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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-04-09
Weekly Artisan; 1910-04-09
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and 7
~ ~II,/: "'1 ~" J. J' , / .~ ./ -1,( ' ...7. A. ~ ~ GRpAuNnD~~~~RAP1?;)
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GHA~ J) RAPIDS •.MICH., APRIL 9, 1910
SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY
The Largest Manufacturersof CHAMBER FURNITURE
EXCLUSIVELY IN THE WORLD
Catalogue to Prospective Customers. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 1
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY
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GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. III
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Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING '
Catalogues to Dealers Ooly. and CHAMBER FURNITURE. I ..- - .. - . .. - _ .. _. --------- ---- ..... ~
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
BIrd' j EYf Maplf
BIrch
!Z.u4rurfd Oak
and
Clrc4jjllJn Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS' BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICUIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
30th Year-No. 41 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• APRIL 9.1910 Issued WeekI,.
RAILROAD RATE BILL AMENDMENTS
Comluittee Agrees to Impose Additional Restrictions on Traffic Agree-
Iuents and Also on the Consolidation of Lines.
All manufacturers and shIppers are more or less interested
m the so-called "aclmI111stration rate bIll" a resume of the
prOVISIOns of whIch was gIven m the \lVeekly Artisan last
week During thIS week three Important amenc1ments have
been offered m the senate and a~ they have the endorsement
of the commIttee on mter~tate and foreIgn commerce they
are expected to be adopted Indeed they have been accepted
with a view of assullng the passage of the bdl All are in
the nature of conceS<;lOns to the opponents of the measure.
One of the amendments mserts the words "Subject to
the approval of the Interstate Commerce CommIssion" m
hne 22, page 13 of sectIOn 7, whIch will have the effect of
requmng the approval of the commission to every traffic
agreement befO! e It WIll be effectIve The pendl11g bIll only
reqUIred the fillmg of such an agreement WIth the commIs-sion
Another of the proposed amendments strikes out the
conc1udmg sentence of section 12 which sectIon m general
authonzes the acquistIOn of one radroad of another road,
provlc1ed the acqUIring road owns not less than 50 per cent
of the stock of a road to be acquired subject to the approval
of the court of commerce The words proposed to be strick-en
out are 1ll the prOVISOand as follows
In making the determmation herein provided for the
court shall take mto conSIderation the effect of such pro-posed
acqtu<;ltlOn upon the due observance and effec tJve en-forcement
of all the laws of the U111ted States and the
relatIve importance of any benefit to the public interest and
of any effect upon competItIOn resulting from such acquis-
ItIon
The third amendment inserts in the same section the
word, "lawfully" as qua1Jfymg the word "owns" to make It
incumbent upon the road seekmg to acquire another road
that it shall "lawfully" own not less than 50 per cent of the
stock of the roac1 to be acquired
The adml111stratlOn raIlroad bIll WIll be taken up in the
house as <;oon as the naval appropriation bill is disposed of
Chanman Mann of the hou~e mterstate and foreIgn com-merce
commIttee, has secured the adoptlOn of a resolution to
thIS effect It provides that general debate be germane to
the blll-a rather unusual propOSItion and that the bill shall
be privdeged as are appropriation bills, that is, it remains
the unfinished business and may be called up at any timfl
there IS nothing else in the way.
The resolution was adopted without much argument
The Democrats dId not seem dIsposed to interpose any ob-
JectIOns Representative Adamson of Georgia, the senior
minority member of the interstate and foreign commerce
commIttee, made a bnef talk to the effect that the adITI1l11stra-tlOn
bill, as mtroduced by Mr Townsend, was entirely ob-nixious
to the Democrats, but he said, the minority members
of the committee had succeeded in amending it materially
and they hoped to be able to accomplish more when the
measure was read in the house for the amendment under the
five minute rule As a result of the action by the house, the
bIll probably will be taken up sometime during the coming
week.
Senator Crawford of South Dakota spoke in favor of
the admmistration's bill last Tuesday He expressed the
opinion that the court of commerce provision would not be
Justified unless it has JunsdictlOn over cases to annul orders
by the boards of raIlway commissioners of the several states
and offered an amendment glvmg this increased jurisdiction
to the court. This amendment has not been considered by
the committee.
Tanning Company Enlarges Their Plant.
The Dahm & KIefer Tannmg company have been making
a specialty of goat and sheep skms for upholstered furniture
and thIS product of theIr tannery, at Grand RapIds, MichIgan,
has been so well receIved and successful, that It crowded their
capacity and they have found It necessary to gIVe that depart-ment
of theIr tannery more room. They have just added
another floor to theIr tannery to accommodate their growmg
trade, and wJ11 now be able to take better care of trade m this
Ime than ever before They color the skins m a great variety
of shades and colors, and show a very attractive assortment of
which they furnIsh sample pads, to those interested.
l'4r Dahm and Mr. Keifer are both experienced and well
known leather men, and they are enthUSIastic over the results
they are havmg _n the production of these skins and the manner
m which many of the foremost upholstenng houses have come-to
use them. The salesroom in Chicago IS at 204 Lake street,
where all mail should be addressed
WEEKLY ARTISAN
WANTS 66NEW OLD" FURNITURE
Cleveland"s Shrewd Millionaire Hotel Proprietor
Displays His Esthetic Taste.
W R Holden IS one of the many wealth, men of Cleve-land,
OhIO Among his most \ aluable po,;;"e":,lOn,,, are the
Hotel Ho11enden and the Cleveland PlamJealer, one of the
oldest dai1Jes m the :,tate The methods by which :\Ir Hol-den
amas<;ed his wealth and the po!Jcle:, Ihe pur,;;ues 111
mal1iagmg It are frequently dbcu,;;sed by the gue"b at his
hotel, particulaJly by tray el1l1g sale"men \\ ho heal anJ tell
all k1l1ds of stones about his cal eer, some of \\ hlch are
based on facts whJ1e others are more or less imagmary
What they consider his succe<;s 111 hfe IS attnbuted to quah-ties
111hiS character which \ ary with the per<;onal opmlOns
of those who are faml!Jal with hI" method", Some call It
luck, others pi efer to credIt hun \\ lth "hre\\ dne"s, keennhs.
foresight or 1I1tUltlOn, \\ hJ1e a few al e kmd enough to de-clare
that It IS nothmg more or le"s than hard v\ ork and
natural abi1Jty
Years ago HoLlen \\ a" a :\1Jc11H;an peda~ogue. poor as
most of them are, and not credIted \\lth an} great abIllh as
a teache1 The most generalh accepted \ el ';;10n at the ,;;t01\
of hiS start in the w01ld of wealth runs about hke thb He
went down to Cleyeland m farther east, It cloes not matter
where, and fe11111 WIth men who had put conSIderable money
into a Colm aJo m111111gpro] ect, and were "orely dl,;;satlsfied
With theIr mvestment He tiled to console them .U1d <;uc
ceeded 111domg so to such an extent that they ",ent llll11 to
Colorado to mvestlgate and I epDrt as to the actual l-onl11-
tlon and prospects of their property \\ hen he returned hIS
reports were not Opt1S1111,;;tICat all and the "toLkholc1el';; \\ ere
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WABASH
B. WALTER & CO. INDIANA
Manufacturers ot TABLE SLIDES Exclusively
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT .. ..- !~
discouraged IIe could not give them any hope for getting
the11 money back, much less, could he promise them any-thmg
m the way of diVidends The investors were in the
Jumps and the matter was allowed to rest for a few montths.
In the meantime ~1r Holden had managed to raise a httle
money and purchased nearly all the <;hare::. at ten or fifteen
cents on the dollar ?\o sooner had he secured the stock than it
began to lIse 111value but It was not for sale The mine
"panned out" great-even much better than Mr Holden ex-pected-
and in the course of a year or two he had become a
nlllllOmare So much fm hiS start.
Another story about ';\Ir Holden IS of particular inter-est
to fur111tUle men The fur111ture m the Hotel Hollenden
was made by the Phoe111x Furniture company of Grand
RapIds t\\Cnty-five years ago It IS of the solid substantial
ty pe that \\ as popular at that tIme and is not much the
\\ ol::.e for hay mg been used for a quarter of a century
-\bout a yeal alSO tJhe tax a"sessol" deCIded that It was valu-able
and \'\ as dsses:,ed too low, so they boosted ItS taxable
\ alue to the e,tent of several thousand dollars Mr. Hol-den
prote:,ted vigorously agamst paymg taxes on the old
furmture declanng that It was nothmg less than robbery,
and at hI';; sugge"tlOn three fur111ture men were asked to
e,amme the fll1111ture and detel mme ItS actual value. They
1 eported that the hlll11ture while m fan cond~tlon was old,
of a sty Ie long "mce discarded and that It was really worth
httle or nothmg As a result Mr Holden's taxes on the
."
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
BAR 0 N IA LOA K S T A I N in acid and oil,
F LAN D E RS 0 A K S T A I N in aGid and oil.
S M 0 KED 0 A K S T A I N in acid and oil,
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAI N in acid and oil.
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
•
Everythmg in Pamt SpeCIaltiesand Wood Fmishing materials. FIllers that fill. Stams that satIsfy
"
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS
IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
Zinc Lined.
Porcelain Lined.
White Enamel Lined.
Opal-Glass Lined.
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting In a
line of the "Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists.
The Alaska Refrigerator Company
ExcluSIve Refngerator Manufacturers
Muskegon, Michigan
New York Offlce, 369Broadway, L E. Moon, Manager
f
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hotel furniture, mc;tead of bClI1g raised 100 or 200 per cent
were considerably reduced
The sequel to the furmture story IS now belllg 1 elated
III furnIture cIrcle" 1\1r ITolden h bUlldang a largc addltlOn
to the Hotel Hollenden, and hc \\ ant<-, furnIture for the new
room" and department'-, He doe" not care for Sheraton,
HepplewhIte, LoUIS XV] or all) of the popular perIod ~tyleb
He wants It Just hke the old furnIture, III style, materIal,
con'itructlOn, fi11lsh and general appearance He ha" not suc-ceeded
m placmg the order, but wIll probably be able to do
so, though the ('new old" furmture may be qUIte expenSIve
The patterns, desIgnb, etc, used b) the Phoe11lx company
twenty-five years ago were long S1l1ce burned, but the de-
SIgner could copy the old pIeces qUIte eaSIly, hence It IS
qUIte certalll that the addItIon to the Hotel Hollenden WIll
be supplIed with "new old" furmtUI e that wIll harmolllze
perfectly with that m the olel part of the house In that
event what wIll the asse~sors thInk or do about the valu
ation? What wIll the experts sa} Jf asked to fix the value
of the "new old" furnIture? WIll they decIde that beIllg out
of fashion It 1S worthless? Perhaps they may reach the con-clus1~
n that the reproductIoll'i m the old ~tyle are not only
valuable but that they have restored the value of the furlll-ture
that has stood the weal, tear and hard knocks of twenty-five
years.
At any rate many furnIture men WIll be mterested in
notlllg the effect of Mr Holden's plan By c1mgmg to the
old style, whatever be hIS motIve, he may bnng It mto popu-lar
favor and cause many manufacturers to use It for a few
years at least
New Factories.
J S Mc ,1aster & Co ha \ e ~tarted theIr new excelsIOr
factory at Rutland, Vt
Col Hagan and Mr DlI1gu" dre promotmg a new furni-ture
factory at Dungannen, Tenn
fhe HelD & 'Vood Carpet company arc new manufac-turers
of carpeL> and rugb III Lowell, Mass
The manufacture of mattress felts IS d new industry
successfully launched by Joseph R I'racId and Thomas \iVood
111::Ylanchester, N. H
The Dumeer Pobsh company have esta,bltshed a factory
at South Farms, Conn They make the Dumeer furniture
pobsh and a dustless duster
James H Hooper, Henry I Greenblat and Jacob Maurer
have 111corporatecI the l\Iarblette Garden Furl11ture company
to establtsh a factory In Yonkel s, N Y Capltal stock,
$10,000 .. ....... _. - . ..,
"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 other; 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. P.... ..
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Lentz Big Six
No. 694. 48 in. top.
No. 687. 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top.
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8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Ii Lentz Table Co. NASHVILLE. MICHIGAltt
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not provided by law to any per'3on 1l1formatlOn obta1l1ed by
hun 111 the dlschalge of this officIal duty or to divulge OF
make knO\\n 111 an) manner not provided by law any docu-ment
recel\ cd e\ J(lence taken or report made under this
'3ectlOll eAcept upon the "peclal ,1Irection of the President;
an,l an) offen">e aga1l1~t the foreg01l1g PlovlslOn "hall be a
misdemeanor and he pU1l1c;hed by a fine not exceed1l1g one
thou"and dollar,,> or 111lpnSOnment not exceeding one year or
hoth. at the (lI'-oCletlOn of the court" The two palagraphs,
on their face, appeal to conflict-one ">aY1l1gthat these cor-poratIon
return" shall be open to 1l1"pectlOn 111 the internal-re\
enue comml-,c;lonel'" office "a" publIc document"," and
and the othel fOlblJdmg "anv officer or employe of the
l~l1lteel State,,>' to dl\ ulge an) of the 1l1formation "except up-on
the "peclal clIrectlOn of the Preqdent," but the latter
para!.;raph ma111fe"th has reference to divulging any of the
111formatlon before It has been filed "a" a pubhc document"
111 \\ ashington-as, for 1l1stance, disclosures hy an internal
revenue collector or by any attache of his office, for a report
of this sort cannot at one and the same time be open to in-spection
a" a regular publIc document and still he examin-able
only by the President's directIon The Gillett amend-ment,
If finall." enacted will simply repeal the clause that
makes the report,.., "subject to examinatIOn as public elocu-ments"
<\nother amendment offered by Senator Hale of Maine
and alread." passed by the senate, pi oVldes that reports of
RESTRICTING PUBLICITY
Obnoxious Clause in the Corporation Income Tux
Law to Be Amended.
The hou"e ot I epl e-,entatl\ e" b} a eleci '-01 \ e \ ate has
adopted an amendment to the obnOxlOtb publICity clause m
the corporatIon 1I1come tax law. that, If pas'ied by the senate
will go a long way toward correctmg what 1'-0 cOnSl(lel ed a
glanng defect and VICIOUSprOVl">lOl1111 the la\\ The amend-ment
passed by the hou'-oe was wntten and offered 1)\ Repre-sentative
Gillett of .l\Ia%achu"etts It \)rO\ Ide" that reL
turns made by corporatIOns under the terms of the la\\ a'-oIt
now stands shall be made publtc only on the order uf the
PreSident of the Untted State", "111 accordance \\ Ith rule~ anJ
regulatlOns to be prescnbed b." the secretar} of the trea'3ury
and approved by the President"
The law now prOVides that \\hen the a""essmenb ,hall
have been made on the corporations. a" directed the re-turns
together With any correctIOn thereof that may have
been made by the commiSSIOner shall be filed in the office
of the commissioner of internal revenue 'and shall consti-tute
public records and be open to 1l1SpectlOn a<; such . the
"\el y next paragraph of the sectIOn. ho\\ e"\er-paraQ,ra ph
seven-reads as follows "It "hall be unla\\ ful for am col-lector,
agent. clerk or other officer or emplo} e of the t-11lted
States to divulge or make known 111 an} manner \\ hate\ Cl
...."
Pitcairn Varnish Company I
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~anufacturers of
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our ~otto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
c. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't. Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. J.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
corporatIOns made under the law shall be made public only
when called for by resolutlOn of the <;enate or house or upon
the order of the Pre<;ldent, that IS, were the President to re-fue;;
e an appbcatlOn for glvmg publicity to a corporatIOn re-port,
the applIcant might go to Congress and get authonty
for the pubhClty Jeslred, Probably there will have to be
some compromise amendment framed by a conference com-mittee
from each chamber, but the "pubhcity clau"e" will al-mo"
t unCjue~tlOnably be mOchfied at this session of Congress
Meantlme, the Supreme court 111 a Vermont case brought
under the law IS considering the very pomt of objection
from bhe outset urged by many newspapers-that where a
firm and a corporatIOn are m busmess competitIOn the firm
can learn all the company's trade secrete;; while the latter has
no such pnvllege as to the firm's busmess And possibly
the court may declare the "publiCity clause" to be uncon"ti-tutlOnal
before Congress acts on it-especially as adJourn-ment
IS not expected untIl June or July
No Profit in Government Contracts.
::\llchlgan ArtIsan, Grand Rapids, Mich, Gentlemen:
Learnmg that the war department is about to issue proposals
for sohd mahogany furmture for the officers quarters, it oc-cure;;
to us that the furmture manufacturers ought to be
warned by the experience of those who handled some of this
contract work in the past A year ago when business was
quiet a great many manufacturer~ went after this contract
The Luce FurnitUl e company of Grand Rapids and ourselves
wet\:e awarded part, and the Batley-Jones company of Jame<;-
towl~~\part, and several other manufacturer~, the Grand Ledge
ancl some Brooklyn and Philadelphia factories, and we are
not betra) mg any secret when we say that all of them doubt-
Ie"., lo"t money The feel1l1g exists among those familiar
v\ Ith the c('ncb tlO11S that It is worse than folly for us to go
after such a clas<; of work Without a good margm of profit
We Lad to put up a bond in the American Surety com-pany
of $91,000 to carry out a contract of about $20,000, and
the gover111'1ent had the nght to reject them on the open
market and charge us up with the difference \Ve beheve
Without an exreptlOn every factory that handled some of this
contract lost money, and it was a Job worth fully 50 per cent
profit, with the 00ther and the danger and the worry. Every-thing
is higher today than formerly Would it not be well
for you to comment on the conditIOns editorially?
A quartermaster captam came to us and said that Uncle
Sam had appropnated $1,000,000 to buy furniture and he
bought it at $600,O()o The way that he expre"sed It was
that the furniture manufacturers were --- fools for domg
this
A manager of the contract department of one of the big
stores I emarked the other day that there wasn't a fur111ture
manufacturer m the United States that he knew of that wa~
rich
I do not know that thl., \'0111 do any good, but It might,
for j au to comment on It
Your truly,
THE WHITE
Mebane, \T C, Mar. 29, 1910
FUR.:-rlTURE CO,
J S White, Treas
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IMPROVED, EASY AND ELEVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt, Electnc and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Powet' fat' Fut'mtut'e Stores
Send for Catalogue and Pnces. ~
KIMBAll BROS. CO., 1067 Ninth St .. Council Bluffs, la.'
Kimball EleTator Co .. 3:l3 Prospect St., Cleveland,O.,
10811th St., Omaha, Neh., 128 Cedar St , New York City.
" -
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DO YOU WANT#
the PRETTIEST, BEST and MOST popu-
L.A-R LEATHER FOR FURNITURE. ANY COLOR. WILL NOT CRACK. I
I GOAT and SHEEP :
SKINS
If so buy our
Write for sample pads of colors.
DAHM & KIEFER TANNING CO.
TANNERIES
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CHICACO,ILL.
204 lake Street,
CHICAGO, ILL. ,',-- ------------- ._....-.---- -------------~ '..
The above cut is taken direct from a photograph, and shows
the range of one size only, our No.1, 24-inch Clamp. We
make six other sizes. taking in stock up to 60 inches wide
and 2 inches thick. OUrs 1S the most practical method of
clamping glued stock in use at the present time. Hundreds of
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 of nearly 100 factories (only a fraction of our llst) 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.
AI E. PALMER &. SONS, Owosso, MICH.
Foreign Representatives: The Frojectile Co., London, Eng-land:
bchuchardt & Schutte, Berlm, Germany; Alfred H.
Schutte, Cologne, Faris, Bl'I1lIsels, Liege, Milan, Turin, Bal'4lelona,
and Bllboa. --...
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8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
RETAIL • FURNITURE ADVERTISING
Condncted by H. H. STALKER.
Dealers Are Urged to Send in Samples of Their Advertisements and to Offer Any SnggestioDflJ
and Helps Which They Believe Will Be of Benefit to Others. This Department
Aims to Be of Practical Service. Help Us to Make It So.
....,,\
I know an engraving house catering to furnIture men,
and furnishmg many wIth good stock cutss, that last :\1ay
doubled theIr business on a "June Bnde Sale" full page bor-der
design Scores of furniture dealers used effectl\ e full
page "ads" m going after the June bnde busmess These
"ads" ran anywhere from May 10 to June 1 and captured a
lot of business
There are many weddmgs in June, and these young
folks must have homes eqt1lpped for housekeepmg The
furniture man that appeals most allunngly to these people
will naturally get the bulk of the business It b "orth gOln!{
after, not only on account of Itself, but because It mal lead
to a life time account
Then there are those who are plannmg on fall" eddmgs
or en a year from June A !lttle artful persuasIOn and sug-gestion
may deCIde some of them to marr) no" and ;tart
living at once, and that's Just what you" ant
N OW, I'm gomg to gl\ e you an Idea for a full page ad\ er-tisement,
and I hope a large number of you wIll work It
up and "cash in on it," for T beile\ e It can be made very
effective Supposmg we head It, "June Bndes and Groom..,
Will Find Pleasure and Profit m \Yan,lering DO\\ n Our
Aisles of Fine Furmture" Then hay e your engra\ er put
the headmg mto pIcture form, sho"l'.mg "everal ro\\:, of
furniture of all kmds, dIVIded by ahles, say three, down
which are coming young couples eagerly absorbed m "hat
they see
I would not try to hay e any particular pIeces stand out
Make the cut thIS tune what I call an "atmosphenc pIcture .
Let It breathe the spint of the head1l1g and produce an all
around, complete effect, instead of try1l1g to feature any
particular pieces Throw m all the descnptlOn and pnces
and talk you want and enumerate the thmgs they ,,111 be
sure to need.
I thmk a good way to layout thIS "ad" \\ould be to
have the head set m, say 48 pomt upper and lower case way
across the top It will make two, maybe three lmes Then
an mtroductlOn of seven or eIght !lnes of 18 pomt Then
reserve a space the width of a newspaper column on the
i .
IIIII
IIII
II
II
extreme nght and left of the page for descnptlOn, prices and
talk Confine your pIcture to the space left, of course leav-mg
room at the bottom for a conspIcuous name plate and
address
:\0\\ I gue:,s that's fairly clear Anyway, your en-gra\
er \\111 understand the Idea, and the pnnter wIll catch
too It might be a good plan to cut thIS column out and
maIl with your order to engraver so he wIll get the Idea.
The MIchigan Englavmg company, Grand RapId;;, MICh,
"1'.111take care of ) au mcely on this
I heard a lecture the other mght on "Art in Advertls-
1I1g" 111u<;trateJ WIth some very pat examples, which lent a
great deal of force to the talk It was most 1I1terestmg and
ll1'itructive I have WIshed smce that all my readers mIght
have heard It, for It was a breeder of new ideas The lec-turel
"ent on to sa) that the most forceful way to attract
attentIOn to \ OUI plOpositlOn by ll1u..,tratlOn was to center
on some feature and play it up strong He explamed the
psychology of the effect of such an Illustration on the read~f.
makmg the pomt that It \'vas much eaSIer for the ey~/and
111md to take In one pOInt at a time Of course he bq.~ed hIS
argument on ~111g1epropOSItIOns, urging that Irrelevant mat-ter
and pIcture; be kept out But the idea is applicable to us
m one partIcular That IS that it is a mIghty good plan at
tImes to break away from talk111g about furniture as a whole
and sho\"', ing a dozen or more cuts, and get right down to
brass tacks on some one particular thing, remembenng that
there are 365 day; 111a year and plenty of time and space to
talk about other things later
It would be a good plan for some of Y011 to try this
Suppose you cut out runmng bIg space occasKfnally, and run
Instead, some nice clean-cut five inch double columns "ads"
contain1l1g one slick cut and a few pat sales points Keep
this up for a month or so and see what happens. I'll hazard
a gue"s that results wouldn't be so bad but what friends
would say, "Jones feels pretty good lately, doesn't he?"
Some people are so tlreles<; that they become positIvely
tIresome
Waddell Manufacturing
Grand Rapids. Michigar.
--~~------_.._--_._---~
CO. II
This is one of our Latest Designs in Drawer Pulls.
Watch This Space for Others
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, M!hogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
a- • • .,.;,_. ._. .__ . -
/#
/ ,r
a,. . ... I -
WEEKLY ARTISAN
A Few Moments with W. J. Calder.
One of the great mercantile establishments of San Fran-
CISCOIS that of the D N & E Walter company A heavy
Jobbmg, Importing, manufacturing and retail busIness is car-ned
on An idea of the amount of busmess done i" furnished
in the statement that the sales of carpets, rugs and mattmgs
alone amounts to $2,000,000 annually The furmture de-partment
IS under the management of W. J Calder, formerly
of Grand Rapids, and occupies 120,000 feet of floor space
Leadmg manufactunng hou.3es are represented on the floors
and the stock on hand when the writer inspected It demon-
'3trated the fact that wise discretion and intelligent appre-cIation
of the trade of San Francisco had been exercised m
the selectIOn of stock. The goods dIsplayed were mainly
of medIum and fine quality, although there was a sufficIent
stock of low-priced stock to meet the requirements of a
firm not seekmg e.3pecially low-priced trade. The buildlllg
m which the house furnishing store is located i'3 a modern
one, it having been erected by the Walter company ."mce the
"tremble" of three years ago. All the fine SUItes are dIS-played
in rooms constructed and decorated especially for the
purpose. If Mr. Calder desires to ",how a mahogany suite m
a green setting a rug in which that color predommates IS
placed on the floor, and the reversIble and quickly adjustable
panels used in the screens which supply the walls of the
rooms are changed when necessary to produce the effect de-sired.
A suite requiring a setting of blue, white or other
colors to bring out its beauties effectively, is quickly pro-vIded
by a change in the panels. "Ninety per cent of the
oak we sell is fumed," Mr Calder remarked "We keep a
small stock of golden oak on hand, for WhICh there IS a mode-rate
call, but nothing in weathered" The company manu-
--~-----~-_._-----------------..,
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,I
,
I,I
,,
I,I
I
"
factures cOD'3Iderable furniture upon order An additional
warehouse to contain 100,000 "quare feet of floor space, wIll
be erected soon The \Valters have been engaged m bU.3i-ness
m San FranCI'3CO over fifty years.
It Brings the People to Their Store.
The John Breuner company of San FrancIsco, have opened
a free hou.3e rentmg agency m their store Owners of houses,
apartments or flats are permItted to file lists of their proper-ties'"
Ith the agency wherre renters may obtam the keys of
buildings and such information in regard to propertIes as
they desIre Landlords are saved the exorbItant rentmg fee;,
charged by real estate agents and the Breuner company keeps
111 close touch with the great army of home renter.3
Each
Net
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &, DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
$2~ $2~
Each
Net
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
/ 10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALS€l MADE WITH 12, 15, 20 AND 25 SPINDLES
DODDS' NEW GEAR
DOVETAILING MACHINE
ThIS lIttle machine has done more to perfect the drawer work of furnl
ture manufacturers than anything else m tbe furniture trade For fifteen
years It has made perfect fitting, vermm-proof, dovetaded stock a pOSSI
bllIty. This bas been accomplIshed at reduced cost, as the machme cuts
dove-tails m gangs of from 9 to 24 at one operatIOn It's what others see
about your busmess rather than what you say about It, that counts m the
cash drawer It's the thnll of enthUSiasm and the true nng of truth you
feel and hear back of the cold type that makes you buy the thmg advertised
ALEXANDER DODDS CO" GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Representedby Schuchart & Schuue at Berhn. V,enna. Stockholm and St
PetersburR Representedby Alfred H Schuue at CaloRne.Bru-u. ueRe. Pa",.
Mden and Bdboa RepresentedIn Great Bnban and Ir.land by the Ohver Maclunery
Co. F. S Thom_n. Milt., 20).203 Dcalllllate.Manchdter. En,Iand
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-E. R. Johnson, 1312 Morse avenue, ChIcago,
$5,000; F. M. Walter, 2727 Fletcher street, ChIcago, $3,800,
Albin Peterson, 1730 ·Winona Sheet, ChIcago, $5,000, C H
Radcliff, 5401 Wayne avenue, Chicago, $7,000, }\!~rs. H ::v1
Spraker, 62 West roorty-FIfth sheet, New York, $JO,OOO,
Gladys E. BruneI, 115 West Forty-Second street, ~ew York,
$6,500; Benjamin Benenson, 407 East 153d street, New York,
$45,000; Fred Wagner, Beaubem street and GratIOt avenue, De-troit,
Mich., $4,000; Joseph Buckley, Fourth and Charlotte
streets, Detroit, $5,000; Anthony TheIsen, CharlevOIX and
Goethe streets, Detroit, $4,250; James Hl. Brown, 211 'Edl'30n
street, Detroit, $7,500; Carroll S. Brown, 219 EdIson street,
Detroit, $4,000; Henry Peabody, Midbury and John R 'Streeh
Detroit, $9,500; C. R. Lambert, 25 Owen street, Detroit, $tl,-
000; C. S. Gilbert, 104 Clairmount street, Detroit, $4,000; W
L. Blackburn, Boulevard and Second streets, Detroit, $8,000;
C. S. Vaughn, FIscher street and Gratiot avenue, Detroit, $8,-
500; Matthew B Whittelsey, 109 Rowena street, Detroit, $9,-
000; L. B. Taylor, 1404 Forest avenue, jEvanston, Ill., $6,000,
Goerge S. Ford, 140-J: Elinor Place, Evanston, $6,000; J. L
Flannery, 822 Judson avenue, Evanston, $6,000; A. P. Cote,
2402 Central Boulevard, Omaha, Nebr., $3,000; E. L. Cain,
1517 South Eighth avenue, Omaha, $2,500; Fred Hamilton, 608
South Thirty-eighth street, Omaha, $18,000; Frank '.;Y. Bacon
432 North Thirty-eighth avenue, Omaha, $7,500; Benjamm
Grab, Elm and Forty-sixth streets, Milwaukee, Wis, $4,500;
B. T. Van Trees, 3927 Cornelius street, Indianapolis, Ind., $11,-
500; Mrs. C. E Summersett, 1015 Bryan street, Columbia, S
c., $3,000; A. E. Hofer, 1812 East Fifty-eighth street, Kansas
City, Mo, $3,000; Fred Danz, 1637 Kemington stt eet, Kansas
CIty, $3,500; John S. Webber, 3877 Fifty-ninth street, Kansas
City, $3,000; George C. Hall, 6808 Cleveland street, Kansa~
City, $3,000; S. H. Everett, 10830 Magnolia street, Cleveland,
0., $18,000; Edward Becker, 676 Parkwood avenue, Cleve-l..
wu, $5,000; John KIlroy, 10010 Parkgate street, Cleveland,
$3,500; Charles Lalsy, 7801 Lorain avenue, Cleveland, $5,000;
Mrs. Anna Gregg, 3410 Maple avenue south, Los Angeles,
Cal, $9,800; WIlham J. HIll, 1525 Marcus avenue, St. LotUs,
.:\10, $3,500; Harry Quest, 4221 College avenue, St. LotUs, Mo.,
$3,500; Mrs Bettha Zlegahn, Hewitt street and Snelling ave-nue,
St. Paul, M mn, $4,200; Mrs Marie Basting, Sherburne
and Grotto streeb, St. Paul, $4,500; Fred R. Ross, Gilpm and
ThIrd streets, Denver, Col., $10,000; J. L. Day, Vine and Twen-ty-
mnth streets, Denver, $3,000; J. R. Day, 3455 Shenandoah
avenue, St LotUs, Mo., $4,000; E. C. Clostermeyer, 4124 Con-necttcut
avenue, St LOUIS, $5,500; Emeha Wis'smann, 4237
Russell avenue, St LotUS, $6,000; Mma MIller, 233'1 Tennessee
avenue, St. LOUIS,$9,000; Kathenne PasqtUer, 5967 Van Versen
avenue, St LoUls, $5,500; Ehzabeth Schneider, 5134 Portland
Place, St. Louts, $21,000; Joe M Walker, PonCe de Leon
avenue, Atlanta, Ga, $9,000; Fred Walter, Krug Park Place,
St Joseph, Mo, $4,500; J J Lahey, 2269 E. Nineteenth street,
Brooklyn, N. Y., $10,000; M. Solomon, 105 Ellery street, Brook-l)
n, $7,000, F Elermann, 63 Ridgwood avenue, Brooklyn,
$4,500; G. L. Beer, 914 Broadway, Brooklyn, $6,500; Charles
Boeswald, 2030 Alta avenue, LOUlsville, Ky, $3,000; Mrs. Ahce
Elliott, 121 Bayly street, LOlllsvil!e, $4,000; W. E. Seymour,
:!14 West Newell street, Syracuse, N. Y, $5,500; James Mullm,
.f38 East Washmgton street, Syracuse, $5,000; H. H. Benson,
229 West Brighton avenue, Syracuse, $6,000; F. H. Ladendorf,
112 East Cormng avenue, Syracuse, $4,500; George Frey, 981
Island avenue, Milwaukee, WIS, $3,800; George J. Markey,
Texas and Wentworth streets, 1V\ilwaukee, $4,800; Mrs. Marie
'\ HIcks, 1798 Wclshmgton ~treet, PIttsburg, Pa, $4,000; Mis~
\
_._.a_a._ _ .__ __ .
FOX SAW DADO HEADS
SMOOTHEST
GR.OOVES
FASTEST
CUT
LEAST
POWER.
LONGEST
LIFE
GR.EATEST
RANGE
QUICKEST
ADJUSTMENT
LEAST
TROUBLE
PER.FECT
SAFETY
We'll iladly tell
you all about
it.
Also Machine
Knlve..., Miter
Machines, Etc.
PERMANENT ECONOMY
FOX MACHINE CO. 185 N. Front Street,
... -.- .._.~._.---...Grand Rapids, Mlch • •• aa. _ ...
ROLLSI
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
WEEKLY
Mary McConegly, 614 Forty-fifth street, Pittsburg, $4,000; IE.
J. Kreitzburg, 5908 Spruce street, Philadelphia, Pa., $6,000;
John W. Shisler, 2331 Mifflin street, Philadelphia, $19,600;
Robert A. Smythe, 1216 East Fifteenth street, Atlanta, Ga, $8,-
000; J. H. Jackson, Sixth avenue and Kline street, Abeldeen,
S. Dak., $12,000; A. Eynon, Belmont and Madison avenues,
Youngstown, Ohio, $12,000; Andrew Higgins, 228 Falls ave-nue,
Youngstown, $3,000; Fred R. Moody, 417 FaIrgreen ave-nue,
Youngstown, $4,500; Alis H. Kelsey, Lincoln and Ellsworth
streets, Denver, Co1., $7,000; James Doyle, West Grove and
Twenty-second streets, Denver, $4,500; Mrs. Stelle M. Starr,
Sunset Place, Los Angeles, Ca1.,$8,000; 1. T. Etheridge, Wood-land
avenue and Third street, 'Winston-Salem, N. c., $3,500;
H. L. Cobbs, 15 Windsor street, Atlanta, Ga, $3,750; A. S.
Merritt, 623 Thirty-seventh avenue, Seattle, Wash., $3,000; O.
J. Johnson, 4714 Eighteenth avenue, Seattle, $3,500; Henry S.
DeForest, 433 State street, Schenectady, N. Y., $4,000; John
Zruszoski, Crane street and Second avenue, Schenectady, $5,500;
Mrs. M. Olmstead, 1155 North Broad street, Knoxville, Tenn.,
$3,000; Fred S. Colebrook, 101 Euclid avenue, Sracuse, N. Y.,
$5,000; G. B. Out, 303 West Ostrander avenue, Syracuse, $3,-
000; D. L. Court, 400 Walnut avenue, Syracuse, $3,000; O. D.
Baughman, 113 Garden street, Bellingham, Wash., $3,50; Mrs.
Barbara Wuest, Seminole street and University avenue, Cin-cinnati,
0., $6,000; Mrs. Emma A. Towsley, Ludlow and
Brookline avenues, Cincinnati, $7,500; Mrs. Fred Seeburger,
Seventeenth street and Washington avenue, Terre Haute, Ind,
$5,000; Frank H. Chisholm, 304 Auburn avenue, Buffalo, N.
Y., $3,500; Wellington Salt, 402 East street, Buffalo, $3,600.
Miscellaneous Buildings-The Swedlsh Baptists of Du-luth,
Mmn., are bUllding a church at a cost of $20,000. The
Arlmgton hotel of Santa Barbara, the first tOUlist hotel in south-ern
California, which was burned last fall, is to be rebuilt at
a cost of $300,000. A. M. Birkel will erect a fine 150-room
hotel at Bakersfield, Ca1. The first Congregational Soclety
of Riverside, Cal., has adopted plans for a new church to cost
$100,000 "Nat" Goodwin has purchased 1200 acres of or-ange
land near Rlverside, Ca1.,on which he will erect a chateau,
on plans suggested by Mrs. Goodwin, at an estimated cost of
$18,000. The Sisters of St. Joseph are erecting a new school
buildmg in San DIego, Ca1.,at a cost of $125,000. The Meth-odlsts
of San Luis Obispo, Cal, are bUIldmg a new church at
a cost of $36,000, exclusive of seat1l1g. Managers of the Gem
theatre of Albuquerque, N. Mex, will rebUIld their house at a
cost of $30,000. The Beaulah Baptist Society of Atlanta, Ga.,
wIll bmld a new church at a cost of $35,000. The Scottish
Rite Masons are bUIlding a temple in East St. Louis, Ill, to
cost $75,000. The Odd Fellows of East St Louis are to build
a temple at a cost of $45,000.
Death of Charles M. Freed.
Charles M. Freed, for many years head of the Freed Furni-ture
and Carpet company of Salt Lake City, Utah, died on March
24, aged 67 years. He was a natIve of Bohemia, came to
America when 13 years of age and went west in 1889 with
the intention of entering the mining business, but soon aban-doned
that idea and established a small furniture store in Salt
Lake City, declaring his belief that the town would become
the metropolis of the mountain region. He was a quiet, and
unassuming man but remarkably enterprising and energetic,
constantly improving his stock and business methods. His
trade kept pace with the growth of the town and he leaves one
of the most prosperous stores in the country, which passes to
his widow and children-three sons and a daughter. He was
an Elk and a member of the Knights of Pythias and was highly
honored and esteemed in both orders.
ARTISAN
'" . I
:No. 592.
Here is
a Rocker
That's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
6RO. SPRATT
8 CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
.. -- . ...
____ ~ •• - • •• • III __ • _ .... __ •
31-33 S. Front Sf., ORANDRAPIDS, MIen.
SEND FOR
...-.__ ._---
I 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 UtI tor
PrIce IMt
&lid dlIGOUDt
~-----_._----
Manufaduren of
Embo.. ed and
TumedMoulcl.
inca. Embo...
ed and Spindle
Carvin... and
Automatic
Turnin.a.
We a110 manu-ladure
a large me
01 Embo .. ed
Ornamenta for
Couch Work.
.256-.258 W. Fifteenth St., CHICAGO, ILl.
, . ..-------------------------
11
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.,
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I . "
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
WALTER CLARK VENEER
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
COMPANY
Yau can always get
IMMEDIATE SHIPMENT
1~8", 1~20", 1~24" and 1~28" R. C. BIRCH
1~16", 1~20", 1~24", and 1~28" POPLAR
1~20", 1~24" and 3~ 16" GUM
Direct from our Grand Rapids Warehouses.
We solicit your trade.
1~20" R. C. PLAIN OAK
SENSIBI~E REVISION OF RULES
Shippers Will Not Be Charged for Large Cars
When Smaller Ones Are Ordered.
The official classification commIttee of the Amencan
Traffic association have made a reVISIOn of rule )Jo 27 whIch
will remove the cause of many compla111ts and save annoy-ance
and expense for many .shippers. The sectIOns of the
revised rules which are of especial mterest read as follows
(c) Owing to the limited number of cars mer 36 feet
six inches in length, carners cannot undertake to furm"h such
cars unless they are readily available.
(d) If a shipper orrders a car less than 40 feet, ..,IX
inches in length and the carrier is unable to furnIsh such a
car, and furnishes a longer car than ordered, but not exceed
ing 40 feet, SIX inches 111length, the minimum weIght shall
be that fixed for the car ordered, except when the 10ad111g
c<lipacity of the car furnished IS used, the mimmum weIght
shall be that fixed for the car furnished
(e) When car.s exceeding 40 feet, SIX mche" in length
are furnished anJ used, the mlmmum carload weIght shall
be that fixed for the car furnIshed, regardless of the length
of the car ordered by the shipper.
With the announcement of the reviSIOn of the rule the
committee has issued a CIrcular which makes these state-ments:
"When shippers order cars of .speCIfic length theIr at
tention should be called to the prOVISIons of rule 27 111odel
that they may fully understand the duty and oblIgatIOns of
the carrier, as well as the shippers' privilege or nghts when
accepted and loading cars of greater length than ordered
"Cars more than 40 feet, SIX l11ches in length, should not
be turl11shed III place of shorter cars avaIlable for those
ordered In the e\ ent that shIppers order cars of specific
lengths, \\ hlch are not readIly avaIlable and the only readIly
d \ allable cars more than 40 feet, SIX inches in length, ship-pers'
attentIOn "hould be directed to that provislOn of the rule
\\ hlch prescnbes the mil1lmum car load weights as applI-cable
to the cars furl1lshed irre,pectIve of the length" of the
cars ordered
"When under the provisions of section (D). A longer
cal than ordere~l IS furnished the following notation must
be made by agent on the bill of lading and way bill:
'Car feet.. ... inches in length ordered by shipper
and car. feet in length furnished under the pro-
\ bIOns of sectIOn D Rule 27, Official Classification'
"\iVhen shIppers order cars of speCIfic length and accept
cars more than 40 feet six inches in length on the basis of
the 111111imumweight applicable thereto, the following nota-tion
must be made by the agent on the bIll of lading and
way bill:
'ShIpper ordered car feet.. 111ches, 111length and
accepted car .. . feet. . inches in length with under
standmg that mmi111um of car accepted will apply'
"Agents shall keep a record of all instances where ship-pers
order cars of speCIfic length and accept car longer than
.:1-0 feet, six inches in length, such record to clearly indicate
that the attentIOn of shippers was directed to the prOVIsions
of paragraph (E) of rule 27."
The revision made and the regulations establIshed are in
re,ponse to a long tIme gnevance of shippers and are ex
pected to obVIate complaints caused by carners furnishing
cars longer than \\ere applIed for because of the fact of the
WEEKLY
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III
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UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead m Style, Conftrudton
and Fimsh. See our Catalogue.
Our Ime on permanent exhlbi-bon
7th Floor, New Manufact-urers'
BUlldmg, Grand Rapids.
II
.""
'3IZe wanted, and the charging for the minimums of the
larger car instead of those ordered. If the instructions gIven
to agents, yardmasters and employes upon whom the duty
and responsibility of placing cars for loadIng are observed
carefully, there will be no occasion for the claims that the
cars employed were of a dimension or capacity of which the
shipper had no knowledge.
It is understood that whenever possible, the carrier'3 In-tend
to furnish shippers with the particular cars for whIch
application is made, but if they are not available, and cars
of other dimensions are supplied, the shipper will be fully
advised as to the charges which will accrue on such cars
A Terrible Night in a Pullman.
The weary, overheated occupants of a Pullman sleepel
running west on the Rock Island railroad had just entered the
snoring stage of a troubled sleep, when the train halted at Bu-reau
Junction and the doors were thrown open. A chorus of
female voices approached and when the leader entered the car
she called out in loud tones, "Porter, oh Porter, where are you?"
"I say, our berths are lower five and seven," one lovely
loud-spoken damsel declared.
"Why, JulIa, you are mistaken. The numbers are five and
nIne."
"The agent (lId not mark the numbers on the card," I e-
JOIned the woman named Julia.
By this time the occupants of the car had awakened and
rubb1l1g their eyes, grumbled about the disturbance.
"Oh Harry 1 Harry' Bring baby to me. 'Muver's'darling'
"You were very nice Harry, to stay with us untIl 2 o'clock
111 the mornll1g whIle waiting for this train," remarked 'Muver '
"I thank you very much."
"Yes, Harry, I hope you will visit us when you come out
west again"
"Yes, Harry, come out to Dry Run, Kansas, and see the
warships," suggested the furniture salesman m lower fifteen
"Oh Hal ry, shut up You are disturbing all the people
in the car," abjured the varnish salesman from between the
curta1l1'3 of lower eight.
"Oh, you," remarked Harry, and subsided. "Must 'muv-er's'
darlIng go to the baggage car? Go along with the porter,
dear. Good night, dear."
"For the sake of the Old Nick, what do you think about
It neighbors?" remarked the man in lower eleven. "'Muver's'
darling is a dog."
"Harry went over to Juarez, Mexico, last summer and bought
a lot of genuine Mexican IndIan pottery," remarked the occu-pant
of lower five. "When he opened the stuff in Bureau he
found it decorated with the trade mark of a firm in East Liver-pool,
Ohio."
ARTISAN 13
.~ '",I
IIII
IIII
II SAMldEL J. SHIMER & SONS, Milton, Penn.
I Manufacturers of the Shimer Cutter Heads for Flooring, Ceiling,
I SidIng, Doors, Sash, etc. ~... . .
Don't Bum Your Moulding.
Blackened edges so often found
in hard-wood Mouldings indicate
the use of inferior tools, which
friction and burn because of their
failure to have proper clearance.
The Shimer Reversible and Non-
Reversible Cutters are made of the
finest tool steel by experienced workmen. In deSIgn and con-struction
they are superior to anythIng on the market. They cut
well and retaIn their shape until worn out. Send us drawings or
wood samples for estimates on special cutters. Many useful de
SIgns, with prices, are given in our catalogue.
"Herause nut yourself," advised the German occupant of
upper thirteen.
"Oh, Harry, the tram is moving. Don't be carried away
with us."
"Oh, you Robinson girls," Harry ventured to utter.
"Embrace the ladies first, Harry," advised lower two
"Do it now," chimed in number four
"Do It right," echoed number fourteen.
"Give our love to 'popper' and 'mommer', Harry dear,
pleaded Jeannette.
"The man in the moon is winking at you, Hal ry. Do It
now," number sixteen exclaimed.
"Come out to 'Peblo' next May, Harry. I will give you
a ticket to witness the balloon ascenSIOn, free," said the Colo-radoan.
Harry stood the gaff well and departed amid the roars of
laughter that filled the car. One of the young ladies seemed
sad when Harry waived a farewell salute from the platform.
But on the morning following the handsome and unusually at-tentive
young Pullman conductor seemed to fill the vacancy oc-casioned
by the violent pdrt111g WIth the good natured and pa-tient
Harry.
Judgll1g from the pI esent condItIOns of the lin"eed 011
trade the country needs more flax farmers or more trust in-vestigation.
.. . ---- _._._._--_._-----
1I
We Manufacture the
Larl!elt Line of
..
rOlDlno
(nAIDS
In the UnIted States,
SUItable for Sun day
Schools, Halls, Steam-ers
and all publIc resorts
We also manufacture
Brass TrImmed I r 0 n
Beds, Spring Beds, Cot.
and CrIb. In a large
variety.
Send for Catalogue
and Prtces to
I~.... .
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND, OHIO
rI
14 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, Chifforobes.
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 Upright F oldmg Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plain oak, imItation quartered oak, and solId quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers in lInitation quartered oak, imitation
mahogany, and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, LIbrary, DmIng and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs, Wire Spnngs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association.
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Made b~ The Karges FUrtllture Co
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Made bj World Furlllture Company. Made by Bosse Furniture Company.
Made by Bockstege Furlllture:Co. Made by Bockstege FurnIture Co.
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUBl.iSHED EVERY SATURDAY av THII:
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SU.SCRI~TION SI eo ~ER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHERCOUNTRIES SZ 00 PER YEAR. SINGI-E CO~IE. 5 CENTS.
PUBLICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NOI'lTH DIVISION ST, GRANO RAPIDS, MICH,
A. S WHITE, MANAGING EDITOR
Entered ... aecond class matter, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand RapId., MIchIgan
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVEE I-EVY
Manufacturers as well as retadels of furniture should
undertake an educational campaIgn at once to check the
growth in the demand for "bUIlt-ill' and "knock-dolWn"
furniture-the kind that "any woman of fifteen or bov of
ten can set up and finish in his or her home "Ithout th; aid
of a cabinet maker." Especially 111 the mIddle \,('.o,t and on
the Pacific coast has an inCl ease in the demand for this
stuff been noticed, and that it has seriously affectecl legIti-mate
trade there is proof in abundance. "BUllt-m furmture"
originated with the archItects, and they are pushll1g the fad
for all it is V\; orth. It is bUIlt by carpenters, and IS .-ery in-ferior
to the work of trallled cabll1etmakel rs The people
need only to be shown the difference between factory bUIlt
furniture and the illy-designed loosely jOlllted and mcon-venient
stuff of the archItect and the carpenter to gIve the
preference to the former HIdeous looking budt III beds,
tables that may be hinged to the wall as III a Pullman car,
bookcases, chma cabinets, buffets, wall cabmets, cupboards
and many other articles may be seen bUIlt mto apartment
houses and bungalows, in many cities of the we"t and the
fad is spreading to smaller places The apartment house
owner tries to make his propel ty mOl e I entable than the
ordinary house by building in much of the furl1lture needed
by a tenant, going to the extreme of fUlnishmg rugs for the
floors, curtams for the windows and mirrors for the walls
Knock-down stuff IS advertised very largely 111 the maga-zmes
and a heavy trade established The stuff IS of little, if
any value LegItimate manufactm ers and 1 etallel s should
not silently permit the growth of thi" trade to undermine
theIr mdustly and render their stocks and plants practi-cally
worthless.
Nowadays, to man} people, an advel tlsement IS hke the
mdex to a book. They can look thlough the mdex and find
what they want. If Jour advertisement IS of the same kmd
It WIll be of such a convemence to people that they WIll use It:
and you need never say that advertismg IS worthle"s to VOll
If you went to a man and said to him: "My name is John SI;llth,
and I keep staple and fancy groceries," that would be adver-tising,
we presume. Then he would say, "Have you any soap,
and if so, what kind and how much do you charge for it'
Your reply is, "My name IS John SmIth and I keep staple and
fancy groceries." He would grow dIsgusted before long. It
is the same way with advertiSing in a newspaper or trade
journal. AdvertIsements should not be confined to routll1e
matters or everyday topics They should talk to readers 111
an entertaining manner.
}lr ,Vhite of j\Iebane, N. C, whose communication ap-pears
on another page is probably right in the conclusion
that there IS little or no profit for furniture manufacturer"
111 government contracts. He is wrong, however, in hIS be-lief
that all the manufacturers who had such contracts dur-
Ing the past year "lost money on the job." The Grand
RapIds manufacturers who had a large share of the busll1e'iS
declare that they worked out about even. They dId not
make much profit direct, but the work came in the dull
season and by increase the volume of business helped to
carry the overhead expenses of the factory. The Grand
Rapids manufacturers had no trouble making the goods to
meet the requirements of the contract.
The idea of a school for the teaching of merchandIsmg
excites a considerable amount of derision today. There was a
tIme when scientific farming was sneered at by farmers, who
thought agricultural schools were a waste of money of the state
Today SCIentific farming is recognized by almost everybody as
\V lse and advantageous. The day will come when scientific
merchandIsing wJlI be taught in full, possibly in schools de-voted
exclusively with that subject. Why not? We must
have merchants and salesmen as well as bankers, bookkeepers
and craftemen. Schools for teaching merchandising will fol~
10>\ the manual training schools.
One of the greatest failings of the average man is lack
of patience He is in a hurry and if he does not get results
1l1stantly he is ready to give up. This IS not so much because
he is famt-hearted as it is because he is Impatient. Patience
l'i one of the finest quahtles a man may possess. It is not to
be confounded with laziness. The greatest successes have been
dttall1ed by men who possessed a patience which was suffi-
Clent to stand for dIscouragement and apparent lack of inter-e<;
t and dullness.
PreSIdent Taft says railroad and traffic managers should
be consulted m regard to laws affectll1g their business, the
same as bankers are consulted when financial legislation is
bemg conSIdered. The same rule should be applied to manu-tacturers,
merchants and workingmen, but no class of men
hould be allowed to dictate or control legislation affecting
theIr trade busll1ess or vocation.
The foreign trade in automobiles now amounts to more
than a milhon dollars a month and that is little when compared
with the domestic trade The enormous, rapid growth of the
auto business must have a telling effect on nearly all lines of
trade Many a man has Il1vested money in a "benzine wagon"
that but for the popular craze would have been used m buying
furniture
The raIlroad paS'ienger assoCIatIOns are trying to get to-
~ether on rates fOI com entlOns, reUllIons, faIrs, home-coming
gatherings, etc. WhIle they are at it they should try to ar-range
some praCtlcal way to gIant reduced rates to Grand
RapIds, New York and Chicago during the furniture sales
seasons
,\ Ith the Steel Trust, the Sugar trust and the big railroad
"} 'items advancing wages, the pessimists must take back seats.
I f congress would fix up that rate bill and the corporation tax
la\V and adjourn the entire country would be assured a pros-perous
summer.
It 1'3 pleasll1g to note that no furniture dealers are mixed
up In the graft and corruption that has been exposed at Al-han}
Washmgton, PIttsburg and other cities.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
New York Notes and Personals.
New YOJ k, Apnl 7 -Manufacturers here are falrly busy
with bl15l11esswell up to the average. Parlor furniture is in
very good demand as well as all spring and summer lines for
porches and outdoors. Wholesalers are doing enough to keep
busy and the retaIleI s are doing d moderate amount of bUSI-ness.
The H Acltman Company has been incorporated to manu-facture
and deal in furniture, with a capital of $6,000. The
company is headed by Louis C. Neuberger, Henry Jackson and
Herman Altman.
The Moller & Schumann company of Brooklyn, making
furniture and finishing materials, has built a large new ware-house
and new brick chimney and will have 16 fires going.
They are putting on the market a new product, a white enam-el
for the interior of refrigerators, which has no odor and ap-pears
like opalite glass. It dries very hard and has a fine gloss.
S. Baumann & Co, have opened their new furniture store
at Eighth avenue and Forty-sixth street, which is a five story
buildmg, 50 x 100 feet in size. The first floor is done in white,
with a white metal ceiling, massive white pillars and handsome
show windows to take in the entire first and second story.
The first floor will be devoted to mission furniture and novel-ties
and for the office. The third floor will be used for parlor
furniture; the fourth floor for bed room furniture and the fifth
floor for dImng room and library furniture. It is one of the
largest and finest retail furniture stores here.
Jacob Kraft of Brooklyn, who was recently discharged from
bankruptcy, has opened a new retail furniture store at 1580
Broadway, Manhattan, and another at 551 Court 'Street, Brooklyn.
Antonio Monaco, doing business as the Madison Furniture
House, in Hoboken, N. J., is to retire from business soon.
Van Dalfsen & Stone of Newberg, N. Y., have taken an-other
floor and enlarged their business at 17 Water street.
The Cahoon Furniture & Novelty company, which moved
from Charliet street, Brooklyn, to West Hoboken, N. J, has
had some financial trouble, but has secured extensions and is
expected to pull through all right.
The Liberty Furniture company is working a full force.
It has added new machinery to its plant.
A ,Veston Smith is not representing the Wolverine Man-ufacturing
company in the New York district any more.
H. K. T. Wright will take out the line of the Hardesty
MfLl1ufactunng company of Canal Dover, Ohio, which makes
mission furniture, opera chairs, etc.
H. Franken has left Price & Rosenbaum's upholstery depart-ment
of Brooklyn, and is now with Cohen Bros, of J ackson-
VIlle, Fla J F. Phelps, late with the Goerke company of
Newark, N. J, has succeeded Mr. Franklin.
The H. B. Drake company, manufacturers of office furni-ture,
of this city, has leased property on East Forty-mnth street,
Bayonne, N J, and will build a one story factory 160 x 160
feet in size and will keep fifty hands employed. Their busi-ness
has shown a great improvement recently.
Louis Gottesman of 86 Forsyth street, making spring beds,
has incorporated his business.
T. J. Venable, late with the R. II. White company of Bos-ton,
has joined the contracting and interior decorating staff of
the Simpson-Crawford company of this city, on Sixth avenue
The Western Chair company, jobbers at 513 Hudson street,
Manhattan, has moved to 160 Grand street, Brooklyn.
Gluck Bros, manufacturing drop leaf kitchen and card
tables, are very busy at their factory on Manjer street, and are
also operating a branch factory in Philadelphia.
Selig Voit will sell Voit Bros.' upholstered furniture line
17
Muskegon, Mich., May 28, '07.
Mr. Geo. T. Hancock,
116 West 84th St., New York, N. Y.
Dear Sir: Referring to our conversation with you while you
were in our city looking over the dry kilns installed by us under
the Grand Rapids Veneer Works system and plans, we wish to
confirm our statements to you, that the first lumber through the
kiln when it was green, having just been completed in winter
weather, was 4-4 white oak, which came out thoroughly dry
in seven days, and in better condition than what we had been
getting out of a hot blast kiln where we had been allowing
three weeks and over for kiln drying, and since then we have
been taking out all kinds of lumber, 4-4 maple and 4-4 plain
and quartered oak in seven days, and the stock is softer and
works easier than any we ever had in our factory.
Weare pleased to state further that the kiln has fulfilled
every representation made by the Grand Rapids Veneer
Works and is entirely satisfactory in every respect. If we were
to install another kiln, or half a dozen, at [he _present writing,
they would all be of the Grand Rapids Veneer Works system.
If we can be of further service to you, command us.
Yours truly, MOON DESK CO.
in New York and Mayer VOlt will take Pennsylvania and New
England.
The Hale & Kilburn company has been showing some up
to date lines at the warehouse, 33 Union Square West, of dav-enports,
sofas, couch beds, commodes, etc. They will move
the warerooms to larger quarters at 39 Union Square.
J. B. Greenhut of the Siegel-Cooper company, presented
a G. A. R. hall to Peoria, Ill., his old home.
The New York Sample Furniture company has enlarged
ib quarters by taking half of an adjoining floor and have now
30,000 square feet of space. Freman Fraim, who was with
Colie & Son, is now with the New York Sample Furniture
company.
R. R. Mitchell & Co., manufacturers of bedding supplies
and dealers in curled hair, has moved its factory to 608 East
Eighteenth street and 609 East Seventeenth street and put in
the latest machinery. This is the plant vacated by the Kindel
Bed company. The warerooms of the Mitchell company have
been moved to 38 East Twentieth street.
Mr. Siegel, late with the National Parlor Suite company,
has gone into the retail business at 126 Clinton street, under
the firm name of Siegel & Rubenstein.
The Wickes-Hoskins company, wholesale dealers in office
furniture at 354 Broadway, is in financial trouble, owing 700
creditors $160,772, with assets estimated at $133,592.
An Effective Advertising Device.
The Eastern Outfitting company, dealers in house furn-ishing
goods in San Francisco recently purchased a large
number of electric clocks and placed the same on walls of
buildings in all sections of the city, where they may be 3een
by pedestnans The clocks furlllsh accurate time and valu-able
advertr'iing for the firm
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I E. H. SHELDON 0 CO. I 328 N. May 5t., Chicago. t .--~
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30 000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
• Vises
The locatIOn of the den is really the prImal condItion. It
must be removed from that part of the house where the
work of the day is carrried on and where the children ramp
and play, for if it is not qui~t and peaceful, it is not a den,
but a mere apology for one.
It falls to the housewife's lot ofttimes to select the room
\\ I11Ch shall be used as a den, as well as to aid in choosing
the furnish111gs, and it is then that her tact will have its best
opportunity for Llisplaying Itself If she but pauses to think
what this WIll mean, she will forget the absolute necessity
of using that little back room with its fireplace, for a second
spare bedroom, or a sewing room, and will cheerfully relin-quish
it for the den The result nine times out of ten will
mean that John stays away from the club seven nights out
of the week, and his morn111g gruffness will lose itself inside
of a week.
Once the room is selected, and a fireplace added if it be
not in possession of one already, the furniture should be
selected mo"t carefully Better the parlor have one treasure
. - ..,
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Patent Malleable Clamp Fixture.
E H SHELDON & CO Chlcal(o 111
Gentlemen -We are pleased to ,tate that the /') dozen Clamp FIxtures whIch
we bought of you a httle over a year ago are glVlnR' excellent se"VlCt> "Ve are
well satIsfied WIth them and shall he pleased to remember you whenever we want
anythmg addItIOnal III thIS Ime Yours trulv
SIOUXCIty Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO ~--_.-_.
Sold on approval and an unLon
dltlOnal money back guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We solICIt pnvllege of sendmg samples and
our complete catalogue
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The Den and Its Furnishings.
There are times in the lIfe of every man when he deSIres
a quiet spot where, undisturbed by the household rout111e,
he may concentrate his thoughts upon some perplexing sub-ject,
or throwing all thoughts aside, dream day dreams 111
company with his pipe and his open fire The fulfillment of
these desires is found in the den, the popularIty of whIch
among the masculine sex is limited to no single class or
caste.
Theoretically speaking, these dens may be dIVIded 111to
two classes, those of the rich, which are fine in archItectural
points, are finished productions of the decorator, and tho"e
which represent careful thought and economy guided b} the
111dividual tastes of the owner. \iVhile we all delIght 111the
luxury and magnificence of the first, the second appeals to
us personally, carrying with it not the thoughts of nnlImIted
wealth, but of real comfort and enjo} ment To the Idtter
also we look for the touch of OrIginalIty, of redl gel1llb \\ hlCh
limited means so often serves to call forth
No. 1711
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No. 1705-1705
New designs in the Louis XVI Style.
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS co. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
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STAR CASTER CUP COMPANY
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIED FOR)
We have adopted cellulOid as a base for our Caster Cups, making the
best cup on the market. CellulOid IS a great Improvement over bases
made of other matenal When It ISnecessary to move a piece supported
by cups wIth cellulOid bases It can be done wIth ease, as the bases are per-fectly
smooth CellulOid does not sweat and by the use of these cups
tables are never marred These cups are fimshed In Golden Oak and
WhIte Maple; finished light If you wtll t1'1la samp!t ordtr of thtlt
goods you Wit! dtstrt to hand!, thtm tn quantttt88
PRICES: Size 2U Inches $5.50 per hundred.
SIze 23( Inches . 4.50 per hundred.
fob Grand Rapids TRY A SAJlPLE ORJ)ER ~-.....
less, than the den lack any of that cozy atmosphere whIch
makes it dear to its owner's heart.
There is no neeiJ for elaborate decorations or color
schemes; indeed the plainer and more serviceable the furni-ture
used and the less obtrusive the colors, the better the
den will be liked by its owner. Beauty appeals to a man as
to a woman, though in a different way, and the room which
would be to the good housewife a perfect bower, would be
utterly condemned by her hU'3band There is no place in his
den for the rockers, little tables and bric-a-brac which Je-llght
a woman's heart, and she must remember this when
"electing the furniture for the den
To begin with, the floor and wall are the first consider-ations.
Hardwood floors and plain dark hangings are the
rule in any den, but the rugs are of course a matter of taste
In one Jen, which was that of a huntsman, the rugs were of
fur, while the settees had robes of fur flung over them;
trophies of the chase were everywhere, and the three really
good pictures in the room were of the hunt.
In a unique little den which was in the upper story, or
loft of the barn, the rug was an arts and crafts and occupied
the center of the floor, which was oiled The remainder of
the room contained artist's matt:!rials and some furniture
which was the work of the owner.
For the orJinary den, the housewife will find one large
rug better than several small ones, and the darker colors
are always preferable. The oriental rugs look well in such
a room, and wear well. One little woman tacked down the
rug in the center of the room very carefully, explaining
apologetically to a friend' "WJ1lIam catches hIS feet in It,
["HOFFMA·N---;RO~H~~~_·C~:--'
FT. WAYNE, IND.
I HARDWOOD LUMBER
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SA~~D } QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY
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._-----.4 CWartiatteowfnoer. rI E• P• ROWE CARVING WORKS , ALMLEICGHA.N.
and kicks! It up, or tumbles over it, and he is apt to use som~
"trong e:ApreSSlOns to rellei e hI!:>feell11gs, so I am fastening
it down for him."
It is for this very reason that the small rugs lying
promiscuously about the room are objectionable, for "Wil-liam"
is not the only man who kicks up or stumbles over the
rugs.
A good easy chair 1'3an indispenslble part of the furn-ishings
of the den, and the table of medium size, as well a13
the bookc'age, may well be counted another. The table
should occupy the center of the room, and should be large
enough to hold a goodly number of books and papers wIth
writing materials also Even then, a smaller table will not
be founJ amiss, for the tables in a den have a way of be-coming
piled up and running over with a ma'3S of literature
and papers, that wIll fill the soul of the neat housewife with
horror.
Passing of a Word.
In certain quarters there seems to be a tendency to drop
the word "solicitor," and use either "representative" or "sales-man"
To many persons, perhaps, the difference in terms
does not seem of much Importance, but who ever has a due
regard for exactness and the suggestive effect of a word, and
will consider the etymological and accumulated meaning of
the words in question, will wonder why astute sales-managers
have not long ago relegated the word "solicitor" to that lin-guistic
cemetery where now reposes that other age-worn
term. "vVe beg to advise "-W. B. \i\farren, in Colliers.
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THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
Glue Heater
Send your addre.. and
and receiYe de.criptiye
CIrcular oE Glue Heater ••
Glue Coof<er. and Hot
Boxeo with prices.
Grand Rapid., Mich. I
f..
The Weatherly Co.
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
~--~------~------_._---------_._-_._-_.~._----~------~-_-..-.-----~----~----- I ACCURACY, DURABILITY, ECONOMY
Three most important requisites in case construction.
We absolutely guarantee our method of construction
to be stronger and less expensive than all others.
Let us tell you about it.
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No. 181 Multiple Square Chisel Mortlser.
Ash for Catalog "J"
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WYSONO « MILES CO., Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., OREENSBORO, N. C.
Care of Furniture and Woodwork.
Supposing the woodworking of one's house to be sound
and clean, as things go, the ordinary maid's idea of cleaning
is to "give a good rub up" or to use some kind of pohshmg
paste or liquid. After this treatment the furniture \\ 111
look bright for awhile unless one should peer into the corners
and find the white dust hiding in crevices and portiom of
molding or carved work.
All rubbing and polishing are labor in the wrong place
unless the first process of cleaning has been thoroughly car-ried
out. There are many ways of doing this Some hou ,e-keepers
use cold tea, vinegar and water in equal parts. Either
application is good, although my preference is for the cold
tea, which seems to cleanse more effectually than anythmg
else. Whatever is used, it must not be swabbed all over the
piece of furniture as if a ship's deck were being treated to
its morning bath, but with soft, clean cloths, dampened \\ Ith
the tea or whatever is used, and then rubbed all 0\ er the
surface and dried carefully at once. The crevices and cran-nies
are best reached by a tiny pad of cotton on the end of
an orange stick or an old penholder. If there is much dirt
to vanquish, it means very hard work, much rubbing, much
renewing of the tea water. Thus free the article from dirt
and greasiness and subsequent polishing will be an easier
task and the final result a very great satisfaction Sltght
scratches may be removed by being anointed with linseed
oil (boiled) at night and then rubbed next day with linseed
oil and turpentine in equal proportions If they are very
deep they require professional treatment.
When the surface has not been scratched, but bruised or
indented, the bruised part can be dampened with warm water
first, and then a pad of brown paper folded many times, so
that it conducts heat only slowly to the wood below, is laid
on the part to be restored, the paper being soaked thoroughl)
in warm water before application Now comes the critical
part of the operation, for an iron, warm, but decidedly not hot,
must be held over the damp paper The pressure must not
be hard, but the iron should be kept in position until all
moisture has been evaporated If this is done directly a
bruise is observed, one application is almost sure to Iaise the
surface of the wood up again, but old bruises require sev el al
treatments.
Immediate removal of ink stains is the obvious filst aid
to the injured wood, but there are stains of this natUle that
are never detected until they have attained a good old age,
and then they need careful management A small quantlt)
of niter applied With a camel's hair brush will remove very
obstinate and hardened ink stains Six drops of the lllter to
a teaspoonful of water is suffiCIent, apphed until the ink has
dlssolv ed and disappeared. Then rub the place With a damp
cloth and pohsh with a soft duster.
vVhen time for housecleaning IS at hand and the house-wife
finds her leather chairs, for example, in need of reno-vation
and yet does not feel that she can afford to spend much
money, she may make them look ever so much better by using
the whites of eggs.
Beat them well, remove all the dirt and dust possible
from the chairs and rub the egg in good; when it dries go
over the whole with soft, clean cloths, and the change will
be very e\ ident
To clean Japanese matting and 11110leums use bran water
which is made by taking two handfuls of bran and boiling it
in a gallon of water. After this has boiled twenty minutes
strain and cleanse the matting or lmoleum with a flannel cloth
wet \Vlth the bran water yiVipe immediately With a dry
cloth.
011 alone does not really clean anything, it polishes for
a short whl1e, but in the end it makes matters worse; but a
mixture of one part of turpentine to two parts of oil really
makes a \\ onderfully good pohsh, It removes scratches and
even dents \\ III many times disappear; it may be mixed and
kept in a bottle to be used as occasion requires
Vlllegar-just hot vinegar-applied to paint spots on
window glass will usually take them off without any trouble
or scraping Painted WOOdWOlk should never be cleaned
with ammonia; It eats off the polish of the paint; but make
a mixture of three quarts of hot water, with soap enough to
make a good lather; add three tablespoonfuls of turpentine
and two of ml1k, and you will find the wood look as If it were
freshly pamted instead of the dull, hfeless appearance usually
noted after soap and water.
\A.'hen \ er) much soiled, all wickel furniture may be
I enovated by first taking off every pal ticle of the pamt With
soap and water in which a little soda has been dissolved; then
the piece may be stained or just revarnished to good effect
Oxahc acid is a Virulent pOlson, but a solutIOn is very
useful to the housewife Four ounces 111half a pint of watel
will remove stains and dark spots, only the place must be
\\ ashed at once in warm \\ atel to remove the acid --~---------...,
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If your DESIGNS are right, people want the Goods.
That makes PRICES right.
(tlarence lR. bills
DOES IT
163Madison Avenue-CItizens Phone 1983. GRAND RAPIDS. UICH ...._ ... ----_ ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Philadelphia Brevities.
PhIladelphIa, Apnl 7-The trade here is moving along at
a very good pace All the manufacturers and wholesalers
'ieem busy and are not complaming much With few ex-ceptIOns
this year WIll be as big as any in the past, with the
profits probably smaller, yet on the whole satisfactory The
hIgh price of materials has of course cut into the profits con-siderably
Some advances have been made in furniture, more
on the higher grades, than on the cheaper goods, but the
increase noted IS much less than the advanced cost of manu-facturing.
Smith Bros. & Pierce, 310 Spruce street, are quite busy
on "orco" elastic felt mattresses.
The Manufacturers' club have taken the old Bellevue
Hotel bUIlding at Broad and ,1\1alnut streets, and will re-model
It for a club house
L D. Shreve of Union City, Pa, will build a large table
plant, covel ing several acres of glOund near his chail factory
The new buIldin~ wIll be of concrete construction, cost
$300,000, and employ 500 men
William Rogers of the J R Bunting Beddmg company
has taken the third floor of the MIller buIlding at 254 South
American street, for a wareroom.
Edward Duncan is now with William Wright at Nine-teenth
and South streets.
Herman Silverstein has moved from Hammond and
Orthodox streets to 4258 Frankford avenue and is carrying
a large line of furniture
S Bowman, furniture dealer of 336 North Second street,
has opened up a new store at 621 South street in charge of
A H Goorland
William Koehle, an old furniture dealer, has taken a
position with the Van SClver company of Camden, N J.
B Levin, formerly proprietor of the Greater New York
Metallic Bedstead company has been dIscharged from bank-ruptcy.
Thompson the manufacturer of Wood finIshes. has
opened a down town office in the Bulletin buIldmg and has
a very large sale for his products Porclltte IS made for re-fngerators.
It is claimed it wIll not cnack or peel and comes
m all colors.
The American Sal11tary Mattress company, SIxteenth
and Huntmgton streets have moved to a larger plant at 209
Thirty-second street. The bus111ess had grown beyond the
capaCIty of the old quarters.
T. Steinmitz, receIver for Boris Levin, Bons Lev111
& Co, Woodstown 'Metallic Bedstead .company and the
Greater New York ~Ietalltc Bedstead company WIll practi-cally
have nothmg to dlstnbute for the credItors
..---~-'--- III
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------------ -- .- ..-. ........ ., I Henry Schmit tJ Co.
HOPK:INS AND HARRIET STS.
Cincinnati, OLio
makers of
Upholstered Furniture
for
LODGE and PULPIT, PARLOR,
LIBRARY, HOTEL and
CLUB ROOM
III
.." I~_.--------------------_._------~
The EmpIre Door and Tnm company, wood workers,
has been incorporated with a capital of $40,000, by WIlliam
Biggart of Bloomfield, N. J, and John Biggart of the Bronx,
New York City. The firm will do business in New York
William H. Gosnell has been on a selling trip to New
York and through New Jersey. His daughter Miss Gosnell
travels to Baltimore, Washington and South New Jersey
points, handling parlor suites and couches.
Stone & Moffat have moved from Sixteenth and Federal
streets, to larger quarters at Fifteenth streets.
"Sandy" Blanton has taken the Hall & Lyon 1111efor
PhIladelphia and Trenton. He is assisted by Peter C Lee
who also sells for the Southern Furniture company.
The Lyon Furniture Agency will move from Walnut
place to 608 Chestnut street.
Jackson Bros store at 38 South Eighth street was sold
sometime ago to Snellenburg Bros. The Jackson's wIll 111
the future devote their time to their Washington store
Philip Gazon as the Michigan Furniture company is 111
financial trouble. His assets are reported at $38,400 and ha-bIlities
at $18,000, with 105 creditors.
Emil Cohn, formerly buyer for George Kelly, has agam
taken that position, succeeding Jack Talleman.
H D Dougherty & Co, is a new furniture manufactur-mg
concern in North Philadelphia.
Harry Sanderson has succeeded John H Sanderson and
wIll locate the furnIture business farther uptown.
The Bernstein Manufacturing company of Third street
and Alleghany avenue, making metal beds, are adding an-other
story to the factory and to the foundry and putting up
a new finishmg bUIld1l1g to cost $40,000. This firm's growth
has been very rapid. They have been consistent advertisers.
A federal law now in effect makes It unlawful not only
to pass counterfeit com, but to retain it If you have it in
jour posseSSIOn, you must gIve It up, nottfymg the federal
authorities of It. It IS unlawful to collect bogus money.
------------------- •• ------ ••• _ •• __ ------ __ awe •• _-. __ •••
OFFICES:
CINCINNATI--Second National Sank Sulldlng. NEW YORK--346 Sroadwa:v.
SOSTON--18 Tremont St. CHICAGO--14th St. and Wabash A......
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Sida. JAMESTOWN, N. Y.--Chadakoln Blda.
HIGH POINT, N. C.--N. C. Savings Sank Sidg.
The most satisfactory and up-to-date Credit Service embracing the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLiED LINES.
. ~
The most accurate and reliable R.eference Book Published.
Originators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System:'
-- - ---- ----------
_ •• --- - sa •• aa ••••
III
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CollectionService Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Drafts.
L__
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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f
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NO.OTHER
,
SANDER
No. 111 Patented Sand aelt MachIne.
WYSONO « MILES CO., Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., OREENSBORO,...N. ...C. .. ...1
FASHION IN HOME DECORATIONS
The Classic Adam Style Now Popular in Wall
Paper Designs.
To an ever-widening circle of wealthy citl7ens, \\ ho-,e
thoughts and aspirations are largely centered upon "oeial
functions and the endless round of 1eceptions, entel td1l1-
ments and soirees thereby entailed, the decoration of the
home is a subj ect of perennial interest No matter what the
cost may be, those who are ambitious to retain promment
positions among the leaders of fashIOnable slclety mtl~t not
lag behind the times in things pertaming to the adornment
of the home. To do so would be almost as reprehensible a..,
to appear at a funtion in apparel of an antiquated type
As a result, the professional decorator IS commIssIOned
at intervals to bring the interior arrangements of the home
into line with the latest development of ornamental art
Really fine furniture is bamshed to the garret or otherWIse
disposed of, rich damask is stripped from the walls, elabo-rate
draperies and portieres are displaced, elegant frescomg
is obliterated. But the idea of replacing the furmture and
decorations thus removed with others of greater artistic
value, plays little or no part m the proceedings The \\ ark
of renovation is usually ordered on the pI inciple that one
may as well be out of the world as out of fashion The
owner of the mansion may take his famJly for,a European
trip while the alterations are m progress Later they re-turn
and admire, also congratulate themselves upon the
modish, up-to-date interior of the residence
Unfortunately it often happens that the work of mterior
decoration does not require, for the dIsplacement of orna-ment
that is good, something that is more refined and artis-tic
as well as newer. Too often it merely represents change
for the sake of change and under such condItIOns, the evane-scent
fad of the hour is sure of consideration, and, most
likely, adoption. The whole field of decorative art, from
Rameses to Roosevelt, or from ancient Assyrian to modern
mission, with every conceivable variatIOn and recomposition
has, in this way, been exploited as a passmg fancy ever
since the days when designers and decorators di"covered
that it was easier and cheaper to pJlfer the ideas and work
of predecessors than to Cleate equally meritorious ornament
of their own.
At present the trend of fashion is in the direction of the
historic styles of the seventeenth, eighteenth and early nine-teenth
centuries. The beautiful ornament of Louis the
XIVth, that of Louis XVIth and the Empire period are also
much used.
makes it possible to dispense with
hand sanding.
Our No.i71 Sander produces a
fmish on flat surfaces, irregular
shapes and mouldings that would
be spoiled by hand retouching.
Ask for Cataio, HE"
In addItion to these, one of the most refined and grace-ful
styles now popular i.s that of the classic "Adam" period,
a style which, for quiet elegance, refinement of form and
n:quislte rendering of detail is surpassed by no other. To
A mellrans It i" doubly interesting and attractive because
Adam Style as Used m Wall Paper
of the mfluence which, along with the Georgian, it exerted
on the Colonial architecture and ornament of our forefathers.
The creators of this style, Robert and James Adam, were
the sons of a talented Scottish architect, WiIIiam Adam, of
Maryburgh, officially known as the "King's Mason." With
Robert and James were associated two other brothers, Wil-liam
and J ahn. Robert, however, was the recognized genius
WEEKLY ARTISAN
of the family. He was born in the town of Kircaldy, in
1728.
After spending several years in Italy, studying the clas-sic
art of that country, he returned to Britain and became
associated in business with his brother James In a few
years they became famous as the architects and decorators
of numerous public buildings and private residences. Highly
as their work was esteemed. it has not escaped criticism
James Ferguson, author or "History of Architecture" writes:
'Their great merit, if merit it be, is that they stamped their
work with a certain amount of originality, which, had it been
of a better quality might have done something to emancipate
art from its trammels." In spite of criticism, the fact re-mains
that their buildings, notably the interiors, are gene-rally
beautifully proportioned, while the decorative features
and the furniture, which they also designed to insure the
unity of the whole, are the acme of delicate grace and refine-ment.
As such, the work of Robert and James Adam is
appreciated more highly today than ever before,
While easily outclassing contemporaries, the Adam
brothers were alive to the importance of securing the most
talented assistants obtainable. We find among the employes
of the firm such names as Angelira Kauffman, Pergolosi,
Zucci, and others. The work of these men, however, con-si"
ted in the execution of detail. The broad, comprehensive
plan of building, interior decoration and furnishing was con-ceived
by Rand J. Adams and they alone are entitled to
the honor of results.
About 1773 they published the first of three famous
volume"> on "Architecture, Interior Decoration and Furni-ture
" These books cover practically every phase of the
subject-building plans, wall and ceiling decoration, all kinds
of furniture, mantelpieces, mirrors, clocks, carpets, draperies,
upholstery fabrics, etc. It is worthy of note that in the pre-face
to this work they do not claim originality for their
style, as that word is often interpreted. They say: "We
have been able to seize with some degree of success the
beautiful spirit of antiquity and transfer it with novelty and
vanety through all our numerous works." A modest claim,
indeed, but the results obtained were original, even though
the makers derived their inspiration from the work of men
whose bones had been mingling with the dust of mother
earth for nigh two thousand years.
The Adam style has often been described as English
Empire Its relationship to Louis the XVlth ornament has
also been spoken of. It is true that the influences which
broua-ht about the Empire style in France and the Adam
b • style in Great Britain were at work during the same penod
yet, while each derived its inspiration from the same source,
the Empire style is more massive and pretentious in form-ation
than the Adam, as might be expected from a style
which was created for the purpose of adding luster to the
name of the Little Corporal Compared with the beautiful
designs of the Louis XVlth period, the influence of which
on the work of R. and J. Adam is apparent, the Adam style
is more distinctly classical and is almost devoid of the dainty
floral forms so charactenstic of the elegant French style.
In surface decoration, ceiling, wall or panel, the central
figure in an Adam design is generally a circle, oval, medal-lion,
octagon, hexagon, parallelogram, lozenge, sunburst or
fan shape. The surroundings details consist of scrolls,
wreaths, festoons, garlands, ribbons, chains, rosettes, urns,
husk, paterae, etc. The ovals, hexagons and geometrical
centerpieces are often embellished with mythological figures
and groups, such as are found in Pompeiian wall decoration.
To recapitulate, the leading characteristics of the Adam
23
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Give your men tools that are ac-curate
to the one-thousandth part of
an inch. Tools that are straight and
true and hold their cutting edge.
No matter how expensive and per-fect
your machinery may be, if the
cutting tools are not of the best, you
can not turn out good work.
We pride ourselves on the fact that we
have manufactured only the very best for
thirty-five years. Write for our complete
catalog, It shows many new ideas in fine
labor saving tools.
MORRIS WOOD & SONS 1508-1510 W. LAKE ST., CHICACO, ILL.
e...__,_._. _ -----,-_._.-.---------.-....1..
style may be summed up as follows: Extreme delicacy and
refinement of form, exquisite symmetry of design and per-fectly
rendered details.
The accompanying original design illustrates one phase
of the Adam style A senes of patterns would be required
to demonstrate the various ornamental details made use of
by the Adam brothers Designs like the illustration are used
for the fashionable, one color, silk wall covering, known as
taffeta damask. During the past four or five years hotels
and residences have adopted this form of interior decoration.
The pattern is formed by weaving the bnllIant silk warp
threads loosely over a dull background of the same color.
These two effects in combination, produce a soft but rich
contrast, pleasing in the extreme The width of the pattern
1epeat is twelve and a half inches The design is equally
suitable for the better class of wall paper.
Western Imagination.
Oregon Tradesman-The Gunn Sectional Bookcase com-pany
of Grand Rapids, Mich., is preparing to locate a fac-tory
here, and has made preliminary arrangements for the
purchase of a large tract on the Portland peninsula. The
plans call for an expenditure of something like $250,000. The
company is anxious to have a factory in the timber country
and has selected Portland as the one best fitted for its pur-poses
in every respect.
When the foregoing paragraph was mentioned to John
P. Homiler, manager of the Gunn Furniture company, he
declared it was news to him. "There's nothing 111 it," he
said. "It's the product of some westerner's imagination."
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
y--------_ •.••• --------------------------------. • •• _.. .---------- ••••• ----------~ , THE LYON FURNITURE AGENCY I
CREDITS AND COLLECTIONS
ROBERT P LYON, Ceneral Manager
SOUTH CAROLINA RETAILERS
Proliram for Their Fourth Annual Convention to
Be Held Next Week.
The fourth annual convention of the South Carolllla
RetaIl Furmture Dealers' association IS to be held at Spartan-burg,
next week Wednesday and Thursday-Apnl 13 and 14
The call for the convention is in the form of a greetlllg sIgned
by 0 M. Heard as president and A 'vV. Lltschgi, secretary
and treasurer, which reads as follows'
"Our annual convention meets at Spartanburg on \pnl
13th and 14th, we want you to come. We expect to have the
largest attendance and the best meeting we have e, er had.
there IS nothing that you can do that wl1l aid you as much
in building up your business as your attendance upon thh
meeting. We want you to come, for if you come once } ou
will always attend. The meetings are interesting and lll-structive,
we have arranged a programme for this meetl11g
with a list of speakers that any body of men would be .le-lIghted
to have address them.
"If you will come to this meeting you '" III lea' e It \\ Ith
higher ideals, a stronger determination and better fitted to
make your business a success. You will always be glad} ou
came, for in addition to all the good things you '" 111 get
from the association, you will have the opportulllty of at-tending
the Concerts of the "South Atlantic Music FestIval"
So meet with us on April 13th and 14th \Ve want to make
this the best meeting we have ever held, we want you to see
what the furniture dealers can do by co-operatIOn Come
to the convention, bring your competItors and yOU ,"Ill go
back home better fitted, and thereby better prepared to make
more money out of your business
"Look thiS programme over and you WIll beglll to ap1)rc-ciate
what is in store for every Jealer in thiS state The time
and money spent III attending this com entlOn wl1l be the
best investment you can possibly make \Ye are look1l1g tor
you."
THE PROGRAM
FIRST DAY, \\ EDKESDAY, APRIL THIRTEENTH
Afternoon Session.
1 Openlllg of the ConventIOn by 0 }I Heard. PreSl-
(In Chamber of Commerce.)
Addrerss of Welcome-A W Smith or ~rr \Vood
D. H. Traxler, Tlmminsvl1le, S C
We1coming Address-C P Hammond, Spal tan bUH;,
dent
2
3
4.
S C.
5
(j
Recess FIfteen ~11l1utes
Reading of the Mlllute"
PresIdent's Address
7. ADDRESS-"Relations Between Manufacturer and
Retailer"-S. L. Davis, Secretary and Treasurer Southern
Chair company.
8 Report of Secretary and Treasurer.
9 "What Benefits are to be Derived from Membersll1p
in the Association."-E. G Cook, Columbia, S C.
10 (Announcement as to Question Box) Report of Exe-cutive
Committee
11 A.pplication for Membership and Payment of Dues
Evening Session.
Adjournment to Converse College to concert musical
festival
SECOND DAY THURSDAY. APRIL FOURTEENTH
Morning Session, 9 o'clock.
1 Communications and Testimonials received
2. Opening of Question Box. Discussions
3. Travelmg Men's Hour: Talk-C. A. Smith, High
Point, N C, G F Jenkins, Winston-Salem, N C. and S G
Ring, Kernersville, N. C.
4 Report of Special Committees.
5 ADDRESS-"What the Trade Paper can do for the
Dealer"-A. T. Thoits, Editor Grand Rapids Furniture Re-cord
6 Unfinished Business.
7 ADDRESS-O. H. L. Wernicke, President The
:YIacey company, Grand Rapids, Mich.
8 New Business.
9 "Freight Rates and Claims."-C. J Field, Secretary
Case Workers' association of North Carolina
10 PAPER-J. M. Van Metre, Columbia, S C.
11 OffiCial Photograph
Afternoon Session.
1 ADDRESS-"Manufacturers vs. Retailers' assocI-ation
"-Fred N Tate, President North Carolina Case Work-er,;'
association.
2. PAPER-"How Should we Regard the Corporation
tax "-A. W. Litschgi, Jr.
Informal Talks by Visiting Members of the North Caro-lina
Retail Dealers' association.
3. Election of Officers
4 Selection of Place of Meeting
5 Installation of Officers.
6 Adjournment.
Evening Session.
Grand Banquet, 11 P. M, Spartan Inn
11 F Ansell, Governor of South Carolina.
Howard B Carhsle, state senator from Spartanburg
r' (\ Truesdale, etc , ,;peakers
OF THE:
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
FURNITURE, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY,
UNDERTAKING, PICTURE FRAME, MIRROR
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES.
New York
Grand Rapids
Philadelphia
Iloston
Clnclnllatl
Chicago
5t LouiS
Jamestown
High Point
IMPROVED METHODS
WEALSOREPORTTHEPRINCIPALDRYGOOOS GRAND RAPIDSOFFICE,412.413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
DEPARTMENT AND GENtRAL STORES. C C NEVERS, Michitan M.anater
Capltal, Crewt and Pay Rahngs
Clearmt House Df Trade Experience
The Most Rehable Credit Reports. I
RAPID COLLECTIONS. t
..---- --- _. - - .....---------------------_._-_. __._-_._----_._---------------------..-...~..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Knew It W8S 16Madein Grand Rapids:'
A lady livIng in Los Angeles, after havIng planned, erec-ted
and furni"hed a handsome bungalow, on one of the hIll",
overlookIng the sea In the Hollywood dIstnct, h"tened wIth
pleasure to the utterances of a party of fnends, praIsing her
skill, taste and Judgement in the creation of a heautIful home
A fine buffet, m the dmmg room deserved and receIved espe-cial
attentIOn and the o~ ner prouJly remarked It wa'i "made
m Grand RapIds" One of the party pretended to doubt
the truth of the <,tatement, when the lady pulled the pIece
away from the wall and 1 e\ ealed on the back of the case thb
m"cnptlOn
MADE BY THE LUCE FURXITUR£ COJIF"1"\ }',
GRASD RAPIDS, MICH
Cabll1et Work by P Peter'ion
Stammg by Robert Owen
FIllmg by John Fopma.
Varmshmg by Albert Tllumer
Poh <,hl11gby Isaac Crane.
The proof wa", consIdered sufficient anJ the party con-gratulated
the owner on account of her possession of a piece
of Grand RapIds furnIture of uncommon merit.
In thIS connection when the fact IS considered that much
poor furnIture is sold under mIsrepresentation as to its ori-gl11,
why would it not pay manufacturers of establtshed repu-tatIOn
to authenticate theIr gooJ', by some such mean" as
the foregomg suggests
Welcome the Bar~~ain Hunter.
We have notIced that when some of the trade magazme
Writers ~ ant to ",ay a partIcularly wlthenng and bhstenng
thmg about certain class of customers, they call them "chronic
bargam hunters" says the Merchants' Journal. A man who IS
<.,uppo"ed to watch the papers for low pnces, to go where
he can buy a hat or an overcoat cheapest, or a woman who
attends the specIal sales and stocks up when she has a chance,
at low prices, IS classed a'i a "chromc bargam hunter.·'
The way some of the merchants talk about them, one
would thmk that a chromc bargal11 hunter was a sort of a
thIef or 'ihopbfter Don't be too hand on the bargam hunter
Don't call hIm names There are a great many of them. He
COni>tltute<.,a very large proportiOn of humamty The chances
are that you are one yourself. The man who Isn't a chronic
bargain hunter IS generally comldered as afflicted with an
ingrowing surplus of money whIch he needs to have extracted,
or else he is mentally defiCIent.
Every man of sense tries to get as much as possIble for
hIS money The merchant '" ho can "buy close" is a chronic
bargal11 hunter The man who pIcks up real estate when he
can find somethl11g that looks as though It was worth more
than the price is a chromc bargal11 hunter. Every body to
."...-. ------••-••-••-••----.---.-.-.- I • • ••• ....-. .. ... .-..4.!.
25
Built WIth double arbors, sliding table and equipped
complete with taper pin guages carefully graduated.
This machine represents the height in saw bench con-struction.
It is designed and built to reduce the cost
of sawing stock.
Write uS for descriptive Informallon.
CRESCENT MACHINE WORKS
OF GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I.._ ... - .. ---- - --- ---------------
whom money means anythl11g IS a chromc bargam hunter.
Some men'", abIlIty to find bargams may run In the hne
of buying hats and SUltS when they are offered cheap, and some
other man's abilIty a'i a chromc bargam hunter may be mani-fested
m hIS skill m buymg lO-story busl11ess blocks, but they
are all bargal11 hunters
If the merchant offers goods at speCIal pnces, he expects
the public to come and buy He would be bItterly disap-pol11ted
If they didn't The chromc bargall1 hunter, If he comes
with h1s money in hIS hand, ought to be Just a~ welcome as any
one else.
To the abo, e 111lgJhtbe added a rem111der that the bargam
hunter or the man WIll IS keenly mterested 111 making the
weekly or monthly salary go a~ far as possible, generally pays
hIS bIlls. The one who IS careless about his purchases, buys
what he needs regardless of the pnce, often eIther mtends beat-ing
hIS debts or unwIttIngly gets 111to a financial hole from
""111Chhe IS unable to extncate hl111'ielf "
Trouble l'i the 1110Stobbg111g th111g 111the world It WIll
never dodge the people w\ho are looking for it ..~
An ounce of pen ent1l)n IS a good antIdote for remorse
..... ~
A. L. HOLCOMB & CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
QROOVINQ SA WS
DADO SAWS
Citizens' Phone 1239
27 N. Market St .. GraDd Rapids. Mich.
t.. ••• ... . - ..._. ... ..
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Drying Furniture Stock
If the information contained
in this book would save you a
carload of oak a year, would it
not be worth reading through?
Not a common catalog, but a book of
information, containing practical suggestions
really valuable to men interested in lumber
drying.
A complete treatise on Forced and Nat-ur..
l Circulation Kilns (progressive and
apartment types) with details of equipment.
A book you ought to have. Sent postpaid to
any address. Where shall we mail your copy?
AMERICAN BLO')/ER CoMPANY ---- DETROIT. FIlCH -----
U S. A.
Manufacturers of
"ABC" low speed;
low power exhaust
fans.
"ABC' 'roller bear-ing
trucks, trans-fer
cars and flexi-ble
doors.
L"Detroit" Return Steam Traps.
FOREIGN TRADE IN AUTOMOBILES
Develops to a Million Dollars Per Month in
Five Years.
Thc forclgn tradc of the UnIted States 111 automobIles now
amounts to a 11111lIondolars a month, or twelve 1111lllOndollar~
per annum, of whIch sum about four mIllIOn are Imports and
eIght mIllIon, exports Ten year~ ago the trade m automobIles
\\a~ not of suffiCIent value to JustIfy the Bureau of StatIstIcs of
the Depdrtment of Commerce and Labor m mak1l1g a separate
rccord of elthel the Imporh or exports, the few automobile,
entermg or leavll1g the country be1l1g lI1cludecl under the mIs-cellaneous
da"s of "All other artIcles" In July 1901, however,
the Bureau began to record the exports, whIch m the fiscal
) ear 1902 amounted to about one mIllIon dollal s, and smce that
tune the ,alue of automobIles and parts thereof exported to
foreIgn countnes has been m round terms thIrty mIllIon dollars,
of whIch total about twenty-five mIllIons has developed 111 the
hve years endmg WIth December 1909, V\lth a prospect that
the fiscal year 1910 WIll show an export record of fully eIght
mIllIOn dollars
In Imports the record was not established untIl July 1905,
\\ hen the total of automobIles and parts thereof Imported
amounted to four mlilron dollar~, 111the fiscal years 1906 and rn
1907 over five mIllIOn, but fallmg below that figure m succeed-mg
yeal s, makmg the total ImportatIOn for the five years endll1g
December 1 ()Ol) for whIch a record eXIsts about eIghteen 11111-
lIon dollal s of automobIles and parts thereof. . The shIpments
of automobIles ,rnd pal ts thereof to Alaska, HawaII and Porto
RICO are not II1cluded m the figures quoted dbove, but amount,
111the past fi, e years, to doout tv\ 0 mIllIOn dollars, makmg the
totdl \ alue of the automobrle pa'osll1g 111and out of porb of the
ll11ted States 111 the past fi\ e year", about forty-five mIllIOn
c!ollar..,
O[ he Import~ ale cIuefly flom ['rance, Haly, Germany, and
the Cl11ted KIngdom, and the exports to practIcally every eoun-tf)
111the world, though the largest number go to Canada, the
C111ted Kll1gdom, :;\lexlOo and Australra 1he number sent to
Canadd 111 the fiscal year 1909 was 1,230, valued at $1,457,121,
to England 590 machmes, valued at $1,693.914, to France 209
macIl1nes, valud at $643,692, to :Ylexlco 200 :Ylachmes, valued
at $282,462, and to Austraha 127 machmes, valued at $81,426
The prices of those sent to iGuropean countnes are, as a rule,
hIgher than that of the machmes sent to Canada, MeXICO and
-\.ustralIa. the average pnce of those sent to France bel11g over
$'1,000 each, accordmg to the pnces and numbers of machines
reported to the Bureau of StatIstIcs, tho~e to England average
nearly $3,000 a pIece, those to Canada about $1,200 and Mex-
ICO about $1.400 each, and those to Australra less than $650
each.
The total number of automobIles expO! ted m the fiscal
year 1909 wa~, according to the Bureau of StatIstIcs' figures,
3,184, valued at $5,387,021, an average value of about $1,700
for a machme, and the number imported 1,624, valued at $2,-
')05,191, shov\l11g dlso an average of about $1,700 for each
machl11e The dlstnbutIon of automobIles extends to all parts
of the world, the number of countnes named by the Bureau of
StatIstIcs as destll1atlon of automobiles exported m the fiscal
\ ear 1909 bel11g not less than 50, and l11cIudrng IndIa, Chl11a,
Dutch East IndIes, Japan, Canary Islands, Egypt, French and
Ijntl'oh -\.fnca. South -\.mencan countne'l Central Amencan
::,tate~, ,\ est IndIa Island'l, GIbraltar, and Portugal
The figures for the calender year are larger and "how aha
hIgher pnces, the number of machl11es exported in the calendar
year 19CfJ bel11g 3,686, and the stated value be1l1g $6,889,031. an
average of nearly $1,900, these figures mcludmg only the shlp-
WEEKLY ARTISAN
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
'"
II
II•
III
IIt
tII
t
II
•I
I•
II
II
t
•1
V.neer Pre ••••. d,ffer.nt kind. and .iz.. (P.te.ted)
Veneer Presses
Glup Spreaders
Glue Healers
Trucks, Elc., Etc.
27
~- Hand Feed Gluein .. Machine (Pal~nl
penmna.) Many .tyle. and .ize •.
_ .....,
II
III
II
I
I
I
II
Wood· Working
Machinery
and Supplies
Power Feed Glue Spreadinc MachIne. Sin..le.
Double and Combination. (Patented)
(Size. 12 in. to 84 in wide.)
LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
No 20 Glue Heater. CHAt E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. No.6 Glue Heater. .
._---------------------------_._._~
ments of machmes to fOIelgn countnes, and not mcludmg the
shipments to our noncontiguous tern tory, or the parts of ma.
chines whIch are included m the grand total stated below in
comparing our own exports of automobIles with those of othel
countries.
France lead<; the wodd a" an exporter oj automobIles, WIth
the United States "econd m rank. StatIstics compiled from the
offiCIal publicatIOn of the countne<; named show that the ex-ports
of vehIcles of thl<; cla"s m the latest yea r for whIch detaIls
are at hand were from l'rance, in 1908, $25,5(;9,000; the
L'mted States, in the calendar }eal 1909, $8,6GI,397, the Umted
Kmgdom, in 1909, $7,610,2fi7, Italy, m 1908, 15,533,000, and
Germany, 111 1908, $,1,031,000
Cost of Living.
From "Good FIxtures," publibhe~1 by the Seng company,
ChlCago-"When the farmer gets enough for hIS produce to
enable hIm to mdulge in some of the luxunes of modern Ii\-
mg, when wage-earners and salaried people get paId enough,
so that they can afford to eat the farm products wlthont
stintmg themselves, and to mdulge m some of the luxuries
of modern Irving-buying good furnIture, for example, when
the masters of finance capItalize theIr propertIes at two or
three tIme<; theIr real value, and force dIVIdends on the m-flated
valuations by ehmmatmg the competitIve element,
and when general business has to support this scheme of
thmg<;-then we have a government commission to "investI-gate"
the hIgh co"t of hvmg and we have to II"ten to the
explanation<; of a lot of speCIal pleaders who are chiefly con-cerned
in mamtaming theIr own position at the apex of the
indu<;trial pyramid.
JIm HIlI of the Great ~01thern call<; it rightly enough,
the "co<;t of l11gh hving" and advI<.,e" frugalIty-on the part
of "the people," mmd you
BIll Brown of the VanderbIlt system echoes that sentI-ment
and would have the farmer produce more, so that the
prIce of food would be les<;, <;0 that labor could exist without
increased wages, presumably
~othing much was <;aid about the cost of hvmg until
the farmer began to prosper and capltahze hIS business and
people WIth fixed mcomcs began to clamor for more of the
proceeds of theIr labor m order that they might mamtam
theil accustomed scale of hVIng ~ ot an unreasonable am-bition
conSIderIng the prospenty of the country
General Busmess wants the farmers to prosper, and
workIngmen of all degrees to have steady Jobs at good wages
They are the spenders And there IS enough prosperity for
all 1£ it is equitably dlstnbuted
Possibly high finance will have to get along with-a re-duced
percentage of profit-with less "graft," not to Ibe the
har"her word
In thi<; great country and 111 thl<; day and age, StraIght
BusIne<;<; and "ll1gh hving" are not IncompatIble
\'Ve can all h\ e If we all hve nght The accent IS on the
all, Mr Aldnch
Drying Hemlock.
Here IS an InterestIng testlmomal regardIng the drYIng of
hemlock. It's worth reaelmg, as hemlock IS one of the most
cltfficult woodb to elry:
Amher<;t, Nova ScotIa, Nov 2, 1908.
Granel RapIds Veneer Works,
Granel Rapids, MICh
Dear SIr .-In further reference to the hemlock lumber
that we kIln dried in our kIlns The hemlock was I" thIck
and green when we got It, and then was stuck on sticks in
our yard for about three months, and put In our kIln for 48
hours, comIng out a" mce and dryas could be WIshed for. The
stock was mce and straIght and none of It showed any checks
In the dryIng We never were able to kIln dry hemlock in
any of our old style kilm. Gum-wood IS another wood that
we always have trouble WIth to kIln dry, but WIth your new
process we can take gum-wood out of the kIln In 120 hours
and every boarJ straight and true and WIthout an) checking
Vve might also say that the kilns SInce bell1g fitted up with
your process are giving us entIre sah<;faction They have ful-filled
every repre<;entation made by you.
We dry all kmels of lumber and thicknes<; up to 3" and
we have no trouble now WIth the "tock checkmg or ''<arpmg,
thus makmg a savmg m lumber as well as the tIme In clJymg
Yours truly,
RHODES, CURRY & CO, LImIted,
C L Suess man, Secy ...
We can help you. Time
saved and when done
leaves are bound (by your-self)
and mdexed by Roors
or departments.
BARLOW BROS.•
Grand Rapid •• Mich.
...-.-.-.-----_._._._. Wnt. RtyhtNow .i. _. _._- --- -... ....- ...
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Minnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture
Association
OFFICERS-PreSIdent, J R. Taylor, Lake Benton Mtnn, Vice President, D R Thompson, Rockford, Mmn ,
Treasurer, B A Schoeneberger, Perham, Mlnn , Secretary, W L Grapp, Janesville Mlnn
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE-ChaIrman Geo Kletn, Mankato Mmn a SImons, Glencoe, Mmn, W. L
HarrIs \1mneapohs, Mmn C Daluelson, Cannon Falls.
BULLETIN No. 105.
that the assocatlOn has to deal wIth and "tIll make d "modI pl0fit So
do your ~hare and help us make good 1y\ U,,111g up the llumbel ot
suites that are llOW com111g thru f01 us 1'h1'->"lute wIll be turllbheel
to our members for $1885 ThIS 1" a httle more than vve \\ ere furn-lo;;
h111gthem for as glass and lumber hay each ancerJ 111 co"t Do not lay
thb bulletm aSIde, thmk111g yOU \\ III order "ome a httle later but "end
us your order now so that we can "hO\\ thIS factorv that our bUS111ess
is worrth \\ hIle
Send all orders to the secretary, JanesvIlle, ~1111n
J he "llltc" (,rdel eel dt com cntlOn \\ 111 be 1 eaJ) for dehvery 111 a
iu\ da\" \\ e hdd thl" "urte made e"peclall) f01 OUI purpo:oe:o One
hunch ed at thcm al e made up for u:oe and V\ e want every membcr to
put thl" ~ulte on the flOO1 :00 a:o to protect themselves aga111"t thl"
p11d"e of l Ol11petltlon Thl:o :OUIte IS ..,oLl by l\Iontgomery Wdrd fOI
SlO<); 1\\ the tlme \OU pal the heIght, a httle o;;ettll1g-up and a httle
tor dell\ el111g, \ ou \\ III "trll be able to meet the hardest proP0:Oltlon
WEEKLY ARTISAN
AN ADVERSE VIEW OF CO-OPERATION
A Paper Read at the Annual Convention Held
.in Minneapolis February 7 and 8.
Mr PresIdent and Brother r'urmture Dealers We have
assembled here from all parts of thl" grand state of ours for
the purpose I may say of touchmg elbow"" exchangmg vIews
anJ dlscus"mg the vanous methods, and to try If pos",ible
to Improve our conJltlOn as retaIl furnIture dealers Now,
m the first place, I wIsh to say that as I am only a country
dealer, the same no doubt as a great many of you who are
here today, I shall confine my remarks to you who are furl1l-ture
dealers m the ",maller towns As I am not a pubhc
speaker and have not the faculty of expressmg my thoughts
m an oratoncal manner, I have Jotted down a few Ideas
as they occur to me m regard to thIs co-operatIve buying
plan I do not wbh to go on record as bell1g a kIcker or a
knocker, but I wIsh to sImply state before thIS conventIOn
my VIews on thIS questIOn a3 It OCCUI"to me from a general
busmess stand pomt As there are always two sides to
every que"tlOn to be con"ldered, I deem It adVIsable to
thoroughly study and weIgh both "Ides and look for a place
to hght before we Jump too far In the fir",t place, as I
understand It, we are attempting to fight the catalog house
eVIl by combmmg or rather co-operatmg m the matter of
buymg. \Ve employ a set of them, or a commIttee as we
term them, to go down south m some other state to negotI-ate
for and buy m carload lots a lot of the cheapest, trashIest
goods that can be found on the market-good" that are made
of cheap matenal and by cheap, unskIlled Idbor They are
;,hlpped to our state and dlstllbuted among the vanou.;; dealers
to be palmed off onto our customers and fnend". Why do
we do thIs? SImply to try to impress upon the mmds of our
customers, who are our best fnends, that we can sell goods
as cheap a3 the catalog houses ;\Jaw, gentlemen, I want to
ask you, a" a body of intelhgent busmess men, IS It nght
that we should tIy to educate our customer" to buy cheap
artIcles Just because It IS made cheap and I" not worth
the money that they pay for It" Should we not rather try
to educate the trade to buy good" that wIll not only gIve
them value receIved but WIll ;,atbfy and please them I am
"ure that I would rather have one satIsfied customer than a
dozen who are dIssatIsfied wIth the goods that I sold them
Gentlemen, I want to aJmlt that I am opposed to this
present plan of co-operatIve Imymg for vanous rea;,ons, a few
of whICh I WIll state for the purpose of your consIderatIOn
In the first place It IS assumed that we are all domg busmess
wIth the de",lre of makmg a legItImate profit on our good3
Now our success depends entIrely I mIght sayan our ablhty
to command the trade In our re~pectlve commumtles, and 111
order to accomplIsh thIS enel we must put forth every effort
to please and to command the respect of the people upon
whom our busmess Jepends In order to do thIS It appear3
to me that we should at all tIme", sell them a good <;ubstan-tIal
class of goods, m the second place we should endeavor
to persuade or educate the people, espeCIally those hvmg m
the farmmg commumtIe"" to buy a better class of goods,
where there IS a better profit for the dealer and satIsfactIOn
for the purchaser-goods that we can recommend and stand
back of and make goo;} on-good", that have the guarantee
of the factory behmd them The largest portlOn of my
patrons al e farmers wh.o as a cla.;;s are the greatest catalog
house buyers. I have been workmg along the hnes sug-gested
and find that It IS bnngmg good results Our farm-ers
today are prosperous and theIr surroundmgs demand a
29
better class of goods, and we have only to get him into our
store and show hIm the latest, most up-ta-date ;,tyles to
mduce hIm to buy a pIece or two Once they buy a pIece of
good stuff they wIll return for more to match It, and will
keep on coming untIl they have theIr homes cosIly furnIshed.
Of course we stIll have a few of the ",a-called catalog house
fiends m every commumty, but that c1as", as a rule are not
a deSIrable clas" of customers to deal with As a general
thmg we finJ that theIr credIt is not any too good and they
are always lookmg for bargams, and If you don't throw off
the profit on the goods they want thev WIll not take them,
unless you sell them on tIme.
Now, the most Important reason why I am opposed to
the co-openatIve buymg plan 1.0 thIS I am heartIly opp.)sed
to boycottmg our home mdustnes Weare CItIzens of the
best state m the unIOn and should be proud of our home
mdustnes and help 111 every way 111 our power to encourage
and buIld up and mamtam them, and never seek to cnpple
or destroy them I w1.oh to ;,ay nght here that our home
manufacturer", are Our be'lt friends and we should go hand
m hanJ wIth them I have always found them ready and
wl1l1l1g to lend me a helpmg hand and why should I go back
on them? Weare today hvmg m the grandest and most
prosperous ;,tate 111 the umon and I am proud of It \lYe have
"ome of the most up-to-date factones m the world m our own
state and m our own CItIes that are capable of manufactunng
all of the good", that we need and If we all patrol1lzed them
as we should they no doubt could furnIsh us our good.,
cheaper than they Jo now TheIr busmes'l IS conducted
along the "ame 11l1es as ours, they have got to have the
patronage that belongs to them 111 order to make theIr bUSI-ness
pay.
Now, gentlemen, I am at a los., to see why I should buy
my goods a thousand mIles from home when we can buy
better goods nght here at home for the same money that It
costs us to lay those southern goods down 111 our stores
Another rea"on why I am not 111 favor of thIS co-oper-atIve
buymg busmes, 1.0 thIS, I do not thmk It adVIsable to
tax thIS as;,oCIatIOn or It;, members for the purpose of de-fl
aYl11g the expenses of thIS buymg commIttee or for rnam-taml11g
a d1;,play room I prefer to do my own bUYl11gand
when I find that I am not capable of so dOl11g I shall quit
the busl11ess I have tned both plan" and I find that the old
way SUlts me be"t \;\Ie talk about the catalogue house evIl
Are we not dOl11g our country a greater harm by not patro-mzmg
our home factones than the catalogue house;, are
dOIng? I am heartIly m favor of co-operatlOn but we should
co-operate WIth our own manufacturers who are domg more
toward the up-buIldmg of the country and cIty than any
other class of people m our gland state
Furthermore, I do not thmk It a credIt to our association
at large to be advocatmg and advertbmg this co-operative
buymg plan m our trade papers under the head of the Min-ne"
ota RetaIl Furniture Dealers' associatIOn. If there are
those who WIsh to co-operate for the purpose of buymg a
lot of that cheap Tohn stuff they should co-operate under a
dIfferent name.
The object of our aSSOCIatIOn, as I understand it, is for
the purpose of meetll1g together once or twice a year to get
acquall1ted, talk shop and to obtall1 from one another all
the knowledge, lllformatlOn and pOlllters we can get as to
the best methods of handllllg the busmess at a profit, and
for the upbUlldll1g and protectIOn of the busmess in which
we are engaged, and not for the purpose of retardmg the
progress of the commu11lty m whIch we llve but rather to
use our influence for Its upbul1dmg. '
C F French
Discussion.
o A 0 Moen-"I am no speaker but I have listened
to the paper read by Mr French WIth a great deal of inter-est
I can not help but feel that Mr. French has not stopped
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
DO inform himself as to the eXlstmg condltlOns m connectlOn
with the bUYlllg comlttee because he has made statements
which I, as treasurer, know are not true As your trea'iurer.
I have never paid out one cent of expen'ie caused b) the bu)-
1I1g committee I also take exception to the reterence he
makes to buying trash
"It Ishould not take much of a fur11lture man to "ee a" he
goe:> over these samples that the maJonty of the lllles repre-sented
here are standard hnes such as tho'ie made 111 Rock-ford,
Grand Rapids and III fact, some of the be"t lllle" 111 the
market As to the members not bemg 10) al to our home
manufacturer'i, wlll say that I happen to kno" that OUI
buymg committee has tned and tned to get \\ hat the) need
m this market but have always found that the' could not get
1t Now that we are gettlllg v,hat "e neerl to meet a pha"e
of compehtlOn which I'> not at all of om l11aklll~. \\ e are "omc-times
accused of gettmg plunder I \\oulJ hke to a"k \Ir
French where he can buy that smte over there m the mall
order corner, made a" good and fi11lshed as good as that h,
for what the assoclatlOn l'i furmshmg It So I could go on
but I feel that the sample'i here wlll 'ipeak for thenheh e"
I would hke to hear some one el"e e"pl es" an 0p11110n along
these lines'
C Da11lelson of Gannon Falls, "\fmn _li\\ e tllerl to
make terms with our home manufacturer" time dl1(1 tIme
again I have been on the floor e, er "mce can, entlOn opened
and I find that our fnend .:\1r French ha:" )U"t come l'rom
the tone of hiS paper, I am afraid that he ha" not taken tIme
to see the hnes repl esented here or he "ould not call the"e
sample& plunder of cheap goods I \\Pould hke tu hdve the
pleasure of showmg 1\1r French the vanou.., line" repl e-sented
upon thiS floor
"In regard to the eApenses of the buy mg commIttee. \\ III
say that I have been one of them and hay e been gl\ mg m)
services Without any pay beSIdes standlllg m) ov, n eApen,e"
but I do not know whether I am gomg to do It am more It
this IS the thanb we are gettmg ,.
ANTIQUES FOR THE CHILDREN
Great Demand for Miniature Furniture Made by
a Pair of Veteran Toy Makers.
Of the numerous toymakers who once" orked m lImghanl,
"Ma% , only two-George \V Feanng, aged 72, and Lonng .:\1
Cushmg, aged 70-are still engaged 111 the busmess .:\111 } ear-mg
ha'i been thus employed for about 25 year", dnd "\11
Cushmg's record IS not far behmd Long ago an endles~
vanety of toys was produced, SdyS the 13o~ton Globe. but dunng
recent years both these makers have confined themseh e:" large-ly
to the constructIOn of hand-made dntlque to) furmture
A minature old-tnne bucket. for whIch Hmgham "a"
famou'i, IS fa'ihlOned "tlll to some extent by l\1r Feanng, tal
It IS very populaJr With the chlldren Mr. Feanng
was an expert bucketmaker and follo,,", ed thiS v, ark
for thirty years. In fact, It was while employed at \VIlder's
bucket shop that he first began to try hiS hand at toy bmldmg
dunng hiS spare moments. .:\1r Cushmg 'vas also a bucket-maker
and the two men were often employ ed at the same
bench.
"In those days," said Mr Feanng, "It seemed a~ If every
other house was a bucket shop, but as 111 the case of other 111-
dustnes, ""'hen machllles came III to use and the bucket.., could
be made more quickly and cheaply b) them, hand"ork was
dnven out. Mr Fearmg owns sevel al sets of the old tools
which cannot now be duphcated.
Mr Feanng and Mr Cushmg are members of the Hmg-ham
!\rts and Crafts sOCIety Their work IS always on exhibi-tIOn
and throughout the summer months I" the center of an
admmng throng of out-of-town 'Isltor.., Very frequently
stranger" go to the homes of the two toy makers, where each
has hiS workloom
Little c1111dren are among their most enthusiastiC admirers,
anJ ,ery often the "ame httle 'Isltors Will seek them out yeal
dfter yeal
The demand for the toy furlllture IS far greater than
eIther Cdll ..,upph Each man works entlrely without assistance,
and e\ en to) plOduced IS noted for the unvalying accuracy as
to detenl of constluctlOn
.:\11 Cushmg.., furmture i.., alway" made m imitation of
mahogan), "hde \tr ] eal1l1g ..,ometlmes Lhe" the Flemish oak,
chern and other "tams, althongh hiS fourpost bedsteads, bur-eau".
lowboy sand desb al e of the mahogany type The tiny
desks are copied elfter pattern.., m me from the middle of the
seventeenth centnry.
The bureaus With their quamt brass handles are always
fa, antes" Ith the children, and are modeled after vanous styles
One IS a very fine speclman of the furmtllle m the heavy style
fd..,hlOnable dw 1l1£;the fir..,t qndrtel of the mneteenth century.
If there h an) mtncate carV1l1g on the old-time furniture
med d~ models It I" duplicated In Its mmutest cletall by these
two clever to) makers The settle I" always of mterest, as lt
was the fir"t form of the long sedt "hlch IS found m the earhest
1l1ventone" m thiS country, and still earher m England
It I'> "aId that the ..,ettle ofteneslt "een m Amenca is of
"Imple comtructlOn, usually of pme and pamtecl It was made
to stand by the great fireplace to keep the drafts out and the
hea t m "I th ItS tall back
In keepmg ,\ Ith hiS settles, Mr. Feanng also makes wan-del
tull) constructed fireplace, With pot, cane and andirons
Each tmy bnck I.., cut out With a kmfe.
There are mahogany tables of vanous patterns, mcluding
a tea table of l'no and a Dutch "tand of the same period.
DUrIll£; the elghteellth centnry tables were a coman article
of turmture "Ith top" of square, oval and round and feet of the
cLm -elml-ball type
(hllthen dre always dehghted with the cradles of 1687,
\\ Ith open top, which these toymakers produce to fit the tiniest
doll, 01 the v can be had measunng sixteen inches on the inside
The chairs are numerou" and begm With the duphcates of
the old Gov Carver chair, the Wmdsor and the Dutch, fol-lowed
by the Ch1ppenddle, Hepplewhite and Sheraton styles.
The GovernOl Can er chalf IS ten mche" high whl1e others
measure nIne mche'i
One piece of furmture which a cl111d invanably insists on
hav1I1g once she sees It 1S a beautifully constructed mahogany
grandfather s clock. \\ hlch IS conSidered one of Mr Fearing's
best e'(amples It stands twelve inches high and is patterned
after a clock of 1770.
Furniture Fires.
Otto Hll'lt's furmture store at Mamto, Ill, was burneJ
on March 29 Lo'iS $5,500, msurance, $2,800
Geiger Bras furniture store at Ashley, Ill, wa'i burned
on March 30 vvlvh a loss of $3,500, partially insured.
The Bra" n FUlnltUle company of Syracuse, NY, lost
$-!-,OOO or $5,000 by fire 111 their warehouse. Fully lllsureJ
A Bradfield, furniture dealer and undertaker of Mecca,
Tnd, was burned out recently Loss $1,500; lllsurance $1,-
000
The furniture and undertakmg estabhshment of B F.
Burke at Carnegie, Okla. was destroyed by fire on March
9 Xa lllsurance
operations, making a lme of medIUm pnced dinmg room
fllI11ltllre
Fred A \/Vright, furniture manufacturer and dealer of
157 Fulton street, Boston, has filed a voluntary petitIOn In
bankruptcy. LiabIltties, $13,000, assets, $3,300
N Schoen & Son, wholesale and retaIl furnIture dealers
at OrtonvIlle, Mmn, have incorporated under the name of
the N Sohoen & Son company CapItal stock, $100,000.
::\1 Kroos & Son have succeeded A W. Ramm in the
furnIture and undertakmg busmess at Sheboygan, WIS Mr.
Ramm WIll engage in the undertaking business m Milwaukee.
Ash & Lynch who recently purchased the stock and
- Date Created:
- 1910-04-09T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:41
- 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/69