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- Fine Furniture; 1936-07
Fine Furniture; 1936-07
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It began publication in 1936. and JULY • 1936
JACK WEAVER
Three score years and four he
has fashioned fine furniture.
(See page 9)
Two dollars a year
20 cents a copy
Grand Rapids,
M i c h i g a n
Application for acceptance under Act of June 5, 1934, authorized April 30, 1936. U. -S. postage 6c PAID, Grand Rapids, Mich. Permit No. 1093.
a v
NO MARKET TRIP COMPLETE WITHOUT VISITING THE
Cartoefcr #allerte£
KEELER BUILDING • GRAND RAPIDS
brings replacement business
Every home needs one room in Carved Oak for variety and charm. Here
is an appealing way to give a home personality. The idea has strong promotion
possibilities for a store. With it you can crack the resistance of many
families who feel their present furniture is good enough. Let "The Oak
Room" open up a rich new market of replacement business.
Be sure to see our hundreds of Carved Oak pieces at the July market.
Come prepared to select a grouping that will attract the higher income
brackets among your customers. Historic creations for all the rooms, filled
"with eye appeal and impressive character and numerous talking points. Trade
up with Carved Oak. Get bigger unit sales, better profits, less competition.
GRAND RAPIDS BOOKCASE & CHAIR COMPANY
"America's Carved Oak Specialists"
HASTINGS, MICHIGAN
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
VICTORIAN
Reproductions
?AVE you ever stopped to think that your most
profitable business comes from the sale of
Period Reproductions and 18th-Century-style
groups? Why? Because the bulk of replace-ment
business in established homes is on these items,
and folks who are now replacing old suites and pieces
with new, have money to spend for better furniture.
Starting'Out couples, when they can afford it, will
pick these beautifully styled pieces too. Hasn't your
experience shown this to be true?
Naturally you make a better profit on such furniture.
So why not devote a special section of your living-room
floor to carefully selected ensembles of this nature?
We'll be glad to suggest the minimum number of pieces
to start . . . then watch your sales climb. See us in
July, or write for more particulars.
Newspaper Mats for Dealers Available on Request
VANDER LEY BROS.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
SHOWROOMS — FIFTH FLOOR KEELER EXHIBITION BLDG.
FlNC FURNITUR€
the Hcmafurniii.ing Magazine horn
the f-umiiurc Style Center of America
VOLUME 1 1936 NUMBER 3
GEORGE F. MACKENZIE, President
PHIL S. JOHNSON, General Manager
ROD G. MACKENZIE, E d i t o r
K. C. CLAPP, Merchandising Editor
•JULY-Cover
illustration courtesy Robert W. Irwin Co. (see pcge 9)
The Boiling Wake 6
"Page Nine" 9
The Best Since, by Frank E. Seidman 11
"Retail Profit"—Theme of Summer Furniture Drama . . . . 18
"Pressing," by B. F. McLain 25
Furniture Frolics, by Ray Barnes 27
Biographing Famous Furniture Firms. 28
Don't Kid Yourself, by Joseph P. Lynch 29
The Sketch Book, by Dermot M. Doherty SO
"Home of the Month" 32
Men Who Make Furniture Markets 33
Retailing Tips . . 36
Get Behind Furniture Week 43
The Customer's Viewpoint 44
The Arithmetic of Instalment Selling, by Murray C. French 47
Gems of Sales Philosophy, by Chet Shafer 49
New Housing Revives Model Homes 52
Rug Markets Open Together 54
Why-is Your Best Window? 56
Buy-By-Brand-Name 59
Your Association and its Activities 63
Homefurnishing News and Reviews 64
Around the Grand Rapids Market 71
New Stores 72
Published monthly by the Furniture Capital Publishing Co., Asso-ciation
of Commerce Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich. Acceptance under
the Act of June 5, 1934, authorized April 30, 1936. FINE FURNI-TURE
copyright, 1936. Eastern office: 545 Fifth Ave., New York
City, phone Murray Hill 23909, S. M. Goldberg, representative.
Southern office: 114^ West Washington St., High Point, N. C,
phone 2152, C. C. Prince, representative. Subscription rates: $2
per year in the United States and American Colonies; $3 in Canada
and foreign countries; single copies, 20 cents.
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6
is ready with a
Record-Breaking Line
for a Record-Breaking Market
THOSE WHO SAW the Imperial showing at the May Market,
pronounced it the finest mid-season Imperial exhibit they
had ever set eyes on. But this showing was merely a pre-lude
to what Imperial has prepared for the July Market
in Grand Rapids. This new line is without question the
most appealing in Imperial's long and honorable history
as America's foremost producer of fine tables.
In all respects, it is a record-breaking line — especially
and painstakingly developed for what promises to be a
record-breaking market. You will find that in style range,
in quality appeal, in craftsmanship superiorities, and in
price attractions, Imperial's new offerings definitely estab-lish
new standards of salability. It is a line accurately
attuned to today's wonderful opportunities — a line that
has what it takes to ring up record-breaking sales and
profits for you.
IMPERIAL FURNITURE CO.
G r a n d R a p i d s , M i c h i g a n
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
• . . . a n d
PRICE
No. 730 Sofa. 34" high, 36" deep and 78" long
At the Market
These Morse men to serve you
JOE N. BALL RALPH D. MORSE
FRED A. NELSON CHRIS PERKINS
GEORGE F. COLLINS
N. H. BRYANT
JOSEPH GRISWOLD, JR.
PRIDE in beautiful merchandise that builds prestige is not
enough! But PRICE that permits of attractive profit on
a sure and steady volume, PLUS the pride that you, your
salesmen and your customer share in distinctive living room
pieces of quality—that's a winning combination!
Smartness and style supremacy of Morse upholstery have
long been taken for granted. Our hard-won success in
bringing MORSE MASTERPIECES into your most profitable
price brackets will surprise you when you visit the Morse
space in July.
RALPH MORSE FURNITURE CO.
6th Floor, Keeler Bldg. Grand Rapids
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
PROVEN ACCEPTANCE
Repeat Orders Tell the
Story of Bobb Values
DEALERS' PROFITS depend upon their customers
being satisfied. BOBB furniture achieves this mark
because it is livable, constructed on reliable standards
and moderately priced. Enthusiastic dealer response
in the form of repeat orders has established BOBB
merchandise as a LEADING SALES INFLUENCE.
Displayed in Waters-Klingman Bldg.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
BOBB FURNITURE COMPANY
KALAMAZOO, MICH.
The modern vanity suite, No.
1006, is made of carefully
selected Harewood veneers, fin-ished
in soft, harmonious tones.
The sound qualities of the suite
emphasize its conservative char-acter.
. . The Carlton group,
No. 1004, includes many of the
original Chippendale motifs com-bined
for present day demands
for a moderately-priced suite.
The clean-cut appearance of the
pieces are enhanced by the
selected, figured veneers, finished
with Old World finish. A-Grade
materials and high quality work-manship
assure value.
We appreciate merit FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
THE BOILING WAKE
Likes His Ad
Gentlemen: We take great pleasure in
acknowledging receipt of our copy of FINE
FURNITURE for June and are very pleased
with and wish to congratulate you upon the
appearance of our ad. It was everything
that we expected and we are sure that it
will obtain the results desired,
B. A. H., Jr., Owosso, Mich.
These Troublesome Women
Dear Editor: With no desire to cause any
consternation, I'm passing this on to you.
My wife picked up Vol. 1 No. 2 and says,
"I didn't know this was a new one. Why
didn't you tell me?" Then she complained
that the cover was just like the first one
except for the inset. And if you're looking
for some special number, say like No. 1,
after you have issued about 12 numbers you
would have a hell of a time. My wife takes
a Mother's magazine which has the same
cover for each issue and she finds it very
confusing. C. S., Three Rivers, Mich.
Cover now carries the month of publica-tion
in such large type that no one can go
wrong.—Editor.
Go West, Young Manufacturer!
Dear Mr. Mackenzie: There are about
400 representative furniture dealers in the
Pacific Northwest who pay their bills
promptly and should be in the market for
Eastern furniture. For the life of me I
cannot understand why Eastern manufac-turers
do not cater to this business. At the
present time about 90% of the furniture
sold in the Northwest is manufactured on
the Pacific Coast. We have approximately
five dealers out of this entire group who
attend the Eastern furniture markets. I
don't believe any of the other dealers even
receive an invitation to attend—the Grand
Rapids market, especially. I doubt if any
of them would even know how to pool cars
from Grand Rapids to Seattle or Portland.
I think your manufacturers are passing up
a big bet and a lot of business when they
don't investigate the possibility for furniture
business in this section of the country.
T. S. C , Seattle, Wash.
Thank You, Suh!
Dear Sir: I want to congratulate you
and your organization on your premier
issues of FINE FURNITURE. I certainly think
you have done a splendid job and all of us
here wish you and your organization splen-did
success in your new line of endeavor.
L. R. M., Jackson, Mich.
Meaning He Makes Fine Furniture
Gentlemen: I received your issue for June
of FINE FURNITURE and notice on pages 12,
13, 14 you do not have any pictures of our
products. For that reason we must contra-dict
the title on your cover on account of
leaving out our pictures.
E. S. G., Philadelphia.
Prices and Catalogs
Gentlemen: We want to endorse your
plan of pricing all merchandise shown in
your journal. It is very annoying to read
an ad and see an attractive cut and have
to wait a week for a price when perhaps we
need it in stock. Another matter is that
catalog makers ought to get sizes of cata-log
cases before they decide what size to
make a catalog. W. S. B., EfBngham, 111.
It's Done Entered!
Gentlemen: I was very much interested
in your initial presentation of FINE FURNI-TURE.
This publication was packed with
concrete facts that a new concern just
entering the manufacturing field welcomed
readily. Will you please enter my subscrip-tion
for one year to FINE FURNITURE?
B. R. S., Owensboro, Ky.
Should Get Response
Sirs: I have just finished looking through
the first issue of your new furniture trade
magazine, FINE FURNITURE. It would seem
that a publication so excellently built, both
with respect to reading matter and illustra-tions,
cannot help but meet a splendid re-sponse
from the furniture trade. May I
express the hope that the response will be
such that each succeeding issue will grow in
size as well as usefulness.
I. A. M., Grand Rapids.
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Just as in our 18th Century group we have attempted to reproduce
honestly the beautiful details and fine finish of this period, so in our 20th
Century furniture we have commissioned one of America's foremost de-signers,
Donald Deskey, to create for us modern designs of fine propor-tions
and carefully studied details. We believe that both the 18th Century
and the 20th Century groupings will appeal to those who can recognize
the finesse of good design and good craftsmanship.
AT THE GRAND RAPIDS MARKET
FIRST FLOOR WATERS-KLINGMAN BUILDING
E S T E Y M A N U F A C T U R I N G C O .
O W O S S O , M I C H I G A N
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
i o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6
The GRAND RAPIDS BEDDING CO.
INVITES YOU
I
Inspect the Line with Many New
Added Features
A double duty
Davenport with
Twins or Full Size
Beds, Inner Spring
Mattresses and
Bedding
Compartment
Ideal for the One-
Room Apartment
and for the Home
without the Extra
Bedroom for the
Unexpected
Guest
SMAR T—DISTING UISHED!
ONE OF THE GREATEST VALUES EVER OFFERED
Spring Base, Spring Edge, Spring Cushion, Spring Back
THE GRAND RAPIDS BEDDING CO.
With its 47 years of constantly improving the quality of its product, also
presents a complete line of Studio Couches, Bed Springs, Mattresses and
Pillows of all types and Superior Quality.
As a Member of the
Master Bedding Makers
of America,
we build
AMERICA'S
FINEST MATTRESS
Displayed in the
WATERS-KLINGMAN BLDG.
JULY FURNITURE MARKET
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Permanent display of the
GRAND RAPIDS BEDDING CO.
Factory
52-64 Summer St., N. W.
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
FINE FURNITURE
WHAT IT MEANS WHEN THE SALESMAN
SJt Li <z cLmmzttncLnn TdutLc I
In every industry there are acknowledged leaders . . .
leaders whose names give prestige to their products
. . . names so well established and respected that sales-men
stress and use them as a closing argument when
selling merchandise of quality.
Salesmen of furniture have learned that in the manu-facture
of upholstery fabrics Zimmermann has won this
enviable position of leadership . . . a position won by
constantly making only the finer fabrics... by placing
quality above quantity production. They know that the
name Zimmermann stands for good quality, good color,
proper styling and enduring beauty in upholsteryfabrics.
Hence, when the furniture salesman says, It is a
Zimmermann Fabric," he means that he is offering a
fabric that is better than the ordinary run of fabrics
of its type . . . a fabric that will give satisfactory wear,
a fabric that will retain its rich beauty. He means
that due to the selection of the best raw materials
and unusual expertness in weaving and finishing,
Zimmermann Fabrics possess those evidences of better
quality which make them a constant source of pride
and satisfaction to the purchasers and afford final
proof of the economy of quality. Address inquiries
to John Zimmermann & Sons, Erie and Castor Avenues,
Philadelphia, Pa.
JOHN ZIMMERMANN AND SONS
ine LLppkoLltet u
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
f o r J U L Y , 1 9 3 6
NINE
CREDO
Immediately upon introducing PAGE NINE, the editors
of FINE FURNITURE hasten to reassure the reader that
never shall this department become a medium for the ex-pression
of hard-shell opinion nor assume an unshakable
stand "for or agin" anything or anybody. Unlike our
venerated predecessors and contemporaries, we refuse to
take ourselves too seriously, or to become involved in politics,
either inside or outside the furniture industry. The only plank
in our platform is this:
MORE PROFIT FOR EVERYONE IN THE FURNITURE
BUSINESS.
Convinced that good fellowship, laughter and the appre-ciation
of beauty are as precious as money when assayed in
the final net profit figures of life, we urge our friends to
interpret our one-plank platform in that light.
BOOING BUDGETS
ff
This department refuses to become hot under the collar
at any time, or to enter into futile controversies over trivi-alities,
but we can't control the choler of correspondents
who rise (and write) in their wrath about this and that. For
instance, a New York dealer takes violent exception to a
speech by Richardson Wright, editor of "House & Garden"
in which he branded budget rooms set up by stores as a
"racket" and not "on the level" because they don't include
displayed books, flowers and other knick-knacks in the cost.
Our correspondent counters, "Any fool knows that only the
principal furnishings are priced in the listings prominently
displayed in such rooms. . . . The budget room is a natural
and logical answer by the conscientious dealer to a genuine
and often expressed need on the part of his customer for a
visualization of what and how much furniture he can buy
and pay for out of income . . . "
We hasten to soothe our riled correspondent with the
comforting thought that the majority of editors write better
than they talk and that most of them can't really THINK
when they get on their feet.
TRADITIONAL COME-BACK
ff
Contemporary designs, given maximum merchandising
impetus by big-city stores in 1935 and even now pushed
with vigor in smaller communities, are being replaced to a
great extent in the new showings of manufacturers by
Eighteenth Century. But the Modern trend has had a notable
influence on the new Traditional pieces, lines being simpler
and decorations less ornate than during the pre-Modern era
of the late 20's.
Manufacturers doubtless feel it necessary to anticipate
the danger of design-standardization threatened by wide-spread
production of Modern which had reached the point
of permitting them very little leeway in design innovations
that might risk the onus of unsalable radicalism.
GETTING READY
ff
A quarter century of close contact with the furniture trade
has never brought us so much news as we are now getting
about new stores, remodeling and alteration of old store
buildings and a general confident preparation for a period
of prosperity in the furniture business. Joe Lynch, in this
issue, intimates that basic principles of merchandising are in
need of refurbishing, too, and that many a beautiful store
front conceals a poverty of retailing wisdom.
ff
Though other pages bare the minds
Of many men, the credit or
The blame I'll bear for what one finds
On this, Page Nine.—The Editor,
WRITE YOUR SENATOR
B. F. McLain of Texas writes that he is moving heaven and
earth to make National Furniture Week, October 2-10, a
success. Mr. McLain is even trying to move Congress. That,
of course, is a problem in itself. But Mr. McLain feels that
if the heat was turned on the Honorable Committee of
Education and Labor, the resolution introduced by Texas
Senator Tom Connally would be acted upon and the Presi-dent
would be authorized to issue a proclamation desig-nating
the week of October 2 to 10 as National Furniture
Week. "Such a declaration would have tremendous pub-licity
value," says Mr. McLain, and he adds, "there is no
expense involved for the Government."
ff
"CASEY"
Back in the days when there was profit to be derived
from the selling of homefurnishings, he was editor of the
Grand Rapids Furniture Record. For the past four years
he has been editor of Homeware. During these years he
established a veritable forest of friends in both the retail
and manufacturing branches of the furniture industry. He
is personally acquainted with the leaders in the appliance
field. He is well-qualified to write, ably and intelligently,
concerning the merchandising of homefurnishings. FINE
FURNITURE, this month, is enthusiastic in announcing to its
many readers that K. C. ("Casey") Clapp now holds the
portfolio of merchandising editor.
It is a personal joy to renew working association with
"Casey" because it revives memories of days, yars and yars
back, when we toiled together in the stuffy back room of
a "daily" scrivening about two-base hits and flying mitts.
Ex-marine and poet, with a golf game sometimes in the 70's,
"Casey" rates high as an understanding, two-fisted man.
ff
THE MAN ON THE COVER
"Good morning, Bob. You know, Bob, I've got to get
away for a day to visit my brother. Can you get along
without me that long you think?"
Robert W. Irwin thought so. Seeing that Jack Weaver
had been working for him and his predecessors for a period
of some 64 years.
Jack is now 87. He came to work at the old Phoenix
furniture factory in Grand Rapids on May 15, 1872. After
four years he was transferred to a lathe at the new plant
and has been standing and plying his delicate craft at that
same lathe for the past 58 years, during which time the
Phoenix Furniture Co. became the Robert W. Irwin Co.
His hands are skilled and deft, of course. They have to
be for the kind of work they do. But they acquired sureness
and softness of touch, too, as the hands of a topnotch
billiardist. In his day Jack has met the best of them at the
green tables—such famous cue-men as Mike Foley, Frank
Ives and Billy Burley. In 1875, Weaver hung up a record
run of 828, which is shooting in any man's game.
Jack's loves are the fine sample pieces on which he now
works exclusively, and the five children he has adopted and
reared, and the memory of his wife who died 27 years ago.
ff
10 FINE FURNITURE
MICHIGAN SEATING COMPANY
STYLE, COMFORT and VALUE
05 Oxew Jrieces . . .
Livable Modern and 18th Century styles of Chairs,
Sofas and Love Seats.
The Fastest-selling line of Correctly Styled Boudoir
Chairs in every price range.
Finest and Latest Fabrics Available — Carefully
Selected.
Buyers from Coast to Coast back our lines with
ORDERS.
WE'LL BE L O O K I N G FOR YOU...
O N THE 6+h F L O O R FINE ARTS B U I L D I N G
Representatives
B. L. DAVIES
L. R. MATTSON
BERT A. PARKS
GEO. L. DAVIES
DAN RIDGELL
HERB JENKINS
C. B. MINTER
HAROLD SHAW
SHOWROOM — FINE ARTS BUILDING > GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
FACTORY — J A C K S O N , M I C H I G A N
f o r JULY. 1 9 3 6 11
THOUGHTFULLY PRICED
in Your Interest
The EVIDENCE T SS:
AWAITS you/ I 1
Federal American
Junior Dining-Living Room Group
MADE of Cuban Mahogany, the finest
known cabinet wood. Styled in the
most romantic period of the historic
South. Handsome enough to grace the
most formal occasions, this group was produced to meet a demand
for furniture of dignity with a Traditional interest that might serve a
dual purpose — to create a perfectly ap-pointed
dining, room and, by re-arranqing a
few pieces, to convert it into an artistic living
room.
The No. 93 drop leaf extension console
table with the mirror hanging over it, makes
an attractive wall piece. By raising the drop
leaves and using two 13" center leaves, it
becomes a dining table 78" long by 38" wide.
No. 175 drop leaf table desk is useful as a
serving table when required.
No. 175 chair, replica of a valued antique
found in Savannah, Ga., may be used in many
places.
The No. 175 buffet, originally called a
"Charleston Chest," serves diverse and useful
purposes as a living room piece.
Corners are often a serious problem which
the No. 933 corner cabinet solves. By the
addition of three or four upholstered pieces,
the perfect two-purpose room is achieved.
' • ' • • V
GRAND RAPIDS CHAIR COMPANY
Showroom at F a c t or y Only
T A K E A N Y Y E L L O W C A B
We appreciate mentioning you saw this in FINE FURNITURE
12 FINE FURNITURE
FRANK E. SEIDMAN
. . . '35 not so hot; '36 really looks good.
"HURNITURE has joined that
J- select group whose members
have nailed to the mast the business
banner, "The best since ." That
phrase is currently being used to
describe activity in a wide variety
of industries. Unfortunately, furni-ture
is a rather late entrant in that
favored domain and therefore the
"best" has so far been none too
good.
To comprehend the present status
of the furniture industry and
weigh its dccdmplishments, possibil-ities
and potentialities (or lack of
them), we must unfortunately grap-ple
with its figures and statistics—
proverbially dry and tiresome
things. However, it is said that
"miles" of statistics and "tons" of
literature usually yield "ton-miles"
of economics, and the economics of
the industry are far from dry, even
though they are and have for some
time been a little disconcerting.
The BEST SINCE—
Written Exclusively for
FINE FURNITURE
By FRANK E. SEIDMAN
SEIDMAN & SEIDMAN, Accountants and Auditors
With Offices in Principal Furniture Manuiacturing Centers
Diagnostician to the furniture industry for many years,
Frank Seidman's hand on the pulse of the convalescent
patient is steady and sure. He has been called to the
bedside so often during the past ten years that his ans-wers
to the question, "How sick am I?" are generally
regarded as gospel. Time after time he has called the
turn on symptoms apparent in the jaundiced figures from
furniture factories, and his wise counsel has brought
about many a recovery.
FINE FURNITURE regards it as indeed a privilege to
be accorded the sole right of publishing the annual report
of this eminent authority. It is information of vital con-cern
to the furniture manufacturer, of course. More than
that, it guides the retailer in his relationship with his
sources of supply and enables him to appreciate more
fully the problems of the producer. — The Editor.
Volume Climbing • For the first
time in thirteen years the industry
experienced a real volume upsurge
in 1935. It is true that in 1933 as
a result of the late but not lamented
NRA, furniture enjoyed an artificial
boomlet. This 1933 episode, how-ever,
lasted only a few months and
was followed by a sharp set-back.
The 1935 activity appears to have
been grounded on more natural and
substantial forces. The rise was a
steady one, with every month show-ing
an improvement in new orders
f o r J U L Y , 193G 13
The best since when? Just how good was it, anyway? How profitable was
it? Will 1936 be any better? These and other questions concerning the
state of the furniture industry are answered by Mr. Seidman in this, his
Sixteenth Annual Statistical Report.
over the comparative month in the
previous year (Chart I).
Of the total shipments for the
year, the various quarters accounted
for the following:
"ft, of Total
Quarter for Year
First _ 19%
Second - 20%
Third - 29%
Fourth 30%
Thus, approximately 40% of the
industry's volume was garnered dur-ing
the first half of the year and
60% during the second half. This
division of shipments was fairly
consistent with the usual seasonal
trend. In normal years the second
six months account for a substan-tially
greater proportion of the
year's volume than the first six
months—and 1935 was no exception.
For the entire year shipments
exceeded those of 1934 by slightly
more than 30%. Even considering
this large rise, the industry's activ-ity
still did not reach a very envi-able
position. Quite the contrary.
At the close of 1935 it stood at only
35% of its 1926 level (Chart II).
Certainly this is nothing to brag
about.
Odious Comparison • A study of
furniture's attainments in compari-son
with other industries, brings out
1926-100
J F M A M J J A S O N D J
Chart I—Monthly trend of new orders booked. The 1935 rise was a
steady one, with every month showing an improvement over the
comparative month in the previous year.
markedly the extent to which fur-niture
has lost out in the American
economic parade. This notwith-standing
the fact that industrial
production showed an increase of
only 14% during 1935, whereas
aggregate furniture volume was
more than 30% ahead. The wide
disparity between furniture and gen-eral
production is accounted for by
the dismal showing made by the
1""
J Wk
!
3Z1- 89 6 j
928 - S-*-9 i
930 - 55.7
9 31 - 39 6
^32 - 2-t.5
933 - £-4.5
931- - £64-
IOO
90
Chart II—Ten-year
index of furniture
shipments. Not-withstanding
t h e
1935 volume come-back,
t h e indus-try's
activity was
still very low.
1926 1927 I92B 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934
furniture industry for almost a
decade prior to 1935. Industry in
general has been well out in front
of furniture ever since 1926, with
each succeeding year showing a
wider spread between their records.
When the depression reached its
lowest ebb in 1932, the furniture
industry's volume was at approx-imately
25% of its 1923-1925 aver-age.
General industrial production
stood at 65% at the end of that
year. Since then industry as a whole
has climbed back to 90% of its
1923-1925 average, while furniture
has only gotten back to 37%. Thus,
while the spread at the depression
low was only 39J4 points, it has in-creased
during the last three years
of business revival to 53 points.
Clearly, furniture has failed com-pletely
to keep pace with the indus-trial
recovery.
Volume by Groups • On the aver-age,
about nine out of every ten
plants increased their volume in
1935 as compared with 1934. The
increases reported were by no means
uniform—in fact, they varied from
a fraction of 1% to more than
100%. In order to make proper
comparison, it was deemed best to
14 FINE FURNITURE
divide the various reporting plants
in this study into groups according
to 1935 sales volume. The follow-ing
groupings have been used:
Group Volume in 1935
A. Under $100,000
B $100,000 to $250,000
C $250,000 to $450,000
D $450,000 to $750,000
E Over $750,000
In general, the larger organiza-tions
made the better volume show-ing.
Thus, those plants whose sales
were over $750,000 averaged an in-crease
in their volume of about
40%; those with volume from
$100,000 to $750,000 showed an in-crease
of approximately 22%,
whereas the smaller volume group
—i. e., those with less than $100,-
000 of business—averaged an in-crease
of less than 16%. This tend-ency
of the larger plants getting the
volume over 193 4. Upholstered
goods made the best showing with
a rise of approximately 40%, while
case goods rose some 30% and
specialty lines, 20%. From these
figures it might be concluded that
specialty lines made the poorest
showing. That, however, is not the
case. Quite to the contrary, novel-ties
and specialties held up better
Chart III—(right)—Percentage that
each volume group received of
total 1935 business and the ratio
of profitable and non-profitable
business in each group. The
largest plants came out on top.
Chart IV—(below)—All groups
made progress in operating re-sults
in 1935 compared with
the previous year.
furniture fared much better from a
volume standpoint than manufac-turers
of either medium or high
grade items. By far the largest per-centage
of the 1935 volume increase
was in the cheaper lines.
Profits? • When we study the
trend of the industry's doings in
terms of operating results, we find
OPERATING RESULTS PER IOO°° OF SALE.5
greater share of the business is a
common one during a period of
business revival.
Of the total plants reporting,
there were only 7% whose volume
exceeded $750,000, yet those plants
succeeded in securing 43J4% of the
total business. At the other ex-treme
we find the smaller volume
group—i. e., those with less than
$100,000 —accounting for 25% of
the total in numbers but only 2l/2%
of the total volume. The accom-panying
chart (Chart III) reflects
the volume percentage of each
group and the percentage of the
business within each group that was
done at a profit or at a loss.
Study of Lines • In terms of
"lines," it is found that case goods
accounted for about 44% of the
total 1935 volume; upholstered
goods, 32%, and novelties (includ-ing
tables, chairs, etc.), 24%.
All lines showed an increase in
than any other group throughout
the depression. Their percentage
increase in 1935 does not show up
as well as the other lines, largely
because the volume in previous
years was better proportionately
than the other divisions of the
industry.
Low unit prices were undoubt-edly
a factor in the maintenance of
specialty volume during the depres-sion
years. The low purchasing
power of the masses did not enable
them to buy much furniture in
suites, and the consumer therefore
was forced to buy individual low
priced pieces. This t e n d e n c y
changed somewhat in 1935, thus
bringing about the better volume
ratio in case goods and upholstered
lines.
However, the better buying power
has not as yet found its way into
the higher grade furniture. As has
been the case during the past five
years, manufacturers of low priced
that beginning with 1927 profits de-clined
precipitously. By 1930 all
profits vanished and the era of
losses was upon us. This continued
for five long years or through 1934.
The lowest point was reached in
1932 when for every $100 of sales
an operating loss of more than $23
was sustained. This was reduced to
about $4 per $100 of sales in 1933,
but 1934 saw another downward
slide and losses rose again to $6 per
$100. However, in 1935 a slight op-erating
profit (about one-half of
one per cent on sales) was earned
by the industry — the first in six
years.
It should be noted that we have
been talking in terms of "operating"
profit. If losses on investments, in-terest
charges, etc., were deducted
from this profit, the industry as a
whole again slips into the red with
a "net" loss of .6 of one per cent
on sales. This compares with a net
loss sustained by the industry in
1934 of 6.9% on sales. While there
is no denying that this indicates
substantial progress, yet the accom-plishment
is obviously a negative
one. The industry has merely suc-ceeded
in losing less.
Plenty of Red • While the indus-try
as a whole showed a small spot
of "operating" black, there was still
plenty of red in individual cases.
Thus, for instance, only 19% of the
f o r J U L Y , 1 9 3 6 15
smallest plants (less than $100,000
volume) reported an operating
profit. Even the largest plants did
not all fall into the "black" class —
31% of that group showing losses.
In general, however, as in the case
of volume increases, it was the
larger plants that made the better
showing (Chart III).
The rate of improvement attained
by plants of various sizes in 1935
as compared with 1934 is shown in
Chart IV. It will be seen that all
size groups suffered losses in 1934,
whereas in 1935 the two groups
with the largest individual plant vol-umes
realized profits and the three
smaller volume groups sustained
losses. Furthermore, on the average
the larger the plant, the better was
the operating ratio; the smaller the
plant, the poorer the result.
Viewing the operating net in
terms of lines, it is found that the
producers of upholstered furniture
accomplished the best results. Case
goods manufacturers reduced their
losses from 10.78% in 1934 to
2.13% in 1935. Specialty manufac-turers
turned a 1934 operating loss
of 1.76% into an operating profit of
2.15% in 1935. Manufacturers of
upholstered goods, however, with a
larger operating loss in 1934'—i.e.,
2.43% — showed an operating profit
in 1935 of 3.07%. On the whole,
plants that reported an operating
profit earned approximately 5% on
their sales, while the losses sus-tained
by the loss group were ap-proximately
8% on sales.
Of all the plants reporting, only
44% showed a net profit for the
year and 56% suffered a net loss.
This compares with 30% of plants
reporting a profit and 70% a loss
in 1934. This does not mean that
all plants made a better showing in
1935 than in 1934. In fact, there
were a number reporting losses in
1935 that operating at a profit in
1934. However, 73% of the plants
attained better results in 1935 than
in 1934. An analysis shows the fol-lowing
changes in this respect as
between the two years:
Plants showing increased net profits 20%
Plants going from a loss to a profit 17
Plants showing decreased losses 36
Total favorable changes 73%
Plants showing decreased net profits 7%
Plants going from a profit to a loss 3
Plants showing increased net losses 17
Total unfavorable changes 27%
Total 100%
A division of favorable and un-favorable
changes among the vari-ous
volume groups shows the fol-lowing:
B
7 3 %
27
C
7 5%
25
D
7 8%
22
E
9 2%
8
Favorable ....58%
Unfavorable 42
100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
Officers' Salaries • Very few fur-niture
plants are publicly owned.
Consequently, the matter of pay-ments
to the officials of the compa-nies
constitutes a more or less arbi-trary
factor. Similarly, depreciation
deductions often fall into the same
class.
Officers' salaries paid by the in-dustry
approximated 3% of volume
in 1935. An analysis indicates that
the so-called profitable group paid
considerably smaller salaries in re-lation
to volume than the loss
group. Depreciation for the year
averaged 2.44% of volume. Here
again, the profitable group made
substantially lower charges in pro-portion
to volume than those of the
non-profitable group.
Before deducting anything for ex-ecutive
salaries and depreciation,
the industry as a whole made an
operating profit of approximately
6%, as will be noted from the fol-lowing
:
PROFITABLE GROUP
Operating profit as reported 5.01%
Officers' salaries 2.64%
Depreciation taken 1.99%
Operating profit before officers' salaries
and depreciation - 9.64%
NON-PROFITABLE GROUP
Operating loss as reported - 7.97%
Officers' salaries - 3.72%
Depreciation taken - 3.30%
Operating loss before officers' salaries
and depreciation - 95%
ALL GROUPS
Operating profit as reported 56%
Officers' salaries - 3.01%
Depreciation taken 2.44%
Operating profit before officers' salaries
and depreciation 6.01%
It will be observed that before
officers' salaries and depreciation,
15 SO as SO 35 40 AS SO
MATERIALS 1931
W32
1933
1934
1935
DIRECT
LABOR
FACTORY
OVERHEAD
SELLING ADMIN
SELLING Z. # 12.53
ADMIN.
EXPENSES
ao 30 40 •so 6o TO ao go iqo no lap
TOTAL
COST
Chart V—Elements of cost 1931-1935. The industry has been making
progress in reducing overhead.
16 f IN E FURNITURE
the divergence between the profit-able
and non-profitable groups is
not quite so wide as the net results
indicate.
Operating Costs • A comparison
of operating factors during recent
years reveals that since 1932 volume
in the industry has increased 45%
while the cost of materials entering
into this augmented volume has in-creased
only about 37%. The direct
labor cost has risen 35%, but all
overhead costs were actually lower
with the increased volume than in
1932.
The following tabulation shows
the various elements of cost per
$100 of sales during each of the last
four years:
1932 1933 1934 1935
Materials $45.09 $41.49 $43.10 $44.12
Direct labor. 23.26 20.51 22.17 21.79
Factory overhead 28.10 21.24 20.84 16.67
Selling expenses-. 15.24 11.71 11.49 10.46
Admin, expenses.. 11.57 9.09 8.37 6.40
Totals $123.26 $104.04 $105.97 $ 99.44
It will be seen that the improved
results during 1935 were brought
about largely by a reduction of
overhead costs in relation to volume.
Materials and direct labor varied
little as compared with the previous
year. However, factory overhead
decreased more than $4 per $100
of sales; selling expenses, $1; and
administrative expenses, almost $2.
It is these overhead decreases that
brought about the materially im-proved
showing in 1935 as com-pared
with 1934 (Chart V).
However, it is perfectly obvious
that costs and selling prices are still
dangerously close together, and that
the industry has a long distance to
go to bring about a sound relation-ship
between these two factors.
Turnover of Inventories • Although
inventories at the close of 1935 in-creased
approximately 3^4% as
compared with the end of 1934, yet
in proportion to volume inventories
were smaller than in many years.
1926- IOO
Consequently, the turnover of av-erage
inventories into sales showed
a marked improvement during 1935.
The following figures show the in-ventory
turnover into sales for the
last four years and reflects the con-stant
upgrade of this factor since
1932:
1932.. _ 1.87
1933 - - --2.00
1934 2.14
1935- 2.83
The increased volume attained m
1935 has also brought about im-proved
ratios in terms of capital
factors. Thus, the turnover of work-ing
capital increased from 1.75 times
in 1934 to 2.51 times in 1935. The
turnover of total capital was de-cidedly
better than any year since
1929, rising from .62 times in 1932
and .85 times in 1934 to 1.23 times
in 1935 (Chart VI).
Employment Rises • On the aver-age,
employment during 1935 in
terms of number of employees in-creased
some 20%, with dollar pay-rolls
averaging an increase of about
27%. Wage rates during the year
appear to have moved very little.
The relationship between volume
and payrolls was maintained on a
fairly even keel during 1935 as com-pared
with the previous years
(Chart VII).
The method adopted by the av-erage
plant was to increase hours
of operation, rather than to put a
proportionately greater number of
men back at work. Largely as a
result of this situation, the average
shipments per factory employee
during 1935 increased to $2,839 or
more than $400 over those of 1934.
During pre-depression years, the
shipments per factory employee
were often more than $4,000. How-ever,
this does not mean that fac-
Chctrt VII—(right)—Payrolls increased
during 1935 but slightly less than in-creased
volume.
19E6 19E7 I9£O I9E9 193O 1931 1931 1933 1934 1935
IOO
so
aa
TO
60
so
1 0
3 0
EO
10
0
Chart VI—(left) —
Turnover of capital
investment into
sales. 1935 made
a better showing
than any year
since 1929.
tory efficiency has declined to that
extent in recent years. What it does
mean is that prices have fallen
sharply, thus reducing the output
per man in terms of dollars. Ac-cordingly,
since the beginning of the
depression, there has been an almost
continuous decline in the "'man-dollar"
factor, the low being reached
in 1934 with shipments of only
$2,428 per man Chart VIII).
Operating profits per employee in
1935 amounted to $16 (Chart IX).
It should be noted that whereas
total shipments per factory em-ployee
in 1935 were better than
those in 1932 by less than $400,
the improvement in operating re-sults
per factory employee was
about $590.
Financially Strong • While the in-dustry
sustained a net loss during
1935, that was after deducting de-preciation.
Since, however, provi-sions
for depreciation do not require
a cash outlay and since additions to
plant for the year by the average
furniture manufacturer were very
small, the balance sheet for the in-dustry
showed a slight improvement
in current condition. The following
is a comparison of the financial
condition of the average furniture
plant at the end of 1935 and the
end of 1934:
ASSETS
December 31,
Cash receivables, invest- 1935 1934
ments, etc $115,000 $107,000
Inventories - 122,000 117,000
Total current assets -.$237,000 $224,000
Fixed assets - 157,000 166,000
Other assets 43,000 44,000
Total assets $437,000 $434,000
90
5O
40
IO
1 1 1 1 T
—J- T \
1 1
ri 1 «v \1
\
1923-4-5 AVG.= 100
1
l \
•Ji i\
1 1
_^
1
/t
f o r JULY, 1936 17
100
9 0
1926 = 100
100 100
8 0
1926=100 IO0
10 10
1926 I92T 1926 1929 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 I93S
Chart VIII — (above) — Shipments per factory employee.
1935 witnessed a rise of more than $400 per man.
Chart IX—(right)—Operating results per factory employee.
The improvement since 1932 aggregated about $590 per
LOSS
1930 -
193 1 -
I93E -*57-<V.OO
1933 - * 99.00
193-1- -*I45.OO
- 6 0
-SO - 3O
-IO0
-IE0
-MO 1926 1927 »Z& 1929 l?3° 1931 1932. 1933 193+ 1935
- HO
LIABILITIES AND NET WORTH
Current liabilities $ 73,000 $ 61,000
Long term liabilities 35,000 36,000
Total liabilities $108,000 $ 97,000
Net worth 329,000 337,000
Total liabilities and net
worth $437,000 $434,000
It will be observed that inven-tories
increased somewhat — also
that receivables were higher. These
increases are of course natural with
expanding volume. Furthermore,
because of increased activity, many
plants found it necessary to aug-ment
their borrowings. Thus, while
current assets, on an average, in-creased
$13,000 per plant, current
liabilities rose some $12,000, result-ing
in a net increase in working
capital on an average of $1,000 per
plant.
The write-down of plant proper-ties
after considering additions dur-ing
the year, amounted to an aver-age
of $9,000 per plant. Thus, the
net worth of the average plant
shows a decrease of $8,000 during
the year. This decrease is made up
of an average net loss of approxi-mately
$2,500, dividends of approx-imately
the same amount, the bal-ance
being accounted for by surplus
charges, capital retirements, etc.
Considering the drastic losses the
industry has suffered during the
depression, its financial condition as
a whole is still very sound. How-ever,
there are an increasing num-ber
of companies that have lost a
large part of their capital reserves.
These plants will undoubtedly ex-perience
considerable difficulty when
the real upsurge in business de-velops.
A Look Ahead • Some really better
things appear to be in store for the
furniture industry. So far 1936 is
witnessing an even more vigorous
rate of volume advance than that of
1935. The first four months have
shown a gain of over 37% as com-pared
with the corresponding period
of the previous year.
Optimism is running high as to
the home building prospects. If past
experience is any criterion, it may
be assumed that the anticipated
expansion in home building will
vigorously stimulate furniture de-mand
and output. To this stimulant
will be added the large latent re-placement
demand for furniture.
These factors, together with the un-usually
low inventories in the hands
of both manufacturers and dealers
and the natural increase in furni-ture
buying which may be looked
for with improving business condi-tions,
give furniture's prospects a
"rosy" hue. The year 1936 promises
to be better than "the best since —."
18 FINE FURNITURE
Stanaara BY WHICH
GOOD FURNITURE IS JUDGED
THE excellence of John Widdicomb Company's furni-ture
products is a standard by which good furniture is
judged. They are the quality leaders in the Grand
Rapids Furniture Exposition. They lead in purity and
perfection of design, in style, in workmanship and in
service to the home. There is nothing omitted in John
Widdicomb furniture that makes for beauty, charm
and completeness.
The Provincial group, pictured herewith, is typical
of John Widdicomb furniture integrity. Everything in
this suite is true to the finest traditions of the style
it represents. It is finished and complete. It is made
in solid Cherry, the tops and sides being veneered in
Marisier. The beds may be obtained either in Cherry
or painted with hand decoration.
The suite is bench made and has an antique finish in
soft amber color. The hardware is reproduced from
old bronzes taken from imported Provincial models.
The interiors are in oak, perfectly finished with
drawers and movable compartments meticulously
fitted.
It is the pride of John Widdicomb Company that its
furniture is a recognized contribution to the lovely
and livable home. Its furniture remains solid and be-comes
a source of profitable credit to its dealers. It
is prestige building furniture that places the same
stamp of public approval on the store handling it
that for nearly a half century has distinguished the
manufacturer's name in the furniture industry.
JOHN WIDDICOMB COMPANY
New York Showrooms — No. 1 Park Avenue Showrooms at Factory —601 Fifth Street, N. W., Grand Rapids, Mich.
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 19
RETAIL PROFIT".
Theme of Summer Furniture Drama
TALENTED CAST OF MERCHANDISE, ABLY
STAGE-MANAGED BY MERCHANDISING
CO-OPERATION, PLAYS TO BIG BUYER
AUDIENCE EAGER FOR VALUES
By ROD MACKENZIE
and K. C. CLAPP
Editors. FINE FURNITURE
•"PHE curtain rises on the Midsummer furniture
_L markets.
The stage is set for an especially impressive drama
presenting a cast of highly talented merchandise. But
through this stellar performance will run a strong,
definite, well-developed merchandising plot. And it will
"get across" to an eager audience of buyers because the
stage manager, Mr. Wise Manufacturer, has taken care
that the show is vitalized by a stirring "retail-profit"
theme. It is more than a perfunctory exposition of
woods, fabrics, glass and veneers. Nor is it keyed to
the old easy going tempo of entertainment-filled buy-ing
burlesques in which carload orders were placed
over a bottle of bourbon (and later cancelled).
It is an untra-modern, fast-moving, highpowered play
meeting splendidly the exacting demands of a sophisti-cated
audience that would get up and walk out on
hackneyed lines or a "ham" performance.
More Buying • Not only are manufacturers exceeding
all past accomplishments in the way of starring spec-tacular,
salable furniture, but merchandise men from
all the nation's homefurnishing stores will be there
to buy and to buy substantially. They admit it. FINE
FURNITURE, just prior to market, asked several hundred
of them concerning the extent of their contemplated
market purchases, and 97% of their number declared
they would buy MORE than they did in January,
which established a five-year record m business
written.
These retailers, cheered by steadily increasing store
sales of furniture, are alert and alive to what unques-
The Duncan PhyJe soia. No. 382, 84" wide, 35" deep,
is by the Wolverine Upholstery Co., Grand Rapids,
displayed in the Waters-Klingman Bldg. The Modern
dining group by Saginaw Furniture Shops is made
of English harewood, mahogany and aspen crotch.
Shown in the American Furniture Mart.
4;
At the top of the page is a medium-priced R. W.
Irwin Co. reproduction mahogany dresser. No. 3021,
displayed in the factory showroom. Directly above
is a group by H. T. Cushman Mfg. Co., shown in the
American Furniture Mart.
20 FINE FURNITURE
Left, a dainty and distinctive French enamel suite
by Estey Mfg. Co., Owosso, Mich., showing in Waters-
Klingman Bldg., Grand Rapids. An Eighteenth
Century dining group by Empire, Ltd., of Rockford,
exhibiting in the American Furniture Mart, is shown
directly below.
At the left (below) is one of the superb
Modern bedrooms exhibited by Johnson
Furniture Co., in its factory showrooms.
Grand Rapids. Right, one of the
Colonial Craftsman series of dining
room groups by White Furniture Co.,
Mebane, N. C, in the Merchandise Mart,
1I
tionably will be a great Fall business. Reasons for this
practically universal optimism are many and sound:
1. Improvement During First Half of '36—On the
basis of returns thus far, most of the leading com-panies,
both manufacturing and retailing, will show a
larger volume for the first half of '36 than during the
same period of last year. This, despite the fact that
1935 was a good year compared to its predecessors,
and that business was practically at a standstill during
several weeks earlier this year because of the extremely
cold weather. The economic dam that held up pur-chases
of homefurnishmgs for more than five years is,
if not broken, at least weakening!
2. Residential Construction — Home building has
been resumed and, although it is still too early for the
homefurnishmgs industries to have felt the full benefit
of the re-birth of this market, the opportunities for
large sales to home builders will be increasingly impor-tant
during coming seasons. New homes mean new
furniture.
3. Prices — The price trend remains gradually up-ward,
with the rising cost of raw materials and the
larger amounts that must be reserved for taxes push-ing
prices toward slightly higher levels.
4. The Bonus — That a fair share of the bonus
millions will go to furnishing, or refurnishing, homes
is indicated by all surveys of what veterans intend to
do with their money.
5. Better Values — The industry this year definitely
has value-per-dollar to sell. Prices are much lower
f o r J U L Y , 1 9 3 6 21
Directly below is ct Hepplcwhite dining room i:i
mahogany shown by G. R. Chair Co. in thoir factory
showroom, while beneath it in a group of two Chip-pendale
tables., a what-not and a Chippendale desk
shown in the Imperic:! Furniture Co. showroom. Grand
Rapids.
•I
Of the many "blondi-" finish bedroom -.uitPH shown
at the American Furniture Mart, thi.-i by the Carroll-ton
Fumituie Co. cf Ccrralltoii, Ky., is outstanding
(top right). Bolcv it is a striking Modem bedroom
group, shown in the factoiv s'lov/ioom of the Widdi-comb
Furniture1 Co., Grand Rapids.
than during the 1929-1930 era, yet the general average
of homefurmshings merchandise is better styled and
better constructed. One effect of the depression has
been to weed out the less efficient operators and give
the business — now that a respectable volume is again
obtainable — to those who can deliver extra value for
each dollar the public invests.
Modern Dominates • Apparently the swing away from
Modern which is noticeable in the offerings of manu-facturers
at this market, is not at all marked in the
buying plans of retailers who still will place, accord-ing
to intentions expressed in the FINE FURNITURE
survey, a large bulk of their orders in Contemporary
styles. However, there will certainly be enough
Modern shown to meet the most overpowering de-mand.
Seventy-one per cent of the retailers surveyed give
Modern first vote as a preferred bedroom style. Early
American runs a poor second; Eighteenth Century
styles are third.
Fifty-two per cent of these same buyers give Modern
first preference as a wanted living room style.
Georgian and commercial designs are second and third
respectively.
In dining rooms, 53% of the buyers questioned give
first preference to Georgian styles; Modern is second,
running very slightly ahead of Early American.
Browns Coming Up • In wanted colors for upholstery
fabrics, browns are rallying to a stronger position than
they have held in years, although rust still is the pre-dominant
choice among buyers. Greens are very low
in expressions of buyers' first preference, although they
poll a strong vote as a second choice color. Blue is
mentioned frequently as a third choice color, with a
few naming golds, burgundy and taupes.
Taps are definitely on the way out as a wanted
cover, most buyers putting various types of mohair
first as a desired upholstery fabric, with friezes strong
as a preference. Curly mohair will again be in good
demand. Velours and velvets will enjoy fair sales.
One of the significant features of the FINE FURNI-TURE
survey is that almost' 65% of the buyers queried
say they intend to make all three major midwest
markets —Grand Rapids, the American Furniture
•?•
Thin No. '.<\=F ' J '-.- :Oc!.-l. G:cfid
Rctpjd-., 14 K-i:ig . ho.-.n for the first
time at the- J'i-,.li r Bltla. this Tonth.
Tn the i f-nt.-r i.-. No. 15 c hctii bv
Wolverine Upholstiiy Co., Watei-*-
Klingmnu B:dq.. GicrndRnpid'--. Bottom
is ci lit".1." trrbii exhibited by Luce
Furiiitiiir- Co. ju its Grand Rapid-,
factoiy showroom.-, end the Mi-rchcin-di.-
i M:ut Chicago.
1
been concentrating their pur-chases
more or less to one or two
market centers, but this year they
feel they can afford to miss no part
of the merchandise pageant, with
key manufacturers of distinctively
designed furniture showing in each
of the major centers. Stores are
definitely bent upon sweetening
FINE FURNITURE
As usual. Baker Furniture Co., Hol-land,
Mich., is outstanding in its
oiierings oi Eighteenth Century
pieces. This desk group is again
being ieatured in Baker's space in
the Keeler Bldg.
their stocks with a wide variety of
merchandise — and buyers want to
see the whole parade.
Period Parade • And what will be
featured in this merchandise
parade? Based on a earful survey
and style forecast of the July fur-niture
markets, conducted early in
June, there is a strong affirmation
of a decided revival of traditional
furniture. Manufacturers appear
determined to maneuver a come-back
of the periods of the past, most
of them feeling that Modern came
too rapidly, and that it is now
swinging into a similarity of form
that is jeopardizing volume sales.
"Waterfall" fronts and rounded
ends, provide an attempted escape
from the onus of looking like pack-ing
cases. But even these features
are overworked as is the round
mirror. A dealer remarks, "That's
a good suite — IF you make the
mirror round." Apparently, the old
story — "if it sells — why not make
a lot of it?"
Depression Design • However, en-couragement
comes in the form of
Oak and leather conspire to
create a handsome masculine
office. Exhibited by Grand Rapids
Bookcase & Chair Co. in the Keeler
Bldg.
for JULY, 1936
A graceful Modern dinette suite in
blonde finish by Estey Mfg. Co.,
Owosso, showing in the Waters-
Klingman Bldg., Grand Rapids.
increasingly better design for
medium and popular priced mer-chandise.
Undoubtedly, the depres-sion
years witnessed more actually
creditable furniture designs than
any other period in years. This
condition can be attributed to the
frantic efforts of manufacturers,
through their designers, to develop
something in the line of furniture
that would have an appeal even
during the distressed days following
1929.
When merchandise is selling
without apparent effort, thoughtful
designing and development of beds,
chairs, dressers, buffets and tables
has a tendency to side-slip into in-different,
uninspiring pieces. Classic
Modern is a case in point. Here
was a style developed from the
purest of classic motifs, and many
were the truly beautiful pieces
fabricated, only to have them
stranded on manufacturers' and
dealers' floors, if they got that far—
for the very simple reason that
everybody and his brother was
making — and for a time selling —
Classic Modern.
Modern For Moderns • Modern is
now hanging in a similar balance.
A desk group of the Federal Amer-ican
period by Colonial Manufac-turing
Co., Zeeland, Mich.
However, this style appears to have
the edge on its Classic sister in that
it is a style in itself, and not a
hybrid, serving as a transition from
traditional to contemporary. Una-nimity
has been attained on one
point at least, regarding this furni-ture
enigma called Modern. It is
here definitely', as a style. Further
Right (top) No. 1952 chair exhib-ited
in Fine Arts Bldg., Grand
Rapids, by Charlotte Chair Co.,
Charlotte, Mich. It is 33" high.
26" wide, 20" deep. Center, wal-nut
desk. No. 1970, exhibited in the
factory showroom of Robert W.
Irwin, Grand Rapids. Length 54",
height 30", depth 30". Below, a
Schoenbeck (Grand Rapids) chair.
No. 1334, mahogany frame, width
31", height 42", depth 32". Exhib-ited
in Imperial Furniture Co.
showrooms.
I
- • ' •
24 FINE FURNITURE
development, to be sure, is antici-pated.
But it is the younger genera-tion's
furniture. The generation
that has witnessed the streamline
train, dawn-to-dusk transcontinental
transportation, radio electrification
of the home. For them, the clean,
smooth flowing lines and joyous
color of contemporary furniture.
Said one well known designer: "A
newsboy comes into my office every
afternoon. No background. Knows
nothing about design. If I'm work-ing
on a traditional piece the urchin
sneers — 'Copym' again', eh?" But
a Modern piece brings forth enthu-siastic
comment. 'That's the kind
of stuff I like.'" Indicative? You
tell us!
S t y l e P e r c e n t a g e s • H o w e v e r ,
traditional furniture, as stated be-fore,
is making a comeback. Ap-proximately
30% of both case goods
and upholstery shown in the sum-mer
markets will represent 18th
Century adaptations; about 40%
will be various interpretations of
Modern and the remaining 30%
will be divided among Early Ameri-can,
Early English, French and
Commercial or "borax."
It is generally believed that there
Milano Furniture
Co. makes the
Charles of Lon-don
t a b l e s
(above) display-ed
in the Mer-chandise
Mart.
The a c a c i a burl
bedroom suite is
by the Davis-
Randolph Furni-ture
Co., shown
in the American
Furniture Mart.
is to be a let up in the demand for
Modern, affording the public an
opportunity to catch up with the
manufacturers' production of this
type of merchandise, while the
"modification" of modern continues,
FINE FURNITURE'S retail survey in-dicates
a continuous expanding of
the market for contemporary fur-nishings.
Groupings • In the period fashions,
the correllated grouping idea is
again gaining prominence. This
method of merchandising permits
the dealer to select an assortment of
pieces from which his customer may
(Continued on Page 61)
The buffet. No.
580, and dining
chairs are by the
B. F. Huntley Co.
priced at $159.40
for nine pieces;
$179.80 for ten.
Shown in the
American Furni-ture
Mart.
Herman Miller manufactures the Modern living room ensemble
featuring wall cabinet combinations and typewriter desk.
The Chippendale dining room suite. No. 520, is by Luce
Furniture Corp., displayed in factory showroom. Grand
Rapids and Merchandise Mart.
f o r J U L Y , 1936 25
"PRESSING CAN RUIN A GOLF SCORE
OR A FURNITURE BUSINESS
By B. F. McLAIN
Secretary-Treasurer, Hart Furniture Co., Dallas, Texas
HPHE golfer who disrupts the smoothness of his swing
1 by trying too hard is said to be "pressing." The
infielder who rushes into a grounder and makes a
fumble is said to be fighting the ball. The football
player can, through over-anxiety, ruin the timing of
what should be a rhythmical shift. Merchandising is
analogous to sports in that the best results are secured
through the happy medium which avoids the extremes
of indifference or carelessness, on one hand, and the
adoption, on the other hand, of unsound methods
through over-anxiety to procure results.
No one should discount the advantages of aggres-sive
and progressive measures in attaining success in
retailing. The dealer who fails to keep abreast of the
Realtor to Retailer
BERNARD F. McLAIN'S
hobby is traveling. And in
truth he has traveled far and
high on the road to success in
furniture retailing. For the bene-fit
of the few not acquainted with
"Mac," he is president of the
National Retail Furniture Asso-ciation
and, incidentally, is the
only man to serve three terms as
president of the Retail Furniture
Association of Texas.
The World War interrupted
and, as it turns out, completely
curtailed what might have been
the career of just another realtor
and made McLain a furniture
man. Because the little squabble
with the Central Powers forced
him to change his residence, he
says, "I took the first good posi-tion
offered me and started in
1919 with the Hart Furniture
Company, Dallas, where I have
been ever since." He is now
secretary-treasurer of that firm.
Born April 11, 1891, in Eliza-beth,
N. J., McLain attended
elementary and high school there
and in Battin, N. J., going on to
Notre Dame Preparatory and
Yale University Law School.
He is 5 feet 11, weighs 155, is
married and has a daughter six
years old. His home is at 3801
Gillon Ave., Dallas. He is a
member of the Veterans of For-eign
Wars, American Legion and
the Brook Hollow Golf Club, but
won't admit what his handicap is.
By what he does in his spare
time, by what he likes in music,
Bernard F. McLain
art and literature may we really
come to know a man, and so we
pass on to you these tiny but
mightily revealing sidelights on
the character of McLain.
His chief relaxation is his home
life, but he enjoys all kinds of
sports, of which his favorite is
football. (He was at one time
captain of the football, baseball
and track teams at Notre Dame
Preparatory.)
His favorite dish is steak,
cooked thick and medium rare—
his favorite author, O. Henry.
Although McLain's hobby is
traveling and he has indulged it
to the extent of three trips to
B. F. McLain, NRFA Prexy, likes
to "go places/' wants his steaks
thick and rare and reads
O. Henry.
Europe, Central America and
West Indies, Hawaii; two to
South America and all parts of
the United States and Canada,
he doesn't care about flying.
His urge to "go places" is re-flected
in his choice of Ferdinand
Magellan as an outstanding his-torical
character, and his favorite
book William H. Prescott's Con-quest
of Mexico.
During the war, McLain com-manded
the trench mortars in the
18th Infantry, First Division in
France, an outfit that saw con-siderable
active service.
McLain's fondest memory and
the outstandingly interesting in-cident
in his business life is based
on what he terms his "weakness
in complying with the men who
served with me in the World
W7ar, and the most interesting
(and perhaps amusing) store
contact was with one of my old
corporals whom I had not seen
since the war. He was making
a purchase of furniture in the
store and when he saw me he
came to attention and saluted."
As Chairman of the Council of
the Texas Retailers' Association,
McLain has many outstanding
legislative accomplishments to his
credit, including the blocking of
efforts to set up industry con-trol.
Dallas merchants estimate
that he has saved them thou-sands
of dollars in burdensome
taxes by being in the forefront
of the fight against nuisance reg-ulation.
26 FINE FURNITURE
times cannot hope to prosper. However, there is a
point where progressiveness stops and dangerous ex-perimentation
begins. The merchant who is inclined
to try every new idea because it is novel is following
a precarious course. Retailers are deluged with sug-gestions
conceived by various individuals and organ-izations
designed primarily to bring remuneration to
those who make the suggestions. In many cases these
proposals involve substantial reductions in profit
margins to the detriment of the merchant.
A large book could be written regarding the thou-sands
of ideas submitted to furniture dealers, osten-sibly
to increase sales, but involving discounts from
the mark-up which is necessary to cover operating
costs. We are told to give discounts to brides, to new-comers,
to policemen and to firemen. We are advised
to give inducements to get new accounts on our books.
When they are on our ledgers it is suggested that we
have special customer nights and give discounts to
hold them. The manufacturer's representative urges
us to run his occasional table or his place chair as a
price leader and when Mrs. Bargain Hunter buys the
special, the credit application shows she has been fur-nishing
her home with all of our competitors' leaders.
In other words, a market which should have furnished
a profit to retailing has been absorbed by specials with
no gain to any dealer.
There is hardly a week in the year that does not
bring the average merchant a circular urging the use
of some sort of a bonus bond, or discount certificate,
or similar price cutting arrangement dressed up in
various ways. Generally, there is the suggestion to
hurr}^ before a competitor accepts the proposal, with
the not very subtle hint that the idea should be
adopted m self-defense against competition. Many
merchants are influenced to engage in promotions
which their judgment tells them are, in many respects,
undesirable, because they are given to understand that
if they do not accept it a competitor probably will. If
each individual dealer will make up his mind to reject
proposals which will not stand sound analysis naturally,
there would be no necessity to launch a dubious pro-gram
to avoid competing against it.
Rising Costs • We are undoubtedly entering a period
of rising operating costs. Taxes are growing heavier.
Social security measures will increase our overhead.
There is a tendency towards shorter hours with result-ing
payroll advances. Terms are growing longer with
carrying charge rates being lowered. Furniture stores
are selling an increasingly large percentage of resale
price items with gross mark-up less than that received
in the past. Surely this is no time to indulge in the
various profit-sapping practices being suggested in
ever expanding numbers. This is a time for sound
and sane measures, and for the courage to say "No"
to the man who offers some new sugar-coated method
of cutting prices in the hope that it may bring in-creased
volume. Speaking of volume, we are unques-tionably
in an era of expanding furniture sales. The
average dealer will need all the capital he has to
finance regular business. He would be foolish indeed
to tie up his sorely needed capital in financing sales of
unprofitable merchandise, or dubious promotions and
so impair his ability to finance sales which bear suf-ficient
profit to cover overhead.
Fundamentals • And now to return to the analogy
of sports. The most successful football coach this
country has ever known was the most thorough teacher
of the fundamentals of the game. Every player was
to fulfill his assignment effectively on every play. He
developed a well-trained organization in which each
man knew what he should do and did it every minute
of play. He taught an aggressive style, but he did not
gamble on his plays. And so it is with successful mer-chandising.
There are certain fundamental principles
of retailing which are all important — a well-trained
organization; a proper stock selection to fill the needs
of the particular dealer's clientele; alertness in dis-cerning
style trends in their inception; attention to
detail; close contact with customers; stock control to
assure turnover, advertising policy based on scientific
knowledge of actual results, not on theory. Such
factors in the operation of a business are far more
effective than indulging in new or novel promotions.
Progressiveness, of course, is necessary and desirable,
but care should be taken to distinguish between pro-gressive
policies and unsound practices.
Retailing is a business of tremendous detail. It
prospers only through careful planning and close atten-tion
to all its ramifications. The successful football
coach does not have his team throw a long pass every
other play. He develops a winning team by teaching
the fundamentals to good men and then watching to
see that the plans are properly executed. The success-ful
retailer adopts the fundamental principles of sound
merchandising and sees that he has an alert organiza-tion
to adhere to them.
"Long Passes" • A long pass is spectacular and
effective if not used too often. It most assuredly has
its place in the game if used with judgment and dis-cretion.
But sound fundamentals and everlasting team
work are the all important factors which win the day
year in and year out. And in this connection it is very
respectfully submitted that it is fundamental that the
selling price should bear sufficient margin of profit to
cover the cost of doing business.
In conclusion, we will revert to the expression used
in the title of this article and in the phraseology of
the golf course, suggest that the best results are not
secured by "pressing" for volume through indiscrim-inate
methods. Retailing, together with every other
type of business, must face the many problems of the
social and economic changes which our country is ex-periencing.
It probably will become increasingly dif-ficult
to procure net profits commensurate with effort
and investment.
It behooves the men who are formulating merchan-dising
policies to maintain retailing on a reasonably
sound basis. Competition there must be, of course. No
sensible man advocates profiteering. Let us adopt
methods fair to the public and fair to the craft to
which we are committed for a livelihood, to the end
that our type of business shall progressively but sanely
serve the public welfare. In so doing we will make a
substantial contribution towards sustaining the all
important bulwark of economic stability.
The August issue of FINE FURNITURE will carry a complete report on important and dominant trends apparent
in the purchases of stores and in the showings of exhibitors at the various July furniture and rug expositions.
f o r JULY. 1 9 3 6 27
BAQ.NES
THE GRACEFUL GOLF FOP-M
(J3ELO\W) IS DAMIEL WITT
HANCOCK.-OFTHEBLUEFIELD
FURNITURE CO. WHO
LIU.ES HIS OOLF, BAKED BEANS
AND THIHKS FRANKLIN D-ROOSEVELT
A 6P.EAT
ouy —
OOEGDISWOLD
PP-ESIDENT GRAND P-APIDS
FURNITURE MANUFACTURER.^
ASS'N - AND 14EAD OF THE
sWlDOlCOM& FUP-HlTURE Co .
HT EATS PEAHUTS 1M PLACE
OF POTATOES.
THERE WILL BE SOMETHING
ELSE TO SEE AT TWE GRAND
&APIDS JULY MARKET
BESIDE FURN ITURE
R.. RAU
•EXECUTIVE
VICE-P^ES-NATIONAL
RETAIL.
FURNITURE ASSN
HE LIKES TO SWIM
AND DIVE INTO
PIE A U MOD&.
DICK
TAHDLER
SALES MANAGER:
FUR-NITUCE
DIVISION, OF
COLLINS mo
PLAYED A
WAS A
STRAIGHT "
MAH. OH TUB
HE WENT INTO
THE fUP-NITURE
TO
LIVlNCr.
famous
furniture
firms
FINE FURNITURE
"C1 STABLISHED in 1870, at Six
I i Mile Creek near Owosso, near
plentiful supply of native hard-woods.
First owners, Estey and
Tooley, this Estey being a nephew
of Jacob Estey of Estey organ fame.
First factory was in reality only a
sawmill, cutting elm, ash, maple and
shipping it to Detroit where it was
assembled into painted furniture
then in vogue.
Entered, in 1875, Charles E. Rig-ley,
who influenced removal of firm
to Owosso. Line completely changed
and Estey Mfg. Co. began to make
chamber suites. Business prounded
so rapidly that "Factory A" aniklin
cope with it and "Factory I>" was
built to the clamor of a unique pub-licity
stunt. Material was assem-bled,
foundation prepared ,'iiul on
The upper oval shows
the Estey Mfg. Co.
plant in 1900, known
at this time as the
largest bedroom lur-niture
plant in the
world. The first fac-tory
and saw mill
at Six Mile Creek at
the right. Below, the
havoc wrought to
Plant B by a tornado
in 1911. Five years
before. Plant A was
destroyed by fire.
Monday morning, first week of Feb-ruary,
1890, laborers started putting
up a plant that was finished in 57
hours and 45 minutes.
In 1906 "Factory A" burned. At
11 minutes after 11 on Nov. 11,
1911, a tornado demolished in 57
seconds the factory that had been
built in 57 hours, nature thus con-tributing
unforeseen whimsy to a
freakish publicity stunt.
A strange story is told of the
famous Estey trademark. It seems
Rigley had been trying to find a
trademark but was getting nowhere
when a tramp came into the factory
asking for work. "What can you
do?" asked Rigley. "Anything you
want," said the tramp, whereupon
Rigley told him to make a trade-mark
using Estey Standard. The
tramp retired to a saloon, returning
later with the design, was paid and
disappeared, but that trademark
has been carried the country over
on every bit of Estey furniture,
stationery, catalogues, etc. Who the
tramp was, nobody knows. Rigley
retired in 1921 and sold his interest
to B. A. Hathaway of Grand Rap-ids,
whose estate still holds the con-trolling
interest.
Beards, brogans and
belligerence were in-evitable
attributes of
the early furniture
craftsmen as dis-played
by the group
of early Estey em-ployes
at the top of
the page. Tom Cal-lard,
sixth from the
left, has been con-tinuously
with Estey
since 1882.
. • / * •
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 29
* ' • .
- • ' " . - • . , . . •
1 *;••*>
JOSEPH P. LYNCH
• • . deplores false dignity.
Called upon to salvage something from the ruins of many a good
store, Joe Lynch, as a sales and merchandising expert for many
years, is qualiiied to speak with considerable authority on the
factors that contribute to success or failure in furniture store opera-tion
today. If you think, as a merchant, that you have arrived,
that you can coast along on the high reputation of your store, that
you can forget the basic principles of merchandising and adver-tising,
. . .
DON'T KID YOURSELF
. .Says Joe Lynch
FEW retail merchants are, sur-prisingly
enough, really com-petent
merchandising and advertis-ing
men. In my contacts with stores
throughout the United States and
Canada, I find that in all too many
cases the merchant dictates mer-chandising
and publicity policy with
no definite aim of building a large
volume of business, but rather with
an idea of living up to a certain
standard of dignity and prestige
which he has set for himself and
his store.
All too often our experience has
led us into a store which a merchant
has operated over a long period of
time and which he has built to what
he considers a winning mercantile
venture, until he has become smug
and complacent to the point of be-lieving
in his own financial wizardry
and leadership. He devotes much
of his time and energy to being
socially prominent.
Prodded by pride in his store and
its accomplishments, he often feels
that he should install new fixtures,
a neV front and other expensive
sops to his vanity. He strives to
make his advertising dignified, con-servative
and—all too often—high
hat. He attempts to compete with
stores selling higher priced mer-chandise.
To all intents and pur-poses,
although he would be the
last to admit it, he has decided that
the customers who built his busi-ness,
made his money and allowed
him to become socially prominent,
are not good enough to trade in his
high-class store. He carries the type
of merchandise they cannot afford
to buy.
What Happens? • Operating costs
increase, slack months come along,
and finally we observe him chewing
the end of his pencil and wondering
what in hell has happened to his
business. He forgets that his very
efforts to improve in this manner
his advertising and to carry a higher
grade of merchandise have created a
strong sales resistance on the part
of his old customers; that his classy
advertising and snooty store have
frightened them away, and it's go-ing
to take a long time to get 'em
back. He forgets that there are
ten thousand buyers of cheap and
medium-priced merchandise to one
of high-priced merchandise. Per-haps
he has been sold on the idea
that he should try and build up his
30 and 60-day charge account busi-ness,
here again overlooking the
fact that about 92% of the furniture
business of the United States is
done on the instalment basis, and
that by actual analysis the long-deferred
payment plan is more sat-isfactory
than the thirty or 60-day
charge account.
It seems to me that the furniture
store operator should remember
above everything else that he is
supposed to be, and must be if he
hopes to continue to exist as such,
a merchandiser and an advertiser.
Five Necessities • In my opinion,
successful merchandising means,
first, the writing of newspaper ad-vertising
that attracts the eye and
draws the great mass of low and
medium-class buyers into a store.
It creates an atmosphere of friend-liness.
It makes easy the purchase
of merchandise in his store. It pre-supposes
a policy of money re-funded
on every article that does
not give satisfaction. It depends for
a large measure of success on sell-ing
every advertisement and what
it aims to accomplish to the entire
organization first of all.
A retail advertisement may be
beautiful to look at—it may carry
an appearance of dignity, it may
tickle the merchant's vanity, but if
it lacks the proper selling assets,
that advertising expenditure is
wasted. The first aim of an adver-tisement
must be to attract the eye.
Next in order of importance is the
arousing of curiosity, then creation
of desire, use of right kind and
price of merchandise in the ad, and
last—the very, very last—the build-ing
of store prestige.
Advertising should be deliberately
designed to bring people to the store
in great numbers for certain adver-tised
items. Experience has proved
to me time and again that they will
buy other items, too. For example,
in a sale we conducted for Brus-haber's
in Detroit, we used a double
truck as a merchandise ad, but did
not advertise floor, bridge or junior
lamps. Regardless of this and be-cause
of the great number of people
who came in for advertised items
and because the lamps were well
displayed, we sold 268 lamps and
shades in a day.
In order to create productive ad-vertising
there must be cooperation
and understanding from the pres-ident
down to the delivery man.
The entire organization must be sold
on the idea of what the advertising
is designed to accomplish, and the
part each one is to play in making
the sale of advertised items a suc-cess.
FINE FURNITURE
FAMILIAR DESIGNS, INTERPRETED
By F A M O U S DESIGNERS
16th Century English
FROM a choir stall in Parish church at Crediton,
Devonshire, England, Dermot M. Doherty received
the inspiration for the development of the 16th Cen-tury
oak bedroom suite illustrated on the opposite
page. A typical post of the choir stall is sketched at
the top of the page and the character and spirit of
this rugged era can be traced in the various pieces of
the group. By delineating the evolution of furniture
creation in this manner, FINE FURNITURE ambitiously
aspires to further a genuine appreciation of what con-stitutes
good commercial furniture—and why.
Frequently, in popular-priced merchandise, may be
recognized a merging of periods, and often it is ex-tremely
difficult to allocate an individual piece or group
to any specific furniture era. Only by men equipped
with fundamental knowledge of the historic, economic
and racial customs of the various sources from which
they must draw their inspiration, can this type of mer-chandise
be produced intelligently. Words alone do
not make sentences, no more than a series of unrelated
lines and curves can be correctly labeled "Queen
Anne dresser."
In developing the 16th Century oak bedroom group
for this month's Sketch Book, Doherty has faithfully
retained the rugged character of early English furni-ture.
The group is sturdy without being cumbersome,
decorative but not flamboyant. Drawn from a period
when great economic and political changes were in
order, the group reflects characteristics of this English
Renaissance, erected upon a Gothic structural back-ground.
The use of the linen fold for embellishment on the
panels of the bed, doors and drawers of the cases, is
typical of early English ornamentation. Originally
employed with reckless abandon, this motif in later
years achieved a certain charm by being adapted only
to logical spaces. In creating this commercial suite,
Doherty has effectively used a linen fold that requires
no hand work, being fabricated entirely on the sticker.
The open Gothic carving, bold in character and
judiciously restrained, incorporates the Tudor rose,
floral patterns and fruit, and lends itself admirably to
commercial reproduction. Here again hand work is
practically eliminated.
Ornamental mouldings, bed posts carrying the detail
of the choir stall post, and turned legs supporting cases
of generous proportions, scaled down to modern facil-ities,
retain the straight, sturdy feeling of Tudor Eng-land.
Probably the outstanding feature of this suite is the
fact that it can be produced with a minimum of hand
labor and at the same time achieve the dignity and
characteristic ruggedness of 16th Century furniture.
The group would retail for approximately $250.
ERIN SENDS A LAUGHING SON ON A BEAUTY QUEST
DERMOT M. DOHERTY
. . . practicing authority on
corned beef and cab-bage.
DERMOT M. DOHERTY, de-signer
of the 16th Century Eng-lish
group on the opposite page, carries
the sobriquet of "Irish." Rightfully,
too, as the man was born in 1890 on
Christmas day in Dublin. How he
severed his allegiance to the ould sod
and managed to inveigle Mother Eng-land
into educating him in the art of
designing furniture, has never been
satisfactorily explained. Nevertheless,
the year 1907 found him in London
as an apprentice in Waring & Gillows'
drafting room. Three years later he
was serving the same concern in the
Argentine, assisting in designing the
interior of the Plaza Hotel in Buenos
Aires. Two years later he was back
m London, this time with the famous
old house of Maple & Co. as staff de-signer.
Then North America beckoned
and "Irish" joined that notoriously
talented crew of W. & J. Sloane in
New York.
Doherty left New York in 1922 in
search of other fields to explore and
for seven or eight years created suc-cessful
commercial designs for impor-tant
Grand Rapids, Chicago and Rock-ford
manufacturers. In 1931 he
opened his own designing office in Chi-cago
and extended his interests to in-clude
other furniture centers. Since
that time he has pursued a free-lance
career and at present is operating out
of Grand Rapids.
His oak group in this issue of the
Sketch Book is in line with the re-newed
interest in furniture of this
character.
Possessor of a hilarious sense of
humor, "Irish" is also endowed with
a sensitive appreciation of beauty, de-spite
the fact that he is an ardent
admirer of Edgar Allen Poe and is a
practicing authority on corned beef
and cabbage. He rates W. W. Jacobs'
"Nightwatchman" the outstanding
character in fiction and there is noth-ing
the Dublin boy would rather do
than design fine furniture — except
paint landscapes.—Editor.
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 31
£
. . — • - — • • 3™ -««M^—;
. . - • • * • • • * * . . * - . - - "
32 FINE FURNITURE
HOME OF THE MONTH
TWENTY furniture stores in as many cities are
reporting substantial sales increases from their tie-up
with the "Home of the Month" plan sponsored by
McCall's Magazine and the National Association of
Real Estate Boards.
To make it easier for participating furniture dealers,
the magazine supplies all stores with suggested dec-
Despite bad weather, 20,000
people visited this "Home of
the Month" in St. Louis, com-pletely
furnished by Lammert
Furniture Co. Below, a typical
bedroom in one of these model
homes.
orating and furnishing schemes, specifying styles in
furniture, floor coverings, draperies and curtains appro-priate
for each room. The store, however, is not re-quired
to adhere strictly to these suggestions.
In the past, many furniture stores have encountered
grief in furnishing exhibition homes because builders
were not of the best. Those chosen by the National
Association for the construction of these houses are the
highest grade builders in each locality. They are com-mercial-
minded and realize that a store must get leads
for furniture sales if it is to benefit, beyond advertising,
from their participation in the venture.
Ample attendance is assured these exhibitions be-cause
each month's "Home" is elaborately described
and pictured in the magazine's current issue. The large
audience of McCall's readers is also furnished with a
list of addresses at which these model homes may be
inspected and the names of the stores decorating and
furnishing them.
This "Home of the Month" plan will carry through
the year and McCall's invites additional stores to
participate.
• : • •
m
LOUIS A. HINDS
Boston Furniture Mart
Boston, Mass.
LAWRENCE H. WHITING
American Furniture Mart
Chicago, 111.
• P ~ "
PAUL W. CASEY
Southern Furniture Exposition Bldg.
High Point, N. C.
LEO J. HEER
Furniture Manufacturers Bldg.
lamestown, N. Y.
MEN WHO MAKE FURNITURE MARKETS
BEHIND the scenes of every
major furniture market is an
intricate and almost endless mass of
preparatory work which buyers and
other market visitors seldom see or
appreciate.
The job of readying display spaces
in a major exposition building re-quires,
for weeks before a market,
the services of hundreds of people
whose activities must be closely
supervised. This talent for taking
infinite pains and checking up on
every minor detail of preparation
amounts almost to genius in the
key men who are really the stage
managers of furniture markets. They
deserve to be better known, and for
that reason we present them here:
Louis A. Hinds, director, Boston
Furniture Mart, is married but has
no children. He was born in Boston
in 1879. Lou is S feet 9 and weighs
185. He has been a director of
markets in Boston since 1926, and
was identified with the Hearst news-papers
before his entry into the fur-niture
business.
Hinds' professional aim is "to
further the welfare of the furniture
industry in New England." He be-lieves
the home furnishing business
is a great social and educational
force, being closely related to home,
"and isn't the home the most im-portant
thing in the world?"
For relaxation Hinds likes to
wander in the woods and country,
and growing things are his hobby.
His favorite sport is football, and
his favorite dish is fried lobster "as
it is served at Marblehead, Mass.,
and at no other place in the world."
Victor Herbert is the composer
Hinds likes best and he most enjoys
reading the novels of Hugo, Cham-bers
and Roberts.
When he retires, Hinds wants to
go "back to the woods."
His advice to those interested in
learning the furniture business is,
"Never miss an opportunity to read
and observe—especially observe."
Lawrence H. Whiting, president,
American Furniture Mart Building
Co., Inc., was born Jan. 29, 1890,
at Plattsmouth, Neb. He is 6 feet
2 inches tall and weighs in the
neighborhood of 200. He is a wid-ower
with two children. Educated
at the University of Chicago, Whit-ing
had a brilliant career as an
athlete, being a varsity football and
track star. His business career be-gan
with the Illinois Life Insurance
Co. in 1907, and in 1914 he became
assistant to the vice-president of
this firm and the manager of its
Chicago department.
In April, 1917, "Larry" entered
the U. S. Army and was made a
captain of cavalry in the 86th Divi-sion
four months later. In December
THOMAS R. MURTAUGH
New York Furniture Exchange
New York City
GEORGE L. HERRSCHER
Fine Arts & Pantlind Exhibition Bldgs.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
JAMES I. RYSKAMP
Keeler Exhibition Bldg.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
GEORGE B. ATKINSON
Merchandise Mart
Chicago, 111.
, * ' • • ! - ' • •
• ' • - > •
34 FINE FURNITURE
of the same year he was assigned to
the post of Chief Personnel Officer
of the Army in the War Department
at Washington and in March of the
next year to G. H. Q. in France as
Chief Personnel Officer. WThiting, in
December of the same year, became
the youngest lieutenant-colonel in
the service and was assigned to the
American Commission to Negotiate
Peace as assistant to Norman H.
Davis, High Commissioner, U. S.
Treasury.
Upon his retirement from service
Whiting organized Whiting & Co.,
investment bankers in May, 1921,
and in 1923 built the American
Furniture Mart, of which he be-came
chairman of the board, hold-ing
that office until 1933, when he
became its president. He is an
officer and director in several indus-trial
institutions and banks.
Paul W. Casey, secretary, treasurer
and manager of the Southern Fur-niture
Exposition Bldg., High Point,
N. C, was born Dec. 4, 1902, in
New Castle, N. C. He is 5 feet 9
and weighs 170, is married and has
three children. He entered the fur-niture
business from the real estate
game. Casey (and that's his nick-name,
too) is a graduate of the
Appalachian State Teachers' College
where he was active in sports, espe-cially
baseball and basketball, con-tributing
a "whisky tenor" as his
sole musical accomplishment.
His chief aim is to ''make the
Southern Market so interesting that
we will have all the dealers in the
South as well as those from other
sections."
Casey likes to play golf for re-laxation,
his hobby is bird hunting
and football is the most exciting
sport he can imagine. His favorite
dish, he says, is not spinach.
His advice to anyone entering any
business is cryptic but forceful. It
is "Be thorough!"
Leo J. Heer, secretary, Jamestown
Furniture Market Association and
manager of the Furniture Manufac-turers'
Building of Jamestown, was
born Dec. 12, 1902, in Louisville,
Ky. He is married and has one
child, Timothy Michael Heer, 2
years. Leo is 5 feet 11 and weighs
195. Before he became identified
actively with the furniture business
he was a newspaper man and a
manager of convention bureaus.
Heer says one of his most inter-esting
early contacts in the furniture
business was that with "a man with
whom I worked for three years be-fore
he decided to buy space. He
was the first one to come to me with
a helpful suggestion when I was in
a spot where assistance in a busi-ness
matter was vital. I never can
forget now that the right kind of
customer becomes more than a
buyer. Give a customer a chance
and he is your friend."
Football is Heer's favorite sport
and reading his chief hobby. Emil
Ludwig and Sinclair Lewis are his
favorite authors, although he hesi-tates
to rank them above Oscar
Wilde, Voltaire and Don Marquis.
The latter's character, Mehitabel
the Cat with her philosophy of
"Tojours gai" being one of Heer's
favorite characters of fiction.
Thomas R. Murtaugh, general man-ager,
New York Furniture Ex-change,
was born Oct. 7, 1898, in
Brooklyn. He is 5 feet 11 inches
and weighs 205. His home is in
Westport, Conn., where he lives
with his wife and one child. "Tom,"
previous to his connection with the
furniture business, was active in
real estate, conducting a brokerage
office, managing, leasing and selling
property. He is a member of the
Advertising Club of New York City
and the Longshore Golf 8c Country
Club, Westport, Conn. During the
WTorld War he was attached to the
office of Naval Intelligence, 3rd
Naval District.
James J. Ryskamp, manager of the
Keeler Furniture Exhibition Bldg.,
Grand Rapids, was born April 18,
1903. He is 6 feet l/z inch tall and
weighs 180, is married and has two
sons. Before he became manager of
the Keeler Bldg. in 1927, he had
spent five years in the retail shoe
business.
The six furniture exposition buildings shown at the bottom of these two pages (left to right) are: Keeler
Bldg., Grand Rapids; New York Furniture Exchange Bldg.; Southern Furniture Exposition Bldg.. High Point,
N. C; Fine Arts Bldg., Grand Rapids; Jamestown Furniture Exposition Bldg., Jamestown, N. Y.; American
Furniture Mart, Chicago.
.<** s\ ''. ivt\
Zflr^- ' " * •
X *• Hi
MW •
1
• « • • ? ;
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 35
Reading is Jim's chief relaxation.
His hobby is the radio and "tinker-ing
with mechanical and electrical
devices." Golf and fishing are his
favorite sports and he would rather
eat baked ham, Southern style, than
any other food. Abraham Lincoln
is his conception of the most ad-mirable
character in history, and his
favorite author is James Fenimore
Cooper. A great lover of music,
Ryskamp's favorite composer is
John Philip Sousa, and the songs he
loves most are "The Bells of St.
Mary's" and "Abide With Me."
Upon retirement from business,
Jim wants to travel, having been
deprived of this privilege most of
his life. His chief professional aim
is the continuation of Grand Rap-ids'
prestige as the Furniture Cap-ital
of America.
George L. Herrscher, manager,
Fine Arts and Pantlind Exhibition
Bldgs., Grand Rapids, was born in
that city Jan. 9, 1901. He is mar-ried,
has one daughter and resides
at 1143 Worden St., S. E., Grand
Rapids. Herrscher weighs 165 and
is 5 feet 9.
With the Pennsylvania R. R. nine
years before entering the furniture
business, he began in 1926 as secre-tary
to G. A. Hendricks, building
owner, and president of the Adjust-able
Table Co. and White Steel Co.
Upon organization of the Fine Art
Corp. in 1929, Herrscher became
director and secretary of that com-pany,
and in 1930 also became
director and secretary of the Ad-justable
Table Co. and White Steel
Furniture Co. In 1931 he became
manager for G. A. Hendricks of
Above, the Waters-
Klingman Bldg..
Grand Rapids, and
below, the Mer-chandise
Marl,
Chicago.
Fine Arts and Pantlind buildings.
Fishing and baseball are Herr-scher's
favorite recreation and sport.
George B. Atkinson, manager, Fur-niture
Division, the Merchandise
Mart, Chicago, was born in Balti-more,
Md. Refuses to give his age
(about 45). He is 6 feet 1 inch tall
and weighs 190. Is married and has
two children.
Atkinson's hobby is the taking
and developing of pictures, and his
favorite sport is baseball. He says,
"One has little time for recreation
in the furniture industry, and my
chief relaxation is the education of
my children."
The homefurnishing business is a
great social and educational work,
in Atkinson's opinion. He says,
"Fine furniture in beautiful homes
tends to produce not only an ap-preciation
for craftsmanship and
artistry but also a proper back-
(Continued on page 71)
•,"-«
* si r
36 FINE FURNITURE
RETAILING TIPS . . .
Helping 'em Find a Home — How Barker Bros. Merchan-dise
Used Furniture to High Income Group — Bedding
Transactions Help Furniture Sales — Gets Refrigerator
Prospects for 14 Cents Each — Hints on Getting Office
Furniture Business.
A graceful and delicate occa-sional
table by Imperial Furniture
Co., grouped with a Schoonbeck
chair.
Free Rental Service
7\ FREE rental service offered to
JTx. home seekers has been a sim-ple
way of bringing many persons
into the Leon Furniture Store of
Allentown, Pa. The store charges
no fees or commissions of any kind
for the service.
An office clerk maintains the
rental records in her spare time.
Vacant houses and apartments are
listed on 3 x 5 inch cards which are
filed under street names. Thus the
person wanting to rent a place need
only mention the particular section
of the city where he prefers to
locate and the clerk can quickly
locate cards of available properties.
Property owners are glad to re-port
vacancies to the store as they
occur because the owner pays no
commissions for rentals made
through it. Real estate men also
turn over their lists of vacant prop-erties
but they are protected by
sending the interested home-seeker
direct to the office of the renting
agent.
Used Furniture for Elite
ONE of the problems confront-ing
the manager of a used
furniture department is how to
attract customers from the higher
income group. Barker Bros., Los
Angeles, has several proved answers.
Manager R. B. Smith was con-vinced
that once he could draw
women from the higher brackets
into his department he could sell
them regularly. However, the mag-net
would have to be more than
bargain appeal. He found the right
approach in a circular distributed
with a newspaper reaching the bet-ter
class families.
The inside page was handled like
a newspaper and one of the most
conspicuous heads read: "Woman
discovers rare antique in sale piece."
Figured woods and white leather are
harmoniously combined in this Holly-wood
group by Virginia-Lincoln Corp.
The account told of a woman who
purchased an old black-painted
chest from Barker Bros.' used fur-niture
department. In a refinishing
shop it was discovered that under-neath
the paint there was a fine old
piece. The article then continued in
a "swanky" vein to point out that
much of the used furniture came
from fine old homes.
The article also stressed the more
practical side of used furniture buy-ing.
This consisted of explaining
how used furnishings may be util-ized
in vacation homes, mountain
cabins, cottages at the sea shore,
etc. Brides were also appealed to as
"clever young brides" who might
have to watch pennies and could do
so in Barker Bros.' used furniture
department. Thus, in the one ad-vertisement
were three distinct
types of appeal: (1) Treasure hunt-ing,
(2) cabins and cottages fur-nished
out of used stock, (3) brides
who may need bargains. Other pro-motions
that can be successfully
used either in newspaper advertis-ing,
direct mail or suggestions in-side
the store itself in disposing of
used stock are: (1) Spare room fur-nishings,
(2) play room furnishings,
(3) boys' room furnishings.
f o r J U L Y , 1 9 3 6 37
Double Bedding Policy
rPHE bedding division has con-
X sistently shown itself to be a
sales stimulant for the furniture
section of the MacDougall-South-wick
department store, Seattle,
Wash. In fact, the "furniture sec-tion"
originally consisted of a small
stock of beds, springs and mat-tresses.
"A satisfied bedding customer is
a real friend of the department and
the store," declares Edward K.
Mills, in charge of the division.
"We make it a point to build this
vital customer acceptance by re-garding
the sale of a box spring as
the foundation for a spring-filled
mattress as a natural course of pro-cedure.
"Our salesmen are especially
trained in this regard and they are
due for a call if they sell a spring-filled
mattress without such a foun-dation,
just as they are slated for
an inquiry if a quality rug is sold
minus a pad. Naturally such sales
increase the volume and net profit
of the department. But what we
The sweep of the
Empire motif lends
unusual distinction to
this sofa (No. 379) by
Wolverine Upholstery
Co. It is 30" high by
85" wide and 33"
deep.
Carrying the Mail
DELIVERY of furniture style
books by floor salesmen in-stead
of sending them through the
mail has resulted in 50% more
effective advertising for the Ritter
Furniture Co. of Emaus, Pa.
About three times a year the
company issues an expensive roto-gravure
style book. John W. Ritter,
manager, decided the books were
not receiving the attention they
merited when sent through the mail
so arrangements were made to have
each floor salesman spend one day
a week delivering them.
homefurnishings which may be de-sired.
This method of approach
eliminates much of the resistance
women display in talking with sales-men
and encourages questions."
Make the News
MAKE the news and boost your
store sales. News column pub-licity
is increasingly being used by
those furniture owners and man-agers
awake to their opportunities.
As a rule retail furniture super-salesmen
are expert newsmakers.
Local newspapers consistently re-port
doings of the Chamber of
No. 1948 chair by Charlotte Chair Co.
Height 30", width 25", depth 20", birch
with walnut finish.
•">•**{,
Modem desk by Imperial, No. 1899. Top
is 18" x 27", height 44".
4
\
Another Modern chair. No. 210, by
Michigan Furniture Shops, Inc. Width,
27", height 30".
are primarily interested in is the
customer satisfaction involved in
the twin sale.
"W7hen we use a 'special' in the
bedding section it is one selling a
box spring and a spring-filled mat-tress
at a particularly attractive
ensemble price, to build a customer
tendency to 'make it double.' "
In one day alone the division sold
42 three-quarter bed springs and
mattresses at a good profit. And at
this time that size unit was sup-posed
to be unsalable, having been
superseded by the three-foot-three
size.
While the new method of distri-bution
costs slightly more than the
firm paid for mailing costs, the re-turns
proved to be at least 50%
higher. "The salesmen are glad to
spend one day outside in making
contacts because it helps them to
develop a larger personal following
and increases their sales," Ritter
explains.
"When the salesman calls at the
home he presents the housewife \vith
a copy of the style book, explaining
that he is not there to sell any-thing.
However, he is glad to give
any information on furniture or
Commerce, luncheon clubs, com-munity
chest, welfare organizations
and leading lodges. Meetings, proj-ects
and speeches are "covered."
The furniture man who will be a
good member—one who always is
ready to work and turns in a good
performance — inevitably becomes
an officer. He makes the local news
hundreds of times and always favor-ably.
Naturally the community has
confidence in the store of a man
who, over many months, has been
associated in the news with praise-worthy
projects and prominent,
38 FINE FURNITURE
public-spirited citizens. The public
will expect to find better furniture
and greater values at the store of
such a man.
True, this takes time and is cost-ly.
But in super-salesmanship activ-ity
of this sort the furniture man
needs to be as regardful for cost as
when building an addition or man-aging
delivery service. Some men
do virtually all such work during
lunch hours and evenings. They
simply make committee and other
meetings at such times a condition
of their agreement to serve. Make
the store sales first and then find
time, inexpensively, for the news-making.
Trips to distant cities are news
opportunities. Attending the inter-national
convention of his luncheon
club in a foreign country, a furni-ture
merchant took motion pictures
with an amateur outfit. Back home
he developed a lecture, some of it
illustrated with color films. He gave
this talk before his luncheon club,
church, school, college groups and
other organizations. In three months
he made the news nearly SO times.
The furniture man who takes a
long business or vacation trip should
call on the local editor when back
home and give him an interview on
business conditions. It should be
for the most part general, of in-terest
to all local business men.
However, the opportunity should be
taken to sketch briefly new trends
in furniture.
Furniture men are close to the
affairs of their communities. Often
they have early knowledge of big
local news in the making. Form the
habit of helping the editor when-ever
there is the opportunity.
Editors are human. They'll appre-ciate
the aid and will learn to go to
the furniture man for information.
And when he has a story of his own
they'll be glad to publish it.
When a "big shot" in the trade
visits your town, call up the news-paper
or take the visitor around to
the city room. Introduce him. See
that there is an interview.
And don't forget the society col-umn.
It is real promotion to report
house guests, friends or relatives to
the society editor. For almost every
woman reads the society items.
Publicity opportunities also are
present on the sport page. Sponsor
a baseball, basketball or other team
and note the tremendous amount of
publicity received for a trifling sum.
The sponsor usually simply fur-nishes
uniforms. There is little
other expense. Of course the team
name should include the store name
or that of one of its principal
nationally-advertised lines.
Don't slight the human interest
happenings. Suppose a customer
tenders a very old coin in payment.
Or a store employe wins a prize in
a manufacturer's contest. They are
good for a few lines in most papers.
There are many other ways to
make the news. The entire force
honors an old employe on his birth-day
anniversary. Organization of
an employes' club. Special stunt
window displays. Report them to
the editor.
Because most furniture stores are
not 5 % efficient in making the
news, the promotion opportunity is
wide open for those wide awake
merchants who will seize it. Sales
benefits always accrue.
Nearly all exhibitors at the July markets are giving
conclusive evidence of an Eighteenth Century revival.
Baker Furniture Co.'s desk and chair group (below)
presents a highly decorated Queen Anne chair and,
for its companion piece, a graceful knee-hole desk.
Above, secretary. No.
654, by Rockford
Chair & Furniture Co.
All mahogany, retails
for $79. Its base is
18"x34", and it is
77" high.
Above, a reproduction of Edison
'Institute museum piece. No. 2308, by
Colonial Mlg. Co. It is 21"x38",
height 43". Below, Victorian chair.
No. 1936, in Old World mahogany
finish. Width 19", depth 18", Char-lotte
Chair Co., shown in Fine Arts
Building.
for JULY. 1936 39
Prospects at 14 Cents
7\ PPROXIMATELY 3600 data
x l cards were turned in by guests
at a one-week electrical show con-ducted
by Pomeroy's, Reading, Pa.
Women attending the show were
requested to fill in data cards indi-cating
appliances employed in their
homes, appliances they didn't have
and those they desired. After the
cards were sorted it was found that
prospects for immediate follow-up
numbered about 500. The entire
sales organization was placed on
follow-up work to contact these
prospects promptly.
Paul Bear, appliance sales man-ager,
stated that the total expense
for conducting the show was about
$500, which brought the cost to
about 14 cents per prospect.
The original data visitor-signed
cards were placed in the files while
duplicates of the cards were given
salesmen for follow-up purposes. The
duplicates were sorted according to
the type of appliance that interested
the prospect.
Pomeroy's sales organization is
divided into two units. One unit
specializes on electric refrigerators
and radios, the other unit works on
ranges, cleaners, washers, smaller
appliances.
Duplicate cards used by the sales-men
are returned to the office after
calls are made. Notations are made
on the cards indicating additional
calls and the cards are then placed
in a tickler file.
The 3600 prospects listed during
the show, with those previously on
file, were sufficient to keep the
salesmen busy for several months
without the necessity of cold can-vassing.
Another chair of Contemporary design
by Charlotte Chair Co., No. 1964. It is
33" high, 24" wide and 19" deep, birch
with walnut finish and de luxe spring
seat.
While each salesman receives a
certain number of prospect cards
each day, he is not required to
make every call on the day he gets
the cards. Bear says it is more im-portant
to give every prospect
proper attention than to make a
daily effort to clean up all pros-pect
cards. Salesmen are constantly
checked up by telephone to find
whether they made the calls as re-ported
on their cards.
During the period of the show all
appliance salesmen were required to
be in the store. Their assistance
was demanded in handling the
crowds, in helping with demonstra-tions.
They also learned many new
kinks about appliances that will
help them with their sales work.
Office Furnishers Co-op.
A Modern interpreta-tion
of a commode
desk by the Bay View
Furniture Co., shown
at the right, has
curved corners. All
walnut, it has black
and chrome hard-ware.
Top 28" x 18",
height 36", No. 70,
$39.50
OOPERATION among dealers
in office furnishings in the
Tulsa, Okla., trade territory, was
one of the salient factors in a gen-eral
increase as well as a 50% in-crease
in the sales of heavy goods
by the Tulsa Stationery Co., accord-ing
to R. G. Attaway, president of
the concern.
"Such a policy on the part of all
of us has done much to create a
confidence on the part of the pub-lic,"
Attaway said.
"We haven't cut prices. We
haven't been at each other's throats.
We were taught, under the NRA,
how to sell for profit in a perfectly
legal way, and such cooperation has
greatly improved sales."
At the left, a handsome Chinese
Chippendale occasional table by
Imperial Furniture Co., No. 925.
The top is 20" x 30", and it is 27"
high.
Server and two chairs in
the distinctive Federal
ensemble in Cuban ma-hogany
by Grand Rap-ids
Chair Co. The side
chair. No. 932, and the
arm chair. No. 932A, are
priced at $22 and $28
respectively. The server.
No. 932V2- is 30" high
and 40" wide, and is
priced at $40.
40 FINE FURNITURE
1836
SL L0OK.S TO MB LIK.E
-•y is GO/NO TO
THE BIGGEST
ON RBCOR.P
<tOR GHAHP RAPIDS
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HALPANE.TMiS
f IS THE FIRST plEC
OF FURNITURE
MAPE IN
i GJUNP RAPlPS .
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Grand Rapid
to a Record Breal
June 2'
"It will be record breaking" is tt
consensus of t he nation's leadin
furniture manufacturers now preparir
busily and confidently for the Jul
Furniture Market in Grand Rapids.
With America's furniture center a be
hive of activity—with Grand Rapid
greatest furniture plants soundly r
established and in vigorous operation-with
many important new exhibitoi
—with every manufacturer showing tt
largest, most appealing new lines i
years—with the May Market bringir
three times as many buyers to Grar
Rapids as in 1935 and seven times i
many as in 1934 — with consumt
GRAND RAPIDS FURNITUR
^ i
•$£<sr
'i
\ - . • - • _ _ .„.
%
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 41
,ooks Forward
rig July Market
o July 18
:mand for quality furniture un-ecedented
— expectations of the
ggest, best and busiest Market of all
Tie are fully justified.
ome to Grand Rapids to see the
:west, finest, most saleable furniture.
jme to Grand Rapids for styles that
art the buying waves, for prices that
>en the pocketbooks of all income
asses, for furniture that gives added
•estige and extra profits to your store
id enduring pride of possession to
:>ur customers.
Ian now to be among the thousands
ho will be richly rewarded by coming
i Grand Rapids June 29 to July 18.
XPOSITION ASSOCIATION
42 FINE FURNITURE
Display Sells 150 Cribs
BABY beds and highchairs are
two of our best items sold
almost entirely by suggestion."
That's what H. L. Bartley, owner
of the Bartley Furniture Co., Fort
Morgan, Colo., located about 100
miles northeast of Denver, says
when referring to the fact that he
sells more than ISO baby beds a
year, together with a comparatively
large number of highchairs. He
does this despite the fact that there
are two other furniture stores in
the city with a population of around
6,000.
"We haven't spent a lot of money
on advertising or promoting baby
beds and highchairs because we feel
they are occasional items," Bartley
points out. "What we have done is
to build up our stock on these two
lines as high as possible, and then
we split them up into four divisions
and display them at different points
throughout the store. We always
keep one display on the main floor
and three displays on the down-stairs
floor. Three of these displays
show new merchandise, the other
used stock.
"When a customer is looking at
furniture on the main floor, the
display of beds and highchairs is
noticed. Seeing repeated displays of
the same articles in other sections
of the store impresses the customer.
Sometimes we sell a bed or a high-chair
simply because the displays
have produced the desire to have a
new one for the baby, but we be-lieve
the biggest advantage is that
after a customer goes through the
store the thought that we have a
big selection is a deciding factor.
When a baby bed or highchair is
needed the prospective customer
thinks of our store and often passes
the same thought on to friends when
they are in the market for such
articles."
Modern in Small Town
TWO effective ways of building
up the sale of Modern furniture
in a small city are advocated by
E. C. Stratford, furniture buyer for
Wrights' Department store, Ogden,
Utah.
The build-up, successfully con-ducted
by Wrights', consists of:
(1) Direct mail contacts. (2) "Sold"
customers given 5% commission on
sales made to prospects sent by
them.
"People have not yet been entire-ly
converted to the modern trend in
E. C. STRATFORD
. . . pays for prospects.
furniture," says Stratford, "espe-cially
those in a small city."
Prominent business men—doctors,
lawyers and business executives—
are contacted by direct mail. These
letters make mention of places
already outfitted and suggest that
they also modernize. It is an appeal
to the "small-town-growing-and-progressing"
pride.
Several large bar-rooms and
offices throughout the town have
been outfitted. Their occupants are
offered a 5% commission on any
Modern furniture sale the store
realizes from a prospect sent by
them.
Furnishings for one doctor's office
and a complete set for the offices
maintained by a large livestock
commission house were sold within
one week of the inauguration of the
campaign.
Sells Sleep—Not Bedding
WHEN a store begins to sell
mattresses and bed springs on
the basis of their function—that of
producing rest — instead of solely
on their value as merchandise, sales
begin to perk up.
During the year that Mandel's
(Chicago) "Slumber Shop" has been
m operation, business has increased
40% on bedding items without
special advertising.
Emphasis is put fundamentally
on selection of a mattress with
proper resiliency. This necessary
principle and other ideas in the shop
are the result of studies on the sub-ject
made by Leon Mandel III,
store president, whose interest in
the promotion has been very active.
A long row of samples extends
along the wall of the Slumber Shop.
Set above each is a card that gives
(1) selling information, (2) price
and (3) percentage of resiliency.
The heavier a person, usually the
less resiliency required.
At one end of the department two
specially built cases hold various
types of bed springs in ingenious
trombone-slide racks which permit
any spring to be drawn out with a
slight pull. Pillows are kept in a
case divided into several small com-partments
and fronted by plate
glass sliding doors. Before this case
is a high counter for demonstrating
them easily.
Many factors contribute to the
shop's outstanding success — excel-lent
display, ease in showing mer-chandise
and factual, interesting
placards.
Fall For Directory Ad
"PURNITURE dealers appearing
X in the classified section of the
Denver telephone directory have
been given a decided boost for at-tention
this year by the clever car-toons
used by the telephone com-pany
to call subscribers' attention
to this section.
A few pages previous to the fur-niture
classification in the yellow
pages appears a small, smile-pro-voking
sketch which commands in-stant
attention, having the effect of
a good cartoon on a news page of
a newspaper.
This sketch features a man who
had met with disaster as he at-tempts
to sit in his favorite "comfy"
chair. A leg has collapsed and he is
sent flying in most undignified pose.
You'll find Furniture list-ed
in the Yellow Pages
Subtly the suggestion is made:
"You'll find Furniture listed in the
Yellow Pages."
Here, furniture dealers using dis-play
advertising have made it easy
for the person seeking a quick fur-niture
store contact to get in instant
touch by giving outstanding prom-inence
to their telephone numbers.
f o r J U L Y . 1 9 3 6 43
TU RNING HOUSES fnto HOMES/
Furniture Week
Style, Quality-
GET BEHIND FURNITURE WEEK!
A Message to Retailers
By ROSCOE R. RAU
Executive Vice-president, National Retnil
Furniture Association
rPHE success of National Furni-
J. ture Week for 1936 is assured.
It promises to surpass, in volume of
sales, the excellent figure of $3,000,-
000 turned in by participating stores
during 1935. Of course, the actual
story of the week will be told in
the intelligent effort of each retailer
and his merchandising organization,
for in the final analysis Furniture
Week simply means each merchant
doing his own job in his own way,
simultaneously with other stores in
the same community.
To get cumulative effect and
legitimate new publicity, the more
stores participating, the better —
department as well as furniture
stores.
Tie-up Kits • Samples of the
materials which dealers will use to
promote the event—the tie-up kit—
will be on display at the various
market centers during the July mar-ket,
and at the same time plans will
SEEK GOVERNMENTAL
DESIGNATION
Considerable pressure is being
brought to bear upon members
of the Senate Committee on Edu-cation
and Labor to get action
upon the Connolly resolution call-ing
for official recognition of the
week of Oct. 2 as National Fur-niture
Week.
Although the committee failed
at its last meeting to consider
this resolution, and although no
further meetings of the committee
are scheduled, backers hope to
get special action in order to
rush the resolution through this
session of Congress.
be completed for local organization
in various centers. There is reason
to believe that more than 2000 will
back the 1936 venture.
Slogan for the week, to be empha-sized
in special newspaper sections,
in window streamers, posters, trans-parencies
and other matter is:
"Turning Houses Into Homes." In
conjunction with this is a sub-caption
reading, "Style-Quality-
Values."
This year's "Week" will actually
include eight days—Oct. 2 to 10—
so that two Fridays and Saturdays
—big selling days—may be devoted
to the project.
Manufacturers at the markets are
being provided with signs announc-ing
their participation in the event.
A considerable number of them
have indicated that they will bring
out "specials" for the event; will
provide special newspaper mats and
window displays.
National magazines have been
approached for mention of the event
through P. E. Kroehler, Kroehler
Mfg. Co. It is hoped to secure
mention of Furniture Week on a
number of radio programs, particu-larly
those dealing with the home
and home products.
Since the success of a "Week"
usually is dependent upon local
newspaper co-operation, stores are
urged to make their plans for co-operative
action as soon as possible.
Supplements • More than 200
newspapers are expected to issue
supplements or sections. Last year,
when material was provided for one
newspaper in a town, the demand
for material from the second news-paper—
or the third—exceeded the
supply. This year provision has
been made to take care of all re-quests.
Merchandise kits to be supplied
dealers will be sold through whole-sale
salesmen. The National Whole-sale
Furniture Salesmen's Associa-tion
which, through its president,
Julius Bachrach of Pittsburgh, sug-gested
the project in 1935, has
Above is shown replica of newspaper
headline mats, nine of which will be
included in the National Furniture Week
tie-up kit for dealers. This particular
headline was designed by Marvin Can-non,
advertising manager of the Haverty
Stores, Atlanta, Ga.
assumed the responsibility for sell-ing
double the 1935 quota during
the late summer. These mission-aries
for good furniture promotion
do this at the same time that they
make their regular calls upon their
trade. It is probable that a trophy
award will be given the man making
the best showing this year at an
industry banquet next winter.
National Furniture Week is being
directed by a council, with B. F.
McLain, president of the National
Retail Furniture Association, as
chairman. Percy Tonk, president of
the Chicago Furniture Manufac-turers'
Association, is chairman of
the executive committee. Clark B.
Kelsey of NRFA is the director for
the campaign and secretary of the
council.
NATIONAL
FURNITURE
WEEK
flrtober
2 TO 10
Turning HOUSES/#/* HOMES
Design for the window transfers avail-able
to stores co-operating in the
National Furniture Week campaign.
44 FINE FURNITURE
THE CUSTOMERS1 VIEWPOINT
The Ideal Kitchen
All these Model Kitchens and Dream Kitchens and Planned Kitchens
are very, very nice indeed, but what your customer wants to know
is, "How much will it cost?" "How can I fix up my own kitchen
that way?" The Junction of the retailer in bridging the gap between
the customer's desire for a new kitchen and her practicable reali-zation
of it should be very clearly defined, Ruth Mclnerney, our
Mrs. Customer, suggests how to go about it.
By RUTH MCINERNEY
""THE "Hollywood-set" feeling
J. which most model kitchen lay-outs
and photographs inspire in
many of us is a mood of wistful
hopelessness.
"It positively breathes expensive-ness.
Besides, our kitchen space is
too small and narrow."
Cost. Impracticability. Reassure
us on these points and you'll have
us sitting down and telling you our
dreams of an ideal kitchen—literally
selling ourselves. Any woman who
keeps house knows the hopeless
features of the old type of kitchen.
Two things which wrecked the
whole efficiency of the scheme were
inaccessibility of the icebox which
must be kept in a cool place, and
the remoteness of the pantry from
r— • - * •
Ideal kitchen is easily kept immaculate.
the rest of the working equipment.
The old kitchen had its mind on it-self;
the new kitchen is for the con-venience
and comfort of the house-wife,
not the reverse. These two
glaring faults, pointed out to a
woman by a salesman, will bring
her admission of the weakness in
the old system.
I think a salesman makes a mis-take
to begin the subject by talking
glibly about planning-centers, re-ceiving
and storing units, prepara-tion
and serving divisions. It's too
factory-like. A customer, once in-terest
is awakened, will be remark-ably
intelligent in helping lay out
her own new kitchen.
Let Her Do It • With the salesman
or kitchen modernization expert as
guide, a woman will more greatly
appreciate a new kitchen which she,
herself, has designed. Furthermore,
she may have some pet housekeep-ing
ideas that the formal modern-ized
kitchen does not include. It will
be with greater pride—and some
advertising benefit to the store—
that she will point out improve-ments
to friends with "I suggested
this." And the more a customer
knows about the merchandise in her
new kitchen, the more information
she can pass on to friends. I often
feel, when I see a woman trying to
explain a new piece of equipment,
that the retail store who sold it
to her never realized what under-telling
can cost. A store's best sales-man
is a satisfied customer. A
salesman without a sales talk—a
customer permitted to buy mer-chandise
she never fully appreciates
or understands—is wasted business.
See that your customers are articu-late.
A half-hour extra selling time
to equip a customer with facts about
her purchases may reap dividends.
About that Ideal Kitchen—
It must have eye-appeal. The
New Kitchen becomes a second
sitting-room, a place to plan house-keeping,
do home bookkeeping,
arrange menus, order provisions,
take care of housekeeping corre-spondence.
There was no such
leisure moment corner in the old
kitchen — because there were no
leisure moments.
It must be provided with equip-ment
that hides things not in use.
The appliances must be of the type
which work, as much as possible,
in the absence of the housewife—
automatic cooking devices.
The modern housewife wants
moments spent in the kitchen to be
enjoyable, meaningful. One of the
greatest drudgeries is dishwashing.
The automatic dishwasher has an
important place in the New Kit-chen,
ranking next after the scrap-ping
of the pantry and the rein-statement
of the refrigerator.
Orderliness • Just as the house-wife
wants automatic supervision
of cooking by thermostatic control,
and refrigerators that work without
adjusting and watching, she looks
for automatic neatness. New kit-chens
maintain order. There is less
necessity for tidying up. Tidying
up takes an enormous amount of
time in the old kitchen. It involves
steps, cross-steps, reaching, bending,
walking and endless amount of
wasted energy just to return a can-opener
to its place or a saucepan
to a nail.
Even as long-drawn-out cooking
procedures are becoming historical,
the discomfort of the old scheme of
things, tolerated for generations,
goes into the discard, too. Women
want comfortable upholstered stools
with back rests, a chair at the work
i o r J U L Y . 1936 45
table, another at the planning desk.
A woman may be seated while pre-paring
food for the stove. I believe
there should be no cabinet space
underneath the sink apron; this
ought to be reserved for knee room.
Top shelves of cabinets ought to
be accessible. Too often the top or
near-top shelves are less valuable
because of their distance from
normal arm reach.
Unfortunately, the older form of
kitchen cabinet had one unattractive
feature which helped gain it dis-favor.
Its many and out-of-the-way
corners harbored dust. This could
be overcome by rounding corners to
decrease cleaning time. With fur-ther
improvements — dustproof
shelves and drawers, smooth panels,
restless metal gadgets, noiseless
metal tops, knee room, greater
beauty and less top-heaviness in
appearance, the kitchen cabinet has
a real chance for a comeback.
With shelves at arm reach and
- Date Created:
- 1936-07-01T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 1:3
- 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/155