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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-08-20
Weekly Artisan; 1910-08-20
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and ------~-----------------,/1
I GRAND RAPIDS
PUB [ 1C r Ii~RA n v ...... .L4 J-ih 11 t
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., AUGUST 20, 1910
NELSON -MATTER FURNITURE CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MIell.
BED-ROO~1 and DINING-ROOM
COMPLETE SUITES
in Mahogany, Circassian Walnut and Oak.
If you have not one in your store, a simple request will bring you our magnificent new CataloKue of 12x16 inch page groups. show-ina
BnItes to match. With it. even the most lDoderate sized furniture store can show the best and newest furniture satisfactorily.
___ -.-~~_. __ ._•• _ •• " _ . _. __ a _._ •• ~__ •• _ •• •• ' •• _ •• _ •••• _._-_ •••••• "
ARTHUR S. WHITE,
President.
ALVAH BROWN,
Vice President.
HARRr C. WHI'TE,
Treasurer.
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I MICHIGAN ENGRAVING Co. I
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MAKE YOUR
Perfect Prod uct
Large Facilities
Courteous Treatment
"Right" Price
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Samples and Estimates Upon Request.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 1
YOU CAN
'MAil YOUR CATALOG
SEPTEMBER 7th
If you place the
order with us.
W"ITE I
PRINTING COPANMY I
GRAND RAPIDS, MICU.
I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
• ••••• r ...... • •••• _ I ••••••••••••• ",
LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY I
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. !,
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Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only. Ii--. • _~ 00 ~
Luce..Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
111
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Btrd' J Eyt Map!t
Btrch
~Ull,.tt,.td Oak
and
CtrcllJJtllll WIl!nut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS'BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICmGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLiC L!JIlURY
30th Year-No. 60 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• AUGUST 20. 1910 Issued Weekly
FREIGHT RATE INVESTIGATION DELAYED
After Outlining Rules and Metbods of Procedure, Commission Adjourns tbe Hearing
Uutil Wednesday, September 7.
The Interstate Comme1 ce comm1S"LJn's hearIng on the
proposed advances 111 freIght rates was opend in the cus-toms
house, N (W York Clty, last Monday l110rlllng and after
a general statement of the lmes along which the commission
",111 proceed In takmg eVIdence Judge G M Brown, the
chief exallllller, en tertamed a motion to adJou1 n untll Sep-tember
7 It was understood that thIs woulJ be done, in-a'imuch
as the notIce of the hearIng was served on the ral1-
roads only last week.
Judge Brown defined the pos1tlOn of the comm1SSlOn
"Both oral testImony a\1d statIstIcal exhIbIts wIll be allowed,"
he 'ia1d, "and, although there V\ 111 be no undue haste, It also
mu~t be understood there ",111 be no undue delay 'vVe want
to vet at the facts If the carner~ can prove they are en-tItled
to an advance they ought to get It If It can be shown
they are not entitled to it, It should be demed
"Everyone mterested ha'i the nght to be represented
whether they be earners, shIpper:" the people in general or
the commisslOn The eVIdence, I take It, WIll be lalgely sta-tistical
Both SIdes wIll be subject to cross exammation in
order that the full truth may be learned."
As soon as the appearance of the railroads had been re-corded,
C C McCam, chairman of the Trunk Line associa-tion,
made the motion to adjourn One of the shippers in-terrupted
the presiding examiner to request that the hearings
go on at once. Their viewpoint seemed to be that the delay
under existing schedules is one of the reasons which has
made the railroads lose as much time as possible in getting
to the actual taking of evidence.
But Judge Brown decided that the motion to adjourn was
not unreasonable inasmuch as the burden of proof seemed to
rest upon the railroads, and it appeared that some consider-ation
should be granted to them in taking their evidence.
He also announced that the western hearing in the trans-
Missouri case will be held in the federal building in Chicago
beginning on August 29.
The roads whose incomes in the freight advance ques-tion
are to be looked into at the New York hearings are all
east of the Mississippi river and north of the Potomac. Not
all of them were represented at the heanng yesterday morn-ing,
because many had been notified that an adjournment
would be granted.
After the adjournment, Mr McCain said he had noticed
m one or two of the mornmg papers dispatches from Wash-mgton
"containmg estimates whIch purported to be from the
commIssIon and whIch gave the figures for the increase in
l11come'i that would result from the advances"
"The figure named as a total." said he, "was $500,000,000
As near as I can get at It from what I have been able to pIck
up It Vi ould be much closer to the actual to drop off one
CIpher, and even then It would be above what seems lIkely.
"It seems that somethmg hke $30,000,000 would repre-sent
the ll1crease whIch '" ould come to all the raIlroads in-terested
1"1"1 ant to 'iay thIS at thIS tIme so a'i to correct a
mbtaken ImpressIOn before It has a chance to settle mt,:) the
mmds of those who ale watchmg the outcome of the com-miSSIOn's
hearing
"The trouble seems to be. that they have conSIdered the
advances as applYll1g to all classes of freIght. and they have
figUrEd on an advance of 16 per cent throughout ThIS is
malllfestly inaccurate, because only a part of the classes are
being dIscussed"
Fewer Idle Frei~ht Cars.
The fortlllghtly bulletin of the AmerIcan Railway associ-atlOl1,
issued August 13, showed that in the two weeks ended
August 3 there was a decrease of 29,030 m the number of idle
freight cars in the UnIted States and Canada, bringing the
total idle list down to 102,781, '" hich is more than 30,000 cars
less than the number idle at the begmning of July There
were on Aug. 3 fewer idle fre1ght cars than at any time since
the ~econd half of last ApliI The ll1creased demand for cars
during the two weeks was principally for box cars, although
the number of coal cars in use also showed a substantial in-crease.
Flat cars", ere the only class of equipment in which
the idle list was increased between July 20 and Aug 3
Grain in the West and South has been moving to market,
and has called into use many idle cars which had been side-tracked
dunng previous weeks and months.
No argument is necessary to sustain the proposition, that
It IS bette1 to keep an article in stock than to give it away.
But the wise way is to put a price on the piece that will move
it, if it has become an old settler.
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in fact few English concerns are better known there than
the Ohver t,1achmery company Later he established a fac-tory
at \lanche"ter to comply with the English patent law.
The errand RapIcls busmess began in a very small way in
the IJlchIgan Trust buI1dmg Several moves were made to
accommodate It<, growmg requIrements before the company
finally located m It,,; present beautIful and commodIOus quar-ter,,;,
corner Colclbrook and Clancy ,,;treet,,;, OpposIte Creston
park In 1900 Mr OlIver started under the name of the
Amencan J\lachmery company. WIth seven workmen to man-ufacture
hIs own machIl1ery In 1902 he was jomed by S. D
Thompson, the treasurer, financial and office manager and
credIt man of the present company. In 1904 A N Spencer
came tn, who had been for thIrty years WIth J A Fay & Co,
of CmcmnatI WIth his advent the scope of the concern
\\ as \\ Idened It went largely mto the manufacture of wood-
\\ orkmg mach1l1 ery, untIl It has become one of the leaders
of the II oodworkmg Mach1l1ery Manufacturers' association.
At thIS tIme the name was changed to the Oliver Machinery
company In 1907 the company was Il1corporated with a
capItal stock of $150,000 Mr Ol1ver IS president of the
company and Mr Spencer vIce preSIdent. secretary and gen-eral
sale" manager
The factory. WIth ItS large and aIry building, its modern
equipment and 150 employe,,;, IS Mr Ol1ver'~ special pride
1t IS the Ie..,ult of hI"; practIcal expenence and of his sixteen
} ear" of tray el The trade-mark "Oliver" is known and rec-ogI1l7Cd
all 0\ er the world, partIcularly m connection with
certam t} pes of machines, as the "Oliver" wood-trimmer or
the "011\ er" UnIvel sal double arbor saw-bench; also with
manual tra111111goutfits It IS the only concern which makes
a complete patteIn shop equipment
11r OlIver IS not only an inventor, he has always been
able to sell v. hate\ er has been produced for him by others,
Dr 111hI"; own factory, and at the same time he is a man of
\\ Ide busmess expenence and tntuition.
lIb puhlIc "pmt has never shown itself more conspicu-ousl}
than \\ hen he gave a large pIece of ground near his
WEEKLY ARTISAN
OLIVER MACHINERY COMPANY
An Institution That Ships Its Products to All
Parts of the World.
The Ohver \JachIl1ery company IS pnmanh the out-growth
of the Inf;el1Ll1t}, the ~kIII and the energy ot Jo,,;eph
W OlIver ::\11 011\ er wa,,; born 111 O"wego. ~ Y m 1864.
J. W. Oliver, President.
of good old revolutIOnary stock ""hen tourteen he came
to Grand RapIds. In whose schools he \\ as educated
HIS fir"t pOSItIOn was WIth the DI"sell Carpet $\\ eeper
company, where he remameJ one year He then entered the
employ of Buttel V\ OJ th & Lowe, where he ma "tered the ma-
Chll1I"t'" trade
:!VIr 011\ er n("(t ~pent twO} eaI ~ on the \\ estern pLu!1"
Plant of the OlIver Machine Company.
and then rdnrned and stal ted ll1 to develop sam,. mechaI1lcal
ldeas of hIS own He m\ ented and patented a number uf
mach111es, whIch he had made ll1 \ allan" part:, of the coun-try
Dunng the palllC of 1802-3 ::\[1 OlIver e"tabhshed a
branch at Manchester, England 1here hI" IngenuIt\' "hcl\\ ed
ltself m the novel metlYld he adopteel at mtrodnc111g hIS nu-ch111ery
He bad se\ eral wagons made, ,,;pecIally adapted to
the purpose, on whIch samples of hIS mach111es were earned
to the very doors of prospectIve purchasers Then he \\ auld
set them up, explaining and demonsil atlng theIr operatIOn.
In thIS way he covered from 20,000 to 25,000 mIles with
horses throughout England, Scotland and Ireland, WIth the
result that no Amencan concern in the eng111eer111g field and
factory, whIch IS now one of the city's most extensive and
completely eqtlIpped playgrounds
1he O!tvel Mach111ery company has branches nDt alone
l!1 thI~ country at New York, ChIcago, Pittsburg, New Or-lean"
Seattle antI Los Angeles. but in Manchester, Paris.
Chr,qIana. IIJlan \'aple.." Antwerp, Bombay, Argentina and
Crugua}
Even the gIl'l with the rosebud moutl> has lines no
carver can exact:1y reproduce.
It IS hard to make money and friends at the same time
Il1 the fnrmture busmess.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 5
Tests for Kiln-Dried Oak.
By Valence m the \Vood-Worker---To tell when oak IS
thoroughly klln-dned reqUlres not only a person who has had
COllSIderable expenence both m handlmg and \'; orking of the
wooJ, but one who also has keen observll1g po", ers, for some
men could handle and machine oak for half their lives and then
not be able to do much more than make a reasonable guess
Men accust'lmed to handhng and maohmmg kiln-dried oak
gradually come to know when oak IS reasonably dry, first, by
the weIght of It, It seems heavy or hght accorcllng to Its de-gree
of Jryness ThIS may seem queer, a'i all oak is heavy,
yet there IS a somethmg m the weight whIch catches the at-tentIOn
of the keen, observmg and expellenced man Second,
by the smell of a newly-cut piece A keen nose IS more es-sential
in detectmg the condItion of oak than a dozen eyes;
yet it reqUIres an expenenced n'JSe and a keen olfactorv nerve
to detect t'he dIfference between good alr-dned and tho~oughly
kiln-dried oak ThIrd, by the way the oak machme'i Shav-ings
and sawdust commg from thoroughly klln-dned oak con-tain
more powdered wood, the dust floats m the aIr very
easlly and can be detected all over the machme room, unless
the blower bystem IS m excellent condItIon Fourth. by not-mg
the condItion of some test pIeces after they have been in
the hot-box a few hours
These test pIeces may be of dIfferent deSIgns Some may
be about ,Vs-in thIck, l8-in or 20-111 WIde, and about 1-111
long These are to test for shrinkage If the lumber IS thor-oughly
kIlned, there will be no apprecIable permanent shrink-age,
although If the measurement IS taken immedIately after
taking pIeces out of hot-box, whlle they are stlll hot, a dIffer-ence
in sIze WIll be noted, even if the lumber is klln-clned,
the shrmkage will be 14-m or ,Vs-111 to t'he foot. but If al-
10we,J to cool for a few hour'3 111 some cool, dry place, they
WIll resume their origmal sIze Other test pieces may be
74- 111 or 7~-ll1 thIck, 3-in WIde, and 4-ft or 5-ft long
These should be jomted to a gooel glue jomt before putting
into hot-box If the heat changes them enoug'h to spOll the
glue joint, It IS pretty certam the pieces were not thoroughly
kIln-dried Yet thl'3 test. 11k<: all the others, reqUIres an ex-penenced
man ?\ eIther an old man 111dotage, a young man in
knowage. a woman, and, I might adJ, a ~reenhorn or a
"pink tea shadow," has any hcense to deCIde by tests whether
or not oak IS thoroughly kiln-dried
The only SUl e way, and the most SImple way, to tell v, hen
oak IS thoroughly bln-dneJ, IS to kn')w that the oak", as 111
the proper bnd ')f a kIln, the proper length of tIme. and the
bIn properly handled, then, WIth the foregOIng tests, we may
have positIve assurance that It IS thorough 1) bln-dlled ~ote
that I say "the proper kmd of bIn" For there are sem es
of kIlns that would nr.t JI y oak properly e\ en If gn en mnety
day'3 at hard labor. as we all know to am sorrow who have
ever tned to huy thoroughly krln-dned oak from some mll1<,
back 111the timber belt Of course, oak mav be dned m the
woods just as thoroughly as m the healt of a cIty but the fact
IS apparent that few saw mIll men, eIther m the Clt, or for-est,
know what a furmture man or cabInetmaker really means
when he says "thoroughly kiln-dned" Yet we are pleased to
note an mcreasmg tendency on the part of the sa"" mlll man
to get pObted upon a subject whIch clld not used to concern
hIm, and whIch dId not formerly enter mto hIS business, as
most of the factones chJ their o\vn kiln-drY1l1g after buying
the saw mill man'" pr')duct
Tha t the ploper bIn-dry 1I1g of oak has for years been a
problem to the average mIll. is a well-known fact, and that
1:'he problem is yet unsolved by a gl cat many mills, IS attested
by the great variety of kilns 111 use and likewise the great
vanety of successes they have Yet in the light of present-day
knowledge we can now take green oak, eIther nver or
forest tImber, put It 111 our dryblns, and 111from one to three
week';, dependmg on thIckness, take It out thoroughly bln-dned,
WIthout eIther mold or honeycomb to contend wI1:Ih
This can be done \vlthout the expen"e of a patented kiln, yet
It reqmres a kIln some\\ hat chfferent from the k1l1el we used
to see and whIch could be called "sweat-boxes for manufaetur-lI1g
honeycomb"
In the future I may. deCIde to wnte an artIcle telhno ,.., some
of the secrets of dryll1g green oak WIthout jihe eVIl of honey-comb1l1g---
the secrets whIch some people claim to have pa-tented,
but whIch canot be patented Some of the measunng
1I1struments can be patented, but not the part that dnes green
oak
Furniture Fires.
The plant of the FleXIble Veneenng company, Paw-tucket,
R I, was burned last Monday Loss $10,000, well
covered by Insurance
A H Reese, fm nltUft dealer of Austin, Tex, suffered
a loss estImated at $7,000 to $8,000, by fire 111hIS store on
August 12 Insurance $3,000
A storehouse owned bv the NatIOnal House Furnishm<Y o h
company at Gloucester, 2\Ias'3, was b111ned ""Ith a loss of
about $9,000 on August 12 r11'311a1nce $6,500
FIre, stal ting from a mystenous cause at mldmght, de-stroyed
the furniture stock and "tore of M I Lull, on Fern
HIll, Tacoma, Wash Loss $1,500 on "tock and $800 on
bUlldmg In"urance $500
The four story carpet store of the Grant & McKee com-pany,
PIttsburg, Pa, was damaged to the extent of about
$18.000 hy fire on August 15 The los", whIch was more
from water and smoke than from the blaze , IS fullv~ msured
To Prevent Warping of Gum.
A plan ""hlch many furmture manufacturers have fol-
Io", ed to good advantage and empbyed VI, here red gum, oak,
mahogany 01 oth er wood" al e used, I" to .leslgn the article m
such a manner that the WIde pIeces may be remforced, and
thus prevent any warpIng or other defectc, showmg up In-stance"
have heen known whu e red gum hoards 18-m Wide
ha\" been glued together and made mto 36-m desk tops The
tops wcn filmly cleated on the bottom, held to place a" well
as an} other wood and gave ~ood satisfaction Thl'o lumber
had been standmg on the sticks for about a year Another
manufacturel, who uses red gum for drawer;., an,l panehng,
guarded ,1lSdmst the tendency to shnnk and 'owell by the apph-cation
of a couple of coats of shellac lllslde and out, and foun,l
that the \\ ooel beha\ ed Itself as well as any that could hay e
been used In thl" Il1stdn( e plam-sa wed gum was employed,
and plam-",lwtd matcnal 01dmallly gl\ es more trouble than
quarter-"a wed ---Government Bulletin
They Show New Tables.
The Dd\ ls-Buely Table company, ShelbYVIlle, Ind, have
jU'ot Issued a fall supplement to theIr spllng catalogue of
1')10 whIch "hould be 111 the hand" of all furmture .lea1ers not
only bel aUbe It "hO\\;., 48 ne", c1e"lgns of hbrary ta1J'es. de"k
tahle'o, "tand tables dnd tabourettes, hut because lL gives the
nunl',trs of 43 deSIgn" that have been dlscar]n I c rlj con-tinued
"1I1e0 the "pnng catdlOlSuE' \'1 dS Issued l"Ie ,uppln
ment IS accompamcd b) a pnce hst whIch apphe" to hoth the
spnng catalogue and the fall supplement
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
Manufacturing
Grand Rapids, Michigan
All Knobs and Pulls have the
No-fium-Loose Fasteners
rI Waddell COlIlpany
B 163
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
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CREDIT SYSTEM THAT YOU CAN BANK ON
By C. E. Whitehill of the White-Galliher Co.• Muncie. Ind.
NInety-mne pel cent of the bus1l1cs", of thIs countly be-ing
done on credIt. the Importance of thIs SUbl ect becomes at
once apparent When asked by our bankel yesterday
whether we were getting much out-of-to\v n busIness, I re-plled
that the 1ap1d growth of our nevv lucal busmess had
kept the credIt department too busy Up to thIS tll11C to
tap the interurban fields He asked vvhat om credIt depart-ment
had to do vvith It and "as told that fulh 90 per cent
of the homes are furnished on credit. and that It is a vvaste
of money to cater to the small minority
Yes, our credIt department has been kept bus\, for if
there is any department of a house fur11lsh1l1g store that
ought to be kept busy it 1<; this one \Ve belIeve thoroughly
in the definite contract system Only a few days since an
ordinary note fell due, on which a responsIble pal ty II ished
to make a partial payment' The credIt manager asked
whether he should gn e Cl echt on the back of the note He
was told, by all means, to make a ne\\ note Do \ 0\1 kn'lv
wlhy? So there would be a defiJ1lte term \' hen the lnlance
would fall due---a certain knO\, n tIme to present a note fOl
collection Has your banker evel asked "Eo\\ long do IOU
",ant it for?" He was looking fO! a due peliod \\ hen V ou are
expected to Inake payment a time \\ hen v ou \\ oull clther
have to "settle" or glVe a rcason why
Are you doing bmines" on a bank1l1l?; basis' If not you
would better get busy "But I am not runn1l1g a bank"
some wiseacre will say Maybe not And the man who
makes the reply never will Another man would ask---"What
do you mean by a bankmg basis'" I mean just that I
mean a House Furnishing Bank1l1g Business in \\ hich you
loan the legal 70 per cent of YOU1dCpos1tors' money and take
therefor commercIal paper with l?;ood security having a defi-nite
due period and a sound recom Se for recovery on failure
to pay
What Jo I mean by your depositors' money? I mean
the money you have borrowed from your faIthful bank, or
your trust111g fnends I mean the merchandIse entrusted to
you by jobbers and manufactulers. all hol,ll1ll?; \OU to ac-count
for the faithful chscharge of duty
What do I mean by tak111g commerCIal paper with l?;ood
",ecunty? I mean you are not faIthful to your trust unless
everyone with whom you open an account IS taken J11to that
httle pI ivate loom, where, after cal eful J11C]Uvll into hIS dhl1-
lty to h'lUhlate his debt as lt falls due, hIS name is plOpe1ly
affixed to a bmdlnl?; contract calculated t.o makE' every stock-holdel
and 1.1 edItor of ) am bU"'lllC,,<"d.bsolutely 'Occur"
As to the form of thIS contract if you are selling to the
c1d<.,St:oIt mav he an ordl11ary note endorsed by a responsible
In open, hnldel nut If you are deahng WIth the masses, by
all means make a lease note, whereby the goods sold become
the best secnntv and the terms of payment can be so arranged
as to smt eve 1v \Dcome Then there WIll be no 10s5.
}'lore than 99 per cent of the people will pay If you only
gn e them a ploper chance, and I can prove it Our losses
fOl the fir"t t.h1ee of the past SIX years aggregated less than
t\\ o-fifths of one per cent That means more than lllnety-
111neper cent \\ ere honest.
nut } our broker IS wise You ask him for $10,000 and
he sho,\ s \ ou ho\\ to get along with $5,000 When this falls
due "hat happen'i' Do yon ~o to the bank and pay h?
Hand'" up \0. anel neIther dId he expect it You reduce
the loan $1,000 and renew You borrowed the money for
00 clavs and pal It all in three years, liquidating a little at
defil1lte intervals
\ 0\\ \\ hen the next man earning $10 per week comes in,
open an acount WIth him at $100 per week and
he'll pal IOU 1f---lf you do just what your own banker does
\\ ltll } ou and I kno'" you are honest Every time that note
comes due you VIllI have to go to the bank or the bank will
come to ) au DId you ever know anyone to escape it?
'\ or cld \ ou el er know any bank to lose money on a ban
e'{cept th10ugh IVaI thless security? Neither will you Sell
on1"l good goods Make them stand for the faithful perform-ance
of the p10per tel ms of agreement ThE'n you cannot
lose For the merchandise plus the after payments WIll be
\\ 01th mOl e than the actual loan
New Grand Rapids Hotel Proiect.
Chades H Leonard IS conside1 ing a plan to supply the
need of g-reate1 hotel capacity which IS felt in Grand Rapids,
j!d1tlculady dlllll1l?; the furniture sales se3S0n" It i", pro-posed
tn convert. the Leonard bU1ldl11~ at the corner of Com-mo
ce ewd Fast lulton St1eets into a large hotel, and, perhaps,
hllll,l an addition on adjoining property owned by William
\ Gunll The bmldll1g is now occupied by H. Leonard's
C:C)J1S as a \\ hole",ale Clocke1y store, the Grand Rapids St't-tJonen
C0mpanv and the Macey company, the latter using
the "'el el, "ton portlOn for storage and show rooms If the
hotel pI oJ ect IS carried to completlOn the present occupants
of the hmlc1l11g IV111probably move to the Leonard building
that fronh on l\larket and ()tta",a streets
Round en I g'lass chl11a closf'ts were originated by the
ldtc (,harle'" \\ Black The first purcha<:;er was a Mrs,
If ch ce of PIttsburgh, through Hugh McElveen.
WEEKLY AltTISAN 7
Pitcairn Varnish Company I
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
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c. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't.
GrandRapids Factory Notes.
The John D Raab ChaIr company i" filling a large order
for chairs for the new U. S Grant hotel of San Diego, Cal
The Sligh, the Nelson-Matter and the John D Raab
companies have booked orders for furniture for a new hotel
in EI Paso, Tex
The Gunn FurnIture company reports a constantly in-creasing
demand for their sectional bookcases and filing sys-tems
The factory is being operated with a full force
During "home coming week," beginning next :\10nday,
the mam buIlding of the Nelson-:YI:atter plant will carry a
banner inscribed· "Established in 1849 Furniture Has
Been Manufactureel Here for Over Sixty Years."
Messrs Mueller and Slack and all the traveling sales-men
of the Mueller & Slack company are out "on the road"
and all report good busmes,,---much better than a year ago
They find a great demand for their new line of chair", up-holstered
111 Jenim s
The bmldmg vacated by the Century FUl111ture com-pany
when It moved to it" new factory is owned by the Ber-key
& Gay company, who wIll not rent it aga111 They wIll
use it to reheve vanou" departments of their plant that have
needed more room for a year or more.
D C McNamara, who recently took the p'lSltIon of
sale,; manager for the Marvel Manufacturmg company, re-ports
that the demand for chairs l'i greater than the '3upply
at present---that the oreler'3 are coming in fa'iter than they
can be filled, though the factory i'3 bemg worked to the ca-pacity
of the present force
A ugust IS usually a dull month for the "men 'In the roaJ,"
therefore some of those repre'ienting Grand RapIds factorie-,
wIll not "tart out on their fall tnp'3 untIl after "home-comm~
'" eel<:" Those who are out report faIr bu"me'i'i, though many
of them are hothered more 01 le'3'i by not find111g the buyer'3
at home One of the veteran'i wrote to hl'i hou'ie the othel
day that "the vacatlOn habit is cel taml} glOvving am::mg
th e dealers"
The Berkey & Gay FurnIture company''i di"play of din-mg
100m furniture wIll not be 111'ihape for inspection during
home comlllg week The '3how rooms occupy the two upper
floOl '0 of the mam factory building and during the past two
weeks It wa" found necessary to grve the filllShlllg depal t-ment
more room and there was no way to do It except by
encroachmg on the show rooms, thel efore the exhIbit of din-mg
room 'iUlte'i and pleCe'i has been dIsarranged
The largest lllle will not "en vvell unles'i It IS made nght
and priced fight.
...
Manufacturers of
To Open New Coal Fields.
Here's an item that may be of interest to manufacturers
who are uSlllg IndIana, OhlO and West VIrginia coal: The
C111Clllnatl, Hanllltort & Da} ton raIlroad, now controlled by
the BaltImore & OhlO, 1'3 to be extended from Ashland, Ky.,
opposite its pI esent termlllal at Benton, on the Ohio nver,
to the southern horder of PIke county, Kentucky, 147 miles
['he undel taking would CO'it $14,000,000, and enormous coal
depO'ilts 111 PIke county would be tapped The need of rail-road
transpOl tation IS all that prevents the opening up of the
tern tory, and If the ne", hne l'i built, the C111cinnati, Hamil-ton
& Dayton wIll become an important coal carrier.
It IS a poor pIece of case work when the drawers do not
run smoothly and evenly both ways.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
Page from th" Catalogue of the
LADDER AND SPECIALTy COMPANY, ATLANTA GA.
A .; i'." 9 § , "' '" i' " t • II!' •• -..-.- •• _ -._. • -_.-. ~
II
'''''Ii!& - ..... , •••• " •• ~
WEEKLY AltTISAN
FREEDMAN CONVERT ABLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Success.
Full size bed in divan space.
SIMPLEST IN ACTION. LEAST SPACE. STRONGEST BUILT.
Supersedes all other Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATIONS AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & COMPANY
Manufacturers of Upholstered Furniture. Factory, 717-731 Mather St., CHICAGO
Effect of Western Rate Reductions.
It is the opllllOn of R B M1ller, traff1c manager of the
Harnman lines III the Northwest that if the order of the
interstate ComnllS"lOn 1ll connection with its decisions as to
rates in the coast rate cases, is made permanent, it will prove
detnmental to Jobbers and manufacturers m the interior and
coast cities who made the complamts upon wh1ch the com-mi'
3sion acted.
This he believes will be brought about by opening to
sharper competition with the east and middle west, the job-bing
districts held by the coast and western interior. Mr
Miller bases his opinion on the reduction proposed in the
difference or "spread" between carload and less than carload
rates on commodities shipped from the east to western deal-ers
It will enable the eastern manufacturer or jobber to
lay his goods down at an interior retail point w1th smaller
freight charge than his western competitor can meet by re-ceiving
his goods in car lots, paying loadmg and unloading
charges, interest on stock held for reshipment and the local
rates on sma1lllots to the towns of inland retailers Discussing
these features, Mr. Miller says:
"The effect of the proposed orders on the business of the
complainants and the business of Pacific coast merchants is
problematical, but the indications are that neither the coast
nor interior jobbers will benefit. On the contrary, the pro-posed
change in rate conditions would benefit the central
eastern and middle west jobbers.
"The establishment of less than carload commodity rates
from eastern points, which is prov1ded for in the orders of the
commission, wJ1l. at least to a certain extent, establish new
conditions, and tend to encourage the buying of goods by re-tailers
at interior points direct from the manufacturer or the
eastern jobber, wh1le hertofore they have placed their orders
w1th e1the1 PaClfic Coa:>t or interior Jobbers."
New Furniture Dealers.
C 'I Nelson 1S to open a new furniture store at Gully,
Minn.
Bender & Leavens are new furmture dealers at vVood-lawn.
Pa.
A. L Breckenndge is a new fmmture and hardware
dealer at Brookstone, Ind
Alex Lamar 1S to open a new furnIture store at Holding-ford,
Minn, m September.
R E F1sh 1S makmg arrangements to engage in the re-tad
furn1ture busmess at W mner, S. Dak.
P1ttsburg partIes have purchased the Crow~Howard
bUlldmg on East Main street, ConndlsvJ1le, Pa., with a view
of opening a new furmture and carpet store.
The Sterhng Furmture and Carpet company, of which
Richard Oppel 1S secretary and treasurer, has opened a stock
of house furmshlllg goods in Springfield, O.
S. D. Romey, an enterpnsmg dealer of Richmond, Ind .•
has joined J. C Welty in organizing the Welty-Romey Fur-niture
company for the purpose of openmg a stock of furni-ture
at Cedar Rapids, Iowa
S. H. Haddock, A. M Petty and H. V. Yoemans have
incorporated the Haddock-Petty company to open a new store
in Macon. Ga Cap1tal stock, $5,000, w1th privilege of in-creasing
to $25,000 by a two-thirds vote of the stockholders.
A merchant must be a pretty good fellow when his com-petitors
speak well of him.
-~------.....,..----------
WEEKLY All"l"ISAN
------------- ... -----_. _ .----_._----------, EFFECT OF THE ANTI.ANILINE EDICT
Movement Is of Much Importance to the Oriental
Rug Trade and Industry.
The movement to prohibit the use of amlme dye" in
oriental carpets and rugs, mentlOned m the \Veekly Artisan
last week, seems to be of much importance, to maunfacturers,
exporters, jobers, dealers and users of those products of the
east. It is now reported that the use of aniline dyes is
certain to be discontinued entirely and that the makers are
to return for thair colors to the vegetable dyes. which from
reasons of cheapness and economy of labor, they had m a
measure abandoned While this measure is hke1y to call
forth anew dlScussions of the relative ments of the tv, 0
coloring matters, ]t seems to furnish d guarantee that carpets
from at least certam parts of the east w]ll be made of vege-table
dyed fabrics
Persia, which in 1908-09 exported carpets to the value of
$3.848,900, is apparently the leader in this movement, al-though
the same rule is being enforced, perhaps with not the
same stnctness, In the neighbonng carpet makmg countries
and at ce~res of the trade in Asia Mmor The Persian govern-ment
seeks to forbid the use of aniline dyes through a court
decision ""hich declares that begllllllng with the seventh of
last month no carpets w]ll be passed by the customs authori-ties
"If dyed with aniline or any coloring matter in the com-position
of which aniline is to be found" As 4921 per cent
of rugs of Persian manufacture are sent to Turkey to be
resold often as "Turkl"h rugs." and 4690 per cent are sent
to Russia to appear afterward in many cases under names
given by Russian traders, the wide e"tent of this ruling be-comes
obvious.
"The profession," says John Kimberly Mumford m his
books on rugs, "IS hereditary in the east, and the tricks of it
are handed down as almost sacred legaCies from father to
son Each dyer, or better, each family of dyersfi has some
peculiar and secret method of proc!ucmg different ~hade~.
and there was a sharp nvalry until the European came upon
the scene with hi" coal tar and his chemical formulas Smce
that time the native dyers have been a brotherhood, of which
the pnde of every member and hiS more than reverence for
hiS colors are the bond and creed" He believes that the
alllime dyes of the west are no substitut", for hiS dyes, that
many of the glanng hues have no durability, and that in
carpets thOi oughly wetted they will run and ruin the fabric.
Madder is the basis for a multitude of the reds in which the
be"t expressIOn of the OrIental dyer's skill is undoubteJly
found. One of the oldest secrets of the east is the makmg of
a rich and enduring vermilion from sheep's blood Kermes,
The Sterling furniture CO.
MARTIN BROCKMAN, PreSident
Manufacoorers of
Parlor Furniture Frames
1509-1511 North Halsted Street
CHICAGO
Telephone Lincoln 5685
g Our New Line is now ready. When in the
market, do not fail to see it.
g Our Specialty is Overstuffed Chair and
Davenport Frames, English Style.
... ......... . . ..,
If you want the best "ardwood
Grooved, Pointed and Spiral
DOWEL PINS and DOWEL RODS
WRITE ME fOR PRICES.
A. fALKEl, 3d and Dewey Sts., Grand Rapids, Mich. ~.- __ -4
a variety of cocus insects found on oak trees about the
Mediterranean, several dyewoods, onion skins, ivy berries,
beets and many other plants are also used to obtain red. 'fhe
basis of blues is mdigo; of yellows, Persian berries, turmeric
dnd saffron and sumac roots. In fact the distinctive character
of the old Oriental coloring system was that "nearly every
tIngent was of vegetable or animal origin, and that similar
ingredients were employed for mordants or fixatives."
It was against the disuse of these old coloring matters
and the substitution of the mineral dyes that the Oriental
colori~ts have made vigorous protest. The Persian govern-ment,
appreciatmg the injury that might result to the coun-try's
principal industry, has listened to them. It has taken
before quite as stringent measures as that announced last
month, but it has not always carried them out impartially and
consistently The introduction of aniline dyes began with the
success that attended their manufacture, especially in Ger-many.
This colormg matter has been employed, but as hun-dreds
of bales of the first rugs so dyed were seized and
destroyed its use was abandoned until within the last two
years, when the unsettled condition of the country made
government surveillance upon the manufacture and sale very
lax.
Every inducement to the use of mineral dyes seems to
have been offered by industrIouS agents of European manu-facturers
One of the reasons advanced for the recent threat-end
German trade invasion of Russian and British zoneS
was that Germany would find in Persia a sale for her dyes,
and anothel \\ <is that "he wanted a free hand if German capi-talists
~hol1ld deciJe to open carpet factories at Ispahan or
Shiraz
The enfOi cement of the new prohibitory rules must neces-sarily
curtail German cm'amerce with Persia. One of the
effects of the manufacture of aniline dyes has been the pas-sing
of vegetable indigo as an article of commerce and the
almost entire disuse of madder as a basis for red dyes. The
question thus presents an interesting commercial as well as
mechanical side, but it is perhaps its very practical phase,
the fact that in future our Turkish or Persian carpets may
stand the same tests of water and sunlight as did the work of
ancient dyers, that will make it of the gratest interest in this
country
Saving in Vain.
According to the following story, economy has its pains
as well as its pleasures, even after the saving is done
One spring, for some reason, old Eli was going round
town with the face of dissatisfaction, and when questioned,
poured forth hiS voluble tale of woe thus:
"Marse Geo'ge, he came to me last fall an' he say, 'Eli,
dis gwine ter be a hard winter, so yo 'be keerful, an' save yo'
wages fast' an tight:
"An' I believe Marse Geo'ge, yas sah, I b'lieve him, an'
save an' save, an' when de winter oome it ain't got no hard-ship,
an' dere was I wid all dat money yes' frown on mah
hands !"-Youth's Companion.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Care of Brushes.
Never let brushes lay In water-it kills the spring of
the bristles. After using brush, wash it out with benzine,
turpentine or other thinners, and soak the brush in raw lin-seeJ
oil. Lay it out on a flat surface or hang it in a vessel
filled with raw oil Do not let the brush touch the bottom,
or the bristles Will turn.
Old brushes can be easily cleaned by soaking them in a
strong solution of pearline water for 48 hours, and washing
them out afterwards With water. This will not affect the
bristles.
If partly worn brushes are cleaned as above they make
the best kind of brushes for the use of shellac, as alcohol
softens the bristles in a new brush, and it soon becomes
flabby.
Creosote oil is a good cleaner for badly used brushes.
If the bnstles m a brush are weak, use the brush in a
turpentine stain for a whIle before puttmg it m paint, and it
will be benefitted.
Varnish brushes should be kept m varlllsh at all tunes,
but care should be taken that the bristles be entirely covered
with varnish, and that the brush does not touch the bottom
of the pot.
Varnish brushes, when not m use, can be kept in good
shape by dipping them in wax that has been dl1uted with
turpentine. In thiS way a valllish brush can be put away for
months Without hardening the bristles, but care should be
taken to wash the brush thoroughly before using agalll.
To straighten the hair m pencil brushes, pour a little raw
oil on a piece of glass and hold a lighted candle under glass,
draw pencil through the hot oil several times, and the hair
will straighten.
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dinina Room Furniture
BUFFETS. CHINA CLOSETS and TABLES
Library Furniture-Library Desks,Library
Tables, Library Bookcases, Combination Book-cases,
Etc.
Our entire line will be on exhibitionin July
on the third floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
11
Look out for moths. They will attack bristle as well as
camel hair goods. Put a few moth balls in the drawer or
boxes.
Use glue-set brushes for applying shellac and spirit var-nishes.-
Ex.
Small Initial Payments.
From the Home Furnisher, pubhshed in Boston, by the
Home Furnishers' association of Massachusetts-The folly of
selhng goods on very small initIal payments is frequently illus-trated.
It would appear as though some dealers have practi-cally
no regard to the amount of the first payment but Wish
merely to sell as many goods as possible on lease.
If times are good and parties are able to keep up their pay-ments
without difficulty, all well and good. If the head of
the family loses his job or moves, chances are that he will
throw up the furniture or move it without consent.
In a recent popular case it was discovered that a large
quantity of leases represented this class of sale and the de-preciation
was found to be remarkably large. Leases are
generally looked upon as safer than open accounts and this is
true if they are taken under proper conditions. However, we
have seen many leases which would average much poorer than
open accounts.
A dealer placing goods on open account is likely to look
up pretty closely the ability of the purchaser to pay. Many
houses selling on lease do not look further than the first pay-ment,
dependmg on the security to guarantee payment. When
they find that the signer does not earn sufficient income to
keep up his payments they are "up against it," because in
many cases the goods are not worth taking back, and a judge-ment
against the lessee would be fruitless.
Wood roar Clamp Fixture., Per Set SOc. ..:
PMent Malleable Clamp Fixture ••
E H SHELDON & CO • ChIcago. Ill.
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 25 dozen Clamp FIxtures WhICh
we bouCht of you a lIttle over a year ago are glvmR: excellent serVIce We are
well sattsfied WIth them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
aJlything addltlonallh thIS lIne. Yours truly.
SloaxClt", Iowa. CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO.
30 000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
f VI.e.
Sold on approval and an uncon-dItIonal
money back guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL roAR CLAMPS. f
Guaranteed Inde.tructlble.
We solICIt pnvllege of sendmg samples and
our complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON & CO.
328 N. May St •• Chicago.
• ... .. . ..... ..
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
..
New Catalog and Pattern Book.
Samuel J Shl1TIel & Sons of Mtlton, Pa, manufacturers
of cutter heads, cuttel s, kl11ves, blt'i, and other "ooel cutt111g
tools, have Just Issued a catalogue and pattern book that "Ill
surely be of convel11ence and ,alue to all "ood "orh.111g
mechal11cs and lumber dl essers The firm has an en \ lable
.. • If aT. •• • • •••• , I •• -- • • .. I "THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests; you will then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories. Sash and Door Mills, Rauroad Companies. Car Builders and others wul consult their own interests by using it. AlIO
Barton'. Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa .
.....
WE HA VB planned a great general ckarallcc u.le ud have slaUi!htcrcd
prlcell to the lam t' Not only are our <'lIbr .. IOampl.. Inu Dch ..:Icd but
advance Fil.ll ,hlpm¢:lb :u well In all gr;u:lu ud hnq ot shplc funuturc you
wJI f\nd wonderful reductions and matehlc5& vall.lcs
Throughol.lt the 6tor~-small slates-attachcd to hundreds of tpe'CI~ bar
~hnns-tcll you tbe story In doHars and cents 1 lu 'black and. wh te- n plain
figures
Our
CreditSystem
~o~~ J~5ct:o ~t ~;- ..~
$100 $7S0to$tOD.pl
WOWt $lto$t50 .. Wk
$250 $15fo$25DeilOld
WORTH $21t1$3 .. Week
~W
Trading SlaIDp'
Double SlamPl
With Mornan.
Purch.aaea
SmgJe StallJlM
After Noon
"The Slates ShoW" the Savings"
'&wur1hu
18.50 ~"'"' 979
'{ov§{lYe 8.71
Sov.... ] hondst._d""i!'" III
por...~ed qo=<r<d aU ll"d.
eo&nlSh,,,,hl,,,geoa .". ;<:, .h'p"d fenth bed
Rock.,.,.
'Jii"",,1hu 5.79
:ffi:<JflOI1Vlhcr
298
'(ov§lJ'Ie Z.SI
Sodgodnok nn!JUc.l
w h I'I'l e f.me and on~
'UPp lanyh.k hEh
am Unuuolr 800<1 ue.
Reproduction of a Full Page Advertisement
1eputation for the excellence of thelr deviee:-, In fact they
are recog11lzed as the leaders in their l111eof products The
book contains 224 pages and is profusely Illustrated with
pictures of the different styles of cutter heads, cutters. j oint-ers.
moulding cutters, planer knives, carving tools, etc, and
several pages al e filled WIth patterns for mouldings, panels,
floonng, cetlIng, Sld111g. ship lap, wainscottIng, etc. Every
opel ator of a wood working machine, all machIne room fore-men
and factor) managers will gain valuable information by
JeaJll1g the book Send card, askmg for catalogue No 30, to
Samuel J ShImel & Sons. MIlton, Pa
A FURNITURE MAN DESCRIBED IN RHYME.
From the Michigan Artisan of January. 1881.
If you want a recipe for that popular mystery
Kno\\ 11 to the trade as a furniture man
Take from the styles that are mentioned in history,
RenaIssance, Eastlake and also Queen Anne.
Jumble together. of each get a smattering,
Antique and modern, the old and the new
In a huge glue pot (be careful of spattering)
MIX wlth 111gredJents I'll mention to you.
The cheek of a man whose designs are practical,
A conscience of rubber out of a can,
~ style or address that is melodramatical,
A vOIce lIke "Ah Sin's," that is childlike and bland
A knowledge of ebony (once known as cherry;)
Gold leaf that's not tainted with Dutch metal stain;
The purest gray draw111gs (that's genuine, very,)
ShIpped by rail direct from a Southern moss plain
Maho~any solid (that is the veneering)
And rosewood from walnut is easily made.
ExcelSIOr for stuffing, so soft it appearing-
You'd th1l1k it pure down, as upon it you laid
Burlaping deducted, but never returning;
To do the square thing is your honest intent.
If they never go back it will caUSe no heart burning;
Composition with debtors (cash 20 per cent.)
Add to these elements perfect sobriety,
Love for your neighbor, your rival in trade.
To the whole of mankind add a dash of propriety,
Stir it up well-the concoction is made.
Let it cool slowly and drain off the scum,
And a "furniture man" is the residium.
-
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Accommodating the Crowd.
"On my aast triP west," said the commercial traveler,
"I put up at one hotel that has New York hates beaten to a
finbh on advertIsmg About 1 o'clock m the morning I was
awakened by a sound as of cautIOus scufflmg in the hall. I
got up and looked out. Two men were moving beds and
mattresses.
"'House is so full,' on of them whispered, 'that we've
had to take beds out of two double moms and put them up in
the parlors.'
"The next morning the first page of the local paper
chronicled the late arrIval of guests at my hotel and the subse-quent
shifting of beds to accommodate'them I pomted out
the headlines to the first customer I called on He laughed
"'Did they repeat that performance last l1Ight,' said he.
'Tlhat lS their top-hne stunt. They give it on an average of
twice a week They move beds around just for the fun of
the thing It is the best kind of advertisement Travelers all
over the country tell one another that the hotel is so popular
that folks have to sleep in the parlor, then everybody stops
there I'll bet you never heard of anything like that, not
even in New York'
"He was right I never did, not even in New York."
New Bed Covers.
Among the smartest of the new bed covers are those
of printed dimity or French stamped damask These are
made with a border m gay colors to match the wall decoration
and on top of the bed have a large wreath or oval of flowers.
The covers are made long enough to hang over the bed, al-most
to the floor. all arounJ, and are drawn up over the
bolster roll
Another good-looking cover is 111cream-colored embroi-dered
net over a figured damask in all-over pattern. The
toning I'> a soft ecru ThiS, too, IS brought over the roll that
is used by day.
Many women who have cotton spreads patched by their
grandmothers are bringing them out in thlS day of printed
coven This is only po sible when the coloring is harmon-
10US, as many of the old qU11tS sh0Vv wonderful stItchery and
little> ta<.,te Those quilted 111all whlte in intricate designs
are artlstic even to modern notions
Glue.
In meeting all demands of the trade there w111be found to
be a variety of demands on glue The cabinetmaker must
have a grade of glue for hlS work which must show a good
body test, should be light in color; must be a glue that
does not dry too rapidly, yet not too slowly The furniture
maker demands a good grade of glue wlth a high adhesive
test. also a good test for sweetness, and it must not foam
while using
It lS generally supposed that for gluing wood pure hide
glue is n~cessary, but this is not always the case. There are
a great many glues for wood. mixed part hlde and part bone
glue, and there are some grades of such being used for
wood work and giv111g entire sa tJsfactlOn.
Glue suitable as a cement for Vv ood should be of an
amber or brownish-yellow color. clear, Jry and hard. with a
glassy fracture, not too brittle, but somewhat elastlc Placed
111cold water, it should "well and absorb conSiderable water
wlthout actually dlssolv111g, though it remain in the water
forty-eight hours It should dlssolve at a temperature of 145
deg F.-Ex.
13
The L. Mac E. VARNISHES
BLUE RIBBON RUBBING and POLISHING VARNISH,
QUAKER CITY COACH VARNISH-CABINET FLOWING VARNISH,
WHITE MAPLE RUBBING and POLISHING VARNISHES;
WHITE MAPLE GLOSS VARNISHES-WHITE REED FLOWING VARNISHES,
FLAT ALL VARNISH and ALL DULL FINISH-JAPANS, Etc.
DIPPING VARNISHES
NOTE-Our many years of practical expenence With the Furniture, Plano
and kindred lInes of manufacture enable ue;to know Just the kind and qualIty of
varnishes demanded. Also the fact that our strong corps of salesmen have an
already established trade with thIS class of customers through vIsiting them With
fillers and stains, makes it possible for us to sell varnishes Without additional ex-pense
to us, which advantage we are disposed to give to our customers in qualIty.
Send us aTrial Order.
THE LAWRENCE-McFADDEN COMPANY Philadelphia
--_ ...
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
New designs In the Louis XVI Style.
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
GraQd ~apids Brass
GRAND RAPIDS, MIOl-i.
•
A Bride". Trouble in Buyinl1 Furnitun>.
A young couple, with thirty days experience 1n matn-mony.
arrived in a certain city of world-wide fame, located m
the state of Michigan, for the purpose of establishmg a hom('
The bridegroom was a June graJuate m one of the learned
profession, and the ink on his sheepskin was stlll wet The
young couple spent the first joyous week m lookmg OVEr
the city and hunting for a house A great many were in-spected
and the young woman learned that It '" auld not re
possible to lease such a house as she had lIved m at home
for $20 per month The bUIlt-in fUI niture. the electtlc lIghts,
the five sleeping and three bath rooms she had hoped to
possess were not to be had for the pnce mentioned \
modest flat of five rooms wIth one bath and h\ a bedrooms
without electric lights was finally selected and a tour of tIte
furnishing stores foIIowed FinaIIy the goods were dehHfE d
greatly to the young woman's disappointment The leather
covered dining chairs were in many colors-one in green
one in red. one in tan, one in black and so on The buffet W'1S
of a different pattern than the one she had selected The
brass beds were "iust horrible" and not the patterns she had
purchased. She informed the urbane. oleagmous, suave and
condescendingly obliging delivery man that the gooels Un-loaded
at her door belonged to other person<; and requested
that worthy to take them away "I shaII do nothing of the
kind," the "gentleman" replied "The stuff was put in the
wagon and I was ordered to dump here And here it i" If
yOU have any complaints to make go to the office; I'll hear
none."
The dear young thing went to the office and hubby 'Nent
also Hubby needed a law suit jmt at that moment and was
ready to begin the practice of hi" profession then and there
The "complaint" adjuster listened to the young woman's tale
<00.
.~
of woe Sympathetlcally and put Up the usual adamantine but
hnIIlantly polIshed flont Mistakes have been made in fiIIing
her order and the salesman would be discharged at once. It
\\ ac, learned \\ hen too late to correct the mistake that the
salt sman had sold to the lady several articles that were not in
stock, that the samples she had Inspected were already sold
to another part, , duphcates had been ordered and if the lady
\\ auld klndh put up with the thmgs delivered for a few days
she wonld recen e the styles she had selected The adjuster
demonstrated h1S competency m thIS instance. but the young
\\ oman had an experience with that particular house furnishing
firm \\ hlch she wlll not fall to relate at every opportunity
dUJmg the next forty} eal s Was it worth while for the house
fUID1shmg company to furnIsh the experience to the lady?
Kiln Dried Lumber.
\Yhere the klln is depended upon for seasoned lumber,
tho e IS a v, a} to determine its fitness for use by taking sam-ples
of the stock, weIghing, then baking them Take the
piece" separate. vvelgh them immedIately, making a memoran-dum
of the \\elght ancl the exact dImenSIOns of each piece
Then put them mto an oven or dry heater of some kind, bake
them for say twenty-four hours, or until it is known that there
IS no mOlsture left in the \\ ood Then take them back and
weigh them aQ;a1l1,and note if there is any appI eciable differ-ence
in the \\ eight after baking them and before By ming
delrcate scales such as can be had from any drug supply
house, one may get a very pOSItive test this way. Where it
I~ founel that the vveight IS reduced as much as 4 per cent by
bdkmg, it is eVIdence that the stock is not thoroughly dry and
should go hack into the kiln This i" a thorough test, but
may not be easy or quick enough for some -Ex.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
No.9-Porch Chair
Large size. Oak Seat Green or MIssIOn Finish.
Weight, 20 pounds
No to-Porch Rocker
Large size Oak Seat. Green or MIssIOn Flmsh.
Weight 21% pounds.
No. l1-Porch Settee.
Seat 40 lUches long, 17% lUches deep Oak Seat Green or
MIssIOn fimsh Weight, 32 pounds.
RICHMOND CHAIR COMPANY, RICHMOND, INDIANA
Fraudulent Failures.
From the Home Furnisher, official organ of the Home
Furnishers' association of Massachusetts.-During the past
few years there have been a great many fraudulent bankrupt-cies.
seemingly more in New England than in any other
locality.
By fraudulent bankruptcies we mean where the party has
gone into bankruptcy after having bought heavily fvr a
number of months back and when the'" petition was filed it
developed that the stock all belonged to someone who had a
secret pledge. The result was that the assets ultimately
found their way back to the bankrupt through some relative or
friend and the creditors got little or nothing.
vVlthout Illtendlllg to, many dealers have helped along
this practice Manufacturers of course are glad to sell all
the goods they can and their salesmen, in their eagerness to
take orders have often extended credit to parties who were
well known locally as being in SUSpiCIOUScircumstances
Local dealers have III many cases refused to put the manufac-turers
wise on the ground that they deserve to be "strung" if
they sell such parties
The re"ult is that ~ Ithm a short time a new "tore would
be opened and stock really sold at much le"s than a legitimate
..
STAR CASTER CUP COMPANY
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted cellulOid as a base for our Caster Cups, makmg the
best cup on the market CellulOid IS a great Improvement over bases
made of other matenal When It ISnecessary to move a piece supported
by cups wIth cellUlOid bases It can be done with ease, as the bases are per
fectly smooth CellulOid does not sweat and by the use of these cups
tables are never marred These cups are limshed In Golden Oak and
White Maple, limshed 1Ight If you Wtl! try a sampls ordsr of thsBt
goods you w.ll dsurs to handl8 tftBm tn quanttttS8
PRICES: Size 2~ Inches $5.50 per hundred.
Size ~UIUches •• 50 per hundred.
f ()b Grand Raptds TRT A SAMPLE OIWllJR
.I. . . "I
dealer could buy it. If this dealer haJ been a little less selfish
and had warned the manufacturer he would have prevented
the demorahzation of prices in his vicinity. This has occurred
so many times that dealers have begun to feel that the bank-ruptcy
law as administered is a farce.
The nrouble lies deeper and is due usually to the granting
of credit to people of no moral responsibility. The retail
dealers fail to realize the enormous injury done to their busi-ness
by this practice. If they did they woulJ undoubtedly
co-operate actively with the manufacturers to prevent fraudu-lent
bankruptcies.
Every failure, even although it is an honest one, wOl"ks a
certain harm to the local dealers Usually stock is sold to the
highest bidder who is not compelled to pay more than 50 to
70 per cent of the value.
He is then in position to undersell his competitors and
until that stock 13 cleaned up prices are demorlized in that
locality.
..
Loyalty and Jealousy.
These never go han,l III hand The man who is jealous of
his wife is never sure of her loyalty to him; likewise the Wife
to her husband. It is the same in business Some men who
wei\Sh three hundred pounds are so small that they rattle
around in a peanut shell and get lost becau"e they have "0
much room These men are seldom 'iucces"ful m bUSllless
It takes the broadminded, generous men, With big brams and
great hearts, who recognize that this is a great big world,
With many in competltlOn with them, whose fnend"hip IS
much better than their enmity These men are not afraid to
show their competitors through their showroom'l, a" the Sligh
Furmture company did dunng the recent furmture exhibition,
when they gave a reception to 400 salesmen, dealers and
manufacturer'l, thereby maklllg a hO'lt of fnend" who wiII al-
~ays have a good word for them, or hke the Piqua Furniture
company, whose letter appear" in the adverllsement of the
Grand Rapids Veneer Work'l on another page of this issue
of the Vfeekly Artisan. It makes good readlllg "A word
fitly spoken is hke apples of gold III pictures of sdver "
Where there IS a wiII there i" lot" of rubbish in a furni-ture
factory that may be sent to the fuel vault".
16
T
WEEKLY ARTISAN
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSC"'''TION $1 eo "E" YEA" ANYWHE"E IN THE UNITEDSTATES
OTHE" COUNT"'ES $2 00 "E" Y.....". SINGlLECO"'E. 5 CENTS.
PU.L1CATION OP'P'ICE, 101-112 NOftTH DIVISION ST, GRANO RA~IOS, MICH,
A. S WHITE, MANAGlINGlEDITO"
Entered .. lecond cla .. malter, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapids Michigan
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVEE LEVY
QUIte naturall}, thele b some JllltatlOn among pIC'c!ULU'-,
manufacturers, mIddlemen ane! retaIler" hel e m the 1 mted
States over the latter-day system of Fedelal, State and mu-nicipal
regulatIOn of busll1ess in almost evely field and from
top to bottom But see hoVv they do thmgs over m Germany!
Violators of certam provIsIOns of the pUle food lavvs there
can be pumshed Vvlth 1Ife Impnsonment at harJ labor \
German-American busme'iS man of ChIcago I ecentl} returned
from a visit to hIs natn e town of Plauen, tells a \Vashmg-ton
newspaper reporter that the mspector" there eAamme
even the toys in the stores to learn whethel 01 not they are
painted with some substance that mIght m1ure the chl1dren
They examine everythmg from cookmg utensl1s to slate pen-cils.
An ice-cream dealer was I ecen tl} taken m to court and
severely reprimanded-although not Ipunlshed-for ha\ mg
in his possession a freezer that was imperfectly tinned.
"The authorities," says thIS observer of the operations
of German law, "do not seem to be eager to send an offender
to jail if he is acting in ignorance {; suall) , when they dIs-cover
that he is selling some article that IS mJunous to thl
public health, they explain the sItuatIOn to hIm and \\ al n
him to be careful 111 the future However"\"\ hen the} find
that he is dehberately attemptmg to sell gooJs that cIo 'WI
pass the laboratory tests, they Impose sevele penalties"
Really, when "\ve come to make companson "\,Ith the
regulatory paterna1lsm of foreIgn countlles the "l-mted States
has not been so dlastlc m this lme of Federal, State and mu-nicipal
legislatIOn as many of u<; have been led to be1leve
At any rate, we don't condemn the 1Ife impnsonment "\IOla-tors
of our pure food laws In fact, "e have much to be
thankful for. The disposItion here IS to make the laws 1eason-able
and fair alike to the public and the bus mess interests,
and popular sentiment in general favors ngld enforcement
of the law.., once they are enacted. EUlope has gone much
farther than the United States in thIS pal ticular-and Ge!-
many Seems to have gone "the lirmt" The present out-look
here IS for much more 1adlcal legIslatIOn than "e ncm
have The only thmg that WIll prevent It 1<;;a stnct ob-servance
of the regulatIOns already made
Some of the plOmment ral1road men seem dete1l11lned to
bling about government ownershIp of ralhoads. steamhnat
hnes and other puhhc utl1ltles The late"t 1110"\ el11e11t111 that
,-hrectlOn IS made by President Rlplty of Cll1laQ,u-C,reai
::\orthelll fame, who IS urgUlg ral1road employes to vote
against the re-election of congressmen who supported what
he calls the antI-railroad or anti-corporation laws, recently
enal ted and to stand s0hdly agamst the election of any man
"ho I" knm\ n to favor further raIlroad regulatlOn :;\1r Rip-
Ie} I" )Je11e\ eel to ha"\ e acted as "pokesman fOl other railroad
111anager~, some of whom have endorsed hIS position and ad-
\ ["ed theIr emplOyes to follow hIS adVIce. By making the
regulatIOn of rallf'1ads and other common carriers a political
I'-,,,ue, .:\lr RIpley and his fnends surely invite dIsaster for
the 111tcre"-t<;;whose method~ can not "-tand investigation and
defeat 1o! the candIdates that they may support By oppos-
In£; I easonahle re£;ulatlOn they VIrtually declare that the rall-roach
cannot plOsper unless allowe,-l to exploit the people by
\"\atenng stocks manipulatlllg combines and 1aising rates to
all that the traffic can carry If they can make the people
hehC"\ e that "uch is the situation, government ownership of
the lallroclC]s ,,111 come "lthin a few year., The people, how-n
('I \"\111not helle"\ e It Recent experience has shown that
tbe 1,1Ilload" can prospel under stlict regulation Nearly
all the la"" 110VvIII fOl ce "ere opposerl and declared un-rea"
onahh lll1practlcahle by MI Ripley and other railroad
1l1dgnatc--, hut 111o"t of the wads have done very well under
£;0"\Clll111e11tregulatlOll Only those whose methods of man-agement
wel e had ha"\ e suffered
Retailers of furl11ture WIll find it advantageous to spend
a day 01 tvvo 01 be1ter stl1l, four or five days, in Grand
Rapld"- next" eek, when the SIxtieth anniversary of the in-
COI pOI atmg of the cIty ,,111 be celebrated They will not
onh he granted opportu11ltIes to lylace orders advantageou~-
h, 1>ut to "\\Itne'os a remarkable demonstration of civic pride
and 10\ alt} to the fur11lture CIty It will be a thoroughly
Cn10\ dhle occasIOn becau<;;e the business men of Grand Rapids
al e ,pendlllg the money to make it so Thirty thousand
£OI111elreSIdents of the CIty wJIl "come home"
The manufacturels of Jamestown, NY, will gradually
I educe the" 01 k111ghour~ per week untIl a fifty-four hour basis
I" leached '\ 0 reduction in "ages WIll he made, but it
"uuld 110t he 'ourpnslllg If the manufacturers should elimi-nate
the aged and 1l1col11petent of their workmg forces.
Co tam manufclctlll el ~ of furmture do not care to "bother"
\\ It'1 01 ,]el' fOl hotels ],eCaU'3e it mten upts their regular
11 adt 1hlOu£;h "omehody'" "hothermg" the goods of these
ll1anufaLtuI el s al e gOIng mto new hotels pretty steadIly, just
the same
Kmg Gem g e of England purpo"es rcfurnishmg the castle
at \ \ 11ld,,01 "Roh' C aldel, who knew George intImately
\\ hell a bo}, ha" already maJIed to hIS old friend assurances
of hI" kllldly I ecollections and profound conSIderation.
I he 1l1anUfclctlll er \\ ho \\alts for the jJllce lJ"t of his
llJl1 petIto! to he cllstnbuted, that he may "cut under," often
leal n" that neIther hI" cle<,lgn<, nor hI" cut prices brIng the
t 1a Ie hoped fOl
\1dn"\ of ill c manuLlcitll ers of Grand RapIds have pre-pal
ed fioat" to l11ustIate theIr llYlustr} in the civic pageant
un \\ ednl..,c1a}, !\ugU"i 24 home coming week
11\ e thou."l11d 111erchani<, dOIng hU"lnes" in MIchigan
ba \l proll11"ecl to \ lSlt Cd an,l Rapid" dIll ing home coming
\\ eek---"\ugu"t 22 to 27
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
Edwa1 d Ryan IS a new undertaker III Dubuqllf', Iowa
G W Thornlllgton has engaged m the undertaklllg busi-ness
at Glenwood, "Vis
F R Hiatt has purchased the retail furniture business
of J M. Kingdon at Culleen, III
C H Pahlman, furl11ture dealer and undertaker of Ma-nne,
III , has sold out to John Kettel
Frank Rob1l1son of McLeansboro. 111, has purchaseCl
GIlbert A Taylor's furniture store at Carmi, Ill.
T1]e Century Furniture company of Jamestown, N. Y.,
offers creditors 25 per cent in settlement of claims.
The manufacture of steel furniture is a new industry at
Celina, 0 , started by Mersman Brothers & BranJt.
Robert J Baggs is the manager of the Marietta Chair
company's recently opened branch at Kansas City, Mo
Hemklin & Son, furniture dealers of Elk Point, S. Dak.,
have sold out to the Union County Investment company.
The People's Furniture company, dealers of Richmond,
Va, have increased their capital stock from $20,000 to $48,-
000
E E. Smith and F B Patterson are recent additions to
the offite force of the Maddox Table company of Jamestown,
N. Y.
The Cappel Furniture cmopany of Middleton, 0., has
purchased the furl11ture stock of W. H Probst & Son, of the
same town.
The firm of Cates & Davis, furniture dealers of Burling-ton,
N C, has been dissolved Mr. Davis continues the
business under the name of the James A. R. Davis Furni-ture
company.
H. H Hiester furniture dealer of Bluffton, Ind., has
moved his stock into the store formerly occupied by the Bee
Hive company.
The J W. Sheets & Sone; company, dealers in furniture
and wall paper in Milwaukee, Wis , have incorporated. Cap-
1tal stock, $5,000.
An addition 50 x 150 feet, four storie:;, i" being erecteC::
to the F W Hanpeter furniture factory of St. Louis, Mo,
at a cost of about $25,000.
The Ch1cago Store and Office Furniture company, dealers
of Seattle, \iV ash, has been incorporated by A. ]. and Clara
J Sidder and Max Marcus
The Allen Furl11ture company of Deeland, Fla, is erect-ing
a two story brick building which will be ready for oc-cupancy
early in September
Robert Carn, furniture dealer of St. Augustine, Fla, has
sold a half interest to Arnold R Kelly, who has the repu-tation
of being a southern hustler.
The contract for furnishing 6.359 chairs for the Houston
(Tex) auditonum has been awarded to the American Seat-ing
company of Chicago at $10,840
Percy G. Mayhew of Grand Rapids, M1ch, has been
granteJ a patent on an inventIOn called a mattress fil1er
The dev1ce IS intended for use in stores
The George W Scott Undertaking company of Chicago,
has been mcorporated by George W Scott, Cora EScott
and Joseph B Graves Capital stock, $5,000.
Frank Holmes, furnIture dealer and underraker of La
;\loile, 11l, sold out recently to Clarence E Tlean. Now
Mr Dean has sold the business to F H. Clear.
Arthur Kalstner, flllniture clealer of 1709 Fond du Lac
avenue, MIlwaukee, Wis, has let contracts for the erection
of a new four story brick building to cost $16,000.
L J H1ll, salesman for the Fanner Manufacturmg com-pany
of Cleveland, 0, has become a resident of Grand Rap-
Ids, Mlch, havmg settled his famlly at 78 James street.
Frederick Cappel, furniture dealer of Middleton, 0, has
incorporated his business under the name of the F Cappel
Furl11ture company, with capItal stock fixed at $25,000.
~\ petition m bankruptcy has been filed against REImer
& Son, furniture manufacturers of 32 Howard street, New
York CIty Liabilities estimated at $10,500, assets less than
$4,000
The Newton, Weller & Wagner company, wholesale
dealers in house furnishing goods, of San Antonio, Texas,
will open a retail department in a separate buildmg on Sep-tember
1.
The Osterman company, dealers in household goods, of
Akron, 0, has been incorporated by I ]. Beusch, H G.
Schaibly, S J Kornhauser and W. N. Osterman. Capital
stock, $25,000
The Hartman Furniture and Carpet company has pur-chased
a lot 50 x 92 on LaSalle street, near Thirty-ninth
street, Chicago, on which they will erect a building to he
used as a distributing station.
The Dobbs Furniture company, dealers of Tyler, Tex,
has filed a voluntary petition in bankrupt('y. LiabilItie'i are
scheduled at $18,429; assets estimated at $28,181. The pe-titioners
claim $4,500 as exemptions.
Samuel B Sterns, born in Russia 45 years ago, for many
vears a furniture dealer at 557 Bowditch street, New Bed-ford,
Mass, died on August 12, leaving a widow and three
sons, who will continue the business.
Denning Fitch, Albert E. Branton an 1 \;[1 s Rose Fitch
have incorporated the Fitch Undertaking company, capital-ized
at $10,000, to take over the undertaklllg business of the
late W111iam D F1tch of Madison, Wis
Ira E Fritz, who has been manager of the W. P. Dor-man
furniture store at Galesburg, nl., has purchased a half
interest in the establishment and the name has been changed
to Fritz & Dorman, the People's Outfitters.
The Basic C1ty (Va) Furl11tiuree company was fined
$25 and costs recently on a plea of guilty to the charge of
VIolating the ch1ld labor law of the state which prohibits
the employment of orphans under 12 years of age in any fac-tory,
workshop or mine.
The Chittenden & Eastman company of Burlington, la,
has made arrangements to establish a branch wholesale fur-nIture
house in Des Moines, la. Matthew Q Giffen, who
has been with the Chittenden & Eastman company for sev-eral
years, will manage the Des Moines branch
The annual mi,lsummer outing of the Home Furnishers'
aSSOCIatIOn ot Massachuseetts, was held last Vlednesday at
Paragon Park, near Boston, with 175 members in attendance
ThIS aSSOCIatIon, orgalllzed several years ago for the good of
the gEneral furlllture trade of the Old Bay state, is one of the
strongest trade organizations in the country
The store of the Etowah Furlllture company, Gadsden,
Ala, was closed recently on a writ called a "hquor IllJunc-tIon,"
or search warrant The petItioners, J l' and E 0
Howle, were arrested on suspicion of havmg bquor on the1r
premises, but were released, giving bonds, and allowed to
reopen the store Whether they will be allowed to keep 1t
open or not depends on the outcome of their trial. If con-victed,
they must quit busllless.
II
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18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
r
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I
Shultz ~ "irsch II Company I
III
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,,
II
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I
Manufacturers of
HIGH GRADE BEDDING
fEATtlERS, fEATtlER PILLOWS, DOWNS, ETC.
UPtlOLSTERED BOX SPRINGS and CURLED
tlAIR MATTRESSES A SPECIALTY
,. .
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II
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,
If
III•
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II
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IIIII•
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II
i THE "ELI" FOLDING BEDS ~~~frl~I~N~I~~ No Stock complete wIthout the Ell Beds III Mantel and Upna:ht I
ELI D. MILLER &, CO.
EVANSVILLE. INDIANA
Wnte for cut. and pnces
",- .
I.. ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, EVAN.VILLE.
SALESMEN~S EXPENSE ACCOUNTS
Comments and SUKKestions on Some Points That
Ha ve Never Been Settled.
If 1Iusmess methods are to become an exact science-dud
that IS the 0111 ectn e of all progressIve commercial houses
- "omcthmg must be done to settle the vexed question of the
"ale"man's expen sc account
\\ hat yyIII the house "stand for" in the way of its repre-
"entatn e's personal expenses ?-that is the question. There
can be but one an S\\ er The house 'ihould pay such expenses
as are calculated to promote and increase its busmess; noth-mg
more The mdulgences, extravagances and whims of
It'i emplo} es are negli~lble in a thorough business system
And It i'i only by a thorough business system that any house
can teep lts place 111 the front ranks
A summarv of the legltnuate expenses which a house
should pay for its sale'imen would include transportation,
hotel bills, excess ba~gage, porter hire, and expressage. Com-mon
"ense \\ III dictate when extras for emergency cases
should be alloy\ ed
It is a question whether the laundry item should be in-cluded.
It IS true that a salesman's clean linen and neat ap-pearance
reflect credit on the house, and for this reason the
item of laundry, when accompanied by the receipted bill or
y oueher, may be presentable. On the other hand, if laundry
ic:; to be admitted to the expense account, why not barber
bills, baths, shines, and the expense of keeping clothes in
repair-even the cost of new clothes?
Such expensec:; are eminently personal. A man with pride
in himself and vi·ith sufficient ability to earn his living ex-pects
to keep himself well groome d He could not mingle
"ith the bll"me'i'i \\ orId unlec:;s he did If he is not able and
\\ lillng to pay for getting him'3elf shaved, and his linen
laundered and hIS trousers pres'ied, does he not rather be-
Ions; to the cIas'i of red-'3hlrte~l muscular toilers than to the
"alecman''i more s;entlemanly c1ac:;s?
\\ hen the 'iales manager buys a dIamond for his personal
adornment. he bm s It already cut and ready for the settmg
1"11 t the "ame pnnclple applicable to the engagmg of a sales-man
J The hou.,e hires Mr Jones on a liberal salary or com-ml"~
lOl1 to repre,ent It on the road, It follows as a matter of
cour"e that Jones, beSIde bemg- a potential business winner,
I" clothe,-l and pre"entable, and ""Ill keep himself so.
l'heatllcal mana<;ers haye 'lllnplIfied the problem They
pay the ~tar who I" able to draw bU<;lne,s d good round sum,
and the stal 1<;expected to furnl"h the costume'3 and dress
the part He can afford to Jo it for the salary he gets And
by the "d111e I ea-0mng a competent salesman will admit that
he can afford to pay f01 llls clean lmen, his shmes, etc, out of
hl" comml"SlOn'3 If he IS not reallLl11g enough on hIS com-mISSIon.,
to em el these tnflIng personal expenses he would
he \' be to "eek dnother hn<;mess connection
i\ 1 eputahle h'JUse expect~ to pay its repre~entatlve'" ex-pence'
<it d good hotel There 1'3 a certalll advertIsement for
the film 111thl" ontla), and al<;o, the comfort and conven-
Ience afforded the sale<;man in '3topping at a first-class hotel
matella11) affect hIS sales These matters of advertisement
and convemence must be recognized as positive values, not
to he tampered \\ ith aD) more than the rolls of bill'3 in the
film's money cha\\ er They ale actually worth so much of
the firm's money
There are salesmen and salesmen-and '3ome of the other
kinJ are in the habit of chargIng in their expenc:;e account $4
per diem hotel bill while they really have little to do with the
WEEKLY ARTISAR 19
ARE YOU A SATISFIED CUSTOMER?
The Temperature of
the" ABC" Moist Air
Dry Kilns can be var~
ied to suit the different
grades of Lumber and
changes in the weather.
Any degree of humid-ity
from clear and dry
to a dense fog can be
obtained at will.
AMERICAN BLO'¥ER CoMPANY ---- DETROIT. ~IlCH
USA
"ABC"MoiSt Air Dry
Kilns are very simple
in design, construction
and operation, being
readily applicable to
the varying conditions
of every day operation.
The highest tempera-ture
practical is obtain-able
with the least ex-pense
for fuel.
Read the regrets of the Lowell (Mich.) Cutter Co.:
"Weare pleased to state that the Moist Air Dry Kiln which you installed for us has proven very satisfactory. Our Kiln is of six trucks
capacity and we are taking various kinds of lumber from our yard and drying it 10 a very satisfactory manner for our work in six days time. We
find the arrangement of this kmd of kiln very convenient for drymg sleigh panel stock, and only regret we did not install one a long
time ago."
N. B. Since the time this letter was written the above company has purchased another "ABC" Kiln. "Actions speak louder than words."
Send Address for new Treatise-Dry Kilns for Timber Products.
I~ Ablest Engineering Organization in the Blower Business, operating three large plants devoted
exclusively to the manufacture of Fan System Apparatus and the allied lines.
hostelry in question except to write letters to the firm on its
<=;tatIOnery and to lounge in its office of an evening. They
have perhaps engaged a room for a dollar a day in a cheap
place, and are getting their meals at a cheap restaurant, there-by
perverting $1 or $2 a day of the firm's money to their
private uses.
If anyone should confront such a salesman and accuse
hIm of embezzlement he would be utterly dumbfounded
Probably he would offer one or two lame excuses for his mis-appropriatIOn
of the firm's funds. The first excuse is that
"what the firm doesn't know won't hurt it," which is too
puerile even to merit criticism; the second excuse customary
under such cIrcumstances IS, "Well, if I am wIlling to ex-penence
the discomfort of hving m a cheaper place when I
might enjoy the advantages that the firm pays for, that is
my lookout!"
But It isn't the salesman's lookout. It is the lookout of
the salesmanager, who has virtually been robbed of money
furnished to faClhtate hIS representative's gettmg sales and
"keepmg up appearances"
Any system of esplOnage which the firm may seek to
employ to guard its mterests m this respect is useless C.:ln-scientIOus
salesmen would hardly endure a spotter in the
person of the hotel clerk, even though such might occasionally
be useful to detect instances of fraud. And even if vouchers
could be obtained from the hotel management tallying with
the Items in the <=;alesman's account of his hotel expenses,
these vouchers could not be relied upon, since it is in the
interest of the hotel management to avoid compromising a
guest.
Some firms have solved the problem by securing a rate
from all the hotels which their salesmen patronize. This
plan. beside forestalling a possible "padded" account, is also
economIcal A hotel rUn on the American plan at $4 a day
will often concede a rate of $2.50 under these circumstances,
whIch also makes it suffIciently easy to ascertain whether
the salesman was actually entered as a guest at this hostelry.
It IS to be regretted that such Items as railroad fare,
sleeping cat and parlor car accommodations, cab hire, etc., are
<=;usceptible to such an amount of jugglmg on the part of the
occasIOnal unscrupulous traveler. Some men will continue to
ride all mght in a smoker or accommodatIOn coach and charge
up the cost of the sleeper they didn't take, to the house.
There IS apparently no recourse for such abuses, but it is
\IV ell for such a salesman to remember that each act of this
kind is apt to be noted by some fellow traveler and circulated
to the detriment of his reputation among salesmen if not to
the injury of his standing with the house Further, he will
find the strain and fatigue of traveling on the road sufficiently
exhausting without these minor discomforts whIch accrue
fr0111the habit or reniging on the expense account If he is to
get results as a salesman he must feel fresh and unfatigued
after an all night's journey. All the advantages which the
most lIberal house allows him are important in influencing
his sale<=; It is a truism that there can be no divergence be-twem
the 1I1terests of the employer and the employed.
The salesman who falls into the habit of padding his
expens. account is morally defective, and in a measure irre-sponsIble
VVhatever glittering results he may obtain, his
ability is offset by the ugly counter consideration-his un-trust
worthiness Sooner or later, the padded expense ac-count
gives itself away, the suspicion<=; of the firm are aroused
and the integrity of the salesman challenged.
"What shall we allow for entertainment expenses?" is the
------~---------T ~ ----------------
I
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
CHOICE TOOLS FOR FURNITURE MAKERS
If you do not know the "Oliver" wood working tools, you had better give
us your address and have us tell you all about them. We make nothing but
Quality tools, the first cost of which is considerable, but which will make
more profit for each dollar invested than any of the cheap machines Hood-ing
the country.
Oliver Tools
"Oliver" New Variety Saw Table lIlo. 11
WIll take a saw up to 20' dIameter Arbor belt IS 6' WIde
SendforCatalog "B" fordata on Hand Jointers, Saw Tables, Wood
Lathes, Sanders, Tenoners, Mortisers, Trimmers, Grinders, Work
Benches, Vises, Clamps, Glue Heaters, etc., etc.
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.
Worka and General Off,cea at 1 to 51 Clancy St
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A
BRANCH OFFICES -Ohver Maclunery Co • Hudson T ermlna!. 50 Church St. New York
OLver Machinery Co • FilS! Nabonal Bank BuudInll. ChIcago, III • Ohver Machinery Co ,
PaCl6c BuudInll, 5oatIle, Wa.L , Ohver Maclunery Co .201-203 Dean'llate. Manchester, Enll
never settled query of the sales manager Th1S 1S the most
dublOUS entry m the salesman's expense account E\ en
when such expenses as theaters, suppers, etc, are leg1tImate
and result m gettmg busmess, they evidence a cond1tlOn of
affairs which the house must necessanly deplore If Jones
& Co are selling shoes they ought to get orders on the ment
of the1r goods, as compared w1th a competltor's hne-not on
the strength of the COnVl\ lal mc1matlOn of the customer's
buyer It is an eV1I that the hablt of treatmg and enterta111-
mg should enter mto the commerCIal equation.
The buyer who makes a practIce of acceptmg hospltaht)
in return for the 111fiuence he may exel t m landing a sale lS on
the level of the man who accepts a bnbe for pohtlcal favors
And the salesman who admits himself obhged to dIspense '3uch
dubious hospltahty is VIrtually m the posltIOn of the gIveI of
bnbes, unless, of course, eAceptlOnal CIrcumstances dlter the
case. The salesman who offers wine suppel s and theatre
tickets as an inducement to hIS customel, face~ the lmputatIOn
of some fault 111hi" own methods of salec;mansh1p EI"'e \\ h)
c;hould he not have closed the sale b) ord111ar). legltImale,
commerclal enterpnse?
One old whlte-halree! \ etel an 111the 1 anks of ~ctle~l11all,
who has an enVIable l)dnk account d'i a re'3uIt ot .fa ) eau;,'
effol t on the road, make'3 It hh boa 'it that he ha'3 nl \ el ~n en
a customer so much as a Cigar, 111 the entIre lOl11Se of hl'i
expenence He IS not a c;tmgy man, If you are recen ed a'i a
guest at hIS home you WIll be elaborately cnterta111oo, and
generously treated, but the "governor," a'i the ho)" call hI111,
holds It as a matter of pnnclple that tl eat1l1g a'" a method I::'
beneath h1S dlglllty
"I can get sales, because I 'iell good ~oocb-dnd bt.cau::.c
I know how to prove then mellt to an) mdn who WIll stand
upon two legs and argue the questIOn WIth me." ThIs IS the
SaveLabor
"OLIVER"
No. 16. Band Saw
36 Inches.
Made WIth or WIthout
motor dnve Metal
lable 36"x30" W,ll
take 18" uuder the
gUl<le-tUb 45 degrees
one way and 7 degrees
the olher way Car-nes
a saw up to '%"
WIde OutJlde beanng
to lower wheel .hall
when not motor dnven
We1lllu 1600 lb. when
ready to sh,p
U Tempers
" COod:
~O\ e1nOl ~ . \ el ~IOn of hl'i succes'o "I wouldn't give so much
d-, a ugarette butt to mfluence the bIggest order that was
e\ er entered on a book \Vhy? Because I would feel that
the CIlSarete butt was worth mOle commerClally than my
capaclt\ as a salesman"
'lhe gOy ernOl'c; IS an eAcepl10nal case, of course There
;u e occa ~IOn'i \\ hen the best and most self-respecting sales-mdn
ma\ tleat to all antage and not feel that he I" gIvmg a
bllbe In c;uch mstancec; the Sale'i111an's expense account may
contaIn an Item for entertaInment-but It should always be
acc lmpallled \',lth an Itel111zed '3tatement as to what the enter-talnmlnt
lOmpll'ied and WIth the same, pOSItIOn and any
pel tment facl'i cancel n1l1g the reclpwnt of hIS hospItalIty
Some house'i have been suffICIently enterpnsl11g as to
abohsh the Ite11117ed expense account altogether, allowing a
1easonable marg1l1 for the salesman'c; expenses and throw1l1g
~_.---- .- - .- .- -----------_._-----
I
i•f
If
IIIIIIIIf
I!~
I,•
I,,!!
,,I
,I
I•
II..
WEEKLY AkTISAN
him on his ov"n devices after that margin (which is usually
a generous one) has heen exceeded The plan has its virtues
and obJectlOnable features Perhaps the virtues of the sy"-
tern pledommate In the first place, It does away wIth any
SU"plclOn whIch may eXl"t between the house and the sales-man,
obvlatll1g any possIble temptation to inflate an expense
account, then, too, it is a time saver, both m relation to the
"alesman and to the bookkeeping department in the home
offIce Every man wIth experience on the road knows the
amount of time and mental effort necessary as a result of
havll1g to balance an expense account daily; and the head
bookkeeper in the house knows that it comprises a 90mpli-cated
detail which he would gladly eliminate As to the ob-
Jections to the system, the principal one is that it is a less
accurate method of accounting than would eXIst, supposing
salesmen's expense acounts were invariably "on the square"
The salesman who thinks that little leakages in his ex-pense
memorandum do not matter "because the firm is rich
anyway," is a short-sighte<1 business man When the little
leakages are taken in the aggregate, where from 20 to 200
:"alesmen are mvoh ed, theIr sum in the course of the year
makes an appalhng dIfference in the matter of dividends and
the abilIty of the firm to extend its enterprise The wealth of
the firm which he represents IS one of the salsman's assets-
It represents growmg importance and more readily accom-plished
sales as a result of which that same salesman will
draw bigger commisslOns next year And since the wealth
of any firm is threatened by these wholesale leakages in ex-pense
money, isn't it for the salesman's own advantage to be
careful m stoppmg the leak so far as his own are concerned?
So long as the itemized eeXpense account exists, the
hou:"e must mtrust its funds to the salesmall1, just as the
United States government intrusts the interpretation of its
la ""s to the various executives of the bench. The sales-man
who is sagaciously figUring how to Job his laundry bills,
wme suppers and other indulgences onto his expense account
err,; m three ways first, he has not the interests of the firm
at heart, whIch are Identical with his own best interests;
secondly, wl11le he shows hImself clever in minute details in
mal11pulatmg hIS accounts, he is perverting his quahty of
cleverness, whIch would be better expended in getting new
busll1ess for the firm he represents; thirdly, he suffers moral
degeneration, WhICh has Its commensurate effect on his phy-sical,
mental and selhng abIlities
EIther abohsh the ItemIzed expense account altogether,
or, 1f necessary, reOl ganize the system so that all superfluous
or doubtful entries v{lll be ehmmated, making an exception
of entertamment, laundry bills, etc, only when <convinced
that the Clfcumstances warrant the expenditure If pOSSIble
arrange WIth hotels to house your salesmen .at definite and
reduced rates, reqUlre, if conSIstent with all other condItions,
21
THE ~nd.tpARLOlt NEW.LU ~ BED r
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Always ready wit h
beddmg in place.
So simpl., 80 easy, a
child can operate it.
Has roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO. Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK, Norman & Monitor.
that the salesman travel on mileage, which, much the same
as a check book, affords vouchers for the demands upon it;
allow for reasonable et ceteras, and hire only salesmen whom
you are sure are salesmen and not sponges -J. W. Madison
in "Salesmanship."
An Important Court Rulinli.
"A deCIsion of lllterest to all lllstalment dealers i3 that of
CIty Court Judge Hodson in the suit of Mary E Butler against
the People's Furlllture company, Buffalo, which was affirmed
by Justice Woodward on July 13. The action was to recover
$358, the amount of money paId on furniture bought on credit,
Mr. Butler claiming she was entitled to a return of all the
money paid.
Mr. Butler claimed that after her furniture was taken from
her by the company for non-payment of the regular instal-ments,
the company faded to gIve her the required notice of its
intended sale or an opportunity to make up back payments, as
1equired by law.
Judge Hodson held that Mrs. Butler's husband, who had
contracted for the purchase of the furniture, had waived his
rights under the statute, his contract reading that all money
paid should be considered as rent for the USe of the goods.
The suit was dIsmIssed WIth costs agalllst the complainant."
The above IS quoted from the current issue of the Cabinet
Maker and Upholsterer and is instructive as showing in one
instance the rights of the furniture dealer were protected by
the courts, says the Home Furnisher of Boston. These cases
all turn on statutory law so that a New York case would not
be a gUIde to Massachusetts, but a number of points in refer-ence
to condItional sales have never been adjudicated by our
courts. The Massachusetts courts have held in one instance
(in reference to thirty day nottce) that the purchaser or lessor
can not waive his rights That IS on the same theory that an
employee on a raIlroad can not hold a company harmless on
account of injuries caused by its negligence.
The laws are usually made to protect the purchaser and
he is not allowed to waive them, but as Michigan laws are
more hke those of New York than those of Massachusetts, it
is probable that the Buffalo decision will be considered good
in this and most of the other northem states.
"-'-------_.~--_._----_ ..--- _. -_. --_._----._---------------------- ...
OF THE
THE LYON FURNITURE AGENCY
CREDITS AND COLLECTIONS
ROBERT P. LYON, Ceneral Manager
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
FURNITURE, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY,
UNDERTAKING, PICTURE FRAME, MIRROR
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES.
New York
Grand Rapids
Philadelphia
80ston
Cincinnati
ChIcago
St. LOUis
Samestown
High Point
IMPROVED METHODS
WE ALSO A£PORTTHE PRINCIPAL DRY GOODS
DEPARTMENT AND GENERAL STORES.
Capltal, Cremt and PaT Ratints.
Cleanng House of Trade Expenence.
The Most RelJ.able CredIt Reports.
RAPID COLLECTIONS.
GRAND RAPIDS OFFICE 412-413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
c. C NEVERS. M,ch,gan Manater
to. •
1
WEEKLY AJtTISAN
... - . &01
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
... Everythmg m Palnt Speclalhes and Wood F1Ulshmg matenals. Flllers that fl11. Stams that satisfy .
Buildinlis That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-Cleveland, 0 -Dr. Gaston, 1467 East 105th
street, $6.000; Frank Gusser. 3709 Poe avenue, $3,000; W. G.
F1Jgle 15327 School street $3,500; Wilham Morris, 2010 East
Eighty-Ninth street. $7.500; Mrs W. B. Weideman, 3111
West Sixteemh street, $f!-,200; Kathenllic Knloblach, 3917
West Thirty-Third street. $3.500.
Columbus, O.-W. D. Norton, Ninth avenUe and Oregon
street, $5.000; M. B. Wheeler. 1216 Hunter street, $4,000;
Elizabeth Burgett, 479 Champion avenue, $3.500; Harry E.
Chiloote. 629 Dennison avenue, $3,000; Mrs. Grace M. Pixley,
473 Linwood avenue, $3,500; W. A. Theado. 552 Wilson ave-nue,
$4.500; Mrs. Sadie E. Harper, 150 Lane avenue, $3,500;
Clarence H. Graw, 2650 Terrace avenue, $3,000.
Mobile. Ala.-Mrs Lula Truetel, Marine and Shormer
streets, $3,300; J. S. Robbins, Lawrence and Poe streets, $4.-
000; Mrs. W. W. Gill, 72 Monterey place, $3,000; T. L. Moore,
Broad and South Carolina streets, $4.000.
Evanston. Ill.-Margaret Milne, 1719 Ridge avenue, $12,-
000; Joseph Hanan, 815 Madison street, $4,500.
St. Louis, Mo.-W. C. Burns, 4405 Arco street, $4,000;
G. L. Buettner. 3449 Iowa avenue, $4,800; Addie A. Dailey,
5375 Washington avenue, $5,000; E. H. Brochaus, 4314 Taft
avenue, $3,000; Lotta M. Dutton, 5344 Terry avenue, $3,800;
Lucient A. Paule, 4051 Russell avenue, $6.600; Philip Cheney,
3100 Keokuk street, $3.000; H. C. Thompson, Lockwood
Farm, Clayton, $30,000; Joseph Boehm, 5070 Delmar boule-vard,
$10.500.
Dulu1Jh, Minn.--M. Rustad, 290 West First street, $4.-
000; John Erickson, 416 West Fourth street, $3,300; Hugh
Cahill, 1168 West Sixth street, $3,000.
Denver, Colo.-Stephen Leberelr, South Emerson and
Cedar streets, $3,000; W. E. Rice, Dahlia and Tweenty- Third
streets, $3,500; Mrs George Stover, Eighteenth and Race
streets, $3,750; Ada Mason, 1248 Elati ~treet, $3,400; Mrs.
FannIe Levy, Knox court, $4,500; Mrs. S. M. F. Sweet, Eighth
and Vtne streets, $4,800
Youngstown. 0 -Dr. H A. Zimmerman, 680 Illinois
a\ enue, $6,500; Frank Helwig, 292 Saranac avenue, $3,000; D.
H Frazer, 420 Laclede avenue, $3,650; W. P. Canfield, 94
Lora avenue, $3,000
Topeka, Kan -M P Wahle, 1332 Buchanan street, $3.-
000; W V Borst, 704 Tyler street, $6,000; William E. Gebby,
1124 Washburn avenue, $30,000; E. H. Crosby, 901 Harrison
street, $20,000.
Fort Wayne, Ind -A A. Bowser, 1130 Oliver street,
$10,000
Milwaukee, Wis.-Joseph Dold, 1511 Twenty-sixth street.
$3,000; R. Wtnterstein, Newhall and Folsom streets, $3,750;
Mrs. F A Cody, 176 Eighteenth street. $4,800; Dr. Lorenz,
Twenty-sixth street and Grand avenue, $7,000; Kerend Drozl-wski,
'vVtndlake and Grant streets, $4,000; Mrs. Laura Kieper,
Cherry and Forty-seventh streets, $6,000; Mrs. E. H. Lorcuce.
1280 Twenty-Third street, $4,500.
Kansas City, Mo -Z. F. Briggs, 5436 Central avenue, $5,-
500; Barry FUlton, 2711 Forest street, $5,000; D. J. G. Eagle.
137 South Elmwood street, $3,000; F. H. Thwing, 1418 East
FIfteenth street, $10.000; Robert Nesch. 3821 Gillham road,
$12,000; W. H. Ashley, 324 Agnes avenue, $4,000; H. N. Han-son,
3218 College avenue, $4.000.
Detroit, Mich -F. C. Hayden, 608 Lathrop street, $4,-
000; W. E. McCorquodale, 286 Gladstone street. $3,800; Ara-helle
Gray, 216 Sibley street, $6,200; Anthony Plach, 320
Trombley street, $3,600; F. A Tottle, 223 Philadelphia street,
$5,000; ohn Morehead, Owen and John R. streets, $5,000.
Indianapolis, Ind.-Mrs. N. B. Miles. Grace and Newton
WEEKLY AR.TISAN
WE HAVE NO PRETTY THEORIES
ABOUT STAINS OR FINISHES
THE MARIETTA PAINT AND COLOR co.
MARIETTA, OHIO.
Making stains for practical men
has been our job for many years.
And long before we became
makers we were USERS.
Above all, our products are
practical. They WORK. The
results in your finishing room, if
streets, $3,000; A. J. Johnston, Park and Thirty-first streets,
$4,100; Paul Bisesi, Merrill and Virginia streets, $4,400;
Howard T. Gnfflll, 3163 North Delaware ~treet, $5,500.
Omaha, Nebr.-Henry W. Dunn, 4156 Cuming street, $3,-
000; E A. Tracy, 1331 South Tenth street, $3,000; R. M.
George, 2727 Emmet street, $3,000; Mlllnie Pearl Epeneter,
506 North Fortieth street, $5,000; Louis Lehman, 1410 Wirt
street, $3,500; E. W. Dixon, 426 North Thirty-eighth street,
$30,000.
Louisville, Ky -John S. White, 434 West Ormsley street,
$10,500; John Gass, 1239 Bandstowl1 road, $6,000; John B.
Wintersmith, 1407 St. James court, $7,000.
Cincinati, 0 -W. T. V. Cramer, Avondale, $10,000; Mrs.
Anna Hanlon. 294 West Fifth street, $3,000; Samuel Schaner.
Forest avenue and Carthage pike, $4,000; Henry Heitmeyer,
Hatch and Fuller streets, $5,000; Theodor V. Bly, 1511
Windham avenue and Reading road, $8,000; Fred Schwieder-
Harrison avenue, $4,500.
Youngstown, O.-Leonard Sawvel, 402 Woodbine ave-nue,
$5,500; D. M. Weinberg, 238 Millicent avenue, $10,000.
Pittsburg, Pa -Thomas Bingham, Shady Lane and Alper-son
avenue, $6,500; Mrs. G. Logiodice, Pal'k and Shetland
avenues, $3,800; S. G. Baldensperger, 812 Sheridan avenue,
$19,000.
Charlotte, N. C- J. E. Hammersley, 601 Kingston (Dil-worth)
avenue, $3,800; Dr. W. M. Robey, 506 Kingston ave-nue
(Dilworth) $4,000; J. B. Spen-ce, 467 Kingston avenue,
(Dilworth) $4,000.
Peoria, Ill.-C. C. Williams, 156 Columbia terrace, $5,000;
George Raleigh, 920 Third street, ,$3,500; Ray D. Fearn, 1004
Pacific street, $3,000.
Atlanta, Ga.-]. P. Grane, 36 Angler avenue, $3,500; Mrs.
C. F. Dernell, 151 Logan street, $3,000; J. H. Morehead, 20
you have the right kind of finishers,
will be the same results as we
show on our sample panels.
You are not experimenting when
you buy stains from us. Ask your
best finisher about them.
Send for sample panel to desk No.3.
Washita street, $3,750; Lemmon Purcell, 289 Ormond street.
$3,000.
Philadelphia, Pa.-Mrs. W. L. McLean, Queen lane and
Wissahickon avenue, $9,000; Albert Wackerman, 859 Church
lane. Germantown, $3,600; W. P. Pritchett, 6203 Germantown
avenue, $4,000; Clara M. Schwartz, 1740 North Fifteenth
street, $6,000; Rev. John F. Graham, Fifty-Fourth and Vine
streets, $6,800.
Miscellaneous Buildings-The Atlas Amusement Co. are
building a theatre at Nineteenth and Martindale streets, In-dianapolis,
Ind. The Episcopalions are bUIldings a church to
cost $45,000 at Central and Sixteenth streets, Indianapolis.
The Catholic Bishop of Omaha, Neb. has a permit to build
St. Patrick's church at 1412 Castellar street at a cost of $45,·
000. The Druid Hill Presbyterians are building a $30,000
church at 779 HIghland avenue, Atlanta, Ga. The Catholic
Bishop of Buffalo, N. Y., is building a $20,000 church at
Rosalia and Hertel streets Topeka, Kan., is erecting a ward
school building to cost $42,000. l" .. --..... n.
10uis babn
Citizens' Telephone 1m.
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 Livmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
... ..-
.. .,
- -- -----------------,------------------~
Minnesota
Dealers"
Retail Furniture
Association
WEEKLY ARTISAN
OFFICERS-PreSIdent, J R. Taylor, Lake Benton, Mmn , Vice PresIdent, D R Thompson, Rockford, Mmn ,
Treasurer, B A Scheeneberger, Perham, Mlnn , Secretary, W L Grapp, Janesville, Mmn
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE-ChamDan, Geo Klem, Mankato, MmD, 0 SImons, Glencoe, Mmn, W. L
Harns Mmneapohs, Mlnn I C DanIelson, Cannon Falls.
BULLETIN No. 164.
UPWARD AND ONWARD
A Paper Read Before the Indiana Funeral Direc-tors'
Association Held at Indianapolis, Ind.,
by W. F. Evans of Brownsburg, Ind.
Before I get through wIth this paper yoU may wIsh to say
to me, what a little lad, whose patIence was sorely tried, said
to a preacher "once upon a time." It was a hot Sunday
morning. The class of little fellows had been together al-ready
for an hour and were tIred. Just before dIsmIssal a
preacher came, and common courtesy demanded that he be
asked to make a little talk He arose and said: "Well child-ren,
I am glad to see ypur sm~ling faces, but hardly know
what I want to say to you" Just at the end of these words a
little fellow on the back seat got up and said: "Why, mister,
just thay amen and thsit down." Maybe you will wish you
had said "amen" and "thsit down" to me before I get through
and. maybe I wi1l wish you had.
I have purposed to say say a few things upon the theme
"Onward and Upward" from the funeral directors view-point
These words are certainly fuM of meaning. It matters not
what our avocatLon in life may be; if we do not take these
words as our motto, our life WIll be a failure We can't stand
still; but we must move upward or downward Certainly the
most of us realize that we are not livmg up to oUr capabIlities
and our responsibilities. Of course, we can never reach it
in ,this life. but if we ever keep in mind the motto "onward
and upward" we will be a great deal further up perfection's
ladder when time is called. With the poet lets say:
"Press on, there's no such word as fail,
"Press nobly on, the goal is near.
"Ascend the mountain; breast the gale
"Look upward, onward~never fear."
There is a great fie[d Ear work and advancement in our
profession. Look back twenty years and see what has been
accomplished. Look forward twenty years, If you please and
you will see that we will have to make even greater progress,
if we would keep abreast of the times
Let us look to our morals. If we expect to elevate the
morals of our profession, we must keep our own above re-proach.
It has been said that "a chain 1S no stronger than
its weakest link." Do we want to be that link? I say no.
Josh Billings has said, I believe, "If yoU wish to train a
child in the way it should go, go that way yourself" So if
we expect our profession to grow morally. we must grow that
way ourselves.
How about our growth mentally? Are we marching "on-ward
and upward" in knowledge, or do we rest our laurels al-ready
won, when we get our license. Stop! I hear some one
say: "I haven't time to keep forging ahead" Look at the
spare moments, look at our trade journals, text books. etc.
Do we read about o'ur business or profession? Suppose our
famIly phySICIan would say to us that he never read any more
m the magazlI1es or text books How long would we call him
as a doctor) Suppo"e our attorney would tell us he dIdn't
need to read any more to keep up WIth the new laws and new
deCIslOns---that he knew enough. What one of us would go to
him when we had a funeral bIll to collect through the courts)
-\ga1l1, If our mInIster \'.lould tell us he never studIed the
Bible or ne,er looked at a text book, haVIng to do with
pubhc speakmg? How long would It be before we would
want hiS reslgnatlOn? And yet how many there are Just as
indIfferen t to\'. ard success
The world moves, ne\'. condItIOns arIse, new problems
have to be solved If we keep up with the procession we
must be prepared or else gIve way to some one who is. They
say, "opportunIty IS a boat loaded and ready to have for a
foreIgn port This is the last boatt out, too. All aboard I
vVhen opportunIty knocks we must be ready to open the door
or else gne "Way for another to pass through.
The worLl demands action. Where the heart is, there is
the treasure vVhere the ambItion lies there is the opportuni-ty
for us All thmgs are pOSSIble to bram, grit, and character.
The duty to our profession .and our fnends IS to always
be at our best You no doubt realIze that our best efforts are
brought out by those superior to us. We are always folbw-
Ing an Ideal It behooves us to set our ideals higher and
hIgher and keep marchIng "upward and onward," even If we
meet in our pathway dIscouragements and CrItiCIsms from
fnends and foes.
:\letropolItan lIfe 111 the last few months has been trying
to use our professlOn for commercIal purposes. Let us build
the profeSSIon so lt cannot be assaIled in this manner. Raise
our code of ethics hIgher, so it will crowd but the riff-raff.
Make our assoclatlOn stand for something. In Rome, to be
a CItizen was better than to be a king. If we keep this motto
before us, what need we fear from the octopus, the trust or
the vVyerhauser mIllions?
And now in conclusion, may I ask what shall be our atti-
" - .- .. ) ....
I HOFFMAN BROTHERS CO.
FT. WAYNE, IND.
HARDWOOD LUMBER
S~~~D } QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY • •I
WEEKLY ARTISAN
marks every table in the Stow & Davis lme. Masterly designs, sturdy oak, and
rich, glowmg mahogany are fashioned by our skillfulworkmen into
Our Bank and Office tables display the same care and ment in their burtding-the
care that appeals to paying customers, whether they be home-keepers or
business men.
f-
III
I
463%
See our line. Tables and Banquet Tops. 4th floor, Blodllett Blell!.
tude to our professIOn, and the dut1es 1t may enJom? Shall
we g1ve way and 1etrograde or shall we mm e "onV\ard and
upward?" I thmk we ought to take a pO'i1t1ve stand for
progress -:\/[ake ourselves artists of the first rank by doing
the work set before us and do 1t well.
Yes w1th Herbert Kaufman we saY'
"Do it, keep on and hop on-get thru it
"Don't stop m the road or hop like a toad,
"From th1s s1de to that, or fly hke a bat,
,'W1th your head ups1de down,
"T111 your brain rattles round.
"Of course there are boulders;
"But you have broad shoulders-
"A tug and a stnde though,
"'N 111move them aside so.
"Deep ruts? To be sure.
"Toward the end, though, they're fewer
"Jot this doV\n where 'twill stay, for you need it all day
"What's got Vi 1thout effort is WOl th what 1t cost
"The eas1ly gamed thmgs are easlly lost
"When the road 1S worn flat,
"Y ou can bet your best hat,
"That 1t leaJs to a place where too many are at
"If you don't go on thru 1t,
"You'll live on to rue it.
"Somebody who 1sn't a quitter Vi 111do it
"He'll laugh as he hambles h1s v"ay tltru the brambles,
"He'll know that the b1g things of Me must be won
"He V\on't mmd a stumble, (It Likes t1me to grumbl::) ;
"He won't care a hang 1f he does bark his shin
"E l' won't be defeated, because he's 0\1 erheated;
"He'll leap on and keep on untll he gl>t'i in."
Stories of Two Bosses.
I went into a store la,t week, says Oliver P Perkins in
Buck', Shot. which I have always comidered one of the best
111 Ind1ana, but 1t looked so much bnghter and every clerk and
everyone wa'S so cheerful that when ] walked Into the office, I
said:
"Well. old man, what card have you been pulling from your
sleeve this time?"
"He sa1d, "\Vhy do you ask?"
"Because the store arrangement 1S so new and everyone I
come in contact with looks good and acts prosperom"
"Am light glad "10U noticed 1t," he "a1d' "the story isn't
very long and I don't mind glVing it to."
"One afternoon last week I inVited everyone connected
with the store to meet me in thiS office at 'I p. m. sharp. When
25
Perfection of Detail
Stow & Davis Diners
Stow & Davis Furniture Co.,
Grand Rapids, Mich .-.- ....t
we were all seated I sa1d, 'Well, what would you say 1£ I told
you that I had disposed of th1s old store and would take charge
of a new one? 1\0 one an5we1ed for a long time, then one
man said, '1 hope that you will take me"to the new store.' 'You
are to go, I answered. and so are the all the rest, and the making
of this new store 1S up to everyone here The new store will
be conducted in the present bUlldll1g and wh1le I'm to be man-ager
you must come to be more and more as if you were my
partners. I want your advice and suggestions. When you
leave this store tonight I want you to beg1l1 thinking on how to
make it b1gger and better and glve me your ideas.' It is
working much better than 1 ever dreamed and the ginger that
is being put into thiS really new store-well, you noticed it and
that's enough for me"
The next day I met a man "on the road" whom I have
known for a long bme He was in the hardware business as a
clerk and propnetor for more than thlfty years. He is now
over fifty years and is doing his fir~t work a, a traveling sales-man.
"The very hardest th1l1g for me to do," he said, "is to
get the price my home Llemands for the goods You see when
1was in business, 1argued that a sale lost was a (lollar lost and
I always cut the pnce a llttle or as much as was necessary to
make the sale and now 1t'S mighty hard to get the price I ask
for I was never accustomed to domg business that way.
"When my clerks would come and say that Mr Blank liked
a cel tam range or cornplantcr but would not pay the pnce and
had made an offer, 1 would say, 'Spht the dIfference if yOllcan,
1f not, do the best you can.' "
H1s former rca;,oning IS the real reason that he'b traveling
today.
Fighting a Shipping Trust.
The Ind1an TI aJe J oumal, of Calcutta, an off1cial organ
of the Bntl"h colon1al government, makes the following an-nouncement
m regard to the rates on sh1pping which affects
the entlre V\arId "A sh1pp1l1g-nng ord1nance has been pub-lished
by the government of the Straits Settlements It im-pose,
a duty of 20 per cent on freight 111 all bills of lad1l1g.
Shippers outSide the nng get the duty returned to them, but
tho<;e InSide the nng do not It is thus hoped to force the
shipp1l1g conference to break up, the alternative being a heavy
tax on S'h1pments Power 1SgIven to recover deferred rebates
to the extent of 10 per cent or such larger amount as may be
fixed by the governor in councll The ord1l1ance will be dis-cussed
by the leglslatlve counCIl in August In the meantime
It IS pOSSible th<lt efforts will be made to reach a settlement
amicably Colomal feellng is strong aga1l1st the ring and the
gorvernment proposals are cordially approved."
--- ~ ~-- ~~-------r------------------.,
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
OUT-DOOR "WITHDRAWING ROOMu
The Garden9 Furnished. is One of the Best Parts
of the House.
(By Esther 'Slllgleton)
Fortunate is he who looks out from hlS terrace with its
mossy parapet, where the peacock perchance shakes out its
purple glories to such a world of his own Roses are cluster-ing
on the wall, or fllllging out thelr fragrance below in the
sun, mingled with the rare perfume of the aromatic azalea
Along the edge of the lawn, his flower-border is gorlSeous
with the queenly lily, the dark-blue monk's-hood, the tall
hollyhock. the spiked veronica, th e red lychnis, radiant
phloxes, proud peonies, the tall spires of foxl:;loves and lark-spurs.
and a multitude of fair denizens of the parterre Rich-ness
characterizes the whole, and the Isentinel yews, the
hedges and box edgings are there to give order and distinction
with the right degree of formahty that belonfSs to the struc-ture
that i" adorned The mural sun-dial the splashinl:;
fountain, the sheltered arbor and the fragrant pergola, all
have their places in "uch a garden N or need the landscape
and the woodland with the llake be contemned These lie
outside the enclosed gardens. and all are beautiful and en-trancing
in their degree and place The final fact is simple.
after all, and the gardener must make it his own It is that
the house and the garden are the two parts of a single wh'Jle,
and happy is he who can best int('rpret their sweet relation-ship"
This description from the pen of a modern 'writer seem s
to have gathered into a nutshell all the salient points of the
decorative, yet homelike l:;arden, where form. color, scent and
sound produce a soothing, though inspiring, effect upon the
senses land the mind A garden "hould iJ:Je.in fact, a retreat.
a place where one loves to linger, to rest, to reacl. or to work
A garden. according- to the opinion of an old authority.
"ought to lie to the be"t parts of the home, or to tho"e of the
master's commonest use; so as to iJ:Jebut hke one of the rooms
out of which you step into another."
A garden i" really a sort of grassy "withdrawing room,"
"In the garden drawlllg-room all the furniture is grown The
carpet, indeed, is swept, but it springs itself out of the floor
which it cover" Then, too, if it should become anywi"c
worn. we have only to leave it alone and the patches mend
themselves The curtains, moreover, of the garJen room (in
the shape of variegated surroundlllg greenery) do not wear
out. and they see to their own spring cleaning or renewal
It is true that you cannot .indulge a re"tless caprice in a fre-quent
shifting about of ornaments (seen in, say. standard
roses); but then they cannot be upset and are not easily
broken. Again its all1ly patterned walls and luminously
decorated ceilings, though these last certainly sometime" let
the water through, are always provided free of cost, and
woven according to the latest design. And when the hour r"·,..-------------~
II
••
" . ..... -'"
Don't risk being
Tyden Lock on your
It means business for you.
without the
tables.
Ask your manufacturer for it when you
buy divided pedestal dining tables.
Many a sale of a dining suite has been lost
to a dealer simply because the Tyden Duo-
StyIe Table Lock was not on the table he
tried to sell.
The sale went to his competitor who had the properly
equtpped table.
Don't run thIS unnecessary risk-the table you buy
can have the Tyden Lock without extra charge. 'I---_._-_._---_._------~------~- ---.....
comes f01 the hfSht" to be put out anll the blmd" drawn down,
th1" IS e, er punctnally done by inVIsible milllstrants who
f01get nothll1g, and sen e us faithfully wlthout needing tire-some
dIrectIOn". or expectll1g any wages at alL"
The above description would "eem to imply that no furni-ture
is necessary In a gal'den, but the enjoyment of the most
perfect l:;arden e, er imagll1e,l would be incomplete without
some pro, l';lOn fOt re"t and comfort 111 the matter of seats and
shelter
'\n oU writer speak,; of
"::\1y gal den "'" eet enclo<,ed wlth '" aIles strong
Embanked "'Ith benches to sit and take my rest"
And in :vruch \clo About Nothmg. saucy Beatrice IS
enticed
"Into the pleached bowel,
\iVhel c honcy,;uckles npened by the sun
Forbid the "un to enter"
] n rel:;ard to the furnlture of a gal den first come the
essentIal part~ of garden archltecture. such as walls, gates,
gateposts and balustrades of the teaaces. The walls are,
perhaps, the most Important factor m the whole, and should
be "olid and lofty, '" lth a beveled coping and end in pillars,
the p1l1ars ornamenteJ With balls or some other device at the
top "\ lches should be aVOIded. for they gather dirt and dust
and "erve no purpo"e The walls, however, should be covered
WIth flowermg Vll1e~ or creepers Gate" of wrought iron
dlway" be"peak good taste Pa, cd stone or bnck path" set
flat dmong the glas.., are nc, el out of place, nor IS the gravel
\\ alk WIth a nedt edgmg of box or grass, or some "imple
flower that blooms close to the ground. "uch as the pansy.
vVlth regards to ornaments and "embellishments-the
II
II
I..
WEEKLY AltTISAM
sun-dial on its pillar marking no hours save the bright ones
and the fountain, throwing high into the air its refreshing
:,pray or tinkling sweetly as it drops from the mouth of some
fantastIc bird or animal into a baslll, are always true to the
spirit of the garden However small the little paved court
may be, a fountain is never out of place"
Vases and statues are "embellishments" that have no
natural affinity to gardens "Statues and such things are
added for state and magmficence, but are nothing to the true
pleasures of a garden," wrote Lord Bacon; and he was per-fectly
I ight Such decorations belong to the stately garden
of the grand Italian style with its terraces and statues, tem-ples,
theatres and va:,es, or to the Dutch garden with Its
evergreens clipped into the shape or monsters or animals ac-cording
to the dogmas of the topiarian art which was ip
vogue in England and this country in Georgian days; or to
the simpler garden with itc:: formal walks, clipped alleys,
'3moothly shorn bO\" ling gree ns and geometrical arrange-ments
of flower beds that resemble carpets and rugs
In the early eighteenth century, Batty Langley orl1a-mented
flowcl-gardens with fragrant flowers, fountains and
beautiful statues, and advised:
"That the intersections of walks bc adorned with statues,
large open plains, groves, coves of fruit, or evergreens, of
flowering shrubs, or forest trees, basins, fountains, sun ..d..ials
and obelisks:
"When in the garden''3 entrance you provide
The waters, there united, to divide:
First, in the center a large fountain make-
Which from a narrow pipe its rise may take,
And to the air those waves by which 'tis fed,
Remit again; about it raise a bed
Of moss or gl ass; but if yoU think this base,
With well-wrought marble circle in the place"
As a contrast let us take a charming and sequestered
garden of seven or eight acres planted about the beginning of
the eighteenth century, belonging, not to a stately villa, but
a small cottage the "habitation of an ancient maiden lady,"
and thus described by Sir Walter Scott· "It was full of long
'itralght walks between hedges of yew and hornbeam, which
rose tall and close on every side There were thickets of
flowering shrubs, a bower, and an arbor, to which access
was obtained through a little maze of contorted walks call-ing
itself a labyrinth. In the center of the bower was a
splendId platanus, or ornamental plane-a huge hill of leaves-one
of the noblest specimens of that regularly beautiful tree
~ hich we remember to have seen In different parts of the
garden were fine ornamental trees which had attained great
size, and the orchard wa'i fille~l with fruit trees of the best
de'3criptlOn There were seats and trellis-walks and a ban-queting
house."
SuggestIOns for furnishing a Dutch garden de luxe may
be found in the following de'icriptions of the famous one
dt net Loo, still the favorite royal residence in Holland.
The garden was de'iigned by Marot and this account of it
was written in 1699'
"The hedges are chIefly of Dutch elms; and the avenue'3
of oaks, elms and lIme'i The figures into which the trees
and shrubs are cut are, for the mO'it part, pyramids On the
walls fresco pallltings are introduced in various places be-
1\" een the trees Jn the al bor walks of the queen''i garden,
are 'ieats and 0pp0':llte to them windows through which views
can be had for the fountains, 'itatues and other object'i in the
open garden The parterres in the queen''3 garden are sur-rounded
by hedges of Dutch elm about four feet high. The
27
seats and prop work of all the arbors and the trellis-work on
the fruit tree walls are painted green All along the gravel
walks and round the middle fountain are placed orange trees
and lemon trees m portable wooden frames and flower-pots
about them"
Another idea well worth imitaJting was seen by Madame
de Sevlgne at a French chateau m 1675, when she wrote to
her daughter as follows'
"There i'3 a grove of orange trees in great tubs; you walk
there, and they form alleys in the shade, and to hide the tubs
there are two lOWS of palisades high enough to lean on, all
aflower WIth tube roses, jasmmes and carnations. It is as-suredly
the most beautiful, the most surprismg and the most
enchanting novelty imaginable"
In all periods people of taste have enjoyed the wild
garden Lord Bacon included a heath in his series of beauti-ful
gardens, and wished it
"Framed as much as may be to a natural wilJ.ness.
Trees, I would have none in It, but some thickets, made only
of sweet briar and honeysuckle and some wild vine amongst;
and the ground set with violets, strawberries and primroses;
for these are sweet and proper III the shade. And these to be
in the heath, here and there, not in any order I also like
lIttle heaps in the nature of mole hJlls (such as are in wild
heaths) to be set, some with wild thyme, some with pinks,
some with germander, that gives a good flower to the eye;
some with periwinkle, some with violets, some with straw-berries,
some with cowslips, some with dai~ies, some with
red roses, some with lilium convallium, Safe with sweet
williams red, some with beal's foot, and the pke low flowers
being withal sweet and 'iightly Part of w~ich heaps to be
~ itch standards of lIttle bushes prieket uponl their top, and
part without; the standards to be roses, juniper, holly, bear-berries
(but here and there because of the Stffil11of their blos-som),
red currants, gooseberries, rosemary, b ys, sweet-briar,
and such lIke But these standards to be k pt with cutting
tl1dt they grow not out of course" I
The accomplished ElIzabethan courtier J,ould, therefore,
have approved of the pretty wild garden. 1
Gautier's idea of a garden wherem natrtre should have
full lIberty permItted the twigs to interlacell themsevles ac
cording to their own fancy, the plants to c eep and clImb;
the mO'3ses to cover with their patches the runks of tree'
the lichens to enCIrcle the statues WIth their gray bands; the
bramble'3 to bar the walks and arrest you with their thorns;
the wild poppy to raise its red spark near thel untrained rose;
and the IVy to rove at its will and hang wrfaths ovevr the
balustrades of the terraces Moreover, full li1ense was grant-ed
to the nettle, the thistle, the celandine, tre burdock, the
nightshade and ,all the gIpsy horde of undisqiplined plants-to
grow, multiply, invade and oblitclate everv trace of culti-vation
and turn the flower-garden into a minfture forest"
One delight of the wJld garden is that it admits of the
owner's transplanting any wJld flower or shrulbs found during
his walks in the woods and fields, even to ne1ttles, briars and
thistles. I
The simple seat with lattice canopy 'v]H be more pic-ture'ique
when the creepers have covered itl A rustic seat
would also look well This kind of seat 1'3al~ay'3 appropriate
except in the 'itately garden where 'itone r marble i'i re-qUIred
The wooden bench i'3 effectIve in f rm and can be
painted any color, hut it needs '3ome pots or Ivase'i of hloom-ing
flowel'i by it'i side Hickory furmturc lis also 'iuitable
for the 'Yimple garden
Wicker table'i, '3eitec'i and chair'3, 1 stained green,
and chairs and table" of wood pamted green we
I
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
also find appropriate, and for gardens that ha' e com-paratIvely
lIttle shade the hooded" Icku chaIr u"eJ "0 much
aJt the seashore Jll Europe and which the ..:Dutch call "\\ 111
ChaIr," IS a 11T1O')t useful addItIon Ru')tic lawn ,ases that
cost a" lIttle as $3 and tree seats from $15 to $30, can be
placed almost anywhere
Turnmg now to the question of the summer hou"e (
arbor, the poet Cowper's pretty IdEa of turnmg h1" lIttle
greenhouse mto an out-of-door sittIng-room mIght be ImI-tated
by those wh') own such lUXUrIes In 1786, he wrote tr
a fnend "When the plant, go out, we go in I lme it WIth
mat'3 and spread the floor with mats. and there' ou "hall "It
WIth a bed or mIgnonette at your sIde and a hedge of hone'
suckle'3, roses and Jasmme" He also had another lIttle room
of which he spake as follow s "I wnte m a nook that I call
my boudoir, It IS a summer house not bIgger than a sedan-chair;
the door of It opens into the garden, that IS now crowd-ed
WIth p1l1ks. roses and honeysuckles, and the wmdow into
my neighbor's orchard"
A portable pavJ1lOn that can be ea')lly erected IS a good
investment Anyone can SEt up a pergola and moreover, at
a tnflmg cost Pergola pJ1lars, lIke fences, arc ncm ..,old 111
sectIOns, pIllars at $650 each. cro"s panels at S;. and pole"
3lt seventy-,five cents
The tent, the SWl11g ane' plenty of cu"hlOns for those who
lIke to SIt on the grass sh '"luld be I11cluded m furl1lshl11g a
garden, and last but not least comes the hammock
"When you hang lIke viahomets coffl11, bet" een earth
and heaven, you expenencE a sense of personal detachment
from the ord1l1ary condItIOns of lIfe whIch. ho" ever easJ1,
realized, is simply u11lque You lIe upon the } leldl11g- aIr
and look throu~h a mynad of leaves pierced here and there
with lIttle rays of lIght, into IIlI1TIltable "pace It i" then,
moreover, that you best hke in the special "tIllness of a
sequestered garden"
Trade Dnys in Texas.
Texas is borrow1l1g a bIt from Fn!:;land and the older
European countries 111 the matter of "market day s" at the
county seats and other Important bUS111e.,..,centers -\ cItIzen
of Dallas, intel vIewed reCEntly b} a \Yash111gton reporter
described in brief a new scheme of the board') of trade and
ot1her commercial organl7atlOns dm" n 111 that" Ide-a" ake
country
In order to encourage better method') of fal l11111g.fl Ult-raisll1g
and kl11dred I11dustnes, he says the commcl cIa I 01ga11l-zations
arrange for trades days 111 count} "eat... and other
important towns and citIes These trades days are held
monthly or bImonthly, when exhIbIts are made of farm pro-ducts
of all sorts As to the results, let the Texan tell them
in his own way'
"From all the surroundmg country the best that the land
ralse'3 of farm ancl orchard product'3 and lIve stock IS assembled
for show purpo"t" Inclclentally, the exhIbItors have a chance
to get together and to exchang-e Ideas on sub1ect" 111 "hlch
they have a common I11terest and become better acqual11ted
The show lIkeWIse affords a good market for the products ex-hIbIted
Of course, they are run on a SImpler plan than the
or,lll1ary faIr, and so trades days are of more frequent oc-currence
They are gall1mg- in popullarity all the tIme"
AJI thl" may be a return to "first pnnclples," a gettll12,-
back to an old order of thmgs-one mIght almo')t say, to
archaIC methods, but the plain truth IS that in the later-day
development of busl11e'3s openatIons we have 111 "ome partI-culars
drifted a mJ1lIon miles away from the thoroug-hly
natural and the emmently practicable. Producers of farm
products all mer the country have come in very large meas-ure
to adopt a S}stem of dIrect marketing through commis-sIOn
houses m large or Important dlstnbutmg centers---a
scheme that most certal11ly has ItS dlstmct and emphatIC ad-
,antages But there I" always a good home or nearby mar-ket
and the neglect of these has in far too many ll1stances re-
"ulted to the JIsadvantage of the producers They cannot
ledrn too much ahout local and "urroundll1g condItions They
canot see each other and exchange ideas any too frequently
-\ncl the} cannot afford to take It for granted that the far-away,
'bl!:;' market')" III always be the best for the dIspOSItIon
of theIr product') -\nd, mCldentally, merchants are benefitted
b} tl ades clay ') "hlch tend to the marketmg of farm products
at home
Here IS an example set by the farmers of Texas that the
producers m every state of the Ul1lon mIght follow with ad-
'antage and profit The old "market-days" and holidays of
the south, were a most Important I11dustrlal and commercIal
factor "holl} a part h om their socIal and neIghborly features
The Jay of theIr usefulness IS by no means past
Card Index a Business Essential.
\ convenient filll1g system is now looked upon by large
corporatIOns as a busll1ess memory They have been won over
\\ Ithm the past few years to the letter cabinets that are made
to meet the requIrEments of heavy corrspondents and oldfa')h-toned
letter file'i are bemg 'iupplanted by cabmets that contam
compartments for the vertICal fill11g of letters and other busI-ne".,
documents By a SImple cardmdex a volumlUou" corres-pondence
can be cared for and at mstant demand a gIven letter
or paper can be turned to
1hIS system "as stnkmgly Illustrated recently dunng the
tour ot mspectlOn of a party of engmeers and city officials of
the \ ,hoken Dam comtructlOn whIch IS to furmsh New York's
ne" "ater supply One of the vlsltmg engmeers was told that
maps "ketches, ')peClficatt
- Date Created:
- 1910-08-20T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:60
- 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/120