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- Michigan Artisan; 1907-04-25
Michigan Artisan; 1907-04-25
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and ~---------------,
GRAND RAPIDS
l).~RY
Twenty-seventh Year-No. 20 APRIL 25, 1907 Semi-Monthly
THE MONARCH PUSH BUTTON CHAIR
EVERY PATTERN OF
OUR WELL KNOWN
L I N E OF MORRIS
CHAIRS WILL BE
EQUIPPED WITH
THIS PUSH BUTTON
ATTACHMENT.
The Monarch is
Perfection, Comfort
and Utility.
Ramsey ~Alton
Mfg. Co.
PORTLAND, MICH.
Note the simple yet abso-ltltely
rigid construction.
Fully guaranteed and pro-tected
by U. S. Letters
Patent Nos. 653,452 and
648,715.
Will Exhibit on the Ground Floor of the Ashton Building (Formerly Pythian Temple), Grand Rapids, in July, 1907.
MICHIGAN HEARSE 8 CARRIAGE CO.,
MANUfACTURERS Of fiNE
Grand Rapids, Mich••
- U. S•• A,=':'"
DO YOU KNOW some of the finest Funeral Carll, Ambulance. and Under-taken'
Wagon .. are made in Grand Rapids~
DO YOU KNOW the Micbip,n Heane & Carriage Co. have in their employ
", the.bell-.sl:illed mm:hanics the Wl)r1d produces ~
DO YOU KNOW we spare 110pains nor moneyin theteledion oftbe malerials thai 80
into the con§:ruction of our vehicle&to make tbem leaders aDd !he
~ thai can be produced?
DO YOU KNOW the underlaket5 of ChicaKO alone have taken _meen of our
vehiclel ,in the pad few moDthl ~
If you are looking for good work combined with Ityle and the right price, write UI today and we will eend half tODe illulltratiooa.
~- --
1
A Splendid New Line
~~I of Tables
We have designed and now show in our new Catalogue a Splendid New
Line of Dining Room Tables---the best in the country---no exclusive table
house has better medium-priced tables.
We have put in new and improved
rabIe-making machinery.
We have new and exclusive de-signs--
some really popular patterns that
sell equal to the best.
Our pedestal tables are all equip-ped
with the new Seng patent K. D. de-vice,
the very latest popular improve-ment.
This makes all tops interchange-able,
so that any top can be put on any
pedestal, to suit any customer, and a
very few tables will give you a very
large number of different designs.
All our five-leg tables, shown in our regular line, are equipped with the
famous INVINCIBLE K. D. device, which makes it unnecessary to fasten
the legs by screwing bridging to the blocks, so that any retail dealer can set
them up in a jiffy with no trouble
whatever.
Besides our regular line of tables,
the beautiful mission patterns in our
popular dining room suites may be had
separately.
We offer you 65 separate and dis-tinct
designs, many of them in three
different finishes.
We challenge comparison with
.any medium-priced line of tables in
this country. We do not make the
cheapest. We do not make the high-est
in price. We do make just the line of tables YOU can sell most readily.
Won't you let us SHOW you?
Northern Furniture Company
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
I
2
SHELBYVILLE DESK CO.
MANUFACTURERS OF
OFFICE DESKS
Mahogany. and ImitationQyarlered Oak. Plain
Oak in Three Grades.
SPECIAL FEATURES
A SQUARE DEAL
Write for lattIt Catalogue.
SHELBYVILLE, IND.
OUR OAK AND MAHOGANY
-Dining
Extension
Tables
Are BeSt Made, 8dt: Finished Values. All
Made from Thoroughly Seasoned Stock.
No. 497 Dining Table
TOPt 48x48. Made in Qyartered Oak.
Weathered Finish. Nickle Casters.
LENTZ TABLE cO.
NASHVILLE. MICH.
No. 497 Dining Table.
Nail's, the Polish that is making Evansville Famous
NaJJ's Red SIa, P0Ji9h dril!S inQantly aJld
never softens or gUIllS. No ~bJe or
offensive odor. Never settles or evaporates
A trial order always makes a perrn3neot cus-tomer.
Brings QUi the finisb aad aives new
life to furniture. This polish is free fram. acid.
Can be used by any child. Guar3.llteed to
give satisfaction.
Sold in I, 2, 5 and 10 gallon aUIll and in
barlf'~. also put lip in 2, 3 and 6 oz bottles
retailingfor,lOc. lSe and 25c. al\Qwinll:a
h"beralprolit to the retailer. Write for prices
and ftate quantity wanted.
A petfed PolUh and Cleaner for Furniture, Office and Bar Fixtures
Pi_N, OI'8'_S, Bicycles, Iron Bed .. Carriages.nd Automobiles. •
'Yc rdC! r,ou to the Crescent FU~lure ~ .. The EvanaviUe De.k Co.,· The Eli
D. Miller Foklilla Bed Co;. and the City National BllDk of Evansville.
AMERICAN PHARMACAL CO., '0' UPP'. ".~. EvallSville, Ind.
Cline's Caster Cup
I Thousands in Use I
Furniture Dealers need have no more
fear. With the use of Cline's Caster
Cup one tabJe may be- placed on top
of another without injury. Made in two sizes in the follow·
ing finishes: Oak, Mahogany and Rosewood. Special pre-pared
felt bottom, preventing sweat marks, scratchiug, etc.
Price: 2)4 In. per 100. $3.50; 3" In. perlOO. $4.50
We also manufacturethe most reliable Card Holder on the market.
Write fol' our new 40 paa-e Catalogue.
L. Cline Mfg.Co.••'3.WabaobAve .. Chicago
~
~df
"~'" ' r C
i"f:ANTD '-!LJi '" l'
PUBLIC LIBRARY
2 7th Year-No, 20, GRAND RAPIDS. MICH,. APRIL 25. 1907, $1.00 per Year.
SALARIED SALESMEN BEST.
Dry Goods Clerks Must Have More Tact and Ability Than
Those in the Furniture Trade.
"Those furniture merchants who think they have all the
trouble in securing competent salesmen and that their sales-men
must be better posted and more intelli'gent than those
in other lines of trade, would change their minds if they \'v"ere
to get into the dry goods business." said }Iorris Friedman,
of M. Friedman & Co., Grand Rapids, Mich., in an inter-view
recently. "Of course, there aTC departments in our
store where a person with the necessary natural traits may
easily hecOl11C a successful salesman. but to get all-around
.knmvlcdge of the dry goods business is much more difficult
alld requires much more time thall to become well posted in
the furniture trade. The truth of that statement is evident
enough when you consider the fact that a furniture salesman
has to knmv about only a few different articles, while there
are hundreds of different articles, with more different styles,
makes and qualities in the dry gooc!5 line.
"The straigbt salary or commission question is a serious
problem. It is difficult to determine which is best. I am
inclined to favor the salary plall, though a combination may
be advantageous in some cases·. The c.ommi,,-;;,lon plan may
tend to increase sales, bllt it has disadvantages. 'VVhen you
place salesmen 011 commission they arc quite apt to give the
the gTeater part of their attention to the most saleable goods
-those that are in great demand and almost sell themselves
-'while they neglect the thillgS that need pushing-those that
we wish to move promptly. Then they are liable to neglect
the stock and fail to do their sbare in keeping it in order and
good condition. Many of them watch the door and in that
way get a hold of the best customers and thus cause ill-feel-ing
and lack of harmony in the force. They soon learn to
pick out those who Jre likely to buy largely and th.ey arc
apt to neglect, slight or even snub, the small buyers.
"The dry goods salesmen must be well posted. There i"
no line of trade 'where lack of knowledge, lack of ability to
answer questions, etc., counts so much agaillst the house as
in the dry goods b"l1sincss. The clerk who becomes confused
or shows lack of familiarity with the sh)ck or store frequent-ly
spoils a sale and creates distrust in the customer.
"Dry goods salesmen not only have to handle ru;:lny more
diffe::ent articles than the furniture men, but they bave to
meet and deal ''lith many more buyers. It is therefore nec-essary
that they should have a much wider knowledge of hu-man
nature-they must have more tact and ability.
"\!>.l e prefer experienced salesmen, of course, but 'we can-not
always find them. When we cannot get them we have
to teach novices, 'which requires time C111d experience ct1ld is
usually an expensive proposition."
Pittsburgs' Enormous Freight Traffic.
Great illcrease in the number of cars handled is ShOWllby
a cO:llparative report just issued by the Pennsylvania Rail-road
con:pauy Oil freight interchange in the Pittsburg yards
in 1905 and 1906. The increase in 1906 over 1905 is 'an
average of 11,08i cars a month, or 364 a day, equivalent to a
gain of 6.3 per cent. The total number of cars handled in the
Pittsburg interchange in 1905 was 2,111,376. Tn 1906 the
total was 2244216, the increase was due to the improved
facilities of the Pitcairn yard and the Brilliant cut-off.
"It should he horne in mind," the report says, 'Ithat these
figures do not in any way represent the total freight cars
going out of Pittsburg as they include only cars which pass
thrcmgh the Pittsburg yards, ''lhile they do not include such
freight as originates in the Pittsburg district and leaves
Pittsbtlt'g without beng transferred from one to another yard.
San Francisco Insurance Suits.
Under the law of California suits to enforce the payment
on an insurance policy must be filed within a year after the
lire. The time for filing such suits for losses sustained in the
great San Francisco disaster of a year ago, expired, in most
cases, on April 18, On that day over 200 hundred suits were
started against companies that have neglected or refused to
settle. \-\lith tbose filed on the last day, the total of such
case.S now pend-ing -in the California courts is over 1900.
THE CORRECT
Stains and fillers.
THE MOST
SATISFACTORY
first toaters and
Varnishes
MANU~Ar:TURCD ONLY BY
CHICAGO WOOD FINISHING CO.
Z59·63 ELSTONAVE.'" Z-16 SLOAN ST.
CH I CACO.
4 ~l'1.19.rIG7jN $
MANAGEMENT OF SALESMEN.
Some Interesting Ideas Expressed by Leading Furniture
Dealers of Rochester, N. Y.
Rochester, April 20.-Few cities can boast of such splen-did
furniture stores as are in this third largest city of the
Empire State, located in the fertile and wealthy valley of the
Genesee. These are busy days with the dealers, but for
the Michigan Artisan they cheerfully considered the ques-tions
regarding the qualifications and management of sales-men
and readily gave their views. None talked more inter-estingly
and more to the po'int than H. B. Graves, who con-ducts
the largest establishment of its kind in the city, and
whose success covers many years. He is regarded as the
leader among furniture men in this section of the state.
HA man must have experience and knowledge of what he
is going to sell," said Mr. Graves. "And the saying that a
salesman is born, not made, comes pretty nearly being abso·
lutely true. The great essential in a salesman, to my mind,
is judgment. He must to a certain extent lead his custom·
er and assist in the selection of the article the latter has
come to buy, since so few people know much about furniture.
For instance, a woman may come to buy a sideboard and she
may be satisfied with the appearance of one selling at $25, but
who may be well able to afford one at $75, while the cheaper
one may be out of harmony with the furniture and decora-tions
of her home. A good salesman would learn quickly
what the customer really needed. He would effect a sale
for $75 instead of $25, and would have the satisfaction of
knowing he had sold an article appropriate to the customer's
home instead of an inappropriate one, which would not give
satisfaction.
"The tact and judgment which is essential to the sales-man
makes him know when to stop. A good salesman will
assist a customer to concentrate his or her attention, while
one with less tact will in reality tend to confuse the custom-er.
The ability of knowing when to show a customer no
more and quickly close the sale is valuable.
"A graduate of a normal school came to me a few years
ago and asked for a position, and liking his manner and ap-pearance
r told him that if he could get a substitute for the
school he had engaged to teach I would give him work. When
he came r put him out in the shipping room; and they called
him 'Professor.' In three months I was able to call him in on
the floor as a salesman, and in a comparatively short time
r made him one of our buyers. He is now in California,
where he holds an important position. He was a natural
salesman and a splendid buyer.
>lWe have our staff well organized. There is a scrap
book .for new suggestions and orders for the salesmen. We
have meetings occasionally for the discussion of business and
methods and the interchange of'ideas. They help. Occa-sionally,
too, we have meetings at which some expert ad-dresses
the men, on upholstery, for instance.
HEnlivening business in dull times? We_ can stimulate
trade to a degree by marking down and cleaning out lines we
do not wish to carry any longer. But the advantage is
questionable. ~larked down goods create suspicion in many.
It is questionable whether it is wise to interfere with the
seasons."
"We require that our salesmen be keen, clean, gentleman-ly
and thoroughly understand their business," said C. F.
Schrninke, of G. & C. Schminke, a firm which caters to the
best class in the furniture and upholstery trade. "\Ve want
him to have absolute confidence in us and have him so conduct
himself that we have absolute confidence in him. Right
in fine with that we demand that he inspire confidence in our
customers.
"We pay well and make few Or no. changes. We like
best the men who start out to learn the bu~iness with us, and
find that every year they become more valuable to us.
"We have no idlers. Each man when he comes in of a
morning has his room to put in order and there is no time of
thE; day in which we expect him to regard himself as an or-nament.
"Courtesy we insist upon. We demand of our men that
they treat all who enter our store pleasantly and in all ways
be obliging and cheerful, whether they khow the person they
are talking with has any intention of buying or not. We like
to think that our visitors leave us feeling that they have been
nicely treated; they are likely to remember it.
"There are many ways by which to judge a good sales-man.
Appearance counts. So does diligence. By watch-ing
your men as they handle different sorts of people, one can
judge well. vVhen people, after dealing with a man for a
while, come back and ask for him again, we know that -they
must have been well treated and that confidence in the man
must have been instilled into them.
"I think I have suggested our policy in selecting men and
in training them. In addition, I will remark that we will lIot
have a man who attempts to force an article upon a customer
or who will not be honest m every statement he makes to a
customer."
The firm of Bickford Brothers does business with the best
people in Rochester, and A. E. Bickford has ideas about sales·
men. "I suppose every firm considers that men trained in
its establishment ~re better for it than outsiders," he said,
Why Not Order?
Say a dozen or more Montgomery
Iron DISPlay Couch Trucks sent you
on approval; If DOt satisfactory they can be
returned at no expense to you whatever,
while the price asked is but a 1rifIe, com~
pared to Ihe convenience they alford and
the economy they represent in lhl!l saving
of floor space.
Thirly.lwo couches mountl!lCl on the
Monlgpmery Iron Display Couch Trucks
occupy the same Ooot spaceas twelve dis-playedin
the usual manner.
Write for 'Catalogue giving 'uB descrip-tion
and pri<:ein the different finishes, to-gether
with illustrations demomb'aring the
use of the Giant Short RailBed.Fastener
for Iron Beds. Manufacturedby
H. J. MONTGOMERY
PATENTEE
Silver Creek, New York, U. S. A.
Dermis Wire aDd Iron Co., Canadian Manu-factureD.
1...oDdon,· Ont.
Oibut there is a limit to that. There is no reason why a
man from a strange city cannot come here and make good.
It all depends upon t.he man himself,
"We like a man to be gentlemanly, polite, neat and oblig-ing.
Vie would not think of putting a green salesman at
work. Ii' a young man pleased us, we would keep him busy
under another with experience till he understood the business
fairly well and had learned our methods. Customers ask
many questions and, if they arc not answered correctly, and
sensibly, lack of confidence results. Above all other things
we put courtcsy. That we insist upon.
HI have seen many· salesmen make big sales and yet
thought they wcre poor workers. We will not have a man
hurry through a customer who comes to buy a small and
inexpensive article, so that he may attend to another visitor
from whom a large _order is sure. r have seen men make a
big showing, but noticed that their customers on calling again
seldom, if ever, asked for them.
"Another thing we are very careful about is that no word
against a rival concern is uttered in this store and no criticism
~r;..I9!fHIG7J-N ,
of any article of theirs is made in the hearing of a customer.
We always speak in the most friendly way of our rivals and,
apart from all else, it pays.
"A lady came into this store yesterday after screens and
it appeared as thougb we could not exactly suit her. As she
was leaving', she thought a moment and asked a question
apparently out of meTe curiosity, regarding' one she had been
shown. The salesman hurried back to see it, and returue,'l
with the information. She bought that screen, partly, I vlil1
confess, because of the courtesy shown her.
As Mr. Bickford was talking one of his salesmen came up
and said: "That table sUlts wel1; 1.h. Scbminke saw it and
told the lady it was exactly what she needed for her room.'
"There," said Mr. Bickford, "that illustrates what I said
about a good word for yOllr competitor and a good word fr0n,
one. T sold that table myselfj for the lady asked my advice.
Mr. Schminke not only has the ple<lsure of having said a good
word for a rival, but he has added to the pleasure of a lady in
an article which is now hers, and he has pleased us.
"It is better to do business that way. It is better to have
your men always candid and truthful with your cust,)mers.
Treat YOllrmen well·so that they will have reason to be loyal,
and you need never fear for the result."
11,'1. L. Garson of Garson & Wood, said that when he need-ed
a good salesman he advertised in the newspapers, lookeu
over the candidates "\vho called and if he liked their appe<lr.
ance, asked for their references and investigated. "1,llledo nOl
use any inexperienced men," he said. "Once in a while i!
is possible to advance a man from the back room, but only
occasionally. Simmer everything down and the best man is
the salesman who sells the most and continues to sell the
most. That tells the story every time.
"It is essential that a salesman in these days shou1d 'knnw
a great deal about what he is selling. He must be able to
answer all questions of customers. He must plea~e If
he pleases and sells, his sales will tell just how much he
pleases. You must have discipline. The rules of the house
must be preserved. But it is the sales which count.
"For any young man who may wish to become a sales-man,
I "lIould say: 'Begin at the bottom of the ladder.'
But not many of them are willing to do that."
The Best "Assistant Salesman."
One of the most effective "assistant salesmen" in the fur-niture
trade is the invention of Daniel VV'. Tower of the
Grand Rapids C:vlicil.) Brass Company. It is called the "N o~
Kum-Loose" knoh or drawer pull and is furnished to man-ufacturers
on request at nominal cost, so that any dealer can
enjoy its advantages by simply asking for it when giving his
orders. The merits of the invention are now quite generally
known. As the llame indicates, the knobs are fastened in
such a way that it is impossible for them to become loose, a
feature that must be highly appreciated by all who have used
furniture equipped with old style knobs, and that fact gives
the salesman a "talking point" that is always effective. Thus,
the "No-Kum-Loose knob assists materially in selling the
furniture on which it is used.
.7IR!T' I oS' A.I'J
c S$t#' 5
The New
"PE.RFE.CT"
FOLDING CHAIR
Comfortable
Simple
Durable
Neat
The Acme of Perfection In the line of
Folding Chairs. PERFECT COMPACTNESS
when folded.
\V.RlTE for PR(CES
The Peabody School
Furniture Co.
North Manoheater.. Indiana
UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead in Style, Confuudion
and Finish. See our Catalogue.
Our line on permanent exhibi-tion
7th Floor, New Manufact_
urers' Building, Grand Rapids.
WE manufacture the larg·
est line of FOLDING
CHAIRS -in the United
States, suitable for Sunday
Schools, Halls, Stellwers and
all Public Resorts.
We also ma.nufacture Brass
Trimmed Iron Beds, Spring
Beds, Cots and Cribs in a
larKe variety. .
Send fOT Catalocue
and PrlCC!1 to
Kauffman Mfg. CO.
AS"LAND, 0"10
The New Banquet Table Top
as wen as OFFICE. DINING and DIRECTORS' TABLES are DU!' apedally.
STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE CO.. ~:h.I.~' ""'"
Wri~ (or CatalGaue. Get samp!eI of BANQUET TABLE TOP.
6 .~Mlf ..HlG7}N2
MOON DESK CO.
MUSKEGON, MICH.
OFFICE DESKS
SEE OUR NEW TYPEWRITER CABINET.
Miniature Beds and Cribs.
The h~.'it 2ilvertis.ing :t fIrm can do is to Jl<lVe striking win-dow
displays, and we know of nothing which attracts more
attention than a window of -miniature beds and cribs. They
are strictly in your line and make people look to your store
for beds aed bedding. The beauty of these little cribs and
the amount of pleasure ~t child can derive from one makes
them remarkably salable. YOll conld not make a more strik-ing
and attractive window t:;splay.
Stores that have put these in have had the benefit of the
advertising and besides have sold as high as 400 beds in a
season.
The posts are of 1i-inch steel tube.
and the connections arc guanlllteed not
The rods are y,j:-inch
to break. The spring
is a fine weave, weB made, and a perfect imitation of the
larger ones.
Indeed, the bed is strong enough to hold a child of four.
The finish is the best white enamel, two coats, and the legs
have casters.
l\tattresses are furnished with excelsior or hair, in beau-tiful
art tickings and little down pillows in the SHne covering.
Length, 30 inches; width, 18 inches; height, 25 inches.
:No more attractive toy can he imagined than this new line
of doll's beds ami cribs. In every particular they are perfect
reproductions of real beds and fini5hed with equal ore. They
are made of TInc steel tubing and rods (all of proper propor-tions)
put together 'with malleable iron castings, making them
smooth and unbreakable.
They have woven wire spring bnttonis and are finished in
0e5t white enameL The mountings arc real bra::s vases a11(l
caps polished and lacquered, and the legs have tiny casters.
The mattresses are filled with hair and covered with art tick-mg.
They arc tufted and side stitched. The pillows are
filled with satin down and covered with art ticking to match
the mattress.
The cribs are like the beds with the addition that they have
sides which fold down.
The finish .is the higllest grade of porcelain enamel, baked
on and beautiful tints of green, pink, blue and cream are fur-nished.
Many of our readers, we are sure, will be glad to
have this line called to their attention. They are made by
The Hard 11anufacturing Company, of Buffalo, New York.
t'v.1I"IC'. HIGANfl
7IR!T' I.s 7I.L'l
t ? $;.
COFFINS AND CASKETS.
Many People Make Their Own Selections Before They Need
Such Furniture.
"Do people ever pick out their own coffins? \\.'hy cer-tainly,"
said an undertaker, talking to the Xcw York Sun,
"There have always been people who have kept coffins on
hand for themselves, ready for use when required. Dou't
you know you read in the papers now and then of some old
citizen \vho has just died, off somewhere in some country
town, who had had his coffin in hls house for lorty years:
Vve were once called upon ourselves to bury a man who had
had his own cofnn ready, for I guess, a longer time than that.
'This was a man who at the time of his death had come
to have large means aud to be widely known. \\.;hel1 he was
young and living in the country there was cut dO\Vll on his
home place a hickory tree that he thought vV'ould provide
good material for a coffin, and out of some of the planks
sawed from this trcc he had fashione.d for hirn.self a c.offin
which he stored away in the. garret of the old house.
"He had no thought of dying then, but he liked that hiek-ory
tree and he wanted to buried in a coffin made from it.
"\;Vell, in due time the old gentleman did die, an old man
thC11,a11d dying, he indicated his desire to be buried in the
old hickory coffin. T0,Jesent Inen up into the country and
got it down out of the garret of the old house and brought it
here, hut when we had got it here it ,vouldn't do at all, it was
far too small.
"He was a young man and slender when he had the coJfll1
made, but nOw with the lapse of many years, and ",,"ith his
vigorous employment through many of those ycars in great
outdoor enterprises, he had comc to be a man of large frame
and body alHI thc old cofiin simply wouldn't do. But hi,
survivors desired that his wishcs should be respeeted, and
thcn we took the old collin apart and used it as a lining lor the
burial caskel in \vhich he was buried. And so he '''''as buried
in the old hickory coHin after alL
"\Ve once had in storage a coffill of hasket construction
that \-vas sent to us by a gentleman who brought it from
a country in which the burial customs arc different from Ol1r:-,.
:dany of the burial caskets s\1ch as we use are of very solid
constructioll; some indeed are of metal, as of aluminum, and
some ;:Ire metal lined; all calculated to preserve the body [or
a long time. But not all of us have the same views about
burial, and it was the desire of the owner of the basketwork
coffin that when he died he should, as soon as might be, go
back to mother earth.
"People do nowadays sometimes make their own selection
of the sort of casket they would prefer to be buried in; young
people sometimes; though most of those making such selec-tion
are old.
"In old days when everybocly was huried in a coffin there
was no such choice; however much they might differ in the
materials used in their construction ;l11d ill the quality of
their workmanship and finish, all coffins were alike in shape,
and a mahogany coffin, for instance, was still simply a ma-hogany
coffin.
""No ..\.' three-fourths or more of all the people dying, in
the large communities at least, arc buried in caskets, w-hich
are very different i.n design and appearance from the old-time
coffin, and which are produced in very great \'ariety as
to their actual styles, as to the materials used in them .. as to
modifications of shape and as to their co~t.
"It is a very common thing, if not indeed the prevailing
practice, for the survivors 01 the deceased to make a selection
of the casket in which the dead shall be buried. Such a se-lection
is often made from the illustrated catalogues of the
casket manufacturers, or it may be made from among actual
caskets displayed in his establishment by the undertaker; or
it may be that the undertaker will takc. those n:aking such
selection to the warerooms of the casket manufacturer. There
caskets may be seen in great variety, but presenting to the
eye all appearance different indeed from that which would
be presented by an array of an equal number of the old-time
coffins, for many of these caskets are of Jine and costly and
beautiful materials, as they may also be elaborate in 'v\'ork-mallship,
while they are all removed as far as it is possible
to make them from the old time coffin in form.
".:\{odcrn burial caskets are now made in such variety as
to the woods and other materials used in their construction
that it is quite possible, if that should be desired, to sel.eet
one that shall harmonize with the lIttings and furnishings 01
the room in which it is placed. The arrangement of the
flowers may add to the beauty of their effect.
"Funeral flowers have often been photographed, thus tD
preserve a remembrance of them. Tt'is now not unheard of
to photograph the room containing the casket with the flow~
ers surrounding it. Vihil", the casket may be costly the
flowers may be equally so; a blanket of violets, for instance,
making a coverlet over the Casket aud reaching on either side
to the floor, costil1g,·it may be, $1,000 or more."
Richmond Chair CO.
RICHMOND, INDIANA
Double Cane Line
SEE OUR NEW PATTERNS
CATALOGUES TO THE TRADE
7
8
HOW FEATHERS ARE MANIPULATED.
Cleaned. Sterilized. Deodorized and Sorted by Machinery-
The Mixer's Trade.
Feather mixing is one of the hardest trades to learn, but
when mastered is also one of the best paying methods of
earning a jiving. The worker who intends to make this trade
his life work must start when he is young, for it takes
on an average thirteen years for a man to work up from pil-low
filler to feather mixer. Feathers that have been plucked
from hens, ducks, turkeys and geese are the only kind of
feathers that are used, says the Chicago Tribune. One
kind of feathers at a time is placed in the drum, to be beaten
and to be sterilized by hot air process. The drum is a large
machine, not unlike the washing machines used in laundries.
In the center of each machine is an axle with eight beaters
fall down into the center of the machine. The cold air blow-ing
from the fan deodorizes them, and they leave the machine
in a steady stream, flying all over the room, The worker
finds himself in what looks like a miniature storm, for the
feathers fly around the room as high as the ceiling. An
onlooker might well wonder where the sorting comes in of
the maze of feathers.
It 1S here that the wonderful P:lft of the machine lies, for
the air pressure is 50 arranged that the heaviest feathers,
which are also the cheapest, will fall precisely into a bin about
five feet away from the machine. The next heaviest will
fall into a bin fifteen feet away from the machine, and the
rest of the seven different grades of feathers will fall accurate-ly
in bins that have been provided for them. The down,
which is the most expensive, flies around in th'e air the longest
but when it comes down it falls into a bin that is placed over
seventy-five feet away from the blower. Thus the seven dif-
AN ATTRAOTIVE FAMILY ROOM.
attached. The beaters make over 200 revolutions per minute
bcating the dust Ollt of the feathers and cleaning thcm thor-oughly.
A thin screen on the front and back of the machine
lets the dust out.
This part of the work is the most unhealthy, for the win-dows
of the dust room are not allowed to be opened and the
dust that comes from the feathers is inhaled by the worker.
Many of the drum men contract consumption in a year or
more doing this work, and are compelled to give up and seek
other empJoyment. The work is not so unhealthy as it was
in former years, for the men are now altowed to leave the
room while the machine is in operation.
After the feathers have been beaten and sterilized in the
drum they are placed in the blowing machine to be sorted
and to be deodorized by the cold blast. As in the drum the
kind of feathers are put in the blower separately. The blow-er
is the most simple and yet the most powerful machine that
is used in th.e feather business. The machine is built with a
large funnel shaped mouth on top, and always placed at one
end of a large room"
The feathers arc placed in the funnel, through which they
fel'cnt g-rades of feathers have been sorted, each kind in a bin
and ".Nithout having been touched since leaving the blower.
The drum and blower man, after putting in five years at
this kilHl of work and also learning the different grades of
feathcrs, takes another step. upward in the business and be-comes
an assistant to the mixer. His work consists of
weighing feathers and learning the different combinations that
are used in stuffing pillows. In a few years he probably will
know how to mix some of the cOlilbinations, but usually it
takes five years of experience before an assistant ean become
a mixer.
The combination used in the cheapest pillows is hen and
turkey feathers. Duck and turkey combination is used in
a little better grade of pillows, and the best combination of all
is duck and goose feathers. The most expensive filling is
made of downy feathers from geese. These combinations
have different prices and the mixer must know these prices,
and,. when he can, experiment with the various kinds of
feathers to try and get a cheaper combination that will last
as long as the dearer kind.
9
WEATHERED FINISH.
H.& \lV. SPECIAL!
ALL OAK.
40 inches long.
Seat 18 inches wide.
Back 22 inches high.
4 7-foot galvanized chains.
4 galvanized ceiling hooks.
Put together with 4 bolts.
Shipped K. D.
Weight 30 lbs.
No tronble to put np.
Prompt shipment.
40 in. Swing, Frame 1 inch Stock,
50 in. Swing, Frame 1)4 in. Stock.
66 in. Swing, Frame 1J4 in. Stock.
WRITE FOR PRICES.
The Harden=Winders rlfg. Co" 1232 E. Long St., Columbus, 0,
Electro Newspaper Cut with order for 6 or more·
five Complete Lines of Refrigerators
at
RIG"T PRICES
Opalite Lined
Enameled Lined
Charcoal Filled and
Zinc Lined
Zinc Lined with
Removable
Ice Tank
Gah'anized Iron
Lined
Stationary Ice
Tank
Send fo.- new
CATALOGUE and let
us name you
price
Challenge Refrigerator Co. GRAND HAVEN, MICH., U. S. A.
10
FURNITURE AT AUCTION
So Popular That Dealers Find Difficulty in Securing Stock.
New York Sun.-This is the season when women carrying
thick cataloguesRnd showing eager, hopeful looks on their
faces are plentiful in the subways, the elevated trains and the
trolley cars about 10 a. m. V\I'omen of small means, women
of large means are equally represented among them. Alike
they are bound for an auction sale. The main difference be-tween
them is that the rich are attracted perhaps by the al-luring
word "antiques," the others by a job lot of kitchen
crockery or brussels carpets 'Ias good as new."
\Vhatever their reason, women representing many social
circles now rub elbows at the auction sales. The old fashioned
woman of good social position, if she went to an auction at
all, wore her oldest clothes and her thickest veil and bid by
proxy. The up to date woman dons her gladdest clothes and
her most becoming complexion veil and does her own bid-ding.
Similarly, once upon a time householders hedged at ad-mitting
that an admired picture or bit of bric-a-brac or side-offers
such a market for auction goods as New York does,
and for the reason that such goods are getting to be almost
scarce.
"To illustrate: This firm alone employs five men who do
nothing but travel over the country from Maine to California
on the lookout for second hand furniture which they can ship
to New York; for uliless an auction house holds frequent
sales in the spring and fall it might just as well go out of
business. Housekeepers expect these sales and watch out for
them. They expect old fashioned furniture and new fash-ioncd
stuff, too, and were it not for the men we keep on the
road we .vauld fall down badly on the old fashioned article.
"Look at that sofa," pointing to a six feet long colonial
mahogany example in underclothes, the outer cO',rering hav-ing
been torn away. "Look at those chairs," indicating some
rush bottoms half a century or so old.
"The sofa was found in a barn at Bethlehem, Pa., and
bought it for $5. The owner called it rubbish and was glad
to get rid of it at that price. The chairs were got from a
woman in Connecticut who, when asked if she had any old
furniture to sell, led the way to her attic.
"Yes, it pays to pay the freight to get them. We must do
MADE BY WOODARD FURNITURE 00., OWOSSO, MICH.
board or chair came from an auction room. The descendants
of these householders announce the purchase at auction of a
desirable bit of furniture or ornament with something like
pride.
"Guess how much it cost me?" responded a New York
woman, who is also included among the Newport colony, to
an admiring comment on a carved marble statuette.
"Fifty dollars," hazarded the vistor, scenting a bargain.
"Seven-fifty," announced the owner in great glee. "Five
at auction and two-fifty to have the base repaired. Originally
it sold probably for $100 or more."
In this city there are dozens of apartments-high class
apartments at that-the furnishings of which were bought
piece by piece at auction and there are many houses in which
the best of the furnishings were got in the same way. What is
more, the occupants of these apartments and houses are given
to boasting of the fact that as an evidence of th~ir skill at get-tin'g
the most for the least money. A od the reason morc apart-ments
and houses are not furnished with auction goods is
that there are not enough auction goods to go round; that
is, not enough of the almost new, high grade variety.
"There is no city in the world," a deal~r explained, "which
it in fact. The supply of high grade second hand furniture
is not now equal to the demand for it in this city. In this
place alone we sell at this time of year 1,800 lots a week, and
a lot means from one to twenty or more pieces.
"Where does most of this come from? From Greater
Kew York, and the reason we get it is that New York folks
are more restless than any other in the world and that New
York has a bigger floating population than any other place.
Into the sale next week. will go a lot of splendidly made
furniture, not showy, but remarkably substantial and good
style which was brought to this country from Austria by a
man who expected to spend the rest of his life in America.
"He and his family set up housekeeping in a fine apart-ment
uptown and he· went into business here.. In less than
two years he was taken ill, hiS: physician ordered a trip to
the old country to restore his health and his furniture was put
in, storage for six months, as he thought. It stayed in stor-age
nearly six yeaTS, for the man never got well enough to
come back, and when he died not long ago word was sent to
have the furniture sold at auction.
"It's ca!'\es like that and others in which men lose their job
and decide to get out of New York that send a lot of furni-
~r;.I9rIG7J-N
ture to the auction houses, and also the frequent change from
a house to an apartmei1t bcc2.11seof the servant question and
for other reasonS. But that is not nearly so frequent now
as it was half a dozen years ago, for the reason, I guess, that
most of the houses then abandoned were turned into business
concerns or were torn down and replaced by oflice buildings.
This, of course cuts down our supply of second-hand goods.
"Today we have to depend for our suppLy of good, modern
furniture on the fickleness and restlessness of the New York
people. It is not generally known tbnt many of the richer
families have their houses refitted about Ol1ce in two years.
"A new style of carving or of \\'ood appears, a new design
in the shape of chairs, tables, sofas, cabincts, etc., a revival of
one or another period and the mistress sends for ber decor-ator,
goes with him over the ncw fashions and then decides
to change from Louis XV. to Empire or from Empire to
something else; from white and gold settiTigs to settings of
natural mahogany or inlaid walnut or polished oak, or any-
11
stiff S0111, I'll wager, and it will fetch at auction perhaps one-half
of what it could be now bought for new simply be-cause
rose\vood isn't now in the height of style.
"As a g'eneral thing, most women who come to an auction
expecting to spend $10 leave $20 behind them when they
start for home, but for all that there are very few who can be
coaxed into bidding on anything modern 'when it gets beyond
the bargain point o( view.
'·\Vith antiques it is different. No only do Ne"v York
\vomcn no\\' come in crowds to every sale of antiques that's
going but they plunge more recklessly in their bids than do
the nH~l1."
No Great Cancellation of Car Orders.
A canvass of the railway equipment companies in Chicago
shows that the railroads have not cancelled any great number
of their orders for new cars and locomotives. It is csti-
MADE BY WOODARD FURNITURE CO., OWOSSO, MICH.
thing undcr the sun that happens to he in vogue and is dif-ferent
frorn what she has.
"It goes without saying that manufacturers see to it tbat
something differcnt is produced every ycolr. \,rell, once
her decision is made, she asks hovv much the decorator will
allow on the, discarded furniture, and the decorator scnds for
a dealer in auction goods and gets an estimate of \vhat they
will bring at auction.
;;Oh, dear, no; the O\"-l1cr of the furniture has nothing to
do ..v.ii::h this end of the transaction; she docsn't know and
(Iocsn't care what becomes of the goods when they leave her
house, whether they land in Harlem or The Bronx or
Brooklyn or over in Staten Island.
"A beautiful bedroom set of birdseye nnple to be auc-tioned
off tomorrow and which has hardly a scratch on it was
sent off because the owner got tired of it and wanted a suite
of natural chestnut, which, of course-, is ncwcr, and a parlor
suite of rosevv'ood we have down stairs was turned out of a
Fifth avenue house to make room for one of inlaid dull
finished mahogany. Originally the rosewood suite cost a
mated that the aggregate of business placed during the past
scyeral months win amount to about $60,000,000. A consid-erable
part of this equipment has been delivered to the pur-chasers,
but nearly all of the companies still have orders
enough on hand to fun them full handed for some time.
The one great drawback is that of delay in receiving iron and
steel. Tn mallY cases the car builders are from 30 to 90 days
behind ill the receipt of these essential materials. Apart
from this, however, the equipment companies have no reason
for worry at the outlook.
A Monarch in the Field.
The Ramsey-Alton 11amtfaduring- Company of Portland,
lVfich.. have placed on the market a new push button Morris
chair, that affords the user comfort and ease in operation.
The conslruction, which is rigid, yet simple, is protected by
letters patent. Every pattcrn of the company will be pro-vided
with their push button attachment. Manager Ramsey
win exhibit the line in Grand Rapids in the Ashton building
in July.
12
Ca()inet Makers
In these days of close competition,
need the best possible equipment,
and this they can have in . . . .
BARNES'
Hand and Foot
POWER
Machinery
Send for our New Catalogue.
w. F. CD. JOHN BARNES CO.
Our New nand iIIndFoot Power Circular Saw No.4
The strongest, most powerful. and in every way the best
machine of it. kind ever made, for ripping,
cross-clltting, bcdng and grooving.
654 Ruby Street. Rochford. Ill.
THE GREATEST LINE of the GREATEST MANUFACTURERS
--- OF -------
CHAMBER FURNITURE
Every Dealer Wants It Because E.verybody Buys It.
SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich~
Manufacturers of BEDROOM FURNITURE EXCLUSIVELY,
New SpriOgLine readv- We operate the largeatfactol"Yin tbe world producing chamber furniture.
13
CHAS. A. FISHER & CO.,
1319 Michigan Ave., Chicago.
WRITE FOR
BOOKLET
AND
PROPOSITION
Warehau.e ..:
ST. LOUIS, MO. KANSAS CITY. Me.
PEORIA, ILL. LINCOLN, ILL.
MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Educating the Public.
=Vlerchants of Laingsburg, Mich., are educating the pub-lic
in a '''lay that might be adopted, with beneficial results, by
those of other to\'..,11S, They have joined in" the publication
and distribution of a card containing a small advertisement of
each, information about the religious, commercial and finan-cial
institution:; of the town, and the following ten reasons
why the people of the community should trade at home:
Because: You examine your purchase and are assured of
satisfaction before investing your money.
Because:-Your home merchant is always ready and will-ing
to make right any error or any defective article purchased
of him.
Because: \Vhen you are sick or for any reason it is neces-sary
for you to ask for credit, you can go to the local mer-chant.
Could you ask it of a mail order house?
Because: If a merchant is "\villing to extend you exedit
you should give him the benefit of your cash trade.
Because: Your home merchant pays local taxes and ex-erts
every effort to build and better your market, thus in-creasing
both the value of city and country property.
Because: The mail order merchant does not lighten your
tax or in any way help the value of your property.
Because: The mail order merchant does nothing for the
benefit of markets or real estate values.
Because: "If yom town is good enough to live in it is
good enough to spend your money in."-Governor Folk, of
Missouri,
Because: The best citizens in your community patronize
home industry. Why not be one of the best citi zens?
Because: If you will give your home merchants an oppor-tunity
to compcte, by bringing your order to him in the quan-tities
you buyout of town, he will demonstrate that, quality
considered, he will save yOlt money.
Concrete in Canada.
Reports from Toronto indicate that the Canadians are
fully up with the people on this side of the line in the use of
concrete as building material. Over there as here, insurance
rates and the high price of building materials have been im-portant
factors in favor of fireproof building materials. To-day
concrete floors and roofs are put on at praetically the
cost of wood. The new offices of the Canada Fottrldry Com-pany
and the structure for heavy loads recently ercl:Le,'l ror
Stauntons, Limited, both in Toronto, are splendid spe':~l1nerJs
of fireproof expanded metal construction. The column::,
beams, floors and roofs are all concrete, moulded with tem-porary
wooden forms, the slab work throughout each being
reinforced by three-inch mesh IO-gauge expanded metal,
placed near the under side in its right position to take up the
tensile strains. In this way a very thin floor plate is all that
is required. Reinforced concrete stairs are also a feature
of this type of construction, being a combination of the meth-ods
employed in panel and beam work. The stairs and ele-vator
openings are perfectly cut off by fire proof walls built
like the partitions. They are light but of great rigidity.
Steel studs of a small section' are secured to the concrete
at floor and ceiling, being placed one foot apart, and to these
is wired expanded metal lath; mortar gauged with Portland
cement is then plastered on both sides, the entire framework
of metal being- embedded_ The complete partition is only
two inches thick, but being virtually, when set, a stone of that
thickness with a backbone of steel, it is exceedingly strong,
and absolutely fire proof.
The same expedient is resorted to in old buildings of a
non-fire proof nature, the wood ceilings being furred down
\'lith steel strips. 1v1etallath and plaster form a ceiling that
effectually protects the inflammable wood work. In boiler
rooms and other places where the fire hazard is extreme, a
great reduction in insurance rates is now made for this im-provement.
STAR CASTER CUP CO.
NORTH UNION STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
(PATENT APPLIHD FOR)
We have adopted celluloid as a base for our Caster Cups, making the
best cup 0'" the market. Celluloid is a great impro~ment over bases
made of other material. When It Is necessary to move a piece supported
by cups with celluloid bases it can be done with ease. as the hases are per-fectly
smooth. Celluloid does not sweat. and by the use of these cups
tables are never marred. These cups are finished in Golden Oak and
White Maple. finished light. If you wit[ try a sample order of these
goods you will desire to handle them in quanlitie8.
PRICES:S~?e2~ !nches __ ·$5.60 per hundred.
Slze 2% Inches 4.50 per hundred.
f. o. b. Grand Rapids. TRY A SAMPLE ORlJER.
14 ~MIpHIG7fN
NOW THE UNDERWRITERS.
An Ohio Grand Jury Gets After an AHeged Insurance Trust.
The grand jury at Elyria, Ohio, has indicted members of
the Lorain County Cnderwriters' Association for violating
what is' known as the Valentine anti-trust law of that state.
It is alleged that the as!:iociatioll constitutes a conspiracy to
fixed and maintained are exorbitant.
In Ohio, as in Michigan and nearly all other states, fire
insurance rates are fixed by a board of inspectors composed
of experts whose work is used as the basis for rates by all
of the "board" companies. TnlVlichigan the Fire Insurance
Inspection Bureau is a corporation which makes surveys,
maps, etc., fixes rates wbich are used by the "board" com-panies
that pay for the service. Of the 125 companies doing
business in the state, it is said that over 100 subscribe for,
pay for and use the rates and information furnished by the
When asked to express an OplnlOn on the probable result of
the action taken by the~Ohio grand jury, he declined on ac-count
of lack of knowledge as to the workings of the accused
association, but explained the operations of the Michigan In-spection
Bureau as follows:
"There is nothing of a trust nature in its workings. \TI,le
must have some basis to go upon and rates must be made by
experts. The rates are changed from time to time accord-ing
to conditions and while as a rule the rating made by the
bureau is found to be equitable, we have in a number of in-stances
on personal inspection found certain rates too high.
These have been modified even at the risk of being accused
of rate cutting.
"The business 'would soon be in bad shape if there was
not some standard of values to go by and -this standard we
secure in this service. The fact that the rates announced
can be taken or left as the individual companies see fit and the
MADE BY CENTURY FURNITURE CO.•GRAND RAPIDS, :MICH.
bureau, which has headquarters in Detroit and branch offices
in Grand Rapids, Jackson, Kalamazoo and Negaunee and
agents in many other cities and towns.
The Michigan bureau was established nearly twenty years
ago by W. E. lIolt, who was then located at Negaunee, Upper
Peninsula. At first its operations were confined to :"h.
Holt's district, but were soon extended over the Upper Penin-sula
and in a few years spread over the entire state. The
founder, who is now state agent for the Niagara CompallY.
with headquarters at Big Rapids, denies that the organiza-tion
is a trust or has any feature of a trust and declares that
it is beneficial to both policy holders and the companies.
fact that deviation is shown from time to time is evidence
there is nothing of the trust nature in our methods of work-ing.
"We had a field club in the state composed of state agents
and managers which was a splendid organization. We met
at intervals for discussion of business matters, but fearing
our motives might be misconstrued and that we might be
deemed violators of the anti-trust law we disbanded a year
ago. The insurance men of this state at least respect the
Jaws ill all their bearings and they are not now and never
have been in any of their workings contrary to the law in
letter or spirit."
ESTABLiSHED 1858 BERRY BROTHERS'
Rubbing and Polishing Varnishes
THIS IS THE CAN
AND LABEL
CANADIAN FACTOFlY,WALKERVILU: ONTARIO
CHICAGO,
CINCINNATI,
ST. LOUIS,
SAN FflANCI.8CO.
MUST BE USED IN FURNITURE WORK TO BE APPRECIATED
THEY SETTLE THE VARNISH QUESTION WHEREVER TRIED
WRITE FOR INFORMATION,
FINISHED WOOD SAMPLES. AND LITERATURE.
BERRY BROTHERS. LIMITED
VARNISH MANUFACTURERS
DETROIT
NEW YORK,
BOSTON,
PHILADELPHIA,
i1ALTIMORE:.
ESTABL.ISHED 1880
PUeL.15HI!!:D BY
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
ON THE 10TH AND 25TH OF EACH MONTH
OFF1CI!-2-20 L.YON ST., GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
ENTERED AS IIIATTER OF THE SECOND CLASS
That the mail -order houses threaten the existence of thc
single line retailer is plainly evident, but it is not apparent
that the means employed to meet their competition 'will
effect thc purpose desired. The mail order magnate, \vith
orders to place amounting to millions, and ready cash to pay
for the same, will ever command the consideration of manu-facturershavinl{
goods to sell, notwithstanding the protests
of the little dealers with a fev'I' thousands to distribute, after
long time settlements. The little dealers are sturdy fighters
for their rights, but the David who is capable of putting the
Goliath of the furniture trade out of business has not made
his appearance. Their interests can be strengthened by co-operation
when their campaign for trade shall be properly
directed.
*1* *1* *i* *1*
Because of the activity of the mail order and premium
houses and the surreptitious sales made by the comrr.ission
agents, the regular single line retailer has much to contend
with. In his fight for the continuance of his business ex-istence
he realizes the value of the substantial backing af-forded
by those manufacturers who confine their sales to the
re,gular trade. Upon this support he must depend for sUccess
and he should regard it a$ a duty to himself to make the bur,
dens of such manufacturers as light as possible. The de Oller
who refrains from making unreasonable complaints and set-tles
his accounts promptly ever has the substantial support of
the manufacturers.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
The selling at retail by the commission houses could be
stopped hy the retail associations of the several states and
the nation. The business is gro-wing in volume and in a
number of instances represents the larger part of the sales
made by individuals, firms or corporations engaged in dis-posing
of furniture and kindred goods. Considerable stocks
are carried, catalogues distrihuted broadcast and sales made
to whoever w.ill buy. The retailers' associations have over-looked
this fC(ltme of the business in their anxiety to grapple
with the well entrenched mail order houses.
*1* *1* *!* *1*
It doesn't pay the head of a house to hamper his buyers.
There are many capable men in the furniture trade so over-shadowed
alld held under suspicion that it is impossible fnr
them to "make good." Given a fair field and a chance to ex-ercise
the judgment gained by long experience in their occu-pation
they would win sue-cess for their employers and them-selves
as ,veil. A buyer's ability cannot be correctly meas-ured
by the unfair methods employed by many merchants.
Success is beyond their reach because they do not deserve it.
*1* *1* *!* *i*
Within the past six months hvo furniture factories have
been established in the state of J\.fichigan by mail order
houses which take the output of several in the state of Illinois,
while quite a large number have taken shelter under the wings
of the great mail order houses in the eastern states. It is
evident that the mail order merchants do lIot purpose retir-ing
from business when the regular single line merchants shal1
15
have induced the manufacturers of furniture and kindred
goods to confine their sales to legitimate retailers.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
The Ci11LlJnati Vvr oodworker states that Grand Rapids is
the ce11ter of the mail order business. This statement is
ullwarranted. \\lhilc it was of some import;!llce a few years
ago, the business at present is insignificant. It has been
proven that selling a single line of goods by mail is unprofit-able
and this fact led to its discontinuance in Grand Rapids.
The mail order house that handles everything needed in the
home or office is generally successful.
*i* *!* *1* *1*
:'v1r.Holt in his comments on the Michigan Fire Insurance
Inspection Bureau, as given on another page, declares that
the rates fixed by the bureau are not eompulsory--..,-tllat the
companies may use them or leave them. He might have added
that the same rule applies to the insured-that the man who
wishes to insure a building or a stock of goods may also pay
the rate fixed by tbe bmeau or let it alone.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
A numher of retailers in Chicago are a{'lvertl5ing the sa\o::;
of samples from the Grand Rapids exposition, arid nO com-plaint
is heard from the organizations. Th.ere seems to be
a difference between tile sale of samples in Grand Rapids and
Chicago. Apparently such sales in Grand Rapids are an in-jury
to the retailers; in Chicago they are not.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
"Grand Rapids Furniture" is advertised extensively by
many installment houses in New York city, that do not handle
the Grand Rapids plOduct. The advertisers eVldently do not
agree with Shakespeare. There is something in a name, in
their estimation, especially when it is applied to furniture
manufactured in Grand Rapids.
*j* *1* *1* *1*
1Vlacey of New York is advertising "Adirondack Silver
Birch Furniture for summer homes. It is the product of a
great north woods factory," the output of which 1hcey says
he controls. Macey has been numbered among the dead for
many years, but his name "goes marching on."
*1* *1* *1* *1"
So long as the "depression" is confined to Wall street,
the lotteries and the bucket shops, there will be no cause for
worry over business conditions.
*!* *1* *!* *\*
Success is never won by the merchants who attempt to
create trade for themselves by destroying tbat of their com-petitors.
*1* *1* *1* *1*
Window displays are like any other kind of advertising-they
must be continued in order to show their worth.
"Her Simplicity Reflections."
Just ,·".here Secretary Cornell met the very attractive
young woman whom he has introduced to the trade in con-nection
with his latest booklet is not stated, but if she is a
product of Jamestc)\"m, that city bas reason 'to rejoice in her
possession. Jamestown is noted for the beauty of its
\vomcn ;;tnd the intelligence of its men. Whethh this results
from the blending of the sturdy Scandinavian and the highly
tensioned American, the writer is not informed;' but the so-journ~
r in Jamestown is ever impressed with the bewitching
beauty of the gentle sex and the manliness of the men. Sec-retary
Cornell declares that the young woman is "perfectly
simple and simply perfcct," and, strange to relate, these quali-ties
have been introduced in the Jamestown Lounge Com-pany's
specialty, the Simplicity davenport bed. Secretary
Cornell witt furnish further information regarding the ar-ticle
mentioned and the young beauty that adorns the book-let
as well.
16
& Johnson CO.
MANUFACTURERS
Are you handling Fibre Rush?
If not you are missing profit-able
and easy sales.
Fibre Rush and MaJacca Furniture sellsquick-ly
to discriminating trade because of its Lightness,
Durability, Artistic effects and its beautiful Color.
the FIBRE RUSH GREEN-a soft, natural green
that is restful and pleasing to the eye and harmon-izes
so well in any place.
Stock carried and delivered from any of the following warehouses:
The Ford
No. 37727> FIBRE RUSH
CINCINNATI ATLANTA BOSTON
Nothing Like It---"IDEAL"
A GOOD LINE TO TIE TO.
-60 STYLES-A
Reclining Folding Cart I", I SIX DOLLARS I
Fully uphol~ered in Moroccolene.
Cataletg.
Go.caru.
Carriagee,
F oldina: Carte.
Detroit Folding Cart CO.
DETROIT, MICH.
CHICAGO NEW YORK
C. f. SCHMOE,Shelbyville, Ind.
No. 160
Plain Oak Front.
Heighl
76 Inches. 'as. 4Zx26 inches.
Poplar top.
Two large
drawers in
base.
o Large cup-board
space
wit h sliding
shelf.
4 spice cans.
Plde rack.
50-lb. slidi(lg
Iloor bin and
1 bread board,
Canopy, '2
cupboard
spaces.
2 drawers.
2 tilting sugar
bins,
1 large china
closet.
Finish, Golden
oak, gloss or
WEll:!'.
Brass trim-mings.
No. 161
satin Walnut.
Same as above.
Finish, Natural
wood, dull
rubbed.
GEESE Do Not Grow
BETTER FEATHERS and DOWN
THAN THESE PILLOWS ARE FILLED WITH.
--··-----WRITE THE-------
SCHULTZ 8 HIRSCH COMPANY
260.262 S. DESPLAINES ST., CHICAGO, 10' tho
190 1IIlustl"atedCatalogue and Price List. That will tdl yOll all
about it. We would like to have you say that you saw this in === the Michigan Artisan.
27
Something DIFfERENT in lCouches
No. 155
WOVEN WIRE
COUCH
$4.00
Net
We have made for some time, Couches and Davenports with woven wire tops. Our latest essay in
this line is DiffERENT. Made and shipped K. D. Easily set up. 4 trial order will .convince.
SMIT" &. DAVIS MfG. CO.,St. Louis.
EXCEPTIONAL
FACTORY OPPORTUNITY
Do you WiHhto find an opening for a CHAIR FACTORY or would
you like to remove to some more favorable )ocatioll r 11so, it would repay
you to at OlLcerequfOst information about a fille loo:ationin the great timber
section of Southeast Missouri along the •Liberal inducements are offered to secure a bona fide proposition em-ploying
not less than forty men. Gnarl rli"'tributillg facilities for finished
product. Correspondence is invited regarding this and other ~xceUent
opportunities for furniture, mattress_ iron bed and other factories along
our lInes. Send for industrial descripti1MmaUer a,boutthe Rock b;land-
Frisco.
M. SCHULTER, Industrial Commissioner, Roek Island-Frisco Lines,
1144 Frisco Bldg., ST. LOUIS! MISSOURI.
MANUFACTURERS OF
HARDWOOD ~~~~i~~
SPECIALTIES :
~t"YFJ'E"~QUAR. OAK VEN EERS
MAHOGANY VENEERS
HOFFMAN
BROTHERS COMPANY
804 W. Main St" FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
J
18
SIGNS IN THE SOUTH.
No Indication of Depression in Any Line of Trade or In-dustry.
There seems to be no marked inclination toward retrench-ment
in productive activity in the South, according to the
:\iJanufacturers' Record of Baltimore, nor in undertakings nat-urally
manifesting the increase of wealth in that section. Few,
if any, cities there show any relaxation in building operations
which have for months been a marked feature of southern de-velopment.
During the past month, for instance, permits
representing $393.,189, of which $376,964 were for new struc-tures,
were granted for llew buildings and improvement at
Birmingham, Ala., and similar undertakings represented $1,-
179,717 at vVashington, D. c.; $363,857 at Louisville, Ky.;
$247,835 at Dallas, Tex.; $215,844 at NashviJJc, Tenn.; $331,311
at Memphis, Tenn.; $98,160 at Chattanooga, Tenn., and $74,-
175 at Knoxville, Tenn.
Another sign of these times, when there is so much talk
of a. limitation of railroad energies, is the fact that a car
works in the South which has just about completed a con-tract
for 850 cars for the New Orleans & Northwestern rail-way,
has been given orders for 1,800 cars, including 500 dump-cars
for coal and ore for the Illinois Central railroad and 500
flat cars for the Gulf & Ship Island railroad. An order of
100 box cars for the Texas Central railroad, one for 200 stock
cars for the St. Louis, BrO\-vnsville & Mexican railway and
one for 5,000 tons of stecl rails for the Norfolk & Western
railway are among other reported provisions for the future.
Equally hopeful are plans for new railroads in the South.
Among these, as indicated by charter movements, are the Sa-vannah
& Southwestern railroad, to build about 250 miles
from Savannah, Ga., to Apalachicola, Fla., and the Gulf; the
Kentucky Highlands railroad to build aline about thirty
miles long from Frankfort to Versailles and Lexington, Ky.;
a lOO-mile extension of the Velasco, Brazos & Northern rail-way
from Anchor to Hempstead, Tex., with a 20-mile branch
to Houston; the Panhandle Short Line railroad to build 270
miles from Hereford to Stanton, Tex.; the Kansas City, Ok-lahoma
& Guif railway to build 110 miles from the northern
boundary of Texas to Athens in that state, and ultimately to
Galveston; the Brandon & Laurel railway to build 65 miles
from Brandon to Laurel, IVliss.; the New Iberia, St. Martins &
Northern railroad to build 35 miles from New Iberia to Port
Barre, La.; the Macon, Americus & Albany electric railway to
operate a line 100 miles long connecting the three Georgia
cities named, an electric railway looking to connect Washing-ton,
D. c., with Frederick, Md., and Gettysburg, Pa., and two
extensions of railroads in \;Vest Virginia.
The growth of financial institutions in the South shows .
no abatement. During the past four weeks 171 new banks
Murphy Chair Co.
MANUFACTURERS DETROIT, MICH.
A COMPLE.TE LINE.
or trust companies have been organized there. This is an
average of more than 40 each week, and it shows that the re-markable
development of all lines of industry in the South is
compelling provision for banking facilities at many interior
points, some of which have never before enjoyed them. A
large number of these banks are institutions of small capi-tal,
which fact demonstrates that people becoming used to
avail themselves of banking accommodations and to appre-ciate
the convenience and security of the financial institutions. •
The Importance of Correct Grading.
"Retailers do not realize so fully as the manufacturers
the importance of grading a line of goods-especially case
work," remarked an experienced salesman. '-"\Vhen there is
a break in a line of chamber suites, for instance, its strength
is destroyed for a season, or until a new line, properly grad-ed
as to prices and quality, shall be brought Ollt. In other
lines of goods, chairs, for instance, the effect is not the same.
There are always designs in a line of chairs thatwitl sell;
the entire line is rarely a failure."
It Pays Him.
"I figure that advertising pays me $20,000 a year," re-marked
-"Stingy Cuss."
"vVhat are you talking about? You do not spend a cent
in the course of a year for advertising," returned Oldliberal-ity.
"No, but the department stores spend stacks of money in
advertising my goods," concluded Stingy Cuss."
Pioneer
Mfg. Co...
Rood furniturc
Baby Garriaucll
Go-Gartll
I'IJII line shown on
second floor, 13 19
MicLi128D Ave.. CLi-callO.
in January.
KOOK WOOD
and a general lin~ of.
ff\N6Y Tf\BLES
Write for Cuts and Prices
PALMER
Manufacturing Co.
115 to 135 Palmer Ave.
DETROIT, MICH.
Full line shown on second
floor, 1319 Michipll Ave.,
Chicago. in Janua:ry. .
J
DETROIT FACTORIES.
All Busy on Current Orders and Preparing for the Summer
Expositions.
Detroit, April 23.-1vfore than one thousand building per-mits
,verc issued in Detroit from January 1 to April 15, which
means nearly 5,000 for the year, if the present building boom
keeps up. That is the best answer to the question, "How
is the retail furniture business in Detroit?'" To furt1ish so
many new houses, in addition to supplying the regular trade,
will call for a large amount of furniture. Detroit is certainly
coming to the front. It now claims to be the tenth in popu-lation
among the great cities of the United States.
The Detroit Folding Cart Company is doing a
fine business in supplying the babies (through the
dealers) with go-carts and baby carriages. Their
"Ideal'" folding and reclining go-cart is an ideal in
fact a<; \wH as in mllne. The American Go-Cart
Company of this city has gone out of bllsil1ess. The
Detroit Folding Cart Company has taken over their
list of custon~ers and purchased everything in the
line of materials that they could 1.1Se,but will not
make any of the American Go-Cart Company's pat-terns,
as they have their own distinctive linc. Their
No. 154, sho-wn herewith, is certainly a beauty, but
there are many more in the line cqually as fine.
E\'ery merchant who o::arries baby carriages should
have their catalogue.
The l\lichigan Upholstering Company will move
into their new factory on Lafayette avenue, between
Seventh and Eighth streets, in rviay. This is a fine
buildillg, 75 x 130 feet, four stories high. It i.s their
own building and will enable them to more than dou-ble
their output.
J. C. \iVidman & Company report trade as very
brisk, and all indications are that it will continue so
throughollt the year. They will add to their fall line
a large number of new pattcrns in standing and
hanging hat racks. buffets and china closets, very
plain, but neat in design, constructed in the best
manner and highly polished, in golden quarter-sawed
oak. They will make their usual display at the ex-positions
in New York and Chicago in July.
The \Volverine Manufacturing Company are mail-ing
the finest cata.logue they have ever isslled. It
shows a wonderful variety of tables, pedestals and
fancy furniture.
The Dctroit Cabinet Company is another of the
busy concerns. They will make their usual fine
exhibit in Grand Rapids in July.
The Pioneer l..Ianufacturing Company will add a ntltllber
of new patterns in reed chairs and rockers to their display
in Chicago in July. Trade is excellent in all lines with this
company.
The Palmer l\1anufacturillg Company have just finished a
very large dry shed for lumber and a new kiln. They are
having an excellent trade and \vill make the [Illest display
in Chicago in July they have ever attempted at any exhibi-tion.
The Posselius Brothers Furniture rVlanufacturing Com-pany
are filled up with orders for dining extension tables.
Unless there should be a great slump during th~ last half
of the year (and there is nothing that points to such a
thing) the year 1907 will be a record breaker for them.
The Murphy Chair Company are preparing their 1907 cat-alogue.
Each year this cOITpany makes an effort to outdo
its previous catalogue, so that now :Y!ttrphy catalogues are
considered souvenirs among the furniture merchants.
7IR-T I.s ..7:IZ\I
? 'itTfe 19
Japanese Contracts are not Sacred.
Curious ,vays the Japanese merchant has of doing busi-ness.
A special agent of the United States government who
is now in Japan gives some illustrations. The buyer, he
says, makes no payment until the arrival of the goods.
If in the meantime the market has dropped the Japanese
will often go to the American and intimate that he is not pre-pared
to stand all the loss and that the American should di-vide
the loss with him, though to do so might wipe out the
profit on the transaction.
As a merchant explained, the Japullese sees nothing wrong
in evading the letter of the contract, because when they make
a CCl11tractthey don't-at least in their minds-absolutely
•
No, 154 Made by the D~troit Folding Cart Co.
agree to do a certain thing or to make a certain payment, but
simply to undertake to try to do it. If there appear certain
ohstaclcs in the way of their doillg so, they do not consider
themselves bound to proceed with it.
Car Famine Slight ly Relieved.
Lake navigation having opened at Chicago, the railroads
have heen relieved of large amount of grain and package
freight and arc able to provide a greater number of cars for
other kinds of traffic. 1d11chembarrassment still prevails in
the \Vest owing to the shortage.
Crating Very Expensive.
"Very fe""vdealers realize the cost of the lumber used in
crating furniture," remarked E. H. Foote, treasurer of the
Grand Rapids Chair Company, "but it averages two and oue-half
times more than it cost ten years ago. Beside it is very
scarce."
20
LEGS AND FEET OF THE CHAIR.
•
To the· Expert They Indicate the Period to Which the Fur-niture
Belongs.
To collectors of old furniture the feet and legs of chairs
are full of information, says the New York Sun. Nearly
every great maker or period was distinguished by some pecul-iarity
in the feet and legs of chairs, which is almost always
present, and by which the probable age and maker of a piece
of furniture may easily be determined. The very old chairs
which date back to the last half of the seventeenth century,
with their carved legs and backs, are seldom met with in
salesrooms. Such chairs, made of oak or walnut, with
leather or cane seats, became common in England about
1660,when Charles II, ascended the throne. When two years
later he married Catherine, a Portugese princess, further lux-uries
were introduced into England. Among them were
cane seated chairs from Holland, with carved turned legs,
made in what was known as Flemish or Spanish style. This
was quickly adopted by the English, who combined the var-ious
details, to suit themselves. A chair of about this per-iod
is shown, made of walnut with turned legs and carved
feet, the latter in what is called Spanish style. This kind
of foot is grooved and turns out, and while it is found on
bined with a certain solidity as may be seen in the chair. It
wilt be seen that, though this chair is of a later period than
the first, the splat is still of about the same form.
The fact that most furniture is undated is unfortunate and
allows great latitude in guessing at the period in which it was
made. Such a chair as this may be called Queen Anne,
Dutch, Spoon back or Chippendale, according to the fancy of
the owner, the fact being that it was probably made during
the first forty years of the eighteenth century.
Styles did uot change with a rush; there was no sharp de-marcation
between one period and another. Each maker
took what he found and then improved or altered it till he
had formed a style which was popular and became to a cer-tain
extent his.
One of the chairs with the ball and claw feet shows a
further development of the cabriole leg. The splat shows
elementary decoration, being pierced in slats, and the top
shows a mOTe gTaceful line, with the ears or continuations of
the top which became a marked feature of the great Chippen-dale's
chairs. Probably this chair was made prior to his
time or it may have been made by a country cabinet maker,
either in this country or England, working from Chippen-dale's
pattern books, for its proportions 'are bad and the seat
is far too narrow for that class of similar chairs which are
known by the name of Chippendale, Compare it, for in-
I J\lt 100 IX l\ ""\, ,::=
I· I ~~~
. lM
_-r.<.-.,#~::~-..~~ /' "- Y
- - '";;:;:=-,---"- Ir .....
I' ~~~ - -,.---.:::c ,'- -,"?,,'\;'''''''.
IT
~
lJ U ""II ~ ~ ~ ij N ~
-H,
I( ~r ~ lJ' !
. I 4
.Duteh Fbot. E«ll-and-Paur. Ettl.t·and-Cla S <lnis
Ta eor Le . so, ton Le $ de Foo1:.
much furniture of this period and later, it is always unmis-takable
from its shape and grooving.' This chair also shows
the original form of- the back which became popular during
the eighteenth century, when the splat (the center panel of
the back,) became a feature of the chair, with 'its ornamental
carving or other adornment.
The chair with the Dutch feet is some years later than
the first one. The wood is mahogany and the legs are of
the style known as cabriole, though this word originally
meant furniture having a stuffed back and had nothing to do
with the leg.
The Dutch foot is found on all pieces of furniture, but
chiefly on chairs and tables. Such legs and feet are on a
pretty little table which may be found in General Washing-ton's
bedroom at Mount Vernon, and it is generally com-
Henry Schmit &. Co.
nopklnl ad Harriet SU.
Cincinnati. O.
UPHOLSTEREO FURNITURE
"'.
LODGE AND PULPIT. PARLOR
LIBRARY. NOTEL
AND CLUB 1l00M
L
stance with the other chair with the ball and claw feet, with
its splendid carved knees and with the graceful splat with
its intricate ornament.
See how much less clumsy this chair is. The heavy cross-bars
have been discarded, the splat has been brought down
to the frame of the seat instead. of having a bar crossing to
the sides of the back. In both cases the wood used is ma-hogany,
and about the carving on the knees can be detected
the marks of the carving tool, characteristic of the old pieces.
Although Chippendale is k!1own chiefly as a maker of ma-hogany
furniture, it was a branch of the business in which he
was not particularly interested, and in his "Director" the
wood is mentioned by him but once as follows: "Six de-signs
of chairs for Halls, Passages or Summer-hJuses. They
may be made either of mahoga:ny or any other wood and
painted and commonly wooden seats."
Chippendale liked to work for the "nobility and gentry,"
and did not care much abollt the solid middle class, who were
after all his best patrons, since the nobility 'could not always
be relied upon for payment. As a carver for his most bril~
liant and elaborate work he found mahogany too hard a
wood. So he chose a close set pine and in this he worked
his fanciful designs, gilding or painting them to suit his own
taste or that of his customers.
Hepplcwhite' and his widow, who succeeded him, worked
out a style which, though pleasing and graceful, was by no
means as solid and substantial as that of Chippendale. Be-sides
the shield shaped back which is so nearly universal in
SPRATT'S CHAIRS
ARE THE JOy OF THE CHILDREN.
Our new CHILD'S··MISSION ROCKER was a winner from the start.
Write far Catalogll.e and prices. OUT Line is large and pricea are right.
We make
CHAIRS
fo'
GROWN-UPS
as well as
CHILDREN.
GEORGE
SPRATT
& CO.
Sheboygan,
Wis.
Say you saw
this ad ill the
Michigan Arti-
OUR FAMOUS SPECIALTIES
The New 20th Century Box Spring
(WITH FlE:MOVABLE COVER)
Double Deck Bed Springs, Folding Bed Springs
Woyen Wire Mattresses
Cots, Couches and Stuffed Mallresses
A great variety of styles and construction to
~elect from. Let us know your wants. Will be
pleased to furnish catalogues on application.
The Luce Furniture Co.
INVITES ATTENTiON TO ITS LARGE UNE OF
Bed Room and Dining Room
Furniture.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Salesroom at Factory Only.
22 .!"~ t;.I9,HIG?}N
-MAKING -GOOD
"Making good" is a hobby with us-••making good
LEATHER FURNITURE for one thing••••the best.
"Reliance" Natural Grain Leather is the handsomest
and moSt dependable brand of M. B. Furniture Leather
manu/adured. but we ask no more for "Reliance" Leather
work than many charge for inferior grades.
If something cheaper i. wanted. buy our "Oakdale"
No. I Natural Grain stock-we are quoting this at .pecial
low figure..
The "Oakdale" quality is lully equal to the average
market best.
Some manufacturers of Leather Furniture use Grain
Leather lor the wearing surface and "Split" or "Deep Buff"
for band •. back. and trimmings. We condemn thi. practice
·-we use no "Split" Leather •.. no "Deep Buff..... nothing
but Natural Grain stock.
BIG CATALOG SENT TO DEALERS UPON
APPUCATION.
JAMESTOWN LOUNGE COMPANY
JAMESTOWN. NEW YORK
The Woman Who Kicks.
Ever meet the woman who kicks?
Undoubtedly, if you have been engaged in the business of
selling goods for the household. Madame with the strong
limb and the trained toe thinks the only proper way to close
the door of music cabinet .. a buffet, sideboard or a refriger-ator
is to plant a "good swift kick" in its center.
A manufacturer of refrigerators relates ~ome of his exper-iences
in dealing with fair users of his boxes, one of which
will serve for the purpose of this item. Prefacing his state-ment
with the remark that he had noticed in many stores
salestr.en who kicked the doors of goods they were showi.ng
to customers he proceeded as follows: "A lady living in
my home town bought a very good refrigerator of our make
from a dealer and a few months later caned our office on the
phone and complained that the locks and hinges were out of
order. Taking some lock springs and screws I visited the
Morton House AmeriClln
.....•Plan
Rates $2.50 and Up
Hotel Pantlind European
......Plan
Rates $1.00 and Up
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
The Noon Dinner Served at the Pantlind
for 50e is the fiNEST IN THE WORLD
J. BOYD PANTLIND. Prop·
lady's home and found the box in a very b<ij:l condition. The
finish on the doors was ruined; the locks would not close it'ml
the hinges we.re w'obbly and insecure. Calling for a screw
driver I quickly repaired the damages and when the lady
came in to inspect the case I closed the doors gently with
my hand. Opening a door, I requested the lady to close it.
Raising a foot, she administered a hard kick and the door
closed with a slam. Opening the door, I asked the lady to
kick it again. The agile foot again performed that duty.
Repeatedly I opened the door ~nd requested the lady to 'kick
it again. It is only a refrigerator.' The lady kicked and
kicked as often <l.S the door was opened, and finally be-coming
tired of the exercise, she asked, 'Don't you close it
that way?' 'Oh, no,' I replied. 'I close it gently by hanel.
My wife trains her servants to use their hands instead. of their
feet when closing doors. ){ow, once more, kick it again.',
"'I won't do it,' peevishly remarked the lady as she disap-peared,
The cause of the defects in the refrigerator had
been located.
RetaiHng in an Exposition Building,
Quite a sensation was caused in Chica~o recently by the
local furntiure dealers' association. An agent was employed
to ascertain whether goods were sold at retail in the exposi-tion
buildings. Several "offenders" were located and posi-tive
proof of their indulgence in the retail business obtained,
Singularly it appears that none of the occupants of· the Man-ufacturers
Exhibition building were among those spotted,
and the local association has given the manageinent of that
enterprise their approval. What course the association shall
take in regard to the offenders remains to be seen. The
employment of spotters is unusual in the business of retailing
furniture, Perhaps the conditions of the 'trade in Chicago
justify the service rendered.
CALIFORNIA TRIP FIFTY YEARS AGO.
Atchison Stage Line Boasted of Making It in Thirty-five
Days.
!
I
I
I
"Atchison to California in 35 days; fare only $200 in gold."
was the heading of au old handbill, yellm'i with age, ..v..hich a
traveler laid upon the counter in a railway ticket office the
other clay, says the Kallsas City Journal. It was an adver-tisement
of a line of stage coaches that ran from ,'\tchisOll,
Karl., to San Francisco, during the gold excitement of years
ago.
"People seldom stop to think '''''hat their ancestors had to
put up \vith fifty years ago," the man said. He was compar-ing
the old time table \vitb a modern railroad time table,
which told of the luxuries one could have by traveling on that
road. No dust, no jarring and all other disagreeable feat-ures
eliminated.
The old time table '.vas !t douhle sheet of paper, tom and
yellow with age. It "vas issued by the Atchison & Califor-nit
stage CO;IClJ line ill 1857. The inducements it held forth
were in strange COlltC\st "'lith tho~e of the modern railroad
advertisen~ent. The stage coach line advertised tbat it had
recently refurnished the entire "road" with absolntcly new
wagonettes, and it told what kind of coaches they were, how
the springs were made and of what strength they were. It
even said that the coaches were painted in "the best rnanner
possible." The horses that drC'\v the coaches were described,
too, as the hest.
~\1l induc(']nent that was held out on the tilLe table to
prospective passengers was a stop-over privilege. '·Passen-gers
who had paid their entire fare from Atchison or other
points to t!Jeir destination," the paper said, "may register witb
our agents. A stopover privilege is tbell given for any pbce
on the road."
Thc time of the stOPOl'C/' was unlimited. Tl,c time table
provided that a passellger might resume the journey wheneyer
there was an cmpty seat ill tbe stage coach.
;'Vv' c make quickcr time to California than allY other stag-e
coach line and at a eheaper rate," the pamphlet stated. Tt
went on to say that fot $200 a person could ride. all the way
from Atchison, Kan., to the gold fiehls of California.
"The distance is 1,8U miles," was stated on the time table.
"The longest distance ever attempted by a stage coach line.
Atchison to California in 35 days."
A hoast was made that there '..vere twelve telegraph sta-tions
on the road to California al1d that eating placcs had been
established along the road where good meals could be had at
the nominal price ,of $3. Every passenger was allmved twen-ty-
five pounds of b'aggage, consisting of ''''earing apparel and
other necessary baggage. All over that amount must be paid
for at a rate of SO cents a pound.
It was advertised that the risk On the return trip was very
great on account of the al1l0n\1t of gold dust and nuggets be-ing
brought back from California. The company employed
only the bravest men fully armed, all the time. But it de-clined
to cany gold dust unless paid for at the rate of $3 a
pOllnd. The cornpany refused to be held responsible for the
loss of gold dust by robbers, Indians or other means.
The pamphlet also advertised a fast freight line between
A tchison and Denver, Colo., iOntwenty days.
That Pennsylvania Cobbler's Discovery.
Tbat "immensely vahwb1c" discovery of all Altoona, Pa.,
cobbler whereby coal can be made to perform several times
its usual function as a fuel is no longer a deep, d:nk secret,
says the New York Commercial. The inventor made the
mistake of disclosing his disC'.overy too widely before he had
taken precautions to settle its early profits upon himself. And
now all Altoona is mixing ashes with its coal and is obtain-ing
the desired results-so a newspaper correspondent re-lates.
It is very simple. so simple that all that was needed
was a hint that it could be accomplished and then anybody
could do it. Here is the preparation: "Common salt one
pound oxalic acid two ounces, water one gallon. Mix and
then moisten a mixture containing one part coal and three
;<'.rts ashes." A better fuel than coal is obtained, it is as-serted.
The cbetnical process is of little interest as adding
to the advantage of the householder. There is the secret.
'\llybody can use it 8nd if it "makes good," the anthracite
bills of next 'winter will be a third of what they were previous-
THEllHOMES OF
OLD VIRGINIA
always suggested a certain
charm for refined atmos-phere
and open welcome.
The hall with its tall clock and dig-nified
highboy---the Dining Room
with its Sheraton Furniture and old
silver---the Bedroom with its four
posted Beds, were all expressive of·
si~ple ideals and homely comfort.
We have reproduced a great many
of these fine old pieces, where the
original models have been adhered
to in absolute faithfulness.
Grand Rapids Furniture Co.
eIncorporated)
34 and 36 West 32d Street
Between Broadway and Fifth Avenue
An -exceUerrt model for a seIDlible. altr&dive, elfective advertisement. 11is Pkiu, brief and
expressive and COIlveys lde1l8 thai wiU stick in the mind~ of the readen. It is coPied from the
New Yo[k Sun.
ly. After good and sufficient proof of the genuineness of
the prescription a public fund should be raised for J oh11 Ell-more,
the Altoona cobbler, everybody being asked to contrib-ute
except the anthracite coal mine owners and. the coal-car-rymg
railroads.
Milwaukee Plan to Stimulate Trade.
Milwaukee merchants, including the 1110st promit:Jent fur-niture
dealers, have an organization which grants a rebate of
one-third on round trip railroad fares to out-of-town patrons
,...h.o buy goods to the amount of $25 within a week of the
purchase of the ra.ilroad ticket. It is not necessary to spend
all of the $25 in one store. It may be distributed among the
members of the organization.
23
EVANSVILLE DESK CO.
MANUFACTURERS OF THE
Best Value of Desks
On the Market Today.
It will pay you to send us an order.
WRITE FOR NEW CATALOCUE.
No.257. Price $18.50. .
Has 4l:l loch Top,S Legs and is Highly Polished.
It's One of the "SUPERIOR"
T"E BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE co. I:VANSVILU: IND.
ftar~es
War~ro~es
are Good Wardrobes
GOOD
Style
Construction
Finish
PRICES RIGHT
Write fr;y Catalogue
Karges Furniture
Company,
EVANSVILLE, IND.
Kitchen
Cabinets,
Cupboards
and
K. D.
Wardrobes.
That Please.
Send for our
1907 Catalogue
Now Ready.
The Bosse
Furniture CO.
EVANSVILLE. IND.
The "ELI" fOLDING BEDS ~~~frl~'~Nm
No Stock complete without the Eli Beds in Mantel and Upright.
EL 0 M &. C Evan.ville. Indi.na , . ILLER O. Write for cuts aud prices
Globe Sideboards
,..------- ARE THE ----,---..,
BEST ON THE GLOBE
FOR THE MONEY
Get Our Catalogue.
Mentionthe MICHIGAN ARTISAN when writing.
Globe Fumiture Company
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA
26
Gents' Chiffoniers
We sell the
best one
in the market.
Make them in
several patterns
and our prices
are the lowest.
Send for Cuts and Deacription.
THEY ARE MONEY MAKERS.
Chas. Bennett Furniture Co.
CHARLOTTE, MICH.
To Simplify Freight Classification.
It is exp,ected that before the end of Mayall freight traffic
associations will have named committees to act in conjunc-tion
with a committee appointed. by the Central Freight As~
sodation in the work of undertaking to formulate a uniform
classification that all the associations will be willing b adopt.
This movement is in response to notice from the Interstate
Commerce Commission that if they did not accomplish some-thing
looking to the adoption of a uniform classification the
commission would do it for them. The initiative was taken
recently by the Central Freight Association.
\A/hen uniformity in this regard is est<>btished it will be
easier for the uniform bill of lading committee to complete
its enormous task.
They Promise to be Good.
The retailers of Chicago babquetted and talked a few
nights ago. Quite a number of commission men and manu-facturers
were guests of the association. All made speeches
and promised to be good. George Clingman referred to the
fact that the sale of goods by reta-il in the exposition build-ings
of Grand Rapids had been discontinued.
Another Upholstering Factory.
The Crisv.rell-Kepler Company, composed of James Cris-well
alld Fred Kepler, and capitalized at $10,000, are to estab-lish
a factory for the manufacture of high grade upholstered
mahogany furniture at the corner of Korth Front and West
Leonard streets, Grand Rapids, 1Jich. Mr. Criswell has rep-resented
the Dexter Chair Company in this section for some
time. lh. Kepler will have charge of the upholstering de-partment.
This will make eight upholstering institutions in Grand
Rapids, where there were none ten years ago. Now those
who make upholstery a prominent feature of their factories
are the Retting Furniture Company, Mueller & Slack, Grand
Rapids Upholstering Company, the C. S. Paine Company,
the Century Furniture Company, Sweet- & Biggs and the
Michigan Chair Company, and there are several others wbo
do more or less upholstering.
New Building for Kragens.
The Kragens store to be erected in San Francisco will be
completed by I\'ovember 1. The new building 'will be six
stories high with a mezzanine floor and basement, located all
Market street at the corner of Stevenson street, The entire
building will be used for samples. It will be 100 x 170 feet.
There will be four elevators and a chute, and a welt on the
pre'mises, tanks on the roof and up-to-date fire fighting ap-paratus.
A vault in the basement will be thirty feet long.
The sho'\v windows wilt be of unusual depth and the plate
glass is to run down to within three inches of the sidewalk.
Besides furniture, carpets, draperies, household goods, stoves
and many other lines will be carried.
Selling Samples Unprofitable.
In connection with the closing out of his Milwaukee
store and the discontinuance of the purchase and sale of
Made by Richmond Chair Co., Richmond, Ind
samples, Phil Klingman, a veteran of the furniture trade, re-marked:
"There is little if any profit to be derived from
dealing in samples. The furniture manufacturer could not
afford to sell the choice pieces in his line separately and
there are many 'hoo-doos' in every collection of 'furniture.
Take chairs for the purpose of an illustration, Many lines
contain hundreds of patterns, no two of which are alike.
,"Vho among the consumers would buy one dining chair?
And what dealer could afford to warehouse a lot of goods,
concerning the selling qualities of 50 per cent of which he had
serious doubts? The wise dealer will not take such a risk."
f
I
Club House Furniture Must Be Seasonable.
Two sets of furniture bave become almost a necessity with
New York clubs, says a writer in the Kew York Sun. tn
the old days the same hlrniture serveJ winter and summer.
\Vhen the weather began to be warm and the windows to be
opened ill April or carly I\Iay the stuffed chairs and sofas of
the drawing room were covered \"ith striped calico or chintz,
and they remained thus l.vith their dusters 011 until October.
Men left behind in town by their wives and families felt them-selves
at home ,<vith the chintz covercd furniture of the <Jub-house
because their Own darkened drawing rooms presented
exactly the same aspect.
In those days carpets coverillg the clubroom floors clear to
the l,vashboards \vere tucked dO\vn, and they came up only
twice a year at most to be shaken, and in order that the floor,;
might be thoroughly scrubbed. After the spring house-cleaning
the carpets were tucked down again, and they staye.d
down rill summtr. The dr;rwing rooms with their heavy
carpets and their stuffed furniure looked prety hot in July
aul August. but such was the ;ljlprovcd arrangetncnt, and it
went.
Some years ago a fe\·\, clubs adopted the pbn of providing
special summer furniture and the practice bas spread. For
the heavy winter furniture light cool wid<er chai,s and sohs
are substituted. Rugs laid all hardwood floors long ago took
the place of the old fashioned carpets for \vinter, and whell
the ,vicker furniture comes ill, the rugs come up and go out
of the house. The result is a delightfully cool effect.
Some club houses have space for the storage of their will-tel'
furniture in SU111n:ertime and their summer fLlrniture in
\vinter time, hut others hire: space in ~torage warehouses. As
to the rugs, they are oftcn SCnt to a cleaner, who cleans and
stores them io1' the sumn~er.
,"Vhat happens in the drawing rooms of the clubhouse hap-pens
also in the lodgings. If there are heavy articles of
furniture in the roon:s they are replaced by wicker, and the
carpets .are sent to the c1e;lllcr's for the Slimmer, while a cheap
Japanese rug at the bedside and another beside th{~<.,vashstand
make the lodging'S comfortable. In some cases slatted doors
are hung at the opcning of spri11g in order to keep the bed-rooms
cool.
:"lo1'e and more clubs have roof gardens. These are de-pressing
places all \V-inter long, and evcl~ lip to the middle of
1hy.
By that time their potted \'"ine~,have been well started, and
men begin to dille on the roof on hot nights alld to sit there
and consume cooling drinks until the closing hour arrives.
Xovv and then a lodger obtains the privilege of swinging a
hammock 011the roof and there he sleeps on hot nights.
Difficult to Prevent.
"It is a very difficult matter to prevellt the sale of furni-ture
in an open-all-the-year exposition by retail," remarked
the manager of an exposition building. "So many people
find employme,nt in the structure and the -interests represent-ed
afe so diversified that it is almost im'possible to prevent an
abuse of the privileges granted to leaseholders and their em-ployes.
The agent of a line of chairs may have a friend who
is selling lllusic cabil1cts or buffets. The former wants a
piece or two as a special f<tvor. A lady relative is to marry
and lle \vants a cahinet for a gift. The accommodating rep-resentative
of the c,-,hinet maker selL> rI music cabinet at
the wholesale price. And so it goes. Hundreds of such
transactiollS arc inevitable. There is no way to prevent such
deals, try as earncstly as wc may."
Another Big Department Store for Brooklyn.
Ralph Leining'er, J. A. Kohner rind George D. Beattys
have organized a cOl'poration to be kno\vll as Darlington &
Co., to establish a first class, up-to-date department start': in
27
Brooklyn, K. Y. The capital stock is $1,000,000, and the pro-moters
propose to have one oi the finest stores in the coun-try.
Another Railroad for "Grand Rapids of the East."
Application has been made by the Dunkirk, Allegheny
Valley & Pittsburg of the l\~ew York Central system for a
franchise to enter Jamestown, N. Y., by huilding a spur from
Falconer. 1£ granted it 'will bring the Lake Shore into clos-e,
competition ,,,,ith the Pennsylvania and the Erie.
Muskegon Valley Furniture Co.
Moskellon
Mid..
Odd
Dressers
Chiffoniers
Wardrobes
Ladies
Toilets
Dressing
Tables
Mahogany
Inlaid
Goods
Ladies
Desks
Music
Cabinets
Line on sale in
New ..vanufae-tU1'
61'8' Bttild·
ing, GRAND
RAPIDS.
The Sargent Mfg. Co.
MUSKEGON, MICH.
Bachelors' Cabinets
Ladies' Desks
Extra Large Chiffoniers
_______ Also Manufacturers and E.xportell of -------
ROLLING CHAIRS
Chairs adapted to all kinds of invalidism, both for
house and street use.
OVER FORTY DE.SIGNSTO SELECT FROM
28 ~MI9HIG7}-N
"The Larkin Idea."
Here is a sample of the kind of adverti:,;ing that has built
up an enormous business for the Larkin Company. It cer-tainly
contains a good argumen.:t, but retail furniture dealers
can easily meet it by showing their patrons that they buy di-rect
from the 'manufacturers, and thus eliminate two of tbe
<imiddlemen" mentioned:
Do you know that you are paying an unnecessarj!y large
price for a great many things of household use? 1'105tman-ufactured
goods are sold to the consumer at from two to four
times the cost of production. This is because the goods pas!'>
through many hands; from the facto~y to the sales agent;
from the sales agent to the wholesaler; from the wholesaler
to the retailer; from the retailer to the consumer. Each
"middleman" adds his expenses, his losses, his profits, and,
request will bring you their premium list, which contains de-scriptions
of over 1,200 premiums, and 150 products. Ask for
premium Jist 1\'0. 36, and address your postal to the Larkin
Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Lounge Taxed as W001.
A bitter tariff battle over an upholstered lounge was de-c.
ided recently by the board of general appraisers in Chicago,
adversely to the claims of the importers, James S. Kirk & Co.
\Vhen the lounge reached Chicago the collector of customs
declared the article is a "manufacture of wool." Duty was ac-cordingly
exacted at the rate of 4.4 cents a pound and 55 per
cent ad valorem. The lounge was held at the custom house
until the importers came fonvard and paid the duty; afterward
they filed an appeal with the lower customs tribunal. Kirk
MADE BY CENTURY FURNITURE CO.; GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
all, in the end, is piled up in the retail price, and must be paid
hy-YOU.
There is a way to stop this, a way by which you can pass
the middleman by, and get things absolutely at their cost.
Every few weeks certain articles of daily use in your home
call for an outlay of say twenty dollars. Would you not wel-some
sotne idea whereby you could purchase these same ar-ticles
for ten dollars?
There is such an idea. It is the Larkin idea, the short cut
from factory to family; a modern business triurp.ph that has
proved a blessing to millions.
How tremendous the responSe of th~ people has be~n to
the Larkin idea is shown in the single fact that the model es-tablishment
has grown from a factory of ],600 square feet
in 1875, to an enormous plant of over fifty acres in 1906. To
visit Buffalo without seeing the Larkin factories is to miss
one of the most interesting industrial sights of the world.
One of the best features of the Larkn idea, a thing that
has brought happiness to many a home, is the premium ar-rangement.
This is so attractively carried out that we would
strongly advise' you to become familiar with it, A post-card
& Co., alleged that the lounge should be taxed only 35 per
cent, the rate applicable to "household furniture comJ;wsed of
wood."
General Appraiser Lunt, who wrote the decision over-ruling
the contention, thinks that the importers failed to sub-stantiate
their claim. He says:
"The only evidence the importers sublritted is a written
description of the lounge accompanied bJr two photographs,
but there is nothing in their memorandum to show the rela-tive
values of the materials involved in the manufacture of the
merchandise, nor is there anything in the record otherwlse to
controvert the collector's classification; In the absence of
competent evidence, the decision of the collector is presumed
to be correct. The protest is overruled."
The furniture makers of ancient Rome held Julius Caesar
in grateful remembrance on account of an order for 60,000
couches for use by the populace in witnessing the festivities
following the return of. the ruler from one of his campaigns
of conquest. They were not davenports, adjustable, sanitary
nor of the ..S..implicity" pattern.
~MlfpIG7;!-N , 29
C O,T S
We make every known style guaranteeing extra good material and workmanship. These cots will cost you no
more and yet are standards of excellence. If you use cots it will pay you to drop us a postal today for catalogue.
HARD MFG. CO., Buffalo, N. Y.
Heppelwhitc's chairs, the foot he used, known as the spade
foot, is almost as indicative of him and his period.
He, too, loved the nobility as patrons, and he had a fav-orite
desig'u of three feathers, the Prince of \\rales crest,
which he introduced at all times and seasons, and on all
pieces of furniture. One form if it is shown in connection
with the spade foot chair. \Vhile this chair docs not show
his familiar shield shaped back, it exhibits the structural
weaknes's \'dlich is present in nearly all of his chairs and
which causes one to find 50 many of them now broken and
mended.
Instead of bringing the back down to the seat, he had a
fancy of ending it above the frame and attaching it by two
short curved pieces, which often broke llUder the strain of be-ing
leaned 011, The legs, too, were oftcwtmduly slender, and in
order to counteract this defect he im-'ented the spade foot,
which gives an appearance of strength, which the chair docs
not have.
\Vhile Chippendale relied for most of his ornamentation on
his carving, Hepplewhite, Shearer and Sheraton used inlaid
work of brass or ..v.oods quite as much as carving, if not more.
When carving was used it was often in lower relief than in
Chippendale's work, and a popular design was called husk
pattern, like the husk of a grain of oats laid out flat.
These husks succeeded one another in a line, graduating
in size when applied to a chair leg. A chair is shown here
with the shield shaped back and husk pattern On both legs
and back.
Originally, no doubt, this chair was covered with the
dainty striped brocade or damask which Hepplewhite g-ives
such minute directions about in his books, and which should
be u::.ed on his chairs with ab-nndant gilt nails ananf';cd in a
pattern. His striped seats and the nails are almost as much
a part of this maker's work as his spade foot and shield back.
It is a pity when old furniture is restored not to carry out the
usage of the maker.
It will be seen that in all these. las;t examples the heavy
•
cross bars for supporting the legs were banished and that
the whole effect was lighter and more dainty. The styles
in dress had something to do with this, and the- spreading
gowns of the ladies and the wide stiff coats of their cavaliers
necessitated chairs and seats ovcr which they could flow with-out
confinement of arms.
By the time Sheraton gave his undivided attention to his
books the modes had altered once more. Slender clinging
gowns of transparent tissue and cutaway coats were all the
rage, so we find many chairs with arms among Sheraton's
designs. The one shown here is a simple one, but entirely
representative of this maker.
It is well proportioned, simple and elegant, and shows the
leg which Sheraton was so apt to put on his furniture, vary-ing
its length tor a four post bed and suiting it to the con-fined
limits of a lady's footstool. The pretty ornament in
the back is agreeable to the eye and of sufficient strength.
The back legs had an air of more solidity than the incurved
ones of Hepplewhite's work.
1\Iany such ch;:lirs found their way over here, some sets
which went into the mansions numbering seventy-two.
These were for the dining room, and while the greater num-ber
were side chairs, there were usually ~t least six arm
chairs.
This style of chair was often covered with leather, some-times
'with horsehair, '''v'hile those which were a little more'
ornate had on the scat brocade, worsted work or velvet, or
had cane or rush seats.
The prices, which are demanded and obtained for chairs
like any of these shown are very high, a set of six in good
condition often going into fOUf figures. Chippendale's pieces
which have an authentic history, like the original bill, partic-ularly
if the piece is one of those made of rosewood or ma-hogany
finished with brass, copper or silver mounts, and
japanned or gilded, may bring $2,000 or $3,000. A few such
piece:; pass through some of the great auction houses in
London each year, but they arc hardly ever met with here.
White Printing Co. HIGH GRADE
CATALOGS
COMPLETE GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. ====== ===
30 ~l'1.19pIG7JN ,
Unprofitable Piracy.
"The light-hearted, neatly dressed young salesman who
has taken a course in a school of furniture sketching during
his between-seasons vacation and enters upon the piratical
practice of sketching the attractive pieces found in the ware-rooms
of the dealers Upon whom h~ confers the favor of his
presence from time to time, and forwards the same to the
very honorable manufacturer he undertakes to represent, not
infrequently causes a lot
of trouble," remarked the
vet era n manufacturer.
"This is the way it works
out. Our company occa-sionally
brings out a piece
that looks good in every
way. The season opens
and it meets the approv-al
of the buyers. The first
lot cut is cleaned Ollt
quickly. The second cut-ting
is ordered. In the
meantime the young sales-man
with the sketch book
has noted the p"iece. It
Made by Manual TrainiDIl' Department, Grand looks good. Everyone
RapidaPublicSchools. has it. He makes a sketch
and sends it to the house. On his next trip he finds it on
the floors of the trade he calls 011. It must be a great
seller. But it isn't. It is a 'hoodoo.' Scracely one of
the first lot cut has been disposed of. The originator of
the style has the second cutting on hand and 1)0 one wants
any part of it, The copying manufacturer enters the market
with copies, and the sketching young salesman 'learns a
few things.' Perhaps the second and third copying manufac-turer
contribute their 'able cfforts' to the unsalables, and
assist in loading the market with a hoodoo for the year to
come. This is an old lesson, as old as the trade, and yet
there never seems to be lacking sketching young salesmen
and 'reproducing' manufacturers to learn it."
Don't Become a Miefit.
There are plenty of misfits in this world. il'1en who
would have made good n~echanics have become poor clerks;
men who would have made a success of farming are strug-gling
along as lawyers 'with a few clients and little income;
men who might have been good salesmen are sitting in offices
with a physician'S shingle on the door, waiting, waiting for
patients who never come. In fact, every trade and profes-sion
contains many men who are not fitted for the work they
are trying to do but who would be able to do good work
somewhere else.
It's a pity that we can't adopt the merchant's plan and
take all the mistfits of business life and place them where they
will do real good, but as this cannot be done, we urge every
boy and young man starting out in life not to become a mis-fit,
says Spare Moments. If you love tools become a me-chanic.
If you lm'e the outdoor life among the fields be-corne
a farmer. If you love drawing, become a draftsman. Find
out what you lovc best and then follow YOllr inclination if yOll
would avoid becoming a misfit. Don't let pride stand in
your way. The world has more respect for a good mechanic
or a good laborer than it has for a poor clerk or an incompc-tent
physician.
Some folks will tell yOll that every trade and profession
is crowded. So it is, but the crowd is at the bottom of the
ladder and not at the top. The mcn who lead in every walk
of life are the men who love their work, not the men who have
chosen such work because it was considered more respectable
than other vocations.
Misfits are always unhappy, always growling and grumb-ling
at the fate that keeps them down. The man whQ loves
the work he has chosen, is contented with his lot, although
ambitious for greater things. The man who fits will rise.
while the misfit will hover around the bottom of the ladder
of succe!';s. Don't become a misfit.
Like Trying to Bell the Cat.
That IVlontgomcry Ward & Co. are not scared nor dis-couraged
on account of the efforts of the national and state
associations of retailers of furniture to restrain their opera-tions
in selling merchandise is shown by the fact that the linn
has under construction a new plant for the distribution of
goods covering l1~ore than an ordinary farm and costing mil-liars
cf dollars, in the city of Chicago. It is the purpose
HOUSEKEEPER ....... Save One-Half the Money You Are Now Payin, for
Your feN. Coffees. Dakin, Powder. Splc ....
FlaVUiin, Exll'acte. Soaps. Perfumes.
and Other Household Supplies.
A HANDSOME PRESEIIT GIVEN WITH EVERY ORDER
Sample of Advertisements Ueed by Premium Houses.
of the company to erect and operate factories when the retail
associations shall have succeeded in cutting off the usual
source of supplies; in fact, they are now sustaining financial-ly
a number of factories operated in the production of goods
the firm handles exclusively. Other mail order merchants
will 'establish retail stores and carry stocks, if it shall be deter-mined
that the vast amount of merchandise contained in their
warehouses do not entitle them to membership in the several
associations of retailers. How to put the mail order houses
out of business seems a more difficult proposition than con-fronted
the mice mentioned in the fable about putting a bell
on the cat.
THE LEXINGTON
Mich~n Blvd. & 22<1St
CHICAGO, ILL.
Refurnished and re-fitted
throughout. New
Management. The
furniture dealers' head-quarters.
Most con-veniently
situated to
the furniture display
houses.
Inler-Slate Hotel CO.
OWNl:l:K &. I.'ROPRIETOR
E. K. Criley. Pres.;
T. M, Criley, V. Pres.;
L. H. Firey, Sec-Tleas.
QUALIFICATIONS OF SALESMEN.
A Few Ideas on the Subject Expressed by Prominent Detroit
Merchants.
Detroit, April 23.-.'1'hat it requires 110 ordinary amount of
ability to be a successful furniture salesman is the emphatic
opinion of some of Detroit's most successful dealers-men
who, themselves, have risen from the ranks to become the
heads of large concerns. "First class salesman arc born, not
made," said James Fitzsimmons of Fitzsimmons & Co. "Of
course, a n:an must have experience rind it requires years to
learn the business, but if a man hasn't the llatural qualifica-tions,
he ""ill never make a high-class salt:sman, 110 matter
how hard he tries.
"1 think that 1 kno ..v.. a good salesman \"'hen I see one, but
I can't draw up plans and specifications of all the qualities
that he n1115tpossess in order to be successful and advance in
his business. But \-ve'll suppose, for example, that you are
going out to b11y a piano. You don't know milch about pi-
;mos-·at least most people don't. You go to a store and a
clerk shows you the stock But for some reason you don't
like the way the man shows his goods and you go to another
place, and get into the hands of the right sort of a salesman.
He shows you the pianos that afe in stock. They probably
aren't a bit better than the olles you saw at the f1rst place,
but in SOlIle \vay this salesman ll1~·lkesyOll think that they are.
FIe brings out all the good points of the piano that he is try-illg
to sell you-·he makes you think that it is exactly what
you want, without undue urg-ing or resorting to falsehood or
misrepresentation rind before you kllOW it he has sold you
a plano. That is the sort of a saleS111r1!tlhat we are all look-ing
for and the kind who command the hig-h salaries. And
unless a man posseSSes this quality of briJ!ging out the best
points of the article lle is trying to sell and convincing people
that it is superior to all others, be will never make a s:tlcs-man,
but win always remain a mefe clerk.
"Of coursc, there are other qualities that the s:lcces'iful
salesman must possess. One thing that ,ve insist upon in this
store above an others is strict boncsty. i\ salesman who mis-reprcsents
goods is treated with no leniency even though he
makes :l good s,tlc by his fal'iehood or half-truth. Lea-ving
out all other considerations, it is poor business policy. Soon-er
or later, the cuStOtllCr is certain to find out he has been
deceived and not only will he never patronize you again, but
he will tell his friends ;.lcd after a while you will feel the
effect. No finn th<lt is not strictly honest call hope to
achieve permal1cnt success."
"In regard to stimulating business in dull times, it has
been my experience that to conduct bargain sales on some
special article is the best way. I believe it is better to make
7fT<.-T I..s'.71.2'1
.e 7 r. 31
sales even if you have to sell the articles at actual cost than
to sit down ~nd wait for trade to come to you. At least, it
keeps you from getting rusty and when people buy articles so
cheaply at one of these bargain sales, yOU often obtain their
good will and when they want to buy furniture at some later
time they are quite likely to remember you."
"There is one trait "\vhich the furniture salesman must pos-sess
above all others if he is to be successful," said F. M.
Adler of vVeil & Co., "and that is adaptability. He must be
able tn adapt himself to al1 sorts of peaRle <Iud conditions.
You can't lay down ally fixed fules. Of COurse, there are
certain qualifications necessary to success in ally business,
but it I have one hobhy it is adaptability. People are so dif-ferent
that a salesman must be able to size up each and every
customer and decide just what is the best way to appeal to
him. It is a hard matter to select good furniture salesman,
at the best; many times a man whom you think has all the
qualities will prove to he an utter failure. But I think that
I am safe -in saying that if a man can't adapt himself to
nearly all kinds of people and conditions be will prove to be
a failure."
"My hobby in selecting a furniture salesman is to get one
who knows perfectly every article to be found in the store
and bow to sell it," said "\V, 1. Owen of Owen & Co. "The
furniture business isn't like others, where each salesman sclls
the article in his department and knows little or nothing about
the others. For this reason we never take on a man who
has not had experience.
"Those aren't by allY means all the 'qualifications. A
man in order to be a good salesman must be hooest and he
must have a pleasant way about him that will make -a favor-able
impressioll with customers. A man who is gruff, im-polite,
inattentive or careless is worse than useless, and I
don't know of any business where there is less use for a lazy
man. The bcst salesmen ,ve have are the boys who started
in as office hoys and gradtw_lly worked their way up. They
know c\'crytbing in the store and they kllow aUf ways and
methods.
",As to enlivening business in dull times, about the only
method that I know of is to make a sale on some special
article. That gets people to coming into your store and
makes you think that you are doing a lot of business anyway,
even if you aren't making much, and then it gets pcople ac-
Cjuailded with your store and often they will buy other ar-ticles
besides the one that you are making the special price
011. vVe believe that it is a.pretty good way of advertising."
Grand Rapids Caster Cup Co.
2 Parkwood I\ve.•Grand Rapids. Mich.
Vile ar",- now putting on th~ best Castet Cups with corll bases evn
offeree to the trade. These ate finished in Golden Osk and White Maple
in a light finish. These goods are admirable for polished flooT!;and fum.
iture rests. They wllll10t sweat or mar.
PRICES:
Size 27.i'inches $4 00 per hundred
Size 2M inches····· - 5.00 per hundred
Try a Bample Order. F. O.B. Gyand RapidJJ.
32 ·~~MI9fIIG7f-N
OUR NEW 1907 LINE OF ALASKA REFRIGERATORS
with side ice chamber is made in twenty-one styles,
zinc lined, white enamel and porcelain lined. Our
catalogue will il'lterestyou. Write for it.
THE ALASKA REFRIGERAlOR CO.
Exclusive Refrigerator Manufacturers,
MUSKEGON, MICHIGAN.
Using the Auto as a "Booster."
The success of schools established to teach young men
how to nm an automobile shows that interest in the "pro-fession"
is widespread. During the fall one was organized
in connection with a motor company at Buffalo and a part of
one factory building was set aside for a class room. Soon
inquiries began to pour in and there was no difficulty, after
the start had been made, in :filling all the classes. The pros-pective
drivers come from all parts of the country, as is
shown by the fact that in the class now going through the
school two of the men are from North Dakota, three from
Virginia, one from Nebraska, one from Georgia and two
from Canada.
The men are said to be young and bright looking and are
of a mentality that enables them to grasp quickly the me-chanical
problems involved. Most of them say candidly that
their reason for preparing. for this kind of work is that they
expect to use it as a stepping stOne to something better as it
will throw them irito contact with men wllo will be in a pO-sition
to help them .
.Notes on Columbus Factories.
The Harden-Winders Manufacturing Company have in-corporated
with the capital stock fixed at $10,000. The offi~
cers are as follows: President, James Keyes; vice president,
C. H. Carpenter; treasurer, Frank Winder~ M. D.; secretary,
Wilber Winders; manager, D. T. Winders. They manufac-ture
mission furniture, novelties, porch swings, and hall
clocks and will show their full line in Chicago in July. To
many men there is nothing more enjoyable in a hot day than
a good book, a good cigar and a Harden-Winders Porch
swing.
The E. 1'1. Hulse Company are enjoying their customary
good trade. Last year they had a record-breaking business.
and barring fires, frosts and frenzied finance, they will set
their peg several notches higher during the year 1907. Their
new Buckeye Oak for davenports and couches in an eye-open-er.
E. M. Hulse will tell you more about it if you give him
a chance.
The Columbus Couch Company is building up a good busi-ness
in couches upholstered in leather and soft goods.
Architects- Are Not Good Furniture Designers.
Several af the large furniture manufacturing corporations
of Grand Rapids are full of orders for hotels, the- contracts
for which were secured through retail dealers. In discuss-ing
this branch of the furniture manufacturing business re-cently,
the superintendent of one of the large plants re-ferred
to remarked that much illy designed furniture is used
in the equipment of hotels, because proprietors of the same
have employed architects to prepare special designs. The
average architect is not conscientious in the drafting of de-signs
and aims to please his employer rather than to give
truthful expression of the art he undertakes to portray. He
is usually successful in fitting the furniture to the wall and
floor spaces it is intended to occupy, but beyond that reQuire-
Made by Century Furniture Co. Grand Rapids. Mich.
ment he is seldom successful. While the conscientious man-ufacturer
endeavors to carry out the purpose of the <!-rchitect
many instances arise in which changes are necessary in or~er
that strength and utility shall not be sacrificed. The av-erage
hotel keeper, owing to his lack of experience, does not
inspect the furniture purchased on his acco,unt as closely and
as intelligently as the regular trade buyer" and when he places
an order directly with the manufacturer, the opportunity pre_
sents itself for the manufacturer to slight the. construction
and finish of the goods ordered. No manufacturer of estab-lished
reputation, however, will take advantage of such op_
portunities.
Inse!
,
II
To Our Western Patrons
NOTE:
There has been no change in the management
of our CHICAGO FACTORY, the
same practical men who have brought it to its
present high standard continue in our employ.
BE NOT DECEIVED.
I WE CAN MATCH ANYTHING
FILLER BONE HARD OVER THAT WILL DRY N I G H T
The great majority-in fact just about all of the manufacturing trade ask
for a filler to be hard dry the day after filling. We can do better than that.
USE OUR FILLER AND YOU
CANNOT DIG IT OUT OF THE PORES THE
===== NEXT DAY ==============
IT IS IMPOSSIBLE FOR VARNISH TO PENETRATE THE SURFACE
IT SANDS OFF IN A POWDER THAT WILL LEAVE YOUR
SAND PAPER CLEAN AFTER THE WORK IS DONE.
The Barrett-Lindeman Company
, IN CONSOLIDATION WITH
The l.Jawrence-McFadden Co., Ltd.
61-63-65-67 No. Ashland Ave•• CHICAGO. 1400-2-4 Frankford Ave., PHILADELPHIA.
Inset
Tha Univarsal Automatic
CARVINO MAClflNE
==== IPERFORM$ THE WORK OF 25 HAND
CARVERS
And does the Work Better than it can be Done by Hand
-----~-MADE BY-------
Union [n60SSlna MACUlnr (0.
Indianapoll .. ,Indiana
Write for Inlorm.tion, Prices Etc.
The Pittsburg Plate Glass Company
MANUFACTURBRS AND JOBBERS 0"
Plain and Beveled Mirrors, Bent Glass for China Cabinets,
Plate Glass for Desks, Table Tops and Shelves.
Our facilities for supplying furniture manufacturers wiJJ be understood when we state that we have 10 Glass factories, extending
from Pennsylvania to Missouri; and 13
Mirror plants, located as follows:
New York Boston Phlladelpbia
Buft'alo ClnciD.natl St. Louie
MinneapoUs Atlanta Kokomo, Ind.
Ford City, Fa. DJgh PolDt, N. C.
Davenport Crystal City, Mo.
Also, our 22 iobbint honses carry heavy stocks in all lines of glass, paints, varnishes and brushes
and are located in the cities named below:
New York-HUdson and Vandam sts. BufI'aJ0-3'l'2-4-e-8 Pearl Street.
Buston-41-49 Sudbury, t~9 Bowker. Bts. Brooklyn-636 aod 037 Fulton Street.
Cbicag0-442-452 Wabash Avenlie. PbUadelPbla-PltcaJrn BuildJog, Arch
Cincinoat1-Broadway and Court Sts. and Eleventh Sts.
St. Lout_Cor. 7th and Market Sts. Davenp0ri-410-416 Soott stl"&!t.
MinneapoUs-OOO-lilO S. Third St. Clevelwul--149-Gl-6S Seneca Street.
Hetl'oit-l5Z-55 Lamed. St., E. OmRha-1608-10-U HaJooey Street.
Plttsburgb-l0tal0S Wood Street. St. Paul-349-51 Minoesota Street.
MDwaukee. WIs-492-494 Market St. Atlanta, Oa.-30, S2 ItDd 34 S. Pryor St.
:Qochestel', N. Y.-Wilder BuIlding, Malo Savannah, Oa.-746-749 Wheaton Street.
and Exchan&,e St&. KanS&s CIty-Fifth and Wyandotte Sts.
Baltim(l~221-223W. Pl'att Street. Blrmlogham, Ala.-2nd Ave. and 29th St.
It needs no argument to show what
advantages may be derived from dealing
directly with us.
AGENTS FOR THE COULSON PATENT CORNEl\. POSTS AND BATS.
GLOBE VISE AND TRUCK CO.
OAH:e 321 South Divbion St., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Mfci, of High Grade
Wood Workers Vises
AND
Faclory Trucks
Qualily and Price
talk in factory trucks
and we can interest
you. Will you send us
your address and let us
write you about tbem?
Wntefor PriC68
B. WALTER & CO.
M.nuf."u"," of T ABLE SLIDES Exclusively
WABASH
INDIANA
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT
SOM.ETHING NEW
WE have perfected a new GOLOU OAK OIL
STAIN without the use of asphaltum or
acid.
This stain is the strongest and most penew
trating stain on the market. It entirely pene-trates
the wood, leaving no surplus on the sur·
face to penetrate with the filler.
Samples furnished on application. -- We have over 12different styles of factory and warehouse trucks 'to offer,
also a complete Hr,e of woodworking vises and benches.
CRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHINC COMPANY
81S-69 ELLSWORTH AVE., GFiAND RoIlPltlS, MICH.
This Machine Makes the Money
========== BY SA VI NG IT ========== It makes aperlectimitation of any open grain because it uses the wood itself to print from, and one operator and a couple of
boys can do mOTe work with it than a dozen men with any other so-called machine or pads on the market.
That~8 why it·s a money maker. It imitates perfectly
PLAIN or QUARTERED OAK,lMAHOGANY. WALNUT. ELM, ASH or any other wood with open grain
WRITE; THIt ---
Posselius Bros. Furniture Manufacturing Co., Detroit, Mich.
FOR PRICES AND FULL PARTICULARS. MENTION THE MICHICAN ARTISAN.
Inset
Inset
Oran~Da~i~sDlow Pi~e
an~Dust Arrester Compan}
THE LATEST device for handling
shavings and dust from all wood-working
machines. OUf eighteen years
experience in this class of work has
brought it nearer perfection than any
other system on the market today. It
is no experiment, but a demonstrated
scientific fact, as we have several
hundred of these systems in use, and
not a poor one among them. Our
Automatic Furnace Feed System, as
shown in this cut, is the most perfect
working device of anything in its line.
"'\Vritefor our prices for equipments.
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETAIL WORK WITHOUT EX-PENSE
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
EXHAUST FANS AND PRESSURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN STOCK
Offic. and Fa.ctory 0
208-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
Cltb,:en. Phone 1282
OUR AUTOMATIC FURNACE FEED SYSTEM
r,
B0YNT0N ex. C0.
SEND FOR
CATALOGUE
Manufacturers of
Embollu~d and
Turned Moulding.,
Embossed and
Spindle Carvings,
and Automatic::
Turnings.
We also manu·
facture a large line
of Em.b'i)~d 0 ..n8'
ments for Couch
Work.
419·421W.fifteenth St..CmC4GO, ILL.
FOLDING BED FIXTURES
Profitable fixtures to use are those which give the
least trouble. They are made by Folding Bed
\iViliiams in many styles and designs, suitable for
every folding bed manufactured. Furniture Cast-ings,
Panel Holders, Corner Irons, etc. New ideas
and inventions constantly being added to the line.
F. B. WILLIAMS
3812 VINCENNES AVE" CHICACO
Manufacturer.of Hardware Specialties fortheFurniture Trade.
Established 1,s78.
FOX SAW
SMOOTHEST
GR,OOVES
FASTEST
CUT
LEAST
POWER
LONGEST
L1FE
DADO HEADS
GR.EATEST
RANGE
QUICKEST
ADJUSTMENT
LEAST
TR.OUBLE
PERFECT
SAFETY
Also Machine
Knlve.r, Miter
Machines. Etc.
PERMANENT ECONOMY
SAMUEL J. SHIMER &. SONS
MILTON. PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A.
FOX MACHIN£. CO.
TOILET SCREWS: 1;£ to 2 inch knobs can be furnished as toilet
screws to order only with standard bolt 3,%inches long and patent drive nut
and washer.
===.
We'lI gladly tell
YOU all about
It.
185 N. Front Street.
Grand Rapids. hitch
Wood
Forming
Cutters
We offer exceptional value in Reversible and
One-Way Cutters for Single and Double Spin ..
dIe Shapers. Largest lists with lowest prices.
Greatest variety to select from. Book free.
Address
THE KNOB THAT WONT COME OFF
NO-KUM-LOOSE WOOD KNOBS
Section of "A"
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich.
CUT shows tbe construction of our line of Wood Knobs.
The metal nut is clinched into the wood at its front end, pre-venting
turning or pulling out. To the back end of the nut
is riveted a steel base, having projecting spurs which enter
the drawer front. The knobs are held in place by a screw and corru-gated
spur washer, which avoids any possi-bility
of unscrewing. All goods are smooth-ly
sandp
- Date Created:
- 1907-04-25T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 27:20
- 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/76