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- Weekly Artisan; 1909-12-18
Weekly Artisan; 1909-12-18
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAl'Tn ~/\PJ '
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• DECEMBER 18. 1909
GRAND RAPIDS CRESCENT
THE "WORLD'S BEST" SAW BENCH
We build four)ypes
of Saw Benches-everyone
of them
the peer in its class.
If you want
modern, up to date
machinery at
moderate prices,
consult with us.
Good machinery
means economy.
This Saw Bench is
the very latest.
It possesses so
many advantages
over old style saw
Benches that it is
a loss of money to
you to run along
in the old way.
Upon Request We Will Send to Your Address Our Complete
Catalog of Information.
The CRESCENT MACHINE WORKS of Grand Rapids, Mich.
The Furniture Market Pre-eminent--Chicago
Now, Dealers, Let's get right down to brass tacks, cutting out theory, roundabout
reasoning, sentiment and prejudice. We've got the market for you and we want
you to come to it and satisfy yourself of the fact. Consider your own business
interests-not somebody's else-and mark well that
The Big Building at Thirteen Nineteen
will show 200 attractive, bristling, business-building lines
from 24 states--practically all the furni ture producing states!
These people are out for business, they know the business is here and they've got
the goods to deliver that'll get the business, not only for themselves but for you
who buy them.
This powerful line-up. back of which will be a tremendous volume of business
energy and "winning ways," will offer the most complete and profitable buying
proposition you have ever had put up to you.
Goods covering the widest possible range for selection; the very best in design, con-struction
and finish because they know nothing else goes in the Chicago market;
and prices and terms which, owing to the keen competition, will be absolutely
unapproachable.
Thirteen Nineteen Grows Trade and We can Prove It
N ow, if you want stocks that are as good as coin in your mitt---goods that will
turn Into dividends with little effort and no worry on your part, come in and
take 'em away. It will be the most satisfactory buying trip you ever made.
Manufacturers' Exhibition Building Co.,
1319 Michigan Avenue, Chicago.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Michigan Chair Company
Grand Rapids, Michigan
January
January
N N
I I
N
N
E
E
T T
E
E
E E
N N
TEN
TEN
Michigan Chair Company
Michigan's Foremost Chair Factory.
On the opening day (January 1st, 191 0), we will be
ready to welcome the Trade Buyers to our warerooms.
Extra facilities have been added during the past six
months, in order that we may be enabled to give even better
service than ever to our customers all over the land.
We will show in this season's offeringsmany sensiblyattrac-tive
pieces, and in view of the vastly improved businesscondi-tions
everywhere, suggest the early consideration of our patrons.
East
CHAS. H. cox
ROBT. E. WALTON
Representative Salesmen:
South
W. R. PENNY
West
CHAS. B. PARMENTER
ROBT.G.CALDER
H. M. STORY
1
WEEKLY ARTISAN 3
4 "WEEKLY ARTISAN
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LUCE
LINE
Many New Patterns m
Dmmg Room and Bed-room
FurnIture for
the Fall Season.
SHOW
ROOMS
AT
FACTORY,
GRAND
RAPIDS,
MICH.
81III
I
IIIIf
I
I
IIIII
LUCE
FURNITURE
COMPANY
Catalogue upon request
5
COMPLETE
LINES Of
REfRIGER4 TORS
AT RIGHT PRICES
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE
AND LET US NAME YOU PRICE.
CUALLENGE REfRIGERATOR COMPANY GRAND "AVEN, MIC"., U. S. A.
GRAl\Tn RAPT ~
30th Year-No. 25 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• DECEMBER 18.1909 Issued Weekly
--SILENT" SMITH'S FAMOUS ART TREASURES
Fifth Avenue Palace Worth Millions. in Which Stanford White. Acting for William. C.
Whitney. Scored His Greatest Achievem.ent; to Be Sold at Auction.
Kew York, Dec 15-\\ Ith the commg ",ale at auction of
the home of the late James Henry Smlth-"SIlent SmIth"
-there WIll be offered for publIc competItIOn by far the
largest aggregate of works of art m monetary value ever
put on publIc sale In thI" country, and mdeed such a sale 1'3
a rarity anywhere The bmldmg alone and Its SIte have
enoneomly been saId to have an estImated value of $1,000,000
It has been found that the bmldmg and land are assessed at
$1,900,000, and the assessed valuatIOn of coUIse b not sup-posed
to represent the full value of the property
The late \\ Ilham C Iv\ hltney, from whose estate Mr
SmIth bought the ploperty, spent for the intenol decora-tIons,
embellIshment" and fmnIshmgs of the house a sum
estImated at between $2,000,000 and $3,000,000, the late Stan-ford
\Vhlte WIth carte blanche from J\Ir \Vhltney havmg
travel sed many lands m the accummulatIOn of the archItectural
and decO! atlve effect" whIch he 111stalled there. Mr SmIth
spent fm ther sums 111 the ennchment of thIS palace, for
palace It I~ m It<.,mten01, IllS expendIture on the ballroom
alone reachmg $900,000
From thIS bnef SUmn1aIy m figures may be seen some-thmg
of what the manSIOn 1epresents from the money pomt
of VIew alone, but art, not mere spendmg power, was the
fir"t con~IderatIOn m the dec01atIOn of the hou-,e. It IS the
beautIful, the mterestmg, the noble and the admIrable works
of art and theIr becommg and orderly dISposItIon m a dV\ell-mg
that commend thIS hou"e and ItS treasures to the artIstIc
ImagmatIOn, It IS not a museum but a home, albeit a home of
luxury, and the component's of Its adornment appeal to col-lectors
and expel ts on both SIdes of the western ocean It
IS highly probable that some of the treasures wIll go back to
Lmope In an art auctIOn of thIS kmd all the V\orld com-petes
In the eye of fnends of 1Ir \Vhlte thIS house represents
the crownmg achIevement of hIS peculIar constructIve mmd
To hIm worl< of art susceptIble of archItectural treatment
ImmedIately !)1ought up a mental plctm e of It mother sur-roundmgs
of hIS own creatIOn, and here, where no 1nnlt v\as
placed upon hIS expendItures, he was free to elabol ate ~chemes
of form, color and propm tIOn to the extent of hIS capaCIty
He effected a result WIth no larrmg note There IS no
superabundance of luxunous detal1 The vvhole agrees WIth
Itself lIke a well compo"ed pamtmg Its atmosphere IS agree-able,
It<.,color delIghtful It IS a place of notable com el11ence
The entertamment of 1,000 per<,ons 1ll no way croV\ds it And
from the maSSIve entrance gates, themselves work of art,
art speaks throughout the hou<;e, the art of the archItect the
painter, the sculptor, the weavers of rugs and of tapestries,
the wood cal ver, the mlayer, the engraver, the maker of
stamed gla"s, and the art of the Onental potter
Smce the catalogue whIch the Amencan Art ASSOCIatIOn
IS prepanng for thIS sale WIll reqmre somethmg lIke 2,000
numbers It IS evIdent that only compal atIvely few among the
wealth of objects m the house can be mentlOned In a news-paper
artIcle
The home It'iel£ wIll first be offered to V\ealthy Ameri-cans
who may WIsh to establIsh them'ie1ves m such a home
I t WIll be offered "tructnrally mtact Those works of art
whIch form mtegral parts of the bUIldmg are not to be offered
sepal ately. All the rest of the embellI"hments, furmshmgs
and decoratIons WIll be sold separately \Vhen It IS remem-hered
that the house IS 200 feet long on SIxty-eIghth street
by 5:; feet on FIfth avenue it may 1 eadily be understood hoV\
much It can contaIn WIthout crowdmg
Even before entenng the house two thmgs which attract
attentlOn may be mentlOned, each m ItS dIfferent way, mark-ing
the scale of what follows WIthin. If one walks to the
hou<;e from up f'tfth avenue he passes over a flagstone so
large that to the SIghtseers 1ll the passmg charabanc'i It IS
pomted out by theIr gmde as the largest flagstone m the
vvorId It IS saId to be true that thIS flagstone 15 the blg\Se:ot
smgle stone ever cut and transported
Approachmg the entrance the VISItor IS met WIth one of
the artIstIc SIghts of {\ ew York that are alway" on publIc
vIew, the massne entIance gate ThI<; Is of wrought lfon of
antIque manufacture and came flam the Dona Palace, Vel11ce
] he entrance or receptlOn hall and the mam hall al e
panelled m rare marble", all brought from other lands, and
the great stalrca~e I~ al<;o of mal ble m maSSIVe blocks and
ornamented WIth al tlstlc cal V111gS The ceIlIngs of these
halls are of anCIent ItalIan workmanshIp, that 111 the mam hall
havmg come from the palace of the VIscount SauLC m south-ern
France
In thIS hall IS one of the most ImpOS1l1g fealm es of the
111tenor arrangement, a huge mantel and ovel mantel of the
tllne of Henn II m can ed stone A.. per.,on can almost walk
into the great fireplace that It span", and the ImagmatIOn IS
led afar by the suggestion of the roaring fires that It has
6
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SEEING IS BELIEVING.
Keil & Anway Company
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Will make a fine exhibit (First floor, north half, Furniture Exhibition
Building) of Upholstered Chairs and Rockers with loose cushions,
seat and back, for the library, den and living room. This is a line
of unusual merit, and every buyer who visits the exhibition in Jan-uary
should be sure to see this line.
I ___ OA
Repusenta!tves H J RIngold, E. B. Spencer, P M Elltss
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compassed, whIch have left theIr traces of the day when It
served a necessity besides adorning a home of the waddy
great. This work IS considered one of the finest of Its kInd
For It Mr. vVhltney paid $100,000 This mantel came OrIgI-nally
from the chateau of the Sieur Franc de ConseIl at
Aigues Mortes
The floor of this hall is of marble mosaic interspersed'" Ith
10,000 trIangular pieces of brass. At one side of the mantel
is a stone sarcophagus and near the stairway IS a cassone
from some ample Italian bUIlding of the RenaIssance
Flanking the road approaches to this hall, "here the}
receive light from the street, hang two large and elaborate
canvases which hold important rank among pa1l1tIngs, an
equestrIan portrait by Van Dyck and a relIgIous compo'i1tlOn
by Lorenzo Costa. The Van Dyck IS a replIca of the famous
equestrian portrait of Charles I which now hangs In \iVindsor
Castle.
For the original Charles paid the artIst £8,000, no small
sum, partIcularly in VIew of the value of money In that day
The replIca, which is recorded in Smith's "Catalogue Ral-sonne"
(1831), was presented by KIng Charles to the gover-nor
of the Duke of York (James II), John Lord Byron It
remamed in the family untIl the sale of the effects after the
death of the poet Lord Byron, when it was purchased by ~Ir
John Borlace Warren, Bart.
The Costa IS a "Madonna Enthroned" of such standmg
that it has been sought by at least one of the world's bIg
museums It was purchased orIgInally by the Duke of Fer-rara
III 1502, during the painter's lifetIme
In the drawing room, which with the lIbrary opens from
the malll hall at the Fifth avenue end of the bUIlding, the two
occupymg the whole avenue frontage, IS a set of furmture
whIch constItutes the costlIest single group m the house It
IS a very beautIful set of nme pieces 111 Boucher tapestrv wIth
carved and gIlded frames and a correspondlllg set ~f ten
pieces, and ItS cost was $400,000
There IS in the first set a sofa, two bergeres and SIX arm
or side chaIrs. The sofa and one each of the accompanymg
types of chairs are here pictured Note the characteristIc
coquettIsh scenes depIcted on the backs and Imagllle them
worked in tones of rose, blue and pale yellow mingled with
gray, green and crea m
Is it true, as some interesting yonug women who have
seen the sofa say, that the maiden m the balcony at the rear
is mutely inVItIng her too devoted admirer to take a leaf from
the book of the caressing young man in the centre of the pic-ture?
On the backs of the bergeres too there are depIcted
variants of the great emotion; on one a youth offers his lady
a flower, on the other one of the plaCIdly amorous type fishes
beside his barefooted, pink skIrted divinity. The seat of this
one shows a startled swan, that of the other a flushed phea-sant.
The backs of the armchairs picture young women alone
or wIth attendant swams or lOVIng one another, sometimes
fondlmg lambs or caresslllg birds The designs on the seats
represent pastoral scenery and sundry bucolic pursuits. The
second set consIsts of a sofa, eight armchairs and a fire screen.
In thIS same room the lesser ornaments are commensurate
wIth the laVIshness represented III the furniture just de-sCrIbed.
In the lIbrary Mr. White made a very satisfactory and
pleaslllg U'3e of a set of choir stalls from a church in Naples
combined wIth part of a sacristy from another Italian church
or chapel WIth this carved ItalIan walnut and dark oak,
work of the fourteenth and fifteenth centurIes, Mr. Whte
made a U11lque but serviceable bookcase and an ornamental
lIbrary, findmg somewhere a ceiling that worked excellently
"Ith hIS general plan and turning out a $50,000 room
The bookcase IS really SIX cases, four wall and two
corner cases The pIlasters and brackets are boldly carved,
and over one of the cases i" a carvlllg of the "BaptIsm of
Chnst"
On the opposIte SIde of the main hall is the great dining
room, and here agam Mr. WhIte exhIbIted successfully one of
hI" ongmal Ideas In the real or fabled room, where only
candle lIght, and that coming from no perceptible sources,
furnIshed the illumination, there could not be a more agree-able
atmosphere than that which Mr WhIte succeeded in
creatlllg in this room. Somewhere in Italy he came upon
some enormous canvasses of decoratIve value, paintings with
great groups of figures in the times of old masters, and these
he used here in place of panels, papers or tapestries. He
glued the canvases to the walls and designed the whole room
m a color scheme in which they take theIr places WIth most
agreeable effect, and then keyed the illumination to the de-coratIOns
He even cut these old canvases to make service
doorways, flush WIth the wall surface, with neither moulding
nor sIll nor lintel
Beyond the dmlllg room is the splendid ballroom, but
mstead of enterIng It this way It is a good time to bring to
attentIOn another of the attractIve features of the luxunous
house, a long corndor to the northward, leading from the
ma1l1 hall dIrectly to the ballroom. This corridor is panelled
WIth InterestIng examples of carved wood and marquetry,
obtained at a cost of $50,000 The woodwork came from
the Chateau de la Bastie d'U rfie in the department of the
LOIre, whIch was bUIlt in the middle of the sixteenth century
by Claude d'Urfie
In the ballroom is another very handsome set of furni-ture,
this one of eleven pIeces in Beauvais tapestry, a sofa,
7
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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In GRAND RAPIDS Only,
January, 1910.
OLD SPACE,
Furniture Exhibition Bldg.,
Fourth Floor.
The UDELL Line
MANY NEW ONES in
Library Bookcases, Medicine Cabinets,
Ladies' Desks, Commodes,
Sheet Music Cabinets, Folding Tables,
Piano Player Roll Cabinets.
A Lme whIch IS well worth gOIng to see A Lme that you
should have a complete cata10g of fhe fact that you hav~not our
catalog can only be rectified by wntlDg for your copy to day
THE UDELL WORKS
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. No.679 No.354
No.1239
~ .
two b<>rgere" and eIght armchaIrs, whIch co::>t$300,000 Gold-en
brown wIth a tmge of rose, pale yellow, green, cnmson
and cream are among Its colors The designs al e anlITlal sub-
Jects by Oudry after La Fontaine's fables, and the old tapes-tnes
obtained from Pnnce NIcholas Obidine, who got them
from a chateau near Le JUans m the Sarthe, have been placed
on new frames carved and gtlded m the style of the onginals
of Loui" XV.'s time.
Among the fables pIctured are "The Heifer, the Goat, the
Sheep and the LlOn," "The tortoise and the Hare," "The Dog
and HIS :Master's Dmner," "The Wolf and the Crane," "The
LIon and the Gnat" and "The Dog and HIS Shadow"
In thIS room also 15 the large Boucher tapestl y, the chief
smgle ornamental feature m the room, whIch occupIes the
centre of the north wall, or that wall opposlte the wmdows
and OpposIte the $10,000 organ. This tapestry, for whIch the
owner paId a pnce varlOusly gIven at from $50,000 to $100,000,
lS more than 12 feet hIgh and nearly 19 feet long
The prodlgahty of ltS decoratlOn may be seen m the
accompany mg lllustratlOn It is a phantasy of court hfe and
called "A Fowhng Party" The apparel of the young people
is of blue and pmk and cnmson and the fohage of the dwarf
trees IS blue green and buff agamst a mtlky sky
The walls of thIS palatlal room are panelled in antlque
French walnut from the chateau of Phoebus d' Albret, Baron
de FOlX, a chevaher of the Grand Monarch who was a field
Marshal of France The Baron's monogram adorns the lu-nettes
over the doors and windo\\ s On the dais at the head
of the room-It mIght well be a throne-stand in majestIc
::>tate two grand Yung-Cheng Jars, more than four feet tall
WIth theIr covers, from some Chinese palace
To reerf bnefly to the lllustratlOns accompanying thIS
fractIonal survey of the house whIch have not yet been touched
upon, the antIque Gobelm tapestry, \\ hlch dlScloses gold and
SlIver threads, lS one of many fine tapestries m the house and
hangs In the drawmg room The two Chmese porcelains are
K'ang-hsl pIeces m famtlle verte
The temple jar WIth ItS hat shaped cover is adorned m
a profuslOn of panels, each pamted m the five colors WIth
bIrds, flowers and symbols The plate, one of the most mter-estmg
of its kmd that has turned up here m many a day, de-picts
a court scene, the Emperor and hIS sUlte we1commg some
conqueril).g warn or and hIS followers The figures are most
carefully pamted and the decOlatlOn IS enriched with gtlding
In tapestries alone the house IS unusually rich, containing
not less than twenty-seven remarkably fine examples. One, a
cloth of gold tapestry of "The Holy FamIly," brought at the
sale of the late Henl y C Marquand's collectlOn $21,000 EIght
tapestnes of the Itahan RenaIssance, lllustratmg the sieges
of Tyre and Jerusalem, were lent by a former owner to Kmg
Edward for the ceremonies of hIS coronation. Six of them
were then hung m the banqueting hall of Buckingham Palace
and two were hung m Westmmster Abbey and appear in E.
A Abbey's coronatlOn paintmg
There lS an eighteenth century Gobelm tapestry with a
Boucher design tellmg a story of "The Fortune Teller" There
are sIxteenth century Flemlsh tapestnes with woven tales of
the SImple Me and one with a story of less simplicity, pictur-mg
great people picking Jewels from a chest, whtle one of
their number clasps a handsome nude boy as her jewe1-
pOSSIbly the "Mother of the Gracchi." ,
A French Renalssance tapestry whIch was in the Repros-pectlve
Exposltlon at Paris in 1900 illustrates a combat 01
the Romans and the Sabmes when the Sabmes have returned
for their revenge and find theIr women defending theIr captors
It is a fabric full of action. An Itahan RenaIssance tapestry
shows Psyche on her Journey across the Styx, and another
one of earlier date, WIth a comphcated deSIgn of a hfe above
the weavers, whose work outlasts it, IS prodigal of kings and
great ladles in dIversified armor and draperies
Yet other Flemish tapestnes of the seventeenth century
deal with ordinary hfe as it IS found in town and country.
... . ~ ._. • ~ "4
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..". _. . . . -...~f~l~ou INTERESTING PRICES g~x~~v~~g I
SEND SAMPLES. ORAWINGS OR CUTS FOR PRICES.
\4
~~~io~':fe.E. P. ROWE CARVING WORKS, ALLEGAN.
MICH.
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8
WEEKLY ARTISAN
One of these pictures shows a farm, peasants and cattle,
while a companlOn pIece shows a town vegetable and flO\\ er
market with tuhps and chernes, celery, turnIps and aspalagus,
WOmen marketing and cavahers There are also two hIghly
illustrative DIana tapestries picturIng forth two of the le-gends
in which the goddess figures
One of the interestmg objects whIch desel \ es a further
word IS the cassone already mentIOned as bemg In the mam
hall. This ornate chest, nearly eIght feet long and standmg
nearly four feet all told from the floor, is elaborately deco-rated.
There must be fifteen figures pictured on It. It may
have been made for royalty or at any rate for some one" Ith
regnant powers, accordmg to the mdlcatlOns of some of the
minor detaIls of the 0l11amentatlOn Its standards are the
gIlded figures of the Evangehsts, each wIth hIS emblem The
ornamentatIOn IS partly carved, but mamly pamted and gIld-ed,
and pIctures the -:\fadonna wIth the ChIld and a flammg
Kindel Bed Company Enjoying Prosperity.
ChIcago, Dec 17-The K111del Bed company have had the
largest volume of bus111ess m theIr hIstory dunng the year
1909 2\Ianager Charles J KIndel states that If all the dealers
appear m the January market who have so stated theIr Inten-tIons
to the Kmdel company salesmen the attendance wIll
be \ eI) large -:\Ir Kmdel IS hIghly gratIfied over the \ 01-
ume of bus111ess done 1111909 and antIcIpates a large volume
of trade m 1910
The new addltlOn of the Kindel Bed company 's Toronto
plant IS Just beIng completed The Sl7e of the Toronto factory
1s 66 A 100 feet, tIll ee stOrIes The January exhIbIt of Kmde1
hed" \\ III be held aga111 on the fifth floor of the Fourteen
Ele\ en hUlldmg
H 1\1 DaVIS, trave1mg representatIve m the east for the
Kmde1 Bed company 1 eturned December 16 from a three
"eek" tl1P through Pennsylval11a, ~ew York and Ohio, and
Part of an AnCIent Set of Carved Gilt Furmture Upholstered in Boucher Tapestry, WhiCh Cost the Late Owner
$'l,OO,OOOand Was Used In HIS Drawmg Room.
heart, and a whole selles or processIOn of allegoncal figures
of young men and maIdens, old men and chIldren
There is a remarkable sIxteenth century Itahan cabmet
and desk, WIth an mtncate 111lay of 1\ 01Y and 011\ e \\ ood 111
an ebony base It IS of strIk111g appearance and entIces stud)
Its outSIde ornamentatlOn IS of J\Iedusa heads 111 nary a11l
wood and eight hans' heads can ed m nOlY 111hIgh rehef
The slidmg door leadmg from the ma111 hall to the draw-mg
rOOm IS of oaken panels heaVIly carved, represent111g a
BIshop and John the BaptIst, Peter and Paul WIth keys and
sword, and "The AnnunCIatIOn" In the ballroom IS a SIlk
I ug about 23 feet by 18, WIth a bewlldenng profUSIOn of
ornamentatIOn representmg many Ideas of the people tlom
whom the weavers came
In an embrasure of thIS room IS a rarely beautIful modern
statue, a nude, "La Reve" by MIchel. Elsewhel e IS an an-tique
statue or group 111fragmentary shape whIch was dredged
from the TIber It IS ascnbed to the second centl11y of the
present era.
Among the pamtmgs beSIdes those already mentIOned are
a portraIt of a Spamsh noble m armour by Gaetana, a 1\lul1lo,
"Infant ChrIst and John," a portraIt of ::\I[r SIddons by Law-rence,
a portrait of Arabella Stuart by Zucchero and two tall
panel pa111tmgs by John La Farge, "John" and "Mary"
From January 17, the openmg day of the 38th semI-an-nual
exposItIon at Kew YOlk, the comprehensli e 1mes of
250 manufacturers WIll be on VIew untIl the c10smg day on
February 5
IepOl ts a \ el J satIsfactory bu "mess on thIS trip as well as
tllloughout the year
Salesmen as Thought Producers.
'You are 111 a measure, makers of thought," saId ex-
Governor Hoke SmIth of GeorgIa, addressmg the cIty sales-man
of Atlanta at theIr annual luncheon last week "It IS
essentIally the tIave11l1g man's reqUlslte to know how to talk
That IS the way he sells goods He talks all the tIme, and he
becomes an adept 111 the art He knows how to talk con-
\ mcmgly And when It IS remembered that hardly more than
half a tray ehng man·s time IS spent m ta1kmg for the house,
what a sp1enchd opportul11t) B perceIved for hIm to exert hIS
Jnfluence 111 mo1chng pubhc ;,entlment where mattiers of
gOYernment are concerned"
FilIin~ Large Orders.
The Globe v Ise and Truck company, Grand Rapids,
manufactm el s of factory furl11shmgs, have been havmg a
splendId \ olume of bus1l1ess dunng the past fall month;,
They hay e filled large orders for the BrunswIck Balke Collen-der
company of -:\Iuskegon, ChIcago and Goshen, Ind , the
Schaeffer Plano manufactUrIng company, Kankakee, 111, and
the LIbrary Bureau of Ihon X Y Among the recent orders
filled V\ as a car load order for H Lebus, of London, England,
thIS hem§; the fifth car load 01der filled for the same house
dunn~ the CUI rent year
Some men are so pugnacIOUS that they would fight a ga<;
bill.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 9
Buildinlis That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-L D. Brown, Berkley Square, Los Angeles,
Cal, $15,000; K E. P. Taggart, 222 St. Andrews boulevard,
Los Angeles, $12,350, George Ma~ters, MermaId Lane, Phila-delphIa,
Pa , $12,500; Richard K. LeBlonde, MadIson Road and
VIsta avenue, CmcInnatI, 0, $20,000; John J. Kelley, 6327 St.
Lawrence avenue, Chicago, $9,500; Enk Fars1und, 22 Grace
street, Chicago, $5,500; Otto H Betke, 4541 N. Claremont
avenue, ChIcago, $4,500, John L Vegler, 3718 N. Hermitage
street, ChIcago, $4,800; E J Hanley, 255 W. 119th street,
Chicago, $4,250; WIlliam Sehmann, 1921 AddIson avenue,
Chicago, $6,000; M Doherty 1516BIrchwood avenue, ChIcago,
$4,000; W. H George, 615 W Peachtree street, Atlanta, Ga ,
$5,000; S C Dalquist, Grand avenue and McAllister street,
St. Paul, MInn , $4,500, W B West, Clay and Harrison streets
Richmond, Va, $12,000, George Eustis Iroquois street and
Mountain avenue, BIrmingham, Ala, $8,000; Mrs. Mary Hor-ton,
210 S Elm street, Birmingham, $6,000; Dr Geo Wood-ward,
St. Martin's Lane and Hartwell avenue, PhIladelphia,
Pa, $15,000, James Bartteson, Oak Lane, PhIladelphia, Pa,
$15,000; Mrs H. FInkelpearl, 1311 Beechwood boulevard,
PIttsburg, Pa, $17,500; Frank Stewart, 606 Douglas street,
Cornwell, 3962 Flad avenue, St. Louis, $3,500; Fred Howell,
Webster Park, St. Louis, $6,000, W. B Berry, 268 Sherman
street, Peoria, Ill, $3,500; C C FItch, 600 NIneteenth street,
Norfolk, Va, $3,000; Bertha Hein, Clayton, Mo., $3,000; Con-rad
Hartman, 523 South Eigth street, Springfield, Mo , $3,300;
Dr. M. W vVelr, 1219 North Harvey street, Oklahoma City,
Okla, $5,425, J. W. Galbrieth, Little Mountain, Cal, $25,000;
C E Grosse, Pa~adena, Cal, 325 S. Los Robles avenue, $25,-
000; Charles Taylor, 2063 Abington road, Cleveland, Ohio,
$6,000; A. A Price, Lexmgton and Hague streets, St Paul,
Mmn., $3,750; Rev Mark SullIvan, Manchester, N H., paro-chial
residence, $30,000, \\1 G Baird, 2 Concord avenue, Kan-sas
City, Mo., $5,000, John A Sutton, 3541 Kenwood avenue,
Fort Wayne, Ind, $3,600, J. M Branch, Argenta, Ark, $3,500,
N. C McPherson. 62 Boulevard terrace, Atlanta, Ga., $4,500,
C M. Marshall, 205 Euclid avenue, Atlanta, $4,000; 0 M
Patterson, 4931-3 Kenmore avenue, ChIcago, $22,250; Miss
Minnie LUken, 4626 Indiana avenue, Chicago, residence and
studio, $4,800
Miscellaneous Buildings-The Board of Educatiolll of
Newark, N. J , will shortly let the contract for a commercial
and manual traInmg school bUIldIng, to cost $650,000 The list
Made by Stebbms-Welbelm Furmture Co, SturgIs. Micb.
Pittsburg, $12,000, Mrs Eva S Morns, 88 Maple terrace,
Pittsburg, $3,800; Dr H Harmisch, 3202 IndIana avenue, St
Louis, Mo, $7,500; J T. Schrenhorst, 2225-7 Malden Lane,
St. LoUIS,$5,500; J Walter Dohany, 269 Commonwealth ave-nue,
DetroIt, Mich, $4,500; F D. SheIll, 955 Grand RIver
avenue, DetrOIt, $5,000; Dr. E Rodd, 1357 Crane street, De-troIt,
$3,800; Dr Opperman, Jefferson and McClellan avenues,
DetrOIt, $4,600; Clyde KIrkley, 32 Commonwealth avenue,
DetrOIt, $4,500; Frank Browl, 456 FIfteenth street" Detroit,
$6,000, Mercy Hayes, Jefferson avenue and MontclaIr street,
DetrOIt, $5,000; Gay Turnbull, 100 Bethune street, west De-trOIt,
$4,000; G A Gage, San Antonio, Tex., $4,500; J. W
Stansberry, 2412 Thirteenth street, LIttle Rock, Ark, $3,000,
R. N Ewmg, Sixth street and SprIngfield avenue, J ackson-
VIlle, Fla, $3,500, Kenneth McKinzy, 1786 James avenue,
Minneapohs, Mmn , $20,500, G W Spriesterbach, 1210 Sheri-dan
avenue north, Mmneapolis, $5,000, A H BreVIg, 3336
Sixteenth avenue south, Mmneapolis, $4,500. Lizzie McGhee,
2905 Irvmg avenue south, Mmneapohs, $3,600, S. B. Appleton,
3848 Pillsbury avenue, Mmneapolis, $3,800; NellIe I Colbery,
2001 Western avenue, Mmneapolis, $3,500; WIlham Haw-kms,
Cannon HIll Park, Spokane, Wash, $7,500; Mrs. L D
Edwards, 6032 Clemens avenue, St Louis, Mo, $5,250; A. N.
of machmery reqUIred will Include equipment for a molding-room
and patternmakmg shop Coalinga, Cal., has voted
$60,000 m bonds to erect a hIgh school buildIng. Rubush &
Hunter WIllbuild a famIly hotel at corner of Mendlan and 30th
streets, Indlanapohs at a cost of $175,000. The Central
Chnstian Church of Terre Haute, Ind. is erecting a $60,000
church Reading, Pa is to have a new seven-story hotel.
Dr J Edmunds WIll erect a modern hotel containing forty
suites of three or four rooms each on OlIve street, Los
Angeles, Cal, at a cost of $90,000
Commenced in 1871.
Charles E. Rigley, manager of the E:;,tey Manufacturing
company, Owosso, Mich , commenced his career In the furni-ture
trade In the year 1871 He has been with the Estey
company at Owosso, smce 1875 The company recently
sold the site of the old plant for $10,000 and will confine their
operatwns for the present to factory "B". A line of chamber
suites in oak and mahogany has been put on sale.
The trouble with most people is that they seem to think
they are as good as we are.
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PERFECT CASE CONSTRUCTION
Our rlultiple Square Chisel Mortiser
A
Makes the Strongest,
most economical and
most accurate case
construction possible.
It is entirely automatic.
It clamps, mortises and
releases, completing the
post in less time than the
material can be clamped
on other machines.
We also manufacture special
patented Sanding and Mortising
Machines that are proving extreme-ly
profitable to chair manufacturers
No. 181 MULTIPLE SQUARE CHISEL MORTISER.
Ask for CATALOG uE"
I WYSONG & MILES CO., C~::~t;~Gdreensboro, N. C.
t~-------------------------
Must Not Overdo the Matter.
\ newspaper 111P1tte,burg pubhshed a number of letter-,
recently y\ 11tten by the head" of prom1l1ent manufacturel s
offenng "uggestlOns that 1f tollowed would assure the ext en-tlon
of prospenty 111busmess Bnef quotatlOns from anum
ber of these letters will he found 111terestmg '\'orth Bro-thers
said "Be ')atlsfied with fair legltllnate profits, keep
pnce') w1th1l1 reasonable bounds, so as not to discourage nev.
enterpnses or curtail consumptlOn" C \\ Heppenstall
')ald "Our suggestiOns to keep up the steel busmess 1S that
pnces be kept down If pnce'3 get too high there 1:-:' no ques-tion
but that bU'3111es')\'1111not be as good as 1t IS now" II
L Kahn, v1ce-presldent of the A..mencan Plate Glass com-pany
sa1d· "I tru')t that the manufacturer') of the countl y
at large w1ll not overdo the prospellty wave 111the way of
crowd111g pnces up too much From our standpomt th1:-, 1'-.
the only th1l1g that w1ll act as a check for ')ome tune to come"
C II' Drown, v1ce-pres1dent of the Pitt'-.burg Plate Gla')s com-pany,
sa1d "If you can be l11t1uenced 111aVOldl11g an undue
extensIOn of cred1ts and the u')ual un\'larranted expanSlOn 111-
Cldent to an era of prospenty, such as 1S antlopated It will
help to prolong the enjoyment of our bus1l1e% blessmg" If
we could aVOid our tendency to boom, 1t would a')slst 111 pre-vent111g
pa111cs, and I th111k 1t wI')e to endea\ 01 to rese1 ve a
con"lderable proporatlOn of our plO:-:.penty for 1911 '
Accused of Under Valuation.
The great furmtu1 e hou:-:.e of D '\ & E II alter, San
Framcisco, have been hav111g some unpleasant expenences
with the customs authontles recently wh1ch ha:-:. been made
the subject of several sen"atlOnal press dhpatches Ii was
reported that a con:-:'Ignment of 1mported Lotu" Quatorze and
Loms QU111ze furn1ture and antlCiue bnc a-brac 1nvo1ced at
._--~._----------
$8,000 had been seued by the cu"t01l1'; authontles for under-
\ aluatiOn and appra1"ed at $24,000, \'Il11ch If true would have
made the goods -,ubject to confiscatlOn It turns out, however,
tl1dt the goods dlCl not belong to the \Valters-that they had
me1 eh been cons1gned to them-but were really owned by
one ]ule" Newbelger who had acted a" agent for the French
manufacturers Newberger has been m sUTI1lar trouble be-tore
and government offic1al,; are trymg to secure hiS arrest
and extrad1tlOn The ,Valter,; have ~hown that they were
110t 1e:-:,po11s1blefor the alleged undervaluatIOn of the goods
wh1ch are being held pend1l1g further mvestigatlOn of the
matter
From the "'Land of Cotton"-
1he Tom n BUlnett company of Dallas, Texas, manu-facture1
s of the V/hlte Swan Ant1-germ Cotton Felt mat-tl
e:-:.se:-:.haye ')ent out a neat httle catalogue that must be
attractl\ e and mterest1l1g to deale1 s 111 bedd111g, etc I t is
beautlfullv lliustrated and show:-:. up the strong pomts of
the1r product to eAcellent advantage The catalogue 15 a
fine n:ample of the pnnters' and englaver,,' art-1t v, a.., pnn-ted
1n Grand Rap1ds-and the descnptlve matter b well
wntten though 1t "eem'i the compller missed one pomt that
m1ght ha\ e been u:-:.ed effectlvely He m1ght have mentlOned
the fact that the ,Yhlte Swan mattress 1'3 made 111the "land
of cotton' where there IS no 111ducement to use the 111fected
"hoddy of whlCh I\Ir K111del of Denver compla111s
In '\ e\'l "\ ark there wlll be I11terest1l1g d0111gs from Jan-
Ucln 17 to Feb1uary; Between those dates the 38th semi-annual
'\ e\\ York expo:-:'ltlOn \'1111have It,; doors wide open for
you
11
WEEKLY ARTISAN
HIDES AND SKINS NEXT THE TOP
Second Only to Sugar in the Matter of Value
of Importations.
VI[ asillngton, DC, Dec 10 -The bUl eau of statIstIc",
department of commerce and labor reports that Impo~ tatlOns
of hIdes and SklllS III the year whIch ends WIth the present
month w111 aggregate nearly 100 mlilton dollars and rank
"econd III value III the ltst of artIcles or groups of art1cles
1mported The value of h1de" and slnns 1mpm ted III the ten
months endlllg WIth October 190°, is, In round term", 82
mtlllOn dollars, and should thIs average be mamtamed m the
~ovember and December figures the total value of tl1l'; class
of merchandIse Impo1 ted would aggregate practIcally 100
m11110n dollars, whIle the smgle 1tem of 1mportatlOn ltkel)
to show a greater value-suga1-"hows 84 mtllton dollars'
worth Imported from foreIgn countne" 111the 10 months end-mg
w1th October, to say nothmg of the 56 m1lhon dollars'
worth comtng from Hawall and Porto RICO dunng the same
penocl but not classed under 1111p01ts,smce Hawall and 1'o'to
RICO are now customs d1"tncb of the L11lted States
ThIs total of practIcally 100 111111101d1ella1'" worth of
1mporb of hIdes and skms whIch the figures of the calendar
year 1909 WIll show WIll exceed by many m1llto11S 1.ho"e of
any earlIer year The hIghest figu-e.., 111value of ImportatIon"
of hIde" and skm" many pnor yedr wa" 84 nl1lhon Jolla1'"
WOlth 1111906, the average dunl1~ thc pa..,t decade 11d\111g
been but 67 l111lhon dollal ,,' worth The quantIty Imported
durllH; the year WIll exceed 500 111111lOn pound'3, wh1le 011 no
earher occaSlOn ha'3 the total reached the 400-n111hon lme, the
hIghest figure be111g m 1906, 399 m11hons Thus m quantIty
and value the 1111portatIons of 1909 \\ 111be approx1mately 25
,.- - -----------------------~
\ HOFFMAN
HARDWOOD LUMBER
BROTHERS CO.
FT. WAYNE, IND.
I
I
I
III
I
I
I
II
I
II
I
II
___________ .4
SAWED
AND
SLICED
l QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS fAN D MAHOGANY
&.---- -----_.------------
..-- I
II
II
II
II
II
----------------------- -----------------...,
\
\
\I
I -~
WOOD fOnninO (UTnnS
A<;only the edge outlines of the
Cutter comes into contact With the
lumber, there is no fnctlon or burn-mg
of the mouldmg~ when made
With the Shimer ReverSible or One-Way Cutters. These Cutters
are carefully moulded to SUItyour work, and are very complete,
lOexpenslve and time-savmg tools We supply speCial Cutters of
any shape deSired and of any size to SUIt your machine spmdles.
Let us have your speCifications. For odd work not found m our
catalogue send a wood sample or drawmg.
SAMUEL J. SUlMER &. SONS, Milton, Penn.
Manufacturers of the Shimer Cutter Heads for Floonng, Ceiling,
Sidmg, Doors, Sash, etc. ..-. .--- --- .-_. -- ----_.-------_-.------.-.---~
----_._---_._------_._---------. -__. .- ~
THEliindtl KIND
THE GREATEST HOUSEHOLD INVENTION OF THE AGE
Need nol be moved from
Ihe wall
Prolecls covering by Iurn-
InG cushions
Is so Simple and easy a
child can operale II.
Has roomy wardrobe box
under seal
Comprises Ihree arllcles
lor Ihe price of one.
Is IIlied wllh felled cation
mallress.
Has LUXUriOUS Turkish
Springs.
Is always ready wllh bed-ding
In proper place.
Is absolulely sale-cannol
close aCCidentally.
Saves renl by saVing space
WRITE WIRE, OR PHONE FDA PARTICULA"S.
KINDEL BED COMPANY
CHICAGO NEW YORK TORONTO ------------_._-----------------_.
["'~;~~~--~aPidcs'~s;~rCUp CO. -,
2 Parkwood Ave., Grand Rapids, Mich.
We are now pultlllg out the hest Caster Cups WIth cork bases ever
offereG to the trade. These are fimshed IU Golden Oak and WhIte Maple
IUa ltght fimsh Tbese goods are admIrable for poltshed floors and fnrn-
Iture rests They will not sweat or mar.
PRICES,
SIze 27.(IUches .... $4 00 per hundred
Size 2M lll~hes . 5.00 per hundred
Try a Sample Order FOB. (frand Raptd •• ,,-- . --_.
per cent in excess of those of the pI evious hIghest record year,
1906 The average monthly 1mportatlOn of h1des of cattle
111the penod smce the new tariff act went mto effect, August
'i, 1909, has been 24% mllllOn pound~, agamst ahout 19 1111JIwn"
m the 7 month" 1mmed1ately precedmg that elate
The growth of ImportatIon of ll1de" and Sk111Smto the
U11lted States, an agncu1tura1 country. has been a mark! 0
feature of the 1mport trade The value of h1des an<.l Sl~lll"
1mported 111the fiscal year 1890 was, m round terms, 22 mll-hon
dollars, m 1900, 58 m1l11on", and 111the Lalendar year
1909 WIll, as above m(hcated, be approx1matel y 100 1111lllOns.
",hl1e the quantIty Imported, \\h1ch m the calendar year 1900
\\ a" but 307 m1l11on pound", WIll 1ll 1909 exceed 500 11111h011'o
One espeCIally lllterestmg feature of th1" developl'lent m
the 1mpm tatlOn of h1des and skms 1" found 111 the fact that
nea'ly one-th1rd of the value of th1s large total can SIsts of
goat "kms
Lat111 Amencan Lotl11tnes and the Onent are the Ch1ef
coni11hutors of the 100 11111110ndollars' wo th of hIde" and
Sk111"Imported m 1909 Of the h1des of cattle 1mported, over
one-half came from :!\IexlcO and South Amenca, and of the
goat sk1l1s llTIported, neatly one half came froln the Bnt1sh
Ea..,t Inches
The llght wlll tnumph At least a man always feels that
'A ay when he W111S.
A genius 1Sa man who would rather acquire fame than make
a liV111g
•
12
prosperity and the advance m knowledge of the fine arts by
the pubhc. nothmg IS now too good for the people of the
middle west, the far we,.,t and the south ,Vhy just thmk
of It \, e are sellmg our be"t Sheraton work m Bll1mgs,
:\1ontana, m SIOUX CIty, Lmcoln, 1'\eb, Topeka, Blrmmg-ham,
Ala, Atlanta, Na"hvll1e, Des MOInes and m small towns
as well as m the larger CItIes \Vhen we engaged Mr Ferris
to represent the Royal Furmture company m the west we
told hIm plamly that we chd not expect h11n to earn hIS ex-penses
dunng the first two years of his employment, that we
would not be dlsappomted if he falled but we expected hIm to
gn e us his best serVIce whether he was successful or not
:\1uch to our surpnse he made good the first year, and we
have now a large and valuable trade estabhshed in his terri-tor)
The development of the we"t and south IS makmg the
people nch, and WIth wealth accummulat1ng naturally follows
the deSIre to ,.,pend a part of It for the best to be had in furn-
Iture F ear of ,N all street no longer exists"
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Chicago Men Deficient.
Prof W. D Scott recently announced that the busmess
men of Chicago, noted for their eenrgy, enterpnse and aggress
iveness are livmg and working far below their effiCIency
Prof. Scott is a member of the faculty of the NO!thwestern
Ul11Verslty and is a noted physIOlogIst He commenced 111S
experiments with athletIcs and has smce then extended them
to the busmess world He has ascertamed what condItions
materially lower effiCIency and beheves It pOSSIble to effect a
material mcrease m the power of busmess men WIthout mJt11y
to health.
The average busmess man of ChIcago may be lackmg m
efficiency, but it IS a safe bet that there are many men m
the furl11ture trade of that CIty whose effiCIency IS the maXImUm
Consider for a moment C A Adou of Mandel Brothers
whose mental and phYSIcal effiCIency IS proven by the amount
and character of the business transacted annually by the
furnIture department of that house The mental and phYSI-cal
effiCIency of George C Clingman is attested by the fact
that he is not only a grandfather but the fathel of a young
chIld as well and the buyer of house furnIshIng good,., for the
Tobey stores m New York and ChIcago amountmg to mIl-lions.
That there IS "some class" to George no one would at-tempt
to dIsprove There might also be mentioned John A
Hall, John A Thompson, W H MIller of l/farshall FIeld
& company and others equally noted in the world of furnIture
Among the manufacturers the names of Co~ an, Nels J ohn-son,
the Karpens, Seaver, Frank Seng and DeHnel, are en-tttled
to entry among the efficient ,;\Then It comes to sales-manshIp
"the whole bunch" hving m ChIcago should he con-sidered
If is were pOSSIble for PlOf Scott to consIder the
furl11ture men as a group the chances are ten to one that he
would put hIS a K on the "outfit."
Fear Wall Street No More.
"The people of the great west do not tremble as formerly
when some speculator beats upon a tm pan m ,Vall street,"
declared Ralph Tletscort, of the Royal FurnIture com pan)
When asked to furmsh a few IllustratlOns :\1r Tlebort
continued' "Four years ago It seemed impossIble to
sell the hIgh grade goods of the Royal FurnIture
company outSIde of the large CIties located m the eastern
states The people of Cleveland or Cmcmnatl would laugh
at a fine Sheraton or EmpIre SUIte, but WIth the return of
Their First Exhibit.
Kell & Anway company, of Grand RapIds, wll1 make
theIr first exhIbIt m January, m the Furmture ExhibltlOn
BUIldmg, Grand RapIds, (on
the first floor, north half,)
and It wll1 be an exhIbIt that
no buyel who VISItS Grand
RapId", can afford to mISS,
] hIS IS ]JlObabIy the strong-est
1111eof loose cushion seat
and back (the "anitary kmd)
chaIrs and lockers on the
market, for the hbrary, den
and !lV111g room, JVIL3SIon
f01 the den; foot-rest and
1eadmg table attachment for
the hbrary, Colomal and
other styles for the llvmg
room They wIll also exhi-bIt
the first and ongmal so-called samtary chair ever made,
the most WIdely copIed style of upholstered furnIture on the
market ThIS dIsplay WIll occupy the space formerly occu-pIed
by the Mueller & Slack company, and wIll be one of unus-ual
ment On another page of thIS I'3SUemay be seen a pIcture
of one of these loose cu"hlOn lOckeI" Take a look at It .
.... .....-..-..-, _._----------------_._---_.-_._-------------.
PITTSBURGH PLATE
L.ARGiEST .JoaaERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
GLASS COMPANY
GLASS IN THE WORLD
Mirrors, Bent Glass, leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass
WIRE GLASS
Plate Glass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beautiful than white marble.
CENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN ACED VARNISHES.
t] For anythmg in Builders' Glass, or anythmg m Pamts, Varm~hes, Brushes or Pamters' Sundnes, addre<s any of our branch
warehouses, a list of which IS given below
NEW YOBK-Hudson and Vandam Sts. CLEVELAND-1430-1434 West Th1~d st.
BOSTON-41-49 Sudbu17 st., 1-9 Bowke~ st. OllllAHA-ll01-1107 Howard St.
CHICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave. ST. PAUL-459-461 Jackson St.
CINCINNATI-B~oadway and Coun Sts. ATLAN':l'A, GA.-30-32-34 S. P170r St.
ST. LOmS-Cor. Tenth and Spruce Sts. SAVANNAH, GA-745-749 Wheaton St.
MIlfNEAPOLI8-500-516 S. Third st. :B:ANSASCITY-Pifth and Wyandotte Sts.
DETBOIT-53-59 Larned st., E. BIBMIlfGHAM, ALA.-2nd Ave. and 29th st.
GBAND BAPIDS, JIIlICH-39-41 N. Division St. Bl1P:PALO, N. Y -372-74-76-78 :Pearl St.
PI':rTSB'UBGH-IOI-I03 Wood St. BBOO:B:LYN-635-637 :Pulton st.
MILWAUKEE, 'WIS.-492-494 Market st. PJDLADELPKI.A.-Pitcairn Bldg., A~ch and 11th Sts.
BOCHESTEB,N.Y.-WUder Bldg., Main &I Ezchanwe sts. DAVENPOBT-410-416 Scott st.
BALT:E1lIOBE-310-111-14 W. Pratt S1;. OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA , 210-212 W. :Plrst St . ... ...
II
. .... ... ....
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
H. R. Lard, furnIture dealer m Eltgm, Ill, has sold out to
E G. Wightman
The Muncie (Ind) Chair company has been mcorporated
Capital stock, $130,000
The Hastmgs (Mlch) Cabmet \i\ orks have doubled their
capital stock-$30,000 to $60,000
The Western Refngerator company, St LOUIS, Mo., has
incorporated. Capital stock, $120,000
The 0 K. FurnIture company, dealers of Muskogee,
Okla, have mcorporated Capital stock, $2,000
An addition, constructed of concrete, IS to be added to the
plant of the chair factory at Parkersburg, W. Va.
J H Parham has moved his wholesale chair establlsh-ment
to 125 West Mam street, Chattanooga, Tenn
The Hargraves Manufactunng company of Detroit have
mcreased their capital stock from $150,000 to $200,000
The Han IS Department store of Emmence, Ky , has been
declared bankrupt E E Harns is the pnnclpal owner.
L J Coleman IS now manager of the New Home House-
FurnIshmg company of 66 North Brodd street, Atlanta, Ga.
The Clarkson (\'Tash) Furniture and Undertaking com-pany,
ha" moved mto new quarters 1ll the Bradford bUIlding
J W. McHenry has purchased the two furniture stores-
Calder's and Gahond's-at GlffOld. Ill, and Will consoltdate
them.
The H H Drake company of Bayonne, N. J. are buIldmg
a new plant, which Will be ready for occupancy early 111 the
spring.
Henry M. Burr and \Valter E Wood-Burr & Wood-have
succeeded Henry Dltckle in the undertaking busmess
at Chardon, OhIO
The Fanner Manufacturing company, Cleveland, Ohio,
manufacturers of brass beds, etc, have mCIeased their capi-tal
stock from $569,100 to $1,000,000
Bishop & Stephenson, undertakers of Mmeral Point, vVis
have publIshed notice of dissolution of the firm, Mr. Bishop
retires to engage m the retail furnIture business.
Green & Foxcroft, retail furnIture dealers of Bangor, Me.,
have sold out to Guy \Veatherbee of Milo, Me., who will en-large
the building and add stores and hardware to the stock
F W. Oehrle, manufacturer of upholstered furniture in
Philadelphia, Pa, has mcorporated under the name of the
Oehrle Bros company Capital stock, $65,000, all paid in
'1he McDougall company of Frankfort, Ind, a suburb
of Indlanapolts, manufacturers of kitchen cabinets, etc, has
been reorganized and re-mcorporated with capital stock fixed
at $200,000
C B Parker and T P. Griffith have purchased the retail
furnIture busllless of Folsom & Tillman at McRae, Ga, and
Mr. Gnffith is managing the store under the name of Gnff-
Eth & Parker
The Empire Furniture company, dealers of Augusta, Ga,
ha" been mcorporated by Oliver Pennington, H. C. Martlll,
R H Stephens and W. B. Tmsley. Capital stock, mini-mum,
$5,000, maXimum, $25,000.
A F. Felts who represents the Imperial Furniture com-pany
of Grand Rapids and C P Limbert & Co., in the Rocky
Mountain regIOn "pent a part of last week in Grand Rapids
Mr. Felts reSides at Boise, Idaho.
The OhIO Chair Manufacturing company (Columbus)
has been placed III the hands of J B. Kable as receiver. The
action was taken on a petition of William J. McLaughhn
who had endorsed the company's paper to the amount of $450.
The Bobo Undertaking company of Union, S. c., have
increased the capital stock to $20,000 and have opened a
branch establIshment at Spartanburg, S. C, m charge of 0
M. Bonar M W Bobo, preSident of the company has charge
of the busllless at UnIon.
Thomas Somers, dOlllg busmess under the name of the
Reltable FurnIture company III St. Paul, Minn., has apparent-ly
copied the plan recently adopted by a gentleman III De-trOIt
who sells to consumers from manufacturers' catalogues,
photographs and blue prmts.
The plant of the Mah ern (Ark) Chair company has been
sold at auctIOn by the receiver, T H. McHenry to J. E Cham-berlain,
who represented a number of stockholders on a bid
of $22,000 Mr Chamberlam does not propose to operate the
plant, but Will try to resell It at pnvate sale
W J. Majors & Co. are propnetors of a new undertakmg
establtshment at 230 East Commercial street, Springfield,
Mo Claude Paxton who recently announced his attention
to establIsh new undertaklllg parlors m the same city has
abandoned hiS project for the present at least.
The vVeek FurnIture company, dealers of Woonsocket,
R. I , ran short of ready cash and creditors seized part of the
stock on wnts of attachment. The concern has been placed
in the hands of Fred B Weeks, manager of the company, as
receiver who reports the assets as more than double all lIabi-lIties
and that all claims wIll be paid m full.
The law firm of Bradley & Dooley of Boston, have in-corporated
the Hub Furmture company, capitalized at $15,-
000 to take over the retaIl furmture business at Lawrence,
Mass, that for several years has been run under the same
name as a partnership concern Miss Laura G. Farnham,
stenographer in Bradley & Dooley's office is the third member
of the board of directors
The John Breuner company's new building fronting on
Union Square, San FranCISco, Will SOon be occupied With a
large stock of furniture, carpets, rugs, and drapenes It is
a four-story-and-basement structure, with a flontage of 90
feet on Geary street and a depth of 130, so built that addi-tional
floors may be added The 'lIte is the same occupied
by this firm before the fire.
New Furniture Dealers.
Bishop & Co wIll open a new furniture store at Mmeral
Point, Wis.
\iVIlham M Fay has opened a new furniture 'Store m
Pittston. Pa.
R. C Sands has opened a furniture and notion store at
Pomeroy, Wash
D E Coleman of Rochelle, Ga , wIll open a new furniture
store at VidalIa, Ga, III January.
Charles Mansfield has opened what the newspapers have
declared is "a first c1as:> furniture store" in the opera block,
Bangor, Mlch
Adam H Stiehl, Charles Auth and George L. Ebrhardt
have mcorporated the A H. Stiehl Furniture company, capi-talIzed
at $10,000 to establish a new store at 337 E. 52nd
street, New York
The Consolidated Commercial company captilized at
$100,000 will open general stores at Ray, Winkleman and Kel-vm,
Ariz, and each store will have a furniture department.
A Hattenbach, E Smith and others have incorporated
the Department Store company capitalized at $25,000 to
establish a department store, with a furniture annex, at Wil-mington,
Cal.
14
roller towel was not wIthout VIrtue Alway" some one came
to toy gl11gerIy wIth 1to; edges 111the hope of findl11g one small
area leso; dIrty than the rest.
BOW111g to the decree WhICh bamshes the roller towel
from "'lght, VI; e yet remember wIth someth111g bke affectlOn
the long) ear-, of 111tJmate assoClatlOn wIth It 111which it never
taded It has rep~e"ented human democracy and comrade-
ShIp It wa" the bond that 1'111ted the hIgh and the low and
It touched all manh111d wIth a welcome Jf hunl1d salute The
a' lO~ant fOIe~vvore the roller towel m the days of theIr af-fluence
hut It ~emallled faIthful and It3 very form typIfied
unl han~m~ pm poo;e
Le~lOn;, of men and vvomen have va111ly sought the end
of the !(JIll! tovvel Ii ha" remamed for the Kanq" "tate
WEEKLY ARTISAN
The Passing of the Roller ToW"el.
Kano;a;, CIty Jomnal-All our fa\onte good" and ;,acled
tradItIons fall one by one befol e the onslaught of reform So
closely have the cbpper" of the pobtlcal 7ealots shorn us of
those personal pllvdege" enjoyed by our ..,Ire" that the mod-ern
man stumbles m hI'" melancholly pathway to the gra\ e
beset on all SIdes by proscnptlOn", I egulatlOn:, and Iule" ot
conduct, and feels 111mo;eIt lucky If he dIe" out ot jad In
Kansas, beautJful, proud, pro<.,perous and tar-famed Kan"as
the reformer" have found theIr paraclt"e Topeka IS the lattel-day
DelphI and the oracle of Idorm speak" 1ll mam tongue"
The lateo;t 1eformatOl) utterance h a condemnatIon ot
the rolle1 to\'\; el It ha" heen offiCIally dedal eel that the lOllel
towel IS even mOl e c!am:;eruu,", than ..,hort sheets, dnnkm~
Made by Stebbms- Wllhelm Furniture Co , Sturg,s, Mich
cups and cracked dl;,hes Pel "quare foot the roller tOl'l'el
conta111s a greatel numbe1 and vanety of t:;erms than are to
be found any",here ebe 111the Sunflo"'er State, and fOI the
protectlOn of SOCIety the tJme-honOl eel J otatmg lag m11',t t:;o
Perhaps thIS IS all fOl the best, yet It 1" perml""'lble to pau"e
and sigh at the pa<.,s111gof the old lO11er tovvel It ha.., "en eel
long and well anel mtlltons of our mo"t respected cltlLen"
have left theIr sooty 1mpnnh upon Its mVltIng folel"
Its rattle ha:, been '>oothmg mUSIC to "'puttellng patron:,
of pubbc washrooms, and 111 spIte of the progres"'lve cy cle
of It" layer upon layer of cltscoloratlOns It posses"ed a Simple
dlgmty that could not be defied Even when, ltmp and d1..,-
credIted, It fe..,tooned In unloveI111e"" trom It" scaffold, the
"THE BEST IS
hoal d of health to lay a vandal hand upon th1" anCIent 111StJ-tutlOn
and tear It from ItS honored place beh111d the door
The StoW"-DavisLine.
The Sto", -Dav IS Furmture company of Grand RapIds
ha\ e nearly completed theIr new l111e fOl the spnng season
of t1 ade Secretary IIunt111g say s It wtll conta111 man) de
~Irable featm es 111old Enghsh and Colomal styles, whde 111
office and du ectors' fnrJ1ltnre and banker:,' sUltes the lme
\\111 be \ ery strong Twenty-five patterns of dmmg table:,
ha \ e been added The 1111eWIll be on sale 111 the Dlodgett
bUllchng, (,rand RapIds, eally In January
THE CHEAPEST"
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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 Compames, Car BUilders and others will consult their own interests by using it. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished In rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
MADE BY
THE
POSSELIUS
BROS.
FURNITURE
MFG.
CO,
DETROIT.
MICH
15
16
Manufacturers who advertise their products in the maga-zines,
al"o by booklets and circulars help retailers by creating
a demand for the goods advertised Such houses as the Macey
company, Berkey & Gay Furmture company, the Royal Chair
compan), the Grand RapIds Refngerator company, Streit of
CincinnatI, Karpen Brothers, the Buck and Kalamazoo Stove
compames, and several manufacturers of kitchen cabinets
dIsburse many thousands of dollar" annually to help the re-tal1ers
Well advertised goods sell easIly. Reahzing this fact
there IS a never ceasing struggle among retailers to obtain
the exclusive sale of such lines.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
~U8LI.HED EVERY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SU8SC"'PTION $1.80 PE" YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHEI'l COUNTI'lIES $2 00 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS.
PUBL.ICATION OFFiCe:. 108-112 NO"TH DIVISION ST. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
A. S WHITe:, M...N...GING EDITOI'l
Entered ..s second class matter, July 5. 1909, ..t the post office at Grand RapIds, Mlchlg ..n
under the act of March 3, 1879
Apparently Sweden can give Amenca, France and Eng-land
pointers On the management of stnkes or on the matter
of dealing with labor troubles. They have had a strike over
there that continued all summer and though the stnkers lost
not even a single act of violence has been reported For sev-eral
weeks every mdustry in the country was tied up com-pletely.
Not only members of the unions but common laborers'
scrub women, Janitors, household servants and even employes
of the municipalities quit work. Many of the stnkers and
many others suffered for food, yet there was no disorder.
The stnkers lost because members of the typographIcal union
and employers of the steam and street raIlways actmg under
the adVIce of agitators from England, France and Germany,
broke theIr contracts and went out with the rest. From that
tIme public opinion, which had been WIth the strikers, began
to turn agamst them and finally they were obliged to go to
work on the old terms. They lost a summer's wages and
their employers lost as much or more without any benefit to
anybody The strike did not even teach a lesson except that
it is best to live up to the terms of contracts and that It does
not pay to listen to agitators.
Some interesting developments in regard to the fire in-surance
business may be expected soon, unless an order IS-sued
by the federal court at Indianapolis shall be set aside
The order which was issued at the request of the attorney
general of the state, requires each of the 127 companies that
belong in what is known as the Western Umon of Fire Insur-ance
companies to answer 226 questions. The order was
issued without notice to the companies When they heard of
it their attorneys got busy and filed a petition for a hearing
which has been granted. The hearing is to take place next
Wednesday and the companies are so emphatically opposed
to the "quiz" that, in case the court refuses to rescind or
modify the order, they propose to appeal and test the matter
in higher courts.
Chefs have been engaged and supplies purchased by all
manufacturers of Grand Rapids whose factories are located
outside of the business center, preparatory to entertaining the
visiting buyers in January Large and beautifully decorated
rooms are used for this purpose. Among the entertaining
corporations are the Michigan Chair company, Luce Furniture
company, Berkey & Gay Furniture company, Sligh Furniture
company, Charles S Paine company, Grand Rapids Furniture
company and Stickley Brothers Much valuable time is saved
the buyers by the lunch service, which with the carriages and
automobiles provided for their use, makes life in Grand Rapids
every season very enjoyable.
"On an average, factory inspection is done by men who
have not sufficient training, who have not studied the trade
they are inspecting but scorn the idea that anything could be
gamed by it," F. S. Hoffman, statistician of a leading acci-dent
msurance company, declared in a lecture to the students
of Cornell university. "To qualify themselves for the proper
discharge of their duties would require time that the inspectors
prefer to devote to 'prenicious political activity.' What's the
use?
The Illmois railroad commission has assumed jurisdic-tion
over the express companies and have summoned the
offiCIals to appear before their body and answer complaints
chargmg that excessive rates are collected for serVIce. The
express compames while denying the jurisdiction of the com-miSSIonw111comply
WIth the order requiring their appearance
It is expected that the interstate commerce commission Will
assume JurisdictIon over the companies in the near future
Making an honest statement of one's property subject to
taxatIOn to the assessmg officer evinces a larger degree of
loyalty to the government than uncovering the head when the
"Star Spangled Banner" is sung.
There wIll be a new state house to furlllsh at Dover, Del.,
a year or two hence and it is hoped the letting of the contract
for furmshing the same w111not be followed by a scandal like
that of Pennsylvania three years ago.
Baltimore, Md , is suffenng under an epidemic of fires in
the business dIstrict Among the recent losers were M. A
Pollock ($10,000), Stern & Co ($35,000), Goodwin & Erwin
and Homer & Co" dealers in furniture.
That furniture manufacturers and dealers have no great
fear of the corporation mcome tax is shown by the number
of concerns that are changing from partnershIps to corpor-ations.
Apple wood, according to a decision of the board of
United States general appraiser's, is not a 'cabinet wood."
The decision was hardly necessary to cabinet makers.
A "real bargain" placed in the window occasionally aids
the people in acquiring the window study habit.
Well furnished homes to begin with tend to assure
peace, happiness and prosperity in matrimony.
Violin players are trymg to restrain their tears. A genu-me
Stradivarius was destroyed by fire in Baltimore recently.
The 'toil 'and trouble" of taking the midwinter inventory
is upon the trade.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
BIG BUILDING WILL BE FILLED
Manufacturers' Exhibition Building Company,
Chicago, Reports All Space Sold for
Winter Season.
Ch1ca~0, Dec, 17 -The Manufacturers' Exhlblt10n Bul1d-mg
company have all theIr space sold up for the January sea-son
Secretary J ackson ~tates that a number of apphcat10ns
had to be turned down because of lack of ~pace, but theIr ap-phcatlOns
have been filed for the July season Among them IS
a strong combmat1On from St Loms who use ten thousand
or more square feet.
Every 111d1catlOn p0111tS to a splendId attendance at the
January sales The best 111dex IS the reports obtained from
salesmen com111g 111from the road. Two of these, one travel-
111g111the southwest and the other in the middle states, state
that practically all dealers called on say they WIll come to
Ch1cago in January. Both salesmen saId that 1£ anywhere near
half the dealers come who say they are coming there wl1l be
a record attendance. Many new hnes wl1l be seen 111the BIg
Build111g in January, some of them show111g for the first time
m any market and others com111g back to exhIbIt 111ChIcago
after an absence of several seasons Among them are the
follow111g:
Buckstaff-Edwards company, Oshkosh, \Vis., Herman &
company, St. Loms, Mo., Eyles Chair company, Cedar Rapids,
Ia , Thos Madden, Son & Company, Indlanapohs, SturgIs
Steel Go-Cart company, SturgIs, Mich ; Moore Furlllture com-pany,
LenOlr, N. C; Modern Parlor Furlllture company,
ChIcago, Ch1ldrem, VehIcle Corporat1On, East Templeton,
Mass, Fehx, Half & Bro, P1ttsburgh, Pa.; Sam Weisglass,
New York, P1el Bros Manufacturing company, Indlanapohs,
Ind ; G I Sellers & Sons company, Ellwood, Ind , Steuben
Lumber & Furlllture company, Call1sto, N. Y , ThomasvIlle,
ChaIr company, ThomaSVIlle, N c.; Standard Table company,
Jamestown, NY; Supenor Furniture company, Jamestown,
N. Y., Toledo Metal Wheel company, Toledo, 0 ; Galha
Furniture company, Galhpohs, Oh1O, Queen ChaIr company,
Thomasvl1le, N. C ; Yorke Furniture company, Concord, N. C
Empire ChaIr company, Elizabethtown, Tenn ; Gray Furlll-ture
company, Adnan, MlCh ; Huntley Furniture company,
\V111ston Salem, N C; B F Northwood Furniture company,
Chippewa Falls, WlS ; Nenhauser Lamp & Shade company,
ChIcago, HImebaugh Bros, Jamestown, N. Y , Mount Airy
Furlllture company, Mount AIry, N C , Gold Furlllture com-pany,
Chicago; Chicago Lounge company, ChIcago, EmpIre
Chair company, Sherman, N. Y , Unagusta Manufactullng
company, WayneSVIlle, N. C , Ste111feld Brothers, New York,
Fayer Bros. & Co, Toledo, 0 ; PIttsburgh Plate Glass com-pany,
PIttsburg, Pa ; Cabinet Makers unlOn, IndIanapohs,
Ind ; Central ChaIr company, Indlanapohs, Ind ; Hausen &
Diekmen, C1111ton,Iowa, E C Ruttenburg, Chicago.
F. T. Phmpton of F T Plimpton & Co, left December
5 for Ohio, \Vest Vlrg1111a, IndIana and M1ch1gan to VISIt the
different factories represented by Phmpton & company
Russell Mull111s, salesman for the Royal Chair company
was 111ChIcago thIS week mak111g ai rangemenb for the fit-ting
up of the space to be occupied by the Royal Chair l111eat
the Geo D \iV1lliams company bmld111g, 1300 IVI1ch1gan ave-nue
and also for a w111dow demonstratlOn to be given by the
Royal Chair company at the store of A H Revell & Co
George Lamb, the well known manufacturer of Nappanee,
Ind., was in ChIcago for several day s th1s week
President Lyman R Lathrop of the Fourteen Eleven
company, Chicago, anticipates a 10US111gmarket next month.
"We have heard from a larger number of new buyers who
p-•-• ---_._~._.~"--_.---.---------....,'"
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THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
Glue Heater
Send your address and
and receive descriptive
circular of Glue Heaters.
Glue Coo1[ers and Hot
Boxes with prices.
The Weatherly Co.
Grand Rapid•• Mich.
are com111g to th1s market," he saId The Fourteen Eleven
bmld111g WIll have among the1r exhibItors some of the largest
and most w1dely known concerns such as the Johnson Chair
company, 1\1111erHall & SOllS, NatlOnal Parlor FurnIture com-pany,
Klel Furlllture company, Ohver Brothers, Manon
Iron & Brass TIed company and the Balkw111 & Patch
The NatlOnal Parlor Furmture company WIll as hereto-fore
occupy the large~t amount of floor space The space held
by th1s company was 30,000 square feet and they have Just
leased an add1tional 16,000 square feet
\iV. G Andrews, V1ce preSIdent of the J. M. Deutsch
company, Hornell, NY, was in Chicago on Wednesday
making a business tnp
C H Sm1th of the Sm1th-Thompson company, left Wed-nesday
for Manon, Ind, to look over the January samples
of the Spencer Table company and to arrange for hav111g
them shIpped to the Fourteen Eleven bmlding.
President-Treasurer, J os S Meyer of the Manufacturers'
ExhibitlOn bul1d111g company recently returned from a short
stay at French LIck Spr111gs, Ind
Secretary G W Jackson of the Manufacturers' Exhibit10n
Bmld111g company recently returned from a bus111ess tnp in
the east and the south A spec1al effort was made dunng his
tnp to feel the pulse of trade from the manufacturers P0111t
of V1ew and Mr Jackson found it umformly healthy and optI-mIstic
There 1S every reason to believe that none will be
dIsappointed.
The Peck & H111s Furlllture company have removed their
offices from the e1ghth floor of the Furlllture Exchange to the
second :Aoor of the same bmlchng, the sales office formerly on
the fir::,t floor and the general offices oCCUp111gthe same floor
P1 eS1dent J C. Hl1ls pnvate office occupies the southwest
corner, the general office the west end and the sales office
taking up two sectlOns from the elevator to the south wall
The mov111g of these offices IS an excellent change, afford111g
the office force throughout ample light
Manuel de la Vaga formerly representative for the Peck-
HIlls Furlllture company wl1l leave December 23d for a South
American trip
The Schultz & HIrsch company report hav111g had an
excellent fall trade, espec1ally 111supplying hotels wIth thelr
goods Among orders fIlled by them 111this department were
the Manon Hotel at Little Rock, Ark., Lee-Huck111s Hotel,
Oklahoma CIty, New Harper House, Rock Island, Ill, St
Nicholas Hotel, Spnngfield, Ill, The Schultz-Hirsch company
1S also furlllSh111g the new addItion of the Pontchartrain at
Detroit, MlCh
Many a man who can afford tarrapin and champagne has
one of those tea and toast stomachs.
18
• •• •• -1
WEEKLY ARTISAN
The Dodds Dovetailers.
The above cut 111ustratet-> the Spl1al gears on the Dodds
Dovetalhng 111ach111e ~'Ir Dodds has now over 65 of the"e
mac1unes 111u"e and everyone of them a perfect succe"s
Mr Dodds ha" not been advertl"111g thl" very much, hut "mce
30me othe1 s have gotten up :,>o111eth1l1gt->111l11ar, 1t 1.., V\ ell to
let the reader" of the Y\ eekly ArtIsan know that \Ir Dodd"
has been manufactunng these machllles f01 some tnne and be-heves
thIS 1..,the most perfect means of dnvmg the,e spmdle..,
that can be produced He put III a machllle over a veal ago
that cost ovel $1,000 on purpose to cut these gears pe11ectl)
You WIll see that J\'Ir Dodd" leads and others follmv If vou
w1sh to get a fir"t class mach111e correspond WIth the A.lex-ander
Dodds company, ("rand RapId'S, M1Ch
Bright Angel Trail.
One of the most remarkable vIews on the Amencan
contlllent IS "l3nght Angel TraIl" 111the Grand Can) on of the '------------~_..._-~
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DETROIT, MICH.
HOTEL NORMANDIE
CONGRESS STREET
Near Woodward Avenue
AmerIcan Plan. $2 50
Day and upwards.
European Plan. $1 00
Day and upwards
Hol and Cold Runmng Waler
In all Rooms.
Rooms wllh Balh exira.
A High Grade Cafe.
Restaurant and Buffet 10 connection
GEORGE FULWELL,
Proprietor
Scbultz & Hirscb Co.
Manufacturers of
HIGH GRADE
BEDDING
Feathers, Feather Pillows, Downs, Etc.
Upholstered Box Springs and Curled
Hair Mattresses a Specialty
I~-
1300~1308Fulton St.
Corner ElIzabeth St. CHICAGO
Branch Factory, Hammond, Ind
---------------- ---~------._-. -.-
lolO1ae1() ll\cl Several yeal:'> ago the congress of the Fmted
.'-ltates pm cha"ed of Thomas 2\loran the ong111al pamtlng of
th1'S famou.., "cene, and caused the same to be placed on V1ew
111the natlOnal cap1tal The Henry S Holden Veneer com-pan}
of Grand Rapid" has purchased a quantity of color
photographs reproduc1l1g the p1cture and have commenced
d1"tnbut111g the "ame to customer" Any manufacturer of
turl11ture and k111clled good'S may obtaIn a copy, '" ith calendar
tOl the C0I11111gyear free by addressmg the company
Will Have a Strong Line.
Ravenna, 0, Dec 8 -The Buckeye Cha1r Company
plant h be111g taxed to 1tS capaClty this year The company
hd\ e 1mtalled a new dry kiln, furl11shed by the Grand Rap-
1e1':>Yeneer \\ orks, wh1ch works to perfectlOn and enables
them to make sh1pments for their trade more promptly than
ever befO! e The Buckeye Cha1r Company w111 have the
"tl ongest lme m their h1story next January. The new stuff
put out dunng the fall season 111the dIfferent penod'i, such
as Flanc1er.." Colol11als, Ehzabethan and mI3SlOn", ha" proven
..,0 popular WIth the trade that the January l1l1e WIll embody
,111ot the"e and man} other sty le"
An Expert "Ad" Writer.
J R Bader, a \ eteran furmture dealer, of Fremont,
X ebr, 1" one of the few men who "ucceed 111wntmg then
own advertlsementb H1" adverttsement" a, e "0 attracttve
and eftectn e that they have been repubh..,hed as model" m
Ch1cago and made the "ub]ect of ed1tonal comment Mr
Bader u..,e.., the "heal t to heart" method-makes h1S ad"
talk to the people 111"uch a way a'o to make them thmk he
15 gl eatly l11terested in theIr welfare
WEEKLY ARTISAN
,~.-..-.------------------- --_.-------------- - ..-----------~
NELSON-MATTER FURNITURE
GRAND RAPIDS~ MICH.
co.
BED-ROOM and DINING-ROOM
COMPLETE SUITES
in Mahogany. Circassian Walnnt and Oak.
If you have not one in your store, a siIDple request will brin, you our ma1!,nificent new Fall CataloKue of 12x16 inch page Jl:roups, show ..
indosuites to Jnatch. With it, even the most moderate sized furniture store can show the best and newest furniture satisfactorily.
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~Iinnesota
Dealers'
Retail Furniture,
Association
WEEKLY ARTISAN
OFFICERS-President LoUIs J Buenger New Ulm Vice President C Damelson, Cannon Falls, Treasurer, o A 0 Moen, Peterson Secretar}, W L Grapp Janesville
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE-D F Richardson, Northfield, Geo. Kltne, Mankato, W L HarTls Mlnneapolts, o SImons, Glencoe, M L KlIne, St Peter
BULLETIN No. 63.
Everyone learns by expenence but \\ e would be spared many
pa111ful lessons If we would only use our common sen~e a ltttle more
often than we do \Ve were caught nappmg a short time ago and
we are g0111g to relate our e"penence for the benefit of the as,ocI-atlOn
A customer who had been studY1l1g the mall order house catalog
came 111toour store the other day to look at tables He had m mmd
a table such as IS shown 111 the catalog house 11lu~tratlon grv en here
We had often seen thIS table Illustrated 111the catalog but paId no
A Near ReproductIOn of the Mat! Order Illustration
particular attentIOn to It, although we notIced that It had an un
usually large pedestal Nothmg we could do would convmce thIS
customer that we could furmsh hIm with a table Just as good 01
better at the same pllce F1l1ally we succeeded 111 gettmg thIS custo-mer
to let us put up the money necessary and order the table from
the catalog house vVe furmsh you here an 11lustlatlOn whIch shows
the table we I ecelVcd 111 ItS tlue proportIOns and we want you to com-pare
It WIth the IllustratIon glVen 111then catalog
Anyone not po,>ted on fU111lture \\ ould probably th1l1k that he
'" as gettmg a good value for hiS mone) The workmanshIp on thh
table seemed to be faIr and the h11lsh wa~ unu,ually bnght when we
exam1l1ed It m the crate but when we set the table up, we found that
It was COvered with han checks and what we call ,armsh bce The
base was e'l1dently dIpped as the var11lsh Ian m waves along the
lower edge The top was too heavl1y fi11l~hed whIch cdused It to
crack so that haIr checks ran through It hke nvers on a map The
table showed a bnght luster but no dealer would care to send out
,uch a fimsh to a cu~tomer To show how they cut out every pos-
SIble Item of expense 111 connection With the mel chandlse they sell
WIll ~ay that I11stead of cratl11g the leaves m a neat box, where they
can be kept, tHey were u'3ed as cratmg for the table, so the receIver
of thIS bux has nothing to put them m These crates cost elll the
W2Yfrom 35 to 75 cents which they s,lVed and they apparently tned
to save on the fimsh BeSides saving on such Item~ as these, they
go dIrect to the manufacturer and pay cash for large quantities of
goods mstead of walt1l1g for the manufacturer to send expensive
sellesmen to them
By d01l1g busmbs In thiS way, they probably bought thiS table
from $2 SO to $3 SO cheaper than It was sold m the general market
which pnce the small dealel usually has to pay If we can furl1lsh
you thiS table for $6 SO m a SIX foot length and still make a faIr
profit, Just look at the profit the catalog house IS makmg by over-drawmg
theIr pictures
The catalog house seems to beheve that there IS a "sucker born
every mmute,' but the ploper Use of our matenal WIll educate these
fnends dnd customers of yours whom they conSIder "suckers" so
that they w111soon be wIse to the methods employed by the catalog
house E\ ery ~tudent of bus111ess buddlllg tells us that 111order to
bll1ld a permanent busllles;, '" e must be truthful ThiS IS a natural
la", No bus111ess man WIll prosper permanently who adopts dt-ceptl\
e methods ThIs truth b the bnght 1111Jngto the dark cloud
of mad ordel competitIOn whIch overshadows the small dealer and IS
the hope whIch IS spurr1l1g us on to wake up the dealers everywhere
to thclr true posItion
\ pen dl a,,1l1g does not gl' e the exact gram of the wood a, a
h,dl tone does so we h,1\ e placed a half tone cut of the table as It
really IS, right over the catalog IllustratIOn You "'Ill notice that
the pede~tal of thIS tdble ha, been o,erdrawn about 80 per cent, the
top abuut 10 pLl cent and so on down the lme of detaIl Now, after
SIZlllg up the catalog house Illustration, do you wonder that hone'3t,
unSllsplLlOllS people who are not posted on furl11ture are tempted to
"end a",ay? Would a true tllustreltlOn be any mducement to them?
vVe hal dly belle, e It would
Here IS an opportul11ty to expose these IllustratIOns of overdraw-
111gwhIch every (lealel should t,IKC ad, antage ot The catalog house
has not cons1Clered you so why should you conSIder them? It does
not affect you So verv much If a customer sends away a smgle table
but the catalog hOllSC~Use batt hke thIS to secure theIr large volume
of bU~111esswhIch should go to the home dealers They send theIr
catalogs to the fdrmer regulatly so It IS only natural that he should
look thru them when he "Ishe, to buy a housekeepIng outfit for hIS
boy or gIrl Then when he ,ISltS your store, If he VISItS It at all,
he has these overdrawn catalog IllustlatlOns m mmd and you have
to be a mighty good salesman If ) ou succeed m makmg a sale
Another customer of thIS class came to our store and when we
showed him the table Illustrated here, ",hlch we receIVed from the
mall order hou~e, he exclaImed m surpnse "DIdn't I tell you, Ma,
that we could scnd away dnd get a table WIth a base tWIce as large
as the one he was trV1l1g' to ~ell us for the same pnce? It we
had not happened to have thIS table III our ~tore, nothmg we could
'd} "ould ha, e com mced thIS mdn thdt the catalog house overdrew
Newspaper Etch1l1g of the Table ReceIved
It Vie never talk dIrectly agaInst the mall order house so we let
hIm have hIS way before we called hIS attentIon to the fact that It
had only a ~e, en 1I1ch base
He could hardly belle\ e the eVIdence of hIS oV\,n eyes but after
he reahzed what a deceptIOn the mall order house pracbced, we had
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
no dIfficulty in selhng hIm a complete outfit We firmly beheve that
we have made a lIfelong customer by bel11g m d posItIOn to show the
dIfference between the real artIcle and the overdrawn plchlre 111 the
catalog If we had not been able to do thh, I'. e would have lost.
not only thIS sale, but all the future patronage of thIS customer It
happened that I'. e profited by thIs mCldent but the e, 11 re~u1ts of
thIS prdctIce over~hadow completely all SImIlar Instances
Of course a man who order~ a table from a mall order house
WIll find out that It IS not as good an drtIcle a~ the IllustratIOn led
hnn to belre, e, but that doesn't help us any Th,lt sale I'; forever
lost But suppose you do sell a tdb1e lIke thIs The cdtdlog house
Lfeate~ a suspiCIOn m the customer s mmd showmg the same thmg
cleverly overdrawn ThIs IS the worst phase of catalog competItIOn
because naturally the consumer Jumps to conclUSIOns and If yOU had
the eloquence of Demosthene~, you could not convmce hIm that you
11dd sold hIm as good or a bettel table ThIS 10 I'. hat we call sume
really artistIC work on the part of the mall order hou,e
Then too, the) get up d very plauslhle talk. tellIng theIr patron~
that the home dedlel s cannot pOSSIbly supply them WIth thIS, that
and the other thmg, as cheaply dS the mall order house They em-phaSIze
strongly the fact that they always do as they say and will
From 'l Photograph of the Table ReceIved
refund your money If yoU al e not ,atIsfied Now they may deceIVe
m prInt but how about theIr IlluotratIOn~? Here h pOSItIve proof
tlldt they practIce a cunnll1g deceptIOn It IS the duty of every
dealer who IS dffected by thIS mall order eVIl-and where IS there
one who IS not?-to bllng thI~ deceptIOn to the attentIOn of the
buyers of theIr commumty If a man or a firm IS caught m a he
once, It IS pretty hal d to belIeve them agam
Every dealer Cdn strIke an effectIve blow at the mall order
houses by usmg the cuts shown here Our a,sOCldtIOn furnishes
these fOI such a small sum that there IS no excuse for those members
who do not protect theIr own mterebts If you are ever gOIng to do
anythmg along tIllS 1111e,you must do ~omethlng beSIdes SIt m your
store and talk about It WIthout a doubt, there are people m your
commumty who have been readmg thIS mall order lIterature for
years and years Some of them send m good SIzed ordero every
month and perhaps they are satIsfied WIth the goods receIved be
cause they do not stop to compare these goods WIth the good,
whIch they get from theIr home de Iler It IS gomg to take more
than one or tl'.O "ads" to convmce these people for you must remem-bel
that you have ye,ll, of c,ltalog I11flnence to llvel come Tn 01 der
to do tlllb, you must go at It 111,I systenMtIc, bnsmess hke way
You cdn't throw mud dt a competItor WIthout sOlI111gyour~eH, but
you Cdn get down to brdss tacks and show your customers that you
can not only meet but beat the catalog hou~e prIce v.hen the) Illus
trdte theIr goods as they really are, and when they do not, It IS up
to you to pomt It out
If we WIll all do thIS, we WIll be able to come to conventIon WIth
lIghter hearts, more plospenty and a love for our busmes~ 111stead
of a dread for whdt the future has In store for u' We can over-come
thIS competItIOn eaSIly If we all work together but we must
go at It rIght IN e must have definIte plans and follow them
Guc,cwork IS always expen~IVe ,md e~peclally so m a case hke thI~
J t IS when the way ahead IS dIfficult that a person's real ablhty
SllUWSItself Now we know there are men ot abIlrty In our aSSOcI
~1'on \rVe all have some and If each one does hIS be~t, sometlung
IS oUle to come of It It reql1lres good Judgment to know the nght
t me for everythl11g but there IS such a tIme and it pays to wa.tch
,md V'lIt for ItS commg but we belIeve that we have waIted too long
\\r e d,d not want to get exuted and do somethl11g WhICh we would
rep<ent liter but m the meantIme the catalog house has worked so
C lUctlv 2nd cunmngly that we have been caught nappIng WhICh makes
It necessary to get an extra huotle on US to make up for lost tIme
Let us all mdke Up our mInds to mI"S no more opportunItIes to
overcome the 111fluence of the mall ordel houses Study out ways of
dOIng thIS Prove to the buyers of your commumty that the catalog
houses dre not to be trusted How many people WIll tlade v.lth a
firm they do not trust? ResolutIOno are eaSIly made but resolutIOns
,\lone WIll not overcome thiS eVIl Make up your mmd what to do
and then do It That IS the only way to make good Don't waste
your tIme worrymg Won y never helped a man to anythIllfS but
hIS grave Th111k to some purpose "Vhat a man accomplrshes IS a
chart to IllS ablhty If the mall order house sells an artIcle for a
cel tam prIce, meet theIr pnce There 10 nothIng gaIned by cuttmg
pnceo when everybody meets the cut
Some of you may thmh we are g0111gInto thIS mall order house
busmess a httle deeper than IS at all necessary but we are not
It IS always better to ovel estImate your competItor than to over
estImate yourself If you don't, you WIll wake some day dnd find
that the bu~mess ploce,s1On has moved by Then ,,,,here ,'\,Ill yOU
be? In closIng thIS artIcle we say agalll It b up to you to e,pose
everyone of these catalog mlsrepreoentatlons whIch you can get
proof of
S01ue Live Advertising Suggestions Front Mr. Klein.
At Chnstmas tune mOl e than at any other time of the year, the
merchant must do hIS utmo~t to make hIS store a con, e11lent and
pleasant place to trade In your Chn~tmas advertIsmg, you must
make your CllflstnMs "ads' carr) hundl ed~ of gIft suggestIOns WIth
pnces The hohdays are the Ildrvest tIme for the merchants and
they bend then energIes toward 111ducl11gthe largest pOSSIble vol-ume
of trade at thI~ season of the year
Generally mCfchants v.ho are 1egular newspaper advel tIser~ in-creaoe
theIr space for a month or so before ChrIstmas and non regu-lar
ad, ertIsers get llltO the paperb about thdt tIme and dlop out en
tn ely ,liter the holIdays Another cla,s of werchants do not be
heve 111the tl';e of much extra ~pace at the hohdav'i, saYl1lg that at
such a busy tIme, they WIll get ,111the bUSl11ess the} Cdn bandle any
\\a) I behevce that both clas,e, ale partly nght and partlv wrong
dnd that a combm,Itlon of both schewe'i WIll gIve the best pOSSIble
results Hohddy Sll'lppel s do not lIke to buy e,\rly though why they
do not want to get the filst chOIce of the finest thmgs IS a problem
that has not been ,olved as yet S111cethIS 10 the case the advertlsel
should concentrate 1110efforts on thc two weeks before Chllstmas
and whoop th111gs up In elv ,\ Ith plenty of talk about buymg 111sea
son and all that I would feature the larger and mOl e eApenslve
al tlc1es If your store does not carry much 111the holIday lllle,
dwell on the advantages of the useful goods to be found m yOUI
store HIt them hard about the nIce thlI1g~-furnlture, rugs, pIC
tures, etc GIVe buyers plenty to thmk of along these hneo-of
course WIth a spnnkhng of to)' and other hohday artIcles-and keep
your store full of customers
Mak111g people want the goods IS after all, the secret of It If
thel e IS a secret Make the publIc want" hat yOU have to sell and
the ~ale IS half m'lde It all depends on your advertIsmg You
cannot catch fish WIth a rIfle, neither can you shoot game WIth a rod
and reel, and If you obtam good results from poor advertls111g It IS
because a mIracle ha~ been worked
A shIpbUIlder who would construct a vessel all ready for the
water and then not launch It because he could not afford tallow to
grease the ways would be a fit candIdate for a lunatIc a,ylum Yet
he is no worse than the dealer who has b11l1tup a bus111ess and then
refuses to float It upon the sea of bUS111essbecause he cannot afford
to advertlse Every bUS111esoman can afford to advertIse
It is not enough for the fur11lture dealer to stock hIS floors WIth
a conglomerate mass of fur11lture and then calmly awaIt the arrI, a1
of purchasers H e mu~t credte the deSIre of posseSSIon by al rangmg
each pIece as It 1'.111look III the home of the cUotomer All this of
course after he has put a suggestIve "ad" 111the paper
If I can aId In dlsperS111g any doubts whIch m;ty be entel tamed
by any of the members of this asSOCIatIon as to the effiCIency of ad
vertlSl11g for promotll1g busmess, I WIll be doing about the greatest
oervlce It IS in my power to render
To start WIth you must recog11lLe ach(,1 tl~ll1,z: IS a COl1ll11oc!ttv
Gei ,lway at once ,l11d forever from the Iclea that It IS dn expens2
It 1, not an expen~e, It IS .a neCe'iblty 1t IS a rare perbon who does
not at least glance over hIS clally or weekly paper and to the m \Jontv
of people It IS the only avenUe open to then mInds aCLhslble tn
those who ha,e thl11gs to ~ell The nev. ~paper carnes suggestIOns
Into the famIly CIrcle at leIsure moments 111parlor or hbr;try where
no salesman 15 permItted to enter It IS In closer tOUch WIth and
exert" a greater mfluence 111 the 110me than any other prInted
th111g Thh IS d p1alll statement of fdcts so well recogl11zed by m
tellIgent and plogresslve dealers, that no argument IS necessary to
substTanhteIatemdnthewmho attempts to do bUSIness these dav'i ''''Ithout ad-
,ertIsl1lg IS a back number Ad,ertIS111g 15 a~ much of a neceSSIty
to successful bUSl1leo<;as a good stock of goods and the time to ad
veItlse IS always "NO,V It IS better to sell good, at a P ofit when
people want them than at a saCrIfice sale after the hohcla} s
M L KLEIN
1\lember of the ExecutIve CommIttee
Mankato, MIl1n, Dec 14, 1909
22 \\' E E K L Y ~-\R TIS A N
,---~-_._---------------------------_._----- _ ••• ':If
-II - i~:sW~:~~~.-~-:-----.
Quartered Oak
Walnut
II Curly Maple
, Bird's Eye Maple
: Basswood
I Ash ,:
Elm I Birch
I Maple
: Poplar
: Gum
: Oak
\.". --------------- ---- -- -_._---------
Foreign and
Domestic Woods.
Rotary, Sliced, Sawed.
METAL BED PRICES MUST ADVANCE
--------- -- --_. ----- ------- -- - .--- - _. ---~
An Important Mass Conference Held by the Man-ufacturers
and Others at Pittsburg, Pa_
The '\Ietal and Spnng TIed IIanufacture1'3 of the Cmted
State'3 held theIr '3econd mabb conference at Hotel Schenley,
P1tt'3burg, on the 6th and 7th 111"t Th1s confe1 ence was
called under the au"p1ce" ot the Ctntlal UUleau, v,lnch I"
made up of delegate" from each of tht local dub" Ol ~anl/ul
111the chfferent parh of the l0lllltJ) '1 he COl1tLrence \\ d"
not confined to member", of the club~ onl), but all manufal-tm
ers we1 e 111v1ted Sev ent) -fi\ e manufacturer" \\ e1e pI (-
bent 111add1tlOn to a nUlllbel of bupply men
An elaborate program had been arranged \'\I11ch CO\ el ed
the two da)" '3eS",lOn Sunday lll0rl11ng a large delegatlOn
callle 111on two specIal "leeper" from the \\ e<;t Other dele-g-
atlOn" from the 'Southwe<;t and the ea~t albo ann ed Sundav,
when all we1 e escorted throu£;h the Call1eg1e museum a~d
ltbrary b) Col \ J Logan of Pitt'S burg and the '3upennten
dent of the 111st1tutlOn \Ivho ga\l e the \I l"ltor" e\l e1\I attentlOn
The Monda) morl1lnl:; sebSlOn vva" con'3umed "111Ihtenll1g
to we1colll111g addresse'i and 1eport" of thc 01gan17atlUl1 Dlftel
ent office1 s from the cbfte'ent club" made report of the can
d1tIon'3 of trade, etc, 111theIr re"pectn e "eltlOn'3 and a can
cenSUb of the reports showed an Improvelllent 111 bus111e<;"
~----.------- ----------
WIth a correbpond111g 111crea~e 111the cost of all matenals and
labor RepOl t'3 al<;o 111d1cated that labor wlll not be too plentI-ful
111the near future
-\fte1 lunch the entire conference wa'3 escorted through
the plantb of the XatlOnal Tuhe company and the Amencan
Steel & \\ Ire compan) Repre"entatlve" from each of these
mammoth 111st1tutlOn'i V\ere 111attendance and gave the VISI-tor"
ever) OppOl tUl11ty to "ee the ore 111It:, proce'3s through to
the completed tuhe, W1'C nall, etc All who had th1s Opp01-
tUlllh \\ e1e t1ee to exprc "" thenheh c" a" to the value of the
'ntOlmat!on 1ecc1ved.
\n e\ el1111~ "e""lOn wa~ held dt V\hlth Col H P nope,
firbt VILe pI ""ldent of the Ca1neg1e ::,teel company addl e",'ied
the convent1On on the subject "]\1ode1n RelatlOnshlp of Manu-facturer,,"
The Colonel \I'Vas 111partIcularly good form, and
1m, addre'i" wa'3 'icholarly and h<;tened to With wtense 111terest
The 1ema111der of the even111g '" a~ spent 111h'itemng to a
C01111111tteerepo' t on co"t<; of cheap bed" and spnng<; C0111-
m1S"lOne1 \\ Ulp1 had prepared a la1 ge number of charts lllus-trat111g
the co<;t of the dIfferent Items entenng wto the
con<.,truct1On of these products, as a<;<;embled from reports
I ecen cd on "ame from c1rfferent manufacturer'3 all 0\ er the
country
On Tue"dd} the report of the evel11ng p1eVIOUS wa" fur-ther
btudled and c11bCU'3'3ed A further leport was al<;o made
\V1th chart l1lu~tratlOn of plOpe1 f0l111'i fo' cost account111g
RICHMOND
CHAIR CO.
RICHMOND INDIANA
DOUBLE CANE LINE
"SLIP SEATS" -the
latest and best method of
double seating.
Catalogues to the Trade.
l-- ~. •_-- • - - - •- .
No. 70
The
Best
Value
and
Greatest
Service
for
the
Money
GENUINE
LEATHER
SEAT
-----------------_ ............•.•.•
WEEKLY ARTISAN
----_._----_._-------_.--------------------_.
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Feed Clue Spreading Machine, Single,
Double and Combination. (Patented)
(Sizea 12 in. to 84m wIde.)
----._----~
II
I
\
I
I
\i
i
I • • _..4
Hand Feed Clueing Machine (Patent
pendlDi.) Many stylea and aizes.
Wood-Working
Macbinery
and Supplies
L.ET us KNOW
YOUR WANTS
CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville,lnd.
23
\
II
I
I
~-_ _----_ _." -_ ..
- Veneer Presses, different kinds and sizes (Patented)
No.6 Clue Heater .
.- ... ..-----_._-_._---------_._. _..--_.
terlee company, ::-'bnneapohs, \11n11 , Royal \letal company,
Brooklyn, ~ Y , Haggard & -:\lan. Ubson company, ChIcago,
Umon ,V1re and ::\lattre'3s company, Chicago, l\11ller Hall
Sons' Bed ::Ylanufactur111g compan), ChIcago, Art Berl'3tead
company, ChlLago, SI1111110n"l\lanufactunng company, Ken-o"
ha, VV1:0 , EnterpII"c Beel company, H al11111ond, J nd , Bdr-celo
\lanufddunng company, Buffalo i\ Y, J{uwdrrl ::\lanu-fddurIll(
2," compan). BufLdo, 1\ Y, and about thIrty bed
"pI111(2,"compameb fI om all the Llllted ~telte"
and the vanou" methods (llscubsecl H C Schwab Ie, an eApert
on cosb of Xew York CIty, dellveled a very 111terebt111g ad-drebs
on the ,.PractIcal ApplIcatlOn of a CObt System" These
numbeI'3 were of great 111terest and all were agreed that to
manufacture and sell producb Il1 the 111dustl y, It was not only
eo,,,enual that co"t" be conSIdered, hut that a manufadmu
pllr:oue correct method" of co"t accountll1g a" well
C0111nl1,,"lOnei \VUlpI'S report of the uell!t and lolilctIon
depaltment of the Olga1ll7ation Wd" of particular mtereo,t d"
the methods employed furlll"hed all members WIth full data
on que"tlOnable accounts. and showed great succe'3" m the
settlement of pa"t due and dhputed accounts
The dang el of acceptmg order" at pI esent pn( pc; f".- f 1
tm e deln e1) Y\-a" fully dIscu'3Sed ThI" IS a prdctIce that ha'3
heen partIcularly prey alent m the bed and spnng mdu"tr)
and has operated to the detnment of the manufacturer" In
\ Iew 01 changes III the cost of matenal market, etc, It was
deCIded by all that thIS p1 actlce be stopped and all v, ere heart-
1ly m o,ympathy WIth the movement
\VhIle the meet1l1g was not called to fix pnce" for the
January market, the general mdicatIon of conditlOns led all
to express themselves qUIte freely that they would advance
theIr pnceb ShoY\-111gS VI' ere made 111d1cat111g matenal acl-vanceo,
of from five to twelve and one-half per cent and It was
conceded that manufacturerb would be compelled to make
ad, ances to at least cover these ad, ances III matenals
The conference was the most valuable and 111tereo,t111(y2e,"t
held and It was deternllned to agam meet 111 June m ~ew YOlk
CIty
E J HIckson of the PIttsburg-HIckson company of But-ler,
Pa, ha\mg mVIted all to VIsit hIS lalge plant, forty-five
manufactm ers left on speCIal tram \V ednesda) morn1n~ They
were taken dIrect to the plant b) tram, and a tY\-o hours m-spectlOn
wa" made of the model n plant The delegateo, were
then ebcorted to Hotel NIxon where an elaborate banquet had
been prepared, whIch was enjoyed hy all Mr Hlcko,on was
ul11versally comphmentecl on his actlOn m mVltmg compet1l1g
manufacturer:" to 1l1:'>pecthIS '.'\lorks, and It IS belIeved WIll do
much toward umfY1l1g the bed manufacturers m the future
Among the concerns repreo,ented m the cnnference were
the follow111g SmIth DavI:o Manufacturing company, St
Loms, Amencan Bed company, St LOtll" , Mellon & Strong
company, St Lams, Evanw1lle ::\letal Bed company, Evans-
VIlle, Ind , MIlwaukee Bed company, J\lllwaukee, VV10> , M111
neapohs Bed company, M111neapohs, Mll1n , Sahsbury & Sat-
Veneer Presses
61ue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc., Etc.
------
Will Enlat·ge the Business.
The bUSll1ess of the brand Rapld'3 Hand Screw com-pany,
formerly owned and opelated by the \VIlmarth ShoV\
Ca"e company, ha" heen tran"fened to John \\ Iddlcomb com-peW),
who IS nO\\ '3ole propnetor and IS opel atmg the busmes"
under the old sty le-GI and Raj:)1({e, Hand Sc eVl company
It h needles., to "tate that ,Ir \Vlr!(l!comh's WIele IepntatlOn
a" one of Grand RapId" leadll1g manufacturer" IS an ah"ulutc
guarantee that the Grand RapIds Hand ~cre,\ company un-der
Ib new propnetor"h1p WIll cuntmne to ma1<e the be:'>t m
thell hne of products, con"lstmg of hand screws, WOlk
benche", cab111et maker" benches, manual tra1l11l1g eqmpment,
factory truc1{." etc Thtse goods WIll he manufactured 111 the
plant formeI1y used by the old Kent Fmmture compan\, now
owned by the John \\ Ieldlcomb company and on \vl1ICh, dur-
111gthe past)' ear 1mplOvement~ cost111g nearly forty thou"and
dollar" ha' e been made
}Ir \V Ieldlcomb states that the plant has been equIpped
'''Ith a new eng111e and new mdchmery, and a new boIler h
also to be put m The plant has been gI eatly enlarged and
the faclhtIe'3 ImprO\ ed 11101 del that the husmeso, of the Grand
RapIds Hand Screw company may he properly taken care of
A Royal Volume.
The Royal Furl1lture com pan) have l"sued a magl1lfi-cent
book of photogravureb Illu"trat111g five hundl ed and
eIght) pIeces of hIgh gi ade furlllture for the d111111groom
and the chamber COple., have been placed III the hando, of
customers and man) letter" COl1lmendmg the enterpi be of the
company and prals111g the heaut) of the book have been
receIved
Heaven would be overcrowded If V\e could all be taken at
our own valuation
The Opportumty Manufacturing company, capitalized at
$10,000 wIth 50 per cent subscnbed and 10 per cent paid in,
has mcorporated for the purpO'ie of estabhshmg a new furni-ture
factory 111 Sag111aw, l\IIch
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Furniture Fires.
J. G. Galloway, undertaker of Butler, Ky , was burned out
recently.
S. M. Toler, undertaker and furmture dealer of Crowley,
La., lost $1,250 by fire on December 6 Insured
The LewIs Furmture company, dealer~, of \\'111nlpeg,
Man, burned out wIth a loss of $30,000 on December 8 In-surance
$18,000
Holmes & \Nalker, furnIture and hard \\ al e dealeI'O of
Chelsea, Mlch, were bUl ned on Decembel 9 Lu"s S-l-000,
partially msured
The A A Gray FUlmture company, dealers of DetroIt,
Mich , '" ere damaged to the extent of $15,000 or $20,000 on De-cember
12. In.;;ured
The mattres.;; plant of the LehIgh Star BeddIng compam
Allentown, Pa, was burned on December 11 Lo.;;" estllTIated
at $4,500, insurance $3,000
The Motter-Wheeler co~pany's department (store in
Walla Walla, Wash, was burned on December 3 Loss
$140,000, msurance, $85000
The Farley undertak111g parlor.;; and the Queen Cm
Furmture company warerooms 111 Baker Clt). Ore, \\ ere
damaged by fire to the extent of sevel al hundred dollars on
December 6.
The plant of the Rac111e (\iVIS) Manufactunng com-pany,
manufacturer~ of plano stools, was almost completely
destroyed by fire On December 6 Los" $60,000 to $70,000 111
.;;urance, $25,000
The Sterl111g FUlmtme company of \\ 111111peg,,ran. lo"t
$200,000 by fire that destroyed their SIx-story wal ehouse 011
December <) The firemen were unable to do effectn e worl,
on account of the cold-2S belov~ zero Insurance cm el '-,the
loss on stock and a part of that on the b1111dlng
C NI~~ & Sons, fur111ture dealel s, of :-1Ih\ aukee, \\ 1"
suffered a loss of nearly $100,000 by fire m theIr store on
Sunday December 12. Three of the four department.;; of the
buildmg were badly damaged, the greatest loss falls on the
sectIOn devoted to holiday goods About 80 pel cent of the
loss on stock and bl11ldmg IS covered by 111surance
New Factories.
The erection of a factOlY for the manufactUle of cabmets
and high grade woodwork IS saId to be under consideratIOn
by J. V HamIlton at Fort Scott, Kan .
The board of trade of :vIurphy, N C, has deCIded to or-ganize
a company vvIth $15,000 capItal stock to establtsh a
chair factory in theIr town
The New York \Vlre and Spring company, incorporated
by R. C. Moodey of PainesvIlle, OhIO, W A Comstock of
Cleveland, Ohio and C l' Ch Ulch of New York City wIll
estabhsh a new factory m or near New York CapItal stock,
$50,000
A bmldmg formerly used as a shoe facto! y, '" hiCh ha"
been vacant fO! a year or more IS to be converted mto a fUlll
Iture factory at Mlfflm, Pa The promoters promise to start
WIth a force of not less than fifty men
The Schimmel-Reid company has been mcorporated "'Ith
capItal stock ltmlted to $50,000, to establt.;;h a factory m
Falrbault, 1\1mn, and manufacture a spIral belt sander in-vented
by Mr SchImmel, and patented 111the Umted States
and m ~e\ eral countries in Europe
The Standard Bed and SpecIalty company, capitalLled at
$6,000 WIll establtsh a factory in ChIcago
Alderman Patnck Sulhvan of Burlmgton, \ t .. IS erectmg
a bUlldmg 48 x 90 feet, two stones In which he \\ 111 manu
facture furmture and wood novelties
The Udell Works Catalogue.
The Udell \\Torks, IndIanapolIs, Ind, have sent out their
catalogue for 1910 whIch shows that they have enlarged theIr
11l1eof products and added many new pattel ns to the old lines
The book contalll" 88 pages and gIves Illustrations, descnp-bons
and pnces of 88 dIfferent styles of ladles desks, 48 pat-tern"
of "heet musIC cab1l1ets, 42 styles of hbrary bookcases,
23 cabmets for plano-player rolls, 27 for cylInder and dISC re-cords
and 27 med1cllle cablllets. It abo shows several at-tractIve
commodes, fold1l1g tables and noveltles m the way
of fold111g pantry and hbrary ~teps, combInatIOn chalrs and
~tep ladders, etc It 15 eV1dent that as a whole that the
Udell hne 15 largel and better than ever which means that
1t wJ11 be of great 111terest to buyers m the coming wineer
season, \\ hen lt wdl be exhIbIted m the Furniture Exhlbltion
bmld1l1g, Grand RapId"
Ordered by Cable.
Alexander Dodd", company, Grand Rapids, manufacturers
of woodworkmg machmery, receIved a cablegram on Wednes-day
of thIS week from VIenna, Austria, ordering one of theIr
famous dove-taders and urglllg prompt shIpment. The order
calls for a fifteen-spllldle machllle
Free Space at Buenos Ayres.
A commU11lCatIOn from 1\1mister C H Shernll, of Buenos
Ayres, states that an arrangemeut has been made whereby
Amencan mach111ely mdy be exhIbIted 111the Argentine 1910
agncultural expOSItIon WIthout payment for floor space. The
I\mencan machmery wl11ch may be exhIbIted includes not
anI} agncult11l alimplements, but also woodworkmg and other
machinery, such as 'Ohoemalnng mach1l1es and sewing ma-chmes
Confu'-,lOn had arisen owmg to there bel11g two ex-positions
m Buenos I\yres, one for Al gentme products only
and the other open to foreIgners A Buenos Ayres commIttee
o± Amencal1', has been appomted, of which A R Hauchell is
chaIrman, to represent Amencan Interests
Most of us can make a lIttle truth go a long way by
stretching it.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 25
WOULD BE A RISKY EXPERIMENT
Manufacturers Do Not Enthuse Over the Co-op-erative
Glass Proposition.
Dunng the past week the \Veekly ArtIsan asked several
Grand Rap1ds furl11ture manufacturers for opmlOns as to the
practIcall1hty of the plan to estabhsh a glass ,)llvenng and
bevelmg concern on the co-operatIve plan The general trend
of the re-phes 1S shown m the followmg paragraphs
"That mIght be a good 1dea said David E Uhl, of the
Grand Rap1d,:>Fancy Furl11tuure company "I haven't glven
the matter much attentlOn but I thmk the furl11ture men
m1ght save somethmg on the pnce of glas:'> by d01ng the1r
own sdvenng and bevelmg. If they found themselves up
agam':>t the trust they m1ght estabhsh a glass plant and make
their plates and that m1ght be a good thmg for others than
furl11ture manufacturers, but I doubt that there would be
any profit m that part of 1t. I understand the glass trust
has the busmess under perfect control m tlllS country and
m Europe and it would reqUlre a strong concern to compete
w1th them It could be done by competent men w1th the
necessary cap1tal, hut to undel take It on the co-operatn e plan
would be a rIsky experIment
"I don't thmk much of that propo~ltlOn," qld Charles R
Shgh of the Shgh Furl11ture company "It would be an ex-penment
and a very uncertam one at that. It m1ght be practI-cable
1f you could find a capable manager but the chances are
agamst makmg 1t a succe')s on the co-operatIve plan I thmk
the manufacturers of Grand Rap1ds are buymg glass as cheaply
as those m other towns The managers of the co-operative
SlIverIng and bevelmg concern would undoubtedly find 1t
d1fficult to obtam plates Of course they could estabb:'>h a
plant and make the1r own plates but that 1S another propos1-
tlOn-worse than the first. It would reqUlre c01b1derable
cap1tal, expert managers and then about 7S per cent of the1r
product would he unfit for sllvenng-1t would have to be
used for other purpose". It m1ght be done-the furl11ture men
nl1ght make the1r own glas" but there Vvould be Just about
as much chance for success a-, there would be if the glass
men were to go to making furl11ture m order to use the1r
glass No, glas'i makmg and furl11ture makmg are d1fferent
mdustrIes They are sepal ate and better be allowed to re-nla1n
so"
"That proposItIon does not look good to me," sa1d Addl-
'ion S Goodman, "ecretary and treasurer of the Luce Furl11ture
company, Grand RapId':> "It 1111ght be practIcable, but I
doubt If It would be a profitable scheme fm the furl11ture
manufacturers The glass busmess, whethel manufactunng
or sdvenng and bevehng plate" 1S 1U a class that reqUIres ex-perIenced
experts to make 1t successful and I am afraid that
a co-operatIve concern would have long and co':>tly experIence
before wmning out."
In the Market Early.
Royal L Sm1th, buyer for G1mbel Brothers of Phda-delphia,
spent DeceUlber 14 m Grand Rap1ds, looking for
goods for early shIpment
Are you gomg to be one of the happy buyers v1s1tmg the
38th sem1-annual New York expos1tion? Any tIme between
January 17, the opel11ng day and February S the closing, w1ll
be a good t1me
It isn't exactly a feat of legerdermain to turn night into
day.
Making Steel Factory Trucks.
For a long tIme pa'->tVanmanen Bros, of the Globe V 1se
and Truck company, G1and Rap1ds, M1Ch, have reahzed
that sooner or later they would be obhged to abandon the use
of wood m the manufactur of the1r factory and Vvarehouse
trucks from the fact that each year prIces on th1S materIal
are becommg h1gher, and also the difficulty 1n securmg at all
tImes lumber of the high grade quahtv reqUlred W1th th1S
reahzat10n they came to the declslOn that they would eIther
have to lower the standard of the1r trucks or else raIse the
prIce':> But mstead, they deCIded that the sooner they got
away from wood constructlOn the plOblem would be solved
and as a result they have gotten out an entIrely new truck,
nearly the whole frame bemg made up of one pIece of sheet
steel, as shown m the accompanymg cut
ThIS d1spenses entIrely WIth the use of bolts and very
httle cast Iron 1':>used 111 the entIre constructlOn The stakes
WIll contmue to be made of wood, and as 111 the wood frame
New Steel Truck-Patent Pendmg
t1ucks a1e removable, and the stake pockets bemg of the same
S17e, there w1ll j)e no confus10n m factones where the steel
and wood frame trucks are bemg used The surface of th1S
new steel truck 1Sabsolutely smooth, which together w1th the
fact that the stakes are of wood, makes 1t entIrely 1mposs1ble
for fine and fil11"hed materIal to become marred whl1e bemg
tIansferred from one place to another
Another pomt 111favor of thls truck 1'->the fact that there
VvIII be a conSIderable sav111g111the freIght a-: they weIgh from
25 to 50 pound" les:'> per truck than the wood frame trucks
Although the steel truck 10, con~lderable hghter 111weIght
than the wood tl uck, any mechal11c knows the strength of
pressed steel, and the Globe VIse and Truck cOUlpany has
subjected theIr new truck to the most se, ere tests posslble,-
tests much more severe than any wood frame trucks are ever
called upon to WIthstand The Globe company adVIses that
these trucks are be111gmade in three dIfferent slzes, namely'
2S x 48, 30 x 60. and 3S x 72 111ches, the latter SILe bemg fitted
WIth an extra heavy runl11ng gear, and 1S also eqUIpped WIth
the Globe frIctIOnless roller bearIngs m all the Vvheels The
smaller sIzes have only the large center wheels eqUIpped with
roller bearIngs The demand for these trucks plomises to be
large, and the Globe company IS preparmg to take care of all
orders promptly by 111stallmg extraordmary heavy pre'->ses to
take care of the work"
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
TIE A STRING ON YOUR FINGER
if necessary to remember and see the
STEBBINS-WIL"ELM LINE
STURGIS, MICHIGAN.
library Tables and Desks
to match
Also Tables for
Office, Parlor, Bedroom, Den.
Sewing Cabinets, Tabourettes.
"ALL fURNITURE
All in LATEST, POPULAR STYLES.
New Catalogue feb. 1st.
Salesroom,
GRANDRAPIDS only,
first floor, Manufacturers' Bldg.
John Shank }
John Shelton In charge.
Hillman & Company Will Build in Chicago.
On the west sIde of State street, In ChIcago, the tallest
department store of the age wIll be erected It IS to be of
sIxteen stones and wIll be devoted exclusIvely to a sIngle
retaIl enterprise An Investment, estImated at close to $1.500-
000, will be represented in the structure
HIllman's IS the proJector, and plans not only the tallest
buIlding In Chicago given over exclUSIvely to merchandise re-taIlmg,
but the employment of many modern ideas in em-bellishment
and m the conduct of the store m its new home
The fact that HIllman's is to buIld became known through
Charles W Pardridge, president of the firm, after announc-ment
had been made that a lease had been taken by Edward
HIllman on the property extending from 112 to 116 State
street The property is occupIed now by a part of the HIll-man
store, the bUIldmg being a six-story and basement struc-ture.
The lease entered into is for ninety-ninety years, datIng
from 1918. This transcation is merely a rene~al of the
present lease, whIch expires at that time The new lease,
however, con tams a clause to the effect that the lea~mg con-cern
may erect a bUIldmg at once if it so chooses
The lease provIdes for an annual rental of $40,000 for
the first three years and $52,500 annually for the remainder
of the term. The property taken has a frontage of sIxty
five feet and a depth of 143 feet.
"It is the intentIOn of HIllman's to concentrate theIr
busmess on less ground space and let it go higher mto the
air," Mr. Pardrige said. "The firm has taken a new lease on
a part of the property now occupied by the store and It IS the
plan to proceed with the erection of a sIxteen-story buIlding
soon. Aside from havmg the hIghest department store in
No. 518. Quartered WhIte Oak, Mahogany.
ChIcago, It IS the plan to have one which WIll dIffer m many
respects from the present customs of merchandise retaIling."
Get Up or Go Down.
-\. furniture dealer m Paris exhIbits a novelty in the
form of a bed, whIch IS an improvement on a simIlar one
whIch attracted attentIOn at the last Pans world's faIr It is
to all appearances an ordinary bed, but the weight of the body
upon It sets a clockwork in motion, and this operates a musIc
box, whIch gives forth soothing melodies. The lullabies which
It plays are supposed to induce sleep. By means of a dial at
the head of the bed, the person who occupies it fixes an alarm
for the next mornmg This produces, when the hour arrives,
dIscordant sounds, to which the person in the bed must pay
heed, because faIlure to anse within five minutes after the
nOIse has begun WIll cause the bottom of the bed to fall out
Open January Third.
The warerooms of the Berkey & Gay Furniture company,
contammg over 30,000 square feet will be open for the re-ceptIOn
of buyers on January 3, 1910. In addItion to a splen-dId
collectIOn of staples in medium and fine work the company
WIll mtroduce many new things-novelties and substantials.
Secretary Covode states that the company's busmess is agam
normal m volume-that their sales for the year are larger
than durmg eIther 1906 or 1907. Manufacturers Hamilton,
Harper. the Wallace Brothers, Markoff and other salesmen
~ III be "at home" dunng the winter sales season
A fellow has no business to be headstrong with a weak
intellect.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 27
"'--- -._ .. ...-- . . . I ~1':'-- - III
'I 1 l:,~'I
.. . . . . ~l
... . ....
! Rockford National Furniture Company
Manufacturers of High Grade ..,
MAHOGANY
Library and Dining Room Furniture
in Selected Quarter Sawed Oak and
"
Our full line will be on exhibition
on the 4th Floor, North Half,
II
I \
I ~~
\ ~~ \~ I
~ , \ I[
""-""'-
'lIIJ'
13<0 FURNITURE EXCHANGE
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
China Cabinet 186. ... aT aT aT a. • __ ••
Kitchen Table and Refrigerator Combined.
The Illustration below shows a great novelty m kItchen
convemence Two useful articles are combmed m one-savmg
space in the kItchen. It WIll also save steps and time
for the housekeeper These refrigerators can be furnished
wIth a complete kItchen cabmet set on top of the table, mak-ing
three useful articles in one
ThIs combinatIOn should prove an excellent thing for
flats and apartment houses. In ordmary dwellings, many
people already have a refrigerator whIch is not quite large
enough, and yet they have not room for another refrigerator
ThIs combmatlOn can be set in the place of the kitchen table,
and the housekeeper WIll then have the advantage of two
refrigerator'S, givmg her ample space and opportunity to sep-arate
the mIlk, butter, cream, lard, eggs, etc., by keepmg them
m one refngerator, and the meats, vegetables, etc. in another
The refngerators are made m a first class manner, havmg
seven (7) vvalls for msulatlOn, sohd brass locks and hinges,
woven wIre shelves, galvanl7ed steel lining or whIte enamel
hning, If desIred
They are manufactured by the Grand Rapids Refngerator
company, Grand Rapids, MIchIgan, who wIll be pleased to
send catalogue and quotatIOns upon apphcatlOn
A New Hotel at Pensacola.
The Luce FurnIture company of Grand RapIds IS in re-ceipt
of a very hand:oome booklet Illustrating and descnbmg
the new Battle House whIch is largely furnIshed wIth Luce
furniture at MobIle, Ala. Gregory W. Luce, president of the
Luce Furniture company, owns a large block of stock in the
corporatIOn. The hotel company are engaged in the erectIOn
of a large, modern hotel at Pensacola, Fla.
Buffet 286. ..t ~ Taa. __ •••••• --_ •• ..- .. .
Par lor Frame Stock Increased.
The re-organlzatlOn of the Grand Rapid" Parlor Frame
company recently effected, includes re-mcorporatlOn, with
an mcrea'Se m capItal 'Stock from $25,000 to $40,000 of which
amount about $35,000 has been paid in. Officers of the re-organized
company are preSIdent and general manager, P. J.
Van Dommelen; vice president, Sybrant Wesselius; secretary
and treasurer, John L. Lynch The manufacture of high
grade mahogany parlor frames will be continued. Messrs.
Van Domme1en and Lynch are both experienced furniture
Made by the Udell Works, IndIanapolis, Ind.
men, Mr Van Dommelen having been superintendent for
the Phoemx Furniture company for a penod of five years
pnor to assoClatmg himself wIth the Grand RapIds Parlor
Frame company and secretary-treasurer Lynch was formerly
assocIated wIth the Luce Furniture company m the shlppmg
department for twenty-three years, and such was the esteem
m whIch he was held that upon the severance of his relation
with that company he was presented wIth a beautiful gold
watch and cham
Roy G. Harnson, former manager of the Parlor Frame
company has gone to Portland, Ore., where he wIll engage m
the lumber busmess.
Larger and Better Warerooms.
The Grand Rapids Furniture company have enlarged and
re-decorated theIr ware rooms preparatory to the opening
of the January season.
28
FURNITURE ADVER"rISING
WEEKLY ARTISAN
RETAIL
Conducted by H. H. STALKER.
Dealers Are Urgedto Send in Samples of Their Advertisements and to OfferAny Suggestions
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.
A very handsome httle Chnstmas shoppmg hst ha3 been
receIved flOm the Mueller & Slack company of thIs Llty It
IS pnnted m green and led on hea,) "hlte papel of good
quahty, It can tams besIdes a shoppmg 11st of fur111ture Item::>
a blank memo page, a page of good local talk, and some cut,
of pIeces of upholstered fur111ture manufactured b) the ~Iuellel
& Slack company They al e fur111shed free to dealel s "Ith
theIr names and addresses pnnted on the cm el. ~II ~Iuellel
reports that dealers have maded m el ;0000 at them under d
one cent stamp ThIs make., e"cellent dl1 ect ad, ertbm~ tor
both manufacturer and dealer, and IS an Idea that can be
made to work to gleat advantage at othel seasons at the) eal
ThIS leads one to I emark that thIS co-operatn e "plnt be-tween
retader and manufacturer IS one m whIch there IS ~ncat
opportu111t) for mutual bencfit and one" hlch should be "Idel)
cultivated E3peclall) IS thIS true m 'Ie" of the tact that mal c
and more magazme ad, el tlsmg IS bemg done each, eal It
IS well for both manufacturer and I etader to keep m close
touch WIth each other, so that each ma) know "hat IS belllg-done
by the other to promote .,ale., The more heart' and
thorough the co-opel atlOn, the better the result:->
\Vhen thIS copy of the \\ eekl) \rtl.,an reaches, ou the
days left III whIch you may do Chn.,tmas ad, ertl"mg "dl be
few Make them count Instdl mto e, ery word and sentence
of your ads somethmg mterestmg-somethmg 'Ital InJ ect
mterest, suggestIOn, persuaSIOn, WIth all the povver of 'lour
personality Vse good cut3, bold pnces and plenty of ,,111te
space to make It stand out conspIcuously Don't merely gn e
the tech111cal descnptlOn of Y0t11 dlffel ent pnces, but speak
about father and hIS comfort-how he would en]oy a 111ce
comfortable rocker Dwell upon the pomts that create de-sIre
The pnce wdl then take care of Itselt \\ hen people
really want somethmg, the pnce doe ,n't stop them Treat
mother, SIster, brother and all the falml) m the same" a, , not
famlharly, but m that easy natural way that wdl make jour
ads readable
We reproduce here a full page i ad ' at House & lIermann,
\Vheehng, \~ Va ThIS "ad" I" abm e the ordmal) It IS qt11te
skIllfully laId out It .,hould have been better howe, el. to
have ehmmated the firm name at the top and substItute a
strong, bold headmg calhng attentIOn to the h ,t below. Then
the top row of cuts have been left off and the OPe111ng
remarks set m a tllfle largel type and pos"lbh a few more
words added The openmg of a lalge ach erthemcnt hke thIS
IS Important, for It I" "uppo'oed to pa' e the wa, to an mtelest-mg
revIew of the Item" that folhvv
It Isn't too late, If you hd,en't alleach done so, to pnnt
a httle Chnstmas 'ohp heanng- a few v,cll "orded sug-gestlon.,
and mad to a select hst of yc u cU'otomer., S,)cnd a tcn dolldr
bdl m thIS way and '''atch result,
Very often good ad,ertlsmg tdleit I., nelel ch'ocmered
There may be a salcsman In youl "tm c who 1., not noted for
bnlliancy on the floor, who could e "Pi e.,., hlll1.,elf "ell on
paper vVhat kmd of a plan would It be to pa' v( t11 .,ale.,men
a httle extra for good ad, ertl ,Ing- ItCI1'o next ,edr ,,",uppo'oe
you offer a cel tam sum each "cek for the bc., tad.,' sub
nutted It would encourage thc boys and rcsult m much
plOfit f01 you The mal c mterest and enthusIasm you can
arouse among those who labor for y au, the better results you
"dl obtam TI) It out
Tech111cal telm" In ft1111ltt11e advertlsmg mterest you, be
cau.,e ) au kno" "hat they mean, but beware of too many m
) Ot11 announcements to the people They don't care so
much about a chaIr measunng 56 mches 111gh as they do
about ho" attlactn e and comfortable It IS You can dwell
"
"" ~..... ~I"·
:::c-'t1'f'f0$15" 00 $"":
~ 69c $1548..,
PBay"NoLwater sa. "._.:: ~ 980 v
, ..:..:::~
HOUSE <m. HERRMANN :;;;w;;;;;:;; HOUSE <m. HERRMANN
upon the dry features better after you have the customer m
the "tore (Jet the human mterest element mto your "ad"
talk 111 fact, make It talk, easy, natural talk Make them want
the al tlcle Tlus does not mean that descnptions are out of
place but rather IS a cautIOn to subordmate them to the
mOl e , Ital pomt" of contact
Good cuts are half the "ad" Yes, the subject has been
than ughly dl'octbsed You ha' e I ead yards of prmt about it
,,",tdl ) al ds upon yards of cuts that are a posItive dIsgrace and
detrtment to the adverllsel are be11lg used They are cuts and
.,0 I11U.,tdo duty It s d ml'otake It always WIll be a mistake
Some ad, ertl.,er., "pend thousand., of dollars f01 costly space,
"hen a $100 bIll fOI cuts for a year would gn e them nel VOU3
WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
The Blue Print and Catalogue Binder the furniture
Manufacturers and Dealers "ave Been Looking for
SOME Of T"E SATISfiED USERS:
Berkey & Gay Furniture Co., Grand Rapids.
Century Furniture Co, Grand Rapids.
Imperial Furniture Co , Grand Rapids.
Royal Furniture Co" Grand Rapids.
Phoenix Furniture Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
John D Raab Chair Co., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Grand Rapids Book Case Co, Hastings.
Wolverine Mfg Co, Detroit.
Sheets are Held as in Bound Book. The Sikes Co, Philadelphia, Pa.
THE PROUDfiT LOOSE LEAf CO., 8 and 10 Lyon S1., Grand Rapids, Mich.
prostration Remember, ever) cut) au u:oe makes an Impres-sIOn
eIther for or aga111st the artIcle How can a black smear
cause any desIre to buy? It doesn't Perhaps that's why so
many advertIse} '3 compla111 of re:ou1ts
The old adage "'II hat's worth d0111g IS worth domg well"
is a mIghty good one Take paIns m prepalmg your ad:o and
the reward wIll be comrnen:ourate TI y It next year, brother,
spend tWIce as much tIme m the COP) and double your ex-penchture
for good cuts It doesn't pay to lay the blame on
the writer
Nipped by a Traveling Salesman.
F 'Iy Luoma alIas E C Olson, a Swede only 24 yeals old
Vvorked a :ohrewd -,wlndlIng scheme on d bank and tll1ee
furmture house" of Atlanta, Ga recently, but was caught
before he gc away wIth hIs !Sam", through the Suplclons
natul e of a avelIng sale'3man Luoma, accordmg to IllS
confe'3':>Ion, IS a 5:1wede, though he wa" born 111F111land Only
four yeaI" ago he came to AmerIca, leaIl11ng to wnte and
:opeak EnglIsh 111a "hort tlll1e Recently he claIms that he
pm chased a tl act of land 111 FlOrIda on the mstallment plan
and whIle on hIS wa} to '\ tlanta f1 om '\Iacon he claIms that
he e, olved a -scheme whel eby he could meet the next pay-ment
on IllS land 1he Atlanta furmtm e men were to be hb
VIctIms
L\rrIv111g 111 Atlanta Luoma "ay'i he secured a CIty dnec-tOly,
acqu<llnted h1111'ielfwIth the locatIon of 'itreeh, and cho'ie
a fictltlOUC, pOl tIon of Seventeenth street as the spot where
as a brIck mason he c,hould buy a complete smte of furl11tUl e
as F K Lmdell He then made out a check for $36, presented
It for depo':!It at the Geol gla Sav1l1gs Bank and Trust company,
and drew out $6
A t the dIfferent furmtm e sto, es he asked to be shown
frn nlture, and after makmg IllS selectIon, pI e'iented a check
a" partIal payment and receIved 111change amount" ran!S111g
from $6 to $12 Thlc, scheme worked on Ed illatthews & Co,
"ho lost $12 0"car Barnes & Co, who } Ielded up $6 D
Zaban, who "donated" $10 :\t the L\mencan I'urmtUle com-pan),
the SU'ipIClOn" ot J L SatterwhIte and R A GOldon
\\ el e alOu"ed and they refused to accept the check Luoma
plesented \ P II anI, a St LoUl" tlavel111g 'iale'iman was at
the Bal ne" StOl e after Luoma left and declarIng that he be-
!Leved "Olson' \\ as a crook, an mvestIgatlOn was started The
fml11tul e men got then head:::. to!Sether, dI"coveI ed that they
all been "stung,' the detectives wel e notIfied and WIthIn a
short time Luoma wa" arrested and IdentIfied
All things come to those who walt, If they VI' alt on them-selves,
Binder Locked as It appears in use
AN ANTIDOTE fOR RING BINDfR EVILS,
The Liberty's New Patterns.
Jamestown, NY, Dee IS-The LIberty FurnIture com-pany
WIll exhIbIt 111 January at the FUll11ture ExhIbItIOn
BUlld111g, Grand RapId", on the fourth floor, the same space
as before The January exhIbIt wIll comprIse one hundred
drfferent patterns nearly all new The 1111eVvIII afford a larger
vanety of popular prIced good'i than ever before No dealer
should fall to see the lIberty exhIbIt whIch wIll be 111ehalge
of the popular salesman, Glenn K Brown, assIsted by R G
HolqUlst, sales manager for the LIberty Furl11ture company
Accomplished Through Co-operation.
The manufacturen of refngerators are not organized but
through co-operatIon they c,ucceeded In secunng a change 111
Made by the Udell Works, Indlanapolls, Ind
the raIlroad daS'ilficatlOn bUleaus, effeLtmg thereby a mateI-Ial
"aV1l1g 111the rate" of f1 eIght
Furnished Hotels.
The Estey J\lanufactullng company of O~ 0",,0, :\1Ich,
fUlllIc,hed a Ilew hotd at San 1"Ianu"co recently and have
contracted to furl11sh the 100111 '3 of foUl adcl!tIOnal fIOOls, now
under COnstIuctwn, for the hotel Tuller ,at Detl O1t, il1ICh,
In ~ ew York there WIll he 111terestIng domgs January 17
to February S Bet~ een those dates the 38th semI-annual
~ eVv York expOSItIOn WIll have its doors wide open for you.
30
Our Large New Line of
p-'-~---~----'_.~'_._----'-._.-._.__.'_W.._E..E.K_L_.Y_._. ._._A.R_T-IS-A-N---._----_--.----_-.--_._._.~--._~------~--
fI
IIIIIIIII
II
f
The season
for banquets
is here.
Get a stock
of our
Banquet
Table Tops
so as to be
ready to
supply the
demand.
DINING and OFFICE
TABLES I
are the best on the American market
when prices and quality are considered.
STOW &. Df\VIS FUKNITUKf, GO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
I
...--._-------------------- ---_._------------- .._~--_._----._~----------....
NEWSY LETTER FROM NEW YORK
Gimbel Bros. Great Store Grand Rapids Com-pany
Interested in An Aeroplane Project.
New York, Dec 14-The manufacturers of furniture and
accessones are all busy and have from reports at hand done
a good year's busmess ConditIOn" here have been far
better this year than last and are almost up to those of 1907
Dmmg the last Six months the furlllture busmess has picked
up to an astoUlshmg' degree There IS not much "kicking"
done and all seem to be qUlte actlve J\Iatenals have been
considerably advanced all along the lme, partlcularly lumber
VIages have also advanced shghtly but there has been no
appreCIable ralSe in pnces of furmture, therefore the dd-vance
of 10 per cent w111probably be qUIte Ulll\ er"al
Another thmg worth notmg will be that buyers ,,;rr=te
more eager to get the best grades fa; the least money, than
ever before They wIll take more tlme to pick out goods,
will take advantage of techUlcahtles and If they can get a
30 days discount by takmg 60 days you may be sure they wIll
do It.
CollectIOns are gettmg 111tObetter ,;hape and there seems
to be more money in use than a year ago There IS a loosen-mg
up and less trouble In makmg collectIOns than wa'i en
countered m the summer
The wholesale trade IS 111very good shape and retaIlers
through the country dlstncts are buymg more than before
ThIS IS specially so of medIUm grade furlllture Cheap furm-ture
IS movmg well Hlg'h grade furmture IS a httle slow, stJ11
It I" ahead of a year ago The south IS buymg fairly well and
the east is qUlckemng
In thIS cIty the trade has been very good m a retaIl way
but New York IS the last place to pIck up from the recent paUlc
T. Kelly, 6th avenue, fmUlture, report~ thiS as the best
"ea!>on he ha<; ever had and ha" put In extra sale<;men The
Imperial FurnIture Company, of Grand RapIds I" featured
here Mr Kelly has advertl~ed a complete lme of all grades
of planas
Spear & Co, 6th avenue retaIl house, report busmess as
very good and are selhng a lot of hohday goods, which runs
to ladles' desks, bookcases, table", etc The regular 1111es
sellmg the best now are dmmg and bedroom furlllture A
large retaIl order busmess IS done 111 advertlsmg speciab,
for which no first payment IS reqUlred A new lme of rugs
has been put m They occupy the entlre ten floors The mall
City Salesroom. 4th floor. Blodgett Bldlr.
...-..
order busmess at their PIttsburg store, IS now so large that
It IS hard to fill orders promptly
G
- Date Created:
- 1909-12-18T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:25
- 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/157