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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-26
Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-26
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and ., (~f{ANDRAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRAHY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., NOVEMBER 26, 1910
BEAUTIFUL BIRD'S EYE MAPLE
Just the Thing to Delight the Ladies at Christmas!
There is nothing quite so dainty-so feminine-so charm-ing
for Christmas, as a Bird's Eye Maple Dressing Table.
Light, airy and cheerful, it goes to the hearts of the
ladies, and it is the 0 NL Y
LIGHT-COLORED FURN-ITURE
THAT IS ALSO
HIGHLY ARTISTIC.
The NORTHERN has
made Maple a leading line ever
since starting in business. We
are in the heart of the Maple
country, where the finest Ma-ple
in the world grows, and
with our standard lines, using
Maple as a base, we are able to
pick ONLY THE CHOIC-EST
PIECES for N a t u r a I
Map I e finishes. Therefore,
when you buy Natural Bird's
Eye Maple from the NORTH-ERN,
you are sure of the No. 1197 Dressing Table. creme de la creme-the finest Made in Oak, Mahogany and Bird'.
in the country. Eye Maple.
But you must have artistic shapes too-the airy beauty of Bird's Eye Maple is completely lost
if it is not made up in beautiful designs. We also give you moderate prices. That is what will sell
with you-beautiful wood, designs and workmanship, at moderate prices, coupled with PROMPT
DELIVER Y (and that means everything when you get near Christmas-nobody beats us at that
part of the game).
No. 1152 Dresser.
Made in Oak, Mahogany and Bird' .. eye Maple.
Full information given in courteous letters about anything that interests you. Write us frankly, freely.
NORTHERN FURNITURE COMPANY, Sheboygan, Wisconsin
CHALLENGE REFRIGERATOR CO.
5
COMPLETE
LINES OF
REFRIGERATORS
AT RIGHT PRICES
SEND FuR NEW CATALOGUE
AND LET US NAME YOU PRICE.
GRAND HAVEN, MICH., U. S. A.
SQUARE POST STEEL BEDS are very popular and should be ready
sellers durmg the Holiday Trade.
We manufac-ture
a very
complete line
of Metal Beds
and Cribs, all
steel springs,
woven wIre
mattresses,
Metal Couches
and Daven-ports,
Cots
and Hospital
Furniture.
Order this Bed
in Vernis Mar-tin
Satin Brass
Finish (Color
19). No extra
charge.
You will be
... convinced of
its selling
qualities.
Stock Color-White.
Vernis Martin to order.
PILLARS and
FILLING
SQUARE TUBING
Pillars 2 m. Top and
Bottom Tubes 1Y2 10
FIllmg I 10 Head 60
10 Foot 40 In Sizes,
3 ft 6 10 and 4 ft. 6
m. Shlppmg weight
154 Ibs. Iron beds
Will be shIpped 10
white unless otherWISe
ordeled.
Price $15
If our No. 35 Catalogue has
not been received notify us. SMITH & DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis, Mo.
Buy beds
equipped with
the Standard
Rev. Rail.
They are
strong and
prevent the
bed from
wabbling.
SEND US YOUR
ORDERS
No. 984. BRASS CAPS.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
"--..-~.. ---------------~-~----------_.~.~._.--_--------_ _. . - - .. .
Every Dealer Who Sells
Folding Collapsible Go=Carts
TAKE WARN/NO
For your own protection avoid buying any folding collapsible go-carts :lOt licensed under FERRIS and LEITH
PATENTS. By seeing that the tag shown here is on every folding Collapsible Go-Cart you handle you will
Avoid infringement prosecutions,
Handle only goods made by the most reputable makers,
Handle Oo=Carts for which a demand is created by a big
national advertising campaign.
Licensed Go-(art
PATENTED
licensed and protected
by and under the
748869 Jan 5, 1904
771386 __Oct 4, 1904
789310 May 9,1905
800471 Sept 26,1905
None Genuine Without This Label
Other Patents Pending
None Cenulne Without This Label
FERRIS and LEITH PATENTS so completely cover
every Vital feature of folding collapsible go-carts that it is Im-possible
for any maker to manufacture them without uSing
some of the features covered by these patents.
The only persons or concerns licensed by us to manufac-ture
collapsible go-carts are the follOWing named companies:
American Metal Wheel & Auto Lloyd Manufacturing Co.
Company. Sidway Mercantile Company.
Children's Vehicle Corporation. Streator Metal Stamping Co.
Collier-Keyworth Company. Sturgis Steel Go-Cart Co.
Ficks Carriage & Reed Co. Toledo Metal Wheel Co.
Fulton Manufacturing Company. H. N. Thayer Co.
Gendron Wheel Company. E. R. Wagner Mfg. Co.
All infnngers Will be prosecuted to the full extent of the
law.
Through our advertISIng the public will be advised that
go-carts containing the most deSirable features are licensed
under FERRIS and LEITH PATENTS, and cautioned to
look for the Label.
We Will protect both the dealer and the public, and by
eliminating the unscrupulous manufacturer we msure the
dealer a better profit, put the go-cart busmess on a legitimate
basis, create fixed values, and educate the public to these
values. LOOK FOR THE TAG.
1
839230 __Dec 25, 1906
840188 Jan I, 1907
857971 June 25, 1907
861475 July 30,1907
863972 Aug 20,1907
913345 Feb 23, 1909
914010 March 2, 1909
918250 April 13, 1909
925151 June 15, 1909
925152 June 15,1909
925741 June 22, 1909
927089_ _ July 6, 1909
PERRIS and LEITH
•
REDUCED REPRODUCTION OF FRONT
AND BACK OF LICENSE TAGS.~~
Suite 630 Marquette Building
sa _ •••••••••
CHICAGO
.- . ...........•...•....•
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
• 1
I LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY I
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only.
.. -_..&
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Btrd's EYf Map!f
Btrch
!f?J'artfnd Oak
and
Ctrcasuan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
Fourth Floor, East Section, MANUFACTURERS'BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRANO RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of ]. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,]. EDGAR FOSTER.
PuBLIC LIBRARY
31st Year-No. 22 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., NOVEMBER 26, 1910 Issued Weekly
RARE FURNITURE WOODS AT HIGH PRICES
Eight Thousand Dollars Paid for a Log ... Mahogany and Old English
Oak Never Out of Fashion.
EIght thousand dollars seems a bIg pnce to pay for a log
of wood, even though It IS a mahogany log 4 feet square and 24
feet long That doesn't make It such a whopper among logs
anyway Many larger one:, have come from Afnca, where this
particular speCImen grew But Afncan mahogany as a rule is
less beautIful in grain and less fine 111texture than thIS pIece
which set the world's dealers biddmg agamst each other.
When aNew York firm secured It for ~8,000 the price
wasn't consIdered eAtravagant, even though the log was then
m London and had to be brought over to Stapleton, Staten
Island Somehow Stapleton seems a queer place to look for
exIles from the mystenous Onent But they are there all right
enough; teak wood from Burma and Java, vumIlIon wood
from the Andaman I c;lands, walnut from the CaucasIan moun-tains,
mahogany from Africa and the West IndIes and Mexico
These are only a few of the rare woods which are sawed
into boards and slIced into veneers almost as thin as silk in
the Stapleton mIll And the smell of the place! Spicy and
sweet and aromatIc wIth now and then a sour whiff from some
African cottonwood or a rank breath from a surface newly
stripped of bark For a good tree, though sweet at the core,
often wears an 111 smelling coat.
There are fashions in woods as in everything else For
several years Clrcassian walnut had been riding the crest of the
wave, then the French walnut took first place in exclusive
work The French V\ alnut IS a soft gray; a wonderful shade,
consldenng It IS a natural one Circassian walnut is a peculiar
velvety brown, rather sematIonally marked with much darker
SWIrlS These two are the fashIonable woods a1 present
But the two whIch 111the long run need fear no rivals
are fine mahogany and good old EnglIsh oak Santo Dommgo
mahogany, the fine'3t of ItS race, IS dlmost ext111ct And old
EnglIsh oak grows rarer every year Even England hasn't a
bIg supply of centunes old oaks, and many of those she does
possess WIll probably never be cut for commercial purposes-a
fine log WIth annular lInes, worth as much as any of the fancy
woods and qUIte as beautiful.
The EnglIsh oak is alone in the beauty of its color, is an
indescribably warm "sweet" brown Our native oaks (of
whlch Indlana oak is considered the best) are white, rather a
dirty whIte French oak is white also; and Spanish oak-which
comes from Cuba-is a muddy brown But English
oak is incomparable not only m its color but also in its mark-ings
and its texture, which has a peculIar flexlble softness like
that of leather.
Now that the supply of San Domingo mahogany is prac-tically
negligIble, the best of that wood comes from Cuba,
Honduras and Mexico; but no glant logs lIke the $8,000
African one. Cuban mahogany as a rule is a tall and spindling
tree It grows singly here and there, jump111g up out of the
lower tangle of the tropical jungle The natIves cut the trees,
square the logs roughly WIth theIr axes and haul them out of
the forest.
And they intend to keep right on doing it too, as Mr.
Williams of the Stapleton mIll found out to hIS sorrow a few
years ago Being of a progressive turn of mind Mr \VIllIams
thought it would be a good plan to beg111at the begin11lng of
his business and get his own tImber out of the forests So the
firm bought at Calcutta a lot of elephants trained to "haul teak
m the sludgy, squudgy creek," as Kipling puts it. The ele-phants
cost $5,000 apiece and were sent to the Andamans to
get out vermilion wood
The Andamanese natives had been on the job themselves
up to that time. Fifty or sixty of them would put a cable
around a log and in the course of time drag it out of the forest.
One elephant did the same work in less tIme and asked no
wages For about twenty-four hours the pachyderm force was
highly successful
Then an elephant was mysteriously shot Then another
one and another J nside of a few days there had been $25,000
worth of mortalIty in that elephant staff Inside of a month or
two every elephant was dead The natives were hauling as of
yore
And :'0 it was in Cuba The firm bought :,cores of cattle
to get out the mahogany logs whIch they began cutting them-selves
The natIves dIsplayed a dIabolIcal ingenUIty in the
assassinatIOn of these cattle, kIllmg about sixty of them at once
by poisoning the water which the cattle drank. Mr. Williams
gave up trymg to be progressive along that particular line and
the timber is now got out by natives working on small con-tracts.
Probably there is more nonsense talked about mahogany
than about any other wood Of course the people who in-variably
ask whether a piece of fur11lture is solid mahogany
and who when told that it is veneered say "Oh I" with the air
of having wrested from you the shameful truth, are not so
------~---~-~--
4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
common as they once \\ ere. But the1 e are more all the tIme
who talk about crotch mahogany and natural mahogany \\ Ith-out
the famtest 1dea of the facts m elther case.
It is a common thmg to see a \\ oman pomtmg out the
crotch in a panel, when as a matter of fact 1t 1'- mere!) t\\ 0
p1eCe'i of the wood matched m a pettectl) appd1 ent de:Olgn
The real crotch 1Sm the wood 1tself, formed by the JunctIon of
a branch w1th the trunk. And so w1th the natural filllsh
mahogany. In reahty mahogany runs a surpnsmg gamut of
color, from pale ashes of roses to the deep 1ed of \ enlllhon
wood, which 1Sreally a mahogany.
To see the thm shces of wood as they come from the huge
knife-the largest klllfe m the world 1t 1s-one would thmk
they were sh1mmenng lengths of mOlre stlk They can be
rolled almost hke stlk too when they are first cut, for they
have been steamed III a huge vat unt11 the) a1e soft A dozen
or more squared logs are put m th1S vat, the great 1ron cover
fastened down and the steam turned on. Some of the logs stay
there several days, others not so long. Then the slxteen foot
klllfe, whose blade we1ghs 400 p6unds, shces off the thin
veneers as 1f 1t were cuttmg cheese These are put on edge
in racks to dry out and finally plIed hke boIts of stlk on sheh es
in the warehouse.
Teak wood mstead of bemg steamed IS actually boded
Teak, by the way, is full of surprises to the ulllllltIated \\ ho
know it only in the form of dark brown or black1sh stands,
bases and furlllture NaturalIy teak 1S very hght in color, a
yellowish, greenish wlllte. In furniture it became known to
the Occident through the Oriental pieces which had been
darkened with use through hundreds of years \Yesterners
demanded dark teak therefore and it was stamed to SUlt that
demand.
The most conspicuous use to which teak is put is in the
constructlOn of battlesh1ps. All decks are made of it. The
floors of gun turrets are of two layers of heavy teak timbers,
one layer at nght angles w1th the other, and covered with
armor plate All the wood which is to go into the two
Argentinian battlesh1ps now building in thls country is to come
from the Stapleton mill and some of it will be such wood as
never went into any other battleships.
You see, the Argentine men are not only a gallant lot,
\\ ith the accent on the first 'i) llable, but also a gallant lot, with
the accent on the last 'iyllable, and they are determined that
'the ladles quarte1 s" shall be dazzhngly beautIful even if a
fe\\ elght-mch guns have to be om1tted from the armament
for lack of room Just what the ladles' quarters may be 1sn't
qUlte clear, but they're gomg to be lovely anyway They're
gomg to have satm wood and tuhp wood and amaranth and
sundry other woods whlch the Argentme enthu::>lasts adm1re.
Tuhp wood-not our own tuhp trees, but exotIc growths
from the \Vest Ind1es-1s shced up into nbbons of pmk and
wh1te lovelmess more suggestIve of a mdhner's or a candy
factory than of a saw mllI And the creamy stnps of satIn
wood look good enough to eat, as 1f they were salt water
taft) And amaranth, wh1ch is old rose, wtll doubtless make
the greatest kmd of a h1t wlth the sweethearts and W1ves of
the Argentme navy. Most of the finest woods seem to come
from the t1 Op1CS They are of all colors from white to black
and ot all textures from hgnum v1tae to Afncan cottonwood.
Llgnum \ Itae 1S the heav1est of them all. A cubic foot of 1t
\\ 111welgh 80 or 85 pounds, and as water weighs only 62
pounds to the cublc foot a plece of hgnum v1tae would s111k
hke stone Mahogany we1ghs from 60 to 70 pounds; a rare
p1ece wtll welgh 85 and w111smk m water. Our wh1te pme,
\\ Ith only 35 pounds to the CUb1Cfoot, bobs around hke cork,
\\ hdc as for the Afncan cottonwood. "WelI," says the super-mtendent
of the mdl, "I beheve that's a mmus quantity 111
we1ght It would almost go up m the air." For th1S reason
Afncan cotton" ood 1S used somewhat m a1rsh1p constructlOn.
The Phdlppmes prom1se to be a treasure house of rare
\\ ood::" though httle 1SJet known of the hundreds of vanetIes
that grow there vVe are gettmg some mahogany from there
and there 1Sa ptle of koko logs at Stapleton, a brow111sh wood
from the 1slands for Wh1Chthere 1Ssome demand. But as yet
our Phtl1ppme tImber resources are practIcally untouched.
The logs, whlch are 1mported 111the1r natural shape-round,
w1th the bark stdl on, show an amazmg tenac1ty of Me.
Huge trunks of Enghsh pollard oak whlch have been lying in
the Stapleton yards for months, and 111some cases several
years, wdl put out sprouts m the most hopeful manner. Some
of these sprouts hay e been planted and have flounshed. There
seems to be only one way of really kdlmg these logs. That is,
to saw them mto boards. You can't "season" all the hfe out
of them even though you leave them lymg out m the weather
for years. They wlll stIll be ahve mS1de.
Although French and C1rcass1an "alnut are the leaders
of fashlOn Just now, our own black walnut IS slow m returnmg
to pubhc favor. And yet 1t 1Sa wood w1th excellent poss1bih-tIes,
good m texture and tf only decently treated by the cabmet
maker, not to be scorned, as 1t has been so long. The trouble
"lth black walnut was that 1t had 1ts day, when most of the
des1gns were monumentally ugly. It wlll be redlscovered m a
happ1er period and will come mto its own.
Of course the misunderstandmg of veneers is, as above
remarked, on the wane. Yet even now it comes as something
of a shock to find that the beautIful panelIed waIls in our
costly pubhc bUlldmgs and pnvate houses are generalIy not
sohd wood an mch or so thlck, but veneered w1th thin sheets
about three-slxteenths of an inch 111th1ckness. However, th1s
is not anything to be deplored after all. Veneered panels 1f
properly made wdl outwear a sohd one with 1tS tendency to
tWISt and to crack. Of course there are stilI thinner veneers.
It isn't so much the thickness of the wood that matters as the
way it is put on. And, by the way, foreign made furniture
rarely becomes acchmated to our steam heated houses without
showing deplorable signs of the process The best American
made furniture is the best furniture for America.
- ------------------
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most of the Grand RapIds manufacturers report a consId-erable
merease m the number of mall orders recelVed dunng the
past two weeks The orders are small, however, and many of
them mdlcate a tendency on the part of dealers to allow the
manufacturers to carry the stock untll orders have been taken
from consumers ThIs tendency has grown rapidly m the past
two or three years Many dealers who formerly lald m heavy
stocks for the holiday trade, and rarely sent m speclal orders
for qUlck dehvery, now carry little more than samples and
some of them carry very small hnes of samples. When one of
thelr sample pieces or a sUlte lS sold tlhey order another and some
of them do a large part of their business by merely showing cat-alogs,
orders receIved recently indlcatmg that many of them ex-pect
to meet the hohday trade in that way. Such at least lS the
concluslOn reached by many of the manufacturers. They think
that many dealers have no use for warehouses and use but httle
floor space.
* * * *
The Thleleman Mlrror Plate company, now occupying thelr
new factory bUlldmg on Godfrey avenue-down in "Peaceful
Valley"-e:xpect to receIve two car loads of inported glass dur-mg
the commg week They report a decided improvement in
thelr busmess dunng the past tv\ a months
* * * *
The StIckley Bras company will have some new patterns
m theIr lme of fancy chairs, etc , for the January season. They
WIll have some thmgs entirely new in design and construction
and promIse a more a.ttractlVe exhibit than they have ever made.
* * * *
John Waddell has returned from his upper-Penmsula deer
hunt. Be got one deer, whIch lS one more than another of his
party got.
* * * *
Z Clark Thwing of the Grand Rapids Veneer Works lS m
N ew York on business.
* * * *
C. B. Beale, for thirteen years wlth the Standard Dry Kiln
company and for elght years a dIrector in the NatlOnal Dry Kiln
company, is now southern manager for the dry klln repartment
of the Grand Raplds Veneer VVofiks. H1S headquarters are at
Montgomery, Ala.
* * * *
The Grand Raplds Veneer Works have just closed a con-tract
wlth the Greencastle Chair company, Greencastle, Tenn,
formerly known as the Stone Chalr company of LenOlr, N C.
* '" * *
A Falkel, the old tlme rattan chair man, who qUIt business
on account of pnson competltIon, lS brmgmg out a
small line of oak rockers wlth seats and backs of rush fibre
They are somethmg new and very attractJve and will be out in
tlme for the buyers in January. Mr. Falkel is a strong advo-cate
of the single tax ldea and between makmg chairs and sav-mg
the country he keeps pretty busy.
* * * *
L E Pearson, secretary of the Rockford Furniture com-pany,
Rockford, Ill, was m Grand Raplds on last Monday en-deavoring
to secure space for the January exhiblt
* * * *
August Nylander, who sells the Rockford Frame and Fix-ture
company's lme in central territory, was here last week look~
5
-GE-T--THE C7ITRLOGUE
II'YOli :Yancy Baney gvrnitilre~
&ou willeZYoy.,&iling the fine 0/
GRA:l'lD RRPIDS FAN CY FURNITURE C2
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
$3.60
Each
Quarter .awed
veneer back and
seat HeIght of
back, 26 lDche.
WIdth of seat, 20
inches. FlUuhed
Golden Oak
HIgh Glos •.
Sb,ppedK D.
Hat. WeIght, 24
pound.
No. 260
rjlarw! IfallufactUrJllRca, Grand Rapjds.Nich.
ing after their exhibltlOn space and making arrangements for
the installation of new hghts He promIses tlhat the "Eff and
Eff" lme for the coming season wlll be even more attractive
than ever.
* * * *
The third story built on the big factory of the Luce Furni-ture
company, whIch adds fully fifty per cent to the floor space,
has been completed and the north half of it is now occupied.
Manager Boult has been rearrangmg the offices by taking out
a number of screens and partItIons, thus giving it more of a
family or social appearance than when each employe was enclosed
in a 'sort of cage.
* * * * The Grand Rapids Refngerator company, having just com-pleted
a large addItion to the factory, have now started the erec-tion
of an adchtional dry kiln that will be designed espeClally for
porcelam WOlk. They have had an excellent business through
the late summer and fall months
1< 1-
The Co-operative Furniture company and the Superior Fur-mture
company, both of Rockford, 11l, wJ1l exhibit their lines
in Grand Raplds in January.
* * * *
Furniture men who visit Grand Rapids during the sales sea-sons
will be pleased to hear that the hotel accommodations are
to be enlarged a little. Another story-the fourth-is to be
added to the Herkimer on South Division street.
* * * *
Edgar H. Scott of thIS Clty has added the Hastings (Mich)
Table company to the list of lines that h" handles in Pacific
coast territory.
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
RICHMOND TABLET CHAIRS
"SLIP SEATS"
AND THE
MOST SANITARY
RICHMOND CHAIR CO.
SHE HELPS OUT THE BACHELORS
New York Young Woman Who Profits by What
Men Do Not Know.
"The field was a new one and a wlde one \\ hen I took up
the furmshmg of bachelor apartments," says a ) oung \\ oman
of New York, who has bmlt up a busmess and makes conslder-able
money at It. "You see, the many new apartment houses
gomg up m the upper part of the Clty, most of them hay mg
but one, two or three rooms and bath, are most a\ atlable tor
the bachelor who formerly llVed at a board111g house or apart-ment
hotel Half of the occnpants 01 the"e "mall apartmenb
are bachelors
"A year ago I reahnd thlS and wondered lf 1 conld not
butld up a busmess that mlght hay e somethmg to do \\ lth
this mlgl atlOn to the northern part 01 the ut} 1 had a
natural ar±ts±tc sense, \\hlCh I hay e smce combmed \\ lth a
busmess instmct, and I alway s knew how to be economlcal
"I take commlSSlOns to furmsh up other apartments, too,
but my speClalty lS bachelot apartments \\ here the 0\\ ners
are bu"y all day and a.., a rule don't kno\\ Ju"t \\hat ..,OIt ot
furnishings and mtenor decol atlun" they \\ ant The decora
tlOns, hov, ever, 111mo"t of the new apal tment bntlcltng':> are
so complete that I am seldom called upon to e"ecute any at
thls part except 111the selectlOn and hangmg of drapenes and
cm tams.
"What I do 1S slmply to look at an empty apal tment,
find out about how much money m} patron \\ 1shes to "pend
and then I draw up several 1deas and subm1t them
"You would be surpnsed to find ho\\ eastly men are
influenced m the selectlOn of furmshmgs It lS a good thmg,
too, for some of the1r 1deas are certalnl) pecultar \\ hen I
find a man who wants to furmsh hlS apartment m a manner
not at all befittmg to the ±tmes, style or the plan of hlS rooms,
I tell hlm why he's wrong and show hlm the better \\ a)
"The greatest fault I have found so far lS that bachelors
want to crowd thelr rooms wlth too many th111gs Only last
week I had to contend wlth a man \\ ho hadmO\ ed 111from the
suburbs \\ lth the fUr11ltul e of a se\ en 100m house \\ hlCh he
wanted to cra\\ d 1I1toa four room apartment \Yhen I selected
his furnishings I took only the plamest furmture and mo"t
inconspicuous rugs, and the re"t \\ ent to the "torage hou"e
No. 100 DOUBLE CANE SEAT No. 100 GENUINE LEATHER SEAT
", _. _. -~----_._-_._._._..----.-.-..-_-.-..-..,
...I
'I find lt 1S the older bachelors who as a rule have the
mo..,t Cl0\\ ded apartments The rea"on for thlS 1S that they
ha \ e many old assoc1a±ton" 111furl11ture and decoratlOns and
ltke to have these around them and feel 1t a sacnlege to
conslgn such thmgs to the auctlOn room or storehouse If they
\\ c n't do the latter I adv1'-,e that the) take an apartment w1th
dn e,tra loom and u..,e lt fOl stonng purposes
, I hay e Ie"" trouble wlth the young bachelors Usually
e\ erythmg 1S new wlth them and they wlll ltsten to arttst1c
'deas The1r 0111)trouble 1" to load up wlth too many plcture",
S011\emrs ancl the ltke wInch have struck thelr eyes
The patlon I most dehght 111,however, lS the bachelor
\\ ho has knovv n httle or noth111g but club, boardmg house or
hotel accommodatlOn" and really doe" not know what he
wants 111 fmmshmg an apartment \Vlth a free hand glven
by such a bachelor 1 can go ahead and make hlm a pretty
home
'Sl1npltclty lS always my motto Most of the rooms of
these apartments are small and do not lend themselves to
much furmslung Then every \\ 1I1dow, corner, recess and
ltght111g mu"t be consldel ed I would never thmk of furl11sh-mg
an apartment wlth only northern exposure wlth sombre
hea\} dlapenes and clark npholstered furl11ture Wlth a bnl-ltant
sun e:A.posure the plan alters
'Unfortunately although ml"SlOn furmture has been done
to death I am called upon to use lt to a great extent If you
mnst furl11sh dn apartment qmckly mlS"lOn stuff 1Salways safe
RICHMOND, IND.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
to select, but I know of no apartment yet fur11lshed altogethet
tn mISSIOn but what ha<, at least a sugge~tion of stIffness
"I have my Ideas, of course, 111furl11sh111gmy apat tments,
but I have found that all men ltke a cheerful touch of red
somewhere about I carry thIs out wIth pIllows and often
wIth plaIn velour hang111gs I never carpet a bachelor apart-ment
unless I can't help It WIth anyth111g but rugs If I can
have my way I ah,ay~ ~elect plaIn mahogany furl11tUle If
the bachelor IS a lover of antrques I can arrange for that If I
am called upon to purchase anttques I know Just where to go
to get the best barga111s But 111all cases I find that It
reqmre~ but httle fur11lture to fit up the small apartment It
i~ the way It IS settled and arranged that gIves It a homehke
appearance
"Then I ne, er forget a touch of plant hfe ~Then an
apartment It> completely furmshed and my patron comes the
first time to inspect It I look about for the best places to set a
SUNDAY EXAMINER ...O..VCMBER 13 1910.
y FREE! FREE!
DId You See Our Offer 0/ LaIt Week? It WaI the Talk 0/ Att Cillcago
We sold 5,000 thIrty-fIve dollar sewmg machmes at a ndlculoU<!lylow price
~.,...,.,...,...,.For every maclune sold we gamed a frIend and customer t
I
I
I
HERE IS A STILL GREATER OFFER I
- - We ask you to Vlsltelther oi our two new furmlure sl,.ores II
for the ne1't five days commencmg Monday and give l..l ...
o an 0PPOl:tUntty to demonstrate to you that we sell better
tutmture ior less money thajn any other store 1U the city
I To Every Vis!!.Q!
nu. beautiful etlm?l~te
ma~tune la mads of the
belittem.~red$teel-wtb
~~~~Ja~~,:!
IUIlI The e:tI.bnet IS the
/ln~t ~eekd quarter saw
~<lak ... ful\t;el.of ..ttach
ll\entll Wltbuch IIllLChne
Rerul&r VIlIue.I3~ Ths
macllneIS gIIN"anteedto
de the rtl\lKhe$ and finest
kind <Jf. work tW tll~y be
nqwrM. A wnttto iU&r
lIlI~torl0YeaJll8l:Vllll
,1uthe&clltnac.hmo.
we w1l1glVe free a $35 00 Sewmg Machme
a full set of attachments guaranteed by
the manufacturer for 10 years "~
This Is Why We Do Itr
We want the Chicago public to know tha.t .:.
there are two furniture stores located a.way
from the down toWn high rent dlstnct whnr.' ~~
can save from 25% to 35% on each pttt n~l'1ase
whether It be a slogle pIece of fUrniture" Q:li
stove or a complete horne outfit (J
Now. Reason WIth YOUrSelf,]
Is It not your duty to get the most and the'
biggest value for your money? 1 If we convmce you that all we have stated IS'
true and you buy from us a sample order of $20 00
worth of any household artIcles and wIth y0111' I
purchase If you should rece' ve one of these high 1
;~ ~~~n~~~~~e~~~o~a ~E~3231-33 (INCOL~ AVENUE I
.... r a.1",0.,.
..... .w."" w.
'.~".,
~..
r~1~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiRII!II
Newly-Weds ~~~~~~~~~,y~~t nl$hed Bat tn ow ~hlwatlkee Ave Btore
It will gtve you an ldcl1 bQ1'l' t9 fi1mlsb
yOUT home correctly
'- --! Good Credit Accommodations
GROSSMAN'S TWO NEW
1530-32 MILWAUKEE AVENUE
N.... It_, nh 111I1II uilid lilt' l .. ~ .. I_I I'I.~
ThIS Offer Seems to be Better Than the "Soap Club" PropositIOn
couple of large ferns They do best near the windows in the
wmter sunshme, but they WIll thnve elsewhere m the room.
ThIS touch of gleen WIll sometimes gIve the very thmg neces-sary
to make a room complete when you dId not know before
what wa" needed.
"I get dlffelent prices for furnishing apartments, but $25
IS my lowest charge, and at tImes I have furnIshed two or
three a week FIfty dollars IS the average price to ask and I
WIll gIve a week's supervision steadtly for this.
"It took qUIte a bIt of mgenmty and hustlmg around to
butld up my bUSIness I became a reader of the real estate
items m the papers and watched the bmldmlS r)f new apat!.
ments I then found out theIr owners or managers, from whom
I got the names of pOSSIble tenants, to whom I went personally
or wrote offering my serVIces Then I got commissions from
managers ", ho wIshed to furl11sh the bmld1l1gs. Many of those
people now know me and send for me after they have recom-mended
me to the bachelors rentmg of them There are just
lots and lots of trIcks 111 the trade, but It IS a clean, actIve one
and one 111 whIch your patrons nearly always express grati-fication
when you have opened the doors and shown them
their new home."
~,---------_.-------------------- ...---- ....
TUE "ELI" FOLDING BEDS 4RE BREaD 4ND
PROfiT WINNERS
No Stock complete without the Eli Beds 10 Mantel and Uprl&,ht.
ELI D. MILLER &, CO.
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
Wnt. for cuts and pnces.
ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, EVAN.VILLE. .. ---- _. __._------.•..•.
-~--------------_._-------- 1
HERE
IS A
CHAIR
THAT'S
A
SELLER
WRITE
FOR THE
PRICE
No 83.
GEO. SPRATT & CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
7
.....,
.a ...
I
All Knobs and Pulls have the
WEEKLY ARTISAN
jUwAOo"n"ELLUOMANUF ACTU~I~~o ~O ...
Grand Rapids, Michigan
No-l1.um-Loose Fasteners
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods .
Idle Cars Now Increasing.
The number of idle freight cars in this countI y and
Canada has increased for the first time since July in the latest
report of the American Raih\ ay Association 'Yhlle there eo .. eo - •• --. -- ..
.'...--. -.-..-.--.--------------------_._-_._.--- -------------------_ ....
Screens Misused in Displny Windows.
Great care should be exercised in the use of screens in
show windows Many pieces of furmture are injured m ap-pearance
by screens placed too close to the articles Take a
buffet, for instance. Place It III the center of a big \\ indow
with a fancy screen against the back. The designs of the
buffet and the screen do not harmonize and confusion results
No matter how good the design of the buffet and the maten-al
of which IS is constructed may be, there IS noth111g111com-mon
between them The screen is ah\ avs hl~her than the
Sideboard else there would be no reason fOI US1l1gIt and peo-ple
inspecting windows often complam that they find it dlffi-cult
to determine where the buffet ends and the screen begllls
The combination is a poor one-injU! iolts rather than \ alu-able
as an advertising feature. This evil may be remedied
in a measure by placlllg the screen some distance back of the
buffet. Still the interest that should be centered upon the
buffet will be divided between the two pieces.
When especial pains has been taken III the constructIOn
and finish of the back of a piece of furmture It might he
advisable to place a mIrror in the dIsplay wllldo\\ for the pur-pose
of showing the back to spectators-complete Vle\\ s of
the piece. A common fault of many dealers in furniture 1'-
the overcrowding of display windows. A single artIcle of
merit upon which the spectator may concentrate his mental
faculties is of more value for advertising purposes than an
overcrowded window that divides one's interest.
GRAND-RAPIDS "OTELS
J. BOYD PANTLIND, Proprietor.
MORTON "OUSE (AMERICAN PLAN} "OTEl PANTllND (EUROPEAN PLAN)
Rates:
$2.50 a day and up.
Rates:
$1.00 a day and up.
The Noon Dinner served at the Pantlind for
50 cents is the finest in the world.
.. .. ...... ... ........... ..... .... .
...... .....
are still shortages 111 box cars and coal equipment, the net
surplus of rolltng stock on the rallroads now amounts to 13,-
581 cars ThiS surplus is nearly double the number of idle
cars reported at the time of the previous compilation, made
on Oct 26, repl esentmg an increase of 87 7 per cent in exact
figm es The greatest 111crease occurred in the Northwest,
where there \HI e nearly 4,000 more cars idle than two weeks
before, alaI ge part of the surplus being stock cars
The net surplus 15 now almost exactly what it was on
Octobel 12 1hen the number of surplus cars had been
"teachl} decredsmg smee July 6, when it was 142,865 cars.
\t thiS season of the year It IS usual for an increase in
the 'Omplus to set 111, aud the increase since October 26 is al-most
lclentlcal \\ lth the mCIease at the same time last year.
••••••••••••• a ......••••• ••• _~
-.,
.by carryingthe
ONE·PIECE PORCELAIN{INED
~ONrIRD
CLERNRBLE
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
GRAND RAPIDS REFRIGERATOR CQ
GRAND RAPIDS. j'tICH.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
New Installation of Old Furniture.
The PennsylvanIa Museum and School of .In dustna IArt has
arranged a new mstallatlOn of old furmture m Memonal Hall,
FaIrmont Park, PhIladelphIa, WhICh should be of much mterest
and usefulness oUblde the trammg instltutlOn as "Wellas wlthm
It. Great care has been taken wIth the arrangement to make It
as enhghtenmg as It IS attractlVe and to keep It free from Illusory
and mIstaken tendenCles Thel e IS a sIxteenth century Spamsh
room, an Enghsh oak room of the seventeenth century, an Eng-h~
h mahogany room of the eIghteenth century, an eIghteenth
century Amencan Colomal room, an Amencan "EmpIre" style
room of the early mneteenth century and LoUls XV and LoUls
XVI rooms. :t\'ot only the furmture but the mtenor decoratlOns
of the rooms bespeak the penods they represent, and the mstl-tutlOn
IS fortunate m havmg been able to secure some of these
much needed element:, for such an m:,tructive exhlbltlOn a:, It alms
to present.
The Louis XVI. room, for mstance, IS fitted wIth old whIte
and gl1t panellmg and mIrrors WhIch were a gIft The walls of
the Spamsh room are hung wIth old Spamsh leather, rare m thIS
country, from the Netherlands, and the cel1mg IS copIed from a
Spamsh house. The Amencan Colomal room IS furmshed WIth
mhented furmture whIch has been loaned for the purpose. But
even a partial enumeratlOn of the contents of the rooms cannot
here be attempted. Of qmte as much mterest and more to be
dwelt upon, however, IS the attItude of the authoritJes m organ-lZlng
the exhibition.
"Where it has been ImpOSSIble to fill a need sUltably WIth a
genume pIece," they declare, "a VOld has been preferred to the al-ternative
of exhIbIting a spunous or really mfenor object. It
IS of hIghest Importance to a large manufactunng centre that
the best models shall be brought wlthm easy reach of its artIsts
and that they shall be taught to detect the old and accurate from
maccurate imitatlOns.
"Of recent years many handsome pllvate houses have been
erected by architects reproducmg architectural gems of the olden
tIme, which have been furmshed with httle regard for the peri-od
to whIch they belonged An Italian or Hispano-::\1oonsh
structure may be found furmshed with Louis XVI. furmture or
American Colomal outfittings, and upon entenng a sIxteenth cen-tury
English house or a French Renaissance dwelling the viSItor
will be greeted WIth Chmese or IndIan teakwood carvmg and
typIcal Empire fixtures.
"That such anachromsms are not only shockmg to the mtel-
.. .... aa ••••• __ ..... _ •••
Lentz's Big Six
t
hgent mmd but are mcongruous to the trained eye and calcu-lated
to rob the house of its most preclOus quality, a restful
homogeneIty, hardly reqUlres argument."
So the museum has claSSIfied its furniture to present an or-derly
sequence of object lessons to students.
.A Level-Headed Secretary.
At the closing session of an association convention, in a
state not a thousand mdes west of the Mississippi, this ques-tion
was found in the interrogation box: "For what reason
dId you jam the association?"
Several members arose with their reasons, and finally
one long, lank member got up and said, "The only reason
I joined was because the secretary kept nagging me until I
had to."
"I move that we elect the secretary a member for life!"
shouted another member Carried unanimously.
New Electric Table Lights.
The tungsten filament has made pOSSIble new and artistic
electnc table hghtmg effects without the necessity of running
wires up under the table or dropping them from the ceiling
to provide the current. Instead the new table pieces are seIf-contained,
bemg provided with a single storage cell capable of
supplying current for three tungsten lamps for fourteen hours.
-Popular Mechanics .
. .- --_ ..~
a.- ~ __ • _. ._._.____ •• • •••••••••••• ••••.•• __ • • • •• • ... .. • • •• • .....
No. 694, 48 in. top.
No. 687, 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
I•
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGAJ'v
the HO! se Show offer w1der opportunity for the wmdow decor-ator
as well as open up a larger channel for the expend1ture
of money
Few persons have an) 1dea of how far m advance of the
season the wmdow decoratO! has to work For example,
large branches of holly w1th many bnght red bernes seen
hang111g consp1cuously on the wall of the wmdow dresser's
\\ orkshop led to the m([Ulry as to 1tS utll1ty m the Ind1an
~ummer "eathet p1e, allmg at that ttme "Oh, that was left
0\ er horn Chll:,tmas" VI as the casual remark, followed by the
nplanatlOn that the Chnstmas d1splay was completed weeks
ago In fact thts pro, ed to be the case m all the b1g stores,
the des1gns had been made, mechamcal accessories bUl1t and
decot atlOn:o applied wa) back 111October, everythmg be111g m
1cad111ess for the final 111stallatlOn at the proper moment
1 uda) the decorator 1:0II orkmg on des1gns for L111coln's and
II ash1ngton:, TIll thday setimgs
". \met1Can women, except those VI ho travel abroad, httle
1cahze," sa1d the IImdow dresser, "what aclvantage they have
0, et the1r fOt e1gn Slste1 s 111respect to extens1ve wmdow d1S-pIa)
s ::'0 accu'3tomed are they to 11.that nothmg surpnses
thcm, not e, en II hen a neIV recO! d has been made But let
them I1S1t the shops across the water and not to be 1mpressed
b) the companson 111favor of theIr own country would be
1mposs1ble
"To be SUle, cond1tlOns are chang111g on the other SIde all
the time, and parttcularly 1Sth1S the ca:,e m London, where the
111troductlOn of dry goods stores run on the Amencan plan
has been very popular Stlll the Engltsh merchant 1S very
cunsen atn e and 11.1S d1fficult for h1m to erad1cate the hab1t
01 ) ears
, German) s shops are gradually becommg Amencanized,
and v, hJ1e 111Ftance there IS no companson to the sort of d1S-play
c\mellcan me1chants make 111the extent and cost of theIr
:,ctt111gS, ncv e1thele:os the F1 ench shop V\111dows are extrava-gant
111a small \\a) and exceedmgly attJact1ve. As a rule the
"hops at e small, and doubtless all the stock w111 be placed 111
the II mdow, but the ta'3te w1th wh1ch 1t is arranged 1S
111dbputable One gets many h111tS and sugge:otions which
at e adaptable to our VI ork here
"Not 111frequently one hears the remark made by Chicago
IIomen that New York has not near the gorgeous d1splays
that the \\ 111d) CIty has The two cannot be Judged by the
-.,ame standards I knov'\, for I have worked there Ch1cago
cate1:O through 1tS bIg mall order houses to a tremendous
II estern trade, but about four tlmes a )ear 11.expects an 111flux
of V1s1tors and shoppers even from the Pac1fic coast, and for
these prospectn e customers 11.makes royal preparatlOn TheIr
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
MILLIONS IN SHOP WINDOWS
Christmas Displays Auanged by Men Who Draw
$5,000 to $15,000 Per Year.
Mllltons of dollars 111merchandIse VI J11 be d1spla) ed 111
N ew York shop wmdows at Chn:, tmas ttme, and the bare cost
of tnmmmg these IVmdows, wInch means the e"pense of the
mechamcal end of 1t, Vl1ll1un vyell up 111tOthe humhed thou-sands
ThIS 1S 111clusn e of othe1 hne" than ch) ~uod-., but 111
the department stores alone, patto111zed mote e"du-"l\ eh In
women, the expense of V\111dovvdecOt atlOn II III be enOl mons
In the bIg d1) goods establtshment" 01 the connt1, the
post of w111dow decorator 1S a most 1mportant onc, all 1 men
who hold such Jobs get sala11es thdt rdnge am v\hC1c 11 0111
$5,000 to $15,000
"The1 e 1S no standard fOl b1a111:',' II a:o the II ,n one
w111dow decorator expressed 11.111speakmg of the salalle" pa1d
these men, "for the man IS to be Judged b, hI" ,alue to thc
house As WIth pa111te1s, the amount a cam a-., bllng" depend"
to a great deg1ee on the pC1sonal e:,tllllate the PUtd1d-"U put-.,
upon 11."
And to Amencan IVomen, accOl d111g to tIllS speuah" t 1'3
glven the cred1t of b1mgmg about the ev 01utlOn 111:,hop II 1n-doV\
s from the ttme II hen a collectlOn of household Jullk \\ a ~
shown behmd a small paned sa"h slmpl) to let the pubhc
know what sort of goods the me1chant hdd to the [me.,t
productlOn of the V\111dow dres"er s a1t d1spld) ed am1d :octung"
that cost a fortune m themseh es
One Amencall merchant recentl) d1spla v eel \\ ha t 1'0
undoubtedly the best bIt m II mdo\\ dressmg In th1-" counll \
the mecha111cal settmg for \\ 111ch dlune co-.,t h1111SlO 000 1 0
account for the sum e"pended the1 e \\ d:, ,1 "tunl11ng back
g10und of 1are woods, a tnumph 01 the cdbmet make1 " a1t
w1th hand can 111g 111 RenaIssance :,t) Ie, all 01 VI h1ch \\ as
des1gned as a settmg for a collectton of hand:,ome 1mpo1 teel
gowns selected to harmon1/e \\ 1th the backglOum1
One wmdo,'V dresser m a bIg '\ e\\ \ ark e"tabh-.,hmcnt
who has thIrty-four vv111elOIl s to be 1c:,pons1 ble tOl -"a)" thd t
the value of me1 chand1se to be useel 111the"e VImelo\\" at the
hohday season will at the very lovvest estlmate mount up to
$50,000, and m all plObab1hty 1£ c"pensn e tUlS are mcludeel
w1ll be t111ee tlmes that amount
From $400 to $500 a 'v mdo\\ "ill be e"pended t01 the
necessary carpentry, drapenes and othe1 accessone", though
111 specIal cases thIS amount will be 111creased to S2,000
Naturally speClal occaSlOns hke Thanksgn mg, Chllstmas and
toO •• ._-----------_._._. -_._---_. _. _. _.--------..-. ~
FREEDMAN CONVERTIBLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Success.
Full Size Bed in Divan Space.
I.. .. .
SIMPLEST IN ACTION.
LEAST SPACE.
STRONGEST BUILT.
Supercede. all other Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATIONS' AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & CO.
Manufacturers of Upholstered Furniture.
Factory, 717-731 Mather St., CHICAGO .
• •• ••• •• _ •• 4
WEEKLY ARTISAN
average wllldow dIsplays are not so smal t as those in New
York, but the fOUl for whIch they make specIal preparatIOns
come up III every feature to the claIms made for them by the
women townfolk
"New York I'i dIffelent There are no season'i 111trade
and merchants mU'it keep up theIr show w111dows to the top
notch of excellence III order to compete WIth theIr neIghbors
and ga111 the attentIon of the woman shopper who comes to
New York from the four quarters of the country every day
In the y ('ar,
"Show wmdows are looked upon as one of the best
medIUm', of ad, ertIs111g, and a woman customer IS half won
If 'ihe I'i arrested by the attractIOns of your dIsplay Kews-papero,
announce to the publtc what the store IS sellmg, show
wmdovv, dIsplay It. The success of a show wllldow i'i
measured by the clowd whIch It attracts If no interest IS
ma111fe"ted than there IS somethmg altogether wrong and It
IS our duty to 5let about dlscovenng what that may be
"To attract customers wllldow dIsplays must not only
be frequently changed-every three days at least-but only
the mo,t up to date stuff mU'it be shown ThIS IS an Import-ant
fea1 ure As fast as new good" come In they are advertIsed
and then dIsplayed ThIS keeps up a contmual111terest among
women fOl even though they don't mean to buy at once many
make a busllless of VISItIng shop wllldows to see what IS belllg
worn, so that when they are ready to buy they WIll know
precIsely what to get and where to get It
'Once it was saId that color was the Important thIng to
attract a woman's attentIOn to a show WIndow, but that day
has gone by Now It IS harmony of colOrIng The readllless
WIth whIch color could be cheapened deCIded conservatIVe
women aga111st It In the matter of velvets of course the
qualtty gIves a character that a cheaper fabrIC would not
pmse,s But generally speak111g It IS the harmony of colors,
the blendmg of rare and unusual shades that IS demanded
today, and thIS has 111troduced a decIdedly new note in window
dIsplay It gIves more scope for the artIstIC sen"e, though a
w111dow dresser must not allow hIS pIcture sense to rIm away
WIth the practIcal SIde at the subject.
"As to what sort of goods attracts a woman most,
probably the new matenals and tnmmlllgs first, but once the
season IS fully opened then the ready-to-wear goods come next
111 POlllt of mterest MIll111ery IS always popular, and art
needlework always pleases the women who do hand work
"In decorat111g one must first have formulated 111m111d a
plan that he WIshes carned out Before that, though, I make
out a dIagram whIch gIves the floor plan of the store, WIth
the actual locatIOn of each w111dow to be dressed, together
wIth the date of ItS change, the name of the decorator and
space for any remarks that seem tImel} ThI'i IS our "chedule
N e'd I gIve my Ideas to my deSIgner, who works them out 111
wa1 er color and If satIsfactory they may then be reproduced
111Ill1matUle, or we WIll work dIrectly from the deSIgn, mak111g
the neceS.'lary changes as the work progresses
"SImpltclty IS aImed at 111w111dow dre"s111g, and to present
a good background WIth a IUll1ted selectIOn of artIcles of good
value IS much more to be deSIred than a w111dow full of a
gn~at varIety of goods Moreo\ er, a crowded wmdow IS
bewIldenng to the observer, and, as some one saId, is ltke an
overdressed woman who has bedecked herself WIth her entIre
outfit of Jewels and fnppenes If the idea of the show window
ltkened to the stage of a theater IS kept In mmd there IS small
chance for nllstakes The aIm IS to show an artIstIc ensemble
by brIngmg mto prom111ence the Important feature and keepIng
the rest SubSIdIary" -N ew York Sun
--_._--------
Dodds' Tilting Saw Table No.8
We take pleasure In tntroauClOg to you our new Saw Table The base is SImIlar to what
we have been ustng on our No 4 Saw Table, only we have made 1t larger on the floor The
raISIng and lowenna deVice IS the same as we have on the No 4 Machme, WIth lever and
pItman The lever IS made of steel
The arbor 18 made of 1~ lOch steel, runnmg JD 10na nng olhna: boxes. and 18 for 1 lOch hole
Jnsaw WefurnlShone 14uIochsawoneachmaclune ItwdJcarrya 16-mchsawlf demed
Table IS made WIth a cenler .hde 12 mches WIde WIth a movemen( 01 21 mche. It has a
lockmg deVIce to hold It when you do not WIShto uae It, and has a detachable mitre guage to be
used when usIng the shdmg table. Can cross-cut With table extended to 24 Inches. also np up
to 24 IDches WIde Table has a removable throat lhat can be taken out when usmQ'dado It
also has two mitre guages for regular work and a two Slded np guage that can be u~d on either
SIde of the saw. more espeCIally when the table IS tIlted, also a tilting TIp gauge to be used to cut j bevel work when you do not WIShto hit the table The (op IS40x44 mches
Countershalt has T & L pulleys lOx 14 mches, and the dnve pulley 16x5 mches, counter-shaft
.hould run 800 Makmg m all aboul as complete a machme a. can be lound and at a
reasonable pnce Wnte us and we wtll be pleased to quote you poce. Addrear.
"a _~~~~ANDER DODDS~CO., ~~::l~~~ Grand Rapid., MiCh.••
--'---_._._._._-_._----~-~-----
POLISHES
Quality and Economy
Two excellent reasons for using the
Excelsior or World's
Fair Polish
on high grade furniture. We claim to sell the best and
most economical polishes, and have proved it by their
being the Standard polishes for 25 years of use in the
furniture manufacturing trade.
Get our prices aCld send for sample before placing
your next order.
GEO. W. LIGHT MFG.
COMPANY,
2312 W. Van Buren St., CHICAGO.
..a. _
11
..- ..,.
-..
...
students of the ul11versitles, enables young men to learn their own
naturdl aptItudes and choose theIr future vocation much more m-tel
lIgen tly
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUBLISHED e:vERY SATURDAY .Y THIl
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR ANYWHI!:RE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES $200 PER YEAR. SiNGLE COPII<S 5 CENTS.
PUIIL.ICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NOI'lTH DIVISION ST. GI'lANO RA"'OS. MICH.
A. 5 WHITE MANACO'NG EDITOR
Entered ... second daIS matter. July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapid. Mlch,C'an
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE e: LEVY
A department store corporatIOn located 111 a pIOmment CIt}
of the mIddle west, through the lllclulgence at the mUl1lupal
authontJes, was permItted to construct a long and lugh ,ho\\
wllldow outsIde of the company s bUllc1mg It IS not an eel')
task to decorate thIS long, hIgh w111dow effectlvely \vlth Its sohd
brick wall background and the latest effort to do so v. as a db-mal
failure FlVe large rugs, m vanegated colors and 'pI a\\ I
mg figures were hung on the v. all and 111the center of each a
cheap hall rack was placed The m1rror~ add to the conhblon
of the scene and neIther rugs nor the furl1lture Impress the be-holder
favorably A great lesson has been learned by decora-tors
who know how to aVOId ,uch a combmatJon as the one de
scribed above.
Lack of knowledge of goods In stock and the lack at proper
tramll1g of sales people IS accountable fOl many leakages and
fallures to make sales m the retaIl bus mess i\ot 111frequently
a SIngle salesman knows the stock contamed III a depal tment amI
in his absence the department IS thrown mto confLl~lOlJ, \\ hen It
would be better if no sales were made \Vhy should not all sale~-
men be trained to learn all about all goods 111stock It not all
salesmen, then a sufficient number to carryon the work of the
entJre store WIthout loss or confusion?
Selhng goods by retaIl IS not a pleasant or an easy emplo}-
ment Confined to a narrow enVIronment, subjected to 1mpo~I-tlOn,
chIcanery and msult the retaIl salesman's life IS not one
dally round of pleasure. If he longs for the farm, the loggmg
camp, the army or the navy, it IS but natural, for he has many
reasons for wIshmg to change hIS occupatIOn. Compared WIth
the life of the retaIl salesman, the traveling salesman has a large,
fat and juicy snap.
A "personal bUleau serVIce" where patrons can plan to meet
their fnends has been establIshed by Marshall FIeld & Co, of
Chicago m their retaIl store. Messages for friends and order~
for coaohmen or chauffeurs WIll be received by attendants The
expense involved in mamtaining this service is conSIderable, but
Marshall Field & Co. know that the appl eciatlOn of the publIc
WIll be expressed through a larger patronage of the ,tore
The apprenticeship system no longer suffice" for trainlllg
men to conduct business on modern hnes The compleXIty of
business as now conducted requires a specIal tra1l1111gas a condI-tion
of success. Besides a special training, such as I, gIven to
That home-made iurmture exhlbltlOn 111 New York, men-tlOned
on another page, was undoubtedly quite interesting and
may serve to 1I1troduce a fad that may become popular with those
who can afford to follow It Home-made furnIture, however,
must be expenslVe and those who cannot afford to use it will stlll
ha\ e to buy the products of factones from dealers.
Ilfty sales ladles employed by SIegel-Cooper & Co, of Chi-cago,
gave a dramatIc enterta1l1ment recently which netted a
handsome sum for the store's benefiClary fund. The play, wnt-ten
by one of the employes, treated of scenes and experiences in
the In e~ of the players "Wasn't It awful, Mabel?"
Somethmg beSIdes a tobacco stamed chm and horns On the
palms of the hands IS necessary to prove to a manufacturer that
the bearer of these lllsigllla IS a complete factory 'Superihtendent.
Callers may expect dIscourtesy of small, unsuccessful man-utacturers,
and of bIg ones who are dymg of dry rot. "Live
\\ Ires" are not generated Jl1 a cold storage plant.
The man or woman who does not know that most merchants
make better pnces for cash than for credit customers is not over-stocked
WIth Il1ql11Sltlveness.
If your busmess IS unremunerative do not ascribe the cause
to poor luck Look yourself over and learn where the fault hes.
\\ hen credIt shall be refused to businessmen who keep no
books at account there WIll be two-thIrds less failures.
Pnce wal" are never profitable It is much more difficult
to restore pnces than to cut them.
If the object sought for in busmess is not a worthy one it
b better to abandon the search.
What Will the ~(8n Think?
\Vhen a man comes 111toyour store and asks for a certain
artIcle, and you let hIm go out with the bald statement, "We
don't keep It," what sort of an impression does he get of your
::,tore") Does he ask hImself, "Why don't they keep it?" And
then, If he proceeds to answer it, do you suppose the reply
wIll be espeClally favorable to you?
vYIlI he V\ onder If your faIlure to have that article is due
to want of enterpnse on your part? Will he wonder why
yOU dId not offer to get It for him? vVIll he wonder why you
dId not tell hIm your reasons for not having It in stock? Have
yOU put a hook 111hIm"" ith which to again draw him to your
store when he \\ ants something else?
Question Box Experiment.
A retaIler down 111Southern Virginia decided to stir his
employes up to a more actIve personal 111terest 111 the business.
To thIS end he hung a question box on one side of the book-keeper's
desk, and asked hIS young men to drop into it any
suggestlOns the} deSIred to make, or questions to ask, as to
the conduct or the betterment of the bU::'111ess The first three
day s it rema111ed empty On the fourth morning he found a
slIp of paper on whIch the office boy had carefully written,
'\\ hen do I get a raise?"
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13
By E. Levy, Representative.
ChIcago, Nov. 25 - J R McCargar of Grand RapIds, presI-dent
of the CommercIal FurnIture company of thIS CIty, IS here
for a few days looking over theIr new blllldmg whIch IS now about
completed. Tlhey have painted new sIgns that stretch across
the entIre frontage WhICh IS now three times as much as It was
formerly and the whole presents an Impo::,ing appearance They
expect to be in full working order by the middle of December.
A new spnng bed manufacturing house has been establIshed
here, under the name of the Chicago Spring Bed company. It
is officered by W. M. Pugh, presIdent; W. E. King, VIce presi-dent
and George E. Trow, secretary. These gentlemen have
had a factory at Kansas City for a number of years, doing bUSI-ness
there as the Kansas CIty Spnng Bed company, and WIll
continue to operate their factory in that CIty. They have se-cured
very commodlOus quarters in one of the series of blllld-lllgS
m connectIOn wIth the Garvy company's plant at 4910
Bloomlllgdale avenue, and there they will manufacture a line of
spnng beds among whIch are theIr special "Bull Dog" brand,
which name they have registered as a trade mark Mr. KIng
IS a former resident of this city having been wIth the old Ames
& Frost company which was absorbed by the Simmons Manu-factunng
company and Messrs. Pugh and Trow are well known
bUSIness men of Kansas City
The Modern Parlor Furniture company are preparing to
make their exhibIt in the 1319 building a specially attractive
one this season. The line is almost entirely composed of new
pieces and they are maklllg greater efforts than at any prevlOus
season to have their line complete and attractive. One of the
features in their exhibit will be a new style of folding couch
which Mr Rusnak of this company has perfected and over which
all Interested and enthused.
F. Bockius & Co, manufaaturers of embossed chair seats,
corner ChIcago avenue and Sangamon street, Chicago, IS prepar-ing
to add a line of Spanish leather and fancy embossed leather
for specialtIes in the furnIture line Mr BocklUs has been very
slUccessful in hIS hne of embossed chair seats and expects hIS
new line to deserve and receive the patronage of furmture man-ufacturers
requmng goods in that line.
----_._._.-._._. ---_.-- ------------.• -11 " - HENRY SCHMIT 8 CO.
HOPKINS AND HARRIET STS.
Cincinnati, Ohio
makers of
Upholstered Furniture
for
LODGE and PULPIT, PARLOR,
LIBRARY, HOTEL and
CLUB ROOM
.. ..
The Horn Bros. ManufacturIng company are now working
1ll theIr new patterns for the commg season and as soon as com-pleted
they wIll be illustrated in a new catalog which will be
pubhshed by the first of the year They will have a high class
line of chamber furniture designed III the prevaIling modes and
as they use the special methods of construction it will be strong
and well set up.
The Herman Koenig Furniture company, manufacturers of
"furnIture for the bed room," have recently made arrangements
with W. A. Von Ketel, for many years a salesman in Chicago,
representmg a number of furnIture manufacturers, to manage
theIr sales department.
A speCIal meeting of the ChIcago Parlor Frame Manufac-turers'
AssociatlOn was held recently to take actlOn on the death
of Joseph Zangerle, who was among the first members of that
organIzation and for several terms its preSIdent He was by
rIght of senionty of age as 'evell as priority 1ll business, what
may be termed the "dean" of the parlor frame manufacturing
trade m this city, and the members of the aSSOCIation showed
their feelIngs toward their honored associate by resolutions em-bodymg
theIr admiratIon for his sterhng character, and expres-sions
of sympathy for Ithe bereaved ones Three of the mem-bers
acted as pallbearers. These were old comrades, one of
whom was a native townsman of the deceased, and a boyhood
frend.
The Oberbeck Brothers are preparing for their exhIbIts at
Chicago and Grand Rapids, and WIll occupy the same spaces this
season as heretofore. Their sales manager, C. L Barron, re-ports
a very satisfactory bUSIness the paslt season and states that
1he new line WIll be even more attractive than before. Their
mlaid SUItes were especially attractive last season and they are
bendIng every effort to Improve on them if possible, as well as
on the rest of theIr hne of chamber furnIture in Circasslan wal-nut,
red gum and mahogany .
•
Your Continued Success Depends
on the QUALITYof Your Goods-
It's after a bed or chair or table leaves your store that it counts for or against your
future trade. Every Stow & Davis table you sell is a constant advertisement
of your rehablhty. Our tables resist wear-quahty is bUilt m, along with the
style and hand rubbed fimsh that make our designs so attractIve.
Our new catalog, showmg some of the handsomest Colonial and Flanders
diners ever built, is in press. You WIll Just naturally want these t0p-notchers in
your own store, for your best trade. Send in your name for an early copy.
STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE COMPANY,
PERFECTION TABLE TOPS. DINERS.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
OFFICE AND BANK TABLES.
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
..- •• '1
NEW DESIGNS I-N LOUIS XVI STYLE
No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
..
Home Made Furniture on Exhibition.
I\n exhIbItIOn at a novel chal actel and a 101 el unnel ot
what alms to become <1 natIOnal mOl ement 111thIs lountt'
wat:> opened 1ecentl} at 22 East TIm tv -tOUIth "tl eet '\ e\\
York "The Home Industnes A"souatlOn IS gl\lng the
exll1bltlen and the ex11t1)Jt" consIst ot al tlcle" made In home"
111\anou" parts of the Ul11ted "'tate" and 110m nealh e,el'
country of the OJd 1101Jel \llsS Lom"e ]\1 u~l'am, \\ ho ha"
attracted attention by hel Idea" about bo, lur111tul e I" at the
head of the enterpnse 111s'o Bngham ha" been a "ettlement
\\ orker for se\ eral } ear" She IS assisted by another sett le-ment
worker, .:\llss Helen Hunt, 111v\ hose studIO the e"hlbltlOn
IS to become a permaneJ1t affaIr ::\lls" Bllgham t:>ald the Idea
was a de\elopment from the box furl11ture \\ hlch she ha~ had
111practical use 111her apartment 111East EIght} -eu.;hth street
fOI more than a year and \vll1ch has been' ISlted bv all k111cl"
of people The anTI 111box furl11ture IS to utt1lze castoff boald"
and boxes that have only found themselves useful to bm/rl
the furnace fire 01 else have been carrIed a\\ ay by the Clt} ash
carb Once the Idea of box furl11tUle IS aSSImIlated no house,
however humble, need go unfUll11t:>hed, as the object le-..~on
afforded in her own apartment prov es
"Every country in the Old IVorld," saId ::\IISs 111u:;ham
"is proud of its expressIOn of thnft, and as I travelled about
last summer WIth this home 111c1ustnes Idea 111 \ lew I found
so much that was 111terest111~ that I determ111ed to launch the
Idea as soon as I could after arnv111g home
"Only a httle bIt of attention to orgal11zatlOn IS Ieqmred
to get together an exhIbIt as credItable to our country as were
those I saw in Europe In Europe the noblhty and the
crowned heads of countnes patroUlze the v, ark of the
peasantly, thus encourag111g thnft and demand111g a 111gh
standard of workmanship In Amenca \\ e have 110thlllg of
..
thh "ort The pubhc splnt needs to be educated here in our
0\\ n land
, -\h eacl} II e have gathered here such 111dustnes made in
the home as the lace of GreenwIch House 111Jones place and
lace from the Itahan and Insh quarters The Craft Club of
'-:e\\ YOlk ha'o gl\ en an exhibit There are the Jelhes and
canches and the bookb111d111g done 111hemes here 111the cIty
\\ e have an exll1bltlOn, the hand weavlllg, sp111n111gand cover
hcl s, from the Kentucky mounta111s, and "'"eav111g and dye111g
as accomphshed In Berea College of Kentucky ViTe have
exhIbIts of WOlk from Deerfield, Greenfield, Magnoha, Glou-cester
111Ma'osachusetts, and weav111g done by the b1111c1111
Cleveland and Boston There are hundreds of places yet to
be heal d from, and I am confident that once a center IS
e"tabhshed In '\e\\ York we shall soon have an 111dustry
\\ hlch \\ III be self-support111g awl encourag111g to the workers
'1\ e al e already affihated WIth fifteen foreIgn countnes,
so that \\ e ha' e the success of the Idea abload to serve as a
foundation for our \\ ark here and to assure us that we are
maklllg no eApel1ment, hut are merely gett111g 111tO1111eWIth
the home 111dustnes of other nations
In \\' est I:lghty-n111th street we hay e opened an apart-ment
\\ hllh I" fU1111shed as a model of what can be done WIth
the V\ ood 111castoff boxe" IV e have also secured a vacant
store 111that nelghbOlhood whIch IS 111use as a carpenter shop,
and there we shall demonstrate what an amateur carpenter
can make \'\Ith a saw, a hammer and a pocketful of natls In
our permanent place of exhibition here we shall show only
models of what can be done 111the home"
It hard ","ark IS the secret of success 111 se11111ggoods, it is
not much of a sccrct
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
~..-.----- ----- -------------------------_._-- ------------------------- ,
FOUR NEW
in acid and oil.
in acid and oiL
in acid and oil,
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M 0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters, In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects,
in acid and oil.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
• •
Everythmg m Paint Specialties and Wood Fmishmg matenals. Fillers that flll. Stains that satisfy "--------------------_._----_.-------------- ---------_. ---------_-4
'W'hich i~ the Fin ..t 1<'lo01"?
A change 'ieemo, to be com1l1g about III the desIgnation of
the StOlleo, of our bLllldlllgs UntJ! recently It was the general
rule III thl'3 country to name the floor on the level WIth the
street the first floor, the firo,t story abm e the stl eet bemg
known as the second floor, and 'iO on In Europe and III
Canada the rule has been to descnbe the first story above the
street as the first floor, desLllb1l1g that on the level "'Ith the
stl eet as the ground floor
In the \Vanamaker 'itores 111 New York and PhIladelphia
the floors are named 111 the ad\ ertlslllg, etc , accordlllg to '" hat
may be termed the European practlce In other words, VIsItors
unfamlhar WIth the 'itore''i pldn who ask the elevator man for
the "third" floOl 111 one of these stores al e apt to find them-o,
elves cal ned to what they would call the fourth ThIs method
may have been adopted 1n order to le'isen the 1dea of d1stance
m the vISItor's m1l1d 111 vlew of the heIght of the new bUllchm;-s
\iV e note that a propo"ed amendment to the bUlldlllg code
of Ch1cago prov Ides that the fir'it story above the Stl eet l:Srade
'3hall be desIgnated and known as the fir"t StOly and the 'itones
abm e shall be numbered, consecutLVely, second, th1rd, and
so on
\iV e also find thIs practlce pm'iued by the elevator attend-ants
III a number of office bmld1l1gs 111N eV\ York
A lack of ul11formlty 111 such matter:o may prove costly
For example, we heard recently of a case VIi here a contractor
was asked to put 111 a bId for the fil1lshlllg up of the "seventh"
floor III a large store HIS bId was accepted, but, much to hIS
surpn'ie, he found that the floor he wa:o e'{pected to fil11sh was
not the one, partly finIshed, whereon he had based hI" bId, but
the one above 1t and wh1ch he would have called the e1ghth
floor Thu:o through the mlSL111der'3tandlllg the contractor
stood III a posItIOn to lose a consldel able S11m
4
Do You See the Feature?
The FI'3h company e\ Idently I eahze there are people who,
from somethlllg hke fal'ie pnde or a deSIre to appear wealthy
and llldependent, Imag1l1e that It 1S an 1I1dlcatlOn of poverty
to trade WIth an 1I1stallment house, that there are some, per-
-D-AVENPORT SOFA BED
$2.00 Cash
$/.75 a Month ,=..-
To b\lY thIS beautIful and serVlceable davenpot:tlS Just hke addmg another bed-f66m
to your nome In the daytime It serves Its purpose as an m-tIStlC, hIgh gl'a<;te
CQue!l:;at O1ght by a SImple easy mo,tlOn It IS converted mte> a hlrj(e spaclOUS dotlble"
hidi: The fl ame IS made of sohli' golde,n oak, covered in genuine Royal leather,
-",'Wit guaranteed steel COlI spnng construct1onr A big value 'It tlus.low P,1'1ce.
GOODS DELlVtRt' IN. PLA.IN WAGONS
OPEN EVENINGS OPEN EVENINGS
1981-U State St. 3036-38Lincoln Av.
:JOU-19 State St. 654-656W. North Av.
1906-0~Wabash Av, Established 1858
haps many, who would hke to patr0111z;e the installment
dealels, but for the dread of hav111g the neIghbors gOS'ilP about
the wagon, as usually pa111ted, call111g at theIr res1dence To
(atch the trade of such people the FIsh company have lllserted
a s1g111ficant feature 111the1r "ad" It 1S not the whltefish nor
the davenport, but the black l111e,"Goods Delivered m Plam
\\ agD1l':;"
16
ENGLISH MERCANTILE METHODS
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Selfridge. the Great American Merchant of London.
Writes on the Science of Retailing.
At the request of the edItor of the Dry Goods EconomIst.
H. G. Selfndge who has made a complete succe"s of the great
department store that he establIshed In London about t\\ 0 \ ear-ago,
has written a letter on the "ScIence of RetaII111g,' \\ hlch
will be of interest to many Amencan merchants because It gIve,
reliable informatIOn 111 1 egard to mercantIle methods med 111
England and other countnes as compared wIth tho,e used 111
America. The letter IS therefore republIshed
DEAR SIR :-1 have your letter ask1l1g that I detaIl some of
my observations in relation to the "Differences and SlITIIlantles
in Methods of Doing Business in England and '\menca," and I
am pleased to comply with the request.
Let me say at the outset, however, that under no CIrcum-stances
do I assume the position of a cntlc of EnglIsh methods
Penhaps my training as a merchant has caused me to look upon
certain points in merchandising differently from those \\ ho ha \ e
long conducted business here in England, but I accept that theIr
methods are quite likely best I stated In mv fir"t ne\\ ,paper
interview in London that I had not come to London WIth the
expectation of teach1l1g any merchant or shopkeeper a s111gle
thing, that I did not feel qualified to do so and had no pOSSIble
desire in that direction; that I had come instead to leal nand
should lose no opportunity to carry out thIS 111tentlOn \nc1
during the past three or four years I have learned much
I believe that no branch of human actiVIt) has 'Shm\ n greatel
development during the past twenty-five years than the "SCIence
of retailing" and yet every thinking merchant of today knO\\"
that this same progress will continue dunng the ) ears to come
The development of the individual bu,ine,s come" from one of
two directions-the application of one's own ongInal Ideas. or
the quite legitimate copying of other people's In either ca"e It
is evident that the measure and rapidIty of development depend
upon the flow of originality, and original thinkers are compara-tively
few.
Now the general methods and "tools" of the retaIl mer
chant are much the same the world over The counter, the sho\\
case, the dressed window, the shelving, the general arrangement,
are alike and have been since stores and shops began The
difference lies in the quality and detaIl and the~e anse 111the
~
I
II
,
...
UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead in Style, ConkudJon
and FlDish. See our CataloBUe.
Our hne on permanent exlubi.
tlOn 3rd Floor, New Manufact-urers'
Bwldul\l. Grand Rapida. .. ... _....... _.
dIvergent tastes, temperaments and types of the nationahties
concerned
Germany, for example, gIves a touch of the Teuton to her
store furl11ture, and to us in Great Britain and America it looks
overdone and not of the style which appeals to our taste Amer-
Ica has bUllt on hnes of slmphClty and dIgnity, whIch to the
European lack decoratIOn England has recently done her
.,tores and shops 111a very ornate manner. France, except 111
her small shops, has paId little attention to her store furniture
and WIth one or two exceptions is doing it no better than twenty
) ears ago No one can say which is best, but a jury chosen
tram all natlOns could be the only accepted authority, and as
no such jury WIll be chosen, the matter will remain as it IS, each
one d01l1g as he chases.
But more important are the methods of different nations
One would almost think that progressive merchants who had
,em.e enough to realize that other people are advancing as well
as themselves would quickly adopt original methods which they
saw successfully introduced in other stores, and that after a
httle we should see a sort of "i&;peranto system" of retailing.
As a matter of fact, this does not happen to at all the extent it
,hould. Either a lack of knowing well what other methods are,
a dis1l1cI1l1atlOn to acknowledge that some one else has thought
. p something better than \ve, an indifference or let-.weII-enough-alone
polIcy (IV hlch, by the way, is not closely allied to progres-slveness),
a conservatism which seems to foster an innate dis-
1l1clination or fear to make a change-for any of these or other
reasons most merchants stick to the methods of their locality
and do not cOP) the Improvements of other countries. But,
ROCkford
Chair 8 Furniture Co.
Rockford, Illinois
DINING FURNITURE
BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSETS
and TABLES.
LIBRARY FURNITURE
DESKS, TABLES, COMBINATION
and LIBRARY BOOKCASES.
Our entire line will be on exhibition in January
on the third floor of the Blodgett Buildine,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
p •••
A. PETERSEN & co.
BEST MADE AND LEADING LINE OF
OFFICE DESKS IN THE COUNTRY
Our attention to every detail from carefully selected and matched lumber
to the finished product has given the PETERSEN DESK its leadership,
FULL LINE.
I... ...
. .. h.... ....
MANUFACTURERS OF THE
RIGHT PRICES. SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
430 Armour St., CHICAGO, ILL. .....................
nevertheless, retailing as a busmess or profession has shown
marvelous strides.
In Broadly defimng the dIfferences between British and
Amencan methods of merchandIsing one could perhaps say that
conservatism almost always dominates the former, whIle a never-ending
desire to change, to adopt any new idea, seems to be the
poltcy of the latter.
To the one, business is more ltkely to be the means to a
more desired end; to the other, because the country is newer
and because leIsure does not carry wIth It the same charm, busi-ness
IS more the end, the fascinating game which the merchant
loves to play, the most mterestmg occupation which his sur-roundmgs
and condItions offer.
Many-very many-Brittsh merchants acquire fortunes suf-ficIent
for their needs and rettre, to live in the country, to enJoy
the sports and pleasures of ltfe which England so generously
offers. The American merchant rarely retires from business,
and when he does he finds hImself alone and lonely; he feels
"out of the game." As one wealthy friend who had retired
descnbed his feelmgs to me, he felt as one who was living on
an allowance. HIs income was very large, but it lacked the
spice of "winning-."
Why Americans Keep on Working
It is generally true, I believe, that the business man of
America who has acquired a reasonable fortune does not con-tinue
in the acquirement of mere dollars only for the dollars'
sake, but be~ause he loves the game and the dollars represent the
counters won in the game. Again, the ownershIp and dIrection
of a great business in America gives perhaps a comparatively
greater personal prestige than in England; but, if I judge cor-rectly,
the feeltng of respect toward the large man of business
IS a rapIdly growmg qualtty m the public mind m Great Bntalll
The mcltnatlon to retire from actIve busmess has made com-mon
m England the system of mcorporatmg concerns and selltng
the shares to the publtc-a most useful method If certain re-sults
are deSIred, but to my way of thmking, a custom whIch too
often clepnves the busmess of personaltty and of that wonderful
factor III the busmcss's expansIOn and development, VIZ, the
personal PItde of ItS propnetors
What the usual mvestmg stockholder wants i" the greatest
pOSSIble dIvIdend, and the stockholders by vote elect the execu-tIves
Owmg, then, theIr pOSItIOns to owners who want dIVI-dends,
It becomes their chIef aIm to make and payout these
dIvIdends
The Amellcan merchant (who knows ltttle of publtc owner-shIp
of hIS kmd of busmess and who owns his busmess) prefers
not to payout his profits to himself, but to contmue them in
that which he himself knows most of-hts own business A
body of men is always more inclined to conservatism than an
individual; they say "Nor' more easily than they say "Yes";
they take fewer chances; make fewer experiments. The "one-man
owner" risks more on his judgment; he is risking his own
money, so why not? When a board of directors act they are
usually acting with other people's money, and this feeling al-ways
does, and will make them cautious, more so than they would
be with their own money. In thIS world and time, and in the
Made by Rockford Frame and FIX];UreCo ,
Rockford. Ill.
department store busmess, the old adage of "Nothing venture,
nothmg have," IS true
(May I add a personal note here and say that our busllless
III London IS, as are almost all others, a jomt stock company,
but all the common shares and nmeteen-twentleths of the pref-erence
shares are held by myself and one or two others and are
not for sale to the publtc Weare therefore III a position to
conserve our profits to the fullest extent.)
Busmess of thIS kmd-department stores-are almost al-ways
profitable in England Expenses are lower than in Ameri-ca
and gross profits are Just as high Rents are perhaps the
ChIef Item of savmg. The pay-roll averages nearly as high in
per cent here as there. Delivery, or "despatch" expenses as they
(Continued on Page 20)
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most Attractive Inducements for Car Load Buyers
Are Offered by the
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber Suites. Wardrobes. Chlffomers. Odd Dressers. Chifforobes.
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets. K D. Wardrobes. Cupboards and Safes, m imitation
golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Folding Beds, Buffets. Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plain oak. imitation quartered oak. and solid quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers in imitation quartered oak, imitation
mahogany, and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, Dining and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by The Karges Furniture Co
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs, Wire Springs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association .
.•.....--------------_._----_._--------_._.----~
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
_.:c'" ~ ~ Made by Bockstege Furniture Co.
Made by Bosse Furniture Company. Made by World Furmture Company.
~ .
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
ENGLISH MERCANTILE METHODS ,
(Continued from Page 17)
are called here, are nearly as hIgh AdvertIsIng IS usually much
less, because much less is done Insurance is lower
Expenses in Amenca whIch run from 18.0 to 23 per cent
(on selling pnces) would here run from 15 to 20 per cent
Cash discounts here are lower, being 3)4, as compared there
wIth 6 per cent
The number of times stock IS turned here IS lower, as a
rule, because, as I thInk, the dally sales or returns are not pushed
so hard and aggressively It is a strange condItIon, for example,
that Pans shows one department store \\ hlch doe~ an annual
return of between $40,000,000 and $45,000,000, and half a dozen
will show from $15,000,000 up, whIle London, "WhIch IS t"Wlce as
large, with a greater IndIvidual bUyIng capacity and WIth much
better and centrahzed methods of Intermural tranSIt, shm\ s per-haps
only two businesses dOIng $15,000,000 to $20,000,000 re-turn.
And of these very excellent houses the departments of
groceries, provisions and sImIlar hnes form the most Important
divisions of the business, whIle In Paris no department store In-cludes
anything of the kind.
Some Brittsh Methods
The BritIsh merchant is now some\vhat glv111g up the "hv-ing-
in" system, of which Amenca knovvS nothIng It means
that the employer supplies board and lodging as part pay But
all houses still give employes luncheon and tea (the latter a small
meal consisting of tea, bread and butter, cake, etc, at four to
five p. m.)
( In Great Britain the Inspection of goods sold IS not prac-ticed.
Salespeople wrap their own goods. In America inspec-tion
is almost universal.
The shopwalker of Bntain has been, and stIli is In many
businesses, a greater factor in the selling than In America The
old system of Importuning a customer and expectIng In every
case a purchase IS also, if I judge correctly, passmg, and the
methods of every country in the world except Great Bntal11,
which allow a VISItor to walk around an estabhshment at WIll,
to buy or not as she chooses, are now bemg more generally
adopted here
In America the ChIef thought of the merchant is to increase
his return J If larger stocks and 111creased expenses are neces-sary
for this result, then they must be accepted. He feels that
the resultant larger profits WIll follow, but he knows that unless
hIS return increases his profits cannot
In England, as I Judge (aga111 the result of the publicly
owned business), the stocks are held down to the lowest possible
pomt and the expemes are studIed with great care The dIvi-dends
must be ma111ta111ec1a'1cJ If added money is spent for mer-chandIse
and expenses the dIVIdends for that year may not be
forthcoming.
The purchase ticket or transfer slip is little known 111Eng-land.
Weare using it most satisfactorily in our business and
" . .
I HOFFMAN BROTH ERS CO.
FT. WAYNE. IND.
HARDWOOD LUMBER
SA~~D } QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY
.. ... .. .. ..
customers appreCIate its tIme and trouble-saving qualities.
Some houses have a "Country Customer's Card," but the town
customer pays or has goods charged to her account in each
department.
Of course, the transfer slip is recognized as a necessity in
Amenca, as It IS also in France and Germany.
A..dvertis111gIS usually the second item of expense in Ameri-ca,
exceeded only by the payrOll, and possibly rent. Not so in
England The money spent in the daily papers is comparatively
~mall, but much more is done in catalogs than across the ocean.
:.'\fany of these catalogs are very fine and very expensive.
\Employes 111England 111a general way compare very favor-ably
WIth those of any country in the world. They are intelli-gent,
thorough, naturally courteous and loyal. I !have been de-hghted
to see the evident interest and enjoyment which our peo-ple
take In the growth and progress of our business.
In many of the large stores of America too often courtesy,
10) alty and interest in the business are sadly wanting.
But my paper IS already too long. Let me end it by saying
that human nature IS the same thing here as in America. The
buymg pubhc appreciate courtesy, good service, a broad policy,
values, conveniences and all thO'S,e points which go to make a
model business just the same as there, but they are quicker and
kInder m expressmg that appreciation.
I applaud the getting together of merchants of different
parts of the world and the discussions which such meetings bring
about The American merchant can learn by visiting Great
Bntain, as can the English merchant by visiting America, and
anythmg I or my house can do at any time to assist in a more
thorough acquaintance between the merchants of Europe and
Amenca WIll be done. If any of our readers are specially inter-ested
111 any point of system, etc, m force here they are quite
at hberty to wnte to us for detailed Information. It will give us
great pleasure to reply to the best of our ability.
Yours very truly,
H. G. SELFRIDGE
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures, Per Set SOc. Sheldon
Steel Rack
Vises
Patent Malleable Clamp Fixtures.
E H SHELDON & CO ChIcago. Ill.
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 25 dozen Clamp FIxtures whIch
we boueht of you a httle over a year ago are glVlnj{ excellent service We are
well satisfied WIth them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
anything addItional In thIS line Yours truly,
SIOUXCity, Iowa. CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO.
30.000
Sold on approval and an uncon-dItional
money back guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We sohclt pnvIlege of sendmg samples and
our complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON & CO.
328 N. May St .• Chicago.
• ........ . ....
~l'1~pLlJ ~ Fan and "ABC"
Vertical Enclosed Self.Oiling
Steam Engine, for Induced or
Forced Draft Plant. Can be placed
in confined spaces which would oft.
times preclude the use of any other
outfit.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
require small space and have immense
capacities.
Some idea of the great capacity of the
"Sirocco" Fan may be had from the
fact that given two wheels of the same
diameter, producing the same pressure,
the "Sirocco" wheel would have 64%
greater capacity than the old style of
fan wheel at a speed 40% less.
"Sirocco" Fans have a high mechani-cal
efficiencywhether running at low,
medium or high speeds.
Latest Bulletin No. 284 MA,
sent postpaid upon request.
AMERICAN BLO'¥ER CoMPANY
----DETROIT.I"'!ICH ----
U S. A.
~e~ ~actories.
Talcott & Burk are to establish a new factory at WIllows,
Cal.
F. A. Gumbertz, Ignace Rosenthal, Jacob Fischer and J.
W. Stevens have mcorporated the MIdland Furniture company,
capitahzed at $50,000, to estab1Jsh a new factory at Evan.ovllle,
Ind.
G. W. Hoban, WIlham Haase, John Peterson and H. S.
Wilson have incorporated the Peterson Art Furniture company,
capitalized at $20,000, and will establIsh a factory at Peterson,
Minn.
Walsh & Laddy of Dedham, Mass., have secured a lease of
the old Latham mill property at Eastford, on the Natchaug
flver, near Putnam, Conn., and will convert it into an Axmin-ster
rug factory.
Benjamin lfupner of the Bay State Fun}iture company,
Worcester, Mass, Wlhodo busmess on the 25-cents-per-week club
plan, was arrested for violating the state anti-lottery law. He
FANS FOR MECHANICAL DRAFT
HAV~ ~ Fan Wheel. Rigid
in construction and lightest, smallest
and most efficient for any duty.
Ablest Enginel~ring Organization in the Blower Business, Operating Three Large Plants Devoted Exclusively
to the Manufacture of Fan Apparatus and the Allied Lines.
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
ATTENTION!
Send for sampl.. of our
Celebrated Nickel Sleel
Sword Tempered
BAND SAW BLADES
Warranted In every particular.
Best proPosItion on the market.
FRANK W. SWETT & SON
Mfa. of band saw blades and tools
1717·1719 W. AdamsSt. Chlcage
was tried and convicted on November 18 and paid a fine of $50
and costs.
Joseph J. Yawltz, late treasurer of the Mound City Furni-ture
company, St. LOUIS,Mo., has orgamzed the NatIOnal Chair
company with a paId up capital of $25,000, and IS buying ma-chmery
for a new plant to be located at North St. Louis.
To "manufacture, buy and sell musical instruments and
merchandise of every kmd, sort and nature," ]. B. Cleveland and
H. A. Man11lng have incorporated the Cleveland-Manning Piano
company, capltahzed at $5,000,WIth privilege of increasing to
$25,000 and WIll establish a factory in Atlanta, Ga.
New ~urniture Dealers.
Selak & Kraft are new fur11lture dealers in Detroit, Mich.
S. T. Johnson has opened a new fur11lture store at Menagha,
Minn.
Kemp's FurnIture store is a new establishment at River-siJde,
Cal.
Morgan & Whittaker are new furniture and carpet dealers
in Savannah, Ga.
Israel Bros. are new ftlfnlture dealers at 1060 North Sec-ond
street, Philadelphia, Pa.
R. L. McDonald & Co., have opened a new housefurnish-ing
store at Rockmgton, N. C.
J. C. Horne, I M Sanderson and Mrs. W. R. Newberry
\have lncorporated the Magnolia Furmture company, capitalized
at $25,000, to open a new store at Magnolia, N. C.
The Union Furniture company, incorporated by William C.
SmIth, Jacob c. Froehch and John A. Buck, with $10,000 capi-tal
stock, are new house furnishers in Denver, Col
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
..
"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests; you will then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories, Sash and Door Mills, Rauroad Companies, Car Builders and others 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.
._-----------~I
Buildings That Will :Need Furniture. \\ II Kmght .nSO East Sixty-fifth street, $4,500, R Kane.
Residences-Detrclt, :\llch-Helman Llchman, Tl1cman 10838 \la'i'''e a\enue, <j;2,;00, S GRose, 12318 Ingomar ave-
'itreet and \\ ard lane, $-+,000, Frank Luzon Chene and I el n nue $2, :;00, F I aulhaber, 3427 Dal"y avenue, $2,500
street", $3,000, Frank A :\Ia"tern 408 :\Ianche;,ter -,treet, Pltbburg, Pa - '\lbert Mosblack, 448 Alton avenue,
$3,000; Frank Capello, 280 Seybul n street, ~4,000, CIaI ence $4 :;00, \\ 111lamPOle, Br) ant and F dl ragut streets, $8,000
\'\ Fllcketc n, Belvidere and Gra\ es "treets, 5>3,:;00 Il1l1me Ll11Loln \eb -~lr" Mary Peters, 2817 Holdredge street,
Hlttmger, 493 Hamilton street, S4000, Jucl-,on Htac!\\a\ 1C).? ';3000
Josephllle street, $2,300, A J Herber, 31:; :\la)buI} "tteet, Calgdl) Sa"k-\\l1ltam Re11, 702 Fourteenth ;,treet,
$2,500, A \V Bather, 226 Plllglee "tteet, S-+-+OO,Damel \\ 82 :;00, 1hlmd.., Lnden\ood, 680 I~tfteenth street, $3,000; 13
Wolf, 339 Eucltd a\ enue, $3,000, J UllllS Peter1m, 39 Richmond Haggan, 418 T\\ elfth a\ enue, $2,800, H J Rowan, 256
street, $3,500 T\\ ent\ -th11d a\ enue, ';>3,000
Dallas, Tex -J A;,hford Hughes, E\ ergleen and::,t LOUh InchanapolIc, Ind -\\ Ilham H Van Mtller, ThIrty-second
street", $2,500, Harr) L ~ea), 301 :\Ia1l1 S11 eet, 88000 C L
Plral1l0, 776 Ma1l1 street, $3,730, Chatle~ Boll, 332 Reiger a\ e-nue,
$3,500
Den, er, Col- John ~lapell, Oh1O and South Lmcoln
"treets, $4,000, Frank \\ ~ ewton, \vashmgton and Tenth
streets, $10,000, Frank J Kennedy, (eda1 and ~outh Lata\-
ette stl eets, $3,000
ChIcago, Ill-Mar) E :\lcGonagle, -+2-+9 \ \ est 110m oe
street, $6,600, W11ltam A 5chleng, 80-+2 Sagma\\ a\ tnue,
$3,000, Charles S Armstrong, 10456 Seeley a\ enue, 88000
Martm Houseman, 10225 La Salle stteet, 82300, Tohn L\nn"
3913 West Monroe street, :];G,'250, ['rank :\farek 3DOO \\ e~t
Twenty-fourth street, $:;,000, H enq '\ orman, 3329 J Lbtme
street, $2,800, SHeck, 7230 Emerald a\ enue, 83,300, '\ \ an
Bergen, 10654 State street, $3,000, James Peterson, 620()
vVmchester avenue, '1;2,:;00, John McLachlan, 11-+52 Prame a\ e-nue,
$4,500, John Peda, 3624 Dn ersey street, $3,000, \\ A
B1rk, 3959 West lullerton avenue, $8,000, T J Hodg;,on, 1061
Carmen avenue, $3,800; :\Irs Emllte Neuenteldt, 3902 South
Ort avenue, $8,000
Cmc1l1natJ, 0 -Robert S F1l1ch, McMillan and Clem,lew
streets, $5,500, Roy S Fox, ConcOl d and Morgan streets
$6,000, AntonellI Rlsselt, Kinsey and HIghland avenue~,
$6,000, Henry HemlOth, 1268 \Voolper aHnue, $4,500, Kather-me
Vetter, 4209 Glen\'; ay avenue, $2,500 ..
Bll1ghamton, ='J Y -A C Crossley, 1 Perry street, $~,OOO, 13eavers
Fa1th L Mtllard, 286 DavIs street, $5 600,):1 B :\Itllal d 40
Chestnut street, $2,800
Jacksonvtlle, Fla -R D Drysdale, \Valnut and ThIrd
streets, $4,500
Boston, Mass - \v tlltam T Henderson, 26 Raven street,
$3,000, Vhlltam H vVhlte, 229 South FaIn lew, ,Vest Dorches-ter,
$8,000; John Monroe, 37 Malcolm street, \Vest Roxbury,
$5,000; Mrs R T Stearns, 15 TIleston "treet, Dorchester,
$4,500; G M Yatl, 57 Montfern avenue, Enghton, $10,000.
M1l1l1leMendebohn, 200 QUll1cy street, $4,000
Cleveland, 0 -H J LeWIS, 1181 East 111th street, $5,000,
"BEAVER," "GINDERELLA," "DOCKASH"
STOVE HEADQUARTERS
"THE LINES THAT SELL"
NoteIMPERIAL BEAVER-one ofmany.
Best, They Stana the rest."
THIS is the IMPERIAL REAVER. It is the finest cooking
range made anywhere in the world.
We think so, and so will you when you see its advantages:
Study the above pIcture. The glass oven door is guaranteed
not to break. No heat lost when you look at your baking. This
range holds Its heat longest, saves 25% in fuel, and has unusual hot
water capacity.
It is the best looking range bUilt-and wears as well as it looks.
Send for samples and see it-but we warn you that no other kind will
ever satisty you again, If you ~o!
W. D. SAGER, 330-342No.Wafer Sf., CHICAGO
WEEKLY ARTISAN 23
and Chfton streets, $3,000, Joseph MInturn, 2182 )J orth CapI-tol
avenue, $4,000, FranC1S BIown, \VashIngton boulevard and
Tvventy-e1ght street, $3,750, W Indield MIller, Langley and
Roosevelt streets, $3,000, A C rrankee, 1637 Prospect street,
$3,000
Toledo, 0 -John vVashneck, 320 Buffalo street, $3,600
Lotus\ 11k Ky -AddIson R SmIth, 1423 South ThIrd
street, $11,250, E L Boswell, DeeI Park, $4,000; Mrs JOSle C
Eblen, 1711 Edgeland street, $6,000
RIchmond, Va - \V \V Haley, 1809 Grove avenue, $5,000
Atlanta, Ga -A P Hernngton, 156 Summ1t avenue,
$2,500, Paul GoldsmIth, ql q HIghland avenue, $4,500; J H
\Vh1senant, 84 PIne street, $3,000, Mrs S C Stenuns, 80
Haas street, $4,300
Oakland, Cdl-E J LIo) d, 606 Ml1es avenue, $2,500,
Robert Cords, Lake Shore and \Valla VIsta avenues, $3,500,
J B MartIn, 190 Lawton avenue, $2,800; J G QUInn, AdelIne
and ThIrteenth streets, $3,000, A \V Claassen, East Four-teenth
street and 1'1111t) -slxth a\ enue, $4,000, \V H \Vebb,
840 Alcatraz avenue, $3,000
Oklahoma CIt), Okla -Mary Beckel, 2415 Hudson street,
$2,500, DI 0 P .:VlcNa1r, 1815 \Vest Th1rty-e1ghth street,
$3,500, G W Anthon), 1708 West Th1rty-eIghth street,
$2,500; Joseph Roster, 1035 Ea:,t EIghth ;,tteet, $4,000, C E
Franke, 629 \Vheeler avenue, $4,500
M111neapob, l\IInn - \\ B R1ley, 4025 vVest Lake Har-nett
boulevard, $8,000, 0 D Sell, 1826 James avenue, $3,500;
Jenme C \Vl1hamson, 4223 Abbott avenue, $3,000; Raymond
Bndgeman, 4143 \\ entwOlth avenue, $3,000; M D Purdy,
5024 Forty-second avenue, $13,000, Theophl1e Ochu, 1118
Knox avenue, $5,000
Columbus, 0 -E K Taylor, 147 South Sandusky street,
$3,000; F D l\Ianon, SlY;; Ea:,t ::,tate street, $2,500; Rosa A
Kelter, 2480 F111dlay avenue, $2,500, L \V Gadd1s, Wallhalla
Park place, $4,500, N \V Munshower, 159 Cleveland avenue,
$7,000, W A Rogers, 363y;; South Central avenue, $3,000
Salt Lake C1ty, Utah -Anna B Petty, Gramercy Park,
$4,000, Mrs C D Beers, Gramercy Park, $3,000; Ed1th E
Prout, Cap1tol and Jackson avenues, $3,000
Peona, Ill-A F \Vard, 803 Seventh avenue, $2,500,
F C Ste"" art, \Vest Instttute avenue, Uplands, $4,500; M. F
Prose, 1040 McClure avenue, $2,800, \V P Gauss, 213 South
MadIson, $4,000, Ed Kerns, Garland street and Knoxvl1le
road, $3,200
Toronto, Ont - \Vl1ham Grogan, 25 Grafton avenue,
$4,000, E J Crocker, Beoth aud Queen streets, $4,000; W C
Mathew:" 6 Chestnut Park road, $12,000; Harry J Rea, Rox-borough
street and Glen road, $4,500; James A Stewart, Dun-
~..••.• - ••••••......•••. --_.. ••• • ·1
The Good Old Reliable Work Bench
THAT NEVER GETS OUT OF STYLE.
For Many Years Made ExclUSIvely by
c. CHRISTIANSEN, 2219 Grand Ave., CHICAGO
Also manufacturer of the ChIcago Truck for woodworking factotles.
Send for Catalogue.
_ . ... ..
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
BUllt WIth double arbors, sliding table and eqUipped complete WIth taper pm
guages carefully graduated. Th:s machm e represents the heIght m saw bench con-struchon.
It ISdeSIgned and bUIlt to reduce the cost of sawmg stock.
Write us for descript.ve informstlOn.
THE TANNEWITZ WORKS, ~~tIfIg:~PIDS,
\ egan and Heath streeb, $8,000; James Turner, 125 Spnng-hur:
ot avenue, $7,000; John T Colle), 814 IndIan road, $5,000
La:, Angeles, Cal-Rebecca Punter, 228 East Seventh
St1eet, $3,000, Opal Arthurholt, 524 \Vest FOl t) -first place,
$3,000, Ahce Clute, 619 Commonwealth a\ enue, $3,500; B L.
Trout, 215 North Magnoha street, $3,300, D C Gates, 256
Le1ghton avenue, $2,500, Jen111e McComas, 3123 Ma111tou
street, $5,500.
Portland, Ore -Thomas Schultz, East Twelfth and Knott
streets, $5,200; Thomas VIgors, Ladd avenue and Palm street,
$3,000, Ida ]\;I E, erett, 688 East Forty-e1ghth street, ;1;2,300;
H W C1awford, 486 Mad1son street, $3,000, \TV C Beaumont,
920 Cypress street, $4,000
Syrause, N Y --Ph111p BroVl n, HamIlton street and l\Il1ton
avenue, $4,000; John C Ball, 520 Colendge avenue, $6,000;
Frank Huntley, 1410 South Geddes street, $4,500, ]. R Stoup,
306 Green street, $4,000
Miscellaneous Buildings-Kelly & L1gnell are buddmg a
$50,000 hotel on Supenor street, Duluth, Mmn, to be called
R1benack A permIt has been Issued for the erectlOn of St
Andrew's LIthual1lan Cathohc church 111Ha1tfOld, Conn, at a
cost of $75,000 The Swed1sh Luthe1 an church of Hartford,
Conn, are bmld1l1g a parsonage to cost $12,500 The Kmghts
of Columbus of I ndIanapehs, Ind , are remodel1l1g the1r hall at
a cost of $16,000 The Reorga111zed Church of Christ, Latter
Day Sa1l1t", are budd1l1g a $10,000 church at 2602 North
Twenty-fourth street, Omaha, Neb R R Thompson 1Sbul1d-
1l1g a $10,000 hotel on Ash, P1l1e and ThIrd streets, Portland,
01 e The l\fason l\IethodI sts of TacC'ma, vVash , are erectmg a
$30,000 church
"A ransackmg sale" ought to stIr up the people
Henry S Stevens of Stevens & Bras, furniture dealers of
Jacksonvllle. l<la, has SQld hIS 1l1terest 111the bus111ess to Ray-mond
Sewell The new firm ,,111 be known as the Stevens-Se-well
FurnIture company
The annual meet1l1g of the ~ atlOnal AssocIation of Spril1g
Bed Manufacturers WIll be held at French LICk Springs, Iud,
December 7 and 8 The cost schedule wlll be one of the pnn-opal
topICS of dIScussIon
Credltors have filed a petltlOn in bankruptcy against Segar
v\ h1t1l1g, who has been conduct111g fur11lture stores at Hamp-ton,
Va, and at Cape Charles for many years He recently
closed h1S Cape Charles store.
Grant & HUl st, who recently purchased the busmess of the
J C Johnson FurnIture company at AustIn, M111n., have pur-chased
the Austm Furmtuure company's store and will merge
the two m the latter's location.
On account of fa11111ghealth W. E. Longley, furniture,
hard\\ are, Je\\ elry and undertaking, of Noblesville, Ind., has
sold h1s furmture and hardware departments to Richardson &
Porter, formerly of Irvmgton, Ind.
J Cohen and A DlOn, second hand furniture dealers of
St011lngton, Conn, were conv1cted of having stolen furniture
from summer cottages on the shore of Long IslaJ11d sound and
bemg unable to pay fines and costs were sent to jail.
The H & VV. B. Drew company, of Jacksonville, Fla.,
\\ hose office furmture department was storm wrecked recently,
have secured new quarters and resumed business wt 228 West
Bay State and have rece1ved several car loads of new stock or-dered
by W1re
\Y A Reynolds, who has a general store at Thorsby and
another at J am1e~on, Chnton county, Ala, 1S financially embar-rassed.
Three furmture Jobb111g firms asked t:hat he be declared
bankrupt, but he hopes to effect a settlement and have the peti-tIOn
w1thdrawn
The Bureau of Manufacturles, Washington, publishes a
lbt of busmess openmgs 111western Canada showing that furni-ture
fact ones are wanted at Edmonton, Alberta and Waldron,
Saskatchewan Furmture stores are wanted at IEdgerton, Al-berta
and Leney, Saskatchewan.
The comm1ttee of 100 app0111ted by Mayor Gaynor to con-
SIder the advlsab1htv of hold111g a World's Fair in New York
m 1913, has reported that there 1S no reason for such a fair at
that time. The contentlOn that B13 will be the 300th anniver-sary
of the foundmg of the city is denied.
The Temple-Stewart ChaIr company, who were recently
burned out at East Pnnceton, Mass, and recently bought the
old Holman & Harns plant at Baldw111sville, same state, have
~:~oted work m the fi11lshmg department at their new locatioll
and w1ll soon have the entire plant in operation.
The Brunsw1ck- Balke-Collender company, largest manufac-turers
Qf b1lhard tables in the world, have purchased from
George VV F1scher the property at the southeast corner of Wa-bash
avenue and Harnson streets, Chicago, for $400,000 and
have planned Improvements to cost an additional $500,000.
Attorneys for members of the defunct furniture trust, so-called,
of Oregon and Wash111gton, have moved for a new trial
of the case of the G1lman AuctIOn and CommIssion company of
Portland, Ore, in whIch the compla111ants were awarded judg-ment
for double the amount of damages actually sustained.
Charles R. Brown has stanted suit against Elizabeth Mar-shall,
hIS partner m the South Side Furniture company, dealers,
of Columbus, 0 , askmg that the business be placed in the hands
of a receIver. He charges that the store has been paY111glarge
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
H E ChristIe has purchased VV r McCoy's furmture store
store at Corning, Iowa
R. J. Shattuck & Co, furnIture dealers of LItchfield, :'I11ch
have sold out to W K. Markham
J. W. Harpster has purchased C H Kmgdon's mterest m
the Mam Street Furmture store at Gnnnell, Iowa.
BenJam111 Glass has purchased the fUlmture bt1S111eCSform-erly
conducted by Samuel Levm at Suftern, X. J
J. H. K11lckerbocker has purchased the turmture and nn-dertaking
busmess of C E Comley at Fo\\ ler, Ind
The Inner Brace ChaIr company of ~ugusta, 11e, have re-duced
theIr calptal stock from $300,000 to $100,000
The great factory of the Challenge Refngerator company,
at Grand Haven, M1ch, IS m full operatlOll on orders.
Discharge in bankruptcy has been gianted Douglas T Cook,
dealer m office furnIture at 2 Dutch street, X ew York
The Blanchard-HamIlton Furmture company of ShelbyvIlle,
Ind., are building a three-story addltlOn to theIr factory
W. H. Griswold, dealer 111 furmture, "alIpaper, pIcture
frames, etc., at Charles CIty, Ia , has sold out to \\'Ilham SmIth
The Banner Furmture company of 11uncle, Ind have 111-
creased theIr capital stock by IssUlng $25,000 In prefel red stock
The Eureka Manufactunng company, furnIture makel s of
Newcastle, Ind , have 111corporated theIr busmess CapItal stock
$15,000.
The Deamer Furniture and Carpet company of Kansas CIt}.
needll1g larger quarters, has leased a five story build1l1g at 1228
Main street.
William Heap & Sons, manufacturers of samtary closets
at Grand Haven, Mich. are operating theIr factory to capaCIty
with a book full of orders
Rice & Co, furniture dealers of VIcksburg, MISS., have had
a plate glass front put in the1r store whIch is now one of the
finest busmess buildings in the city.
Charles R. Kauffman, furniture dealer of Cleveland, 0 . ha~
purchased a site on whIch he WIll ereat a store bmldmg on \\ est
Twenty-fifth street and Meyer avenue
Samuel P. Garonzlk, dealer m furmture, carpets, etc, Steel-ton,
Pa., has filed a voluntary petltlOn in bankruptcy, schedulmg
liabilities of $2,372 and assets of $1,900
Emil Kiefer, upholsterer of Toledo, 0., has filed a voluntarv
petition in bankruptcy. He schedules his hablhtles at $21,3-16
and places a value of $2,500 on hIS assets.
On the petition of creditors a receiver has been appol11ted
for J. c. Boyer, general dealer at North Webster, Ind. Liabil-ities
are estimated at $7,500, with assets of $2,500
The Frontier Furniture company of Buffalo, NY, ha\ e
oper:ed their new store on Main and Chippewa streets Over
25,000 persons were entertamed on the opemng day.
David Dias has purchased the interest of the FIeld estate
in the furn~ture and carpet store of L FIeld & Co., Chnton,
Mass., and is now the sole proprietor of the business
The Lee Bros. Furmture company, dealers, of Bridgeport
Conn., are erecting a five story bUIlding at 1379 :'Ilam street
It will cost $30,000 and wl1l be ready for occupancy m January
The bankruptcy proceedIngs agal11st R. Elmer & Son, fur-niture
dealers, of 32 Hovvard street, New York City, have been
dIsmIssed, the firm havmg effected a settlement at 25 cents on
the dollar.
Albert B, Charles L and Robert A Day, wholesale and re-tail
furniture dealers of St. LOUIS, Mo, have mcorporated under
the name of the Day Bras Furmture company Capital stock,
all paid in, $15,000.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
profits in which he has not been allowed to share and he wants
an accou11lting.
The officers of the St. LoUIs, Mo, Furmture Board of
Trade for 1911 are: PresIdent, A. B. Cltppard; secretary,
Henry M. Holtgrew; treasurer, Edward RItter. Duectors-
A. Partridge, Joseph A. Stemmeyer, John F. MIchaels, C J.
Kostuba, George A Mellon, J. H. Kentnor, H. A Vornbrock
and J. ]. Gruender.
A reporter for the Chicago Tnbune claims to have dIscov-ered
that more furniture is sold at wholesale in ChIcago than in
all other cilties of the country combmed. He has found 220
factories in the city with a combined output of over $25,000,000,
and claims that the product of other factories, sold in Chicago,
raises the total" wholesale figures to about double that amount
John Fink bought a forty-dollar davenport from the James
Furniture company of St. Louis, Mo, and found that It was m-fested
with insects. He returned it and was given another which
Ma.de by Rockford Frame a.nd Flxture Co •
Rockford, III
also had undesirable inhabitants Then he asked for rugs and
lace curtains to the amount of his investment. The company
refused to make the exchange, he sued them and was awarded
judgment for $40 and costs.
The Greenhut-SIegel-Cooper company of New York, the
six-mtllton-dollar corporatIOn formed by mergmg the Slegel-
Cooper company and the firm of Greenhut & CO, 1S officered as
follows: President Joseph B Greenhut; vIce preSIdents, Jerome
SIegel, WIlham H. Cooper and Henry Morgcnthau, secretary and
treasurer, Benjamin J Greenhut. The chrectors are the officers
and Nelson W. Greenhut, Benjamin HIllman, Frank C Cadden
and E. R. Wolfner.
.A New Industry at Grand Haven.
The Fountain Specialty company, who recently moved from
Chicago to Grand Haven, Mlch, are erectmg a large factory
and will take possession of the same early in January. The
company manufactures counters and special furniture for use
with soda fountains.
OUR
25
STAINS WORK
They don't raise
the grain. They re-produce
exactly the
finishdesired. They
are the products of
practical men.
Modern facilities
and expert knowl-edge
go h:and In
hand here. Above
all our ~stains are
practical.
Put this state-ment
to the test by
putting our stains to
the test. You'll find
they ALL work
ALWAYS.
Write for sample
panel to desk No.3.
MARlETT A PAINT II&£2~~~Hl~O'1I
InqUlry IS not furmshed In the letter To make matters worse
such a letter may be wntten In long hand more or less dIfficult
to read 'lnd may, fUl thermore, be wntten on both sIdes of the
"heet HoV\ much better for all concerned If for each subject
a separate sheet IS used--and If the letter be typewntten
chances for errors, etc , are mlmmlzed
Moreover, In the case of remIttances the use of an Item-
Ized pay statement greatly faClhtates matters and saves much
extra correspondence Many concerns keep a carbon copy
of theIr pay statements for reference and use III case any POInt
or objectIOn IS raIsed by the payee
In "endIng In an order to a firm wIth whom he has had
no dealIngs the retaller, unless hIS bUSIness IS of a sIze to gIve
h1l11a broad reputation, WIll expedIte dehvery by accompany-
Ing same \\ Ith the name of some concern wIth whIch he has
had actn e busllless relatIOns, preferably a firm located III the
same CIty to whIch thIS first order IS sent. If such names can-not
be gIven the wholesaler ought to be Instructed to send the
goods COD, If he has any doubts, until a credIt baSIS can
be estabhshed
Reordel s sent by mall should embrace all necessary par-ticulars
and II hen sendIng 111 open orders It IS best to state
the quantlt). "ILe, color, \\;Idth, and other particular:::., accord-
Ing to the lIne of goods deslfed. as well as the range of pnces,
and the applo\.lmate number of styles wanted Such orders
"hould ahl a) s bear not ouly the sender's name, CIty, state and
"ll1pment-date, but abo rout1l1g InstructIOns, and If valuable
goods al e ordered to come by express the wholesaler should
be told V\hethel he "hould or should not "declare" theIr value
In the receIpt at the tIme of shIpment
RetaJlers when placlllg an order with travel1l1g men or
\\ hen purchaSIng goods on the market should always inSIst
upon recen Ing a copy of the order, IncludIng terms, time of
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
HOW TO SAVE TIME AND EXPENSE
Suggestions That May Be Used to Advantage by
Both Retailers and Wholesalers.
By the use of the sImplest precautIOn:::. I etallers may sal e
both themselves and theIr wholesale fnends consIderable cor-respondence
and thus aVOId numerous controverSIes on 1\ hat at
the start are tnfl111g matters In a recent I:':>suewe mentIOned
a number of p0111tS whIch taken Indlvlduall) by some mIght
be regarded as of mInor Importance, ) et attentIOn to \\ hlch on
the part of wholesalers would le"sen In no small degl ee the
work of vanous functlOnanes and agenCIes 111the retall :::.tOle
WhIle, however, the wholesalel frequently pelmlt'" la\.lt\
on the part of hIS emplOyes In legal d to "ueh pOInh, It 1:0
equally true that retall concerns themseh e" too otten tall to
make thlllgs as easy as they mIght for the wholesaler' In
many of such cases the delays thus occasIOned are apt to cause
consIderable Inconvemence to the retaller hlmselt For
example, the retaller wlll often mentIOn on one and the "ame
letter sheet a number of matters, each of \1 hlch 1ns to be taken
up by separate functlOnanes or departments of the \\ hole..,ale
concern Thus one such letter may contaIn reference to a
check enclosed, order ne\1 good:::., compla111 regardIng a short-age
on some prevIOus shIpment, and peJ1nps deal \\Ith one or
two other entirely different subjects
N ow It IS obI IOUS that thIS letter \\ hen It reaches Ib
dest111atlOn must go In turn to the addre:::.:::.ee:::.ea"hlel tl h1')
order clerk, to hIS shIppIng clerk and perhaps to the cor-respondence
clerk or to the manager, and may he on the de"'k
of each of these functlOnanes, recelvlllg or a \\ altlllg attentIOn,
for a couple of day s And all the more so If as IS otten the
case, a clear and complete explanatIOn as to each transactIon or
TURPS-NO.
The Only Perfect substitute for Turpentine.
Contains No Gasoline, No Benzine, No Headlight Oil.
For use in reducing Varnish.
For Use in CUTTING DOWN EXPENSES.
TRY IT.
The results speak for themselves. Barrel sent on approval.
THE LAWRENCE·McFADDEN CO.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
------------ -
WEEKLY ARTISAN 27 --_. - -.,
MACHINES-People
wonder where their profits are going when the trouble usually lies in poor equip-ment.
A little foresight in the begmning would have saved them dollars-a little more money in-vested
at the start in "OLIVER" "QUALITY" equipment.
Some manufacturers of wood working tools shght their output by putting in poor materials-employing
poor workmen-simply to be able to make a httle more profit. "Ohver" tools are bUilt
along machme toollmes-careful-accurate-durable- safe.
Some purchasers fall to mvestigate thoroughly before placing their order. Some unscrupulous
salesman tells them to purchase something-they go ahead -find out too late they are wrong-lose
money, whereas a letter addressed to us would have procured our catalogs-set them thinking-saved
them money.
QUALITY -------
ISN'T IT TOO BAD-ISN'T
THAT TOO BAD.
"OLIVER" No. 61 Surfacer •
"OLIVER" No. 60 Saw Bench.
OURLINE-SURFACE
PLANERS
HAND JOINTERS
SANDERS
WOOD TRIMMERS
CHAIN MORTISERS
LATHES
SAW BENCHES
SWING CUT.OFF SAWS
BAND SAWING MACHINES
BORING MACHINES
SAFETY CYUNDERS
VISES, CLAMPS, ETC., ETC.
ADDRESS DEPARTMENT "D"
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES-lot
National Bank Bldg , Chicago, III.
No. 50 Church St., New York CIty.
1125 West Temple St., LoaAoeeles, Cal.
Pacific Bide., Seattle, Wash.
..
delivery, shlppmg mstructlOns, etc These COpIes the retaIler
should file with hIS recelvmg clerk or whoever may have
charge of such detaIls so the bIlls for the goods can be com-pared
therewIth, etc.
On receIpt of express packages, etc, the retaIlers should
make a memorandum of the shIpper, weIght, and expressage,
prepaId or collect If the package IS numbered by the whole-saler
thIS number, too, should be noted Such notatIOns WIll
greatly faCIlitate tracmg, If necessary, the adjustment of
claims, etc.
Frequently, when a package is opened, invoices, un-noticed,
are thrown away WIth the wrapping paper The
mV01ce should, therefore, be looked for before the wrappers
are thrown aSide and the contents of the shIpment should at
once be carefully gone over and checked Any shortage, dam-age
or other discrepancy should at once be reported to the
wholesaler and a carbon copy of the claim should be retained
for reference.
Employes who receive packages from express companIes
should be instructed to take special pains to see that the
packages are in good order, as the "shortage" may have been
occasIOned en route In the case of packages receIved by ~-.------_._. _. --------------..-.~_..--..,-
I...- .. .- -- ... -- ...I
freight, where the quantity of merchandIse is naturally larger,
stIll greater care m checking IS essential. Erroneous claims for
shortage frequently result from a store's lack of proper recelV-mg
faCIlities Agam, clerks in theIr eagerness to put on sale
goods whIch are overdue, or otherWise badly needed, may
remove them-or some of them-from the recelvmg room
before the quantities have been compared with the mvolce
-When goods do not arrive Wlthm a reasonable time after
receIpt of mVOIce the wholesaler should at once be notified
The sooner he receIves such information the easier Will it be
for him to trace goods and, thus, the sooner can they be
received by the retailer.
If goods have to be returned the party at fault ought to be
promptly informed what IS wrong And when such returns are
made an inVOIce should be enclosed With the goods, or, better
still, mailed separately. Before packing such Items the
retaIler's employee should u:-.e due care m checkmg off the
debIt memo therefor.
The placing of the retailer's name on such a returned
goods package will greatly facilitate settlement by the whole-saler
WIthout such name and address the origin of the pack-age
in question may become known to the wholesaler only
after long delay and possibly much correspondence.
Goods that are sent back to the manufacturer for repairs
should be carefully recorded. The account of the wholesaler
can be temporarily debIted With the amount (a notation
"repaIr" being made in the ledger) vVhen the goods come
back the wholesaler's account should be promptly credited
The small amount of extra time required for attention to
the foregoing detaIls '" III more than pay for Itself m the
aVOIdance of letter wntmg and costly delays -Dry Goods
Economist .
Effect of the Long·Short Haul Law.
~ pecuIJar conclJiJon of affairs is reported from New
Ollean.., m 1egalCl to the long and short haul clause in the
ne\\ mter"tclte commerce law. It appears that the southern
1 aJIJoael aSSOl1atIOns have deCIded to observe the plovisions
ot the la" \\ lthout even a protest wh11e the New Orleans
110Z11 d of 11 ade propose to fight It PresIdent Elhs of the
boal d, \\ hen asked \\ hy busmess men of New Orleans should
oppo"e a la\\ that has been endorsed by nearly all commercial
01~anlLatlOlb m the country, saId they felt that the operation
ot the long and Sh01t haul clause would work dIsastrously to
t1le Imsmbs mtel est of Ne\V Orleans and all seaport towns
\\ hlCh had heretofore been benefited by water competition.
He declal ed that he intended to take immediate steps to in-struct
the freIght and tl ansportatIOn department of the organ-
IntlOn to Slg111fyIt::, \\ Illmgness to act in co-operation with
the lallroad- m protest1l1g agamst the sectlOn of the law. In
dlscu",omg the subject, :Vlr EllIS said:
"1he boa 1 el of trade (lId all It could to assist the railroads
m plotestmg agamst the clause \\ hen it was enacted into the
1a\\ and ItS posltlOn is unchanged VI e are opposed to the
clalbe becau"e \\ e feel that It w11l work inestimable injury
t) the Jobbmg and other mterests of New Orleans.
"E\Cl) "eapOIt town in the country is bound to suffer .
It \\111ha, e the effect of bU1ldmg up the business of the interior
to\\ ns and depllVl11g the seaport towns of the natural advan-tages
m the \\ ay of rate makmg, which they have by reason
of God gn en water competltlOn to regulate the tanffs and
c1lftelentlals .,
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
IDEAL STAMPING AND TOOL CO.
SOCKETS, DOWELS,
TOP fASTENERS
and GUIDES
for Extension Tables.
Also special stampings
In steel and brass.
Write for
NO·KUM.OUT TABLE SOCKET. Patent applIed for. samples and prices.
465 N. Ottawa St., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
"---_.~~__.._._._._.,_._._~~----.--~-
LOUIS HAHN I
154 Llvmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
"----------_. __ .-_._. _. _. ---------~
I
II,...I
Clllzens Telephone 1702.
DESIGNS
and Details of Furniture
-----_.~----_._._..-_._-_.--~------..-.-.~-
IMPR~~~gKE::I~I~NE~L EVATO RS II
Belt, Electnc and Hand Power
THF BEST HAND POWER FOR FLR-"ITLRI: S10RI:S
Send for Catalogue and Pnces
KIMBALL BROS. CO" 1067 Ninth St., Council BlUffs, la,
Kimball Elevator Co •• 7li Commerce Bldg ,Kansqs CIty, I Mo, J Peyton Hnnlel 1ermmaI Blclg: Dqllas rexas
Western Engmeenng SpecIaltIes Co 1 Den\er, Lolo ..
~-.. ....'-"
How about the 0 0 Z E?
If you found a hole a yard square
in the side of your dry kiln, you
would repair it at once. Don't you
know that the heat is oozing from
millions of pores in your wood,
brick or concrete kilns? That the
combined area of these pores makes
a hole bigger than your kiln door?
Seal these pores with steam proof,
acid proof, fire proof
EBONOID
Kiln Coating
and see how easy it is to keep your
kiln hot. Ebonoid will also stop
rusting and prevent decay.
SOLE AGENTS
Grand Rapids Veneer Works
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
~••••••••••••••••• __._._._._. •••••• 4
Furniture Fires.
Pal ker & 1\1anett, furntlUre dealers of OroVIlle, Cal, suf-fered
a lo~~ of 825,000 by fire 111theIr store recently Insured.
The tactor) of the Butler Brothers Plano Manufacturing
compan), C111c111natwl,as damaged to the extent of $20,000 on
~ 0, embel 17 Insurance, $13,700
The bllllcl111goccupIed by Sufall & Countryman, furniture
and carpet deale!,) of Somerset, Pa, was badly damaged by fire
recently ] he los~, estimated at $20,000, is partially insured.
Haldman, Peck & Co's piano factory on West Forty-ninth
-treet, New York, was almost totally destroyed by fire on No-
"\ember 22 Loss, estimated at $200,000 to $250,000 partially
111sured.
SparkS from a locomotIve set fire to the tank that supplies
\\ atel tal the automatIc cpnnklers 111the Globe furniture fac-t01)
of EvansvIlle, Ind, recently, but was extinguished before
It had released the contents
Busy Putting in Blow Pipes.
The Gland Rclplds Blow Pipe and Dust Arrester com-pam
ha, e clo"ecI a contract for and are now working on the
complete refittmg of the bIg factory of the Bissell Carpet
5\\ eeper company They wJ11 install a 100 inch fan, the
leugest that 1s made They are also putting in a big dust
all e,tel f01 the J\hchlgan Alkali company of \Vyandotte, and
plpJ11£;the the plant of the Great Lakes Veneer company at
J\1ul11-.mg,\IICh.
Irwin Elected Chairlllan.
The new chal ter commIssion of Grand Rapids elected
Rohert \\ In, m of the Royal Furniture company chairman
The commISSIon has a membership of fifteen able professional
and blb111essmen and ItS duty is the drafting of a new charIer
for the CIty. The abohshment of ward divisions is favored
by many CItizens.
------------------------------- - -
WEEKLY ARTISAN 29
Play the Same Game.
How does the mall ordel house get business? Dy adyel tlsing
By mallmg mynads of Clrculars, folders, card", letter" and cata-logs
There ale but few people 111your commu111ty who do not
regularly recelVe pnnted advertlsmg from that sourse. Furll1-
ture earned by mall order houses IS generally mfenor to that
earned by dealers. Your people, hke all others, want good thl11g",
and they ~ant to be told about good th111gS TheIr m111ds are
always 111a receptive mood when It comes to read111g about any-th111g
that WIll make theIr homes more attractive The mall or-der
house knows thIS. PossIbly you know It But the mall or-der
man does not stop there. He takes advantage of hIS knowl-edge,
and IS everlastl11gly tell111g your peopre, through pnnted
salesmen, of the th111gs he has to sell lt stands to reason that
you, nght on the ground, have the first advantage; provld111g
your lme IS well selected and up to date In design and fill1"h, and
you are able to sell It at low, yet pl0fitable pnces.
To get people to recogll1ze your store as the one to patron-ize
will require a lIttle effort, but by follow111g the mall order
man's example, you can keep hIS furll1ture sales in your town
down to a mi111mum.
The Northern Furniture company IS thoroughly alIve in as-sisting
its dealers to meet this mall order competitIOn. For
years It has worked to produce a qualIty of furll1ture superior to
what IS generally sold by the mall order house, yet at pI Ices that
enable every dealer to compete. WIth a well selected sto!=k of
the Northern lIne, the dealer has every opportunIty to crowd out
the mall order houses in hIS territory.
To get started on thIS, get up a senes of short, personal let-ters,
and mall them to your regular customers, and to those wlho
should be your customers. But send them at stated intervals-every
t\'.o or three \\Ceks Get up a neat, httle folder gIving a
more detaIled descnptlOn of the good'S, WIth an IllustratIOn or two,
send thIS folder with the first letter. WIth the thllJ letter send
another folder. Keep at it.
lt has been proved, times WIthout number, that such a meth-od
has practIcally elIminated mall order competition. And better
yet, It has increased dealers' sales at an astonishing rate.
Remember this, the mail order man WIll sell hIS goods to
an} one who WIll pay his pnce. He'll sell goods 111your town, if
you don't. It is up to you -Northern Furmture.
p •••••••••••••• _.- •• -._ ••••
1015 to 1043 Palmer Avenue,
DETROIT, MIC".
No. 550
Price $8.75
Palmer Manufadurin~
======(om~anJ======
.....-................ . .......•.
THE, TZ":ndelpARlOR.. NEW ....U BEDn
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Always ready with
beddmg in place.
So SImple, so easy, a
child can operate It.
Has roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK, Norman & Monitor.
'Vestern Railroads Lose in Court.
A dIspatch from San FrancIsco, Cal, ddted last Tuesday,
states that on that day CIrcUlt COUlt Judges GIlbert, Ross and
Morrow of the Cahfor111a Dlstnct, rendered a deCISIOn WhICh
put to rout the contentIOns of the Southern PaCIfic RaIlroad and
twenty other hnes operatll1g west of the 1\IIssoun nver. The
raIlroads sought to 1estrall1 the Intel state Commerce com111ISSlon
fro111 enforcmg and pubhsh111g rates whIch It lowered on all of
tJhe raIlroads lUvolved from the Atlantic seaboard to Nevada and
Anzona pOInts. The rates fixed by the commerce board last June
were to become effective on December 1and were to be pub-lIshed
by the vanous raIlroads no later than November 23.
Judge GIlbert upheld In every ll1stance the findings of the com-merce
board. The case wIll be appealed to the Supreme Court
of the Ull1ted States to awaIt the outcome of other sI1111larcases
now pendll1g.
Old Machinery Goes to Louisville.
The Voss Mantel company of LOUIsville, Ky., has pur-chased
a part of the machl11ery that was used in the C. D.
\Vldman Furmtme company's factory 111DetroIt, Mich. The
Vo<;s company are said to have pald about $25,000 for the
mach111ery whIch they WIll use 111alaI ge addItion to theIr fac-tory
that they have just completed. The C. D. Widman
pbnt \\ as recently converted 111to an automobile factory.
Will Resume in January.
The Falcon Manufactunng company, whose factory at Big
Rapids, MICh., was destroyed by fire several months ago, are
erecting a new factory and expect to resume the manufacture
of kItchen cabmets in January next.
----..
• •••••• __ ••••••• •••••••••••• a •
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
YOU CAN
MAIL YOUR CATALOG
DECEMBER 20th
If you place the order
with us by December 1st
W"ITE
PRINTING COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICU.
. I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
-----
WEEKLY ARTISAN 31
Cincinnati~s Continuation School.
At the fourth annual convention of the National Society for
the PromotIOn of Industnal EducatlOn, held III Boston last
week, Supenntendent F. B Dyer, of the Clllclllnat[ schools,
after alludlllg to the vanous methods employed In Clllclllnatl
to prepare chtldren to enter llldustnal1Jfe, devoted the greater
part of hIs address to a descnptlOn of the ContlnuatlOn School
that was estabhshed there III 1909 He saId "Th[s school IS
not a trades school but [S desIgned for the llltellectual Improve-ment
of those boy s who are already apprentrces It catche:-,
the boy III the shop and bnngs hun to the school The attempt
was made to get apprentrces to attend the l11ght schools but
WIth httle success The apprentice IS a daytIme prOpO,,[tlOn
He has not the phySIcal endurance to work all day and go to
school at night. The penod of apprentlce:-,lllp [S a cntlcal one,
as the boy at this age needs gUIdance and nght Ideals kept
steadily before him He needs to have an intellectual lllterest
created III his work III order that he may be aml)ltlous to
become, lllstead of a mere hand, the master of an honorable
craft The board of educatIOn provIdes the school and the
teachers; the manufacturers release the boys one-half day a
week and pay them, If they attend the school, theIr regular
wages; if they do not attend, they are docked About 250
machine shop apprentlces are enrolled The school runs 48
weeks a year, 8 haUlS a day The teachers are allowed two
half days to VISIt the boys in theu shops, consult WIth the
fOlemen and gather matenals for theil school work The boys
are graded accordmg to theIr llltellectual abIhty-the Immature
coming the first part of the week and the mature the last part
"The course of study conSIsts of an hour of blue pnnt
[eadlllg and free hand drawll1g, an hour of shop SCIence, an
hour of apphed mathematics and a general hour for cultUl al
purposes, includlllg cIvics, llldtbtnal geography and hIstory,
readlllg, etc The method IS dIstinctly practlcal and obJectrve
Whtle the mathematics IS arranged so that tOpICS follow a
proper sequence, the mathematrcal prlllClple,., are applIed
dIrectly to the machInes III use 111the shops, and all non-essentIals
are elIm111ated The school
- Date Created:
- 1910-11-26T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 31:22
- 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/35