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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-07-23
Weekly Artisan; 1910-07-23
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and ,
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH •• JULY 23, 1910
CONTROLLING INTEREST
The Exclusive Agency for Karpen Guaranteed Upholstered Furniture,
Means Controlling the Sale of Upholstered Furniture
in Your City and Vicinity.
It is the only line of upholstered furniture people ask
for, they reco~nize the Karpen Trade Mark as a dependable
~uaranty.
The successful furniture man caters to public taste; the
demand is for Karpen Furniture; then why not take advanta~e
of "The Easiest Way" to meet this demand·!
Write today for control of the line in your city---the
~reatest business buildin~ influence possible to obtain.
See Our Exhibits in the
Karpen Buildings.
All Dealers Cordially Invited.
S. KARPEN & BROS.
NEW YORK.
155-157 W. 34th Street.
BOSTON,
22 Sudbury Street.
CHICAGO.
187-188 Michigan Avenue.
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\ I
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
...-.---_._-----_._-----~--_._- ._----------------....,
LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only. '"-.-..------_._-----. __._._._-----_ .. --_... -_ ... _--_._---
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 alld Tuna Mahogany
Btrd' f EYf Mapl,
Btrch
IZullrtfrfd Oak
and
CtrCafftan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUFACTURERS' BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MIC"IGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
__ .4j
30th Year-No. 56 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• JULY 23. 1910 Issued Weekly
BANKERS APPROVE MACVEAGH'S PLAN
New York Financiers Heartily in Favor of Organizing Emergency Currency Associa-tions
as Recommended by the Secretary of the Treasury.
Kew York, July 19- The bankers of thIs cIty are heartlly
III favor of followmg out the suggestlOns of Secretary of the
Treasury Mac Veagh to form emergency currency assocIatlOns.
It IS not so much because they belIeve that there is any great
lIkelIhood that suoh a system wIll be called into use wIthin
the near futul'e PossIbly such a contlllgency wIll never arise,
but the opmlOn appears to be general that the good of such
a system for Itself alone with the steaiying effect that its eXIS-tence
would have could not be overestImated.
It has been thought that the Clearing House would
naturally be the meetlllg place for the committee which has
been charged wIth conSIdering this plan. and that any scheme
deVIsed by thIS committee would be, more than likely, sub-mitted
to the Clearing House for its approval. Up to the
present tIme there has been no action that has come under
the attention of the Clearing House.
A banker who is prominently interested in 'the purposed
system, however, had this to say yesterday:
"Secretary Mac Veagh's suggestion seems to be partic-ularly
pertinent just at thIS time. Money is easy now, there is
a general feelmg that banking affairs are calm and quiet, and
there IS no necessity to expect anything dIfferent in the immed-
Iate future. CondIhons of that sort are the best imaginable
for the formation and completion of such a system as the
secretary suggests as a result of the Aldrich-Vreeland law
of 1908 We have the law, providing for a plan that would
be of lllcalculable good in a time of strained conditions, and
the time to make ready is when there is a calm
"But it Isn't so much the actual instance of emergency
currency that seems attractlve to us The setting up of such
a machmery with the pacifying effect it would have upon the
minds of the bankers of this country would be quite as valu-able
a phase of the law. I am certain that it will be a very
little while before something definite is aowmplished to for-ward
the secretary's desires"
Mr. MacVeagh's statement was given out on Saturday at
his summer place in New Hampshire He emphasized the
advantage which the scheme would have from its very crea-tion
"It has been my feeling for some time back," said he.
"that the first impulse of the national banks immediately after
the passage of the Aldrich-Vreeland bill was the correct one.
"That impulse was to form at once the national currency
association provided for in the act. The effect was to inter-pret
the authorizations as something that should not a"vait
an emergency, but should be adopted when the financIal at-mosphere
was perfectly clear."
The law prOVIdes for the issuance of additional banknotes
m a time of emergency, either by individual banks upon the
depOSIt of proper secunty with the government, and the pay-ment
of certam mterest, or by an organizatlOn of 10 or more
national banks havmg capital of $5,000,000.
Soon after the passage of the bill there was some activity
toward the formation of such an association here. There was
no result, however, because a number of the financial insti-tutlOns
felt that the law was not clear upon certain technical
points. There was not adequate provision, for instance, as to
how a bank could withdraw from the association.
Opinion yesterday seemed to be unanimous in £avor of
going through with the plan. Herbert L. Griggs, president of
the Bank of New York, expressed himself as favoring im-mediate
action at a time when there seemed to be no need of
emergency currency.
Lewis L. Clarke, president of the American Exchange
National Bank, said that no one but a banker knew what
demands there were upon it for money, and that the creation
of a system of the sort that Secretary MacVeagh urged would
tend to keep these demands rational As it stands now, a
country correspondent is very likely to over-estimate his de-mands
for a few months ahead, so that he will be sure to get
all he needs when the time comes. If he knew that there was
no chance of being left in the lurch, said Mr. Clarke, he would
ask for only what he wanted and the New York banker
wouldn't be bothered by extraordinary demands. Besides,
said this official, a certain elasticity would be imparted to the
situation at the time of crop moving.
Those who were doubtful about the advisability of form-ing
an association here or anywhere else in the country,
seemed to think that the technical details had not been as
yet sufficiently smoothed out.
Whining, complaining letters to the !-louse hurt a sales-man
more than anything else The "old 1, ,w" and the lady
stenographer in the office thin'( such ~l ~,II~-mJn III ,e~ an aSs
of himself The salee nan who me, the "old rP.ln" in pri-vate
and settles matt'·~ m dbpntf' Llt"'C~'1 them aiter a fight
commands respect al, l gall'., d tH~is entItled to.
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
MERGED WISCONSIN CONVENTIONS.
Furniture Dealers. Funeral Directors and Com-mercial
Agents at Fond du Lac During
First Week in August.
The sixth annual conventlOn of the Wisconsm Furmture
Dealers' association, the twenty-l1Inth annual conventlOn of
the WIsconsin Funeral Directors and Embalmers' aSSocIatIOn
and the sixth annual conventlOn of ,Viscon"m CommercIal
Agents' club will be held jointly at Fond du Lac on \Ionday.
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of the first ¥\ eek m
August. All business meetings will be held 111 the Elks
Club House, mornmg sessIOns at 9 o'clock and afternoon "es-sions
at 2 o'clock The program for the Furmture Dealer,,'
association has been arranged as follows'
ProgI1am.
Monday August 1,9 o'clock a m -Meeting of the execu-tive
committee
Payment of Dues
Called to order by ,V D 11cK111stry, PresIdent
Address of vVelcome. by Mavor E ,V Clark
Response, by \V F Saeckel
P,resident's Addres", by ,V D :V1cKll1.:otry
Appointment of CommIttees
Secretary and Treasurer's Report. 0 J Kremer
Talk "ExperIence Dunng the 'Var." by ~1aJor E R Her-ren,
Secretary-Treasurer VV l11nebago Furl11ture ~Ianufactur
ing Company.
Question Box
Tuesday.
Morning SesslOn
Talk. "Prices," by A F Banderob. Banderob-Cha"e com-pany.
Oshkosh, \Vis
Talk, by F B Ho111enbeck. President C A C, \Vater-town
Talk, by H F Krueger, Neenah, Pre"ldent ,\ IsconSIon
Retail Hardware Dealers' assocIatIOn
Relport of COimmittees
Election of Officers
FUNERAL DIRECTORS' AND EMBALMERS.
Tuesday Afternoon.
Payment of Dues to Secretary,. T F Flemll1g
Call1l1g to Order, by B M Hoppenyan. President
Invocation, by Rev. L P. Peeke
Alddress of Vvelcome, by Mayor E W Clark
Response, by C L TruesJall, FlfSt V Ice Pre"Ident
Address, by B M Hoppenyan
Appointment of CommIttees
Lecture and DemonstratIOns
Tuesday evenll1g, entertall1ment bv manufacturers of
Fond du Lac
Wednesday.
Morning Session
Report of Delegates to NatIOnal Com ention, S Peacock
Address. by Hon M K Reilly
Address. by J. F. Ryan
Lecture and Demonstrations
Afternoon Session
Address, by George L Thomas. President National A.s-sociation.
An Experience Hour, John R Ragan
Undertakers' Records, J R McLain
FOR DETROIT EXCLUSIVELY
"Wanted Agency for Furniture
to sell to Dealers."
DETROIT MANUFACTURERS' AGENCY,
36 East Larned Street, Detroit, Mich.
-\.ldl es." by J 11 Boyle
Lecture and DemonstratIOns
\\ edne"c1ay CVCl1lng, the Commercial Agents' Club will
entertaIn at Fraternal Hall
Thursday.
Morning Session.
-\ddress, by "\dal1l Lelcher.
Report of Secretar}
Repol t of Treasurer
Report of CommIttees
Report ot Delegates NatIonal Convention
LectUl e and DemonstratIOns
Afternoon Session.
ObItuary
Report of CommIttees on ConstItution and By-Laws
ElectIOn of Officers
ElectIOn of Delegates to National Convention
SelectIOn of CIty for next convention
-\JJOUI nment
Freight Rates Voluntarily Suspended.
Repre"entati\ eo., CJf the 25 roads composIng the western
trunk 1111e" commIttee, conferred with the Interstate Com-melce
CommIssIon at \Vashington on July 22 and agreed to
p""tpone the effectl\ e date of their increased freIght rates
frol1l -\ugust 1 to KOHmber 1 ThIS is in keeping WIth the
agreement that the eastern trunk lines and the railroaJs in the
central traffic terntory made with the commission a few
day" ago
The actIon of the western trunk line commIttee completes
the drrangement for a voluntary suspension of the new rates
b\ all I aI1road., ea"t of the MIssouri RIver pending an investi-gdtion
Into theIr rasonab1eness by the Interstate Commerce
Lommb';IOn The commISSIOn had voted to suspend the in-creased
rate,; until they could investigate them but the volun-tary
actIOn on the part of the railroads relieved the commis-
SIOn of the nece""Ity of making pIecemeal suspension and
enables them to beg1l1 at once broad investigation into the
que"tIOn of whether ll1creased operating expenses and hIgher
co,;t of eqUIpment necessItate,; increased freight rates
Mr. Vandercook Comes to Grand Rapids.
Don Vandercook of Chicago. with S Karpen & Bras, for
eight years past, has moved to this CIty and purchased a new
bungalow home on the corner of Burton and Russell avenues
::\fr Vandercook wIll design for the trade in claSSIcal and
modern type:> and will make lodge furniture a specialty His
StUdIO vVIll be at hIS suburban home for the present
To the peSSImist the main shaft in the factory invariably
breaks down when a large bunch of orders come in
The commission salesman IS expected to sell all the stickers
the salaned sdlesmen fail to dispose of.
'"- ",-- WEEKLY ARTISAN
SUITE No 52.
From the New Catalogue of the Ladder and Specialty Co , Atlanta, Ga.
5
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
• •••• _ ••••••• • - - ••••• --_. • • • - --1 ....
The SCHRAM MODERN
SECTIONAL BOOKCASES
Acknowledged by buyers who saw the April display to have no
rivals or competitors. The rea::ion? Beautiful, artistic designs and
styles. The Schram system of construction provides for the Automatic
locking of cases horizontally and interlocking of the entire combmation
by a simple device, thereby practically making a solid case filling a de-cided
need. Our new device in equalizers makes it possible to construct
a door that will absolutely prevent binding and giving not only an ab-solute
dust protector, but also a positive air cushlOn. which makes the
Schram practically air tight. Our Colonial Style has absolute perfec-tion
of detail, high gflade finish and artistic beauty and workmanship.
In Polished Golden Quartered White Oak and a Polished Genuine Ma-hogany-
the latt!er with paneled ends.
Catalogues to Dealers upon request.
SchraIll Bros., 421 Armour St.9
IIIIII
III
II
Chicago I
----- --~~-------------~I
Colonial Style, Combination No. lOCo
Furniture Men-Their Finish.
Very few furniture men see their own fimsh, yet, like the
commodity they handle, they are variously fimshed Some are
polished, some dull, some (some, mark you) golden, some weath-ered
and some fumed.
This article will deal with the fumed vanety, smokupus-nicotiana
as clasSified in the language of the inclent W op
Who are the fumed? I am for one, and if your wlfe will
permit of your attentions to "My Lady Nicotine," the chances are
that you're another.
Why do men smoke? To keep mosqUItoes away In the sum-mer
time and moths out of the house In the Winter.
Why do not ladles smoke? Custom forbids.
Custom is a strange propositIOn In the days of our grand-pap,
Custom suggested that a chewing tobacco box was an ap-propriate
gift for a fastidIOUS lady to select for a gentleman
friend, but in our more refined age, Custom teaches that men
must eschew chewing but may blow clouds of cigarette smoke
about a public dining room.
Dame Custom i" liberal in her views, but some day some hu-man
volcano will make her tired and she will decide that while
the 'Smoker may have his rights, so has the smokee. Then the
smoke inspector shall get busy and It shall be decided that special
places shall be set apart and special tllnes appOinted for the fum-ing
process.
Uncle Bent Wood, the weathered furniture dealer of Helical
Springs, is of the opinion that no dealer would complain to the
house if a salesman should enter his store without a cigar in hiS
mouth, nor would any lady customer object to a salesman laying
aside his cigar during the process of a sale. He says if Provi-dence
had equipped man with an automatic draft, some fellows
would smoke while they sleep According to Uncle Bent, some
of us stnve to keep an eternal fire ahght With the persistent zeal
of a Vestal Virgin.
If you want to learn more on thiS subject, inqUIre of Uncle
Bent Wood, of Helical Spnngs. I have mislaid the Istate
Have a cigar ---Verms ::\1artm m Peck & Hills' "Everywhere"
New Factories.
The new factory established by P. M. Wolf at Plymouth,
"'IS, has begun operatIOns, getting out a lme of sample daven-ports
and couches.
Otto Pearson, Joseph Lyden and Edward Carlsen have in-corporated
the Rockford Novelty Works, established a factory
and manufacture furmture and wooden novelties at Rockford,
Ill.
E M LeaVitt and others of Wmthrop, Me, have organized
the Inter-Brace Chair company for the purpose of establishing a
factory at Wmthrop Capital stock, $500,000, with 20 per cent
5ubscnbed, but nothmg paid in.
The Ford & Johnson Chair company Will estabhsh a new
factory m New Haven, Conn. Their plant, connected With the
county ]ad in that City, was burned last April and owing to op-position
from the city authorities it will not be rebuilt.
The -\tlantlc Pall1t and Var11lsh company is to establish a
factory in Wilmmgton, N. C. Platt W. Davis, M. Ashley Cur-tiss
J r, DaVid C. Ray and Charles N. Evans are the incorpor-ators
Capital stock, $35,000, With $7,500 subscribed.
A news dispatch from Helena, Ark, says, "there is a strong
probabihty that the Ramsey-Alton company of Grand Rapids,
Mich., Will establish a branch of its manufacturing plant in He-lena"
The Ramsey-Alton company is a manufacturer of high
grade chairs at Portland, Mich.
I, _
WEEKLY ARTISAN
7
I The PROUDFIT P B BINDER for Blue Prints, Photos and Photol!:ravures
has been adopted with success by the following firms and many others
THE PROUDFIT LOOSE LEAF CO., 8 AND 10 LYON ST., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Wolverioe Brass Works, Grand Rapids
Gland RaPIds Brass Wks, Grand RapIds.
Mlchloan ChaIT Co, Grand RapId.,
Grand RapIds Chair Co, Grand RapIds
BerkfY & GayFurniture Co ,Grand Rapids
Century Furniture Co • Grand Rapids
Imperial FurnIture Co , Grand Rapids
Royal Furniture Co , Grand Rapids.
Phoenix Furniture Co • Grand Rapids.
WHY NOT GIVE IT A TRIAL AND BE CONVINCED'?
John 0 Raob Chair Co , Grand RapIds
HastIngs Cabinet Co , Hastings, Mlch
Barber Bros Chair Co , Haslings, Mlch
Grand Rapids Bookcase Co , Hastings
Woiverlne Mfg. Co • Detroit.
The SIkes Co , Philadelphia. Pa
The H Lauter Co, Indianapolis, Ind.
Langslow.Fowler CII , Rochester, N. Y
Gallla Furniture Co , Gaillopolis. 0
IF YOU WILL SEND US A SAMPLE SET OF YOUR
SLUE PRINTS, WE WILL INSERT THEM IN ONE OF
OUR COVERS AND SUBMIT FOR lOUR APPROVAL
New J"urniture Dealers.
Harry Shaffer WIll open a new furmture store at Woodland,
Iowa.
The Cornella Furmture company are new dealers at Cor-nella,
Ga.
Joseph Goldberg 1Sto open a new furniture store at Monroe
City, Ind, in August.
'vV W. Thompson is erectmg a bUllding whIch he WIll oc-cupy
as a furmture store at Buffalo, Mmn.
A. E. Olson of Mendota, W1C,I 1S maklllg arangementc, to
open a new furmture store at Tomah, in the same state.
The Ideal Furmture company WIll open a new furll1ture
store III a remodeled bUlldlllg on Kanawha street, Charleston, 'vV.
Va., on August 1.
\-\1Jlllam Skiff and John Webster have engaged in the retail
furnIture busmesc, at Central C1ty, Nebr., under the name of the
Corner Furniture Store.
Arnold A, Max W. and Emma E. \Verner have mcorpor-ated
the \Verner Furniture company to deal in furniture in Chi-cago
CapItal stock, $8,000.
J F. Hartwell IS erecting a two story brick bUllding to cost
$4:0,000 at Gary, Ind, which wlll be occupied as a furniture store
by a firm composed of two experienced dealers from Chicago.
Weather Bavors Kansas.
Among \\ e Inesda}'s arnvals at the :'lorton Hou"e was W.
H. Lape of CoffeyvIlle, Kansas, and 111the course of a chat with
the ArtIsan-Record representatlVe, th1s well known buyer said:
"I am later than usual thIS se,lson on account of having viSIted
rt>latlVec, 111M111neapohs, and WIll probably be here dunng the
rest of the week. There are hav111g very dry weather up m M111-
nesota and the crops are suffering, but out m our section of Kan-sas
we have been enjoying made-to-order "'eather, as you might
say, WIth just enough ram to boost our crops along. We are
not raismg so much wheat there as formerly, corn and oats being
our pn1l1c1pal crops and they are looking fine.
Coffeyvllie has 20,000 people and is in the center of a
fertile farmmg belt We have an abundance of natural gas,
which is one of our leading commercial ~sets, and the law
which now forbids the extravagant waste of it will prevent its
exhaustlOn during my hfetime at least.
"Our retail trade has been excellent this year."
Furniture Fires.
J. R. Huffman & Son, furniture dealers of Norfolk, Va.,
lost about $1,000 by fire in their store on July 18. Fully insured.
The Anderson Furniture company of Clinton, Iowa, lost a
few thousand dollars on July 13 by the burning of their lumber
sheds.
August Buchwelitz, furniture and hardware dealer of
'Weyerhauser, VV1S, was burned out on July 17. Loss, $6,000,
partially insured.
The Chippewa Falls (Wis.) chair factory was struck by
llghtn111g on July 17 and completely destroyed. The loss, esti-mated
at $15,000 to $18,000; insurance, $9,000.
Showers Brothers' New Plant.
Showers Brothers of Bloommgton, Ind., have under con-
'itruction a large factory, wh1ch WIll be used in the manufac-ture
oi furniture ~ wi:l completely surround the old factory,
the latter will be torn do",n when the new shop shall be made
ready for operation. New machinery will be installed.
. "
Manufacturers of
Pitcairn Varnish Company
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
c. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't. Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. 1.
._~ . ._._-----_.. • ..._... • . ..-A
r
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Carpet and Rug Business.
New York carpet and rug manufacturer~ and l()hher~
report that in spIte of the generall) qUlet penod no\\ hemg
passed through. some order" are commg to the <;urface from
Jobbers who, on lookmg up theIr "tock "heets. find that the)
have underestllmated a normal demand for fall. and feel the
necessity of gettmg addItIOnal carpets and carpet rug~ nndel
order. The new busmess IS glvmg WOlk to loom<; \\ hlch
would other\\ ise be closed down. as It I" the pohn \\ Ith the
carpet manufacturers not to speculate man) \\ a\ on the fall
season. Some of the hIgher grade \ eh ets and \\ tlt()n<; are
reported to be under order to an amount eqnal to the a\ erage
year, and, as prices on the<;e goods ma111talned on la ~t \ ear ~
level, or a shght advance, the total 111 dollar<; of thb "ea<;')n I~
satIsfactory
None of the manufacturers of lo\',er grade carpet~ are In
receIpt of suffiCIent busmess to keep theIr full quota of ma-chmery
m operation, but on ingrams, 10\\ prIced brn~~el~ and
some of the medium and better grade tape"tne~. the pO'ltlon
for fall IS safe On rugs of odcl sIze. a stronger dupltcate
busmess is commg m than early ordenng 111dlcated \\ ould be
the case Some mms ha\ ere, Ised thur pnce" \\ here the
amount of business booked wa<; small and ha\ e thu" ~ecurecl
their share of duplicate order~ The questIOn \\ Ith carpet
manufacturers of covermg on \\ 001 hone \\ hlch the\ do not
seem inclined to face confidentl) The) are purcha"mg- 1n
small spot lot", but indIcate by then bld<; that the\ arc n ,t
ready to make large commltment~ at pre~e\1lt pnce~
Business m onental rugs I~ reported to be of a "uhc;tantlal
character and on many of the cO' enngs of thb charactel
which are intended for office and hotel purpose<;. the qale~ are
equal, if not larger to those booked for a correspondmg penod
last year The number of buyers from dbtant pomts ~hO\\-
mg an mterest in onental good", IS large. and It l~ <;ald that
representat'ives of department stores are sho\\ m~ a~ much
mterest in this class of merchand1se a~ the, dId dunng the
past years of prosperous tradmg Thl<; 1S taken a<; a faIr mdl-cation
that they WIll have a 'iub'itantlal Improvement m the
retaIl trade, and wish to be prepared WIth full <;tocks On
small~slzed onental rugs and hall-runners, Importer~ are dOlng
a better busine<;s than last) ear ThIS IS accounted for through
the fact that m 1908 buyers were consen atn e In takIng thl~
class of gooJs, and succeeded last year m cleaning up theIr
stocks They now have to bnng up theIr assortment<; to a
nonmal pomt, and thIS Influx of orders IS makmg the ~P)t
busl11e<;s Il1 N ew York falrl} actIve
New Ships and South American Ser,~ice.
Announcement has Jmt been made at RIO de J aneno that
the Lamport & Holt Ime of steamshIps. \"hlch ha~ been fur-nishing
a fortnightly passenger shIp servIce bet\\ een '\ e\\ York
and RIO de Janeiro, WIth a monthl) servIce bet\\ een '\ e\\ York
and Buenos Ayres, has let a contract for the constructIOn of t\vO
new ships in addItion to one new shIp now under comtructlOn
which, WIth the modern shIps now In serVIce, \\111 be used to e~-
tablish a fortmghtly serVlce between N"ev. York ann Buenos
Ayres, by "VI ay of RIO de J anelra, of modern, ¥lell eqUIpped and
reasonably fast vessels.
The present service between N"ew York and the east coast
of South America south of the Amazon zone conslsts of two
modern vessel'i, the VerdI and the Vasari and one other vessel
of the same SIze, but WIthout modern passenger equipment
which gIve a monthly servIce to Buenos Ayres from Xew York
and return, and of two ~maller vessels of out-of-date equipment,
which give a monthly servIce between New York and RIO de
Janiero and Santos on the alternate fortnightly dates. thus glv-
I11g a fortmght\ servIce to Rlo and a month 1) servIce to Buenos
-\) re<; \\ Ith the ne\\ shIps the hne WIll gwe a through fort-mghth
servIce to both RIO and Buenos -\yres The ne¥l shIps
are to be S10 feet long. 61 feet beam, and of approximately 12,-
000 ton~ gross 1 bey \\ 111have tWin screws and will make 14
knots speed per haUl They WIll be eqUIpped v"lth rooms en
'Ulte, prn ate hath~, and other luxunes, nursery, laundry, and
other modern com emence" and can carr} over 200 first-class
and a large number of second and thIrd class pds<engers
ThIS new sendce WIll greatly mfluence trade between BraZIl
and \rgentll1a and the Umted State" gOl11g far toward affordmg
that measure of ~hlppl11g servIce between these countnes whIch
commercIal I11tere-,ts need
Exports and Imports of IHnnufaeturers.
E,-ports of manu factures Il1 the fiscal year UJ1 0 exceeded
those of am earhel year andlmports of manufacturers' matenals
111 1010 were al~o the largest on record ThIS IS a summanzatlOn
()f an anal) SIS of the ) ear's lIuports and export;, )ust prepared
0\ the Bureau of StatIstIc') of the Department of Commero::e and
labor The statement <;hows the Imports of 50 pnnclpal articles,
the export~ of 50 pnnclpal articles. and the total Imports and ex-porh
and b snffiCle.lt when coupled WIth the rletatlerl figures of
the precedmg month. to JUStl£) the as'iel tlon that both the exports
of manufacture" and the Imports of manufacturers' matena1s
e,-ceeded tho~e ot any earlier year Il1 the hIstory of our C0m-merle
Copper steel ralls, pIpes and fittmgs. meta1-workmg
machl11en, sew mg machines. typewnters, lock<; dnd hl11ge,. and
'iructural Iron amI steel, ¥llle, electrical instruments, automo-btles
paraffin furmture upper and sole leather, boots and shoes,
lumber, and many othel manufactures show marked I11creases
ll1 the exports of 1JI0 compared with 1909 On the other hand,
hIdes and skm~, IndIa rubber, wool, fibel s, tin, leaf tobacco, m-trate
of ~oda fur skl11s, \\ ood pulp and numerou'i other artIcles
ot manufacture I~ matenal" "how marked mcreases m the Im-ports.
Suggestion to Traveling SalesIDt"'n.
Consul rehx S S Johnson suggests that commercIal travel-er~
,1~ltJng \\ atertm\ n '\ Y. should make the tnp of 47 mde,
mer to l\mgston Canada The feVv bours ,pent Il1 thIS way
\\ ould enable them to place theIr good'i 111 that active lake port
The con~ul add" that CanadIan merchants prefer to buy L\men-can
goods rather than foreIgn geods TImes are prosperous
and the crop prospects pron1l'img The consul add'i that he b
\\ l11mg at all tImes to co-operate WIth Amencan manufacturers.
or theIr representative" ll1 extendmg tbelr trade Il1 the Kmgston
chstnct
President Karges in Town.
A F Karges, preSIdent of the )JatlOnal Fur11lture Manu-factunng
aSSOCIatIOn, arrwed Il1 Grand RapIds yesterday and
~pent se\era! hour, Il1 confelence WIth John S Lll1ton, the
~ecretary of the aSSOCIatIOn Mr Karges IS the preSIdent of
the Karge<; FurnIture company and has large financial Il1ter-ests
111 bankll1g and manufactunng Il1stltutlOns Il1 Evanc;-
\ l11e He reported that the thirty furmture factories that
make E\ an~vllle famous are Il1 full operatIOn and that the
products for trade thIS fall are good
--,--------
Adam and E, e were unable to blame theIr downfall to a
fo1d111g'bed
Eternal VIgIlance Il1 the factory ic; the price of Vvell made
furl1lture
WEEKLY ARTISAN
/
9
f'. • - •• - - ••• • -. ••• ~ •_~_._._._._.__.__ ••• _•• _• _....... _. •• • •• _• • • •• • • __ ....,
1
T"E COLONIAL BED COMPANY
BEAUTY
STRENGTH
DURABILITY
ALLENTOWN, PA.
Various Styles
in OAK
MA"OG4NY
IMIT. M4"OG4NY
BIRO'S EYf
MAPLE
CIRCASSIAN
W4LNUT
""ead and foot posts are assembled with steel rods to insure
Durability and Strength." II...._ ..-. ..-------------------------.--------------_._-_._.-._.-------
SANITARY
Onexhibit In THE YEAGER fURNITURE COMPANY SPACE, 4th floor, Leonard furniture Exhibition Building. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH .
HARRY WIDDICOMB.
............ --- ._.-
Youthful Head of a Great Manufacturing Industry.
Harry Wlddicomb, the only son of the late John Widdi-comb,
founder of the great furniture manufacturing industry
bearing hIS name, m which seven hundred men are employed,
is a natIve of Grand Rapids. He left school quite early in
hfe to engage in business pursuits, his first employment being
in the Wlddicomb saw mills where he gained e~pert know-ledge
of forest products. While so employed he took a
course in manual training and acqUIred experience in me-chanics
of great value. During the ten years preceding the
death of his father he successfully managed the Halliday
Lumber company cutting mahogany and other varieties of
fine caibinet woods.
When it became necessary to find a new head for the John
Widdicomb company after the death of Mr. Widdicomb, the af-fairs
of the Halladay Lumber company were 'speedily closed and
Harry Wlddicomb was selected to undertake the work. To him
it 'seemed, so long as those financially interested in the company
had confidence in him, that it was his duty to take the reins and
carry forward the large undertaking which his father, with mar-velous
energy and foresight, had pushed forward so rapidly. In
spIte of his youth he brought to his new duties fifteen years of
active business experience. He possesses the faculty of manage-ment
and energy which characterized his father.
The officers of the John Widdicomb company are Harry
Widdicomb, president; Ralph H. Widdicomb, vice president; B.
A. Hathaway, secretary and treasurer. These officers with F.
Halladay and A. H. Sherwood form the board of directors.
John Veneklassen is superintendent of the Fifth street fac-tory
and Weba Rypkema is superintendent of the Front street
factory.
..... _- .._-----~
"Nothing Succeeds Like Success."
Why is it that some men succeed and others fail. right in
the same business? That one strives as hard as the other,
:,rt lallure is WI ;tten on everything he dGes. I", it net because
one has the foresight to see what IS wanted and to provide for
It, whIle the other has not the shghtest idea, other than to
lag behind and copy and cheapen, or infringe on others pat-ents
and ideas? The Waddell Manufacturing company of
Grand Rapids. the largest manufacturers of wood furniture
tnmmings in the world, do not belong to the slow class. On
the contrary they are originators, and constantly strive to
bring out somethmg new and appropriate, and having many
machines of their own manufacture (they have one of the
best machine shops ltl the city used exclusively for making
machltles for their own use) they are equipped better
than any other shop in the country. Hence success is written
all over them. They never allow anything to go from their
factory that is not right. The cut accompanying this sketch
is only one of many hundreds that fill their catalogue. On
another page of this issue the reader will find a specimen of
their emibossed moulding that is worthy of attention.
Let the down trodden, long suffering laboring man take
heart. The duty on apron leather has been reduced.
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
ChIcago, J uly 21~Charles ]. Kindel is all \\ orked up
over the posslblhtles of hIs new "Dlvanette," \\ hich is a
new outglowth of the regular K111Jel parlor bed. but \\ hlch
is much more compact and just 3tllted to the requirements Jf
the miniature rooms that flat bUlldmg owners are compellmg
city people to live in The new fold111g davenport closes up
for its narrower dImensIOn and makes a smaller and lwl:>hter
piece of furmture than anyth111g yet produced of ItS kmd
The Kindel plant 111ChlcagJ, one of four 111the Umted States
and Canada, is now runnmg overtime to supply customers
with parlor beds ordered before the market opened
A fair specimen of an up-to-date retaIl store m the
southwest country, which appeal~ to be the commg country
for the consumptIOn of medium grade furl11ture, IS "Green-berg's"
at Houston, Tex. That's the Vvay the electnc sign
reads, but the whole name is B. H Greenberg & Son. "lvVe
furnish the home complete" follo\\ s, and Mr. Greenberg,
senior, who is now in ChIcago bUY1l1g hIs stock says that
the "nest-feathenng" offered by theIr store, 111cludes \\ m-dow
shades and beddmg, carpets anJ rugs, refngerators,
stoves, etc, earned, and the eIght floors 50 x 100 feet are
occupied by the house furmshing bus111ess of thIs firm "A
general credIt system IS used, as that IS the only \vay one
can run a furmture store any more," l\1r Greenberg saId
today. Morns chaIrs are a Chnstmas leader at Greenberg's
and the grade of fine mIrror-front wardrobes the Texans buy
would make some northerners Sit up and gasp, for some of
them run as high as $150.
Zala Green, of the Columlna Feather company of Chi-cago,
says that he finds the demand for hwh-arade hair b l:>
mattresses is improving and hiS plant IS no\\ runn111g full
time. Feather pIllows and hair mattresses are the two big
specialties of the Columbia, and the group of hotels that
have been eqUIpped by Mr Green's plant speak for the
quality of its output.
L. E HUdgm, OhiO salesman for both the Wolvenne
Manufactunng company and CadIllac Cabmet company of
Detroit, left today for hiS territory. Sales Manager Wilson
of these twin DetrOIt faetones is still at the ChIcago ware-rooms
on the seventh floor of the Thlrteen-N meteen bUlldlllg,
and Henry S Smith is back on the Job after IllS httle mIshap
in a boat at Ottawa Beach, Mich
Candlesticks of any and all klllds are getting to be a
stapdard artIcle for furl11ture stores to carry m stock Heavy
brass sticks in FlemIsh and Colonial designs are strongly
in favor and now comes the Spencer & Barnes Manufac-turing
company of Benton Harbor, Mlch, with solid mahog-any
sticks to match theIr Colonial dressers. The Gold Furni-ture
company of Chicago, are showmg some fine French
period sticks fitted WIth fancy shades m their display in the
Thirteen-Nineteen budding These match the gIlded parlor
suires and tables which are the specialty of the Gold FurnI-ture
company.
The old Wellmgton hotel is about to change hands It
has long been the fa vonte tavern for a good manv buyel s
visitmg ChIcago regularly Changes have been threatened
before, but except for a few improvements to keep abreast of
the newer houses the old Wellington has contmued to look
... ----------------- .....
.. a ••• I • _ •• a •• •••• 4
hke home to sevel al scores of old-timers Its "Dungeon" is
the la\ ored rendez\ ous of the Furniture Club and It IS hoped
that the new propnetor WIll be as attentive to the needs of
lurmture men a" the old \Vellmgton owners have been.
Labor trouble~ and dIfficulty m getting structural material
have delayed so many new bUlldlllgs m ChIcago durmg the past
fe\\ years that Karpen's al e takmg no chances in belllg left with
an unfim~hed bUlldmg when the t1me comes to vacate the old
place. \Ylth good luck the buildmg may be ready to occupy
next January and se\ eral tenants have already been secured. If
all the space 1S rented out to furmture manufacturers the new
Karpen bUlldmg \\ III be an Important umt 111 the string of Chi-cago
eAhlbitlOn bUlldings.
C L. Merce, salesman for the Mersman Bros. & Brandts
Co, who make tables at Celma, Ohio, and sell them in Chicago,
was called home today by the ,enous Illness of his father at To-ledo.
Albert Mersman, who looks after the shIpping of all or-ders
down at the factOly, and who has been 1ll Chicago for more
than hvo weeks, left for home today.
C T. SIgmon, of the SIgman l\Iranufacturing company,
Chlcka~ha, Okla, IS 111 ChIcago bUYlllg for theIr house, which
now does an eAcIuslve Jobbmg and manufactunng business.
They have the only furmture factory 1ll Oklahoma, and also make
cotton felt mattresses complete from the raw cotton grown near
ChIckasha A \ aned assortment of wooden furniture is made
by them, mcIudmg dmlllg tables, dressers, kttchen cabinets, etc.
The Slgmons formerly dId a retaIl business there but now con-fine
them::,elves to manufactunng and wholesallng.
WIlliam G Remhardt, for many years a parlor furniture
salesman and also a manufacturer, has recently arranged to rep-resent
the Modern Pallor Furmture company of Chicago. Mr
Remhardt has many fnends in the trade whom he has met at the
e"h1blt1ons bUlldlllgs here and others who WIll no doubt be pleased
to learn that he \VIII be \\ Ith a parlor furniture house again.
The Manufacture of Sand Paper.
Old fashlOneci. sandpaper Vvas made with selected sand-hence
the name vVhat IS known as sandpaper now is all
made WIth crushed glass and is really much better than the
old time product Old bottles, etc, are first crushed and then
ground, and the vanous grades of fineness are secured by sift-
Il1g To get the powder on the paper hot glue is applied
a" It passes through a machine and the powdered glass is
<;Jftecl on at the same time Then a wooden roller passes
m (r the "heet and plesses down and smooths the sand.
It doesn't make much drfference what a salesman thinks
about a lme so long as the dealers buy it hberally,
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
THE GEO. B. LUPFER CO., 262-94 North Hanover St.,
Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. Lupfer having sold his interests in the firm in which he was a full partner for
sixteen years, during which time he had full charge of the manufacture of Fine
edding, wishes to announce to the F urniture Trade that he has organized the
Geo. B. Lupfer Company.
Purchased an up-to-date Factory building, installed the best and most modern
machinery for manufacturing a superior line of Mattresses, Box Springs, Woven and Coil Wire Springs, Feathers and Pillow ••
Guaranteed in quality and price.
You are invited to call and examine the merits of our lines. With our New Equipment, long experience and square dealing, we solicit a
portion of your business, which will have our immediate and best attention.
Samples shown only with F. T. Plimpton & Co., 1319 Michigan Ave., Chicago, III. (4th floor), and at the factory.
~ - .
ANNOUNCEMENT.
•• "1
I~._-------------_._----------- ---- ----- .. . .. . ..._. - _.. -
Many Need Modernizing.
One cannot help feelIng sorry for the young man who
descnbed himself as a"youth of nineteen just entering the
business of hIS father" He descnbes all this in a letter to
the writer, In whIch he tells of his efforts to get the
head of the house to do something along the line of more
effective advertiSIng and better catalogues, with attendant
better hterature generally, "but," he says: "There is a 'wise
one,' a chIef engIneer of the building, and his instructions tv
thIS assistant must be followed exactly. Our system of cost
accountIng and bookkeeping is most mvdern and perfect, but
the advertiSIng department seems to be quite without scheme,
pohcy or " ery clear purpose It IS an old story to you, doubt-less,
but very new to this youth of nineteen," etc.
Hundreds of young men in business today will sympa.
tll1ze WIth tIm, young man who has been out in the world
enough to know there are modern ways of doing things and
who would hke to see modern methods employed in this
particular case, but find conservatism rock-ribbed and iron-clad
In the office;, A case In point is a well known one in
CIncinnatI'
Carl F StreIt was in the office of his father who was an
old time manufacturer Carl tried to get certain modern
methoJs adopted but falled and finally got enough money to-gether
to buy hIS father's interest in the business. He then
proceeded to put into effect some of his long desired plans.
DIre disaster was predIcted, not only by Mr. Streit, senior,
but by others of Carl's friends. However, he determined to
try It out and the result has been one of the most conspicuous
successes of recent years in the furniture manufacturing
business. Not only were improved methods adOiPted for the
factory, but for the office as well. Money was spent for
good llterature and for judicious advertising and the result
is known to all.
Many manufacturers are quite willing to spend money
for improved machinery and up-to-date cost systems, designs,
etc. and then expect the goods to sell themselves. The fact
is no branch of modern business requires more skill, more
science or better appliances than does the selling end. Young
men are more apt to reahze this than are the old fellows. A
certain manufacturer in an adjoining state recently said: "I
have made many mistakes, but none I think more serious than
to let pass an opportunity recently to secure an available
man as a sales man3Jger for my two companies, who was
pIcked up by another house." Up-to-date men are realizing
this and it is no wonder that young bloods like our nineteen
year old son of his father are kicking against the pricks.'
. .. . ......
Light Absorbed by Hangings.
Exhibitors of furmture have learned that the color of
paper hangings and tapestry is far from being a factor of
minor importance III the degree of light that prevails in a
room, and is very closely related to the economic use of
artificial illumination also.
In accordance with their color, such fabrics throw back
into the room a part of the light that is falling upon them,
while they anlllhllate another part, or absorb it, as the
technical phrase IS As the power of absorption of light
rises in such a fabnc, so naturally in less degree is the room
bnghtened and less advantageous is the use of artificial illumi-nation,
a part of the money spent for the latter being
wasted for light annihilated by the hangings.
The latest investigation reveals that the absorption of
hght depends, III the first instance, on the color of the hang-mg;"
and therefore on the same color when the walls are
pamted with It too Naturally the most favorable effect of
color in thIS regard 13 afforded by the white hangings and
paints, but even these absorb SO per cent of the light falling
upon them, wlllle the other SO per cent radiates back into
the room.
Following these in the effect of light come the yellow
hangings, which radiate 45 per cent, and annihilate 55 per
cent The next in order are the bright green, of which the
power of absorption rises to 60 per cent, while 40 per cent
of the hght striking them is thrown back. Dark green and
reeLhangings exercise precisely the same influence, they an-nihilate
quite 85 per cent, only IS per cent radiating from
them
When Courage Failed.
"Duke," asked the heiress eagerly, "did you see father?"
"Yes."
"Well?"
"We talked about the weather."
"What? Lost your nerve again? Why don't you brace
up and talk hke a man-a subject of a king on whose domain
the sun never sets?"
"Can't," moaned the duke. "AIl the time I was in your
father's office he kept grinning at a big painting."
"What painting?"
"The battle of Bunker Hill."
Hotel Orders.
The closing days of the mid-summer season brought
quite a number of hotel furnishers to Grand Rapids and many
good contracts were made with manufacturers through dealers.
I
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
.... . .- . .
CONSISTING OF
CHINA CLOSETS
BUFFETS and
BOOKCASES
Will be shown as usual in Chicago only, this coming July,
1319 Michigan Ave., First Floor, opposite elevator.
The following well known men in charg ..,
F P. FISHER, FRED LUGER,
R. G. BINGHAM, P M SMITH,
N P NELSON.
W J ALEXANDER
Line of AIUerica~~
Rockford Standard Furniture
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Co.
'--------------------- -----------------------__. .__.---_.--_--._._.-_------ ---..-.----..-.-------"
The Sales Manager is Supreme.
LIterally a salesman for a house appearmg before a
customer I" the house Itself and somethmg more HIs
powus for good and for bad al e lInlltless, accordmg to
the man himself One crooked salesman m a ....e..e..k may
so queer the reputatlOn of a house through a terrItor) that
not m five years of effiCIent serVIce can a successor recover
ItS old prestIge. Yet that hou"e ....h..l.c.h has fifty
salesmen over ItS terrItory IS open to fifty mdlvldual,
personal mterpretatlOns Iby ItS customers 1\'ext to the house's
stock, open accounts. and plant, thIs sales terrItor) IS ItS
most valuable asset, but It IS forced to gIVe over that terrItory
to fifty mdIVldual men, anyone of whom has power to rum,
almost as much through Ignorance as through mtent.
I t is recogllltlOn of the value of sales terrItory to the
industrIal and commercIal world ""hlch m the last decade has
developed the sales manager In the beglllnlllg thIs sales
manager in embryo was the mdlvldual m the house to whom
travelmg salesmen reported matters that seemed to them to
need reportmg, he was the head of the sales department to
whom the dissatIsfied customer was allo\', ed to kIck But
as 'ialesmanshlp has developed and a'i competItIOn In territory
has grown, the progressIve house ha'i had forced upon It the
necessity of a staff of salesmen whICh shall represent the
house.
"We've got to train these men," decided the wIse manage-ment
"If we are more and more to delegate to the salesmen
everything that the house is, it is up to us to know every-thing
we can about that travelIng delegate and have him
know everything about us."
Which establIshed the sales manager as the supreme
ruler of a destmy of a business Having on the face of
things the powers of a czar, he had to assume the role of a
tactful, dIplomatIC arbItrator and director. He had to stand
by Ius salesmen who proved worthy, while he had to satisfy
the customer who mIght have felt himself aggrieved and
....r.o..n. ged Salesman hImself, he had to have the power of im-partlllg
sales methods to competent men, willing and able to
learn He sought out a man's weak points and showed him
\', herem he \\ as lacking In a word, he was a maker of sales-men
It was III the larger, more progressive houses that the
sales manager developed. This fact put the larger number of
Illdlvlduals under hIS dIrection and gave him the larger task
of molding widely dIffering n,atures to his ends. One, two, or
three of these indIviduals inevitably must ,be of a character to
0....ershadow all the other ninety-nine, ninety-eight, or ninety-se\
en of the 100 salesmen, but at the same time that one hun-dredth
poorest man in the list must be good enough to repre-
"ent the hou"e Do you see the task?
t\ ecessarIly tlllS ha" increased the cost of salesmanship.
Too Man~ Idle Oars.
The fortnightly !bulletin of the American Railway associ-ation,
J:osued under date of July 6, showedl an increase of
about 20,000 in the number of idle freight cars, bringing the
Idle llst up to 142,865 cars. This increase more than wiped
out the small Improvement which had been noticed in the pre-
VIOUSfortlllghtly statement of the American Railway associ-ation
committee, and indicated that summer dullness was be-gmning
to accentuate the already decreasing volume of traffic
on the railways of the country. The number of idle cars on
Jul) 6 was the greatest reported since August 18 of last year.
The prIncipal mcreases, so far as -classeS!of cars are concerned
during the fortlllght covered by the bulletin were about 5,000
III box cars, 8,000 m coal cars, and 4,000 in miscellaneous cars.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13
TWICE TOLD TALES.
What You Read in the Daily Michigan Artisan on
July 25, 1895.
Buyers arnved' C Niss, Jr., MHwaukee; J. W. Hall,
Hall & Headmgton, Baltimore, WIlham F. Carroll, Chicago;
Wilham SpIkes, Oshkosh, WIS.; G A Recker, Indianapolis;
Lewis Hax, St. Joseph, F. D KImball, JanesvIlle, Wis; A.
C. BaIley, Ford CIty, Pa.; W. J Kettler, Ft Wayne, J c.
Hadley, Logansport; Alex Campbell, Clinton, III ; William
Schmeer, Portland, Ore; George Galloway, Menominee, Wis.;
S. F. Snyder, Marshall, Mich., H. J Van Atta, Fenton, Mich ;
L. L. Atwood, Paxton, Ill.; Edward Long, Chillicothe, 0.;
C. W. McClain, Manon, 0., J McManus, Macon, Ga.; L A,
Barmore, Akron, 0.; J W. Blatchley, Wheeling, W. Va.
Louis Herbert, a salesman in the employ of the Phoenix
Manufacturing company of Cincinnati, claims distinction as
the originator of furntture exhibitions in the United States.
"I remember, when living in Southern Germany, that the
cabmetmakers, in making pieces to order, could not occupy
all their time, so they used to make things to keep busy.
These would be put in a public place and sold for the benefit
of the workmen. The idea occurred to me that if the manu-facturers
of Cincinnati could make a j oint exhibit of their
goods it would be a good thing for them as it would induce
a larger number of buyers to come there We had had a lot
of trouble when the lines were scattered, in getting buyers to
come to our city They would go to Grand Rapids and when
traveling salesmen went to their stores would be told that
the buyers had VIsited Grand Rapids and purchased the goods
needed. One day I met J. G. Sextro, and, over a stein of
beer. I presented my idea of an exposition. FIrst we would
secure the refusal of music hall for a period, call a meeting
of the manufacturers and discuss the proposition. I knew I
could not initiate the movement, so I interested Mr. Sextro.
The meeting was called and the subject duly considered when
the manufacturers resolved to go into it. For music hall five
cents per square foot was paid A committee on entertain-ment,
with myself as secretary, was appointed and we raised
$2,500 to use in making the stay of the buyers pleasant. We
had intended engaging several tally-ho coaches and taking
the visitors through the city, but our wings were chpped be-fore
the season was over, and we returned forty per cent of
the money to the gentlemen who gave it. The exposition
was moderately successful, and the one following, run more
economically, did not meet expectations and the third was a
failure. While I was staying in New York a few years
later, in conversation with Mr. McCarthy, of Vogels, I told
him that New York ought to have a furniture exposition
He talked the matter over WIth C H Medicus, Porter, Spratt
.-.-..--.-.--.--_._.__ ._-.-------_._--_._----- ..
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 cur on the market. Cellulo,d IS a great Improvement over bases
made 0 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 finished m Golden Oak and
White Maple, finished 11ght If you w,ll trv a sample order of the,e
(lood, y01lWlU de.. re to handle them ,n quant,t.e,
PRICES: SIze 2~ mches. $5.50 per hundred.
S,ze 2J« mches 4.50 per hundred.
fob Grand RapId, TRY A SAMPLE ORPER
~ .~
and others and a semi-annual exposition was instituted which
has since been maintained."
"It requires a good deal of patience to sit in the ware-room
waiting for customers," remarke1d the representative
of an out-of-town line. "If, when they come in, they would
take time enough to look the samples over thoroughly it
would be different"
"It's hke going into a town in the morning, getting
through with your work in half an hour and then being com-pelled
to walt ten hours for a train," remarked another.
"That is not so bad as having but an hour to spend
in a town and being compelled to wait four hours for the
buyer," said N E Fowler "When you go in and find your
man opening his mail you cannot interrupt him. But his wife
or daughter claim and receive his attention at any moment,
and such visits are always unnecessanly long. When, finally,
he notices you he will say' 'wait a minute old man,' I must
fix up bank matters and he takes another hour. The day is
practically used up so far as you are concerned and yOUre-signedly
await whatever befalls you."
"I visited an old dealer in one of the prairie towns of
Illll10is several years ago," said Fred Lange "We had just
begun on my photos when a man came in and asked for a
coffin. One was brought down stairs and the old man set to
work to trim it He had to do the work himself. Before
he had finished the job a woman came in and wanted to bUy
a chamber smte Before he had finished a man came in and
wanted a casket for a child So it went all day and it was
five o'clock before he was ready to look at my pictures. I
turned in and helped sell goods an'd he bought a good bill
of my stuff."
P • .., • •• • • • •• - •• . _ . • a ... 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, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others will consult their own interests by using it. Also
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. I
, -'" •
,
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN .....
TAUBER UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
- ------- in ---------
PARLOR GOODS aDd ROCKERS
Dealers who handle them recognize the TAUBER PRODUCTS
as Leaders in Individuality, Quality and Price. July Exhibition
at 1411 Michigan Ave. will show many new and varied patterns.
The most extensive Tauber Display in its history.
MAURICE TAUBER & CO., Chicago,Ill.
Factory and Office, 2313~2319 Wilcox Avenue.
III1
~----------_._-------------_._-----------_._-_.-._._-.------------~..~ 60. • • • • •••• •• •
Phenomenal Success of the Tyden Lock.
There has been much interest in the furniture trade in the
success of the Tyden Duo Style table lock. The members of
the Licensed Table Manufacturers bureau say the progress
made in the first year of its adoption has been phenomenal.
Sixty manufacturers of divided pedestal dming tables making
about 80 per cent of the entire output of these tables, are using
the Tyden Duo Style lock without extra c.harge.
The tremendous success is attributed to the fact that the
public and especially the women of this country have almost
instantly grasped the usefulness and practicability of tables
fitted with this lock, and a great majority of them have seen
how it was to their interest to select tables fitted wIth the
Tyden Lock, so they cannot spread apart in the base, and
can be opened and leaves locked in wIthout opening the
pedestal.
Furniture merchants 111many locahties ha'. e been qUIck
to appreciate the importance of this lock They went through
the same process of reasoning as did the dming table manu-facturers.
Eighty per cent of all dming table manufacturers
in the United States sawall the objections to the dividing
pedestal overcome by the Tyden lock and they adopted it
without delay. Some waited to see how it would take. and
they found in a short few months. that a dining table with
the Tyden Duo Style lock, has become the standard
The traveling salesman of the dining table manufacturers
have found a surprising amount of interest in the lock. Mer-chants
are benefitting themselves by advertis111g it to their
trade, and when compet1tive business comes up they have
noticed that frequently the thing that decides a good sale
of dining room sU1tes is the Tyden Duo Style lock on the table
Interesting Facts About Drying.
The Grand Rapids Veneer company of Grand RapiJ~,
Mich., recently issued a folder interestingly 11lustrated with
cuts of cross sectlOns and mIcroscopic sections of wood, for ... . ...
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures. Per Set SOc.
PlIItent Malleable Clamp Fixture •.
E H. SHELDON & CO , Chlcajt'o, III.
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the25 dozen Clamp FIxtures whIch
we bonl!'ht of you a lIttle over a year ago are gIVing- excellent se'Vlce We are
weB satisfied WIth them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
anythmg addItional m thIS Ime Yours trulv.
SIOUXCity, Iowa. CURTlS SASH & DOOR CO
the purpose of employing modern methods based on scien-tJfic
knowledge, in the drying of the various types of lum-ber.
This company has for some time been exploiting the
ments of the Grand Rapids Veneer Works' vapor process
and of vanous bnds of dry kiln equipment turned out by
the company. and has now gotten that process down to a
point where a thorough efficiency based on sClentJfic exact-ness
can be guaranteed.
The pamphlet goes into the subject of the physics of
wood in a thorough and comprehensive manner. and tells 111
a way which can be easily understood without any technical
knowledge of the "ubj ect. just why the old fashioned meth-ods
of kiln Jrying- are detrimental It shows the
causes and results of case hardening, check111g. warping,
shnnk1l1g, etc, and then goes on to prove Just why the new
proces" '" 111e1Jminate these bad results. The pamphlet is of
'. alue as a treatJse on the subject, aside from the fact that
1t puts the lumbermen m touch with a means of doing away
vv lth a great deal of trouble, and should be obtained for the
111formation 1t contains. if for no other reason -The Hard-wood
Recol d.
The Old and The New.
On another page of this issue of the Weekly ArtJsan,
one of the bIg Sheboygan Chair companies has an 1l1teresting
letter to the Grand RapIds Veneer Works relative to their
expenence w1th two k111ds of dry kilns It is worth reading.
Look up the Grand Rap1ds Veneer \iV orks "ad" and see what
they say.
There are many ways to explain the cause of a broken
chaIr leg, but the break remains. just the same.
The manufacturer who is sure h1S hne 1S right and then
proves it, has taken the road that leads to wealth.
30 000 Sh.ldon
Steel Rack
f Vise.
."
t
Sold on approval and an uncon-dltlonal
money back cuaranlee
f
III
"
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We soltcil pnvIlege of sendmg samples and
our complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON & CO.
328 N. May St•• Chicago. .....
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
IMMENSE INCREASE
THE PAST
SEASON
has seen a very pleasing and very large increase In the business that has come to
us from all parts of the country.
and our friends tell us that no other manufacturer is so prompt in making ship-ments.
We know how important it is that EVERY ORDER should have quick
attention. It enables dealers to do a big business on a small stock, which means
small expense and big profits. Then, too, no other line is made up of so many
The design, construction and finish, combined, make the NORTHERN line the
most popular in the country. It is our constant aim to make the kind of furni-ture
that will move quickly, and July, 1910, is going to surpass allprevious efforts.
visiting the furniture market this coming season should make a special effort to
see the many new patterns offered. With our enormous line---the biggest in the
world---you can always save money by making up a car.
GRAND RAPIDS
Leonard Building
NORTHERN FURNITURE COMPANY
SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN
CHICAGO
1300 Michigan Ave.
THERE
MUST BE
A REASON
Grand Rapids Factories are Expanding.
The Leonard Refrigerator company broke ground this
week for a large addition to their plant on Clyde Park ave-nue.
The addition is being made to the enameling works,
and the building wl1l be of cement, in harmony with the rest
of the plant It will be 24 x 150 feet, three stories. and will
contain another furnace for the enameling process, thus
doubling the capacity of this department. The company
reports that the busllless of the past year has been the big-gest
in its history.
Isaac Wagemaker, president of the Wagemaker Furni-ture
company, states that plans will be drawn soon for a
large addition to the factory near Market street and the
river The new building will be constructed on the north
side of the present plant and will double the present output.
A new boiler has been purchased and a new engine will be
added soon to the power equipment.
The Stow & Davis Furniture company will build a mod-ern.
fire proof factory, north of its present plant, and though
the plans for the same are well in hand it is possible that
the work will not be started this fall The building of the
flood protection wall along the river bank has delayed the
company in their expansion plans
QUICK
SELLERS
EVERY
DEALER
NTHEEWT.LZa"'~nd•• PARLOR. ~t:BED p
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Always ready with
beddmg in place.
So simplet so easy, a
child can operate it.
H;'s roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK, Norman & Monitor.
NEW YORK
Furniture Exchange
These improvement items taken in connection with the
additional story on the bIg Luce plant, the new building at
the Imperial and other expansIOns of local industries in con-templation
for the near future, lends a very encouraging
outlook to the industrial situation in Grand Rapids.
How Long? Who Will Answer,
"YL". I noticed your article In regard to the ni·l(' 1'1011ih<;'
dai,11g:' said a plOminent southern man'u['tc"crrr tJ a rep~rter
for the Al tjsan-Record. the other day. J wJ1lV\O'tiure that the
repl e.,pntative cf the large New York dcp~llnH 11t store got
\\ hat l1e a,ke::l tor, if not from S0mc mid ufacluro-::-, [row
C'ihe~'3. I know of manufacturers whf' h:i, f' ~iven onc ye.1f·s
dating-and the usual discounts. I knO\' oi anothc,' lar~e
KeN YOlk department store buyer wh) ",a~ 1'1 lh,~ malke: for
his \~.-1.ntsfer S!X months and askeJ the ll;al'lJiacturers f ... -
tllt-ir 10\c:::t pliees. The buyer then inslster{ thai the-,e good"
were to be delivered at prices named This concession W.-1.S
granted, then they demanded the cash cEscount of 2 per cent,
60 days, granted them to cap the climax, the buyer demanded
'three per cent additIOnal, because he claimed the gDods were
for the wholesale department, and of course the manufacturer
kicked, but to no purpose. He wanted the order and took it
on the terms mentioned In addition he paid the salesman
who engineered the deal six per cent commission. How long
will the manufacturers submit to such extortion?
Tihere was no answer, not even an echo.
Real salesmen don't have to hurry out of the office as
soon as the contract is signed, for fear the buyer will change
his mind.
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
,U.SC"II"TION $1 eo I"E" YEA" ANYWHE"E IN THE UNITED STATI:S
OTHI:" COUNT"'I:S 'Z.OO 1"1:" YEA". SINOLI: COI"II:' 5 CENTS.
PU.LICATION OI"I"ICE. 10'-112 NO"TH DIVISION ST, G"ANO RA .. IOS. MICH.
A. S WHITE, MANAGING EDITO"
Entered AI .econd claiS matter, July 5. 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapids, Michigan
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE,1:. LEVY
The business of furnishing hotels and pUbllc lllstitutions
is now largely in the hands of the retail dealer A few years
ago the hotel keeper and the institution manager bought the
furniture from the manufacturer direct and no one objected to
his doing so. There did not appear to be anythlllg particularly
objectionable to such transactions, especially as was formerly
the case, the furniture maker supplied the carpets, rugs, bed-ding,
crockery. silverware, curtains, shades, and in fact every-thing
needed to completely furnish such an establishment In
those days but comparatively few retailers possessed the capI-tal
and the knowledge necessary to carry through transactIOns
of such magnitude and the busine"s naturally found its \\ ay
to the hands of the manufacturer of furniture It was a husI-ness
that was not of uncommon value to him and he welcomed
the entry of the large mercantile houses into the field A con-si.:
lerable number of the great merchants control rug. curtain
and bedding factories, affording advantages that count for
much in the business of supplying hotels and institutions An
idea of the importance of this trade is presented in the single
fact that during the first six months of the current year one
department store in Chicago, furnished twenty-five hotels
Landlords are using better goods than formerly, after having
learned that the price to be charged guests for rooms depend"
largely upon the character of the furniture
The attorney general of the state of Indiana jabbed his
fist into the ribs of the Pullman car company on July 16,
when he filed an intervening petition with the interstate
commerce commission in the case brought by the state of
Okldhoma against the Pullman outfit Twenty-one railroads
operating in the state of Indiana are named as defendants.
The petition sets out that virtually no tourist sleepers are
operated in the state and that when passengers desire to use
sleeping cars they are compelled to patronize those operated
by the Pullman company; that approximately the passenger
mileage is at least twice as much in the Pullman cars at night
as by day; that the charge for Pullman seats during the day
is approximately half what is charged during the night when
the seats are sold after 10 o'clock at night at seat rates. The
several organizations of traveling salesmen might help a lot
in pushing the good work along. Will they do it?
The litigation pending adjudication in the courts, involv-ing
the Tyden and Brown table lock patents, '" hich may re-sult
in putting one and perhaps both of the locks out of busi-ness,
recalls the litigation between W S Gunn, John Toler,
W, R. Fox, and other manufacturers, a few years ago After
several years spent in the taking of testimony the presenta-tlOn
of arguments and the usual routine of litigation, involv-ing
a heavy expense to all interested in the business. the
htlgants were mduced to enter into a partnership that ehmi-nated
competItion, and all shared richly in the business of
manufacturlllg and selling casters during the life of the
patents The hIstory of the litigation offers a suggestion of
valLle to Mes'irs Tyden and Brown.
The buyer for a prominent department store located in
one of the cIties of the central west bUys and sells nothing but
low grade stuff He frankly admits that his know-ledge
of the furniture business is limited. "I know nothing
about good stuff, and for that reason I do not buy it." he ex-plained
I can sell cheap stuff, therefore it is for my interest
to buy only that class of goods. The first and about the only
con"ideration with me is a low price." Evidently this buyer
lacks an artistic temperament.
Blum is heavily", eighted. How a man of his moderate
SIZP can successfully carry so many lines remains to be ex-pla1l1ed
J\Ir Blum lives in Atlanta, and when he starts out
on a tnp he is obhged to pay for excess baggage, on ac-count
of the hnes he carries. The many houses he repre-sents
are satisfied with hJS work and Blum is accumulating
a roll as large as a bale of cotton for use when the rainy day
so often mentIOned in business circles puts in an appearance.
The operator of a large factory located in an eastern city
make" a personal inspection of the plant twice daily as much
for the good effect Jt has on employes as for keeping in touch
with the processes of manufa cture. While passing through
the plant. e\ en i'f one's mind is absorbed in other matters , his
presence causes the neghgent to go at their work with greater
will and inspJres confidence in the faithful and industnious.
Names for 300 new sleeping cars are solicited by the St. Paul
railroad. Why not name them in honor of the furniture sales-men
who travel over its rails? What would look neater or
sound prettier than such names as "Dan" Allen, "J1m" Howard,
Paul Markoff, "Bob" Calder, "Ted" Gamble, "Jack" Neather,
"Lou" Bauer," "Charley" Parmenter, "Phil" Raigue1. Seal
Re\ Ilold"," "Yohnny" Yohnson" and others of their kind?
To the dIscontented man Mission furniture is too plain;
LOUISXIV too ornate; Chippendale uncomfortable ; Jacobean
too clumsy, L'Art Nouveau too creepy Nothing satisfies him.
Hb aim m hfe JS to accomplish the impOSSIble He would
fill round holes '" ith square pegs. "A good time," is un-known
to him
I t is better for a dealer to throw a poor selling piece
of furniture into the furnace and lay in a stock that will sell
than to lose the profit on a superior article because he can
not "ell an inferior one The profit made on good sales WJll
more than make up the loss which would result by not making
sales through holdmg to unsalable stock
Quoth Dan Allen. poet and philosopher: "certain re-taJlers
who pass us by, would probably be very much sur-prised
to know what we think of them." Oh. Dan' Whv
did you not send that brilliant thought to Line-a-type? Why
did you try to attach it to the chemist of the Peninsular Club?
The designer who declared that a certain- manufacturer
who had copJed his designs was "an art forger," had a true
appreciation of the merits of his own work.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
I-I
III
aa _ ••••••••••••••••••••
Waddell
. .--..,
Manufacturing I
Grand Rapids. Michigan
Co.
Samples of our
EMBOSSED MOULDING
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.
MANUFACTURERS DOING FOOLISH THINGS,
"I do not know what the future of the furniture manu-facturing
business is to be," said a well known manufacturer
who exhibits in Grand Rapids, the other day. "It seems to
me the manufacturers are doing a lot of foolish things. One
man comes along and asks for nine months dating and another
comes along with a ten thousand dollar order danghng at the
end of a pole and some manufacturer grabs it off at a price
that will lose him ten or fifteen per cent, just as sure as he
takes it. Two large Grand Rapids houses figured on some work
and two outside houses also made a bid One of the outsiders
got it and he certainly will lose money on it. Then there is
one of the biggest houses in the United States offering a
solid mahogany dresser at $18. A good many buyers are not
buying regular goods at all but are waiting for jdbs or cut
prices So I ask where is the poor manufacturer coming
in? He can't be selling at tweny-five to thirty per cent off
all the time for there is not half that margin in the goods.
What the industry wants and wants baday is a good strong
association to remedy some of the evils, If there had been
a strong association of the manufacturers composed of the
majority of the good houses in the country, one that would
stand by agreements, that offer of nine months' dating would
never have been made."
h.... .... . .... a •••••• • • • _ .. ~
New Comer's View of the Market.
"What surprises me," said John Schlude, Jr, of the
Schlude company, Poughkeepsie, N. Y" in talking with the
Artisan-Record representative, "is the bigness of the di--
play here, the quality and above all the inexpensivene'-s
of it. This is my first visit to Grand Rapids, and I hope
to come regularly from now on. I had the idea that Grand
Rapids furniture was almost altogether out of the reach of
dealers in smaller towns, but find that I was mistaken.
Many others have that same idea and if the manufacturers
could conduct a publicity campaign of some sort that would
gain the attention of the smaller dealers who never come to
the market, and once persuade them to break the ice and
come, the market attendance would see a wonderful increase.
"This is certainly a magnificent market for fine furni-ture,"
Dull on the Wiest Coast.
"How is bU'iiness? That is a joke so far as my territory
is concerned," said one of the biggest salesmen in the busi-ness.
"I travel in the far west entirely and there is no busi-ness.
Why? No one knows why. Simply the merchants have
not had the trade; that is all In January they bought liber-ally,
thinking to move the goods. They have not sold them
and of course have them on hand-but," and here he showed
the optimism of the average furniture man, "things will come
out all right and we will get it later."
A New Company Making Parlor Frames.
The Western Parlor Frame company, recently organized,
has engaged in the manufacture of parlor frames in Plymouth,
,,vis. M. L Reuter. who has had twenty years' expenence rn
pushing the sale of lines manufactured in Chicago, is associated
with the corporation. The company has a well equipped factory
and experienced workmen.
.COLUMBIA FAULTLESS BEDDING
SAMPLES SHOWN AT
THE BIO BU'LDINC, 1319 MICHIGAN AVENUE, 8TH FLOOR, CHICACO.
MANUFACTURERS' BUll-DING, CARE ORINOCO FURNITURE CO., CRAND RAPIDS, MICH •
---------_. _._----_.-._.-._.-._--------- 18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
._.- .. Strange Fashions in Burial Robes.
"I always have maintained that every man ought to go to
his own funerallooklllg like a gentlemen," said the undertaker
with artistic tastes "No matter how man} hard knocks he has
had to stand through 11fe,no matter 1£ he has had to ,,111ftalong
with only one suit to his back, and that a hand-me-down, when
the struggle is all over and done with he ought, I say, to
make his last appearance dressed in the fashlOn The world
owes every man at least one good Stllt of clothes, and If It
doesn't pay its debt before hiS death It ought to see to It
that the account is squared afterward
"The thing that very often prevents an undertake I from
carrying out his own safe and sane Ideas IS the whimSical
notions of the deceased "V,romen are more gn en to freak
burial clothes than men. SentIment is largely responSible for
their fantastic ideas.
"They have a special predIlection for wedding go'" ns I
have known women who have been married thirty or forty
years to cherish that one precious dress through all the up"
Made by Luce Furniture Company, Grand Rapids. MIch.
and downs of life, that they might '" ear It agalll on the last
great occasion. These gowns look awfully old-fashlOned and
have a musty odor appropnately suggestive of the grave, after
having been done up 1ll lavender and tissue paper for so many
years, but vanity no longer plays a part 1ll the scheme of the
old ladies' existence, and style is to them a small matter com-pared
with the gratIficatlOn of sentiment
" 'It brings good luck to be buned 111'" edd111g clothes,'
one woman told me shortly before she died
" 'Good luck to whom?' I asked. 'How can that posslbl}
benefit anybody? It certalllly cannot be much of a mascot for
the mourners, and the deceased is done with luck, both good
and bad.'
"My answer puzzled her a good deal
"'I am sure I don't know for whom,' she said, 'but I do
know that it bnngs good luck.'
"She evidently believed It, too, for when her tIme came
she was laid away in a weddlllg outfit that was complete, even
to the bonnet and slippers The incongruity of the headgear
as an accessory to a burial toilet was enough to make an angel
weep It was an enormous, high-crowned, white silk affair,
fully fifty years old, and was fearfully unbecoming to her
emaciated face, but her relatives had promised that she should
wear it, and they were courageous enough to keep their word
Framke & Sievers
Factory: Lincoln and Hastings Sts., Chicago.
Our new
line of
DRfSSfKS
and
(niffOnlfDS
marks a new
era in our
trade and is
the best
we ever
produced.
Send for
prices, etc.
Samples throughout the year,
1st Floor, 1319 Michigan Ave., CHICAGO.
In..c.ha.rg.e..o•f.t.h.e- C.hicago Distributing Co. . ..... _ ..- ...__ ...- ..
"I buned anothel '" oman not long ago dressed in a com-plete
set of furs Spite, not sentiment, was at the bottom of
that eAhlbltIon of bad ta"te
"The fur:o, "ere, ery costly, and there had long been a
bitter dispute among the female members of the old lady's
famIly as to who should wear them after she was done With
them As the tl1ne of her depal ture drew near the quarrel
over the plOspectl\ e ownership waxed hotter
"The old lad) herself was SOlely perplexed over the merits
of the' anous claimants ~ ow she lllclllled toward this one,
now toward that F111ally she concluded that since the coveted
furs'" ere bound to create discord so long as they were above
ground nobody should have them, but that she would settle
the ri, aIry and spite the whole brood of scheming nieces and
COUSlllSby ,,,eanng the furs herself to the end of the chapter
"The relations fumed and fu"sed over this dictum, and if
they had had their way probably they would have refused to
carry out her i11'3tluctlOns But the old lady had foreseen
this tempest in the family teapot, and had taken the precaution
to llltrust her post-mortem toilet to a disinterested outsider,
who had nothing to gain by disregard111g her wishes. Threats
and adjurations had no effect upon that hard-hearted sartorial
executor, so we put her ladyship away on the hottest day of
summer bundled up 111enough furs to keep her comfortable on
a voyage to the north pole
"One of the oddest whims I have ever been called upon
to humor was that of the man who insisted on going to his
grave wrapped in the traditional sheet He sent for me several
days before he died and explained his fancy.
"I misunderstood him at first. I thought he meant an
ordinary white shroud I could remember the time, away back
in my childhood days, when it was the custom to clothe both
men and women in those flowing white robes, and I took it
WEEKLY ARTISAN
that he was simply a little old-fashioned and wished a reversal
to primitive customs. But he quickly corrected that impres-sion.
"'I don't mean anything of the kind,' he said 'I want to
be buried in a sheet-a plain, every-day white sheet.'
"For once my curiosity got the better of my good manners
" 'I will do as you ask, of course,' I said, ' but will you
kindly tell me why you want to be dressed in that peculiar
style ?'
"The old fellow's answer fairly staggered me
" 'Because I am going to do a good deal of haunting when
I'm through with the flesh,' he said, 'am I'm going to take the
sheet along with me, so there will be no delay about getting
down to business. I'm going to leave lots of people behind
who have been playing me mean tricks all their lives I have
never been able to get back at them in my present state, but
just wait till I get clear of these fetters, and if I don't haunt
them good and hard and make them wish they'd done the
square thing by me when they had a chance it won't be my
fault.'
"I couldn't make out then, and I have not been able to
make out since, whether the old chap was downright crazy or
just eccentric," concluded the undertaker. "Any way, it was
not my business to investigate his mental condition. My
business was to bury him in a sheet, so long as he asked me
to and was willing to pay for it, and I performed my part of
the transaction to the letter."-N. Y. Times
Something More About Persian Rugs.
"The shipments from Bagdad to the United States last
year were more than for five years previous, though the supply
of real antique Persian rugs is diminishing fast," says Fred-erick
Simpich, American Consul at Bagdad Ahout $8S0.000
worth of rugs came to Bagdad from Persia in 1909 of which
less than one-fourth were old Nearly all the genuine antiques
however, go to America, Shiraz Ramadan, Tabri7, Kerman-sha,
Bokhara, Kulyahi and Sina are the kinds of carpets mostly
sent to the United States The local prices paid for such rugs
range from $2 60 to $3 70 per square meter for ordinary quality,
$440 to $600 for better grades and $8 80 and upward on age,
quality and condition
Cheap rugs, aniline dyed in imitation of ancient patterns
are now manufactured in large numbers by a foreign firm at
Sultanabad for much less than real Persian handmade carpets
and are readily detected by rubbing with a moistened cloth,
which reveals the aniline dyes by leaving a stain on the cloth
Every district in Persia has its own style and design of
rugs; yet the mere name is no guide to quality, as good and
bad rugs are turned out in all districts. It is not easy to dis-tinguish
one rug from another by word description, but a
feature of the Shiraz, Koor distan, Jaff, Kulyahi, etc, is that
they are woven wholly of wool, while the Ramadan, Sina,
Sultanabad and Ferahan are made partly of cotton The dom-inant
color of all Shiraz rugs and carpets is red, while the
Bijars are blue and marine.
The choicest rugs are woven in silk and wool and come
largely from Kerman, Persia. Many ancient patterns, pro-ducts
of early Mohammedan days, as well as convential
flower designs, are seen The color blendings are exquisite.
These silk rugs are usually about 430 feet by 7 feet and are
measured by the native "zar" a square measure of 20 by 40
inches. Sixteen stitches per inch are usually woven in the
manufacture of rugs and carpets for export, though Persian
rug fanciers insist on a finer weave. About 1,000 looms are
operated by hand in Kerman, where the price for the better
quality of carpets is nearly $5 a "zar." The estimated annual
output of woolen rugs in Kerman is $200,000 The silk carpets
" . .
Table wi.th top removed so as to
show the Tyden Duo-Style Lock.
Ask for the Tyden Lock
It makes business for you
When you buy pedestal dining tables ask
your manufacturer for the Tyden Duo-Style
Table Lock-there is no extra charge.
Don't run the risk of losing sales because the lock is
not on the dining table-you can have a completely
equipped table Just as well as not, and gIVe your
customers the most for their money.
When you place your order for dining tables be sure
it calls for Tyden Duo-Style Lock.
~----.....------------ ..... .. .... ......~
of Kerman sell locally for about three times the price of woolen
carpets and in Cairo one silk rug from Kerman has been
known to bring $500.
Small boys working two or three at a time under a master
weaver, turn out these valuable rugs. The master reads the
pattern aloud to them, which they recite or repeat after him
as they work. These formulae contain many words now
obsolete.
The "shal" of Kerman-whence our word "shawl"-is
made of goat's hair Like the carpets, the shawl patterns are
learned by heart, and the work is even finer. Children also
do this work. It is estimated that Kerman turns out $300,000
worth of shawls, hand-made a year. The finest product is a
fircone pattern, a rich color effect, made especially for the
governor of the province, who wears it as a robe of honor
o_n.the Persian New Year's day. ...... .
I
---_._-----_. _. ..--- _ _ ~
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Our SOLID STEEL MOULDING CUTTERS are the Best in the World.
SPECIAL. ORDERS SOLICITED AND GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
WOOD WORKERS TOOL COMPANY, 542 Jackson Blvd., CHICAGO.
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19
... .,
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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These Specialties are used all
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N. 20 Glu. Heater CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. _ ....
The Entering Wedge.
This morning I started forth, full of JOy and gmger B)
noon I was trying to study out a new phIlosophy of hfe, for
I needed it I dont beheve there is any business or plOfesslOn
in which you can get so many rapid and contradictory shocks
as that of se1hng goods far from home The fir"-t place I
en tered, I thought of a real clever story I had h card the 'l1g'11
before Oh, yes, It was proper enough-nothlllg" naughty
about It, just a real funny &tory I had thought of a way to
use it as an introduction for my selllng talk, and T spmng it
on the first merchant I met Gee' He pulled 111'; face down
and said sternly:
"Young man, this beautiful morning, so SOon after the
Sabbath day, your thoughts should be more grave and fi"ed
on higher things."
Now, I'm not saying that he wasn't nght, but I'll lca, e
it to any of you if that wouldn't sort of take) ou aback I
hadn't gone at it hit or miss, either, but I sized hIm up as a
man who could laugh over a good story Saturrtay evenmg,
maybe, but not Monday morning
Greatly subdued, I crept into the next store, looked as
pious as I could and remarked that I had heard a most eAcel-lent
d1scourse the precedmg evening I thought that would
please him, and the truth was I had been to church Sunday
night with a htble beauty. He looked as though he would
be willing to discuss the authelllcity of the scnptures, but
again I was due for right about I expected hIm to nod
gravely, stroke hIS beard solemnly, and obsen e
"Indeed, my young friend, it was of a truth a mo"t Ill-structive
disquisition." That would pave the" al for satl"--
factory business. Instead, he glared at me and remarked
viciously:
"What you g1vin' me, you p1cfaced dude? You can't
sell me no llfe of Talma.ge "
There ought to be a law passed to compel every onl' to
act and be like he looks
The rest of the day I spent in the good old fashlOned
way. I went in, shook hands, when the boss didn't stick
them into his pockets, and pitched right in on trade And I
found I dId better than when I tried my fine work at the
first. Guess t<he trou1ble with me was that I couldn't read
the humanity of those first two men Perhap'3 both of them
detected in me an insincere note and that made them cast me
down hard
Some of them bke a funny story, and ,",orne of them don't
No.6 GI•• H•• t.r.
care for funny stories Some of them like to dl1SCUSSreligion
and some of them don't. Some of them like to gossip and
hpar the latest from the big town, and others don't care a
red cent about the scandal on the front page of the daIly
bla therskite
I asked an old timer about it th1s evening, and what he said
J 'ice 1'3true He said' "You can't always tell what a man's
llke inSIde by the looks of his outside. He may dress like a
pne'it and talk llke a mule skinner He may dress like a
dudc and be a phIlosophcr But there's one thing they're all
Interested III If they're real merchants, and that is their busi-ness
If they are trying to make a good business and make
It better, the) have their ears wide open for suggestions for
impro, ement. sea'3onable and paymg goods and the like. If
,ou can show a man a dollar for hIm he will listen to you
Thl'3 isn't because he's greedy or stingy or crazy about money,
eIther. but because he has to make money to live and you are
one of the factors that enter into his money-making existence.
If ) ou are a preacher, then it would be of interest to talk to
hIm about his soul But you arr one of the mercantile factoi"
and business should be your talk"
"Then," saId I, "you wouldn't talk anything but busine'is
at any time?"
"Oh, sure," rejoined he "Sure, you have to talk other
things But make everythmg applicable. WhIle he's inter-ested
m business, especially his own business, the reason he
doesn't talk 1t w1th you always is that he isn't sure you are
the fellO\, \'\ ho can tell him about what he ought to have and
,,'hat he ought to do. Your talk is to catch his attention.
Suppose he '317eS ) ou up as a good teller of stories and not a
man "ho knows more about the market than he Then a good
story 1:0what he wanb from you, and he feels able to take
,are of hIS buymg wIthout any monkey talk from you If he
wants a story, I gIve hllTI one, but I try to have one that will
gn e h1m an 1dea that I :.now that-know the real business
of the day, as well as tales to pass the time pleasantly."
"But how do you break the ice?" I cried 'What I want
to know 1S how to begin I can do the rest all proper enough,
I think, but how to get through his shel1.' "
"This IS the way I do it," he replied "I copy in a broad
way the methods of the best merchants themselves. You
know how they put out leaders? Well, that's the way I do.
Suppose I have some goods that are real bargains; I use them
for leaders If the merchant knows his business at all. he
knows that he's being offered a good thing, and I have his
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
attention right away Suppose, as is sometimes the case, I
have word from the house of something concerning the tend-ency
of trade or pnces. I let hIm have that, if I can, telling
him where the information came from, and he recognizes it
a'S worth listening to and heeding. It gives him more respec~
for me, not as an after-dinner speaker, but as a man who
knows something about goods.
"Then he may buy or he may talk about the goods, or he
may do or say something else that gives me a clue to what
he is. If you talk to a man for a while or better, if he talk3
to yOU, you can tell something about hIm. If you can't, you'd
better get out of the business But glVe him the leader first.
ITe is m business and so are you. GIve him som.::thil1g that
WIll make hIm recognize you at once. Then you can make
hIm accept you still fUl ther WIth your chat on reltgion or
) f)L,r amu"mg anecdotes later on, but rememl'er tlw fir"t
thmg is to interest him, not in you, but in your ability to
assist him in his bus mess."
The more I thought about these things, the more I could
see good, plain, common sense in them. That fellow repre-sents
dry goods; but he appears to have made good, all nght
It is also true that, no matter where you may have ac-qUll
ul your knowledge, it IS apt to come in h llldy a~ any
moment For instance, I made a good fnend yesterday be-cause
I know how to pack goods I wandered mto the
sVwe where I have been turned down twice by the plOprietor,
already. However, it wasn't because he was mean, 'but merely
because he was satisfied with the house he's trading with.
This mor111ng I discovered him packing a box of stuff for
shipment, and he happens to be one of those fellows who
can't pack a box at all-just isn't in him. He was red in the
face and perspiring freely. He looked up and nodded and
hammered his thumb, but didn't say a word-out loud I
had a hunch, and besides it bothers me to see a man paoking
space poorly. I said:
"Say, Williams, I'm an old hand at packing. Let me
have a try at that. It used to be my business when I was a
kid-I was brought up at it."
He got up and handed me the hammer without a word
J went to work, after shedding my coat and my cuffs I
worked hard at it and fast, and in a few minutes I had all the
stuff in neatly and securely, sohd as it could be, and was
naihng the hd down, one lick for each naIl.
Do you know, it pleased him immensely. I know how it
is, myself If somebody can do something you can't you admire
it more than a greater amount of skill at somethmg you can
do. He looked at the box with satisfaction and genuine
pleasure, walked around it, pushed it WIth his foot, and said
that it was a dandy job.
I told hIm how much time I had put in, packing goods of
all "hapes and kmds and hc grew quite intele ,ted 1 h ~1,
following the adVIce of my fnend, I sprung on hlln a ~peclal
He felt th3Jt he ought to hsten, and my proposition was really
a go,d ' ne even for small Luyers He orde"-.:rl a fc\v tl1mg~,
and I told him that while I should always be glad to get his
business, I diJn't want him to buy just because I naIled up a
box of goods for him. He said he wasn't buying for that
reason, but solely because it was a good buy. That did please
me. In a legitimate way I have put in an entenng wedge,
and the day will come before long when my brethren of the
other house will have to split business with me m that house
And then, ultimately, it will be up to the goods of the two
houses In my mind, it means a new customer for The House
The man with a hot temper doesn't always make a
warm friend.
iJoh~~~C~h"ai~co.l 4401 to 4531 West North Ave., CHICAGO
Makers of the
in the West.
BEST
MEDIUM
and
HIGH GRADE
line of
CHAIRS \t
I
Our new Catalogue will be mailed to any responsible
furniture dealer on request. It shows the latest patterns
of the most seasonable goods.
'"'-----_._---- . . .. ..
to- .- ••• _-_. 1
Mechanics Furniture Co.
Rockford, Illinois
Makers of FINE and MEDIUM
BUFFET No 194 II,..
Dining and Library Furniture
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE.
Our {u!llme on exlublt 3d Hoor, 1319 Michigan Ave., CHICAGO. .- - ...-- . _. - ..- ..- ..
22
" .. • -- •••••• __ aa •• •• . a.a.- .. _ __ .. .-.,
WEEKLY ARTISAN
TO FURNITURE MEN
A large and successful department store, now covering 50 hnes, Will consider proposItion from responsib~e, practical persons,
firm or manufacturers who may wish to mstall and manage a Furniture Department as a part of the store organization. Store is located
m one of the best manufactUring and railroad centers m the middle west, and the most prosperous state m the Union. Store room
building IS situated in the best 10catlOn m the city; different floors eqUipped with the most improved, up-to-date store fixtures; be-ing
on corner of street, hght could be no better. PopulalOn of city referred to over 200,000, with lmmedlate suburbs, surrounded by
a prosperous farmmg territory. About 21 steam and 12 trolley railroad lines operatmg over 300 trains every 24 hours into and out
of the city. Practically no k~en competition. Busmess hmlted only to aggressiveness and ablhty of management. Space now avail-able
for proposed department Will be utlhzed for other purposes If not soon taken. An opportunity for a "live wire" to ally himself
with a prosperous, successful and growmg concern, With estabhshed trade relations extending over 25 years. Correspondence and
investigation sohclted. Address commumcatlOns to Clingan, Box 2031, Columbus, Ohio.
j, ••••• -----------~---_._-------.~-_._-_.-._~------------~_._----
Window Dressing Principles.
Wmdows should be dressed SImply. They should not be
filled WIth a conglomeratIOn of goods unrelated to each other
In that case they would cause confusIOn m the mmd, \\ Ith harel
ly a chance of 111terestmg anyone.
The whole Idea of SImplIcIty IS ba"ed on fact, demonstrated
by psychologIcal expenment, that people cannot observe and re-taw
more than two or three thl11gs at a time. The correct the-ory
IS that attentlOn WIll be attraced to a thl11g when alone, or
when exhIbIted WIth somethl11g that IS naturally assOCIated WIth It
The wl11dow dresser must be ongmal, he must know the
latest style; he must be posted on the general demand for
goods; he must know the taste of hIS customers But It IS
hIS prl11c1pal busl11ess to present the goods 111an artIstic man-ner
that brmgs out theIr value and VIVIdly fasten hIS pIcture
on the ml11J through the eye of the passer-by, so that he shall
be impressed by them and have hIS mterest awakened.
SelectlOn of matenal IS an exceedmgly Important factor.
Color effects If JUdlClOUsly employed, attract attentlOn qUIck-est
RIchly colored gooJs, as a 1ule, are the more fascmatmg.
Thm the matenal should be carefully and skIllfully arranged,
an effort bemg always made to aVOId an over-dressmg. Care
should be taken to exclude anythmg repulsIve or mdehcate.
The wmdow decoratlOns should Ibe nothmg more than an
mdex of goods m the store, and therefore, must be truthful
m every respect The goods must always be !behmd the dIS-play;
If they are not the wmdow dressing is a damage and not
a benefit. The wmdow should be the mirror of the store-It
should reflect both the character of the goods and the bUSIness
pnnc1ples of the store.
The wmdow decorator should always have the matenals
he deSIres and the proper faclhty for their dIsplay As a rule
the decorations should be changed tWIce a week.
Should the pnces be shown? On this subject there is a
wide dIvergence of opl11ion Some merchants inSIst upon the
tIcketmg of every artIcle, whJ1e other merchants WIll not allow
one in a wmdow dIsplay. But pnces talk and are busmess
bringers, and the use of pnce tags wJ1l probaJbly be advan-tageous
to the vast army of retaIl stores throughout the coun-try.
Where they are employed, however, they should be neat
and not too obtrusive.
Opportunity should be taken to gam advantage of the
occurrence of public holidays or local events of general Im-portance,
and the windows gIven over to pictures that refer
to the occasion and at the same time display seasonable
merchandise.
Go where one will throughout the country and it WIll be
difficult to find a successful store where the windows do not
reflect its prosperity. On the other hand, the stores that are
failures can generally be discovered by the slipshod methods
of the window trimmer As a rule, success and good window
trims go together.
Most thmgs worth having are hard to obtain The sales-man
who has landed a dealer after trying for ten years to
get a part of his trade appreciates this fact
...
Urges Missionary Methods.
"Speakmg of the attendance. I thl11k that some missionary
\\ ork might be done nght here m MichIgan," saId a middle west
,ale~man recently to the ArtIsan-Record. "If dealers from towns
of 20,000 people, and less than that, in Kansas, Oklahoma and
C\ en farther pomts, find It profitable to come to Grand RapIds
tWIce a year, why shouldn't the dealers nght here at home do so?
Muskegon has five or more dealers and only one of them came.
Owosso, Hillsdale, Alma and a number of other thriving CIties
"ere not represented at all There were a number of Detroit
dealers here, but only two or three from Sagl11aw and Bay CIty
, Th1S b not as 1t should be It's a matter of habit more
than any thmg else, the habIt of buy mg from pictures of the
Made by Luee Furmture Co • Grand Rapids, MICh.
same old houses year after year. Why not come to the feast
that 1S spread for theIr benefit here in January and July, and
get m touch WIth styles and prices, picking up a few odd
p1eces and novelties perhaps to add interest to your stores?
"The exhIbItors mIght well unite on some energetk cam-paign
of education to arouse interest in this market, not only
in Mlch1gan, but m every state The attendance should be
increased three fold, and masmuch as past experience proves
that when a buyer once gets the market habit he sticks faith-fully,
the work should not be arduous. A lively, working
orga11lZatlOn, \\ lth paid secretary, would accomplish wonder-ful
results along thI" lme in my opinion."
The one man in the world who should see himself as
others see hIm IS the man who makes a sale on a nine months'
datmg
Baldwin. Tuthill & Bolton, Grand Rapids, have just re-ceived
an order for one of their saw-fitting machines from
South Austraha. Last week they made a large shipment of
machinery to St Petersburg, Russia.
The name of the Hallock Furniture company. dealers of
Rockford, Ill, has been changed to the W. & F. Furniture
company, Guy E. Williams and O. F. Finfrock having pur-chased
Mr Hallock's interest in the business.
Frank Lynch, who left New Orleans a few years ago and
went to Panama where he has become one of the most promi-nent
merchants, has placed a order for eight car loads of
furniture wlth the "Big Six" factories of Evansville, Ind.
Charles O. Dhonau, Robert T. Martin, C. Horace Clarke,
S F. Nuezel and A. J. Nunnamacher, have incorporated the
Cllleinnati College of Embalming company, capitalized at
$50,000, to teach the art of embalming in Clllcinnati. Ohio.
John Jacob Astor of New York. not one of the famous
family of that name, has been granted a patent on a steamship
chalr that may be securely fastened to the floor and quickly
released. It is held to the floor by the suction of a vacuum
cup.
The business of M. A. Hunt & Co.• Cincinnati, Ohio,
manufacturer3 of brass and iron bedsteads, has been incorpor-ated
wlth capltal stock fixed at $150,000. Warder D., Grace
A. and Howard C Hunt, Wllhard Lathrop and Albert Bet-inger,
are the stockholders
"A gentleman from Washlllgton, D. c., is reported to have
been in Greensboro, N. C., recently, inspecting the plants of the
Gate City Furmture company, which have been idle for some time,
with a view of purchasing one of them and engaging in the man-ufacture
of high grade furmture.
The Modern Furniture company, capitalized at $25,000,
has been organized to take over the business of the Nebraska
Furniture company of Salt Lake City, Utah. John A. Sharp,
president; Edward E. Jenkins. vice president and H. J. Smith,
Jr., secretary and treasurer, are the incorporators.
Hansen & Dieckman, who recently began the manufacture
of extension and hbrary tables at Clmton, Iowa, were too late to
make an exhlbltlOn this season, but have arranged wlth Henry J.
Ehlen, who has been selling furniture in Chlcago, to represent
them in that Clty. They make a line of medium quality.
The furmture factory at Nelllsville, Wis., which was
burned recently, was owned by capitalists of Baltimore. Busi-ness
men of the town have offered to rebuild the factory if the
Baltimore gentlemen will equip lt and continue business. If
the proposition lS not accepted by the Baltimore men it will
be made to others.
A new building for the Spiegel-May-Stern company.
furniture dealers of Chicago. is being erected at the corner of
"Vest Thirty-fifth and Mosspratt streets. It will be construc-ted
of brick and stone, four stories and basement with a
frontage of 180 feet on West Thirty-fifth and 125 on Moss-pratt
street and wlll be u3ed mainly by the subsidiary com-panie3
of the Spiegel-May-Stern company.
The film of Bass & Harbour, furniture and carpet dealers,
of Oklahoma Clty, Okla, has been dissolved, Mr. and Mrs.
J. F. Harbour retiring with $75,000 in cash and an eight story
office building recently erected by the firm on North Broad-way.
The business will be continued by J. M. Bass, George
C Stoneberg. George K. Williams and George L. Rose, un-der
the name of the Bass Furniture and Carpet company.
The new firm takes over the old store, stock, warehouse and
accounts.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
C. IE. Freeman, furniture dealer, of Marcus, Iowa, has sold
out to 1. C. Thompson.
The Lewlsburg (Pa) chair factory is being enlarged and
equipped with improved machmery.
The Colher Furniture company of Cordele, Ga, has
gone into voluntary bankruptcy.
Salisbury Brothers of Randolph, Vt, have just completed a
large addition to their furniture factory.
E. C Allen has purchased a half interest in the Richland
furniture store of Washington, Iowa.
J. A. Goode of Griffin, Ga, succeeds the Jackson Furni-ture
company, dealers, of Jackson, Ga.
Edward H. Church of Dover, Me. has added an under-taking
department to his furniture store
B. J. Quick has succeeded Quick Brothers in the retail
furniture business at Boyne City. Mich.
Diller Brothers, furmture dealers, McComb, Ohio, have
added an undertaking department to their business.
The Commercial Furniture company of Chicago have
increased their capital stock from $20,000 to $50,000.
The Seneca Chair company, manufacturers of Kent, 0.,
have doubled thetr capital stock flOm $300,000 to $600,000.
The White Fixture company of Grand Rapids. recently
incorporated, wJ11 make a hne of store counter and show
window fixtures.
The Pfetzing Furniture company of Peoria. Ill. are
preparing to erect a new concrete block building on the site
of their old store.
The American Bedding company of West Superbr, Wis.,
will repair thelr factory, which was burned recently and will
build an addition.
The Rockford (Ill) Desk company have started work on
a four-story bnck addltion to thelr factory which w111more
than double its capacity.
The Williams Furmture company of Gastonia, N. c., has
filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy Liabilities, about $13,
500; assets, estimated at $11,000.
The Balatin-Drabkin company, furniture manufacturers
of Youngstown, Ohio, has been incorporated and the plant
will be enlarged Capital stock $10,000
The bankruptcy schedules of Abl aham Kopelman. furni-ture
dealer, of 799 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y., show $10,543
liabilities wlth assets appraised at $2,,201
L. E Plerce, Wllham A Hall anJ J. c. Bowman, have
incorporated the Wisconsin Casket and Undertaking com-pany
of Milwaukee Capital stock, $100,000.
C. L. Saunders & Co , furniture dealers of Teague, Tex.,
have made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, W. A.
Mixon. president of the Flrst State Bank of Teague has been
appointed trustee
The name of the Hannon-Brown-vVall Furniture com-pany,
dealers of Spartansburg, S C. will be changed to the
Hanbrowall company, when they move into new quarters
which will be ready in August.
John E Whitfield, president, J M Ragland, vice-presi-dent
and Sldney J Holhster, secretaly, have incorporated
the Whitfield Furniture company of Clinton, Iowa. with
$20,000 capital stock subscribed.
The word "undertaking" has been dropped from the
George L Thomas Undertaking company of Ml1waukee, Wis
As the George L Thoma3 company, they will confine their
business to dealing in furniture.
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residence~hicago-Andrew Samuel,. 3843 Jenson
avenue, $4.500; Mathilda Andreasen, 1525 North Forty-first
street, $7,4DO; J. C. Murphy, 5525 Ehzabeth street, $3,500;
Gina Ronning, 1503 North Fortieth street, $4,600; Thomas
D. Joy, 3911 Van Buren street, $17,000; Charles M HewItt,
1453 State street. $22,000; H. M. Brown. 1253 Hood avenue,
$4,000; C. C. Hungeyer, 112 South Ohio avenue, $4,800, ~111-
ton E. Robinson, 4616 Drexel boulevard, $26,000, IE P.
Gridley, 424 Park avenue. $5,500.
Detroit, Mich.---e. C. Card, 286 Bethune avenue, $7.000,
A. F. Munro, 180 John R. Street, $6,000; D. C Lundy. H L
Hansen, 1339 Wabash street. $7,000; F. H. Falkenberg, 4Q-1.
McClellan avenue, $4.000; H F. Yatzek, Twenty-eIghth street
and MIchigan avenue, $4,250 ; Julius Pierol, Caufield and Col-lin"
streets, $3,000; John Kurntz, Goethe and Holcomb streets,
$3.500.
Denver, Col.-W. U Bliedmg Lm",ood street and Sum-mit
avenue, $10,000; Fred Schultz, Lincoln street and T" ent>-
third avenue, $4,500; Carl Ulrich. Twenty-sIxth and Cha~-
bers streets, $6.600; W. C. Fenloss, 2285 Twenty-thIrd Stleet,
$3,500; Mathew Nadler, 819 West FIfteenth street, $4,000,
William H. Wilson, Decatur and \Vest Thirty-fourth streeb,
$3,000; Dr. J. Mignolet. 1247 Milwaukee street, $7,500, Ll1-
lian Wilkins. Milwaukee street and Colfax avenue, $5,000
Milwaukee, Wis -0. P. Steuerwald, Elm and Forty-seventh
streets, $4,4DO; Charlotte Febuer. Buffman and Bur-leigh
streets, $3,000; John Schrenk, Mitchell and Eighteenth
streets. $4,500; Henry Kiefer, Mitchell and Pearl streets, $4,-
000; John W. Mariner, 70 Prospect avenue, $3,000, John
Gloyer. Twenlty-tbjird and Mineral streets, $4,500, C S
Rueckert, Twenty-fifth and Hopkins streets, $4,000
Buffalo, N. Y -Louisa J. Nenno 138 Enrrlewood avenue , b ,
$3.500; Harry E. Phillips, 154 Huntington street, $4,000,
Joseph B. Johnson, 1002 Humboldt street, $4,000; George \V
Jansen, 996 Humboldt street, $3.500; Fred A Bell, 99 Fargo
street, $8,(X)(); Madeline Lascewitz, 644 Amherst street, $3,-
000; Rosalie Kajdasz, 52 Empire street. $4,000; Herman Ad-ler,
309 Gibson street, $5,500.
Omaha, Neb.-Thomas Hurd. 811 South Thirt, -tlmd
~treet, $10,000; W. J. Hunter. 2107 Bmney street, $4,600, A
E. Swans en, 3327 Seward street, $3,000; John \Y Robbllls,
126 North Thirty-eighth street, $5,000; PhIlIp A Scholl, 1912
South Twenty-eighth street, $3,000; V/ilham Anderson, 4146
North Fortieth avenue, $3,(X)(); A N. Gross, 3317 ::\Iartha
",ueet. $3,000.
St. Louis, Mo -Julia K Gilhs, 758 Euclid a\ enue, $5,-
600; Nettie R Francis, 5948 Berlin avenue, $4.500, ThIeme
Wolf. 3020 Magnoha avenue, $8,500; W. H Lesser, 5344
Washington avenue, $22,000; Fanme F. Fleming, 4264 Flora
boulevard, $7,500, Della Epstein, 303 UnIOn boulevard, $25.-
000; A E Spencer, 4424 Rutger street. $5,000; H A DIa-mant,
6008 Washington avenue. $7,000.
Grand Rapids, Mieh -WIlliam A Gunn, 29 Jefferson
avenue, $4,600; Verne B Pope. 204 Cornme avenue $3000
Peter Brouwer. 260 Alexander avenue, $3,000, \V.' \V'alte;
Smith, 188 Eastern avenue, $3,000; Mary \iValthur. Carner
and Christ streets, $3,000.
Los Angeles, Cal-Mary M. Stanley, 713 Kensington
road. $3.500; Frank Morris, 1122 LeIghton avenue $3500'
Flora J. Caphanson, 857 Manhattan place, $4,000; Nell:e R:
Higgins, 615 North New HampshIre street, $7,000
Columbus, Ohio-Anna Mc~arney. 58 ChIttenden ave-nue.
$3,000; F. A. Rostofer, 2 Mam street, $4,000.
Indianapolis. Ind -James McGllllchey, Lexington ave-
HARDWOOD LUMBER
II SA~~D t QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED rAN D MAHOGANY
I I ....... - .... --- .... . ....
nue anJ State street, $3,(X)(), Louisa Ricks, 325 N. State
o,treet, $4,000, G J Cook. 820 Washington boulevard, :j;5,OOO,
J V 1Iaddlllg ,119 Northwestern avenue, $3,000.
Portland, Ore -J G Celhson, East Twelfth and SiskIyvu
streets. $4,500, Mrs Colson, East Sixteenth and Knott streets
$5,000, Alfred Peterson, MIlwaukee street and Foster road:
$3,500, J H Himes, 477 Everett street, $3,000.
Salt Lake City. Utah-H. F. O'Byrne, 445 Catherine
street, $6,000; Charles Gooch, 408 North Second West street,
$3,500; C A Holmquist, 1495 South Third Eas1tstreet, $3.(x)().
Kansas CIty, Mo -L. J. Dwyer, 3233 Karnes boulevard,
$5,000, C F Smith. 3705 Tracy street, $16,500.
PhIladelphia, Pa.-Emanuel Furth. 4000 Pine street, $16,-
000; Dr George G. Ross, 1721 Spruce street, $4,000; F. B.
DavIs. Springfield avenue and Lincoln jrive, $30,000; Dr. B.
L Gordon, 928 South SIxth street. $6,000; Isidor Cherikowich,
1161 Venango street, $7,800.
Syracuse, N. Y ---Mary L Powers, 1455 West Onondaga
street, $4,800; Henry W Crofott, 223 West Ostrander street.
$3,500; Otto Hoppe, 228 Burdick avenue, $3,000; P. D. Mc
Carthy, 516 East Genesee street. $3,000.
Lmcoln, Nebr -William Kearns. 2001 North Twenty-sIxth
street, $4,000, O. H. Thompson, 1521 U street, $3,000;
::\Irs MIller, 3009 Holdredge street, $3,500.
Duluth, Mllln -John Korby, Woodland avenue near
T", enty-first street, $3,500; L. C. Bradley. Fourth street and
T~ entleth avenue, east. $6,500; T. G. Gustafson, West First
street and Twenty-ninth avenue, $3,000.
RIchmond. Va -Cora B. Watkins, Jefferson Park and
~Iosley street, $6.000
MmneapolIs, Mmn -S B. Appleton. 4652 South Emer-son
street, $5,200; Moses Goldberg, 804 North Dupont, $3.-
600; W B. Dickson, 2441 Grand avenue, $4.000; Mrs. Selma
Barck, 4958 South Dupont street $3000
Oakland Cal-Mrs G. Heeseman. Grand and Bellevue
avenues, $9,000; Mrs E. Mejia, 1286 Emerald street, $3,450;
C E Lange, 728 Jayne street, $4,875; F. W. Edwards. 212
Grand avenue. $3,500
Bride's Coneveyance.
There was to be a wedding in the church opposite the
J ones house and little Harriet Jones stood at the parlor
window looking eagerly out. Yesterday there had been a
funeral, and thIS she had watched with equal interest. As
the sound of dIstant wheels smote her ears she strained her
eyes to see what was coming, and caught a glimpse of a
far-off carriage
"Oh. Momma, Momma." she cried, all excitement· ,
"come quick, here's the hearse with the bride in it."
WEEKLY ARTISAN
. Will Encourage Small Factories.
A unique scheme recently advanced, whereby an oppor-tUnity
wJ11 be provided for small manufacturers to obtain
locatIOns w1thout expense of erectmg costly factones prom1se"
to become one of the leadmg busmess features of Salt Lake
CIty The Herald-Republican of that C1tyS says, it is proposed
to erect a large factory buIlding provIded with all sorts of
fac1ht1es such as trackage, power, pulleys and the hke. so that
It w111only be necessary for a manufaclturer w1th 'imall capital
to move mto the place and start work. It may be necessary
for 'iuch a man to purchase a "mall 'iupply of spec1al machin-ery,
but the great m1tIai expense incIdent to starting a factory
wJ11 be ehminated
It 1S pomted out at the present tllne that many people
come to the cIty w1th small cap1tal and good ideas and anx-
IOUS to ",tart a manufactory They may have a few hundred
dollars and they may have thousands The first thmg re-qUIred
1S the 10catlOn Land 1S eXlpensive near the railroads,
where good trackage fac1hties are avaJ1able Three or four
thousand dollars may be requIred to purchase a slte E'ght
or ten thousand dollars wJ11 be reqmred after this to erect a
factory and equip 1t wIth the necessary power faclhtles ana
machlllery By the tIme the plant is ready the capItal of the
manufacturer is exhausted and he 1S compelled to mortgage
the plant to raIse enough to carryon operation'i
Generally, howeyer, the ne", leomer doe'i not get so far
He has not suffic1ent cap1tal wIth wh1ch to purcha'ie the
ground for locatmg hI" factory It 1'i dIfficult, perhaps, to
organize a company tlo undertake the propos1tion and besiJes
there 1S the matter of time which has to be cOlllsdered If
the manufacturer 1S fortunate enough to obtain the cap1tal re-qUIred
to erect the bUlliding, eqUlp it he may be unable to make
the busmes'i "go" and he i'i then obhged to lelave the city for
some other place, d1ssatIsfied with cond1tions here, and the
cap1tahsts who furnished the means for the enterprise are
hkely to say that he was an impostor and are not so w11hng
to undertake a similar propositIOn m the future
Vl1th the building all ready for occupancy the first dIffi-culty
wou1d be eliminated All that would be required would
be the purchase of such special machlllery as was necessary
and the place coulJ be rented by the manufacturer for a
small monthly rental If the busmess d1d not succeed no one
would be the loser but the manufacturer h1mself Succe"s
would be more likely, also, Slllce the manufacturer would be
able to starte in a small way and conduct a busllless of the
Slze '" ith '" hich he wa'i faml1iar In other w1ords, the pr -Jp-oSltIon
would be 'i1mJ1ar to that now presented to retal!
dealers who find rt:ady for the1r occupancy e'(cellent quarters
of all kmd'i 'iO that they have lonly to 'iup,ply the strck III trade
and proceed to business
The 1dea apphed to manufadunng has been tned m
Grand Rap1d'i, ~11ch, with great 'iucces'i, says the Hemld-
Republican It would bnng about a revolutIOn 1ll the manu-factunng
busmes'i, 1t 1S 'ia1d Almost every wleek ne", manu-facturer'i
come here from other 10cahtIes and look oyer loca-tlOn"
for theIr busmess It may be that the SIze of the busI-nes'i
does not ",arrant a new large bUlldUlg It may be that
only a small 'ipace is reqUIred for carrYlllg on the undertak-mg.
There is no such place in the cIty at the present time
that IS avaIlable A regular factory builldmg is reqmred for
such enterpri'ie'i and there ,hould be also trackage facilities
an JpolWer A company could be onganized, a site secured on
the west slde m a good location and near the milroad tracks
Then a good factory buJ1dmg could be erected and leased to
small manufacturers
It has been stated by a realty man here, who suggested
25
the enterprise, that an im estment Y1eldmg at least 6 per cent
mcome would be practIcally guaranteed The scheme has
many attfiactlVe features and 1t is expected that a number of
cap1tahsts wJ11 take up the propos1tlOn m the near future and
carry It to 'iome defin1te conduslOn
Hardwood Lumber in England.
Answenng an lllqUlry relatIve to the opportulllty and
pnces pa1d for Amencan hard wooJs III BIrmIngham, Consul
!\lbert Halstead report'i as follow'i, addmg the complaints of
Enghsh dealers concerning the preparatIOn for market
A leadmg tImber merchant of Blnmlllgham says that
httle lumber of any kmd IS bought direct from foreIgn coun-tne..,
by dealers m the mtenor of England, but that practIcally
all of 1t IS purchased from dealers or brokers at the great
ports of the c0untry, and that 1t 1S 1mposs1ble to gwe any hard
and fast hst of pnces, becat1'ie the pnces vary as much as 4
cent'i per foot, accordmg to the cond1tIon of the lumber on
arnval He stated that it ",as surpri'illllg the drfference 111
conJltlOn 'If lumber on arnval, some of It appeanng to be
stowed away so as to be more mJured than the avemge on
the VOl age, but the particular ground for the dIfference was
due to the fact that whIle seme lumber manufacturers were
part1cularl} cardul a~ to how they sawed thelr lumber so as
to get the be'it out of 1t that was pO'islble and make It attrac-tIve
for the purposes for whIch It was reqUIred, grading 1t
accor lmg to quahty, others sawed carele~sly, often wastefully
and 'ih1pped the1r lumber m such cond1tlOn that more work
was reqUIred on It and 1t was not as suited to the purposes
for whIch It was reqUIred as it should be
There has also been complalllt that kJ1n-dned lumber
Vyarps far more than lumber that has been permitte'd to sea-
'ion naturally In connectIOn WIth warpmg, an mstance in
",hlch a piece of partIcularly fine lumber wanted for a carved
pIcture frame was not SUItable because It was so cut as to be
certam to warp badly, may be gIven The instance, of course,
was small and the faJ1ure of the sale comparatIvely unimport-ant,
but the fact that the lumber was cut so as to permit of
the maxImum amount of warping would indicate a certain
degree of careles'iness m the preparatIOn of the article for the
market
Though lumber IS not packe1 and cnated or boxed ltke
many other products shIpped abroad, the foregOIng state-ment
by the largest lumber dealer of thIS dIstrict m regard
to lumber crmIng from the CllIted States should be made
known, so that shIppers might fully apprecIate the I1l1portance
of so prepanng theIr product, part1cularly hard wood and
other woods for fine purpose"" a<; tn make 1t attractive and
thus secure better pnce'i and a retadler market
The 'iucce'i'iful sale"man must stay on hl'i Job He can-not
go on a fishIng excurSlOn for a month WIth the purpose
of doublmg hIS work In the month to follow, and make a good
showmg at the end of the year Every workmg day should
be a record of sales Such a record IS nearly impo'isible of
attamment
Success WIth one lllle need not deter a designer 111 an
effort to bnng out a better one.
Some of the buyers have more confidence m a !Jne than
t~e man who made it.
The great central west IS furnishIng the greater part of
the orders as usual.
Minnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture
Association
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
OFFICERS-PreSlctent J R Ta\ lor Lake Benton MlIln Vice Preslctent D R Thomp.on Rockforct. MlIln
Trea ...urer B A <;choeneberger Perham 1\t'nn ~ecretaf) W L Grapp )ane<;vllle Mmn
EXECUTlVF LO\l\lITTEE Chairman Geo Klelll Mankato Mum 0 Simon, Glencoe. Mum, W I
Harns \1!t1lleapoIJs, l\1tnn C Dalllel.,on Cantlon Falls
BULLJi.:TIN No. 157.
SUOCEISS VERSUS RECREATION,
The cont1l1uance of your success depends largely on
your health This world 1S made for health and happ1l1css,
the richest price of eX1stence If yoU are t1red out, feel weak
and weary. sleep does not refresh yOU and your appetIte IS
poor In thIS hot season, yoU need recreatIOn, } au need a
vacation Success, after all, 1S an easy matter, noth1l1g strange
about it. It does not reqUlre a specIal genIUS nor demand a
cultivated talent To be sure, there IS anI} one \\ a\ to suc-cess
and that 1S work Everybody can \\ ark That lsn t
genius That means energy, force, strength, 1l1tellectually
and physically
Now. in order to retam strength. It IS necessary to de-vote
some time to the buJ1d1l1g up of } our strength One
way to accomphsh thIS, IS to take a rest Remember that
your nerves are not made of steel It IS the stead, ~nnd at
our daily task that tIres the body more and \\ eakens the
nerves than anyth1l1g else' That IS the reason \\ In ,ou
ought to have a change and get rested up "\0\\ I" the tIme
while bus1l1ess 1S dull and the weather condItions most fa, ar-able
The furnIture dealer should have someth1l1g more be-
SIdes h1S usual breakfast 111 the morn1l1g. the tnp to the
store, g01l1g thru the same drudgery of makmg sales, etc.
and doing this 315 days 111 the year and pOSSIbly some Sun-days
Do you reahze that th1s manner of hV1l1g WIll sooner
or later consume your strength and make you entirely unfit
to work unless you take a vacatIOn? The managers of large
firms are beg1l1n1l1g to recogl1lze the necessIty of gnT1l1g theIr
help an annual vacatlOn They know that theIr emplm ees
WIll do much better work after the vacatlOn, \" hen they are
rested up Oughtn't you really to do lIke\\ Ise? You say y:JU
can not get away, that the many detaIls of your store need
to be looked after V\T e say, "\\ here there IS a WIll there IS
a way." and if you have not the detaIls of the bus1l1ess do\\ n
to that point where you are master of them 1l1stead of the1r
be1l1g master of you, you need to be pItted You need a
vacatlOn doubly sure Already you have dra\\ n too heal J1y
on your nerve power and unless yOU take the \\ ell needeJ
rest you will pay the penalty and find that } OUr busll1ess
does not at all prosper or run smoothly as It should
There 1S no other state where you can get so close to
nature as 111 'Our own M1l1nesota, WIth ItS beautIful scenery
and innumerable lakes, \\ here yoU can spend a most profitable
vacatlOn Try It and yoU wl1l be conv1l1ced that a couple of
weeks spent at one of these lakes IS the best mvestment that
you can make, and after you return to your customary work,
you wJ1l find it no longer a drudgery, but a pleasure, and
success is yours.
J R TAYLOR, Pres
Are You In Earnest.
We need to have yOU co-operate with us By "You," we
mean, the members of our Retail Furl1lture Dealers' associ-ation.
Just stop for one moment and count up the different
art cle" that you hay c contnbutcd for our department in the
\\ etkl} Artisan, so far th1S year. How many d1d we hear
} au sa} ?-
i\ow surely each of our members has splendId Ideas
and good thoughts that would help our department 1mmense-
Iv and \\ e are sure that they could wnte up good spIcy artl-
L1e~ that \\ auld be a credIt to our assoclatlOn \V III y:Ju
not bear thIS 111 m1l1d and take an hour or two some day 'Or
e\ enll1g (do It now) and wnte up someth1l1g that you have
been benefitted by and whIch wJ1l benefit the rest of us?
Shal e } our good thou~ht WIth us-the furnIture men Kane
are "0 \\ Ise that \\ e cannot learn from our neIgh bars
II c are In a WIde awake terntory, but if each indiVIdual
1u"t peg~ed away at the same old gnnd, da} in and day out,
tak1l1g no l1:Jtlce of the outSIde world, where would we be at
the end of the year, both 111tellectually and financ1ally?
I" our a",;oclat1On g01l1g"forward or backward? We must
not go back\\ ard by any means Decide for yourself Just
\\ here } au "tand 1I1dlvldually WIth oUr department, and if
} au are at a los,; to kno\\, Just make sure that you are on the
UP\\ ard clImb and wnte that artIcle, that you have been 111-
tend1l1g to wnte so long and you WIll have done that whIch
h ,our duty and at the same time yoU \\111 have written an
artIcle that v au WIll be proud of when you "ee it 111 print
!\fter yOU have done thIS, there WIll be no doubt in our
m1l1ds, that you really are 111 earnest
Do Not Forget Your Dues and Subscription Fee.
Are your dues paId to the assocIation and what about
} our subscnptlOn fee of $100 for the Weekly Artisan, that
1" dOIng "uch good work for us? Get bU3y WIth U'i and pay
up, so that \\ e can start in the last half of this year, WIth a
clean slate
It IS up to each of us to make good by contnbut111g
\\ hat IS requIred of us It IS not much, so Just attend to th1S
httle matter of sendll1g 111your dues an,l also your subscnp-tlOn
to the IVeekly ArtIsan of $1 00
I\~ c cannot expect to get returns unless we pay for what
\\ e get The \\~ eekly ArtIsan cannot afford to send us their
paper unkis we pay for same promptly We cannot carry
on d bus1l1ess unle"s our customers remIt for artIcles bought
Prompt actIOn 111 thIS httle matter WIll be greatly appre-
CIated by all concerned.
:Mlost any <;alesman can accustom hImself to a small order
more readIly than a large one. He has had practice with such
Many a man who can deSIgn an artIcle of furmture would
not succeed when he tried to sel11t.
Censure serves a good purpose All men need tonmg
down as well as tomng up
Salesmen deal in facts, designers m dreams
WEEKLY ARTISAN
SUMMER SEASON A SUCCESS.
Brake the Record for the Number of Buyers Ar-rivins
in Grand Rapids.
The summer sales sea~on in Grand Rapids has been much
more successful than was anticipated at the opening It has been
at least fifty per cent better, both 111 the number of buyers and the
volume of business, than was expected a month before the open-mg.
When the Daily Artt~an-Record closed it summer season---
the number of buyers registered m the Grand RapIds market wa~
1121. On Fnday and Saturday 64 more arnved, making a
total of 1185, and as they will continue to come for a week at
least the total for the season will surely be over 1200 and may
reach 1300. The highest number registered any previous season
was 1120 in 1906.
The season did not close with the dlscontll1uance of the
Daily. Though some of the salesmen have left the market and
started out on the road, all of the exhibIts ,vlll be kept mtact un-til
the end of the month Most of the local factory show room~
are kept open throughout the year, and several of the displays
111 the five exhibitIOn bU1ldlngs Will hereafter be kept open With
'Sale.smen in attendance between the regular sales seasons. Fol-lowing
is the list of buyers who arnved on Fnday and Satur-day,
July 22 and 23:
R. G. Fuller, Savannah, Ill.
B. Boothroyd, Frankltn, Pa
Frank R. Pryor, Pueblo, Col
Joseph Smith, St Louis, Mo.
B. Feldman, Little Falls, N. Y.
M. Feldman Johnstown, N. Y.
A Braverman, Cedar RapIds, Ia
Geo D Epp, Epp Bros., (Ene, Pa.
A E Murnlls, Bee HIve, Portage, WIS
C C. Colyear, Colyear's, Lo~ Angeles, Cal
Oscar Sotier, Davis-Satter company, Alton, III
H E Cave, C J Benson & Co , Baltimore, Md
C. J Benson, C. J. Benson & Co, Baltimore, Md
Frank E Ott, C F. Brower & Co, Lexington, Ky.
C. F. Brower, C. F. Brower & Co, Lexmgton, Ky
E M. Brown, Brown-Dean company, Tulsa. Okla.
L M\.:Manus, L. M J\JCcManus, & Co , ~1acon, Ga.
F Droit, Koch Outfittll1g company, EvansvIlle, Ind.
E. D. Eichenlaub, W. F. Eichenlaub, Pittsburg, Pa.
J A. Richards, Palace FurnIture Co, WichIta, Kan.
H ]. Cloyes, Home Outfitting company, Quincy, Ill.
T. P Best, W E MIller company. 'Winchester, Ind.
T. E. Swan, Swan Furmture company, Tyler, Texas
L. W. McManus, L. M McManus & Co., Macon, Ga
]. W. Stell, Swan Furniture company, Corsicana, Tex
27
F. Stuerwauld, John Stuerwald & Son, Newark, N. Y.
E C. O'NeIl, Swan Furniture company. Cleburn, Tex
E. S Swan, Swan Furniture company, Palastll1e, Tex.
T 0 Bass, Bass Furl11ture company, Muskogee, Okla
.:vI C Martin, T H Springer's tEstate, El Paso, Texas.
Lee Stem, Ottum",a FurnIture company, Ottumwa, Ia
W. C Schelle, Swan FurnIture company, Marshall, Tex.
E M. Brown, The Brown Beane company, Tulsa, Okla.
C A H Thom, Gregory, Mayer & Thom, DetrOit, Mich.
\V E Koepp, Koepp-Mueller company, MIlwaukee, WIS.
T E. Harbour, Bass Furl11ture company, Muskogee, Okla.
A H Swartz, Swartz Furmture company,
- Date Created:
- 1910-07-23T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:56
- 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/145