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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-02-12
Weekly Artisan; 1910-02-12
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS
DBLIC LIBR1RY ~~~==~~
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH••FEBRUARY 12. 1910
Our No. 171 Patented Sand Belt Machine
will sand flat surfaces and
irregular shapes, including
mouldings, better and faster
than any other process. Nearly
1000 of our Sanders now in use
by your competitors. Why give
them an advantage over you in
your sanding department?
We also manufacture special
patented Sanding and Mortising Machines that are proving extremely profitable to chair manufacturers.
Ask for CATALOG "E"
No. 171 SAND BELT MACHINE.
WYSONG & MILES CO.,
W
Cedar St. and
Sou. R. R. Greensboro, N. C.
"l~heBest Truck---The Strongest Truck
This is the famous Gillette Roller Bearing Factory
Truck---the truck on which it is said, "One man can
move a load of 3000 pounds while with the other trucks it
takes three men."
This is the truck that is strong where others are
weak---the truck that has an unhreakable malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are looking for if you wish
to invest zn rather than waste money on factory trucks.
Gillette Roller Bearing CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. ----------.- ,E The Lightest Running,
Longest Lasting Truck
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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One of Our New
FIBER·RUSH
PATTERNS
Freight
Shipment
Insured
PLACE YOUR ORDERS NOW
Our greatly enlarged line of Fiber ..Rush Furniture and our recently increased
facilities for its manufacture, insure a wide variety to select from and prompt ship..
ment of orders.
Genuine Fiber-Rush Furniture is manufactured solely by The Ford &
Johnson Co.
. Th.e following salesmen will represent the Company in the respective
terntones:
W. B. Chase (
J. B. Gough ~
C. G. Shaw
J. N. Mehornay
Paul Clark
Tom Woodbury
C. F. Lehman
E. A. Sibley
J. R. Walters
SALESMEN 1910
Pacific Coast J. I. Brewer
J. R. Cline
J. C. Hubbard
L. D. Green
F. H. Waterbury
J. S. Boyer
F. E. Hunn
L. H. Steiner
A. H. Jennings
Southwest
Michigan and Ohio
Central South
Southeast
City of Chicago
Floor salesman
Floor salesman
Floor salesman
City of Chicago
THE FORD & JOHNSON CO.
Iowa, Nebraska
Missouri and Colo.
Illinois and Indiana
Northwest
City of Chicago
Credit Department
Sales Manager
II
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Show Room: 1435-37 Wabash Avenue. Chicago Warehouse: 16th Street and Indiana Avenue,
Chicago. Factory: Michigan City, Indiana. IIj
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Complete lines of samples are displayed at 1411Michigan Ave ..
Chicago, and in the Furniture Exhibition Building, Evansville,
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber SUItes, Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, Odd Dressers, Chlfforobes.
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, In ImitatIOn
golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upnght Folding Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, China Closets,.
Combination Book and Library Cases.
Made by The Karges FurnIture Co
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association .
...... • • • • __ • • • • • ~e:- .. _ •• - •• _. - - - • • • • • - - - ••• • - '"'
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards In plam oak, Imitation quartered oak, and sohd quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers In umtahon quartered oak, lr<lltatlon
mahogany, and imitation golden oak
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE co. Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, Dlnmg and Dressing Tables
THE METAL FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds. Cnbs, WlIe Spnngs and Cots
WEEKLY ARTISAN 3
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Made bv World Furllllure Company. Made by Karges Furllllure Comp,ny.
Made by Bockslege Furlllture Co.
Made by Bockstege Furlllture Co
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4 \\/EEKLY ARTISAN
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Have you had anything from The Luce Furniture Co. lately?
Bedroom and Dining Room equipment in profusion.
Time---Now. Place---Grand Rapids.
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C"ALLENGE REfRIGERATOR COMPANY
GRAND HAVEN, MICH., U. S. A.
5
COMPLETE
LINES Of
REfRIGERATORS
AT RIG"T PRICES
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE
AND LET US NAME YOU PRICE.
GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRARY
30th Year-No. 33
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., FEBRUARY 12, 1910 Issued Weekly
CONNELLSVILLE COKE TAKES A TUMBLE
Various Theories as to thc~ Causes and Effects of the Decline of Twenty Per Cent
in Prices.
Adv1ces from P1ttsburg Ieport the greatest dechne in the
pnce of coke ever 1ecorded m a smgle week Smce last Satur-day
Connellsvdle coke has dropped from $2 50 per ton to
$2 and sales have been made at $1.90 for spot dellvery while
contract coke, on whIch the manufacturers were asking $2.65
a ~,eek ago IS be111goffered at $2 25.
The mdependent operators m the Connellsvdle legion are
demorahzed T,,,o meetmgs have been held sl11cethe middle
of last week Efforts al e bemg made 10 1eVlVe the merger
plan which faded last yeal as the only solutIon to the SltU-atlOl1
whIle steel corporatIOn 111fluences have volunteered to
assist the 1I1dependents 111 fOlmmg a sellmg agency.
0, er-plOductlOn 111 the Connellsvdle field, coupled with
the fadure of the steel corp01 atIon to take coke from the open
malket for the filst half of the year, m as large quantItIes as
II as expected, 15 blamed for the present situation, but thele
IS a strong SUSpicion that the present conditIon of the indus-t!}
1Sthe 1esult of a plan to force the mdependent operators
mto the combine and thm IestOle pnces to figures that ruled
a month ago, or hlghel, and thus preven1 a recurrence of such
a state of affairs as has existed thIs "eek
It IS a fact, hO\, e\ eI, that smce the first of the year the
olltpUt of the Connellsville IeglOn has mcreased steaddy, while
shIpments have fallen off Last "eek, the plOductlOn for the
upper and 101'e111 Connellsvdle fields was 474,496 tons, the
hIghest 111 the histOl y of the 1 eglOn Up to last November
the recOld for a smgle week's output "as 426,000 tons, made
clUl1l1gthe heIght of the 1907 boom
It 1Sconceded that 1£ the pnce of coke remains at $2 or
less in the Connellsvdle region It wdl soon cause a decline in
the cost of such val1et!es of bituminous coal as are used for
heat1l1g pUlposes-that householde1 s "ho a1e now bUlning
coal p1efer to use coke and wiII qUIckly change If plices are
to IUna1l1 a" at p1esent quoted
Such a movement would not be t 'epected to affect the
cost of soft or steam coal ho\\ever Few factories ale equip-ped
WIth coke-bUlnmg gi ates and It would have to decIme
much 11101ethan fifty cents a ton in the pnce of coke or the
hlgher glade of blltuminolls coal to make it profitable fOl
manufactUl el s to use It for steam plOduc1l1g purposes.
Some of the leaders of labOl orga111Latiom, particularly
the m1l1ers have advanced the Idea that the decline in the
pnce of coke has been forced hy what they call the Coal
Trust and that is the fil st move of the operators against the
demand of the miners for higher wages-that the purpose is
to cut prices of not only coke but all kmds of coal and thus
create an excuse for refusing an increase or perhaps for cut-tmg
the present scale of wage.
vVhlle lower pnces for fuel '" ould be heartily welcomed
by nearly .111 consumers very few Will expect the producers
to 3dopt the pollcy predICted by the labor leaders and st!ll
fei\ er "III expect any decrease m their fuel bIlls dunng the
com111gsixty days.
Failure to Make Sales.
A merchant, a manufacturer of interior finishes and two
newspaper men met at a table in a popular cafe in Grand Rapids
recently and m the course of the conversation that ensued the
manufacturer remarked:
"I call(>clat} our store yesterday and asked for a mackintosh.
The man 111 charge of the clothmg department smiled and re-marked
that you had not had one 111 :,tock in the past ten years.
He called other salesmen to his side and '>tated the object of my
call. The salesman regarded me as an escaped lunatic and inti-mated
that I should be taken into custody. I visited other de-partment
stores but was unable to purchase a mackintosh. I
'>pend much of my tIme in the woods and need such a garment
vel J much" ..If thet e is anythmg that will make me wild It is
the 1eport of such an eApenence as you had at our store.," re-marked
tht merchant "\Vhy we have mackintoshes in stock at
thIS moment-we alway" have them in stock in season. I am
tempted to discharge the whole outfit of wooden headed salesmen.
Your expe nence was the result of their faIlure to keep informed
a" to what we have in stock."
The merchant, who is a thorough bU"ll1e"sman, pushed his
roast beef aSide and it wa" pLlinly evtdent that his appetite had
been spoilcd.
I have had under considet ation for some time the employ-ment
of· a rule reqmring salesmen to report why sales have not
been made to callers. While the enforcement of the rule would
place a lot of additional work upon the office I believe it would
prove profitable," the merchant continued, picking daintily at a
salad.
"We introduced the 1U1e~everal years ago," the manufac-turer
remclrked, "and have profited thereby Whenever we fail
to secure an order we have sought, I am promptly informed why.
It IS a good 1ule and I think it will be adopted by merchants
and manufacturers generally when its value IS understood."
WEEKLY ARTISAN
RETAIL FURNITURE ADVERTISING
Conducted by H. H. STALKER.
Dealers Are Urged to Send in Samples of Their Advertisements and to Offer Any Suggestionl!l
and Helps Which They Believe Will Be of Benefit to Others. This Department
Aims to Be of Practical Sel."vice. Help Us to Make It So.
Here's an 1dea f01 a wmdow ch~pla} Beg, hm HJ\\ or sk,d
three wax figures, two of men and one woman Then, m }om
wmdow, make a regular stage setting sho\\ mg one large room
beautifully and tastefully furnished Wlth the figm e ot a man
and woman comfortably pOS1tioned. Suppo:Ol11g' ou mahe 1t
dllling room scene with table set for suppeI. Have man and
woman at table, with an appropnate settlllg about them ot
buffet, chllla cabmet, chaus, etc Go I11tO deta1l perfecth
~!!iiii<a~a?m
This Is a Positive $8 Styled
"Arts and Crafts"
Rut we t60k all :\
Grand Rapido mak-er
had left on Jan,
1 and offer them
Monday at each onl)
Rocker 0
Eal J) Lngll.;;h finlbh t)f course-beautlfull) '\\&'\.ed-made
UP flom hea'lh dlnlE>llbfon€'d quarter sawed oak The pOJ::>t.,:
and allns ale hand <;hapeu-the seat i,;; full sprtngNl and
co\elcd "ah folnC\ Boston leather It s one of those- ma<s-sh
e, unIque. 'E't thorough Iv comfortable pit."cE's that will
loom up nlo~t an'\" hE'te S""e them in the windo\\ s-see
othe-r exanlph:-,;; of FtlllutLll e llnoerpl iCIng In the wlnJo\'\ <,.,-
see what a lILG1~ alnOllnt of money J. au 11 c;ave b) wdlkln a
mel p block 01 '0 tarthel than usual It WILL pay) ou
The Omaha
Furniture & Carpet Co.,
1209- 211-1213Farnam St.
Have food on the table, dIshes on the buffet w1th fruit in them,
fancy d1shes 1ll the chllla closet, a vase of fio\\ ers on top, etl
Give it the atmosphere of a real home. Then have a d1Vldlllg
partttion. Picture a d1sconsolate, lonesome ll1dn \\ ho room.,
and boards. Use old furnIture, out of date, such as 1mght be
found 111a boardlllg house Have an old wa.,lbtancl \\ 1th old
style pitcher and bowl and other fur11lshings to match Make
the sett111g as forlorn and cheerless as you can Then w1th ap-propriately
worded signs, not so conspicuous as to dIsturb the
harmony, suggest the d1fference and urge young folks to get
married and hve m comfort The contrast may be made so vi-vid
that it cannot fall of the desired effect. It w111touch an
d1h\\ e1ing Ch01d in the heal t of many a s111gle person, It w111
get them to thmk1l1g along hnes calculated to l!lcrease the sales
ot t1111l1tule and vv 111cduse some d1latory persohs to hurry the
hdpP\ e\ lilt '\ ot only that, but 1t w1ll attract general attentlOn,
uuse fay orable comment, make other sales, etc. Yes, certainly,
It \\111 be a httle trouble It will take time and labor. But it
\\ 111also pdY and vI 111add to your reputatlOn and presttge in the
commu11lty You l111ght carry out the plan throughout the
This Is a Positive $8 Styled
"Arts and Crafts"
Rocker
But we tlHlk all a
Grand Rapids mak-er
had left on lall.
I and offer them
Monday at each only
Early Bngllsh tinlbb, of course-beautifully waxed-made
up from heavily dimensIoned quarter saw...:! oak The PUbts
and arms are band shaped-the seat Is full sprJnged and
covered with fane, Boston leather It'., one of those ma~·
slve, u;'lqu.., 'at thoroughlv comfortable pieces that wlll
loom up most anvwhet e See them in the wlndows--see
other examples of Furnitule underpIIClng In the wtnlo\\b-see
what a Huon amount of money you II save b) walkln a
mere block 01 _0 brthel than usual It WILL pay )OU
The Omaha
Furniture & Carpet Co.•
1209-:2U-1213Farnam St.
hou~e, c1hplaymg one room at a tIme coztly and artIstIcally ar-ranged.
The Omaha Furniture & Carpet company has spoiled a
111lghty good "ad" WIth a hideous, heavy border which complete-ly
overshadO\\ s everything else The printer is probably at
fault, but If the "ad" man had laid out his work and specified
the n~ht k1l1d of bo1 cler, it would not have occurred. The
"ad" 15 reproduced as 1t came 111 and I have also reproduced
It w1th conect bordel treatment The improvement is ObVlOUS.
Thi5 lead., me to almost plead w1th you to watch these details.
... WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
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In GRAND RAPIDS Only,
January, 1910,
OLD SPACE,
Furniture Exhibition Bldg"
Fourth Floor.
The UDELL Line
MANY NEW ONES in
Library Bookcases, Medicine Cabinets,
Ladies' Desks, Commodes,
Sheet Music Cabinets, Folding Tables,
Piano Player Roll Cabinets.
A Lme whIch IS well worth &010& to .ee A Lme that you
should have a complete catalog of. The fact that you have not our
catalog can only be rectIfied by WrIting for your copy to-day.
THE UDELL WORKS
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. ~.-
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IT PAYS I 'lay It agall1, good (hsplay 15 half the "acl."
Don't overlook it
Tn the~e ddY~ of :,trel1UOU~competJtion one is inclined to
bear down too heavIly on pnce, and not enough on quality.
Puce b a good thing to feature, because folks hke to know the
cost of ihings that interest them On the other hand there are
many who are Just as much concerned about quahty; they be-heve
in buying the best, and the latter CL1SS, are, in the last anal-
YSIS,the best class to cater to. 1£ you gain a reputation for
reliablhty, when you do see fit to have a sale your announce-ments
WIll carry greater weight, and consequently stronger pull-ll1g
power. Let the other fellow do the price slashing; the
fl anilc spell-bll1dll1g stunt. Do you go quietly, persistently,
and everla"tll1g after the kl11dof trade that stIcks, the hl11dthat
I~ not carned away WIth every wind that blows, but which is
determined to buy good goods, realIze that a fair return must be
paId, and know where to go to get what they want. It IS
perhaps slmver to blllld up a trade of thIS character, but its a
hedp more sailsfYll1g"111 the end, and more profitable too. And
on top of all that yon and yonr bn,ines, command twice the
1 e,pect of the community.
Procrastination.
Is saId to be the thief of tIme, but a bettel lendellng, it
5eel115to the v,nter, is, "ProcrastmatlOn IS the thief of pI os-pellty"
Many a battle has been lo~t because of procrastI-natIOn,
and many a bml11ess fallure could have been avOIded
kid the manager had the wisdom and foreSIght to Sleze on
the best thmg S before It was too late In the manufactUl e of
furnIture thIS IS peculiarly the case Here IS a new machl11e,
that WIll do a thIrd more than the old one, and do It better.
Jones, who is a practical man, at once sees the advantage of
It. whlle Brown, who has been runnmg his factory for a long
tune, but runnl11g It from the office de"k instead of in the mIll,
that IS, vvithout makl11g hImself famlhar WIth every depart-ment,
from the lumber yard to the ShlPPl11g room, sees no
reason why he should throw out IllS old machine and put in
the new one just because the man who is trying to sell It to
h1111knows hIS business and is a smooth talker.
Probably the worst case of plOcrastination in the furniture
Llctory IS 111the dry kIln Almost every man, w hen it comes
to the dry111g of lumber, "is from Mlssoun," and demands
tn be shown He knows perfectly well that there is some-ihmg
'vl0ng 'vlth his kJIn-that there IS too much waste
111mhel ~om£; to the fll1nace, 01 else he shuts hIS eyes to the
tl ue condltJon of affall s untIl hIS old kIln ha- dumped hIm
off the tIack mto the dItch of bdnkI uptC). If the reflder of
tIllS will turn to the advel tJsmg of the Gl and Rapids Veneer
vVorhs e\ el y v\eek for the neAt three or four months, and
note what far-SIghted furnIture manufactul ers say, he WIll be
convinced that there is a way-a llght way-to dry lumber
and save enough from the furnace to pay for ItS imtallation
111 a year Procrastination WIll never do this
~v. L. G.'app for Secretary.
The MIChigan Artisan takes upon Ibelf the responsi-blht}
for suggesting to the membel s of the NatIOnal RetaIl
Furniture Dealers' AssociatIon the name of \V L. Grapp of
Mmnesota for the office of secletaly. Mr Grapp is endowed
'v Iih the quahftcatlOns necessary for performing the duties of
the office successfully and for the greatest advantage of the
retaIl furniture trade. He has demonstrated hIS capaCIty to
handle large business transactIons as secretary of the Mmne-
SOtDRetailers' ASSOCIation He IS resourceful, intelhgent, en-thusiastic,
and a capable orgamzer. Not only should he be
selected by the national association to fill the office of secre-tary,
but a hberal salary should be prOVIded for his services.
In the larger field he would render serVIces of greater value
to the trade in general than the most optmllstic could antiCI-pate
The Al tIsan has not consulted :\Ir GIapp in regard
to plesentmg his name to the natIOnal a"soclatlOn for the
office of secretary To accept the pOSItion, If elected, might
be' detenmentDl to his pnvate intelests. Such a contingency
deserves caleful consideratIOn vVlth the tender of the POSI-tIon
to Mr Crapp should be an offer of compematlOn that
vvould assure his acceptance of the honor
Renewed Honor for Mr. Harris.
VI L Harris, preSIdent of the New England Furniture
and Carpet company of M111neapolis, was re-elected to the
presidency of the PubhClty Club of that CIty Vv Ithm the past
SIX months two hundred and siAty-elght names were added
to the membt rshlp.
. ...--- ....--.- ..- ... ..... -- ..-. f--"Be W'ALTER & CO.
Manufacturera ot TABLE SLIDES Exclusively
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WABASH
INDIANA
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT. -~-------------,-----------_.-- - _... . ... .....
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8 \\iEEKL"l
North Dakota Enterprise.
The accompanymg reproduction of an advertIsement mdI-cates
that the up-to-date, energetIc, enterpl1smg fm mture dealeb
and capable "ad" wnter" al e not all confined to the larger cltIe~
The 01 iginal of the reploductIon occupIed a full page 111 an elght-column
paper and most readers WIll be surpnsed \\ hen they note
that it was used by a dealer in a small to\\n-DevIl'~ Lake,
North Dakota.
Mr. Gilbertson has Just opened a ne\\ ±tumture ,tore 111 ,l
building that would be consIdered a credIt to mam oldc 1 and
GRAND OPENING North Dakota's Greatest Furniture Store
JAN 15tl W oea",ewoabeda l\ nlaK a us e-& a a a g"" m .xl' b ~u l4>
,.. 1 nbPu!:t Of~e,. faeanJ en naK h G ndOlJen ~Cee dO Of";\\ oJ<' '<J t'rn n. N
OUR\lOnO
" !>oo ..,. ....... t.Iy_e.-.~
c.... _ y ......... "' .. w_ r..... """"'-..... ",-O_ ..... f.- __ I \ r~'
520.00
Fancy Blend Pottery 1-
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CUSPldor "1:':••
" $1600 D:E -.~_..$225
RUGS
E. W. GILBERTSON
East fourth Street. Devils Lake, North Oak.
much la1 ger town~ than Devil's Lake It is bmli of bI ick and
covers a full lot 140:A 2l> feet, and has fom fl001 sIt b mcel}
fimshed WIth steel ceIll11g, tasty electnc fi:AtUles and fine ft ont
composed partly of pI 1~J11 ~las" \\ h1ch matel wlh aId, l\l IHsht1l1g
the large room.
The basement I~ fitted as a morgue and IS complete l\l evel \
detail In the basement IS also el dmt plOof loom \d1Ich IS used
ao an undertakl11lS room and m thl" h chspla\ecl hh lau:;e ~tock
of undertatl1lg good, The 1e111amdel ot the ba-,e111ent h thec1
for packmg "1uplus fml1ltule and I, loaded to the top \\ Ith hh
new <;tock \\hlch he 1<;unable to find loom t01 on the othel l1001'
The fil st and malll floor IS med f01 the dhpJa\ at hh ele-gant
l111eof parlor, dm111groom and beell oom tltll1ltm e \mong
the artIcles here dIsplayed are pieces 111metal, oak, of Val IOUS
varietIes, black and ell caSSlan walnut, ebo!1\ and mahogany
These articles are arranged 111 sets and 111<;mgle pIece" thel e are
a1,les between them so that a pelson can pa~s hetween them and
get a view of them to excellent advantage
A broad stan way leach to the second flool \\ hl(h I' ,11Ianged
m the form of a horse shoe, the stail s gomg up thl ot1~h the cen
ter of It and the sides extending well to\\ arc! the hont of the
bUllding Here is dIsplayed an elegant 11l1Cot rugs, cal pets,
ARTISAN
curtams, draperies, office furl11ture, ladles' wnt111g desks, etc.
The fourth floor is reached by a staIrs 111the rear of thc
bmld111g The rear part of thIS floor IS an ang ed 111to rooms
\\ hel e }Ir and 1\1rs GIlbertson reOJde The flont, a large room,
J" arranged as a chapel, for use in lodge funerals amI. such events'
It b eqmpped WIth a chapel organ, pedestal, etc There IS a
large closed elevator 111the rear of the bmldI'1g run111ng from
the fOUlth floor to the basement.
:Huch taste has been shown 111the arrangement of the bmld-lllg
and the clIstl1butlOn of the stock. gIV111gDevII's Lake one of
the finest fUll11ture :,tores 111the northwest.
On the open111g day and each eve111ng dUll11g the week Mr
GIlberbon had the DevIl'<; Lake orchestra present to furnish mu-
'-Ie and he clId even thUlg 111hIS power to make his visitors en-
JO) to the fullest the comforts and pleasures to be derived fl0111
a \ ISIt to hIs elegant new store.
Souvenll s 111the fOlm of small booklets, contain111g pictures
of }lr GIlbertson, the store and numerous publIc bUlld1l1gs, wel e
gn en the VIsitors.
Higher Wages in Germany.
RepOl ts on the \\ Olkmg of Germany's compulsOly 111-
~1Jl Ztnce la \\ fUl111sh mfOlmatlOn that IS con <;Idered much more
1el18ble than that obtamed from census reports One of the
most ImpOl tant featUles of the 111SUlance reports IS the collec-tIon
of e,,-act mformatlon on wage rates among the workmg
class ] he amount paId to each worker IS of necessIty recorded
\\ It1 each entl y of msUl ance The sum totals supply 1I1ter-estmg
data for vanous reglOns, for the dIfferent industries,
and espeCIally as 1eg al ds the labonng populatIOn of the em-pn
e as a \\ hole
S111ce 1900 the m')Uled have been dIVIded into five cate-gOlJes
based upon the late of wages, m 1900, among every
I 000 \\01 kel t>. 189 \'vel e em olled 111 the first or lowest class;
342 m the second class, 238 m the thIrd; 158 111the fourth; and
73 m the fifth 01 most hIghly paJd class The changes in the
COUlse of eIght \ eats ha\ e been remalkabble In the year,
1908 the claSSIficatIOn pel 1,000 \\as as follows FIrst c1at>s
(lO\\est), 114, second, 263, tlmd, 243; fourth, 179: fifth, 201
The table shows a mal ked chm111utlOn 111the two lower
categones, and a malked1l1CleaSe, practIcally a treblIng, of the
em ollment 111 the fifth class of the better paId operatIves. EVJ-dently
thele has been a steady movement upward in earnmg
PO\\ er flom each clas<; to the ones above it As a result, the
avetage wage of the Gelman \\Ork111g populatIOn male and
female bas mounted \ el y 1aplClly
J he a\elage \\eekl) wage \\as, 111 1891, $495; 111 19°1,
$542, and 111 1908, $600 In other WOlds the German wOlk-er's
avelage wage \\as m 19°1, 10 per cent greater, and m
[90S, 2I pel cent g 1eateI, than m 1891
A Difference in Wood Carvers.
PublIshed 111the MichIgan ArtIsan in 1880. "The demand
to! clabOl ately cal ved furl11ture IS large, and 111 consequence
~kIlled carvel ~ find ready employment Tho,e of the hIghe<;t
,kIll elle paId \\ agcs equalll11g the salal ies paId to presidents of
bank, Several local manufacturers have imported carvers from
Italy, France and Germany, hop111g to obta111 high class work-men
In thIS respect the} have not been successful \\t 1111e,as
a rule, the imported men al e skIllful they are not famIlIar with
the work in our shops and slow WIth the tools They lack the
energy and qUIckness of the Amencan carver. So long as carv-
111gl' preferred 111ornamentatIOn of furniture it 1<;advI"able f01
manufacturers to employ as many apprentices as po"sIble and
place them under competent instructors."
(The art of utllI71ng the grain of the w10cl for 01namenta-tlOn
\\ as practICally 1111knO\n'v thil ty years ago.) -Ed. ArtIsan
,..
WEEKLY ARTISAN 9
......,
DELAWARE
CHAIR CO.
DELAWARE OHIO.
LARGEST I I "QUALITY" I DOUBLE CANE LINE ~ LEATHER I
of J MISSION I
CHAIRS, ROCKERS and SETTEES f
CATALOCUE TO THE TRADE ONLY. .._---------_._-----_.~._.--._------~----------._--.--- _. ---_._---_._--- - .. ..... .-
New Foctories.
The Comb111atJon Chall" company ha:, been incorporated
to estabhsh a ne,y factOl y at Salem, 01 e
N. \\Telter lS plepallng to engage 111the manufactme of
office furnitm e in speClal hnes at CentJ aha III
Jesse D Sdcott IV dl engage 111the manufactm e of furm-tm
e 111the Borreman bmld111gon J uhana street, Pal kersbm g,
W. Va.
GeOlge S. Brandfield and othel shave 111corp01ated the
Hlbbard Furl1lture company capltahzed at $20,000, to estab-hsh
a plant at Barnesvdle, Ohio.
The Ruby Manufclctm111g company, cdpitalized at $10,-
000 has been incorporated to establish a fact01 y and make
desks, bank fmll1m e etc , at H.uby, S C.
A newly O1gal1lzed company has engaged in the manufdc-tllle
of chair stock 111a bmlcl111gformedy used as a hosiery
mIll at \~Test Rumney, near ConcOld, N. H
Business men of Opehka, are orgal1lZ111g a company
wlth capItal stock $25,000 to $50,000, for the purpose of estab-hshing
a "bIg" furl1ltm e fact01 y 111their to\\ n
Mayor Moeller of EvansvIlle Ind, i:, negotJat111g wlth a
conceln that employs 400 to 600 men 111the manufacturc of
school and bank fml1ltme and wants to move to Evansvdle.
Adolph Torke, Thomas and Valent111e StJ auss, have 111-
COlpOlated the Central Upholstering company, capltahzed at
$10,000 to esabhsh a plant anclmanufacture upholstered furl1l-hue
dl Sheboygan, \V1S.
vV lllldm and Mlchael Haclchgan and Edwal d Conley,
school boys, hdye estdblt:,hed a furmture factOly at 121 Tyng
stJ eet, Peolld, III They n1clke chdlrs, tabourettes, stand:,
dnll 'Sleds and al e sald to be mdk111gmoney
\ \ dll11g & Glllm\, U S \, lS the name of a company -_._---~~-----
III
III
.- .~
I
I"--------------- . -_.. .. '"I
'"
cap11ahzecl at $1,25°,000, incOlpOlatecl by Samuel James War-ing,
James Elston Wanng of London, Eng., and Sewell Philip
Staats of New York to manufacture cab111etsand £mniture in
Nell York City.
The Johnson l\!anufactur111g company of Thomasville,
capitahzed at $10,000 and the Rom111ger Funnture company
of \N111E->ton-Salemc,apitahzed at $100,000, are the latest cor-porations
formed to engage 111the manufactme of furniture in
North Cdrohna The latter succeeds the Rom111ger & Black-burr
company.
New Furniture Dealers.
G B. Webb & Co., have opened theu" new fmniture store
at Uniontown, vVash.
The Pee Dee Furmture chartered at $4,000 wdl open a
new store at Ddlon, S. C.
The Greenwood Furniture company have just opened a
new store 111Seattle, \\Tash.
Thomas VIalker is to open a new furl1lture store in the
\;\711k111son budding, Trenton. N J
The Washburn company have opened a new furniture
'Store on \\Tater street, DunkJrk, N. Y.
C A Buchman, general dealer of Bucyrus, 0, has moved
into new quarters and WIll add a line of furnitm e to his stock
The Jake Tennenbaum company capital1fec1 at $roo,ooo
,v, 111buy and sell furmture and household goods 111C111cinnati,
OhlO
The M A Hunt Mathes:, factOly in C111c111natJO, h1O,
was damaged by fire to the extent of $500 on FeblUary 3.
Insured
Mr and Mrs James Boyd have purchd'Sed a bmld111gon
Flfth street, Beaumont, Tex, in whIch they wlll opcn a
ft1lnltt1l e E->tore
George Flowels, manager of the Dover (N H.) Furni-tnre
company has reslgned and wdl open a new store for him-
:,elf 111the same town
Ech\ ard A Myd and Herman IV. \Vengler have incor-
11Hated the \Vengler Furl1lture company to engage 111the
let:lll hade at Glasgow, 110 Capltal 'Stock, $15,000
1he (.rlas'STI10:, 1< Ull1lture company has been incorpOl ated
to open a ne\v E->teOl11113m11111gham, Ala Then" capital 'Stock
l~ lU11ltedto $5,000 and they wlll start bus111esswlth $4,000
pald 111
to WEEKLY ARTISAN
/L J\ 10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALSO MADE WITH 12, 15 20 AND 25 SPINDLES
DODDS' NEW GEAR
DOVETAILING MACHINE
This llttle machme has done more to perfect the drawer work of furul
ture manufacturers than anythmg else m the furniture trade For fifteen
years It has made perfect fittmg ,ermm proof dovetailed stock a POSSI
blltty ThiS has been accompllshed at reduced cost as the machme cuts
dove tails m gangs of from 9 to 24 at one operatIOn It s "hat others see
about your busmess rather than wl1'lt )OU sa} about It that counts In the
cash drawer It s the thnll of enthusIasm and the tl ue nng of truth you
feel and hear back of the lold type that makes y au buy the thtng ad, el Used
ALEXANDER DODDS CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Represented by Scbuchart & Schutte at Berlin, Vienna, Stockholm and St
Petersbura Represented by Alfred H Schutte at Coloane, Brulsel., Lege, Pa",
Muan and Bllboa Represented In Great Bollan and I"land by the Ohver Machinery
Co. F S ThomplOn. Mar. 201-203 Dean.gate, Manchester, England
,.. ..- .--- .- - .- --- - ..-~I
Palmer's Patent Cluin!! CIamps I
I
Ihe abo,e cut is taken direct from a photograph, and shows
the range of one size only, our No 1, 24-lllch Clamp We
make SIX other sizes takIng in stock up to 60 inches "Ide
and 2 inches thick, Ours is the most practIcal method of
clamping glued stock III use at the present time, Hundreds 01
factories have adopted our way the past year and hundreds more
will in the future, Let us show you Let us send you the
names 01 nearly 100 factories (only a fraction of our list) who
have ordered and reordered many times. Proof positive our way
Is the best, A post card will bring it, catalog included, Don't
delay, but write today,
A. E. PALMER &, SONS, Owosso, MICH.
Foreign Representatives: The Projectile Co" London, Eng-land:
&chuchardt & Schutte, Berlm, Germany: Alfred H,
8chntte, Cologne, Paris, Brussels, Liege, Milan, Turin, Barcelona,
and Bilbo". ..
NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE
Paragraphs About Furniture Manufacturers and
Dealers in the Metropolitan District.
Xew YOlk, leb 10-Business contmues good in a general
\\ clj \\ Ith the I11dnufacturers dnd \\ holesalers There are many
urdel ~ m Sight "hlch \\ III keep the plants g0l11g all rH;ht. The
letaller, ale hay 1I1g ~peL1al sales and all dOIng a lIvely busmess
1 he furmtu! e eAposltJOn which closed Idst Saturday was a good
,ucce,s, as <ho\\ n by the large number of buyers and the lIberal
01 del S placed m all lInes, The buying was up to that of the
othel }edrs and all seem very well satisfied, Conditions m gen-eral
are Improvmg and look bnght for the current year
The Grand Rapids Show Case Company, makmg c1othll1g
cabmets and the McKenna Brass company of PIttsburg, making
\\ mdo\\ fixture", had exhibits at the clothes show m Madison
Square Garden
::'Ia'C LlOn has resigned as manager of the Monarch lurni-ttlte
compan}, of 161 E 125th street.
The Yogel Cabmet c{)mpany has been incorporated to do
t;enelal cabmet \\ork, \\Ith a capltell stock of $10,000, headed by
Jacob Schlesmger, 1]0 IV Thirty-fourth street and John Vogel,
'216 II' 110th street
The Sl1pellor 1\If'tal Bed company WdS incorporated to man-llfaetme
bra~s cll1d Iron bcdstedds and furniture, With a capItal
stock ot SlU 000, promoted by Isaac Stein, Abraham Stem a 1d
S D Dodll1
\ new company IS opeldtmg the plant of the \ntwerp ('1"
Y) Chair company.
fhoma s D lltzl.;el aId has been dosmg out the stock of the
C:;II"beerurl1lttlte compan) of Elmila, N Y.
The ), mcteen- '\ meteen company which dealt in furnitUi e
at 165 BI oad" a}, has had a petition m bankruptcy filed against
them The hablhtles arc scheduled at $9,000, a<sets $5,000
The Thompson Starret company has made a record m rapid
,teel constl uctlon on the new GUllbel Bras, store by completing
the big ,teel ~hell 111 about 40 days 1I10re than 22,000,000
pound ~ of ~tee1 "Ill enter mto the completed ctructure About
11,000 tons of steel at the rate of 1,800 tons weekly, were put
m place The record for settin~ fire proof tile has before been
115 loads a day but thiS concern has put up 170 loads a day
B '\lav retail humture dealer, 347 Third avenue, IS going
out of the fUI11Iture busmess altog ether
Robert J Ehlers has bought a controlling interest in the
IV r, \Vhitne} Chair company of thiS city, and Will conduct
It as a Jobbin~ fUll11ture house at 19') Grand street under tbe
name of the R J Ehlers company.
S Teitelbaum, for 13 years a fur11ltUl e dealer at 91.2 Thml
avenue, Manhattan, has opened a new store at ~G2 Broadway,
l3rooklyn under the name of C; 1 eitelbau111 & Son Morns
Teitelbaum, formerly salesman for E. Schloss & Co, will do
the bUYll1g
CO\\ pertlm dlt & I saae" 11d,e divided their business clncl (h,,-
-.oIvecl J L Isaacs goes "ith the FOld & Johnson C0111pll1Y
dnd Hel bel t Cowpel th" ait takes the line of the Hall & L) 01
rur111tule compan}, Choate-Holhster company and others
~leAancler Boller, late fUl11lture buyer for Stern Bros IS
the bu, er for the new fur111ture clepartment of i\dams, Fla111-
l;an & Co , \\ ho have bmlt a large aclchtion to their store in the
Bronx
Herbel t CO\\ perth" ait has gone to Chicago V\ here he is ex-hibiting
his lines, as well as at Grand Rapids and did not ex-
111blthere L A Corey Will represent hll11 111 Brooklyn J K
Rogers, manager for the labnkoid company, cayS that all cotton
goods have gone up 25 to 30 per cent in the past vear and that
.. Fabnkoid has been advanced 10 per cent,
". _ ...._. .. .. .. ...
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Feed Glue Spreading Machine. SlOgle.
Double and Combination. (Patented)
(Size. 12 in. to 84 in wide.)
Veneer Preue •• different kind. and .ize. (PateRted)
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc" Etc,
._-~
!I
~
Hand Feed Glueing Machine (Patent
pendmg.) Many .tyleR and RizeR.
No.6 Glue Heater.
_ ..
ColIe & Son, the parlor goods manufaciunng concern of
Brooklyn, N. Y, are c10smg out theIr warerooms at 20 E
Twentieth street.
Moritz Weisberger, who was in busmess at 372 E Houston
street and sold out to the present propnetor, has opened a new
store at 44 Avenue C
Ehrich Bros., who went mto business at 6th avenue and
23d street 22 years ago and later moved to 287 E1gthth avenue.
c1d1m to be the largest dealers 1n beds, bedd111g, Ollc1oth and 1111-
oleum in the city.
Frank M. Randall 1S mak111g good progress 111gett111g the
construction work done on h1S ne" budding and he w1ll use
from two to four flOOl s. He expects to be located m the buIld-ing
by July.
The K111de1company, Dav1d Robertson, manager, has moved
1ts factory from E1ghteenth street and the Ea:"t river, Man-hattan,
to Brooklyn.
The 1. J. Nolan company has engaged in the retail furniture
business at Albany, with $5,000 cap1tal Incorporated by Thom-as
J. Nolan, Moses F. Kuwan and otbe1 s
The New York and Albany rurmture company has star ted
111business at Albany, N. Y.
Foster Bras have put "Cliff" Schutt on the road
Armin Herrmann 1S a new furmture dealer in the Blonx
M/Jrns M111er & Co, who have a furmture store at 106
Manhattan avenue BlOok1yn, have opened a new store in Man-hattan,
at 41 Union Square.
Randolph U rlander has opened a ne" cab111et and uphol-stery
shop at 681 Amsterdam avenue.
,....------ ----- 0 • _
These saws are
made from No.1
Steel and we war-rant
every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
Write us for
PrIce Llat
and discount
31-33 S. Front St., ORAND RAPIDS, MIC".
I~------ ....._-----
One of the nove1tJes for G1mbe1 Bros.' new store vnll be
a roof garden on the top of the bui1d111g for the use of the em-ployes.
Em11 BenOlt, late w1th James McCreery & Co, is the new
buyer for John Wanamaker.
] ohn Malkin of Schechter & Ma1k111,1299 Third avenue, has
left the firm and has opened a new store at 618 N111th avenue.
J\lr Schechter cont111ues in business at the other store
E. Samuels, furniture dealer at 94 Fifth avenue, Brooklyn,
ha:" moved to 4~9 Fifth avenue.
Herman Sigall, who was salesman for Max LIOn, 1S now
w1th Finkenberg on Third avenue.
S. K Pierce & Sons' factory has been taxed to the utmost
capaCIty to fill order~. A. P. Brown is the manager.
Cheney Bros., who manufacture silks and plushcs at 14'1'
Broome street, are moving to the Parker bUl1d1l1g, N1l1th street
and Fourth avenue, where they have a 21 years' lease The
annex for the upholstery business at 811 Broadway WIll be
dropped dnd merged with the new quarters.
.-..
Personal Mention. The following paragraph appeared in the Michigan Artis•an
on September I, 1880·
"During the past week the following commercial 'Salesmen
vis1ted Grand RapIds: Joseph S. Hart, Bcndit Drey Co, New
York; F. D. Hill, D. W. Selleg, NewbUlg, N. Y.; C. H. Somers,
Glover & Willcomb, New York, J. F. Hams, Murphy & Co.,
Cleveland, 0 ; J. A. Adams, Masury & Son, ChIcago; Thomas
D LIlley, S B Vrooman, PhiladelphIa; J. N Murray, C. SId-ney
K on 1S & Co., BaltImore, A L SprOUl, FaIrfield (Conn)
Rubber company; H ;\. Newkllk, HIlls, Turner & Co., Bos-ton,
Mas". .. ._0. . . _
I••
1ou{s babn
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 Livmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN I.-- -- - ..._--------_._-~I CItizens' Telephone 170~.
~-- ----------
-------~~----_._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
the fi1st half of the )eetl the p11ces of plate glass \\ere the
10\H~t J11 the hht01) ot the 111dust1) TO\\a1d the end of the
\ ea1 ds g enelal busll1ess 1esumed nOlmal p1Opm tions, the
P11CESof OLD p10duct inCl eased, and \\ e look for d cont111udnce
of the~e 1111P1O\ eel COn(htlOl1S
::'\ot\\ Ithstctmlmg the 10\\1 P1ICC~ of om p1Oducts, the
\uh'me of om hlhl11e~" lllued"ec1 flom $[6,925,79999 fm
J{)o.'( to S1976<) 8-1-756 f01 la"t ye~l1, all lllUeetSe of 168 pel
cent
'L his lllCl ea "e dCC011l1b p11llClpally £01 the lllCl ease 111the
,Il( ount " dnd bIll" 1ecen able, alld to a C011e~pondll1g e'(tent
t() 1\,e llluease III 1n11o. and accounts payable
J \\ 0 \ acanues 111 the board occm1 ed c1ml11g the year
tIll ough the 1eg1 eadble dc,lths of H on Ethan Allen Hltch-cock
and \\ llltd111 D Hal tupee both of whom had been identl-fied
\\ 1th the mdnagement of ) our C0111peU1ysl11ce 1tS consoh-c1atJun
and had 1ende1 cd p1aheW01 thy sel vice 111 their respec-tne
sphe1es :;\I1 E(h\a1d P1tccllln VIas chosen to fill one
\ acanc) and \11 E D Ra)mond, the other. 1\11' Raymond
has had 20 ) eals' e"penence III the manufactullng department
of the Gene1 al Electl1c Co, for the last si:A years as general
superintendant of the1r Schenectady works, and has just come
llltO am 01ga111LatlOn It lS 111tended that he shall fill the
PO"1t10ll [Ol111e11) occup1ed b) ~rr Hal tupee
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PITTSBURG PLATE GLASS STATEMENT
Chairman Pitcairn's Report on the Business
Transactions of the Company in 1909.
John PltCel1lll, Chc111nlctnof the hOetld of dlledm" ()f thc
P1tbhmg Plate Glcts" L01llpetll) l1d~ l""ued the ful1O\\ 111'.; "LttL-ment
"h()\\ mg p1e'oent asseh and hdbI1ItJe'o dne! lO\ el 111~ the
mOl e 1111])01 tant tJ eU1"ctLL10nsof the compan\ dUl111~ the \ C,ll
19°9
\b~('1b
111\ ':>t111tut
C;tOt ks llah Glass \\ Indo,\ (TI a::, '; 11111
PaInts
~lettelldl an 1 ,\Volldng Account<-
Cash Bllb and. A CLounis nee en aIJI(
QU1C'k A..ssets
Liabilltie.
Capital "tock
DIlls and Accounts rUyablo
Bdls Payable
Sundry CredIts
Inbulance rund
S nklug Fund-ChICago anct Cleveland
DU1hl1ngs
<"'Ulplus Janua1-v 1 1909
Profits 1900
D CUll]
c;, IS "" 1 "
1 31 j I
P uJ ~ ) 0
1 0 I Of (l
)0 G 1
1 \ 1lclD S
q (
0024000(0
11084-:>30 "I S I
, 0 9
1-0 i 19 ro
4 B33 189 1"
101301 H
.fotal
Le.s
D1\11cnds 1909
])cprf>ClatIon
Smplus Januar} 1 1910
q.,1 2 t.ll)O 00
I1G0060 J& 000[0
)1 )1 J G
The greater part of the incl ea"e 111the 1m estment ac-count
1S 1epl esented by ne\\ con:ott 1ktlOn elt the Kokomo and
Cly"tal CJty plants The old plclnt" at these POllltS hd, e been
dlmost entirely 1~L/ed dnd dl~mant1ed 1he nc\\ constlllCtlOn
1" of the most substcl1lt!al cha1 actel ,tnd model n de"lg n rl he
plOductn e cdpac1t y of these plcl11t~ \\ III he much g 1 edte1 than
011g1nally planned Th1" \\ 111enable us to mamtdlll tul1l OUI
1e1attve pO"ltion in the pIette glas", tJ ade and to 1e(hllC O!11
cost of p1OductlOn Necessa111y the P10\ l"lon fOl sl1lh lll-
Ll ease in capacIty 111\oh ed a cons1de1 able mC1ease III plant
llll estment, as sho\\ n in the abo\ e statement
In cOl1S1denng the 1esults of the yea1 's blls1ne"s 1t S110111d
be un de! stood, thdt on account of the heal) 1econst1 uct10n
\\ 01k, the Kokomo plant has been ent11 el) shut do\\ n, P10-
dUClng no glass chu1l1g the past ) ea1, ancl that the CJ \ stal
CJty plant has been opelating on only a small pal t of 1ts capa-city,
so that the 111vestment 111those pLl11ts. for the pe11O(1
COYe1eel by the statement, has been almost \\ holh unplOdl1l-tive
Dl1l111g the plesent ) ear these plants shollld be fi11l"hlll
and 1eady to opel ate tu full capaClt), and It the 1111p1O\ eel
bus111ess conclltlOns now p1e\ aI1111g continue thlOUg bout the
) ea1, sabsfactOl) ea111111g" should be made on the l1K1eetsed
111\estment
rollowing om usual pohc\ \\ c cha1ged a sub"tGlllt1etl
--nm to clepleclatJon, as appealS 111the statement
Om natmal gas opelatlOl1S \\ hleh appealed so ]l om1"lllg
a yea1 ago, ha,e p1O\en chsappomtmg, the lalge \\ells 111the
ne\\ field hav111g become 1apidl)- exhansted The loss on the--e
ope1atlOn~, amounting to about $45,000, \\a" cha1ged to ev
pense The shOl tage of gas tempOl allly handlcapped 0111
~'\llegheny Valley factolles although at the pI esent tllne \\ e
hay c an ample suppl)
Cons1denng the chal actcr of the busmc~~ and the heel\ \
e'{pendltm es that must be made flOm ) eal to \ eal to keep
our factones modeln the plOfits f01 the past) ea1 a1e ha1(lh
adequc1te, althou~h they may lJe 1ega1 ded a:o satlsfactol y, m
v1e\\ of bade conlhtlOn" that p1evalled dUllng the pe110(1. F01
Running Overtime.
B1g Retp1cls, ~I1ch, Feb II-The Luce-Redmond Cha1r
LOmpany had the la1 g cst bus111ess 111Janua1 y they have ever
had S111cethc Olga11lZatJon of the company and are running
1.\\ehe dnel one half homs a day That's because they make
~oud L11dl1'1111a leuge numbe1 of pattell1s in oak and mahog-am
and of the stvles and canst! uctJon and finish not sur-lM,,~
e(l 1)) elm othe1 cheW mdhCI S 111the counby
Hood ~ IIl1ght the veneer men ne\ e1 had such a la1ge
,tm[ hne "toch of log'o in then) ald as now. c111dthe wOlks ale
] 111, to C,qMUt\ e\ e1\ c1<1\ In addition to mak111g \ eneer"
they 111,lke p,wels and elL1\\ e1 bottoms in great \ a1iety TIllS
1" one of the most'successful houses in their l111e111the countly
rl he BIg Rap1ds FUll1ltUl e ::\1anufaeturing company have
blOught out a ne\\ l111eof hall and dming 100m fUll1ltUle that
1" \ el' 11lce fm the Jl11ce a11d \\ hen the mal het opens up on case
'.;()O(\" they e"pelt a g 1edt 1un
John Widdicomb a Generous Man.
rJ he late John 1\ 1dchcomb \vas noted for hIS inte1est 111
ll\ lC aftan sand .phllantlll ophy He \\ as a substantial sup-pOl
tel ot the L 13 \ Hos1ptal, Bel tsch Home for \Vomen,
the Deelcones,,' IIome and k111ched instJtutions He took an
elctive 111te1est in the "eHa1e of his wOlkmen and often as-sl~
tcd them when e11l1Janas~ec1 by Cllcumstances As a tol~en
ot 1e--l)Cct to h1" mem01 y all the clVic boa1 els of the elty and
th emplo) e" of the \1 1dchLOmb FUlmture and the John \ Vlel-dJComb
factollcs attended the fune1al Four hunched LIC-t0l1eS
111the l1ty \\ el e shut elO\\n \\ h]le the se1 \ lce \\ as helel
Had OrdeJ.·s Left Over.
l-IeISt1l1gS, Feb 9 -The Hastings Cabinet company had
eln e'{ceptlOnally bu"y )ed1 dUllng 1909 a lalge number of
()]del s bel11g left 0\ el on J anual)- I Viil11ch had not been
jll1ed P1e,,](lent-manager. L 'D. \Vatel s ~tates that the ad-d
lt10n l11dde to then plant ,l1lll completed lclst fall has m-
II eel~cd then capaelt) h\ ent) -fi\ e pel cent The improve-ments
111clllcle a quantItv of ncw mach1l1ery The capitali-
ZeltlOn of the Hastin~" CabUlet company \\ as 1eccntly in-
Cleelsed to $60 000
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Catalogue House Expanded.
The fol1owm~ taken trom a ChIcago paper of 1ecent
date, sho\'\; s that the managers of onc of the great maIl 01der
houses e"pect a contmued growth of theIr busll1es5.
Seal s, Roebuck & Co, are havmg plans prepared for
the adchtlOn of SIX floors to the t\~a anne"es of the mam
merchandl:oe bllllclll1Q, of the plant on the west sIde, and
~~hen thIs adchtlOnal space I" added the melchanchse bmldmg
\,\;111 be the lalge"t sll1~le structl1le m the \V()tld III all about
$-1-00,000 IS to be spent 111 completmg the addItIOns
The extIa fluOls ale to be added to the t\',o v\II1Q," on the
mel chandlse huIldll1g, \V hlCh al e now th I ee stone" Il1 heH~ht
The mam portlOn of the bmldmg IS mne stories hlgh and the
L"t!a fioO! s al e to be added to the vv1l1g bl1l1chngs to make the
HEYMANtS HEYMANS IfEYHAN$ ftEYMANS lfEYMANS
RED LETTER SALE
.,..,::,,:.C:~·"-:;l~Ine":
advantag.:
s." .. Walnut Flnl.h
'" p '.: '" '"' Two 9t71_ to S.,I ...,t Fro.,.
~ ;:::",,,'" "( '"0--;I W: ~ .. ho. >. \> up.,
Your credit
IS alw~a
good
Red Letter Sale Lace Curtains
N;t~nS;50a~c:rta:,nj.59 1(. L 2 68
Arabian Cluny ...nd
5 V> '"" "'"j .. J 89 RenalsJUIftCe Lace Curlalns
~ 3ba.o ~ "~./ .. ~ ~$';:8~:::'" ""M~~ j{ ~ ,,:~u~ oi~:gg
"EYMAN
COMPANY
47-61 Canal Street
A Sample AdvertIsement.
structure Ul1lfOlm 111 heIght and to prov Ide addltlOl1cll spacc,
whIch has become nece-;sary for that department of the firm·s
busmess
The floOls to be added \\ 111 compllse appro:Xlll1ately 300,-
000 sqllal e feet of "pelce 1 hIS wlll Q,I\e the mel chandlse
hU1ldm~ 2,000,000 squale feet of flOO1 space, \\ ll1ch I" equal to
about f01 ty-fiv e and two-thllds acres 1he \\ mg c11\ 1"10n 111
the stl ucture makes It pos"lhle for a lad\\ av S\\ Itch track
to be Iun II1tO the bl11lding
Patent Claim Settled.
1he dlspute 0\ er office chaIr Iron patents bet\\ een the
GIlson Mal1ufactunng company of POl t \Vash111~ton and the
Jenk111s Mach111e compal1y of Sheboygan also the claIm of the
GIlson ::\Lll1ufactUlll1g company agal11st the \Volf RIver Chalr
company of Ne\\ London, \\"15, has been settled. The \Volf
River company settled by paY1l1g $6 a dozen lOyalty The
telms of settlement by the Jenl~111s Mach1l1e company are pn-vate.
This book is not simply a
catalog, but a complete treat..
ise on the theory and latest
practice in drying. Will be
received with intense interest
by the entire craft.
Sent free post paid.
Where shall we mail your copy?
AMERICAN BLOWER COMPANY
General Offices: Detroit, Mich.; Works: Delroit, Mich. and Troy, N. Y.
13
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I HOTEL NORMANDIE I I
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TL~!~~~~~~
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
CONGRESS STREET
Near Woodward Avenue
Amencan Plan. $2 50 per
Day and upwards
European Plan. $1 00 per
Day and upwards
Hot and Cold Runmng Water
10 all Rooms.
Rooms wIth Bath extra
A High Grade Cafe.
Restaurant and Buffet In connectlon
GEORGE FULWELL,
Proprietor.
6. •• • •• _ •• a •• _Fa •••••••
MORE EVIDENCE OF PROGRESS
New York Merchants and Manufacturers' Ex-change
Now Capitalized at $1.600.000.
N early every day addItional evidence lS aft endell that the
plan:, of the New YOlk Merchanb' and :;\1anufactmel S 'E"
change are enlal g1l1g and that the enterpnse is to become mal C
important than many have thought possIble vVhen the '\ ew
York Furniture EAchange IS merged vdth the other more com-prehensive
exchange and after the completIOn 01 the great Stl uc-tures
under way it will be a part of a great commelclal undertak-ing
enjoying ample capltal for the conduct of lb operatIOns 111
the broadest and most hberal manner The capltal \\ III Pl0-
vide for the promotion of the mtel ests of the exchange and of
the manufacturers of furniture taking pdl t on a ~cale \\ Ithout
precedent in the history of the industry, and fOl the mtlOc1ucl1On
and maintenance of the conveniences and all the de~ll ed featll! e,
for facilitating business.
A news item printed in the New York evening papers on
Monday, January 31, should therefore be of pal tlcu1<n mtel e"t
to the readers of this paper and to fm niture men 111 genel dl
It stated that on that day the NIelchanb' and \IanufactulelS
Exchange of New York certlfied to the :,ecretar) of ~tatL at
Albany that it had increased its capItal stock from $25,000 to
$1,600,000, dlVlc1ed mto $l,OOO,OOOcommon and $600, 000 pre-ferred.
The certlficate was slgned b) E P. V. Rlttel the ple~-
Ident and Raymond n 1'·,eat1l1g, the secretary of the e'<:change
as repl esenting the stockholdel S at the ll1eetll1g at wlm h the 111-
crease was authorized
The Merchants' and Manufacturers' Exchange (of whlLh tbe
Furniture Exchange will be part) has leased the b1..ulclll1gsand thi"
THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
Glue Heater
Send your addreu and
and receive descriptive
circular of Glue Heaters,
Glue Cookers and Hot
large sum of mane) IS the \\<orking capital of a leasing and operat-ing
company. Quite another matter is the investment in ground
and bmldll1gs. The glOund is conservatively estimated to be
\\ orth thl ee 1111l11ondolldrs or 111ore. The appropriation of the
\e\\ YOlk Centtell anrl New YOlk & New Haven railroads for
the g 1cat t\\ 1ll ~tructm es specIally planned for the Merchants'
elml .:\Ianutactmer,,' Exchange amounts to four million dollars,
:some half 11111110n1110re than \vas at first contemplated. The
figures, so impressive in the aggregate, inchcate the importance
and magmtude of the whole undertakmg.
It IS explained by Mr. Spratt that the $25,000 former capi-tal
was deCIded upon and subscnbed some six months ago mere-ly
as a prelimmary, pending the complete working out of the
plans, and the sIgning of all essential contracts. While the fi-nanCIal
end of the exchange has thus had succe:ssful attention,
and whIle preparations for the construction of the buildings
ha\ e been under way m the offices of the architects and contrac-tor:"
the work in .:\ifr. Spratt's office and the general offices of
the exchange has been going on rapidly and satisfactolily. Al-read)
leases have been made and signed representing 75 per cent
of all the floor space avallable for the furniture department
Lea'b fOl space 111 the other departments have been made, also,
111~dtl~1actOl) number and amount. The ground being all pre-pared,
and the pI e11minalY work so well under way, the can-st!
uct10n Wlll go on without let up or hindrance until the build-lllgS
are completed and the expanded furniture exchange takes
the importel1lt place its success has earned.
New Supply of Hardwood.
\\1 F Holmes, formerly of Grand Rapids, Mich, now a
reslclent of }< lorida, is reported to have dlscovered a chemical
process by \vhlCh the wood of the palm tree is hardened and
made useful as a substltute for many kinds of hardwood
He prop0'ie'i to e:,tabhsh a factory at Jacksonville, where he
\\<111 turn out furniture and art pieces manufactured from
the hardened wood He sent a number of s•amples of hIS wood to the commIttee on new enterpnses of the J ackson-
VIlle board of trade, vvhlch body commented \ ery favorably
on them fhb encouraged h1m to send a 1epresentatlve to
~ ew YOlk 101 the purpose of making demonstratIOns with
the result that he was 1.11ged to make a commercial venture
and ,:,tart a factory -"'-----_._----------_. ----~.~----_._._--.-.-..-.., II
I
II
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We can help you. Time
saved and when done
leaves are bound (by your-self)
and mdexed by Hoors
or departments.
BARLOW BROS.,
Grand Rapicla. Mich.
Wrtte RtgktNou ..- "i'
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
NELSON-MATTER FURNITURE
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CO.
BED-ROOM and DINING-ROOM
COMPLETE SUITES
in Mahogany. Circassian Walnut and Oak.
If ",on have not one in your store, a simple request will brintt you our ma4nificent new Catalol1ue of 12x16 inch page groups, show ..
ing suites to match. With it, even the most moderate sized furniture store can show the best and newest furniture satisfactorily.
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUBLiSHED EVERY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUIISCRI"TION '1 00 "ER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES '200 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS.
PUBLICATION OFFICE, 108-1l2 NOATH DIVISION ST. GAAND RAPIDS, MICH,
A. S WHITE, MANAGING EDITOR
Entered as lecond class matter, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapids, Michigan
under the act of March 3, 1879
Postals savmg shanks ha\ e been successful m othel Lonn-tnes
but that does not glVe absolute a"sUlance that the c;\,,-
tern VI ould be successful hel e, because col1ChtlOn~a1e not ..11111
lar m all respects PublIc sentIment, ho\\ e\ el 1'0 clead\ J11
favor of the system and It \\ III plObabh be tIled m the nea1
futl1l e The W01d "tried" IS used mstead of "adopted" be-cause
it \\ 111be an e'Cpellment and It IS plOb,lble tl1dt, \\ hate\ e1
Its PlOVlSlons may be, the fi1st la\\ \\ 111ha \ e to be a111cndcd
repeatedly before It ISmade to \\ 01k sat1c;factOllh I he g1eat
est clIfficulty in frammg a law fOl thIS count1 \ 1'0 tonnel In
prov1dmg for the use or mvestment ot the tunch ,lfte1 the\
have been depos1tedm postal banks. The gO\ e1nment can not
affo1d to pay mterest on the money and ,dlo\\ It to 1em,ll11
Idle It must be kept m cIrculatIOn and that thel e I.. chtficult\
m solvmg the problem IS shO\\n by the 1epOlt that se\e1al
changes m the bIll intlOduced by SenatOl Cu tel ha\ e ahead\
been suggested and some of them \\ III unc10ubtedh be adopted
That the bIll \\ 111be passed at the CUllent sessIon of congles" 01
the next is generally concecled E\ en those \\ ho a1e oppo-.cc\
to It say that it \\ III be pao,sec\ afte1 bemg amended It 1'0
urged that RepublIcans must \ ate f01 It becau-.e the\ ,11 e
pledged to its SUppOlt by then natIOnal platfOlm, and that
Democrats should \ ate fOl It because the gl eat maJol1t\ ot the
people \\ ant It, some fOl one Ieason and some tal dnothe1
The postal savmgs banks \\ 111be expected to clIa\\ out mone\
that has been hoarded and put It mto busme"s channels Ii
they do not do so they WIll be a faIlure and the la\\ \\ III be
repealed If they do b1mg out the hoarded money It can not
hurt eXIsting banks, but WIll certainly benefit them by me1eas-ing
theIr depOSIts, for it is now conceded that money placed
m the postal banks must be tlansferred to other banks Tlms
the system would tend to lower rates of mtel est and \\ mJlc\
advel sely affect only those whose mcomes ale clla\\ n flOm
mterest on bank deposits. The banks can make mal e plofit by
paymg 2% per cent on deposits and loa111ng them at 4 pel
cent than by paying 30 per cent and loanmg at 5 per cent
ChIcago IS fOllOW111gGrand RapIds m the mattel of estab-lIsh111gbranches
of the publIc hbrary. The commlSS10ne1s ha \ e
estabhshed 1efel ence and book-circulating statIOns m se\ e1al
schools and 111one commercial establishment The latter IS
looked upon as a novelty or, rather, as an experiment, but
there is no reason why it should not pI 0\ e successful It should
surely be to the advantage of employes in large me1cantlle
estabhshments and factories to have books \"hele they may
be obtained without the loss of time and expense in making
a trip to the central library. A good book of fiction, bIO-graphy,
history, travel, exploration is a joy and a solace to
mOSLpeople The pleasUl es of hterature and the Imagmation
ale not the monopoly of the few, but the helltage of all To
place books In factolles IS, therefore, to Dung sunshme,
\\ a1111th,l11elbe,mt\ mto thousands of humble homes It IS
to tOo,tel Hleah..11l ll1tele"t m hh;-her thll1gs, home lIfe and
!;oocl habIt.,
\ bIll to amend the msurance law of :\e\\ YOlk. penQll1g
actIOn b\ the legIslatl11e of that "tate, leqUlre~ msurancc
compal1le" \\ 1th111five dav" after lecelpt of notice of loss or
dal1lage b\ fi1e to ckll\ er to the msnreel plOpet blanks tOl mak-ll1g
ploof of such 10"" 01 cldmage as requllcd by la\\ or by the
pollC) \\ Inch blanks shall contam printed instructIOns as to the
manner 111\\ hlch such proof of loss shall be made Proofs made
111substdntlal COnf0l1111ty\\ Ith such 111st1'11ctionsand \\ 1thm
the tll11epI esu IhecI shall be cIeemed suffiCIent pnm,l faCIe proof
()f such loss 01 cLu11age ['adUle of dn Insurance company to
SUprly the lequned blanks \Valves the lIght of the company to
1eqUlle sen Ice of proof and l11ctkes1t hable for all loss 01
damage sustal11ecl unclel the polley, clesp1te any prOVISIons to
the contI a1) If the mea" Ule, \\ hen passed, shall be so ad-l111l1lsteeJd
ds to clIp the cIa\\ s of the adjuster sharks, It wIll
-.e1\ e a gooel pm pCbe
E1l1est \\ StImson an Enghshman has succeeded in an
attempt to m1'Cup Fl ench cun es \\ ith arts and crafts features
,mel "n account of IllS achle\ ement "Good Housekeepmg,"
sa\ '~r 1 Stu11p..on IS tholOughly an al bst" HIS \" hole time
I he eloe-.nt stop fOl lunch nor to take a bath if Housekeep-ll1g'"
statement 10> t1ue-Ed) and attentIOn are concentrated
on the study of a1tistic fmniture mak111g, and his work IS
cl1alactelJ7ed by gl eat fil1lsh amI refinement Perhaps its
sumphClty IS 1ather over-pronounced. The frequent banish-ment
of all semblance of COInlCe produces a certam Idea of
attenuatlon and gl\ es to pieces of furl1lture 111tended as thc
pel111anent mmates of the rooms "of whose decOlative scheme
the\ f01m a pal t, to bear a kinship to the packing case"
\\ lthout doubt StImpson IS "bug house"
A bIll to pe1mlt 1110,Uanlee compal1les to insure against
100,,,>or damage by the bleakage or leakage of spr111klers,
pumps, tanks, \\ ater pIpes or plumb111g and aCCIdental mjury
flO111any other cause other than fire or hghtmg to such ap-phallces
IS pending actIOn in the Ke\\ YOlk legIslature BIlls
of a sl1111larnatUle have been mtl oduceel111 the leglslatUles of
other states
"BIg bUSiness" IS opposed to the pubhc1ty clause of the
natIOnal COlpOlatlOn ta'C law Congl ess IS the wlll111gtool of
hlg busll1ess anrl a speed) lepeal of the ohnoxlous clause may
be CtntJcipated
Bank cIeal111gsm the pnncipal cities of the United States
\\ Ith thl ee exceptlons last week were largely in excess of the
COlIespondlng pe110d last year
Local manufacture1 s are bUSIly engaged in ShlPP111%out
Oldel s taken 111 Janual y and cuttmg new stock
Repol ts of 1l111)1"ovement 111 the retail business come to
hand daIl\ \\ lth the paSSIn~ of the winter season
Catalogues mailed dUl111g the cun ent month are pro-ducing
much new trade
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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17
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Made by Nelson-Matter Furmture Company,
Grand Raplds, Mlch
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
r--~; ~~-;-~~a;~-~.~~~.-~~~u-'~;' ·~-O.
2 Parkwood Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
We are now puttIng out the best Caster Cups wIth cork bases ever
offeree to the trade. These are finIshed In Goldeu Oak and White Maple
In a llght fimsh These goods are admltable for polIshed floors and furn-
Iture rests Theywill not sweat or mar.
PRICES'
Size 2)« Inches •... $4.00 per hundred
SIze 2')i Inches • 5 00 per hundred
Try a Sample Order FOB Grand Rap.dl .... - -_ ... _.. .
WHERE PHILADELPHIA EXCELS
Sleepy Old City An Acknowledged I~eader in the
Department Store Business.
Phl1adelphia, Feb. 10-In this cIty the depdl tment StOlC
idea is carried out on larger lInes than most other cItIes ::\a
where in the country, not even in New YOlk or ChIcago, can
be seen so many bIg stores, carrying such lal ge and vaned 11l1es
as here. Men interested 111these 1111escan ah\ a) ':0 leal n somc
thing in thlS city whel e the store~ al e g encrally conslclel cd
models. The world over knows the name of John \\ anamaht
praetJcally the angina tor of the great elepal tment StOle anel the
others here are knO\\ 11 nearly as well especially GImbel BIos
Lit Bros., Strawbndge & Clothler, \; Snellenburg &- Ca Bel g
Bros. and Blum Bros.
Every year the three depaltment ~tole" elt Elghth and "tell
ket streets-Glmbel Dras, ~trawblldge & Clothlel dUel Lit
Bros.-conduct a trade expositlOn, show111g many lme" of actual
manufactUl ing 111 vanous hnes. There one may see carpet
weaving, making of tabourettes, eye-glasse~, Je\\ eh), rug~, lace,
shoes, cut glass, clothing and about 100 othel Imc", all eqUlpp d
wlth machl11ery showing the actual process of manutaetul c It
lS a great drawl11g cal el anel each firm gIves aut souvel1lrs. \s
a paying proposltJon it lS not a great success, else lt \\ ould
be repeated regularly every year.
There are few cities \\ here the bIg lmes of ftlfl11tUle al e
earned that can be seen 111the depal tme11t :ot01es hel e :::;ome~dV
that the hnes are top hea\) that lS thc) al e too big anel un-wleldy
and the money l11vested 1uns 111tObIg figures It 11111"! ..-. . . .--------_.--------- I HOFFMAN BROTHERS CO.
t FT. WAYNE, IND.
HARDWOOD LUMBER
II SA~~D} QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY
I• •• • .__.__ _. • •• I I • _ _ •••
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o~ MANUFACTURERS p.~D DEALERS
IN HIGH GRADE BAND AND SCROLL SA~S
REfAIRING-5ATI5FACTION GUARANTEED
CITlZEN5 FHO'NE 1239 27 N MARKET 5T
.~, GRAND RAPID5~ MICH.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
if It may have come from the bed rooms of Marie Antoinette
or from one of the palaces of the LoUIs. The breadth, scope
and magnitude of thIs sale can be understood only by inspection.
In the Item of pianos, from 180 to 217 are generally sold every
day at these sales If you want beddmg there are 45,000 pounds
of stenhzed hall' and 26,000 pounds of deoclOl ized geose
feathers It would take a few geese to supply thIs one firm alone
wIth feathers.
vVIlliam Grant & Co, the installment house at 1020 Race
street, wIll move to ItS new bUlldmg whIch WIll be occupIed by
them at Eleventh and Arch streets.
Ackerman & Co, of Manayunk, making mohaIrs, plushes,
veronas, etc, for the trade, al e reported as exceedmgly busy
and do about the bIggest business m the countI y in theIr hnes
TheIr prices have all been advanced 20 per cent as these goods
are in strong demand and everyone wants orders filled promptly
The supply is none too good and manufacturers are WIlling to
pay the advance in order to get the matellals they need.
WIlliam Gosnell, Jr, will not remain m the furniture man-ufacturing
busmess with his father, but Intends to go mto the
mining engineering business.
George W. Dana IS rebuildmg his furniture factory \'v hlch
Illllned at Camden, N. J.
Jules Kippler leslgned hIs position on the 11001' at \Vana-maker's
and Is now wIth Hunt, GIlkmson & Co.
The Union Publishing company which does a bIg premIUm
business in furniture, have moved from 902 VValnut street to
519 Market street N. GottlIeb, who was WIth the defunct firm
of Feigenbaum & GottlIeb, is the manager
\V. L. Hurley, who is presIdent of the Board of Trade of
Camden, N. J., and of the firm of Gately & Hurley of that city,
is building one of the finest homes there, at \Vhite Hou"e Pike
and Magill avenlle.
Harry Slocum, who was with Moses' fur11ltme store of
Washington, is now with John Wanamaker.
The \Vilson-Bennett-Porter factory at Montomsvllle, Pa.,
is completed and they are busy turning out their various lines.
Robert Henderson havmg sold his intelest in the Hender-son
Furniture company of Johnstown, Pa, has gone into busi-ness
on his own account.
Schrack & Sherwood, who had a bad
lull stJ eet, some tIme ago, WIll rebUIld.
takers' supplies and upholstery trimmings.
The Loomis Table company of UnIon CIty, Pa, has out a
very nice line of Jacobean and Flanders designs and have a
very attractive catalog.
The Penn Upholstered FurnitUl e company, of 220 South
Second street, are very busy on their parlO1 suites. They have
been running day and night and have not been able to keep up
with the demand. A new line of mIssion davenports and suites
fire at 1516 Callow-
They make under-
ROLLS
For Bed Caps, Case Goods, Table Legs
and many other purposes; in Gum,
Mahogany and Quartered Oak Veneers.
The Fellwock Auto & MfJ!. Co. EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
Muskegon, Mich., Feb. 10th, 1908
Grand RapIds Veneer Works,
Grand RapIds, MlCh
Gentlemen
Mr. H G Leonard of the Grand Rapids Refriger-ator
Co, called on us last Friday to look over our
kiln We took great pleasure In shOWing hIm the
entire workmgs of the klin and went mto detaIl
gIvmg an explanatIOn of the way It was operated
and the results obtamed
We are so well satIsfied WIth the kIln ourselves
that It IS a pleasure for us to recommend It to
others and we trust that what we saId to Mr.
Leonard WIll result in hiS deCldmg to adopt our
kiln.
Yours very truly.
BROWN, MORSE CO
And He Did. "Nuf Sed."
of three and four pieces is being put on the market S. Gold-man
has been in New York lookmg for plushes as they can't
get thm fast enough and the price has gone up also. The firm
has bought the building at 221-223 and 227 and will greatly en-large
the business in davenports, beds, etc.
The Moore Furniture company, 234 South Second street,
managed by G. H. Sheip, wholesale the bed room, bureau and
SIdeboards made by the Lenoir (N. C.) Furniture company and
have taken up a new hne of parlor, lIbrary and extension tables
made by the Sanford M):l11ufacturing company of North Caro-lina.
H. Block of the Fidelity hVtlse Furnishing company, 1540
Kensington avenue, has opened a new store at 2755 Kensington
avenue.
f------·-·-·--· ---._ ..---- - - - ...,
I A veneer punch whIch removes defects satisfactonly from Blrd's Eye
Maple and Walnut veneers. It Will cut out the defect instantly and plug the
hole so that the patch cannot be detccted.
Made of the best tool steel and tempered by a secret process so that the
edge WIllnot turn over. Any size 18ft to 2.Lft mcluslve @ $3.98 each, or a
set of three @J $11.75.
I
II
I
. ....... ..I.
For sale by Birds Eye
Walker, Chicago, III.,
Dept. D., 6611 Wood-lawn
Ave.
LONG DISTANCE
PHONE HYDE PARK II
..._... -_.
~111I1~ WALKER 33 .--... _..... ..---_. _. _..-.-.._._._--- .....
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
MADE BY HOLLAf\D FLJRNITURE COMPANY. HOLLAND. MICH
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
MINNESOTA UNDERTAKERS
Over Four Hundred Attend the Twentieth An-nual
Convention Held in Minneapolis.
1\Ill1nedpolIs, F eo 10- The hventIeth dnnudl cermention
uf the Mll1nesota } unel al DIrectors' associatIon \vll1ch closed
here this afternoon was attended by 0\ er four hundred under-tclkels,
of "ham a do/en or more "ele women lVIany of the
I etaIl fllll11ture dealers, v\ho held then" annudl com entlon
hel e thIs week, al e undel takers and as they attended both
com entlOns K111ghts of Pythias hall \\ dS filled to its capacity
at evel y session of the Funeral Dil ectOls
1he Funeral Directors' conventions was ccllled to Older
Tuesday morning by President J. A. \VIlh\ershled of St
Paul Re\ J A. Corngan of St. Paul made mvocation and
an dddress Other speakels "ere V. M. Grady of Duluth,
and PlOfessor \V. P. Hohenschuh, E B. Norbert and Law-
Ience \V Illwerschleld furmshed vocal music.
In the afternoon the plesident delivered hIS annual ad-dress
which was followed by the introductIon of members by
J \Van"en Roberts of Mmneapohs the officers reports and
addresses by Professor Hohenschuh and Harry C. Sinks,
disinfector for the state board of health made up the program.
Wednesday's sessions wel e devoted mainly to repOl ts of
committees, addresses on vallous topics and demonstrations
In the even111gmost of them joined in a theatre party at the
01 pheum.
DISCUSSIons,demonstIatIons, etc, "ere continued today
and at the close the convention" as conceded to have been the
most successful ever held by the organizatIOn Over fifty
new members \\ el e added
Organization and Compulsory Arbitration.
At the annual bclnquet of the Home Fm nishers' aSSOLl-dtlOn
of :Massachusetts at the Re\ ere House in Boston, Allen
T rJ Iedd\\ ay, pI eSldent of the stdte senate, speak1l1g on "The
Mel gel'," declal ed :
vVe \\ ant 01 gamzatlOn and \ve want it in every l1l1e of
human conduct Above all, It IS necessary in polItIcs. Unless
the 01gamZdtIon beh1l1d polItIcs IS sound civic implovement
w III be ImpossIble As an OIgamLatIon your assoClaton has
always had a salutaly effect on the shapmg of polItical Issues "
Our facIlItIes for tIan"pOl taUon are sadly lackll1g. Ow-llL~
to this fclct we have lIttle bus mess connectIOns with the
south\v estel n pal ts of Massachusetts Too much of your
busmess IS \\ Ith New York It IS mcumbent upon us to get
back what ploperly belongs to us"
H\\ e also \\ant a law for the compulsOly settlement of
labO! tI oubles
HAn aLt of tlns kmd is m fOlce m Canada and It IMSbeen
the medns of say mg more tlMn $3,000,000 wages, and male
th·1l1,50,000 Idborels have been mvohed A la\V of thIS na-tu
Ie ought to be mcol porated mto Olll statutes"
Busy Factories at Chester. Pa.
Chester, Pa, Feb ro-The New Farson Manufactullng
co 11pany, Kmth and Howell streets, mdkmg chma clo"ets,
halChvood \\ ater coolel s, music cab111ets,etc , have been fardy
busy all fall and winter and are 100k111gfor alaI ge "pr111g
tIade rl he old F clrson :'.Ianufacturing company used to
make IefJ Igel ators, but the ne" company \\ III (hScont111uethat
Ime and devote their time to mak111g fmmture specialties
TheIr new line of chma closets ale saId to be velY atUactIve
'J he "ales al e made to the Ietail tI ade m :'\Iew Y01k Phlladel-pllla,
Boston and the lalge southern cItIes A new catalogue
will be issued in July and they WIll e:>Jl1l)ltat the July Furni-hue
ExhIbition m New YOlk E S Farson is the general
salee. agent tak111g in the East and South; J oseph ~1essick is
plesident; George Messick, tIeasmel; John McCabe, Jr,
secretary.
R. J. Keppel & Co, Second stIeet dllll Concord avenue,
make ch111aclosets, buffets, etc, ulllIel the fil111name of the
Keystone Cab met company ThIS firm IS also qlllte busy.
The La1\ler Flllmtllle Stale, on ThIrd stIeet, will go
out of busrness S.
Furniture Fires.
Max Klssllove's FurnIture store at \Vaukegan, Ill, was
destIoyed by file on February 3
The E A. Hadson FurnIture company of Houston, Tex,
suffered a loss of $2,5°0 by file on Februdry 5, fully insured
FIre in Thomas Roche's furmtme stole at BrIstol, Pa, on
February 4, caused a loss of $2.5°0, whICh is fully covered by
msurance.
FIre m the Smith Calpet \Vorks at Yonkers, N. Y, on
Febl uary I I, destroyed fimshed stock valued at $35,000.
Fully insured
George Horne & Co, flllmtllle dealers of Manchester, N
H, lost about $3,000 by the burning of their walehouse on
NOl ih Ma111stIeet, FebruaIy 4 Inslllance, $1,500
Chamber Suites in Gum.
Charlotte, MIch. Feb I I-The Charles Bennett Flllm-ture
company have recently brought out several patterns of
Chamber stutes m led gum, finished as satin walnut and ma-hogany
that are \ ery att! actI\ e These are great values and
ale Illu$trdtedm a neat httle supplement \\hich any dealer may
hdve fOI the asking. One of these sllltes is Illustrdted on
another page of this week's Issue Others WIll follow in sue-ceedmg
issues
The Charlotte Manufactullng compdny, manufacturers of
lIbbraly clnd parlor tables are hay mg a fall' trade A new
catalogue wIll soon be ready fOl mal1111g
Read by All the Readers.
All persons who lead ne\" spapers and all pel S011'3\vho
do not read neV\spapel s Iead posters. Advel t!"111gby postel s
costs less than advel tIS111gby nev"spapers and IS much mOle
profitable The \Vhlte Plmtmg company Kas I08 I 10 and
112 N Dn iSlOn street, Grand RapIds, nMkes a speCIalty of
h\ 0 colored posters for dealers m flll111tllle and kmch ed goods
\Vllte for sample and prIces
..----
I
- - _ .... --------- ---------~._.------_.--.
ON CARVINGS
OF ANY KIND
SEND SAMPLES. DRAWINGS OR CUTS FOR PRICES.
f.._--
CWartiatIeoElIo'rue. II E•P. ROWE CARVING WORKS, ALMLEICGHA.N. !I ........ _------ -- . "
Minnesota Retail
Dealers'
Furniture
Association
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
OFFICIcRS-Prcsld.nt LoUIS J Bnenger !\e\\ Ulm VIce PresIdent C Danielson, Cannon Falls, Treasurer, o .. 0 \Ioen, Peterson Secretan W L Grapp Janesville
E'l:ECUTIVF CO\l\IITTEE-D F RIchardson !\orthfield Geo Kllne, Mankato, W L HarTls, MlIlneapolts, o SImons Glencoe M L Kittle St Peter.
BULLETIN No. 98.
PROCEEDINGS OF THE FIFTH ANNUAL CONVENTION.
Our fifth annual convention in ~Iltlneapoh~ opened leI,t
Monday with over 200 members pre"ent. Dunng the da\ thc
number was largely mcreased and betorc the clo'ie mOle than
350 dealers had mspected the exhIbIt of arbcle" secm ed tt 0111
mail order houses and placed side by sIde \\ Ith duphcatcs boug-ht
by the association's buying commIttee at figureo that enable
dealers to meet or cut the catalog pnces On each piece se-cured
from mail order houses was pasted the catalog descnpt10n
and a picture of article with adchtional t) PC\\ ntten matter p01nt-ing
out wherein the goods dehvered fell Sh01t of de~C11ption amI
picture. The exhibIt mcluded table~, chdiomer-, chall sand
desks. Numerous dIagrams shO\vmg catalo1:; 1\\u' tl a t10n~ 111
light colors and with actual SIze of "mall artIcles dehvel ed \\ orkul
in in black, were aho part of tIllS ch"pla\
::\layor Haynes gave the furnltm e 111cn ,I heell t\ \\ elcome
in an interesting addre"s and thell Iespome \\ as del1\ el eel b\
J. R. Taylor of Lake Benton President Buenger ot "ew L 1m,
delivered his annual mesage and iE K. \i\TJlcox made an ad-dress
on methods of salesmanship.
The proceed111gs of the convention followed the plOgl elm
as published very closely President TIuenQ,er's addre~s and the
reports of the buying and <oap club commlttee'i alc pl1bh~hLcl
this week and more of the pI oceed111g'i and some of the addres,e~
on special topics may appear 111 tIllS depal tment ne"t \\ eek, \\ lth
comments on the convention wlllch i'i conceded to haye b~en a
gratifying success.
Election of Officers.
The election of officel s for the ensuing ) eal Ic-,ultcd a-follows:
President, J. R. Taylor, Lake Benton.
Vice President, D R Thompson, Rockford
Secretary, W L Grapp JaneSVIlle
Treasurer, B. A Schoenbens-er, Perham
PRESIDENT BUENGER'S OPENING
ADDRESS.
"Gentlemen, it affords great pleasure to me, for I ha\ e the
honor of opemng om fifth annual COt1\ ent10n In dOlng- 'iO 1
cannot help but urge that the member'i of thIS a,socldtIon at
tend to the working and doings of ItS bus111eos, thelt the a_so-dation
bnngs with it and stay with us until all the mlpartellt
work is completed. You have come hele and opent tune and
money and I am sure thdt it will be well Ill\ested a, we \\ III
have some very good demonstratIons and speakers
The officers have tried hard to make this com ent10n the be'it
we have held in our association, and w111prove to you that It
is before you leave for your home. \Ve want each dnd e\ el \
member here assembled to feel that this 15hIS convent1On whethel
he hold'i an office or not, that you are welcomed to all pm lIege'
of thIS convention Don't be backward should any que-bon
arise where you want to say something, as we \\ ould hke to
hear from you all I want to urge every membel present to
attend our meetings regularly and be on tune at the hour for
which our meet111gs are called. As president of thi'i associ-ation
I most heartily welcome you and thank you more than any
words can express for your presence here today, in the dty of
\I111neapoh'i whIch always reaches out a welcome hand to the
:\Imnesota Retail Furniture Dealers' dssociation
One of the important duties of the preSIdent, that of render-
Ing the anl1l1dl message, IS the one duty which is most hard for
me to accomplIsh, WIth a 'idtIsfdctlOn of having it well done.
Yet I ha\ e been made to see by bemg in close touch with this
\\ ark ,I, ) our pre'ild1l1g officer that It IS through the mstrumen-tahty
of the preSIdent's message thdt the pohcies and reform
\V ork of any d~soclat1On should come. Reahzing this as I do,
I hope ) ou \\ rIl bear wIth me for a little whIle and I will try
to do the be~t I can.
This Year's Work.
10 'd\ that the past year has been a busy one is putting
It nulc1h but T belJe\ e I can see that it has laid the foundation
fOI pel manent succe'iS because I hold that no business or asso-
CIation \\ 1\\ be prosperous until it has demonstrated that it can
dnd doe~ g1\ e lllOle than vdlue leceived. You WIll always fitld
men \\ ho \\ 1\\ lend their aid to any movement that has the ear-mdl
k" ot help 1ll !t for d eel tam pel iod of time, but that sup-
PO!t Celn anI) be made permanent by the "make good" policy
\\ hlch appeals to the majonty. Our association is no excep-t10n
to that natural la,\ Therefore I wish to emphasize that
I beheve that our co opel atJve buying policy has made our as-sociation
a success Not that thIS is in itself the great thing
m our a'iSOC!atlOn \York, not at all, but it is the instrument that
hI mg ~ m the ne\\ lJfe of the association without which no in-stJtution
can plosper Expenence has taught us that after we
g-et a dealer mto II hat we term the convention habit, that he
finds the educational feature, the getting together, the exchang-m1:;
of Ideas and the rubb1l1g of elbows with men bigger than
themseh es al e after all the big things that make association
hfe \ aluable ~ 0\\ please don't forget that.
It IS onlv natmal that 111 a body of 200 or more live dealers
thdt the! e IS at tunes a dIfference of 0p1l11Onas to what is the
best pohcy to pursue, but I am glad that I can say that we are
all '\mericans and that the great American policy of "the ma-
JOllty 1ule'i" is a fixed law wlthm our association as it is in all
\merican institut1Ons. If we analyze this a little further, we
find that out of the varietv of opimon composed of the radical,
the conservative, the indifferent, the don't care opinions, U5-
nalh come a Just and equable policy.
\Ye have dIscussed this so often that it may seem old and
uninteresting- to ) ou but the effects of this evil are 'so far-reach-l11!.;'
that \\ e ha\ e found It neceS'iary to g-ive it the first place in
the hst'i of eVI):, that \'ve hope to correct throug-h a'isociation
endea\ 01'i \\ hat I have to say I am 'iure ) ou will find decided-h
intere'it1111:; Thie; problem i'i such a larg-e one that we cannot
(l!'icm~ all Its phaoe~-suffice to say that we are just beginning
to lc,l1n to get dm\ n to funddmental principles that have made
tl110 mall order eVIl possible It is only reasonable to assume
that ) ou can find a remedy for any great evil only after you
hay e found out what has made those eVIls possible. That there
must be some fundamental I ea'ion why the mail order houses
ha\ e ~rown as they have, no one doubts I ask you to tell me
ot am 1l1stance where a bmmess that caten to the public has
g-roI\ n hke the mail order houses in the last ten years. If you
cannot, It ploves that there must be 'iome fixed funddmental
1ea~on for It The natural response to that statement would be,
\\ hat is it 0 A..nd I must confess that the fundamental princi-ple
1eferred to wa'i beyond me or rather that I did not con-sciously
see it \iVhile unconscIOusly we had been pursuing
the right course to meet this evil, its true significance did not
fully dawn upon me until I picked up the Commercial News of
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Jdnuary dud read the drticle headed "The Debating of the Great
Question of the Big Cataloger.", when It dawned upon me that
1\1r Sears has l111115elflet the cat out of the bag whether in-tentIOnally
or not, by Sd)mg on page 5· "I am mtere;,ted in the
tabulation m your book of the name;, of Jobbers and manufac-turers
who do and do not sell to catalog houses To your
readers wIth Imagmaly wounds I have no doubt thIS, sort of
stuff IS a balm, but Just between you and me, it's a Joke, for I
never knew a tU11e when the catalog house couldn't buv what
It wanted wIth money, and wanting so much of It they can us-ually
get a httle better quality than the retailer gets and almost
always at an appreCIably lower price.
The first part of this paragraph proves to me that the cam-paIgn
of the various associations and especially of the Com-mercial
News is having its effect being the diplomat that Mr
Sears has proved himself to be He IS endeavoring to cover up
this influenc~ calling it a joke, but the nugget of truth in his
admission comes in the last four lmes, which please note care-fully,
in whIch he says that because of their volume they get a
little better quahty than the retailer gets and almost always at
lower pnces. Before I go further, let those hnes sink deep
mto your mind because thIS is an admIssIOn from a man who
has made every dealer m the country at one time or other, think,
and think hard.
To me this admission proves that this policy of our buying
committee is nght, when you stop to think that this admission
comes from one who has proved its value in his busmess career
Yes, Mr Sears has given us information that ought to be worth
considering.
At our last conventIOn Mr Sheldon told us (and I know
of no better authority to quote) that by natural law any com-mercial
transaction is dIVIded into four parts: the salesman, the
customer, the things sold and the sale Itself. N ow then if all
thmg S eHe equalm such a transactIOn, If the cost of handling mer-chanchse.
co~t of sellmg and the fir;,t cost of the artIcle sold,
is the same to all there cannot be created a competItIve or uni-versed
pnce By that I mean that if all thmg's are equal that you
WIll find that the average pnce upon a certam table, chaIr or
whatnot sold for about the same price all over the states Now
listen so you catch my meaning.
Business experts tell us the cost of doing business is usu-ally
the same, generally speaking, whether mall order honse or
dealer. \iVhile the mall order house may be doing a greater
volume, yet because It IS not in personal touch with the trade,
its pro-rata expenses per dollars worth of merchandIse sold IS
on an average with the majority of small dealers Vie find that
the mail order house has no advantage there Now to the
thought that I want you to remember. If the first cost of mer-chandise
sold, is not the same to the small dealer as to the mal!
order house, then the mall ordel house has the advantage over us
which advantage in turn creates a condition for us to meet
Therefore the solutIon of this problem resolves itself mto the bus-mess
problem of "How are we getting to our source of supply?"
If the recent busmess methods of gettl11g our supply are not in
line with the best business pohCles that up to date business men
have adopted, and which the mail order houses are considered
masters of, then it is up to the small dealers to either adopt
these modern methods or face a condition like this
In order to more forclby Illustrate my meaning, let us take
for example the buying of a $10 bed The maker of this bed
m arriving at what he should charge for It has added the cost
of material and manufacturing, those expenses necessary to
mdintain a prosperous factory, basing his knowledge upon past
e'{periences. He finds in order to sell this bed, that he must
mdmtam a sales force, must caIry accounts thirty or sIxty days,
and if he has a large factory and finds it necessary to cater to
the jobbing trade, he must add to this first cost the jobber's pro-tection
which varies from ] 0 to 33 per cent. N ow these ex
penses are all added to the first cost of this bed before the man-ufacturer
sa} s it must be sold at $10. Now follow me closely
I am told by manufacturers that it costs 7 per cent to sell goods,
3 per cent to carry the accounts and offset the losses, which
makes 10 per cent or $1 on the bed The jobber's protection IS
20 per cent or $2 and thus we find that it costs the manufacturer
$3 to bring this $10 bed to the average small dealer. Now that
is legItimate expense added to the first cost and the manufac-turer,
in order to market this bed, must do what I have cited
In the natural trend of business, I can readily see that the
catalog houses stumbled upon these facts and saw the opportun-
Ity to cut out all this unnecessary expense by adopting modern
busmess methods of going dIrect to the manufacturers, paying
23
cash, whIch bnngs them this bed at a cost of $7 while the small
dealer pays $10. If you andl)Ze It stIll clo;,el, you WIll find that
the net profit to the manufacturer of this bed IS Just the same
whether sold to the maIl OleIel house for $7 or the smdll dealer
for $10 Ju"t as "oon as we get at the bottom of thIS, we find
that the first cost of mel chandi se to the mall order house and
the small dedler IS decidedly dIfferent Because of this concli-tIon,
the mal! order houses hdve been successful. Couple this
advantage WIth no freight added and the over-drawing of pic-tures
111 the mall order catalog and you WIll see what has created
a vel y wide dIfference in the quotation of prices on merchandise
'\s human nature is the same the world over, this wide dIffer-ence
in price has made the mail order house successful.
These are the stern facts that have faced your officers since
they have begun to study this problem systematically and the
remedy hes in adopting such business methods as will put you
and I upon the same basis m our first cost of merchandise ThIS,
I believe, we are doing in our method of co-operative buying.
\iV e have tned to assemble here for} our benefit, the actual ma-terial
WIth whIch to help yourself" ith and whIch WIll bring to
you as it has never been before the possibIlIties that lie in actIve
and hearty co-operation
Co-operative Buying.
As the permanent success of this movement depends wholly
upon the volume that can be secured, it behooves each one of us
to see that this volume ic just as large as we consistently can
make it \iVhIle there are some difficulties ) et to Qvercome, the
groV\th of thIS movement and the experience that we have gotten
proves to me that with the help of the majority of our members,
we wIll be able to bring to them helps that they now lIttle dream
of I realize that this method of supply1l1g our wants is new
and helS some drawbacks, but as we go on, we find that we can
adelpt ourselves to the condItions and reqUlrements necessary to
to bring to u" merchandIse WIth which to protect ourselves against
phases of competitIOn that inchvldually we never ""auld be able
to cope" Ith Therefore I urge you all to 1110re carefully con-
SIder the Item" assembled here and that you lend your aid, ad-vIce
and expenence to the buying committee in order that they
may, in turn, be able to be of greater service to us all. I trust
that you WIll consider well the source from which comes the op-position
that this movement has receIved and trust that you are
business men enough to see the reason why. If you wIll all give
this portion of our Walk the thought and support it deserves, you
WIll be able to abolish nearly, If not all the evils with whIch our
business now is affiliatetl.
Great Future Ahead of Us.
\iVhile we have given the solvmg of the mall order evIl our
first and most constant care, yet it is only one of the minor de-taIls
of the pOoslbilities that lie before our association. You
must remember that your officers al e necessarily the 1l1struments
through \vhich you work and that they will follow the policies
and methods you demand We are living in an age of short
cuts in business methods and the motto of "Let's find the be'lt
way" is beg1l1mng to be the business slogan of today. Through
associated endeavors, our members \\ III be able to find the best
way;, at conventIOn tImes whIch othel" ise would take years and
years to learn if left to each indIvidual's actual experience in the
school of life. I hope and know that the educational features
of our association will grow in accordance with the demands
made upon it and the financial support whIch it receives. If \Ve
could only double our membership, we would have sufficient funds
to bring to us at convention time the brightest minds that money
em c1ell1dnd for our instructIOn and benefit. So make the reso-lution
that} au \\ III bnng in one new member thIS year.
Salesmanshi p.
The a"sociation has always recogmzed the importance of
this factor in the success of every bus111ess. I believe every
dealer in find1l1g that because of the advanced educatIOn the gen-eral
public 1<; getting, there is a demand for more and better fur-niture.
Who is going to supply It, the mail order houses and
k111dred concerns or yourselves? That is the important question
for you. Do not forget that salesmanship backed up WIth an
equality of the first cost of merchanclIse is going to be the master
of business condItIons. Also do not forget that because of the
great volume of the mall order and soap club concerns, they are
able to employ the brightest ml11ds to be had to bring to them
successful se1l1l1g schemes IndIVIdually the small dealer cannot
afford to surround himself WIth the best that there is to be had
along this l111e,but collectively, as an association, we can do this.
2+ WEE K L Y "\ R TIS A N
Our Department Trade Journals.
The supply of mdtellal to make OUI elepal tment 111 the tr dele
jOl11nals interestmg and plOductIve has been the hellc1est dut} tn-volved,
but we beheve It 15 the only \\ a} to keep dll\ e cont111ual
mterest m assoclatlOn affaIrs You \\ 111notice \\ hen the report
of the committee on credentIals IS mdde that deetlel" c \ tl \ \\hel C
cue begmnmg to leahLe what the J\I111nc~OtelelS~OleltllJll 1~ dOl11~
\vl11ch pI aves to me tl1dt our \\ 01 k has been effectl\ e I most
heal tlly 1ecommend that our by-ld\\ s be so changed that the ma11l
td111ing of thIS depal t111ent can be made pel111el11entclllc1that e,lcll
member be supphed wIth same tor the first \ edl at hh 1111111bel
ShIP, cost of \\ hich IS to be palel out of hIS 1111ttatton tce" \t the
expIration of the year, each member should PIO\ Ide hl111"elt \\ tth
this department through the naturdl com "e at SUb"LllptlUll tt)
the trade journal whIch pleases hl111most
Dues.
As dues are the hte blood at 0111 a,,~Oclat10n \\ e ought to
be mOle prompt m pa}mg them It lOLl \\1111ead the annual
tepOl ts and check up the vallet} of l \.penses nece""al\ to mall1-
tam a hve orgal11LatlOn, }ou \\ 1111eadlh ,ee thdt It t,kes monc\
to pay the pnnter, postage alld other e\.pen':>es \ s e\ er} la-borer
is worthy of his hIre, and as \ve hay e accomphshed \\ hat
no other assoctatton has, I trust thIS I efel ence to dues \\ III be
heeded and that you will not make It necessal \ fOI the ~ecrc
tary lO keep cont1l1ually after thIS pl1<l~eot OUI \\ 01 k
Secreta}')Y.
'1he longer I am 111 tOllch \\ Ith the seLl etal \ " ofuce, the
mOle J dm I111ple' sed wIth the fact that we eUe tOl tl1llclte 111
h2V1l1g J or Olll secretal y a man \\ho has been 111 con~temt tOllC'1
wltL the dealers throughout the state 111 the pa"t \ edl" becelU-e I
am sUt e that wIthout hIS e),.penence the deteul s at the "eLll
tary':, C'ffice could not be carned on el' they no\\ ,ll e \ \ hen 1
tell YO'l that I have receIved ovel 40(J0 copIes of letters \\ nttcn
tIn, ;, :c'r you WIll beg1l1 to 1eah7e what the seCl etal \ "hIp of thIS
a~"ociatlon means 1£ our office!:' \\ ere rev el sed, I am ~Ute thdt
tlll:o amount of wOlk \\ ould hterally S\\ a111pme \ et 1 Lan ~d\
that our seCl etary ha s n1<lna~ed to \\ 01k out a "\" tl111 b\ \\ hll b
thIS \\ork ha, not leCJmltd mOle thdn one hom 111 the torenoon
and one hour after SI\. d eL1Y 1hh could be ~hOltened It OUI
membel s would supply n ore matellal fOl the use of the tl ade
journals. I hope that 111 the com1l1g vear \\ henever }au hay e run
up aga1l1st d trade problem, celrrled ant a successful sale 01 got-ten
hold of the detaIls of a sale out of the lelSlttmate l hanllel
tlla1 yOU \\ould wllte It up and send It to the secletal\ tOI dl-pal
tment use. If our work g1O\\ s 111 the ne"t SI\. month~ a" It
has 11l the past, It WIll be necessary to eqmp the 0> eLl etal} s othce
WIth another typew nter, 1111l11eogapl h and add 1e-s111g l11aChlllC
1£ all our membels pay up then dues pl0mptly and bnng m one
ne\\ l1lembel, ,hIS can be accomph shed WIthout any extra burden
upon our Jlll11lbels I therefore 1elommend that the e\.ll LltlVl
COll1mlttee '-eel, 1u "upply the secretdry Cltf-tCC\\lth \\ h"t h 1Jec"S
',11 \ tc) lt~hjl 1 the \\ork as ':>oon a~ j)(h",Lle I \\clut '(' [11,.
t]i1S 0PPOlt1111,,; to tlldnk tht seCletan fc the mdny Cl 1LC
I have rece1ved and feel that I vOIce the sent1111e11tof 0111 mem-bers
when [ say that vve all apprecIate the "01k that hI'"- office
and our coml111ttees hay e done for us thh \ edl
Conclusion.
Wlu1e \ve hdve hdd a pl0spelOUS ,edl dml Ot11 as~ouatlOn
1, III bettel comhtlOn findnclally than e\ er befOl e, ) Lt I want to
lautton om ll1ember~ 'lot to let up m a-~oucltl 11l endea\ OJs b~-
Cduse when yOU lecelve the lepOJt ot the ,,(Jdp club C0ll1lll1ttee
1belteve you WIll see that there IS ~leatel nlle-~lt\ 101 a pcmel
f ul and well financed assoClatton no\\ than e\ er b~iol c. "hl1e
some of you may have thought that the mcltl order e\ 11 \\ a~ dl
most an unsurmountab1c obstacle to Ovelcome, ) et It 1~ nothlllg
111companson WIth the results of the soap dub e\ 11 \\ hen once
It gets a fi1m foothold 111your commu111t). Xow that \\ e have
a good start, let us make the best use of the opportunit\ that a ell
arsoclatlOn work affords. ThIS IS our fifth annual l11eetlllg dllll
as I look back, I see that many of the annoy me; tt ade eVlb ha \ e
cllsdppeal ed and thdt there IS beg111111ngto develop an dltogethel
cllffel ent trade feelmg-that we al e beglll11lng to look to\\ al d
our conventlOn as a home gathering TherefO! e T \\ ant \ l U t)
feel ,It hOllle dur111g thIS convention and to OUI neVI tt len 1" let
11~extend a most hedrty welcome. Let us all entel mto the "p,t It
of the COl1ventlOn ~o that \\ hen thIS conveni!on I'"- hI t01 \ \\ C
can look back to it and sa} that the 111spnatlOns ellld ~l 0 1 tc1-
~c)\\ "!J1p that thIS com lntton brought \\ ere the means of making
us brrader, better and greater busmess men. I thank you
L. J. BUENGER
REPORT OF COMMITTEE ON CO-OPERA-TIVE
BUYING.
In ]Jllo>cnt111gOUI ~cLOnd lepOlt of the \volk done by the
1JU\ 111l2.' commIttee \\ e feel that we can show a consIderable
~I ()\\th ()\ u la 1 \ eal \ Ve found that a gl eat many ehfficul-
IIe" hdd to be 0\ L~come m call J mg out the detaIls of this WOlk
\\ e had to glOpe alOuml 111 the dalk to find our bealings dnd
leal ,1 thl0ugh pI actlcal e),.pellence what tlungs could be accom-ph-
hed dml \\ hat could not
Thh mo\ ement stal ted out as a carload buying' proposItion
hut \\ e ~oon found that the bulk of this business is done thru
open L hlpments or fil1-111orders hetween seasons This pro-cltlce"
a ldl ger \ olume than the onginal orders. The members
ot \ our bm mg con1l111ttee, e),.cept one, who, by the way, has ren-duell
u" \ el \ \ aludble d~slstemce are small dealers and be-l
au,e of then ll1111tedoutlet, \\ ere not able to get in touch with
the pllce that \ olume bnne;s TherefOl e, 111 our endeavor to
bnne; to OUI membel s the matenal necessal y to meet various
phd e" ot cOmpetltlOn \\ e had to go out of our natural sources
of "upph and i!e up \\ Ith factOlles whose production did not
come up h· selmple Then too, we had no reasonable data to
go b\ m the eal h part of thIS work \Ve did not know whether
\\ e COllld the $1 01 $10,000 worth of merchandise and so had
to feel om "a\ '\0\'\ we have had a year's experience and
knO\\ the \ olume \\ e can use \Ve find that our accounts are
deudedh \\ 01 th \\111le to the factolles who al e hungry f.or bus-l11C"
\\ e al e 111~tbegin11lng to get in on prices that volume
commdncb and thth \\ e can repOl t that we l1dve made contracts
\\ Ith factolle" of kno\\ n 1eputation who make the best class of
goods 111theIr lespectlve l111es, as yOU WIll have noticed in this
\ ear's displaY
\ \ ear ago it \\ ould have been impOSSIble for us to bl ing to
\ ou the special leaders that \\e have hdd made for our purposes
Ihh 1'1O\~' that It \\ e arrange our buymg in accordance WIth t1
,(>
]Joltdt" 11ll,,' al \ to call v on thIS \\ ork, we can supply ourselves
\\ Ith dJl\ pdl l,cular Item thclt may be bothel ing th Vvc c~n do
tIns at a pllce thdt \\ e hel ctofOl e ltttle dreamed of dnd WIthout
10clChn~DUIsc1\ es \vith large quanttttes because one or two items
fOl the membel s of the a~souatlOn, uedtes a volume that will
IJlmg to 11"am thing \\ e want
\\ hIIe \\e l1d\e lald paltlculdr stteso> upon fllll11shing those
thin~o> needful to meet catalog c0111petttlOn, \\ e feel that the sam-ple'
g-dthel ed hel e \\ 111shcm that \ve have turned Olll attentlOn
to better lllle" of goods \V111ch0111members can make a profit on,
In do me111belshIp hke ours compoced of all the hve dealers in the
stdte \\ e elll kno\V that the hve mel chant buvs closer than the
indiffel ent and small mel chant Therefore, the saving we have
blonght Out membel s \\ 111range flam 3 per cent to the big buyer,
10 p~r cent to the medlUm and 20 per cent to the small dealers
\s the snlc1ll dealels ale in the majonty, it is safe to say that the
caV1110 111money conSIderation is at least 10 per cent which
mean~ that we have saved our members tbis year over $2,500 be-
",des pntt1l1g them in a positlOn to meet and beat any phase of
lompetltlon that is bl ou~ ht to them
If the 111('mbels here will study cal efully what we have as-
"unbled for their inspection and do that which is for their best
111telest \\ e \\ 111soon hdve a \ olume that WIll make this move-mcnt
self-sustaming and bl111g us sttll greatel advantages Thus
far tbl~ movement has paid all ItS own expenses and borne part
1)( jl1l stenographer' expenses for the dssociatlOn It has also
1101ne the e"pense of mamtdming the depal tment 111the trade
J 0111 netl"
Thele has been a Vely chvelsified opinion as to the C1uahty
01 the goods shIpped out by the mall order houses. In order to
show our members just what kind of a propOSItIOn they are up
agam~t \\ e have assembled here for inspectton some 15 drticles
tlOI11the mall 01 der house \Ve have arranged them so that they
-tand -lc1e b\ SIde \\ Ith artldes we have had made for onr dealers
to n-e 111mcet111g these 1tems ,Ve want to call your particular
,lttentlO'1 to the \\ orkmanshlp and quahty of these Items as com-
1111ed \vItI, the nMll order productton \iVhen conSIdering these
ltems \\ e \\ dlJt yOU to ask vourself if ,ou could have gotten them
othel '1\ I~C than thru thIS channel Don't these practIcal lllnotra-tl0ns
show tl1clt It IS not neces5,lry to cut qUdltty m ordel j get
the price necessary to meet thIS competttion ~ If we w; 111J
WEEKLY ARTISAN
adopt the Shm t cuts of bus111ess reqUlrements, we '" I I be on a
more advantageous foot111g than the mail order house.
1£ you wIll gIve us the "upport that you have I the past
year, we wIll aglee to double the volume and bring you till better
matenal than we have 111the past If, by chance, we lave macl<:
,011le mIstakes, \\ e want to assure you that they were c used only
by lack of expellence and that we are profit111g by thIs e perience
TIecause we al e all dealers om selves and know what IS neces-
S<lly, we WIll be able to Co1rect them sooner than would othel wise
be the case. The greatest, most Important draw-bac to over-come
IS the influence that the Jobber has over the m jority of
standard lInes WhIle m market, your committee woul time and
time again run into lines that \\ el every mVltmg and deals '" ere
nearly made but just as soon as our field of operatIOn w s known,
we found that certain jobbers had tIed up this territory nd there-fore
the lme could not be had In "evelal instances Job ers have
brouglIt so much influence to bear upon certain factone that our
contracts could not be renewed but this dIfficulty will coon be
overcome because our accounts will be mOle acceptable t an those
of the jobbers if they grow as they have in the past
We call your attention to thIs to give you some idea of the
chfficulties your buying comnTIlttee has to contend with There-fore
if you hear now and then mS111uations as to uur work, re-member
that a knock is a boost and that they haVE' reasons fm
It We have a certam phase of competition brought about thru
the mail order house which is not of our making and which we
must meet As self protectIOn IS the filst duty of everyone, we
feel that we are Justified m following this policy until the C011-
dltIons that affect us are removed. If, by chance, It hits a cer-tam
mtel est, we cannot help It as our first duty IS to ourselves
ThIS movement, no doubt, would never have crystalli7ed into
what It has, were It not for the fact that the personalIty of thIS
commIttee happened to be situated in towns afflIcted by the mail
order eVIl. We followed every pOSSIble line of self-protectIOn
that plesented Itself-such as the issuing of catalogs, monthly
CIrcularizing and aggressIve advertIsmg This brou~ht home to
us the practical results of not gettmg our supply at the proper
first cost Thru thIS medIUm, we have been able to solve thIS
problem at a very nominal cost to us as compared WIth the meth
ods we were pursu111g before Therefore we feel that, person
ally, we can afford to spend considerable tIme and money to
bnng about a system that will make thIS work permanent. \Ve
have turned a factor of competItion which vve ahv:tys dreaded
into one whIch it is now a pleasure to meet. Thel e IS a satis-faction
in beating a game whIch heretofore we helVe bund almost
ImpossIble-that is and make a legitImate profit. ThIS no doubt,
has been the reason which has spurred this committee on. to do
the work It has \Ve fully belIeve that thru the source of edu-catIon
along these lmes our members WIll soon see the great pos-sibilities
that lie m thIS and give it a still greai er support than
it has enjoyed in the past
Your" truly,
D R. THOMPSON, (hallman,
C DANIELSON,
F II PFTERSON,
GEO KLI'IN"
Committee
REPORT OF SOAP CLUB COMMITTEE.
The workings of the soap club evIl are beginl1lng to he felt
more and mOl e to receIve the attentIOn and thought of eve I)
member who IS huild1l1g for future business. Any method of
adveltismg IS bound to he a factor to be lechoned WIth if It IS
based upon fundamental busmes, pnnClples and has the ear-marks
of sometbmg for nothmg Most of us tllought the mall
order evIl the hal dect ploblem for the merchant to solve but
snlce we have commenced to study this problem systematically we
belIeve that the soap club eVIl IS gOIng to make us j h111k even
harder than the mall 01del' problem.
In studymg this, we find that the success of this proposi-tIon
depends upon supplymg the mel chanclIse as well <ISthe first
cost of the premIUm, m a scientific way The promoters of thIS
SO<lpclub busmess have studIed human nature and selected such
Items as appeal most strongly to those afflIcted with the human
traIt of alway s wanting something for nothing If you will take
a list of the merchandIse, soap, perfumes, eye water, etc., you
can readIly see that they have selected a hne of goods on which
there is generally a long profit Then if you ",ill study the list
of premium supphes, you WIll notice that they have selected a
2S
line which the avel age consumer knows very little about and
which, as a rule, carnes a long profit. All this gives them a
big leverage 111vvork111g"out their plan of giving $20 worth of
merchanchse for $10.
In getting data concerning this matter, your committee
found tl1dt the average cost of the soap, drugs, eye water and
sundries they ±nrlllsh cost $5 62 when bought in reasonably large
quantItIes. The avel age pI emium that they give costs from
$2 85 to $3 23 plus a fall' profit, if bought at the cost of manu-facture
1hus, vve find, in its final analysis, that the $20 offer
really costs but $8 to $8 50. We have personally inspected
their methods of manufacture and believe that they cut down thIS
cost to about $7, l11clud111gtheir advertising expenses ThIS
shows thdt they make a profit of $3 upon every $10 receIved,
vv hlch meam that they receive a profit of $30 by the time their
scheme has traveled the CIrcuit of one little club of ten.
If bU'3mess methods were employed in carrying out this
proposltIon, the results vvould not be so very far reaching. How-ever,
we bave stuched the condItions of four towns who are much
afflIcted vv Ith the soap club evil. We find that the secretary of
these clubs b usually some domestic who sells to her friends in
order to get wh?-t she thinks a $10 premium. These domestIcs,
111 turn, ask theIr mistresses to let them buy $10 worth of soap,
dru~s, etc 1]sually, rather than offend the domestic, the lady
gracIOusly coughs up $1 per month for ten months. Thus,"We
find that after the circuit is complete, ten pieces of furniture
have bee:1 dl<tnbuted and $100 worth of money taken out of the
commumty.
The WOlst of it is that after it gets started each one finds
that they are paYIng for all they get but have not the nerve to
",ithdraw untIl the CIrcuit is complete. Thus we find that this
competItion, by workl11g from the back doors of our homes, gets
a support v~Inch It otherWIse could not command The latest
move along these 1111CSIS the giving of $10 certificates. In dis-playIng
theIr prel1uums, they have been wise enough to select the
most claSSIcal, Iefined Items of furniture that it is possible to
manufacture at a gIven pnce. These are given for two three
01 fOUL certificates whIch brings about an average of tl{ree or
four $10 clubs where, origInally, there was only one.
If the members of this association had been with Us the day vv e
viSIted the factory in Rockford, Ill, where the premiums for the
Lal k1l1people are made, you would all realize, as we do, the kind
of a PIOposltlOn we are up against When you stop to conSIder
that a factory 200 x 500 feet five stories high is devoted to the
manufacture of soap club premIUms, exclusively, you "'Ill begm
to realIze ltS ma~l1ltude. But that is not all. The factory is
eqUIpped WIth all the latest Improvements and the machinery IS
so placed that there is not a lost motion from the time the buzz
saw cuts the lumber until the article IS finished
As we stood gazmg at the chma closets, colonial bookcase;"
and handsome lIbranes ",hich we, as small dealers, could not
have bought wholesale for less than $8, $9 or $10, you may ap-preciate
our pOSItion. We could see that they have adopted
many short cuts In manufacturing. By devoting this large bUIld-ing
to a short lIne of only about twenty pieces of furniture,
utIlizing the most modern machinery and employing a class of
help which the avel age factory does not, they are able to manu-facture
a quantity of goods at a decidedly lower figure than we
small dealers can get them-that is if we continue to get our
supply in the long route of present day business. But we are
grad to report that, thru the medIUm of our buying committee,
we may be able to work out a solution of this problem.
If it is falr to sell $10 vvorth of soap and give a $10 table,
why IS it not fair to sell a $10 table and give $10 worth of soap
T £ vve can arrange a plan by which we can do this and make .1
tall plDfit, vve say In all seriousness, why not be master of tIllS
phase of competition? We would recommend that tlllS comlmt-tee
be enlarged so that it may be in constant touch with the wOlk-ings
of this evil in the towns where it has gotten a foothold
L hen b} the tIme these combInatIOn colonial buffets and SIde-boards,
selpentIne qualtered oak dressers and coloniallIblane,
begin to arrive at our various towns as premIUms for one, two
and three certificates, we wlll be able to show our customers that
they could have gotten the same thing from Us under the same
conchtlOns
We know that at this point, some WIll sa}, "That IS all
very well but I do not like to do this, that or the other thIng and
I do not belIeve It necessary." Well, all we have to sa} IS that
we belIeve that every dealer ought to be master of the condItIon
in whIch he finds hnnself You alone are to be the Judrse of
r--------------------- --~~~-
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
whether the confidence of your cmtomers IS "orth tll1~ \\ e
know that the value of a reputatIOn of meetmg and beatmg dll
sources of competItion is worth cultlvat111g.
As the aSSoCIatIOn15 the medIUm thru which these 1l1flu
ences are blought about, we bring you thIS report to set \ ou
thinking along these hnes. We realIze that at the be"t, \ en
little can be done thIS year, but v\e ought to lay our plath ,,()
that by the next convention we WIll have some c1efil11teplan to
present \\ e mmt not fOlget that committee vvork is slow
IIor k dnd It dh\ a, ~ t,lkes longer than we figure on to bring about
an accomphshed fact
Yours truly,
GEO J. HILLYER,
A. GRAPP,
M. BONSON,
CommIttee
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
George H LeGlOs has sold hIS fUI111tme and umlel takl11g
lmsmess at Adrtan, Mlnn
George LevlCh has sold hIS furnitm e StOle 111SlOU" Clt\
Ia , to hIS brother, A. LevlCh
\!Vest P0111tMIss, wants a fur111tme factol} ,111d"" ants
It badly" says the local paper.
The D. F. Lane company, fm111tllle dealel'" of PIqua.
OhIO, WIll move to MunCie, Ind
A W. Pressler, of Keene, ~ H, has been granted a
patent on a chrld's roCk111gchaIr
Lerghton (T Fullman of Ludlo\\. Yt. ha ~ SeUlleel a
patent on a chan of l11s0\\ n 111ventlOn
'The Hal t7feld Fm11ltm e company succeed" the 01 nel
Furnrture company dealer s of Du BOIS, Pa.
The Tobey Furnrture company of ChIcago has been 111
corporated wrth caprtal stock fixed at $ 15°,000
The Rhodes Furniture company of Loms\ llle Ky. h,h
been l11corporated wrth capital stock fi"xed at $-1-0,000
Mrss Bertha Hor ton of TonganoAre, K,l11s, ha" been
granted letter s patent, on a chan of hel 0\\ n 111\entlOn
Credrtor s have filed a pebtlOn 111bank! uptcy aga111"t
Grossett & MCauley, fm111tme dealer s of C) nthtana, K)
J A Tyrholm & Co , dealer s 111fm111t1JI e elnd hat chIelte
at New Rrchland, }\1111nhave 111corpOlatecl Capital stock,
$5°,000.
The G M Bauett company depa1 tment stOle. of ~1th\ au-kee
Wrs., have l11creased then capital stock flOm $100.000 to
$200,000.
The Stewart Bras & AlI\ ar cl company fm111tule deale Is
of ]\;ewark 0 have mcreased therr capItal stock itam $ 10 000
to $25,000.
Jeffrey T. Stanley formerly a member of the firm 0 f
Stanley Dros, fm niture dealer s of Manchester. ~ II. rs
dead, aged 84 years
The Espenhain DIy Goods and Fm111tme companv of
MIlwaukee, \¥is, have mcreased theIr capItal stock fJ om
$400,000 to $500,000
The Bolte Bros FUrt1rtme compan) of \\ lChlta. Kan".
have purchased a site on wInch they \\ III elect a neVI bmldl11Q,"
at a cost of $25,000.
The Southwestern Furniture company of Topeka, 1(an" ,
have increased therr capital stock from $30,000 to $75,000
and will enlarge their plant
The Culver-Harris Furniture company of Dothan, i\la.
have bought the stock of therr competitOl. :\1 Blumbelg and
are closing it out at reduced prrces
Manufacturtng corporations hay e expended mal ethan
$2,000,000 m new buildings and machmery 111Lo\\ell, l\fass.
and suburbs dm ing the past year
A. E Levy furnrture dealer of Rodn FOl cl Cal ha"
sold l11s stock, which 1l1ventoned dbout $TO.OOO to L \
Lamport and VV H Carl from Lamar, Col
Frederick Sterm. dealer under the name of the Stel ns
Fur11lture company, of Spokane, \Vash. has been adjud~ed
bankrupt The store IS m charge of L J Gay as rece1\ er
The stnke of the tapestry carpet pt mtel" of Phtla<1el-pIll,)
ha" been settled \\ 1th a raise of five per cent m IV ages
rl he ~tl1ke ,\ll1ch affected SIX manufelcturers started m N0-
\ ember
GeOlge Seymour Beckvvrth has sold hIS mterest in the
film at Beck\\ Ith Dlos & Co prano leg manufacturers of
\ \ e~tfield. ~Ia ss. Ii ho wrll continue the bus111ess under the
old name
Dr Samuel \ Vy coff Wal sh a prominent chair
manufelctm er of Blooklyn, NY. (hed at his home on Feb-
1UelJ\ 2 aged ;1 \eelts, leav111ga wrdow, a son and a daugh-ter
'1 he :\Iattatuck :\I anufacturng company of Hartlford,
Conn, manufactm er s of fm11ltm e nails, trimm1l1gs, and brass
~o()ds. hay e mCIeaseo. theIr capital stock ftom $75,000 to
8;r25 000
\1 thur P Der b) ]tt11ior member of the firm of P. Derby
&. (0. chall mamtf,lctmer s of Gardner, Mass, (hed on Feb-
1uar) 5. aged 5-1- He ,vas one of the town's most hrghly
re"pected cItIzens
The name of the Rhodes-Burford Fur11lture company of
Lout"\ IUe, K). has been changed to the Rhodes-Burford
Hou"e FUl11lsh111gcompany and the caprtal stock has been
mCleased to $1.200,000
Samuel Goldman IS the new president of the Retarl
FUl111tUle Dealel s' a,socratIon of St. Louis, 1\10 , and rs also
one of the delegate" to the convention of the natronal assocr-atlon
to be held m DetrOIt
J La\\ lence Luther, fUl11lture dealer of Ebensburg, near
John"to\\ n. Pa . \\ III close out his stock and qUIt the bus111ess,
to take a pO"ltIon as cashier for the Cambna Trtle and
Gual ant) compan) .=t new orga111zatron
J o"eph J SchneIder and Norman E Lar son of Ma11l-to\\
OC, \\ IS, are repOlted to have taken stock 111the com-pan)
that plomrsed to t11vest $2,000,000 111a ne,v fUlUltUle
exposItIon bUlldmg on the North Srde 111 ChIcago
J E DoughtIe has purcha"ed the interest of hIS partner,
J E St,lple~ m the Doughtre Furmture company dealers of
\fellc!Jan. :\11"s. and has abo effected a consolIdatIOn of the
httsUles" \\ lth that of IllS competItors, the Lauderdale Furni-tUle
company
A reward of $250 is offered for information that wrll
lead to the findmg, dead or altve, of H. B Bradford a fur11l-ture
dealer of Ne\\ Orleans, La, who chsappeared about a
month ago He rs about 60 years aIel and has a scar on th~
lett sJ(le of hIS nO'oe
Frank Burnham and J A Coate", hav111g pttrchased an
mte] est m the Prerce Under tak111g company of Los Angeles
and Pasaclena, Cal, the name has been changed to the Prerce
Bm nham & Coates company Mr Coates will have charge
of the Pasadena blls111ess
Hem \ H \ man and Morl1S Bessman, constituting the
GIan(1 FttrmtUl e company, dealers at 658 Thi1 d street, M1l-
\\ aukee. hay e filed \'oluntal y petItion m bankruptcy Liabrl-
ItIes $6.310 of \\hlch $126 rs secured; assets, $1,015 of which
$700 may be claimed exempt
John FOlkenblock, has sold hIS interest in the bll"111ess
WEEKLY ARTISAN
... ... ._. .....
II
III
IIII
The season
for banquets
is here.
Get a stack
of our
Banquet
Table Tops
so as to be
ready to
supply the
demand.
A-.. •
of May Bros & Forkenbrock hardwaIe, furnitme and under-taking
to Henry May Mr May takes over his share 111the
hardware and furmtm e busmess, ancl Mr. Forkenbrock be-comes
the sole owner of the undeI tak111g business.
Holawasser & Co, furmture dealers of 1417 Third street
New Yark, have been running notices in Connecticut and
New Jersey papers, stating that their store will be open on
the hohdays, February 12 and 22, to give visitors opportunity
to mspect theIr stock, and that they wIll refund ral1road fare
to those who make purchases amount111g to $10 or more on
those days
The resIgnatlOn of Wal ner F. Liedbald, president of the
Jamestown (N Y.) :Manufacturers' aSSOCIationcaused some-th1l1g
hke a new deal in the organizatlOn. Cyrus E. Jones of
the J amestovv n Tabble company was promoted from chairman
of the executive commIttee to the presIdency; vVIlham J. Mad-dox
of the Maddox Table company who was first vice-presi-dent
succeeds Mr. Jones on the executive commIttee and
Arthur C. \Vade of the Al t Metal company becomes first
vIce-president.
A Sensible Suggestion.
EdItor MIchIgan Artisan -BIgness IS often the parent of
smallness The evolutlOn of the fm mtm e exposItIons held
at Gland RapIds and Chicago, have been so rapId that It
seems as though they haven't had tl1ne to pay vely much at-tent;
on to small detaIls vvhlch on account of then smallness
are so annoymg when 0\ erlookecl-whlch bnngs us to the
point.
In not one of the fUInitul e exposItIOn hUlldmgs is there
Our Large New Line of
DINING and OFFICE
TABLES II
are the best on the American market
when prices and quality are considered.
STOW& DRVIS FUKNITUKI; 60.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
City Salesroom, 4th floor, Blodeett BIde.
a sectlOn and attendant proYided for checking one's wearing
apparel, that one may go through the bmldmg unencumbered,
without leavmg hIS hat, coat, umbrella. etc. m the custody of
someone whom he does not wIsh to 1l1commode, even though
they are ever ready to accommodate
At the recent expositions, the writer's attention was
called to the Imperative need of coat rooms m the furmture
bmld1l1gs, in a manner which has no doubt been the experience
of many others.
At the automobIle exhIbition held in the Wayne Gardens
m this CIty ample checkmg facIlitIes are provided and would
suggest th.lt the Artisan forCIbly advocate makmg simIlar
provISIons at the expOSItions, knowing that the installatIon
of coat rooms will meet wIth the approval and apprecIation of
the visitmg buyers.
Yours respectfully,
J. BRUSHABER SO:\fS,
DetroIt, Feb 5, I9IO. Per Chas BI ushaber
Have Outgrown Their Quarters.
The Madem Parlor Furniture company of Chicago, manu-facturers
of parlor furmture, couch and davenport beds, have
outgrown their present quarters on DIVIsion street, where
they have 30,000 square feet of floor space The growth of
theil busmess. espeCIally in the couch and davenport hne
demands expanSIOn and to meet present requirements and
prOVIde for antICIpated glOwth they have purchased 20 lots,
wIth a frontage of 265 feet on the ChIcago, MIlwaukee & St
Paul raIlroad, on whIch they will build a new factory at a
cost of at lea~t $75.000.
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's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
27
- ..,
..-..
......,
"--------~._._. -,_._._-_._-_. _. --_.~----- ----~--~---~---------- __ __01 ........_ . . ..
28 WEEKL't ~\RTISAN
Trade School.
New York City ISto hay e Its fn st out-and-out tl ade ::>chool
f01 boys fully eqUIpped and lead) fOl busmess \\ Ith the open-mg
of the spllng term It \\ III oc~upy the east \\ 111~ot
PublIc School 100, at I38th stleet and I'lfth a\ enue \\ ImJl
Ins a pleas111goutlook on sevel al \ acant lots and the Hatlem
ElVer 1he equipment for the classes m plumbl11g, cal pentl \
pllntl11g, and ellaughtl11g has alI ead) been 111stalled, and a
fe\\ boys have been ,lllo\\ed to come 111 and be~11l \\mk
\\'hen the plant IS fil11sheclthele \\ 111be eqmpment tol a UlllI-plete
course 111tl aele tl ammg such as 1'0otiel cd no\\ hel e el~c
m the cIty
"In the fit"t pIau," sa1(l C11cldes Pickett, the pI l11CIp,l1,
'\\C ale a tlade school ptHe and simple and \\e mtend to tmll
out fine \\olkmen and fine fe11O\\'S.but the standald I~ a plac
tIcal one thl0Ughout For yeat s 90 pel cent of the gn band
boys m this COlllltty hay e been geLtmg then 11\mg::. thl (Jugh
manual \\olk, and onl., 10 pel cent have gone mto the plO-fes'Slo11'>
But the schools have been planned f01 the 10 pel
cent and not for the 90 pel cent '
The "tracle expellment" I" not deSIgned m any \\ a\ to
take the place of a tech1\lcal hIgh school \n) glammal ~ch,)ul
graduate may enter or ,Uly boy \\ho ha" leached the age at Lt
and can pass an entlance exammatlOn 'to be g1\en b) m)::>elf,
declal ed the pllnclpal '1he COUIse IS to be t\\ 0 ) eal S leg u-larl)
, WIth pOSSIbIlItIes fOl the te\V \\ ho might \\ Ish to add
two years furthel speualtzatlOn
DUrIng the legulal COUlse the \\olk IS d1\ Ided mto the
'vocatIOnal" and "non-v ocatlonal," as the autholltles call It
The academIC mclueles trade arIthmetIC and algebla, and such
gleanmgs of trIgonometry as would be usedm a machme ~hop
EnglIsh IS to be emphas17ed, CIYlCSand hlStOl\ fl0m the m-dustnal
standpomt, appl led ph) SIC"and chemlstl \, elemental \
bookkeepmg and the ekments of commercial la\\
])1 a\\ mg IS mcluekd m the non-\ ocatlOnal It,,t, awl \\ 111
l11ean mecha11lcal anel ;1Icllltectural ella\\ mg. mdu stllal de" IgIl
(whICh means 'Suchthmg s a:; olnamentallettellng. Utt makmg
cover deslgnmg, and \\Olk \\hlch \\ould teach a 110\ to plepale
an attlactlve trade catalogue) blue-pllnt makll1~ anel dla\\ mg
up of speCIficatIons
"Drawmg IS emphaSIzed," e"plamed 111 Pickett, "be-cause
the man m a handlClaft tIade must talk \\ Ith hiS penCil
In the shops whele the ~ood \\olk IS done plactIcally all of It
IS done from dra wmg In an) shop 01 factOl) the man \\ ho
can tell from a sketch e",lctl) \\IMt IS \\anted and e"pl,lln to
the othel WOlkel s I" a \ aluable man For a 11Iechal1lcthe m
abilIty to use a penCil IS a sellous hanclIcap and the ablltty to
u"e It gIVes any man a deCleled aelYant age "
The non-vocatIonal \\ 01k IS eApected to OCCUpyft am one-qual
tel' to one-th11d of the tIme, and no matte 1 \\ hat ebe ,1
boy takes he cannot avOId It The industllal tlammg IS dt-vldeclmto
h\o genelal glOUpS wood and metal \\OIkmg In
the first thel e \\ III he cal pentl y and jomel y, home cal penc!)
vvood tUll1lng, patte In makmg and the use of nnllll1g 111,1-
chll1ery, band sa\\s, JIg ,a\\s, JOIntels, cl11dso f01th In the
metal workmg thele I" a genelal machme "hop tlall1l11g, fOlge
wOlk, sheet metal \\olk, plumbll1g, pllntmg, both composItion
and pless work, and electllcal wifing and mstallatlOn
"Our boys \\111 be 10ughly clIvlded mto t\\0 c1clsses."
saId Mr PIckett, "tho'Se who have "ome hne alI eady pIcked
to follow and those who whde hay mg genelal aptitude ha\ e
no defimte chOICe It I" safe to sa) tlldt a boy \\ ho"e fath<:!
vvas a carpenter \\ ould most hkel) have hiS best openmg III
WOOdWOlk,and \\oukl stalt light m on that
"For the boy WIth no defimte openlllg \ve adVise genelal
\\ olk before choosmg a Ime in \\ lllch to special lie How can
c1boy tell \\ hether he \vould make a better cal pen tel' or ma-chm
st untIl he has WOlked a lIttle at the trade? In the first
\ e:l1 \\ e expect to gn e only the elements of the \\ ork, and the
~peClclllzmg mu"t come m the second year"
\ rI Pickett IS emphatIC m hlS statement that the trade
~lhool 1" to be as fa! dlffelent from a tech11lcal hIgh school as
pos"lble "I'o belSm WIth the course IS dIfferent The hIgh
-,chool takes foUl \ ealS 01 dt least thlee and a half, and I" under
tbe HOellc1of Re~ent'o 1\0 matter what a boy doe" m the
lI1eclJal11cdl\\ OJ k he IS gl dded and gl aduated upon hIS stanel-lP~
111 the aCclClemlcsubjects The be"t l1011\\orker 111 the
~ch()ol might not be gIaduated because he fell below 111 model n
lan~uages
"In thiS tl ades school the boy's shop wOlk \\ III count
e(ludll) \\ Ith hIS CL1ss100m 1eCltatlOns \\ hen It comes to
~IaduatlOn the questIOn I shall ask is what can you do? not
\\ helt do you kno\\? Om aim IS fl ankly the mastery of tools,
\\ 111( h IS not that of the manual trammg high schools No
teachel thel e unless he I" afflIcted \v Ith the mdustrIal bacillus-
\\ hleh by the \\ ay, IS d \ ery new aIlment m this country-for
It ~l\e~ Ius \\OJk such d plactlcal emphasis
"1~Ulthel mUIe, the atmosphere Will be different It IS
tu be a'o tal flam the schooh oom as posslbble. I mtend to
"ub-tltute the dl"clplme of the shop for the dlsclplme of the
sc1100hoom The boys are to learn to move in the man's
\\ odd and to he Judged by a man's standards There wIll be
110 mOle l1Iles agamst whIsperIng and the chllclIsh pedagogical
oftense'o, but OUI legulatlons \'1'111be those of a first class shop
01 factory'
Domestic Raas Better Than Oriental Imitations.
'1 he chOice at the lIght kmd of rug to complete a given
~cheme of decOlat Ion and fm11l"hmg IS perhaps as Important
11l 11'0 eftect" cl" any plOblem that confronts the home maker,
"a)" a \\ Iitel m the Claftsman A rug must be absolutely
IllSht m COI01,deSIgn and even texture, or It Will throw the
\\ hole decOlatn e scheme out of key, and one of the most
j 1 equent complamt" \\ e heal fl0m conscientIOUS and ehscrimi-natlllg
hOl1le-makeI" h of the chfficulties they encounter m
then eHO!t" to ~et lUgS that are at once beautIful, durable
and not too e'l:pen~t\ e to come \,Ithm the reach of a moderate
pUl"C
But pel hap" the gleater pal t of these difficultIes arIse
ft on. cel tam C011\entlOnal prejuchces It goes Without saymg
tha the best of all kno\\ n lUgS are the ancIent OrIentals, WIth
then \\ onc1elful dll1l llch colormg, theIr mdescrIbable 'Sheen
ane1 the \\ea11l1lScl
- Date Created:
- 1910-02-12T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:33
- 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/107