revoluti()11ize and replace present methods of drying. Es-pecially
is this true for factories drying oak and other hard-wood
lumber ullder conditions such as they are today, when
thc lumber that has been air-dried only a short time must be
used on account of the scarcity of well air-dried stock. \\lith
the new process the Morton Dry Kiln Company claims to be
able to take any kind of commercial lumber and dry it quickly
and without injury in any \vay. They further claim that the
system will reduce the time of drying from om'.-third to one-half
in drying oak Olndother hardwoods over any other ordi-nary
method now in use and that further, 1t win leave the
lumber in excellent condition without honeycombing. warping
or checking", and that it will be softer and work better in ma-chines
and show no perceptible shri~"kage in drying; and fur-ther,
that practically all the acid is removed from the lumber,
therby insuring that glued joints \vill 110t open.
The Morton Dry Kiln Company have expended consider~
able money and time in perfecting this system and thoroughly
testing it before offering it to the trade. They already have
se\'eral installed alid in operation, upon which they base their
claim for results obtained.
The equipn~el1t consists of a splendid sheet iron tank or
hood, counter balanced with weights and having guides so
that it may be raised or lowered onto a concrete base, making
an absolutely tight chamber, in \vhich the lumber is given a
preliminary treatment or sweating process of from two to
four hours duration before being run into the kiln, where -it is
dried in the ordillary manner under a high temperature. The
drying chamber also has a special equipment to obtain a
proper amount of humidity, which they claim is absolutely
necessary in order to obtain the high temperature in the dry-ing
room.
Another feature of the special equipment offered, is that
it can be arranged for use in conection with the hattery of
kilns, as well as one room and thus reducing to a minimum
cost of installing the system in one or more rooms. They
.7'IR.T I ..5' Al"J"
1 $ eri 27
also advise firms that have not the s'pace or room to install
one of these special chambers in connectioo\vith the kiln,
that they have arranged the system so that it can be put in-side
of any kiln \vith equally as good results, with a fcw·,inex-pensive
constructive changes.
The ~lorton Dry Kiln Company will be pleased to give
further information regardiflg this new process either to firms
that are desirous of increasing the capacity of their present
kilns, or firms that are contemplating the erection of a new
kiln. \Vrite them at 218 La Salle street, Chicago; Ill., and
get their new catalogue "0" just issued, containing valuable
information with respect to kiln drying lumber, which they
v\-,il\.be pleased to mail upon request.
Must Adv&Uce Prices.
The vVestern Brass and Iron Bed Association and the
,\r estern Spring Bed Association held meetings at the Annex
and Auditorium, Chicago, respectively, Thursday, May 16. The
meeting of the former association was called to discuss mat4
ters of great importance to all manufacturers of brass and iron
beds. A recommendation was made to advance prices five
per cent all all beds, but no definite action was taken. The
increase of [lve per cent is based on the increased east of raw
material entering into the "construction of both brass and iron
beds, the latter having from thirty to sixty pounds of pig
iron castings to a bed, an increase of fifty per cent lately
being made on this iron. Manufacturers have also been not-ified
that an advance on tubing will soon. be made. Thus it
is plainly seen that in order for manufacturers to realize any
profits prices must advance.
Fox Trimmers in Demand.
The Fox 11achine Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., have
just received an order for two No.8 Fox trimmers, the larg-est
si.:ed trimmers manufactured and twenty of the small No.
4A Fox trimmers, for installation at the Pennsylvania Gen-eral
E1ecrtic Company's Stearns plant, Erie, Pa.
The demand for Fox trimmers is so heavy that whereas
it is customary to carry several hundred of these machines
in stock for immediate delivery, at the present time orders
are being received for the machines faster than they can be
Designed by Otto Jiranek, Grand Rapids, Mich.
crowded through the works. The redesign of these ma-chines
a short time ago has apparently added very materially
to the sale and aU possible trimmer users, both large and
small, are showing a disposition to give this class of equip-ment
the attention, which it has always deserved, but often
failed to receive.
Alexander H. Revell & Co., Chicago, have increased their
capital stock from $240,GOO to $500,000.
28 .7'IR.T 1.5'JI.l'1
, 7$.
D-EI.rIT
I
TRACE MARK REGISTERED
FILLERS AND STAINS AND
MISSION FINISHES
You want to make all the profit you can, don't you? You wish the best results with the least
outlay in time and money. Ad-el-ite Paint Specialties will accomplish this for you. Our Fillers and
Stains are uniform in quality, correct in.shade and nonfading, they are dependable goods of established
favor.
Popnlar taste demands the use of the old, dull, velvety Mission effect in finishing woodwork and
furniture in halls, libraries, dens, dining-rooms, etc., and you can secure this with a single application of
anyone of the many shades of our One-Coat Dull Finish. A test will convince you of its worth.
SEND FOR BOOKLET AND SAMPLES FREE TO YOU.
STA.E
-I
CHICAGO
Manufacturers Favor Tariff Revision.
The Kational Association of Manufacturers, at the An-nual
meeting held in New Yark during the third week in
May, adopted a report favoring a revision -of the tariff laws
"at the earliest opportunity" and the negotiation of more re-ciprocity
treaties. The report as presented by the committee,
appointed at a previous meeting to consider the subject, was
based on a poll of 3,000members of the association. Of the
total number replying, 55 per cent declared for immediate re-vision,
while 20 per cent expressed a "hands off" sentiment.
Eight per cent believed that the time for revision had not ar-rived
and the other 17 per cent expressed indifference or made
noncommittal answers.
The association also adopted resolutions favoring the
"open shop" and industrial education and opposing illegal
combinations of either capital or labor. A committee was
appointed to raise a fund of $1,500,000 to be used in carry-ing
on a campaign of education against "dictatorial combina.
tions."
James W. Van Cleave of St. Louis, Mo., was re-elected
president and F. H. Stillman, New York, treasurer.
Looking Forty Years Ahead.
Alarmed over the failure of the steel manufacturers to
. produce suitable steel cross ties at practical cost the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company will go into the tie-pro-ducing
business on the largest scale ever attempted in the
world. The plans include the planting of 20,000 acres of land
in the Allegheny ~vIountains with timber.
Assistant United States Forrester E. A. Sterling ha!'i been
pl~ced in charge of the new forestry bureau 0'£ the railroad.
More than a million trees will be planted this year in the
20,000 acre tract which lies between Altoona and Hollidays-burg
on the eastern slope of the Allegheny Mountains. It
will be 40 years before the trees now to be planted wilt be
available for the first crop of ties, but the" railroad has decided
that it must look that far ahead. The Pennsylvania annually
uses more than 5,500,000 wooden ties. At the present time
ties command an average price of 95 cents each. After the
first 40 years it is expected the forest will produce 4,328,000
ties annually.
No Postponement This Year.
A meeting of the Grand Rapids F~rniture Manufacturers'
Association W<lS held on May 15, to consider a proposition to
postpone the opening of the summer sales season for a week
or more, some of the members, apparently, having become
convinced that June 17 is too early. After thorough discus-sion
it was decided to allow the date to stand, as a postpone-ment
would cause inconvenience and annoyance to those who
have sent out notices to customers and made other arrange-ments
for opening their exhibits on June 17. It was generally
considered, however, that the third ·week in June is too early
for the opening and it is probable that it will be fixed at
least a week later next year.
The matter of advancing prices on case goods was also
brought up but no definite action was taken, further than to
abide by the result of tbe referendum ordered by the National
Case Goods Manufacturers' Association at the meeting held
in Chicago recently.
The Ou:1ook is Good in the East.
David E. Uhl, manager of the Grand Rapids Fancy Furni-ture
company, returned from a tour of the eastern cities,
recently and reports a decided improvement in the Outlook
for business. He anticipates a lively season of trade during
the remainder of the year. Mr. Vhl was appointed a member
of the police and ·"fire·commission of Grand Rapids early in
May.
Ca~inet Makers
In these days of close competition,
need the best pOSliible equipment,
and this they can have in . • • .
BARNES'
Hand and Foot
POWER
Machinery
Our New "and and foot Power Circular Saw No.4
The strongest, most powerful, and in every way the best
machine of its kind ever made, for ripping,
cross-cutting, boring and grooving.
Se
- Date Created:
- 1907-06-10T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 27:23
- 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/5