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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-12
Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-12
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAl'JD RAf-1L
(iRAND HAPIDS, MICll., ~OV:EMBEH
NELSON-MATTER FUR CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MI H.
BED-ROOM and DINING-ROOM
COMPLETE SUITES
in Mahogany, Circas"ian 'Valnnt and Oak.
If you have not one in your liitore, a simple reque ..t 'W'"l.lJ briIl2 you our magniiicent new- Cataloane of 12x16 inch Pdge groups, show-ing
suites to JUatch. With it, e, en the Ino ..t Illoderate sIzed fnrn1ture store can shoW'" the best and new-est furniture satisfactorily.
- - ----------------,
"THE PORTER" Jr. 5 INCH JOINTER
IS THE GREATEST LITTLE BIG
MACHINE ON THE MARKET.
It is built with the same
care, accuracy, and feat-ures
that are embodied
in "The Porter" Hand
Join ters which are
known the world over.
The steel lipped
ground tables which
can be withdrawn from
the cylinder; traversing
mclines for guaging the
cut; the tilting guage for
beveling, mitering, etc.;
and the Round Safety
Cylinder are all identical features of the larger machines.
When furnished upon the iron bed (shown in cut), any style
of motor can be attached. The style of current, cycle or
phaze is immaterial. The machine is furnished with or with-out
the countershaft, or stand, just as is desired.
IT IS THE IDEAL MACHINE
for the cabinet room, pattern shop, manual training school
or any place where small or narrow jointing or buzz planing
is done. It requires but little power, small space and runs at
high speed; and say-don't you know that
50% OF YOUR WORK
is within the range of this machine. You ought to be inter-ested
in this machine and our catalog T. will tell you all
about them.
C. O. PORTER MACHINERY CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
WEEKkY ARTISAN 1
No. 1152 Dresser.
Made in Oak, Mahogany and Blrd'.-eye Maple.
Beautiful Bird's Eye Maple
JUST THE THING TO DELIGHT
• THE LADIES AT CHRISTMAS!
There is nothing quite so dainty~so feminine-so charm-ing
for Christmas, as a Bird's Eye Maple Dressing Table.
Light, airy and cheerful, it goes to the hearts of the
ladies, and it is the ONLY LIGHT-COLORED FURNI-TURE
THAT IS ALSO HIGHLY ARTISTIC.
The NORTHERN has made Maple a leading line ever
since starting in business. We
are in the heart of the Maple
country, where the finest Ma-ple
in the world grows, and
with our standard lines, using
Maple as a base, we are able to
pick ONLY THE CHOIC-EST
PIECES for N at u r a I
Map I e finishes. Therefore,
when you buy Natural Bird's
Eye Maple from the NORTH-ERN,
you are sure of the
creme de la creme~the finest III the country.
But you must have artistic shapes too-the airy beauty of Bird's
Eye Maple is completely lost if it is not made up in beautiful designs.
We also give you moderate prices. That is what will sell with
you-beautiful wood, designs and workmanship, at moderate prices, coupled with PROMPT
DELIVER Y ( and that means everything when you get near Christmas-nobody beats us at that
part of the game).
No. 1197 Dressing Table.
Made 1D Oak, Mahogany and Bird'.
Eye Maple.
Full information given In courteous letters about
anything that interests you. Write us frankly, freely.
Northern Furniture Company
SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY II
,
III
I
III
I
•Ij
t
II•I
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only.
~-.-_. --.-. ----_._. ------------------------~ _. -_.._.-- ._..--- .--- ._. . . -- - --
luce-Redmond Chair Co.,ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Blrd's Eye Maple
Birch
::J<!tartered Oak
and
ClrCI1SSJI111 WI1t1Jut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS' BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
"Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES, J. EDGAR FOSTER.
I It t ND RP..rb 10
'-'"PUBLIC LIBRlRY
31st Year-No. 20 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• NOVEMBER 12. 1910 Issued Weekly
'WHY MOST REAL SALESMEN ARE IRISH
They Are Required to Serve as Apprentices and Are Thoroughly
Trained for Their Occupation.
CWlitten for the Dry Goods Economist by Ge01ge Rob111son
head of the foreign departments of the \Vanamakel stores)
The "obsci vmg pel son" was surprised to notice through
the lal ge dcpal tment St01e of New Y01k that seemmgly a
maJonty of the salesmen were I11sh; yet the same thmg
would be found tl ue m Clllcago, Plllladelpllla, Boston or any
of our large American cities. This is especially so in the
fabnc depal tments, where an actual knowledge of the con-structlOn
of the matenal becomes a substantial asset to the
man behmd the counter.
These are the men who have learned their business on
the other Side of the water and have answered the call for
ti amed salesmen from the greatest and most remunerative
field m the vvorld Imagme the feelings of an American boy
at the age of ±ourteen or fifteen If he were told that he must
work fm four years Without pay. 01 the consternatlOn of his
father at the Idea of paying a fee of $500 and donatmg his
son's sel vices at the same time. This is preClsely what hap-pens
to the Insh lad when he decldes-or rather hiS parents
deCide for him-that a bUSllless career, and not a professional
one, IS to be hiS lot Thus the young man makes hiS start m
the busmess world, impressed
(and generally subdued) by the
fact that his father has paid out
a good round sum of money and
eApects only one thing in return:
that he shall learn that particular
business, and le'lrn it thoroughly
from the ground up.
If an Amcncan lad goes to
vvark at thiS age, the thought in
hiS mmd IS revenue only, and if
he casts in IllS lot with a dry-goods
house it is because the im-media
te wages al e a little better
than he has been offel ed in any
other place It is just a "job" to
him; nothing more. And the
ne"t week he will as carelessly
and cheerfully leave it for a place
in an office or a canning factory
for fifty cents a week more. This
boy is much more likely to SALESMAN BY ACCIDENT.
change four times m one year than to remain in one place for
four years.
A man who has been tlllough this course of training in
the old country appreciates just what it means, for well he
knovvs what hes between the start and the certificate of rec-ommendation
at the finish. One youthful aspirant for mercan-tile
honors was apprenticed to a Belfast house, and trembling
With fear lest he would not be competent to fulfil the duties
required and might be returned to his parents in disgrace,
he asked an older boy, who had been longer on the job, just
V\ hat was expected of him, and was told in return that if he
was sufficiently expert in the art of sprinkling damp tea-leaves
on a dusty carpet and could handle a broom well enough to
sweep them up agam he had nothing to fear for the first three
months at least. It may be added that the new apprentice
acquires a personal knowledge of the uses of the dust-cloth
as well.
By the end of the third month the "new boy" has come in
and the first boy is advanced one point further up the scale
of leal nlllg-which means that he goes to one of the cash
desks dotted about the shop, and there he learns how to ac-curately
make change These desks are numbered from one
up, according to the location and importance in the house and
a boy is advanced from the lowest to the highest only as he
implO\'es in accuracy and rapidity.
In the course of a period in which a boy serves in the
various cash-desks he is required to report at the end of the
business day to the head cashier-who is usually the treas-urer-
with hiS balanced accounts showing the amount of cash
taken in for the day in hiS section, and it must be absolutely
correct. If the vouchers do not agree he is given opportunity
to look over the sales-checks, and if an error has occurred
which he cannot account for he must give a proper and satis-factory
explanation to the management.
By the time the boy has finished with these desks he
pretty nearly knows how to make change and balance simple
accounts. After thiS he goes to the counting room and credit
office of the firm This finishes the first year and the sales-men
of the futm e has not yet handled a yard of merchandise.
At the beginmng of the second year he is asked if he has
a preference for any particular department, and, if he has,
It is usually arranged to place him there. But this same boy
has a long way to go before he becomes a salesman or gets a
FOI the whole foUl years that the Iri'3h hoy is "serving
111..t,une" the only incentive held out to him I~ the plomlse of
a position at the end of hi" t11ne, with a PI111ce1y111come of
£16 a year-equal m our good, hard-earned Amencan money
to $7820. But long before the four years have expired he
has heard from some of his old associate" who have gone to
,\merica and are bemg paid as salesmen five and SIX tunes
more than he could possibly earn for a gooel many year'3 to
come. Hence, his own preparatIOns for fitting al e generally
completed by the time his certificate is handed in.
Thus Ireland Im,e'3 one more
of her trained young men and
while these boys may start at the
bottom of the ladder in thiS coun-try
by no means all of them re-mdin
there. You will find them
among the best buyers, managers
and e\ en proprietors in some of
the ~Teater stores 111the United
State'3, and the rungs of their lad-ders
have been their Old World',>
training, their apphcation to the
business, their enthusid'3m and
last but not least, their good
health and regular habits, ac-quired
during their apprentice-
'3hip-( for the boys are boarded
and lodged by the firm and under
their supervision generally in
charge of one of the managers)
and subject to stnctest discipline
THE TRAINED SALESMAN after, as well as during, the busi-nes'
3 hours They are required
to be in their rooms hy 9 o'clock at night, when the superm-tendent
makes a per'3onal investigation of each room and
looks for each boy, yet aside from thIS, a hberal time is
given for recreatIOn.
Many a \\ eak boy, startmg his apprenticeship in these
shops, takes out at the fil11~hinto the busmess world strength
and health as a result of the outdoor sports in whIch the
boy s are encouraged to engage "Mollycoddlelsm" does not
flourish under the same 1oof WIth fifty 01 sixty boys, all pure
Insh, and mostly flom the farms, and the puniest lad soon
finds that he hkes cncket, football and baseball, and in the
four years he accumulates blood, and bone, and muscle to aid
him in hIS battles with the world.
While we believe our methods in this country are far
in advance of the old country's stores in general merchandis-mg,
yet there 1'3much to be said of a salesman from the Em-erald
Isle. He is taught that he should make customers feel
that the VISIt to the shop is an honor, and he Impresses you
that It is a great pleasure to show the goods and you can
Just trust him to fulfill his duty to his firm by selling you
all he can, for SELL IS wntten 111capital letters on his very
bram \Vell he knows that If he fails to make a sale tho
aisleman or the buyer, ever on the watch, will ask the reason
why; f01 they m turn, are expected to be sufficiently alert to
keep track of pi acticall y every transactIOn between the sales-man
and the customer.
Thus a salesman IS constantly kept keyed up to his best
efforts, and, on the other hand, a buyer IS actually in touch
wIth his merchandise and the daIly demand of his depart-ment
But, mdependent of this, there is a feeling of loyalty
m the hearts of all these men, salesmen, aislemen and buy-
(Continued on Page 6.)
WEEKLY ARTISAN
chance to actually sell good.., In",tead, he I~ gl ac lothly per-mitted
to become valet to the 1eal "pald sale~men." lIe is
obliged to arrive an hour ear her than the saId "1eal salesman,"
remove the covel~, dust the countel s and generally prepare
the department for the merchandIse display \"hlch 1", made
fresh every mornmg aftel the al nval of hiS chIefs
During the day he IS now behmd the counter pel ton111ng
the duty of stock-boy and I ecel \ mg lesson~ m callng for the
stock. Even the correct manner of placmg a pm m a bolt of
ribbon is not too small a thmg to be taught thI::' boy Thus
is instilled mto hIS young mind a spmt of economy, thnft,
and regard-which i::. clo'3ely akin to rev erence-for hiS mer-chandise.
I Ie must all the time keep hh eye", dnd ear", open
to learn how to addres::. a cu::.tomer, ho\\ to walt on a LUS-tomer
and to intelligently pI e"ent and dI"play the merdldn-dise
for a customer.
The "observmg person" ::.a\\ the other da), m gomg
through a large department St01e m ~ evv York, a sale.,mdn,
supposed to be servUlg a customer lIe had one hand m his
pocket, he leaned agam~t the ~helf fixtm e, dnd b::. legs v\ere
crossed. The customer \\dS lookmg at the goods, but he
made no effort to assI"t the would-be purchaser. not e\ en
taking the trouble to appear mterested-whlCh 1 esulted m
the customer actually selhng herself from the ~oods that
were on the counter, m plam VIew The lad m the Insh shop
could never have learned such salesmanship, f01 such mdIf-ference
to customers or merchandise IS unkno\\ n there Some-time::.
this slovenly salesmanslllp come", about from the mdol-lence
of the buyer himself or hIS assl~tant, for men are otten
lIke geese 111 this respect and follow theIr leadel and as the
head is so it is down the line This indIfferent salesman who
leaned against the shelf-fixture may have lost the chance to
make a friend for himself as \\ ell as for hIS house Hel e is
indIcated the great opportumty to a good man possessmg tact
and expenence. All customers, of course, cannot be treated
alike. Some will enter mto conversatIOn freely, \\ 111leothers
will resent too much explanatIon. But It IS always permiS-sible,
when deahng With senSible people, to pre",ent certain
interesting facts. If a ::.alesman IS showmg a garment, or an
article, or, 111 fact, any piece of goods, fabnc or othen\ Ise, and
can give his customer some mformatIOn regardmg the con-struction
of the article or fabnc it goes far m estabhshmg
confidence and may pave the way to mtroduce other Items for
sale. A knowledge of the merchandise, though, IS necessary
in that case.
Real Business-Builders.
Whether the salesman is a foreigner or born in th1s
country, and whether he is behind the counter m ~ ew York
or in any other city, if during hiS leIsure hours he WIll make
it a point to inquire from the older people behind the counter
and to make a careful examination of the merchandIse he Will
always have some httle bit of mformatlOn to give whIle he is
waiting on the trade that will make him personal fnends and
also friends for his house. This IS the kind of people that
really build up a business.
It is not necessary to agree with a customer any more
than it is to agree with a person In any other phase of life.
If he has a careiul knowledge of the merchandise and im-par~.
I it in a clean-cut, pobte mannel the customer leaves the
counter WIth an impreSSIOn of havmg been properly served.
Today, in New York, as well as 111 any other city, the
young Irishman will be taken on in preference to the Ameri-can
applicant for the same pOSItion. Not because the Irish-man
is better liked, but because the management usually de-tects
the ear-marks of a better groundwork, though probably
ignorant of its sources.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 5
J B Van SClver and hIs buyer, A F RoellIg, of Camden,
N. J , were in Grand RapIds this week, buymg furmture
* * * *
Z Clark Thwmg of the Grand Rapids Veneer \\T orks.
\\ ho has been east on a bus mess trIp for several weeks, re-turned
home last Wednesday
* '" '" '"
W H MIller of Marshall FIeld & Co. ChICago, was in
GIand RapIds thIs week, lookmg for some of the good thmgs
m furnIture sUItable for holIday gIfts
* * * *
The managers of the Tanne\\ Itz Machme \Yorks report
a good demand for theIr products and a pleasmg mcrease in
theil busmess in the past fe\\ months.
* * * *
\Y ork has been started on the constI uctlOn of the large
addItIon to the plant of the ImperIal Furmtme company,
whIch is to be completed early m the spring
* * * *
),1 A Heyman of the Heyman company, home furn-ishers.
has gone east on a bus mess trIp His partIcular ob-ject
is to pick up bargains in rugs, carpets and draperies.
* * * *
Among the furmture buyers who have visited Grand
RapIds factories this week are Mr and Mrs E S Crosby elf
Topeka, Kan, and John LeslIe of vVmnipeg, Man.
* * * *
John \Vaddell of the Waddell Manufacturilw company • b ' IS up in the nOIth \\ ooels, deel huntmg. He went away before
electIOn belIevmg that the country IS safe no matter who may
be elected.
* * * *
J 01111G. Heberger of the Standard Furniture company,
'Cmcmnatl. \\ as m Grand RapIds thIs \\ eek The Standard's
lme, strengthened and enlarged considerably will be exhibited
hel'e as usual, in January.
* * * *
Glaml RapIds' manufacturers are not antlclpatmg any
'>hortage of coal thIs fall or wmter Coal dealer'> here have
laId m lal ge supplIes and shll)ments are commo- in more reou- b b
arly no\\ than they \\ el e a month ago
* * * *
\VIlllam S Emery. the well-known veteran furniture
'lalesman of Gland RapIds. Mich. has !S0ne to Bo'>ton to re-mam
a \\ eek or t\\ 0 after \\ hich he \\ ill visit his son in New
York and then go to Flonda to spend the winter.
* * * * The Luxury Chair company's orders and shipments in
October wel e larger than in any other month since they be~
gan busmess and judgmg from the number of orders booked
last \\eek November IS lIkely to be a better month than Oc-tober
for their business
* * * *
This week the Hot Blast Feather company shIpped a full
tar of mattresses. pIllows and springs to one house in Xorth-ern
MIchigan ThIs IS the thIrd carload ,>hlpped to the '>ame
home thIs year TheIr trade m southern ~1ichlgan is grow~
mg rapidly and theIr city trade i~ ah\ a) ~ good
* * '" *
Robert \V. Irwin was anlOrtg the successful C:1ndldtl,tes
for membership m the charter commISSIOn elected in Grand
Rapids on ~ ovember 8 MI Irwm has studied municipal
government sevel al ) eal s and is well qualIfied for service on
the commISSIOn. He wIll be a leader m the \\ ork to be done.
* * * *
The E. O. Bulman ManufactUrIng company, manufac-turers
of wood and metal speClaltIe~ are building a new fac~
tory on Broadway opposite the plant of the Imperial Furni-ture
company The building \\ III be made of concrete, 50XI5°
feet, one-story, and WIll be completed and occupIed early in
the new year.
* * * *
Hon Edwin F Sweet. who was elected to fill a seat in
Congress by the people of the Grand Rapids dIstrIct. has been
for many years a stockholder in the Oriel Cabinet company
and its vice president He is an able and honorable gentle-man
He served a term as mayor of Grand Rapids a few
years ago
* * * * The \Vaddell ),Ianufacturing company WIll in the near
future start m on the enlargement and improvements of their
plant. \\ hich \\ hen completed \\ ill about double their capacity
for turning out carved moulding. furniture trimmings, rope
moulclIngs. etc All of the wood knobs and handles have the
"no-kum-Ioose" fastenmgs. the only thing that will absolutely
prevent the knobs and pulls from coming off.
New Factories.
Charles Ruebekam and Charles Holmees are orgamzll1g
a company to establIsh a casket factory at Traverse Clty,
Mich.
The new factory of the Pier & Felch Chair company,
Brattleboro, Vt . is expected to be ready to start business about
the middle of December.
G A Harper, G W Landon. D VV. Berry and H. E.
Denme have mcorporated the Central Closet company to es-tablIsh
a ne\\ factory at Kokomo. Ind Capital stock, $75,-
000.
The Dedell Furniture company of Marion, Ind., are to
establIsh a new factory at Muskogee. Okla. in accordance
with a contract WIth the Muskogee Industnal Development
company.
The \VISCOI1S11C1haIr company of Port \Vashington, are
erecting a branch factory at Sheboygan The bmldmg will be
:;6 x I40 fEet. t\\ 0 stOlles. and \\ III be med mamly in manu-factunng
wood novelties.
New Furniture Dealers.
G D Allyn has opened a ne\\ furniture store at Lyndon-
\ Ille, Vt.
BradlEY & Flanal;an. have opened a large. new furniutre
store at \Vellington, Tex
The J K \Val d Fml1ltm e and Hard\\ are company, are
new dealers at Richwood, W. Va.
The Home Furnltme company have opened a new house-furnishmg
store in Spnngfield, Mass.
The Cooper-Preston Fm mtme company, incorporated,
with capital stock fixed at $2:;.000. are new dealers m Birm-ingham,
Ala M F ),ifcCdrty IS president and trea~urer;
Robert A Preston, vice-president and general manager and
Robert Stnckland, secretary.
vV G Buttedy, formerly a member of the furniture
fIrm of Baumam1 & Co, of 152c1 street and Second avenue.
Nc\\ York a'> taken a ten year lease on the five-story bu Ilcl111g
at 445 Tremol1t avenue, the Br01n, \\ hlch he WIll stock \\ Iih a
full line of new up-to-date furl1iture, cnl'p~ts, etc,
6
.. -_ ... -----
BEST MADE and LEADING LINE of OFFICE DESKS
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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A. PETERSEN &CO., CHICAGO I MANUFACTURERS OF THE I
III
IIII
III
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IN THE COUNTRY.
Our attention to every detail from carefully selected and matched lumber
to the finished product has given the Petersen Desk its Leadership.
I SEND FOR CATALOGUE. FULL LINE. RIGHT PRICES.
'-- --- . ----_._--------
No. 100 DOUBLE CANE SEAT
el s ahke, to their Ellm, to Vvhlch the} came as bo} sand
remained as men to teach 111 theu tUIn
When a merchant on this side opens a stOle to the pub-lic
it is presumably With the obj ect of seilIng his \\ ares, } et
the attitude of some of the people behind the counter m some
of our New York stores, at tunes, makes It hard to belIe\ e
this. Customers frequently complalll of llldd"tel ence-"ome-times
amountlllg to positIve rudeness-on the pal t of the
salespeople.
A timid woman, gOlllg mto a shop to make a p\llcha-,e
requinng time and dlscnmination, such as a coat, SUIt 01
hat, is often made to feel so unimportant, If not pO-,ltl\ eh
"cheap," that she walks out of the stale feelmg aII the tIme
that the very article she I eaIl} \\ an ted \\ a" thel e It someone
had only gIVen a lIttle attentIOn and shO\\n a lIttle mtele"t
What Department Head Should Do.
Buying the goods, placing them on the counter and ~l\-
ing a salesman a book al e not ah\ d}" pi oductl\ e ot the (le-sired
result. Short talks by the bu}el of the depaItment
respectmg the ments of the goods he has to selI-\\ Ith \\ hKh
he IS, or ought to be, thoroughly famlha1-mIght result
in qUIcker sales and cleaner shelves, hence better profit at
the end of the season.
A buyer has a moral responslblhty re"tIng upon him m
addItion to hiS prescnbed duties of suppl) mg the pi opel
merchandise for hiS department, as e\ er} one IS susceptible,
------ ._--------
\\ hethel lon"Uoth1y 01 unconscIOu"ly, to theIr surroundings.
1Tence It de\ oh ee, upon the buye1 to create an atmosphere in
IllS depal tment of lo} alty to the busmess and of activity in
the busllless Tine, W1II elImmate, very often, the seeming
md1ftcl ence on the 1 11 t of the people behmd the counter m
meetm£; eustome1 s that ha\ e come actualIy into the store to
pUIeha-,e pi 0\ 1ded the') are sho\\ n the nght goods m the
l1£;ht \\ a\
How to Train Oneself
If the \mcflean-bcl1n salesman \\hu has d11fted tll10ugh
\ alloth mOl e 01 less agl eedhle Jobs fiJ1Cb hunself aeCldentalIv
hehmd the cuunter, \\ 1thout the eall) tIammlS of the l11"h
lad as a toundatIOn, b} makmg good us,' ef hIS tune and hIS
\\ It'' there 10, ample oppot tumty fO! hIm hel e m the gl eater
~to! ee, to stuch and knO\\ the lSood" he "elIs DUflnlS leisure
hOlUS he can usualI} select some Imee, of meh~hand1"e from
the fi" tm e~ 1earrane;e them and exaLlme them, carefulIy
1epldl1112, them on the sheh e::" and m "0 dcmg he IS all the
tIme leal nm~ F\ er} customer he walts upon, every time
he shcm" hIS 2,cwds-vvhether a "ale IS made or not-If hIS
m111d 10, on the hu::,mess he learns somethmg new each time
He must not attempt to gIVe a long, dry story about an arti-cle
he IS selhng
But he n111"t keep one thought 111hIS mmd clearly: that
the \ 1"lt01s to hiS department may not ha\ e come to buy,
and IS not oblIged to buy m thIS "hop, but that It IS withm
RICHMOND TABLET CHAIRS
"SLIP SEATS"
AND THE
MOST SANITARY
RICHMOND CHAIR CO.
RICHMOND, IND.
No. 100 GENUINE LEATHER SEAT
WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
his jurisdiction and his responsibilIty to his house to enlist
her sympathy and in tel est her. HIs sale may not be made at
thIS moment; he may not hay e the exact llght artIcle whIch
may SUIt her taste, } et he can establIsh a confidence in her
m111d that vv hen "he th111ks aga111 uf th111gs to buy in that
IlllC she \\ 111ImmedIately th111k of hIm.
Salesman the Great Factor.
A film may ad\ ertt"c and a film may spcclahze and may
pro\ Ide the best mel chandlsL and the best buyel s in the
world, but unle,;s the 111dnIdual man behllld the counter de-votes
lnmself to hI'; bus111e,;s conscIentiously, so as to gIve
the best that IS m hun at e\ ery tm n, and unless he wIll stand
up loyally for hI" depal tment and the goods he has to sell
and wIll keep posted as to the demands made upon him as
he comes datIy III contact wIth the customers, the depart-ment
cannot hope to get the results It IS entItled to Some-one
has said:
"If you work for a man, in hea\en's name work for him.
If he pays you wage,; that supply your blead and butter,
work for him; speak well of hIm, stand by him and stand by
the instItutIOn he represent,; If put to a p111ch, an ounce of
loyalty IS worth a pound of clevelness If you must vllhfy
condemn and eternally dIsparage, why, resIgn your position,
and when you ale en the outsIde damn to your heart's con-tent
But as long as yOU are a part of the instItution do not
condemn It. If yOU do you are loosenlllg the tendrils that
hold you m the instItutlOn, and 111the first high wind that
comes along you wIll be uprooted and blown away and
probably you wIll never know why"
Advel tis111g m newspaper" I eache,; the e) es and S0111e-t1l11e"
the mmds of the buymg publtc. and an ad may be lead,
scrutml7ed or cntIused, accordmg to the confidence estab-bercd
m the mIDd cf the readel 111the film whose name ap-pedr,;
thereon That advel ttsement may bnng a customer
to the store, but It WIll not always sell the goods. V/hen a
customer enters a store after readlllg the ad and is dIrected
to a certam sectlOn, then It depends entirely upon the mer-chandIse
and the man beh111d the counter Here he can do
mOl e good, 01 more harm, as he deSIres and as he puts hIS
m111d and lIfe !ilto hIS wOlk It 1-- novv up to him to do or
undo.
,r-------------------------~--
IIII
I
IIIII
I Price $8.75
II•
I
No. 550
Palmer MaDufaduriD~
======(ompaDJ·======
1015 to 1043 Palmer Avenue,
DETROIT, MIC".
.... - . •••••• • r _
Mr. Salesman. on the interest you take in your sales, on
the efforts you put forth, on the methods you employ in your
department and on the way you handle yourself largely de-pends
your success.
Opportunities lIe as thick as blackberries in the mer-cantile
field of America. There are more good executIve po-
SItions today in the greatel stores of this country than there
al e competent men to fill them; sometImes a man may oc-cupy
a positIOn and yet not fill it.
The lIttle "God of Chance" sits on the stairs and beck-on,;,
but the cross-legged salesman below him stares vacant-ly
into ,;pace and never looks up.
Has More Than His Share.
C. Fredenck Eckfelt, presIdent of the Mound CIty Chair
company, St. LoUls, Mo , secured a decree of dlvoce recently
and a few hours later marned Mrs. May Louise Powell, a
plomlllent society lady, who was recently dIvorced from James
L. Powell, a wealthy raIlroad contractor. A few day later
the caUl t dlSCO\el ed that thel e had been colluslOn in the di-
\ orce proceedmgs and set a~lde the decree. Therefore Mr.
Ed.felt has a surplus of wives on his hands.
----_. -.,
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
Every Dealer Who Sells
Folding Collapsible Go=Carts
TAKE WARNINO
For your own protectIon avoId buvlng any folding collapsIble go carts lot lIcensl d under FERRIS and LEITH
PATENTS. By seeing that the tag shown here IS on even folding CollapsIble Go-Cart you handle you will
Avoid infringement prosecutions,
Handle only goods made by the most reputable makers,
Handle Go=Carts for which a demand is created by a big
national advertising campaign.
licensed Go{art
PATENTED
Licensed and protected
by and under the
748869
771386
789310
800471
Jan 5, 1904
_Oct 4,1904
May 9, 1905
Sept 26,1905
Other Patents Pending
None Cenulne Without Tnl. Labe'
FERRIS and LEITH PATENTS so completely cover
every VItal feature of folding collapsIble go-carts that It IS Im-pOSSIblefor
any maker to manufacture them WIthout USIng
some of the features covered by these patents.
The only persons or concerns lIcensed by us to manufac-ture
collapsIble go-carts are the follOWing named companIes:
American Metal Wheel & Auto Lloyd Manufacturing Co.
Company. Sidway Mercantile Company.
Children's Vehicle Corporation. Streator Metal Stamping Co.
CoIlier-Keyworth Company. Sturgis Steel Go-Cart Co.
Fick~ Ce:rriage & Reed Co. Toledo Metal Wheel Co.
Fulton Manufacturing Company. H. N. Thayer Co.
Gendron Wheel Company. E. R. Wagner Mfg. Co.
All mfnngers WIll be prosecuted to the full extent of the
law.
Through our advertISIng the pubhc WIll be adVIsed that
go-carts contaInIng the most deSIrable features are hcensed
under FERRIS and LEITH PATENTS, and cautIOned to
look for the Label.
We wIll protect both the dealer and the publIc, and by
ehmmatlng the unscrupulous manufacturer we Insure the
dealer a better profit, put the go-cart bUSIness on a legItImate
baSIS, create fixed values, and educate the publIc to these
values. LOOK FOR THE TAG.
839230
840188
857971
861475
863972
913345
914010
918250
925151
925152
925741
927089
Pec 25 1905
Jan 1, 1907
June 25 1907
July 30 1907
Aug 20 1907
Fcb 23 1909
Mareh 2 1909
Ap,oi 13 1909
June '5 '909
June 15 1909
June 22, 1909
July 6, 1909
PERRIS and LEITH
None GenUine Without thiS labcl
REDUCED REPRODUCTION Of FRONT
AND BACK OF L.ICENSE TAGS. x)o;:.
Suite 630 Marquette Building CHICAGO
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Th(·~··D"l.lmmernand lIis Trunk.
Ihe 1111,lCUlstomedtl,1\ eJIel I'; ltkel) io have a llUl1lbel of
pleces of hand hlg~age io ]00], ahel dn(] bother about, but
the (!l ummel, i1,1\ el1Jn~ all the i1111e,t11e,; to ,;pal e h11n,;el£
all such trouble On the platfoI111 of a 1all road ')tat1On stooe!
,1 trunk not one of the cardboard vallety Vvlth g111gelbl ead
cornel') that \\oule! tall apalt If vOU (hopped It off a \\agon
but a 1 ugged t1unk that \\ oulc1n't even bounce If you sltd 1t
off a loaf \\Then the owner of the trunk came ,dong he
placc(l a h,mcl bag he \\a') carr) 111gon the platform for ,1
moment and unlocked the ,;ohel 100k1l1g trunk and ihl ew lb
hd hack Then he dloppee! the bag mto a compal t111entwlthll1
which It jmt fitted, and then out of another compartment
\\ hich 1t just fitted he IJfted and ')et el()\\n on the pt1tfCllm a
sample case Then he dlopped the tlunk hcl and locked the
Moon Tune, June TIme, Summer TIme, Spoon TIme, or Any Old TIme
DeSIgned by Frank Burton, Student In the Grand Rapids
School of DeSIgning
trunk, and the next 111111uthee was off with the sample case to
see the people he wanted to call on 111that town
When he struck a town he dIdn't have to bother over
lugging his handbag around WIth hIm or leavmg it somewhere
or getting it checked; he Just dropped it 111 hIS t1unk, and
that's where he carried hIS sample case except when in actual
use. He could get all hIS belong1l1gs into one piece of baggage,
his trunk, and the check for that he dropped 111 his..pocket Of course not all drummers can get theIr baggage into
this compact form. There are men who take along ten, fif-teen,
twenty trunks, a double truck load of baggage. But
usually the man on the road has some scheme to save himself
all unnecessary trouble; and few men are mOle resourceful
than this drummer.-Ex.
Desi~ns of Japanese School Furniture.
A sketch of the Japanese school furniture as used in the
elementary schooh ha,; been forwarded to \tV ashington by
Consul-General Thomas Sammons, of Yokohama. This
school furnitUle 1Smade of pine. and is painted or stained a
reddI')h blown color The desk,; and seats are each intended
for the me of two children The price of each seat is nomi-nally
$5, but heavy discount') are allowed on large orders. No
nails or screws are used in the construction of this school
furniture. The design will be loaned to interested firms who
address the Bureau of Manufactures.
"I
For
$9.25
we will
ship this
Dresser
in Satin
Walnut
or
Mahog.
any finish.
Chiffonier
to match.
Mail your
orders
promptly
to
CHAS. BENNETT FURNITURE CO.,
CHARLOTTE. MICH.
I....-. - .
,
HERE
IS A
CHAIR
THAT'S
A
SELLER
WRITE
FOR THE
PRICE
GEO. SPRATT & CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
...-....
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IIIIt
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No 83.
i..
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10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
FREEDMAN CONVERTIBLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Succe...
FuJI Size Bed in Divan Space.
"ART FOR LIFE'S SAKE"
How Business Men May Assist in the Progress
of Art.
Prof. Charles H. Caffin of N ey York CIty lectured re-cently
at the Ladies' Litel ary club house, Grand Rapids, on
"Art for Life's Sake." He saId that the word "art" is from
the Greek "ar" and means to fit or to shape. The Greeks
used copper and bra"s for helmets and shIelds fittmg and
shaping them for the purpose of using in warfare. Conse-quently
art begun m thIs way, thlOUgh CIaftsmanshlp Flom
this beginning It was gradually e>..tended to other thmg"
The speaker saId that that is \\ hy \\ e are takmg up techm-cal
schools -to leal n craftsmanshIp, leal mng how to fit and
shape articles for practical u"e. In al t fitness must be com-bined
with unity and harmony thus producing a perfect
whole.
Art, contrary to the generally accepted idea embraces
not only painting and sculpture, but also archItecture, musIc
and ltterature. A man may be an artist in any lme to whIch
he appltes himself. The business man of today can so fit and
shape hIS business as to impro\ e it in every \\ a y. By the
addItion of new and up to date machmery and methods and
by stnvmg to bettel the condItIOns of hIs workmen, by aId-ing
m publtc reforms, the beautIfy mg of a Clt\ \\ ith hand-some
structure", publtc playglOunds and palks and by look-ing
after the public health.
For a contrast to fitness, unity and harmony in al t and
• in everything about us Mr. Caffin spoke of the unfitness so
often observed in publIc buildmgs whel e lack of umty and
harmony are very eVIdent and pamful, to a degree ;\s an
illustration he mentIOned an office bmldmg now being erec-ted
on Michigan avenue, Chicago, dIrectly OppOSIte the Al t
InstItute. It IS cut up mto cubby hole" ltke an office filmg
case by the great number of \\ mclo\\ s. "cubby holes fot
lawyers, some for doctOl" and others, all plamly labeled," he
said. The speaker then pt oceeded to dl5CUSS the faults ot
the new Pennsylvania raIlroad statIOn in New York, where
the style of a Greek temple has been followed only multiplied
about a thousand times, making it unfit m every way for the
purpose. Travelel s gomg in OppOSIte dIrectIOns al e bound to
col1tde and "say things" as the dIstance bet", een the pIllaI c;
of the facades IS small-gO' et ned by the Ideas of pioportIOll'3
used in a Greek temple. Mr. Caffin saId that a raIlroad
station was no place to set up a Greek temple, where the
anCIents went to worshtp thea' clteties
"The architecture of today should be constructed for the
needs of today and not hark back to a dead age whose build-
,,-
I..
UNION FURNITURE CO.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
II,t
I,II
IIIII~----------_ _ .
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead in Style, Conftruc!bon
and Fmi.h. See our Catalogue.
Our lme on permanent exhibi-tion
3rd Floor, New Manufact-urer.
BUlldlllollGl. rand Rapids. I -"
mgs did not and do not fit our present day needs," he de-clal
ed. 'The modern skyscraper IS the nearest approach to
plogless m art, although many mistakes have been made
The beauty of the skyscraper lIes in its height and pro-pOl
tIOn". The French were the first to acknowledge this
-,t\ Ie
The speaker "aid that Louis H. Sullivan after he ha-d
const! ucted the audItorium in Chicago realized this fact. The
Campal1lle m Venice is a perfect specimen of architecture of
thIS type The ploportlOns of the shaft, the placing of the
bllck at angles, so as to cast shadows, produces a beautiful
effect. The appltcation of art to the conditions of life around
u" \\e ale no ah\ay-, suffiCIently aware of .
The al tIst who can bring home to us a sense of the
beautIful and give us inspiration has done a great thing.
Thel e are two classes of artists, the natural and realistic. It
I" from the latter that inspiration comes. Frans Hals was
a natmahst, Rembrandt was famous because he painted what
he sa" about hIm-beauty in SImple things. His paintings
of old people are famous not because of the sitters but be-cause
he pamted old age itself.
Mr Caffin said that the best American painters today
al e the landscape pamters, because they bring before our
mmds condItIOns now eXIsting all about us in our own
country and so they are a part of our existence. The import-ance
of teachmg chIldren these facts cannot be overestimated
ChIldren learn so eaSIly and quickly, that we can easily
teach the next genel ation to be better than ours and more
progressIve 111 al t, also to feel the need of more art about them.
The lecture pleased the audIence greatly, especially as
},Ir Caffin, had a humorous way of expressing some of his
Ideas on old fogyism in art. ..
SIMPLEST IN ACTION.
LEAST SPACE.
STRONGEST BUILT.
Supercedes all other Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATIONS AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & CO.
Manufacturer. of Upholatered Furniture.
Factory, 717.731 Mather St., CHICAGO .
• ••• ..11
WEEKLY ARTISAN
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~
Each
Net
$2~
Each
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cone All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &, DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
A Weekly House Organ.
Seaver Brothers, who conduct a big department store in
Brooklyn, celebrated the twenty-first anniversary of the
foundmg of their business, dm mg the third week in October.
The original store was a very small one, but step by step the
firm have built up an establishment which is the large::,t of
its kind In their section of New York City. An anniversary
sale is a regular event WIth thIS concern and this year's sale,
we understand, has resulted in a business considerably ahead
of that produced by any similar sale in previous years.
The sale was advertised in a weekly newspaper entitled
"South Brooklyn Home Talk"-a publication started by the
firm eight years ago in order to reach the local public. The
average edition of this paper runs to 16 or 20 pages. It is
pubhshed and dIstributed on Wednesdays, and, when con-sidered
necessary (as in the case of this anniversary sale), a
four-page special edition is issued and delivered by carrier,
just as is the regular edItion. This newspaper plan, by the
way, has been found more resultful than ordinary circulars.
Seaver Brothers own their building and the site and re-cently
purchased and added an adjoining building, giving
them a total frontage of eighty feet. The twenty-first anni-versary
was also celebrated by the employees, who presented
to Daniel B. and C. A. Seaver, the members of the firm, a
handsome loving cup, with their congratulations and best
wishes.
Had a "Congress of Nations."
Hahne & Co, house furmshers, Newark, N. ]., recently
just concluded a two weeks' "Congress of Nations." This
was described in the opening "ad" as a "tribute to the people
of all countries, by the state's greatest store." During the
two weeks two days were dedicated to the people and pro-ducts
of each of six countries, viz., France, Ireland, Italy,
Germany, England and the United States. Following the
opening "ad," a page "ad," with suitable heading, was de-voted
to each of these countries, and in each "ad" there were
offered hnes of merchandise for which the country in ques-tion
is famous.
In addItion to the newspaper "ads," a colored placard,
beanng the words "Congress of Nations," was placed in
every window and at various points throughout the store.
The placards also indicated what nation was being honored
on each partIcular day. Flags of the nations, too, were con-spicuously
displayed throughout the store, small flags being
placed where goods made in foreign countries were being
exploited.
,.. ...... -----_ ...... ---._._.-.--.-.,
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11
. .I.
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
FURNITURE IMPORTED IN ARGENTINA
fJnltf'd Stlltes Furnish Most of thf' Desk and
Office Fixtures.
J D \Vhelple\ commelclal agent of the L~nlteel St.1tc,
\\ ho recentlv Ietm ned flom a prolonged m\ e~tH;atJC)n at hU~l-ne'Ss
affall S 111 At g entma reports that Jlnpol ts ot fml1ltm e Illli
that country are e:\.tensn e It I'S estImated that dbout IMlf of
the fm nlttu e used IS Il1lpOlted 1he cheapel g I dde'S al e I11dde
largely 111 the countl y, plmcipalh flam pme I ecen ed flo!l1 Ihe
U111ted ~Iates as the natne \\oods ot \Igenllll<l <lIe 111u~th
too hal d fOI \\ 01kmg uJl I11tOf111nltul e e~JleC1a1h \\ hel e 1111111
l11um cost IS <111o1nect I he f111nltul e nM Ie 110m "01 th ~ _
i\ll1etlcall pmes IS 110t \ <tt11l~hed hut II edled h~ hth \\ Ith oIl
01 \\a" so that It has all11o~t the appeal an c ot an ullhl11~hed
al tIde Such fmllltul e IS fOI ~<11ee\ el \ \\ hel e m \1 !;e1Hmd
and IS the kmd mosth u~ed m the a\ el age home
L\ 'Small amount of hlgh-gldde hUl1lt\1le h al'So mallU-factm
eel 111the Repubhc fOI \\ hlCh pm pose some of the natl\ e
haul woods ale employed ThIS is not fil1lshed \\ Ith a hl!;h-
~lo'Ss varntsh a~col d111g"to the method most 111 \ og ue 111the
United States Instead, \\ax onh IS emplmed tubbed m at
co'St of much bme and pams bv hanel untIl a ~ott anel \ eh et\
appearance is obta1l1ed, far mOle elegant and altbtlc, \\hele
the qualIty of wood and \\01kmanshlp is ~ood, than a hlgh-varnish
finish One fUll11tut e house m Buenos All e'S emplo\,
some 300 men in ItS facto! \ anel makes fUI nltLtre both of the
cheaper anel more expenSI\ e SOlts It al'So eloes a lat ~e amount
of the upholstel y \\ ark on ImpO! teel gooels Leathel and othel
uphol'Stery matellal IS comparatn ely cheap m Argentma, and
by attend111g to tIllS end of the \\ ork Itself, the house 111ques
tion 'Saves large sums in customs duties
Largest Part of Imp07 t, From E1l1 ope
For the fi\e-)ear pelloel 1904 to 1908 fml1ltme \\as Im-pOl
ted to the amount of $6,177,175, Argentll1e gold (Sr of
\\ hich equals $0965 U mteel States mone)) A.ustlla fl11n
Isher the largest mell\ Idual share, \\ Ith the Ll1lted SLlte,
second L\ustlla'~ contllbutlOn IS lalgeh 111the \\ a\ ot hel
we11-kno\\ n bent\\ ood fml11tm e England ~upples mam al t
Ide'S of the MISSIon sty Ie FI ance fml11shed the bulk of the
most expensn e and ornate creatIons ItalIan ImpOl ts hay e no
espeClal 111dlvlllual note, but 0\\ e then place pl1l1cipall) to the
1,11!;e ItalJan element 111 the populatIOn and the consequent de-mand
for al beles £Iom the home countt y,
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
BUIlt WIth double arbors, shdmg tabl. and equIpped complete WIth taper pm
guages carefully graduated, Th:s machm e represents the heIght In saw bench con-strudlon
It IS desIgned and bUIlt to reduce the cost of sawmg stock.
WrIte us for descrIptIve InformstlOn. THE TANNEWITZ WORKS, ~fc~:m:;PIDS. .. Imports from the Ul11ted States are almost entirely in
the \\ aj ot office fUll11tUl e, book shelves, and the 1Ike, In that
field om manufactUl el 'S have all but a monopoly of the trade
-\1 !;entll1e fUll11tUl e dealers SelY that in no other country has
the mattel of office eCjUlpment been worked out on such prac-tIcal
and comprehensl\ e ll11es Roll-top de:,ks, sectional book
,beh e~ I e\ oh l11~ bookca~e~, fill11g cabl11eb, and the 1Ike from
L nlted State'S factol1es al e all exceeell11gly popular
Ot LOUlse tIllS IS a bU~1l1ess wlllch does not extend much
oUblcle the CIties, and as Al gentll1a IS an agllcultUl al country.
\\ Itb a populatIOn of only about 6,000,000 l11habitants, the
tl ade h not capable of 111defil11te expansIOn except as the
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dinin~ Room Furniture
BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSETS and TABLES
Library Furniture-LIbrary Desks, LIbrary
Tables, LIbrary Bookcases, Combination Book-cases,
Etc.
Our entire lme WIllbe on exhibition in January
on the thIrd floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13
Your Continued Success Depends
on the QUALITY of Your Goods-
It's after a bed or chair or table leaves your store that It counts for or against your
future trade. Every Stow & Davis table you sell is a constant adveltisement
of your rehabllllY. Our tables resist wear-quahty is bUllt m, along with the
style and hand rubbed fimsh that make our desIgns so attractive.
Our new catalog, showmg some of the handsomest Colonial and Flanders
dmers ever bUllt, IS in press. You wIll Just naturally want these top-notchers in
your own store, for your best trade. Send in your name for an early copy.
STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE COMPANY,
PERFECTION TABLE TOPS. DINERS.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
OFFICE AND BANK TABLES.
country grows But new methods are evelY\\ here displacing
old ones m the Argentme bus mess world, and with thIs move-ment
there is a natural demand for up-to-date office eqUlp-ment
\Vlth thc exception of office furniture and book shelves,
United State" manufactUl es al e not popLllar and do not prom-ise
to obtam much foothold, unless our styles undergo con-siderable
mochfication or An;entine taste changes At present
French influence is strong upon the country The demand
1" £01 01nate pdttern" and "howy ltpholstery m colored fabrics.
Lotm XV tl pe may be said best to leple"ent the prevallmg
ta"tes GlIded f1l1l11tme and pIeces \\ ith elabO! ately carved
\IOOCIlIOlk ale ~lcatlv ddmired The arts and uafts move-ment.
\\hiLh hds lateh made ~Ieat heacl\\ay 111 the Untted
State" has not found so much ,1" an echo 111 .\lgf'ntl11a
fhe SImpliCIty of such furmture \\ould, at the ple"ent t11ne, at
lea~t. find moderate appreciation
One feature of the lmpO! ted furmture most seen 111 "\1 g en"
tll1C\ IS the attention to mIrrors Vvardrobes and clothes
presses are largely used-"\rgentina houses are, for the mo"t
part, 1l1ade \\ llhout closets-and the doors of these are invar-iaIl
eq111pped \\ Ith full-lem;th m11101" \\ ashstancls, bureaus,
and the 11l"e ,lie al"o hbelalh eq111pped \\lth lo)kn) glasses
\nothel appdl e'lt tendenc\ IS tcm a1 cl bl~ al tIde" of f n mture
Ene 111" ,u e lhudlIl l.ll ~e ancl con"ldel dhl) hi" "el than those
m \ o~ue m the LJmted State" \1 hel e tile cont! aLtm~ Sl7e of
utI ap,lIt111cnt" ,1I1cl flcCjllent 111()\111~"1],[\c tcncled to popu-la
11/e } ~hi C1 ,11ld Ie"" l umbel "ome models
11 h douhulli If 1.:111ted St,l'e" 1l1dnufd( tUI ('I" \Iould find
It pi olIi.lhk to (ompete f()] the \1 ~ent1l1c fm nltul e trade 111
the l111c" \\ hel C I, lUopedn natIon" al e nO\\ "U111e111eand with
,u tICle" of ,1 e,11111 ldl ndtm e 0111al11ental cal \ '110 and inlaid
1\ 01k al e lIttle unclel stood !1l this count 1 v, and th~ attempt to
tUl n out !1loclels all nellch 1111es\\ auld plohahh I esult in the
p10cluctlOn of al tICles oi e,cess!\ e cost
The mattel of fi11lsh ahead) alluded to, IS also a point
,1~,]"1"L .\01th \l11e\Kan tm11ltme as no\\ largely made, The
hl~11-\alnlSh fi11l"h, "0 ~enelal 111 the U111ted States, is little
u"ed b\ Fm opean manufacturers, and suffers in comparison
\\ Ith the soft 011 and \\ <1X fi111shes usually employed for theIr
best ploducts
011e Idllet\ of fmnltme 111 whIch om manufactmers are
lO1l\pcll11~ \\ Ith "eJ11IepI01l11<,eof "ucce"" 111 \rgentll1d Ie, bras"
hed"tead" 'I hc"e ,11 C much less popul.u ,wd much less used
Ihele l11<1n111thc l'11Ited ~t.1te" hut ale 21aclu,tllv 0a111ltW 1Il -, -'..., b
Lt\Ol, 1\01111 \ll1CIll,l\1111dll\lfactmeJs h,ne pJoc1uch on sale
\\Imh ('1l1pI1l [noI,lhl) In JllllC ,mcl <ju,lht) \\11h ,111y othel'>
offel ed England at pI esent supphes most of these goods. In
the mattel of brass bedsteads, as III other kinds of furniture,
the chief objectIOn to U11Ited States goods seems to be what
is regarded as theIr extreme plall1ness, In brass bedsteads, as
in other household articles, the taste tends toward the very
lUXUrIOUS and ornamentation IS strongly in demand. English
manufacturers have catered to thIS taste without stint. Several
bra"s bedsteads from that country \\ el e "een, for instance,
ornamented at the foot and head WIth rIsing suns (the coat of
arms of Argentina) and otherWIse 1Jberally provided WIth
decoration.
"BEAVER," "GINDERELLA," "DOCKASH"
STOVE HEADQUARTERS
"'THE LINES THAT SELL"
NoteIMPERIAL BEAVER-one ofmany.
13est, They Stctnd the 7est,"
THIS is the IMPERIAL BEAVER.. It is the finest cooking
range made anywhere in the world.
We think so, and so will you when you see its advantages:
Study the- above picture. The glass oven door is guaranteed
not to break. No heat lost when you look at your bakmg. This
range holds its heat longest, saves 250/0 in fuel, and has unusual hot
water capacity.
It is the best-looking range built-and wears as well as it looks. I Send for samples and see it-but we warn you that no other kind will
ever satisty you again, if you :0'
W. D. SAGER, 330-342 No.Water St.,CHICAGO
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
YOU CAN
MAIL YOUR CATALOG
DECEMBER lOth
If you place the order
with us by November 15th
WHITE
PRINTING COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICU.
I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
WEEKLY ARTISAN
News Items of 1883 Reprinted.
From the Michigan Artisan for November, 1883-The
Forest City Furniture company of Rockford, Ill., have re-ceived
seventy carloads of walnut lumber from their mills
in Kentucky, to be manufactured into furniture.
The A. S. Herenden Furniture company of Cleveland
have secured contracts to furnish three large hotels in New
York-the St. Marc, the Wellington and the Hamilton.
The cabinet makers of Pans, France, are using yellow
pine III the manufacture of furmture
The Gland RapIds Furmture company have bUIlt a fac-tory
upon the sIte of the one destroyed by fil e last Apnl, and
have commenced operatmg the same.
Ames & Frost have III COUl "e of erection a large brick
factory on Blackhawk and Cherry street, ChIcago.
Koenig & Gamer of ChIcago, have added a foldl11g bed
to their hne.
In the trial of a law suit at Cleveland recently a wit-ness
interested in a varnish factory testified that in three
MR. COUNTRY
. MERCHANT: KEEP THE TRADE -AT HOME! W,th the aId of FISH'S Co operatIve AdvertlSlng Sernce you can keep
the trade In your town, and tn your store, and not lose It to matl~ordel;'
hOUses, large cIty stores and other a~sslve competItors
Ow SerVlce..lSnot an expenrneJ;lt, but ISm actvil and successful use by
~houS<mdsof &alers In the central West
Ful out the Coupon bel<\w and m..i1It t<>-<lay It won·t obligate you
to anythmg
L.FISH F. CO., 1901-11 State Street, Chicago
Merchant.' C?-e~ratioe Adverttsing Service
BUI'~"
FREE BUSINESS INCREASE COUPON
£. FISHF co. N-..IN/I~;;-StChkxil. III
IonWf"t",',~. -m:::"...~/B:::='h~"':''';:..:~h::-:'';:tl'::.·';'~ ".- -----.r-.-y ----_.) Atltlru. · I
A Chicago Propo6ItlOn
years the company owning the same had disbursed dividends
amounting to twenty-five, thirty and forty per cent.
The Phoenix Furniture company have engaged Asa Lyon
a designer of Chicago. He will commence work on January
1, 1884.
WIlham H. Rouse is securing many good orders on the
road for the Wolverine Chair and Furniture company.
An expression of luxury has been found by a lounge
hung from the ceiling by chains of Indian brass.
George L. Withers & Co., have opened an agency for the
sale of furniture in St. Louis.
H. L. N eidringhaus' furniture store in St. Louis was de-stroyed
by fire recently. Loss $90,000; insurance $51,000.
Unele John Fuller the veteran explorer for furniture
dealers in the northwest, will continue his work in that region
next year.
H. R. Leonard is preparing to open a stock of furniture
in Detroit.
While the year 1883 has been a dull one in the furniture
trade and none of the factones of Grand Rapids have been
operated fully, they produced goods which sold for $4,184,000.
15
f- -------- --- ---- ------- -- -----------.-~
! Sheboygan Novelty Co.
tJl Order your hol-iday
goods early,
so as not to be dIS-appointed
III deliv-ery.
Our
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
Lady's Desk No. 305.
...-.-----~~------~-_._-_-. ---_.
Music Cabinets,
Ladies' Desks,
Bookcases, etc.,
are just the things
for holiday gIfts.
Write for Catalogue.
tJl Lady's Des k
No. 305 is a goed
one. but we have
many more to select
from.
•• •• a ••• ~_. _ • ..
• a.a • •••••••• _ •••
POLISHES
Quality and Economy
Two excellent reasons for using the
Excelsior or World's
Fair Polish
on high grade furniture. We claim to sell the best and
most economical polishes, and have proved it by their
being the Standard polishes for 25 years of use in the
furniture manufacturing trade.
Get our prices and send for sample before placing
your next order.
GEO. W. LIGHT MFG.
COMPANY,
2312 W. Van Buren St., CHICAGO. ... .
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16
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUIILISHIEO II!:VII!:RY SATURDAY ay THI!
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CeMPANY
---"---~ --- -- --- -
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES 5200 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS.
PU.LICATION O~~ICE. 10a-112 NO"'TH DIVISION ST, G"'AND RA~IOS, MICH
A 5 WHITE MANAGING EDITOR
Itnterei .. lecond cia .. matter, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand RapId., Mlchll'lln
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO RI!:PRESENTATIVI[ E LEVY
The Walter & Beck" 1th Fm nltm e companv of Portldnd
Oregon, strongly favor the plan plOposed by certall1 manu-facturers
to fix the retaIl seIIll1g pnces of al tlcle~ ~old to
dealers. To bring about uniformity ll1 1etall pllce~ It "auld
be necessary for all manufactLll el S to co-opel ate ll1 the 1110\e-ment,
which would seem at first thought to be ImpOSSIble
The manufacturers of furl11tme ale located 111 al111o~t e\ el \
state of the union, and then ll1tel ests al e so cll\ el slfied th'lt It
would be difficult to assemble the111 and 0ll:ia1117e them a~ a
composite body In the considel atJon of such an 01 ~al1l7atIOJ1
the anti-trust laws of the states and nation vvould naturally he
taken into account. Among the evils the ''''alter & Bech 1(11
company would have destroyed ale the ~iving a\\ay practI-cally
of leadel s as an mclucement fOl dealel s to hm othl1
goods, and the sale of new goods to second hand amI 1llnk
men, who turn theIr new l:;oods on a five pel cent basis as a
decoy by the aid of which they unload second hand furl11-
ture at a profit of from 100 to 200 pel cent In enU111elatm!;
the advantages that would follo\\ the adoptIOn of the plan
suggested, the firm says' "A "pecltled mil11111um sellm~ pI Ice
placed on an article by the manufactm el "ould l:iual antee Ib
quality to the retailer and enable the manufactul el to ~ell hI ~
output to high class trade The numbel of shoppel sand bal
gain hunters who bother the merchant and their sale ... people
by trying to obtain an article for nothml:; and finalh ].m 11lg
second hand goods of a junk deale I at a C0st conslclel abh
higher than ne" goods could be b0ught frll IS lal ~e "Ithout
doubt. the plan \\ auld be, if put mto use, of g I eat \ ethle tr
manufacturers and dealel sand \\ hIle the chfficulties to he en-countered
in the creation of an OIgan17ation are manv they
are not unsm mountable The attitude of the fil m 111 I e~al d
to shoppers and bargain hunters is wlong No up-to-date
merchant despises the shoppel sand bal ga1l1 huntel s It IS
only through shopping and bargain huntmg that mam people
qualify themselves for buymg the things thev need 111 then
homes or for their personal use, intellil:;entlY 1\ dub all
merchants 0\\ e to themselves IS to teach the shoppel sand
bargain hunters that qualitv not price should l:(oyel n m the
purchasing of goods A more important dUb of the mel chant
is the making of friends for the stOIC If the shoppels and
bargain hunters ale made to feel that their \ iSlts to the stOI e
of a merchant al e not desil ed, the sl10ppel sand hal ~al11 hnl1-
ters will exe1 t an l11AUenle a11l0n~ t11ell fllend~ 1nd ,ll1/1111nt
:1l1CC~ that" 111 injme the 111elchant 111 the l~tllll !tHI!1 (I[ 111111\
people "h()~c flicnd"hip ,l1Id "lIJlJl()J( (ltC\ f](ul I hl up (I)
date 111erchant' '11e" and ~1 ,mt" mOlC than 01 d111,11\ ll)l1
sidcr:i~:"n to f,p , ppel" ,ll1e! 1),[1 ~all1 ImntpI ~
\ contnbutor to One of the monthly furnitm e maga7ines,
IJ1 Ch~UI""lI1~ the art of Y\ Ilham :\;fonls says' "Morns was
the l11stlgatol (,,!1\ not the ong1l1ator?-Ed ArtIsan) 'of
t11e ellts and CIa it-., "t\ Ie He 10\ ed the beautiful, the tenclel
,me! tlue \nd \et '[aliI" bl11It fur111ture "bload and big"
I he "tatement 1" S!anclelOlh If 1\101 ns' fml11tm e was "broad
lne! lm~ \\hel em dld he e'Cpl ess the al ts and crafts idea)
1t h e\ 1dent that the contllbut01 IS not famtliar with Morns
fm nitme "DI~ and hlOad" ale not essential details in hIS
,11 t On the conti ell\ \\ hI Ie hIS \\ 01k is stl ong, utillt\ and
heelut\ p1edo111111atem the expl esslOn of hls lCleas
Lon~ hetOle the hollda\s vou'II be moving a lot of heavier
~Clods that ma\ ha\C seemed a bit back'Aard, a"aiting a hint
of \\ 1I1tel I\h\ a\ s the expected season seems to linger, but
it !;ets the I e \\ Ith both feet to those prepared for It, and the
man" ho bul1ds no" fOI business in table linens, kItchen things
and h()111epi etb ml:;s \\ 111be ready to trim attractive windows
befOl e Thanksgi\ m!; tnTIe and \\ in some lively sales by sug-
~estion 1eadmes" Let this man be vou Give a pri/e to any
in \ OUI employ \\ ho can, in time, supply an acceptable thought
tOl no\ el \\ 1l1d()\\ display app10priate to the day and effective
In ~e1l1l1ggoods
The mel chant s of Los Ang eles decided to have opening q
of all the stOles associated in their orl:;a111Lation simultaneous~
h The plan" as put to the test on September 26, 27 and 28
PI i7es "el e offel ed fOI the most suitable announcement "f
the e\ ent Especial \\ indo\\ displaYs \\ ere planned The
\\ hole city and in fact all of Soutllern Caltfornia took an in-
(erest in the plan and the stores were crowded with shoppel s
The dealers In fm nitm e and aIIled lines participated leu zely in
the e\.J1Jbit and all \\ el e pleased and satisfied "ith the out-come
1he plan IS \\ 01tlw of a trial in other cities
It's over Conl:;1 ess will he divided politically and radical
Iel:iislationls l1TIpos"ihlc Teddv is locked in his kennel at Oyster
Da\ and the people \\ ill thlow politics to the clogs and do
hU~11le~s fOl the sake of bu ...mess There wiII be more or less
discussion over the a\ ailabilib of cel tain men for the nomi-natlODS
of the se\ era1 pal ties f01 preSIdent. but it will be con-fined
to the P011tlCld11S The people \\ ant to do business and
business \\ ill be clone
The hI!; stOJ elan not I ema1l1 hig \\ hen the cm nel 01
l11anal:(el "atlsfiecl \\ Ith \\ hat he h~h aClomphshed, lests on hIS
lam els H1S conduct affect" his emplo\Cs, \\ ho become care
les" 01 nel:ilectful1l1 their tleatment of cu"tomel s, who neglect
the "tock 'l11d CIeate ch~uI del 111 the IOlltllle of the bllsllless
Tn snch a moment the weIl mandgecl httle StOIe becomes the
bIg stOle
'\ \ el \ \ alnable ach ertls1l1g stunt \\ as pulled orf I ecently
lw the Standald Fmnitme compan), 111 Seattle, 'Vash In
one of the lar!;e shO\\ \\ Iw10ws a numbel of \\ 01 kmen con-
Stl ucted davenpOl ts and steel couches and in anothel relt
mattrc"ses \\ el e made It is needles'> to state that CW\\ ds
\\ Itnessed the opnat1on of the window factories.
Hondma" le\le~ an export tax of $5 00 per 1,000 feet
1 JO;lld 111ea~11cl on l11,lhogam shipped fl0m that countl v dncI
S-t pel T 000 feet on oth<:1 cah111et \\ClOelS Thele\ a (,(,,<, 111
\\111(11 t11e rrJ1el~!1el CULllllh pet\" the t,t' ...
Illc t111l1l:;'1th,lt 1 el11ellll J(ltl~C"L III the h,lI1d~ (If 1he clenlel
IIH{H,lIc tlw lllCapclclt\ of the make)
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Germans Fostering Canadian Trade.
110m \VInUlpeg comes the IepOl t that the 1emoval of the
Gel man surtax by the Canadian GoveinmeI1t has affected the
volume of >\n1e11Can1rnpOlt" Into westel n Canada to a COI1-
':>lderablee'(tent The full effect of the abohtlOn of the SUItax
lMs only 1ecenth become appal ent wIth the placmg of orders
by Canachan merchants fOl the en:,uing year Dunng the
past fell' months \\ estel 11 Canada has been introducecl to many
Gelman films thlough aLtne commiss10nels I\ho have Come
to ,:>eefOJ them"eh es the needs of the people and the Opp01tun-
ItJes f01 GenTIan goocls TIle fil st eVIdences of German trade
actIvIty are found In 01namental bI ass and copper ware, such
Made by Rockford Frame and FIxture Go , Rockford, IlL
as teapots, U1 ns, hot-water kettle':>,tl ays, and va"es of vanous
designs, eel tam lmes of mechal11cs' tools, alcohol stoves for
burning denatul ed alcohol, and dl ess goods and velvets In
these Imes Gel many seems ah eady to possess an advantage
0\ el commelc1al competitors
\\ estelll Canada It 1S ':>a1d,offeI'-, at the pI e':>enttnne an
e,ceptIonal OppOItU111tyfor Ame1Ican-made goods, but, lIke
C\ 1'1Y othel mal ket It must he fostel cd The U mtecl States
IS he1hlc to lo':>ethls meltket lal ~ely thlough mattentlOn It
WIll do lIttle good to adveltlse 01 seek tll1ou~h catalogue ch'-,~
...----_._--------,---_._._--
17
r ~ $2.50 : MARVEl; ::.:':::' ! 0 U S QuarterSawed
Veneer .eat.
HeIght
of back 24
Inches WIdth
of seat 20
Inches No 210.
FInished Golden Oak Shipped K. D.
flat Weight 23 pounds
r.JIorwlIfolluloct!JnllR rat Grand Rapjds.l1ich.
tnbutlOn to b111ldup the trade Catalogues accomplish httle,
11nless thel al e pl esented by ,:>omeone wIlo can intelligently
descnhe tl'e ;11 LLles depIcted, callmg attention to their value
and 1rnplessll1!Supon the merchant their salablhty
List of Kilns Being Installf'd by the Grand Rapids
Veneer Works.
Clmsty Bl othel s & Co Amhel st, N S, 2; The Canada
\\ ooc!em\ale company, St Johns, ~ B, I; Haley Brothers
company, St J O]111S, N B, I, Halev & Son, St Stephen, N
B , I , Blmel Spoke and \uto \\ heel company, Portland, Ind ,
2, P E KlOehler, XclpelVIlle, III 2. Lincoln Manufacturin15
company, Kell Y01 h (j H allIS, McHel1l y & Baker, Elmira,
NY, I, Schumann Plano company, Rockford, Ill, I; Get
man & Judd company Muskegon, -:\1Ich. I; Standard Furni~
ture company, Herkimer, N Y, I; R H Coop & Son, Old
ham. England, I W1l1cIsor Furniture company, Ltd, \Vind-sor,
N S, I; Lal kin company of America, Memphis, Tenn,
4; Yratson ManufactUlmg company. N \Voodstock, N H.,3;
National Casket compan}, LOlllsville, Ky, 3; VV. M Ritter
Lumber company, Ritter, XC, 3 Verm(mt Spool and Bob-bm
compan} Blllllllgton, Vt, 2 Ene BUllal Case company,
Erie, Pa, I, and the 1\ B Chase Piano company, Norwalk.
Ohio, 2
Tl11s makes f01 t\ 1ulns at pI e"ent helllg lmL1llecl. and
there etIe a lalge l1Umhel of nrc1e1s 111 jJlO,:>pelt some of 1\11ich
al e be1l1~ bool,ecl almost el ery dcly
(,USS\\ 01 d':>a1e almost ,1':>~le,lt ,1 nellsslty to the lclbinet
n1clhcI II ho h;),:>1)1m':>edIllS thumh \11th ,1 h,1l11111U 01 I1Mllet.
cls ,11 e teal S to a II oman
---------------------- III
WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
II,
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Zinc Lined. Porcelain Lined.
White Enamel Lined. Opal-Glass Lined.
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting III a
line of the "Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists.
THE ALASKA REFRIGERATOR COMPANY, EXCI~S~~8u~~;~M~U:S;:K~EoGrON, MICH.
New York O-ff-ice-, '3_69.B_road~wa_y, .L_E-M-o-on-, M_.a.n._age-r.-_.__......._, Me Ilk "' ............
III
It
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18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
GREAT INCREASE IN LUMBER CUT
Oak Furnishes About Ten Per Cent of
the Total.
Statlst,c" pl1blJ"hec1 b) the depal tment of commel ce and
labor last Tuesda) shrm that the lumbel cut 111the L~11lted
States Chll111g the calendal vear 19°9 \\ as 44,585 11111110nfeet
boal cl mea "11l e as aga111st 3~ 224 11111lJonfeet 111 1908 and
4.0 2:;f 11111hollfeet 111I C):J7 Th1s ,\ as an 111~1ea ~e ot 3-+2 pel
ccent 0\ el 1908 dn 1 of 10 8 pel cent 0\ e1 19°7
The ~u')~ tant lal 111Ce1a"e 0, el tl1f' 1\,0 ])1e~ecl11'1S ) ea 1" \\ a"
0\ no <11 fell of t11e m 11\ ldual .,tates "hem mg a decreased cut
The fi'Sl1les fOl 1908 anJ 1907 ,Hle collected b\ maIl dnrl
\\ h1le mc1u l111gthe com111e1cTal mIlls 01 the countl, dld 11')t 111
many ca~e" crn er the small nelghbOl hood mIlb \\ ho~e output
\\as comumed local!) The lelatl\eh lalge llLlease 111the
nU111bel of mll1::, 1epOl t111g fOl 1909. tJg ethel \\ 1th the 111-
crea se 111the cut fOl that veal \\ as clue lal 2,eh to the fdCt that
the field force of the cen"us bl1l eau. \\ hlch \\ a" engd2, ed 111
gathenng statistics of all bl an0hes of manutactl1l e th10ugh
out the Ul1ltecl Scates "eCl1leel 1etl1l ,1S f10m pI actJcalh e\ el)'
sa\\ 111111111opel atlOn clullng the \\ hole 01 elll) pal t of 19°9
II 1tl10ut 1egarel t'l lt3 "lze. and 11l thlS II av thel e ha, e been
included many small m111s not c)\ el ed b, the mall census 111
the pl ececlJng ) eal s
1he gl eatest pOl tl0n of the 11111ed "e h tound 111the south-el
n states and LOnS1QS lellg eh of ,e11O\\ p111e In the 2,'1our
of coa"t state,. from Vlrg111la to Te"as, l1lc1thl\ e together
\\ lth \1 kansas and Oklahoma. thel e stanels j)lObabh not less
than n111e-tenths of the pl esent supply of \ ellow p111e stump-a2,'
e The plOpOl tlOn of the total cut of lumbel 111the l-l1lted
States contllbuteel b) thIS glOUp. tog ethel \\ Ith KentllCk) and
Tennessee, ha" been steadlly 111creasmg ell1l111g 1ecent ) eal "
In 1907 then output \\ as 17.834 mIlhon feet, 01 443 pel cent
of the total, 1111908, 15,056 ml1110n feet, or -+53 pel cent of
the total, awl 1111909 22,057 ml1l1On feet 01 -1-95 pel cent of
the total Yello\\ p111e, 111clud1112,the se, el al "peCle" long-leaf,
shortleaf, loblolly Cuban. etc, constItuted '-ub"tantJalh
the same per cent of the total cut of lumbel 111 the~e ~tate~ 111
each of the th1ee )ears, furl11shmg 72 per cent 111 1909. 728
per cent m 1908, and 724 per cent 111 1907. The large In-crease
111 the number of 1111llsrepOl tmg f10m thl" regIon 111
1909 over 1908, from 12,824 to 23,255, amounted to nearly
hv o-thirels of the total mcrease 111the nU111bel of n1111s1epOl t-
---------------.~---
Lentz's Big Six
No. 694, 48 in. top.
No. 687, 60 in. top,
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGAA
--------------------------~---
i"Grand Rapids Caster Cup Co. I 2 Parkwood Ave.• Grand Rapids, Mich.
,III•
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I Grand Raptd6 I ..----~----------------~_._--_.----...
W" are now putting out the best Caster Cups WIth cork bases ever
ofiereu to the trade. These are fimshed 10 Golden Oak and Wh1te Maple
In a hght fim'h These goods are admIrable lor polished floors and furn-
Iture rests They will not sWlllat or mar.
PRICES
SIze 2}{ Inches .,. $4 00 per hundred
SIze 2~ 1O~hes . 5 00 per hundred
Try a <lampl, Ord'r FOB
mg for the entIre Umted States betvveen these years The in-crease"
111 th1S g10Up of states, both 111the number of mIlls
and 111cut, \\ ere due undoubtedly 111 large part to the many
small 111111s111 remote locahtJes WhlCh were reached by the
agents 111 1909, but whlch are elJfficult to canvass by mail.
The lllmted output of mllls of thlS class and S1ze, however, IS
almo"t II lthout exceptlOn consumed in the immediate vicinity
of ltS manllfactul e, and hence exerts httle or no ll1fluence on
"uppl} and pt Ices in the generallllmber market of the country.
The pl0port1On of the total lumber cut of the country
contllbllted by N evv yO! k and the New England states did not
\ al) matenally clUJ ing the tin ee years, bell1g 9 per cent 111
19°7,96 per cent in 1908, and 7.5 per cent in 1909.
The 1elabv e importance of the Lake states-Michigan,
::\1111nesota and \Viscons111-ll1 lumber production continues
to deCl ease steadl1y, as the supply of white-pine stumpage
gl 0\\ S less These states contnbuted 13 6 per cent of the
total lumber cut of the Umted States in 1907, 13.2 per cent
111 1908, and 123 per cent in 1909.
The PaClfic coast states, w1th an output 28 3 per cent
ld1ger 111 1909 than in 1908, and 22 per cent greater than in
19°7, nevel theless contributed a smaller propol bon of the
total cut of the country in 1909 than 111 either of the preceding
years, the per cent for 1909 being IS 5 for 1908, 162 and for
19°7, 168 Douglas fir vvas far 111 the lead as lumber material ----------------_._._---_._~--~
._----- - ----_.------ ._--..4
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
..--_ .._ ..--_... -_._-_._-_ ..._.---- - .,. _.,. ---'.._._-_._._------._--------------------
Chicago's Best and Most Effective Line
of
Can be seen throughout the year at J. J. Hall & Son, 187 Michigan Ave,
Peck and Hills Co., Wabash Ave. and 14th St. and in Our Catalogue,
sent to any furniture dealer on request.
r
BEDROOM FURNITURE
IIII
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,If
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in Mahogany, Walnut, BIrd's Eye M.ple and Ouartered Oak
HORN BROS. MFG. CO.
1114·1156 W. Superior St., Chicago.
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m these states dm mg the thl ee years, the productIOn from
thIs species constitutmg 68 I per cent in 19°7, 66 I per cent
m 1908, and 685 per cent m 1909 It contnbuted 792 per
cent of the total productIOn m \¥ashlllgton in 1909, and 832
per cent m Oregon, vvh1le redwood formed 456 per cent of
the total output m California.
Of the total pioductIOn of lumber III 1909 softwoods
supphed 33,875 mlllJOn feet, or 76 per cent, while hardwoods
contubuted IO,693 mtlhon feet, or 24 per cent. Softwoods
contnbuted I per cent less of the total productlOn m 190q
than III 1908 and 1907, m each of whIch years they formed
77 per cent of the total
The 1eported cut of yellow pine in 1909, 16,277 milhon
feet, constItuted 36 5 per cent of the total lumber output ThiS
proportlOn Vvas substantIally larger than m 1908 and 1907,
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~OTTINGI
Drying lumber liberates steam and
acid in the kiln. That is why your
unprotected kiln depreciates faster
than other buildings.
EBONOID1 Kiln Coating
Protects the inside of a wood, brick
or concrete building, stops the rot-ting
process, is fireproof and cheap.
You know you ought to coat your
kilns with Ebonoid at once.
Sold by
Grand Rapids Veneer Works
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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in which years it formed 33 8 per cent and 32 8 per cent, re-
:,pectlve1y, of the total Douglas fir lumber, which 1ankecl next
to yellow pine in 19°9, vv1th a reported cut of 4,836 m11110n
feet, formed 1°9 per cent of the total oucput 111thai year, a~
aga111st I I I per cent 1111908 and 11 8 per ceat 1111907
\Vh1te pine, WIth an outlut of 3,9°0 m11hon feet, contllbutec1
88 per cent of the total in 19°9, as against IO I per cent 111
1908 and IO 4 per cent in 1007 The 1eported cut of oak
lumber 11119°9, namely, 4,446 l1111hol1feet, \vas substantIally
larger than the output of thIS species 111either 1908 or 1907
It formed IO per cent of the total 111 1<;09, as aga111:,t83 per
cent 1111908 and 92 per cent in 1907 A steady decrease 1')
noted in the propOl tion of hemlock lumber 111the total pro-ductIon
durmg the last three years It formed 84 per cent
of all lumber in 19°7, 76 per cent 1111908, and 68 per cent 111
1909 A slmtlar showl11g \\ as made by spruce, \\ h1ch de-clined
from 43 per cent of the total 11119°7, and 42 per cent
111 1908, to 3 9 per cent in 1909 ·Western pllle showed little
val iatIon 1n actual or re1atn e productlOn 111 the three year')
Its contnbutlOn in both 1907 and 1908 f01med 38 per cent of
the total, and in 1909, 3 4 per cent The cut of lumber from
no other species reached as much as 3 per cent of the total
output 111any of the three years, though a substantIal increase
111 the production of hickory lumber was sho\\n for 19°9,
when a cut of 338 million feet was reported.
VVashlllgton leads all the sta,tes m production, with 3,-
~63,000,000 feet board measure, closely follo\\ ed by Louisi-ana
w1th 3,552,000,000 feet, MlssisS1ppi IS third, North
Caro1111a fourth and Arkansas fifth lVI1chigan \\ hich \\ as
first a few years ago is now tenth. It's cut last year was only
1,890,000,000 feet
Phillipine Wood for Kwang Hsu's Tomb.
A mag11lficent mau:,oleum 1Sto be bm1t to mark the 1est-lllg
place of the late "Son of Heaven"-the Chlllese Emperor,
Kwang Hsu The f01ests of the Onent \'Yere searched for the
best and most durable \OV ood, and, after much competition, a
Manda lumber company has won \OV hat 1S descl1bed as the
nchest commercial pri7e of recent years in Ch111a The prell-mlllary
contract for the matena1 ha:, now been signed by tv, 0
of the Chmese impena1 princes, and It p10\ 1des 111the first
place for the shipment of 5°,000 feet of Philtppl11e hard \vood
On 1tS arnval at Peklllg \\ ork IS to start fm tin' 1th on the
mausoleum among the tombs of the M111gdynasty near the
capital For the huge pd1ars of the mausoleum glant trees
wd1 be taken from the M111dunao forests. Some of them, al-ready
cut, a1e 60 feet h1gh and 4 feet III d1ameter, \ve1ghmg
over 17 tons.
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
An Important "Fellow Servant" Decision.
That the hablhty of the employer for the acts of hb ~er-vants
extends beyond the 1esponslblhb t01 acclClent, to the
employe lesu1t1l1g flam the neghgence of a fello\\ 1, demon-
'it rated by the deClslOn of the :\ew YOlk COc11t of apj)eal~ 111
the ca'ie of Mary \ Hogle a~a1l1st the FI<lnkll1l Il l11ul le-tunng
company of SYl acuse an autom(1)\le U)\lell n I he
'The Man of the Hour," or The Alarm Clock," According to Yom PolItiCS
Deslgned by Frank Burton, a I::ltudent In the Grand RapIds
School of Deslgmng
court holds the company llable fOI an 111JUl\ 1e"ultl11~ 110111
the throw 1I1g by Its emplO\ es of metal spikes and holt, mto
the yards of the pla1l1tlff despite the tact tlldl the empll\ e'
had been thleatened '11th dlschal!Se 111 la,e the plaetJcc \\<\'
not stopped Judge Vann \\ ho \\ 1 ote tIle oj)1111on" 1\ ,11K
defendant flll ni~hecl the p1.lee fl0m \\ 111chand the l1lecln~ \\ lth
\\ hlch habItual tI espasse'i, cdkulatecl to mfllct pel sona1 1111111 \
\\ el e committed on the aclJom1l1!:; ]JIeml"e" (i 1he pLlI111 I n
The defendant kne\\ of the j)lacLlce and Lne\\ th It It hdd e "-
l"ted f01 a Ion!?,"tIme, and \\ htle some effllJ t" \\ 11 C mark tl\ P\ e
\ cnt It the C\ II Lontl11uec1 and e\ en g 1e\\ \\01 se \11 'el [-
'donal tIespass of tl11Skl11c1commItted bv the defendant', \\olk-
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The Good Old Reliable Work Bench
THAT NEVER'GETS OUT OFlSTYLE.
For l\1aO) YCdrs 1\ldde t.xeJuslvt'lv b\
C. CHRISTIANSEN, 2219 Grand Ave., CHICAGO
Also manufacturer of the ChIcago Truck fOl \Voo,h\()[k,ng flLtones
Send fOI Latalogue
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men \\ auld not \\ a1 rant the Jury ll1 findmg 1t gUllty of suf-fel111g
01 mall1ta1l1111~ a llU1'ianCe, but \v hen the practice be-came
habItual and the l11J1.HYd11ect, substantial and \vell
Lno\\ n 1 thmk the c1ut\ of the defendant became absolute and
that It \\ a~ ~11l1t\ of suffell11g a nUlsance to contmue on Its
land If It chd not prevent the eVIl"
Boycotting Vftrious Trude Schemes.
Ihe ketall J\Ielchallts' associatlO11 of 5t fo",eph, Mo, has
l,lopted d I uk fOlhlddl11!:; members to give pnzes, premiums or
1(11l1ll11'~1(11lo~t dll\ k1l1d, 01 to ent;'a~e 111 an) contest that will
,111uth ()! mdneetl) hung letlllns, tlade 01 leceipts to arty
The Modern Prtscilla for November, 1910'
Buy Correct Furniture at Correct Prices
MAKE ONE DOLLAR DO EXACTLY THE WORK OF TWO
You owe It to yourself - to your
famIly-to investigate thIS proposl-tlOn
You take no fisk Satisfaction
IS guaranteed
Send for Catalog, No. Il.Today
It explaInS how by puttmg the as-sembled
pIeces together-just a
lIttle effort on your part, a pleasant
form of recreatlOn - you can place
high grade, solId oak furmture
nght In yOU! home for less than
half your local dealer would charge
you We 9uarantee to do thiS
Three Reasons Why You Should
Nol HeSItate
FIRST I[we misrepresented one
thmg MODeRN PRISCILLAwould
THIS BUFFET - $22 50 nol accept tillS advertIsement
We have tumJturefor every roorn w thehome chl'boroffice ~rcor..D Our guarantee of sat
Only one of the 75 remarkable barb 'llnS offered In our lI;;factlon or your money returned
CATALOGNO 11 protects you In every way. You
have absolutely nothIng to lose
THIRD We have been m bUSInessfor ten years - doublIng our output each
year ThIS alone proves our relIablhty
BROOKS MANUFACTURING COMPANY
4911 Rust Avenue SAGINAW. MICHIGAN
A STRONG ONE B'ROMSAGINAW
NotICe how cle" erly they nlake It appear that theIr goodE'and methods are
endorsed by the publ1shers of the magazine
1l1Unbel 01 film 01 firm-membel The I ule also I)1ovldes t.hat
members must nut gIve lebates, discounts, premiums, tradm
"tamps, ~treet (dl tIckets or any ~l!t" whatevel to mdlvldual
ell" tom el" ll1aklll!:; pIli cha "e~ A rule has also been adopted,
tu the effect that membel s of the aSsoClatlOn shall nut give
(1, l1lell \(Jlh ]JIl/l" O! pI Ull1llm~, III la~h ()\ 111elChclll(h-.c. EOI
dill l()nte~t, Llll (111lll<'l1llll1ent 01 hel/dl, ell"o th"t Icque-.t-.
I )J "uell dOll It1\)ll~ etl mll~t he llM(le dn cd to the ,1"~OLl<ltl011
111 \\lliln~. \\ll11lUPOll the ,l"solldtIOll, If It (llc!Ol"C" the
(,ll1c,e. \1111 11dlldk the I UIU( ,,1 <II! (l t b) 1 (,I-.h -.uhsu IpllOn
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
Lower Pric('s on Rugs.
All of the hIe, carpet and lUg hotl'ie~ ll1 the east opened
lle\\ Illle~ for the ~pl1ne,- tJ ,Ide Ll"t l\Tomla) mUl11me, Buyers
\\ele m attendance ,It an unu'mallv calh hoUJ In OIlC 1,\1 1;C
house ll1 pal tlculal It VI'as stated that bl1ye1 s began to put 111
an appearance a~ early as 7 30. The p11Ce" named on the
new lme" \ el tfied pI edlctIOns made some tll11e ago The p11n-llpal
1111e",of lUg s ha\ e been 1educed flO1112 scent s to $T00
CLlch, \\ l1Jle carpets] ema111 on the same ])llCe level a" that of
the "eason just clo"ed In some ([uarte]" It \1 as 1athel chfficult
to e,et at just \\J hat had been clone 111the way of namme,- pI ices,
and f01 the fi1st h\ 0 weel,,, of the se,l"on at least It IS believed
flI~e:OOOSEWINGg.: . J' MAC"'NES ..
TO BE SOLO AT
~
Our name engraved on thIS
Sewmg IVlachme will be a
daily remillder that when you
are III need of Furniture, Rugs 01'
Stoves you should patronize Gross-man's
and save from 2S to 30 per cent
un any single piece of Furniture or on a
complete Home Outfit.
Have You Ever Heard
Of a drop head Sewing Machme whIch IS guaranteed
10 years by the manu-facturer,
and equalh
as good as any $35
machme on the market, to
sell at thIS ridICulously
low pnce of $2 98 ?
Why We Do It
It 15 our aim to have you VISlt eUhel
of our two new and most beautiful
turmture stores. located awa} from
the downto\\ 11 hIgh rent dIstrtct, and
once you enter (JUT stores you are convll1c~d
of the low pnces prevailIng and the stand, TO
qualIty ot our merchandlsc
That we may 1dd your name dn10ng our lIst
of satlsfJed customers we ask }'QU to buy horn
us a smgk pIece of Furniture Rug or a
Stme Just\a sample order to th .. amount ot
$2000 and vou are entitled to thiS high
grade $35 on Sewmg Machme for $298
Positively Only One Macnlne to a Customer -
Furmture selet.ted for future ddlvery ~lutsh:ea~~:~:;~~t:~lc~l~1~:~h
entitles you to a Se\\mg Machine prO\lde<l1 atef;t ropro cd nechant n very ught
1 dep,.)SIt is made runnng 1hecabmet::l hefi~selected
Open Evemngs Except Wedne"day and Frrda) =-;-:r'il~e\~a~a~ f$UI1 2\ 0 9att~8I'h
Liberal CredIt Extended cbme Regu1ll.r value
Newlyweds must not fall to VISIt our com ~:~n~tc~~ lS guarantel"d : do_ he
pletdy furnished flat at the MIlwaukee avenue roughes and fin(:~t kmd or ork that may
StOfL and learn ho\\ to flJrnIsh your home be !f'qwred A \\'fltten guarantee fqr 10
correctly )ears IS glver! '\'lth each mach nc
h6~~ GROSSMAN'S h~~~
1530-32 MIlwaukee Ave. 3231-3:7Lmcoln Ave
Near Robey "'\leat Bo=lmont
A Sample Advert1sement
that \ alues \~111be rathel 111 egular ~lanufacturel s were very
much alSamst nam111g anv reductIOn" as they are well aware of
the Ltct that cal pet II ools al e I11gh, as compal ed \\ Jth last
yeal, and that 1t doe" not look a" If the law matenal \va" gOll12,
to be any lowel £01 some tIme to come
At the salesl 00l11~ of the Alexandel Smlth & Sons Car-pet
(0l1lpany, the new pllces announced on Monday mornmg
shcmecl 1edl1ltlon" of 50 cents each on 12 -1- !\'(mmstel lUgS,
SO cents on velvct PalIsades and $1 00 each on Wllton lUg".
Carpet" were 1epoJ teel at pllces sImllal to those in force
dUlln~ the past "eason rl he new price lIst announces that
on orders placed after January I, advances wlll be ask!:'d all
along the line.
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Ii DOETSCH and BAUER CO.
I 1534-44 Greenwood Terrace, CHICAGO
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All previous efforts eclipsed
---- in our new lme of ----=~--=~ PARLOR FRAMES II
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wh1ch 1Slarger and more effective than
we have yet offered
Now ready for inspection at our factory
Take Southport Ave car to Greenwood Terrace, thence west 10 factory.
or Clybourn Ave car to Ashland Ave, thence north 10 Greenwood Terrace.
.by carryingthe
ONE~PIECEPORC£LflIN{INED
WONliRD
CLERNRBLE
WRITE FOR CATALOGUe:
GRAND RAPIDS REFR1GERATOR Cg
GRAND RAPIDS. !"fICH.
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I THE "ELI" FOLDING BEDS ~~tf'rl~I~N~~~ I ELi «"0:""iVlooi' L L'E'R"'"& u'co.
I EVANSVILLE. INDIANA
Wnte lor cuts and pnces I ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE. EVAN.VILLE. • • •
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22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
--~~__. _.. _. -_._._._.__._~-~---_._-_._._._-_..- -.--~ .....-----------------_... .. . -- I QUALITY MACHINES-ISN'T
IT TOO BAD-People
wonder where their profits are gOing when the trouble usually hes In poor equip-ment.
A httle foresight In the begmnmg would have saved them dollars--a hule more money Ill-vested
at the start III "OLIVER" "QUALITY" eqUipment.
Some manufacturers of wood workmg tools slight their output by puttmg In poor matenals-employmg
poor workmen-simply to be able to make a little more profit. 'Ohver" tools are bUllt
along machIne tool hnes -careful-accurate-durable - safe.
Some purchasers fall to mvestlgate thoroughly before plaCIng their order Some unscrupulous
salesman tells them to purchase somethmg-they go ahead-find out too late they are wrong-lose
money, whereas a letter addressed to us would have procured our catalogs - set them thInkmg-saved
them money.
ISN'T THAT TOO BAD.
"OLIVER" No 61 Surfacer
OURLINE-SURFACE
PLANERS
HAND JOINTERS
SANDERS
WOOD TRIMMERS
CHAIN MORTISERS
LATHES
"OLIVER" No. 60 Saw Bench.
SAW BENCHES
SWING CUT.OFF SAWS
BAND SAWING MACHINES
BORING MACHINES
SAFETY CYLINDERS
VISES, CLAMPS, ETC., ETC.
ADDRESS DEPARTMENT "0"
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES-lot
National Bank Bldg , Chicago, III.
No 50 Church St, New York CIty.
1125 Welt Temple St, LOl Angeles, Cal.
PacIfIc Bldg., Seattle, Wash.
e. _ ---~------._.-._ ..._----_._----- _ .. --- _ .....-. - .... I
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-Grand Rapids, )'llch -S DeGroot, \Vest
Leonal d and Da'ls streets, $3,000, C. E Baxter, 86 ~ubU1n
avenue, $2,500, H A TOI en, 126 La1kms a, enue, S2 800, L
P. Oltman, 454 Fountam street, $2,500, \V E ChamptOn, 137
Reynolds avenue, $2,500
Atlanta, Ga -G M HilliS, 27 11echal11c street, 89,500,
R. S. Monis, 194 Stetlmg street, $3,;00. ~Its )'Ial) E Can-non,
18 Bovv ie stt eet, $2,800; ),11-- E S Gllffin. 4-+ South
Gorden street, $7,000; G H GllLlm, 47 South GO!den stl eel..
$4,000.
Detroit, l\Itch-\Vdham Halt, Forest and Trumbull ave-nues,
$10,000; J \V Gill, 711 Hamdton street, $2,500; GeOlge
A Erskine, 108 \V estmm ster street, $4,000; Clemens Fbher,
975 Joseph Campau street, $3,800; \Vl1ham Leslle, Burlm-game
and Hamilton streets, $3,000; E G. Villerot, 295 ?\ atlOn-al
avenue, $4,350; Frank LeWIS, 73 Larchmont street, $3600
ChIcago, Ill-R E. Hollowell, 7604 Emerald avenue, $5,-
000; Patrick Feeney, State and Nmeteenth street, $6,000;
Henry T. \Vol£, 6040 \Vood street, $7,200, M Powers, 120
Kensmgton avenue. $4,000; Miss Hattie \Vmchell, 5951 East
Circle avenue, $4,000; P. 0 Hulton, 6148 Vernon aiellUe,
$6,500; \V. H. Croft, 6757 Bennett avenue, $18,000, H. S.
Smith, 7221 Pa1mel avenue, $5,000, Olaf Kl111gen, 4207 Hirsch
street, $4,000.
Cmcinnati, 0 -1. Y Cooper, Salem and Menlo streets,
$4,000; \Vtlham Gerhard, Ernst stteet and State a'enue, $5,-
500,"\ J Scott, 2428 Maplewood avenue, $3,800; E. L Hell1s-heimel,
384 !\laska avenue, $3,800; LOUIse \-onCostello, Dan-
Iels and Euchd avenues, $4,000, John 1Iahlenkamp, Can I and
Geiger streets, $4,000, Charles Reuter, Fisher street and
MIgnon avenue, $4,500.
St. Louis, Mo -l\lary E. Duxbury, 5352 Julia street, $4,-
000, \\'lllJam SIegmann, 6527 Mmnesota avenue, $2,500;
CalOhne ElChkol n, 3523 Tennes~ee avenue, $2,500; Minnie
Schultze, 5444 Ridge a, enue, $3,900; C. P. Hed, 2010 Forest
a, enue S3,300; LOl enz Rett1er, 3971 Flora boulevard, $10,-
000
East St Lotus, Ill-Robert Cunningham, 811 Ohio ave-nue,
$5,200; Dr Geolge P. Adams, 635 North Thirty-third
c;treet, $-+,700
De.., :\Iome,." Ia -Herman \\-llk, 1264 Fourteenth street,
S3,6oo, ),1 Thiel, Este,., street and \Ventvvorth avenue, $3,-
;00, Petel Sc..hemenauer, 1606 Thirty-siAth street, $4,000.
Denver, Co1 -James 0'Dllscoll, Douglas place and
Boulevard F, $3,500; Edward Cook, Yates and Twenty-se,
enth streets, $3,800, H. J. Clowd, Ash and Twenty-third
sheet _, $5,000, ),IlS M. W. Jones, King and Forty-second
"ireets, $3,000
Indlanapohs, Ind.-O. P. Ensley, La Salle and Thir-teenth
street, $2,800; Lyman H. Pnce, 3047 Broadway, $3,-
250, G M. \Vedd1e, Bismarck and Washington streets, $3,-
000; Ella Getz, Gray and New York streets, $3,000.
Ene, Pa -D. H. Comstock, Tvventy-elghth and Parade
Stl eetc;, $2,500, A KnoII, Eighth and Parade streets, $4,000.
Trenton, ::.J. J -M M. Martinett, 346 Edgewood avenue-
$3,000. Isaac Lenzner, 416 Randall avenue, $8,500.
Bll1ghamton, N Y -IV. E Clark, 200 Robinson street,
$2,500. B. B Bundy, 28 Judson street, $2,500.
Mmneapohs, Mmn -Anthon) Moore, 1406 Eighteenth
a, enue, $3,000, Rosa M Selb, 15 Barton avenue, southeast,
$6,000, P K Bal bour, 3805 Lyndale avenue, south, $3,500;
John Fager, 3902 BlaIsdell avenue, $5,000; Ludwig Welker,
2101 Sixth street, $3,750; Alft ed Boik1und, 3906 Second ave-n
ne, south, $3,000.
1Il1waukee, \Y ls.-Oscar Brochman, State and Twenty-
WEEKLY ARTISAN 23
r--~A'DDELL MAN~'FAcTuRI~~"~o-~-1
I Grand Rapid •• Michigan I
I All Knobs and Pulls have the
IIII
No-I1um-Loose Fasteners ,
I
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The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
third streets, $7,000; Nicholas Lauer, Buffum and Concordia
streets, $7,500; Mrs. Emily Koepke, Locust street and Louise
avenue, $4,000; Mrs. Henry Gattman, Summit avenue, near
Belleview place, $10,000; J. M. Schneider, Mitchell street and
Twentieth avenue, $2,700; Theodore Hauseman, Forty-first
and Meineke streets, $2,800.
Portland, Ore.-Albert Larson, Minnesota avenue and
Shaver street, $3,000; G. B Raymond, East Forty-elgth and
Schuyler streets, $3,500; H. V. Carpenter, Montgomery and
Upper drives, $4,500; W. O. NIsley, East Forty-eIghth street,
and Kelly avenue, $4,000; Mrs. L. E. Hamilton, 149 Seventh
street, $3,000.
Newark, N. J.-Luigi Perna, 637 North Sixth street, $12,-
000; Alfred Schmidt, 74 Garrison street, $4,800; Peter Trani-son,
Third avenue and FIfth street, $25,000; Emma E. Lyon,
869 South Eleventh street, $8,000; William A. Dennis, 19
Randolph street, $7,500; Maria M. Eiselle, 55 Farley avenue,
$8,000; Helen Mersfelder, 388 Seymour avenue, $4,000; Abby
Eppinger, 784 South Twelfth street, $5,000.
Los Angeles, Ca1.- J. A. Patterson, 711 Frostless Belt
road, $3,500; Gertrude McCaffery, 1221 West Seventh street,
$3,000; R. R. Crabtree, 445 East Twenty-eighth street, $3,-
000; LIla A. Young, 807 Golden street, $3,250; A. A. Burn-and,
806 South Bonnie Brae sstreet, $2,800; J. E. Calhoun,
322 West Forty-first place, $5,000.
Syracuse, N. Y.-D. P. Bennett, 259 Midland avenue, $4,-
800; N. H. Young, 111 East Corning avenue, $4,800; Charles
Quackenbush, 1226 Cannon street, $5,000; H. S. Slocum, 808
South Salina street, $4,500; Lena Markert, 620 Court street,
$5,000.
Schenectady, N. Y.-c. L. Hensler, 321 Glenwood ave-nue,
$5,800; Conrad Hartung, 728 Stanley street, $3,500;
Francis Neverman, 606 Christler avenue, $4,000.
Toledo, O.-W. H. Kontz, 1425 Huron streeth, $2,500;
Frank J. Welzbacher, 28 Parkwood place, $2,800; E. 1. Bayer,
Melrose and Rosalmd avenues, $3,500; George Zimmerman,
Princeton drive, $2,500.
Omaha, Neb.-Pryor Nelson, 2505 Pinckney street, $2,-
500; George W. Snyder, 1712 South Central boulevard, $4,-
000.
Seattle, Wash -F. M. Barnes, 2742 Thirty-eighth avenue,
southwest, $2,700; F. R. PIerce, 1160 Eighteenth avenue, $3,-
000.
Peoria, Il1.-Harry Spangler, 350 Columbia terrace, $3,-
200; Samuel Gordon, 268 North Garfield street, $5,000.
Spokane, Wash.-George Gutschen, El718 Gordon ave-nue,
$2,800; T. VV.Mornson, E826 Twenty-sixth avenue, $4,-
000; E. D. Tifft, E3608 FIrst avenue, $2,500.
Kansas City, Mo.-Samuel Brenn, 3512 Chestnut street,
$2,900; Mary E. Beasley, 3727 Terrace street, $2,500; VV.D.
Frae, 3717 Tracy street, $4,000, F. M. Hobbs, 4409 St. John
street, $3,000; J. H. Graham, 2920 E. Twenty-eIghth sheet,
$5,000.
Hammond, Ind.-J. V. Slodda, 1110 Columbia avenue,
$4,000; H. J. \Vnght, 360 Plummer avenue, $2,500
Dallas, Tex -Mrs J. S. Terry, 219 South Harwood
sh eet, $2,500; Lou Leedom, 532 Reiger street, $3,000; Mrs.
VV.T. Moore, Flora and Leonard streets, $3,500; R. S. Geen,
San Jacmto and Mahlda streets, $3,500.
Jacksonvl1le, Fla.-Capt. A. B. Potter, Osceola and Oak
streets, $4,000.
St. Joseph, Mo.-Mrs. Rachel Watson, Isador and Elev-enth
sheets, $6,000; VV. F. Uhlman, Folsom and Osage
streets, $3,650.
Lomsville, Ky.-Mrs. A. Holtevert, 2310 \Vest Jefferson
street, $3,000; W. C. Reederer, 1124 Hilliard street, $2,700.
WIchita, Kan.-M. E. Eshelman, 1015 Litchfield avenue,
$3,000; V. E. Appleby, 1020 North Waco avenue, $2,500.
Miscellaneous Buildings-St. ::vIalk's EpIscopal church
vestrymen are bmldmg a $10,000 chapel at 1218 AddIson
street, ChlCago, Ill. The Fnst Umtanan Chuclh society are
bul1ding a $25,000 church on East FIrst street, Duluth, Mmn.
The German MethodIsts are bmldmg a $30,000 church on
Greenwood avenue, Tlenton, N. J. Bartmann & Pretschold
are bmldmg a $10,000 theatre on North avenue and Twenty-
SIxth street, Ml1waukee, \VIS. The Orpheum Theatre com-pany
of Portland, Ore., ale remodelmg and refurnishmg their
theatre on Mornson street at a cost of $20,000 R R Thomp-son
15 electmg an eight-story hotel bmldmg on ThIrd, Pme
and Ash streets, Portland, Ore., at a cost of $40,000. The
Board of EducatIOn of Newark, N. J, are erectmg a FIrst
ward school bmldmg in Crane and HIgh streets. The 1. N.
Poe estate is bmldmg a three-story brick hotel at 422 St.
Clair street, Toledo, 0 The Belmont :Ylethodlsts of Roanoke
Va, are bmldmg a $25,000 church.
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
ATTENTION!
Send for samples of our
Celebrated Nickel Steel
Sword Tempered
BAND SAW BLADES
Warranled In every partICular
Best proposilion on Ihe markel.
FRANK W. SWETT & SON
Mfrs of band saw blades and tools
1717 1719 W. Adams SI ,Chicago
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Cur SurpJu!'> Changed 1n Shor1age.
rl he CUllent 11l11letllJ of the AmellCll1 RLllh\ ,1\ ,l"SOCI
ation "hows that the numbel of Hlle heIght Ull" d<:ued"td
I apidly m the t \\ 0 \\ eek s CO\el ed by the 1epOl ts 1 he de
crease dUlmg the last half of Octobel \\as -+ 506 Celt" 11m
cuts the numbel of SUIplus cals do\\ n to 29, 131 \\ l11ch IS
r ,765 cal s less than last} eal at thIS tIme
ShOl ta~ es have mCIeased 1,377 cal s flOm the fi~ UIe of
two weeks ag 0, the shol telg es now bemg 2 I ,896 calS '\t the
same tlUle last \ eell thc h~Ule \\ a" 3(),o,6 cal s The ledudl0n
m the '1\11plus IS lal ~eh III miscellaneous C,ll" \\ hlch shu\\ I
deC'lease of 3 68~ rjhe Llt~c"t Ilem ol Illuea"es 111 the "hOll
al:;es, IS m ftlt caIson the sO\1theln I acIds
PUI chases of lonstluctlOn matel Jal and eqUIpment for
lC) T I bv the 1.1111oad S 1 S (()mlll~ closel to I elll/atlOn hut IS
lIot \ et ,m al101llpll"hu I fed \ l1umhel at the lOad" al e
Made by Sheboygan Novelty Co Sheboygan, WIS
considerIng purchases, and several have asked for bids on
cars and ralls A few have made small purchases. The steel
mIlls have opened books for orders, In the plans for pUl-chase
that a number of the roads have made all-steel cal"
constitute a bIg Item rj he lOads al e adoptmg- the all-steel
cars fOI both passengel and fI eIght tI afflc 1\ext yeal WIll
show a big jump m the all-steel tI ams bemg opel ated
Plans to Boost St. Louis.
At the Octobe! meetmg of St. LoUIS Sales :YIanagers'
assocIatIon It was suggested that If all 'st Lams salesmen
would concentrate theIr eftorh on a certam state at one
time and boost St. Lams and hel industries 1t would aid St.
Lams materIally m extendmg tIade relatIOns. FOI example
if all the tlavelIng salesmen out of St. Lams making the state
of Iowa would get together and set a eel tain week in whIch
to swarm down upon the merchants of that state and talk
nothing but St. Lams goods to these merchants the effect
~-------------- ---_._---_._------ ,,I
III
"III
,,,II
,I,,
,,,
,,
,
~
LOUIS HAHN
154 Llvmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
l'ltl7ens 1elephone 1702
DESIGNS
and Details of Furniture
IDEAL STAMPING AND TOOL CO.
SOCKETS, DOWELS,
TOP fASTENERS
and GlIlDES
for Extension Tables.
Also special stampings
In steel and brass.
NO KUM.OUT TABLE SOCKET Patent applied for Write for
samples and prices
465 N.Ottawa St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
U CLl ted IV o1l1d be fal 1 eaChllH:; I t was also su~gested that
'-,t I 0111'- <IlllCIlI"elS boost the Clt) III the adveri1slllg mattel
\\ hIe h thcv L,tl IJ11t <Illcl III the11 aclvC'1lIsements which ap-pl,
l! 111 1 he 11l<I~Ll/1l1e"tll1 ol1ghol1t the countIy.
Strength of Sears-Roehuck Stock.
On the (h] ca~ a E xchan~ e Seal s- Roebuck stock aftel
le,llll1m; lX.zy ha~ leleded to 1790 A financIal writer on a
( lnc,\£;() pape1 declale" thele IS an agreement among the ('hl-
Thirty Days'
Free Trial to
Convince
You
We don't ask yon to
p'ty a cent
~~;~lr~~
Oul Products;
exammed the
artIcle selected
WIth your pur-chase
and are con-villced
we gIve you
about don ble the
value that yon
could get at a. storo
for the Bame money
~~rt1ill~r~ar~~
Pro due ts 0 f your
selectIOn and any
article m our Cats
log glven WIth a $10
purchase, on tlurty
days' trIal You
then pay $10, If satis-fied
If not~ we WIll
l emove goods at our
expense r efn nd
treight charges and charge you nothing for a
reasonable amount of Products used m tnal
\\ e guarantee satisfaction
Get Our Free Catalog
af~u~L8~~~lg\>~g~~~iI:~lS~?~~~it::i~~~nOdtI3~:crltl~::H of the 1700artlCles of Wearmg Apparel ann Housefurmsh
ing offered you to choose fl om Send today Addles8
No 15
L\l.dy Washlog
too BoudOir
Desk chOice of
Quarter sawed
Golden Oak or
genuine Mahog4
aoy Veneer
Given With a $10
purchase of
Larkin House-hold
Supphes
Depa-nment L.;rrki'n C",. BUFFALO,
NY.
tf West~of-the MissiSSippi Send to
LARKIN CO Dep. 71 PEORIA, ILL
SImply FIll In, Cut Out and Mail ThIs Coupon
Larfdn C.a. Mail free Catalog No. 72 and
explain how I can furnish my home or clothe myself
out of present cost ofllVing. (G. P. 157)
Name' _
St. and No. or R. D. _
P.o. Stafe
:3ome of the Strongest Larkm Ideas
cago officers of the company and their immediate entourage
that no stock shall be dIsposed of within a certain period;
that is, the interests indicated have obligated themselves not
to liquidate a shal e' of their holdings for a specified time-a
SOlt of vel bal esclow \\ hlch IS as binding as a written escrow
because no stock could be 11quidated without the cognizance
of the compan} '1 offiCIals The telm of this agreement is not
known. It is supposed to extend anywhere from three to five
years \Vith thIS lctlge amount of stock VIrtually tied up, it
J', not so clIfficult ,IS It \\ auld at first appear to keep the market
"trong.
Wi"e men \\ III not try to pull a table leg befol e the varn-ish
is dry.
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
Laukamer Brothers have purchased Thomas DavIson's
fUImture store in Mankato, Minn.
The Crex Carpet company of Hartford. Conn, hay e m-clea:;,
ed theIr annual chvldends, flam 2.0 to 3 per cent
Fort SmIth, Ark, papers state that R A Re1t7 has de-cIded
to move h1s furl1lture factOly flam EvanSVIlle, Ind. to
Fort Smith.
\\'J1IId1TI Cald\\ ell has purchased the Osbourne fUlniture
store m \Vest Some 1VIlle, Mass, and presented it to hIS son,
Fred Caldwell.
Thomas H BI 0\\ n, far neady twenty-) ears a fUl11l111e1
dealel and undertaker at ;\1arlboro, Mass, ched on No\ embel
4, aged 48 years.
Simon R LaPlace, furniture dealer of Deep River, Conn.
has doubled the SIze of IllS store by rentmg and remodelmg
an adjommg building
Congressman John H Boehne of EvanSVIlle, Ind. who
\\ as Ie-elected last Tuesday, is president of the Globe FU111l-ture
company of that city.
The Panhandle Mattress and FUI11ltUle company of Ama-rillo,
Tex. recently mcorporated, have filed proof of full pay-ment
of theIr $25.000 capital stock.
The furniture dealers of Memphis, Tenn, have orga11lzed
an associatlOn mainly for the pUIpose of securing enforcement
of the law relative to moving furniture.
J H. Kentnor, treasurer of the SmIth & Davis Manufac-turing
company, St Loui:;,. Mo , spent the greater part of Oc-tober
on a vacation trip in Texas and Louisiana
The Courts Furniture company of Cincinnati, 0, has
been mcorporated by B A and M L Courts. Harold S Bis-hop
and Walter Schmidt Capital stock, $10,000
At the special town meeting last Monday the freeholders
of Brattleboro, Vt, voted by a large majority, to exempt the
Felch & Pier Chair company from local taxation for a pellod
of five years.
The Sa11ltary Mattress company of Malshfield, "V/is . has
been incorpol ated CapItal stock, $5°,000; of which $40,-
000 is owned by C H Stack, K \V Doege, C. G Engstrand
and F VoHmer.
The Sterling (Ill ) Hearse and Carriage company. manu-factl11ers,
have incorporated their busmess Capital stock,
$IO.OOO. owned by A A \Volfersperger, C E BenSll1gel
and H C Newell.
Contracts for supplyll1g furnIture and office fixtUl cs for
the ne\\ customs house in San FI anClSCO.Cal, hay e been
awarded to the H S Crocker company and the Ruckel Fullel
company of that city.
The habllities of the Edwards-Ihrig company. manufac-turer,>
of caskets. mattresses, beel springs, etc, of Oskosh.
IVis. \\ ho wel e declal ed bankrupt recently. al ereI'm ted at
$62,6 r4 \\ ith assets estimated at $78,586
MI s L Cohen of New Yark City, has announced the
engagement of her daughter, Miss Anna, to Samuel IV Prus-
"Ian. head of the Grand RapIds FurnIture compam and the
Hub Furniture company of Boston, Mass.
The Foy & Starr company, dealers 111mantals at 902
~fam '>treet, Cincinnati, 0 . have leased the adjo111m~bwldll1g.
occupIed by Joseph \Vuerst as a mattress factory Mr \17uerst
1'3no\\ located at 129 East Twelfth street
The Burlington (Vt) Furniture company, who decided
to go out of busine'3s because they were unable to lenew then"
leasc or SeCllle other suitable quarter'3, have sold their '3tod.
in bulk to the McQue ... ton Pm n1hwc and Cat pet company of
Manchester, N. H.
The Quake1 CIty Metall1c Bed company, PhIlade1ph1a, who
chscontmued busll1ess on account of finanCIal ernbarrassment,
report the1r hab1lltles at $60,200, assets, $52.967. mcluchng
fixtures, machmery, etc Most of the credItors hay e agl eed to
accept 25 cents on the dollar.
N A \Valcott. \\ ho has been elected by the Pm to RIcans
as delegate m the Umted States house of RepI esentatJve",
\va" fOlmerly m the fUl11lture bus111essat POltsmouth, N H.
He \vas a pal tner of R Clyde MaJgeson 111the POl tsmouth
Furmture and Cal pet company.
Manager Charles Lugrin of the Atherton FmUlture com-pany'
cham of thirteen stores, accompanied by one or more
of hIS assistants, has been buying rugs and carpet:;, 111New
YOlk this \\ eek and may be expected to appeal in the western
fml1lture markets dunng the coming week
Gershenowitz & Berg, furnIture dealers of 1378 FIfth
avenue, New York, have filed a voluntary petitlOn m bank-ruptcy
They schedule their liabJ1ities at $75 I and estimate
their assets at $675, including stock worth $350 that was
tm ned over to trustees for creditors in October
The stockholders of the Siegel-Cooper company and
Greenhut & Co, of New York, al e to meet today to consider
and vote on a proposition to merge the two big concerns in a
smgle corporation to be called to Greenhut-SIegel-Cooper com-pany
If the merger is effected the capitalintJon WIll be
$6,000.000.
The furniture for the new $500,000 court house at Shar-on,
Pa, will be made from the special designs made for the
court house at Youngstown, Ohio. last year Every piece in
the Youngstown courthouse will be duplicated and the cost
will be just half of the $28,000 paid by the Youngstown
county commissioners.
Isabelle Chapman has started suit against the Ne\V Eng-land
Chair company to collect damages for the death of her
husband. a fireman \vho lost his life in the fire that destroyed
the chair factory and jail in New Haven. Conn, la"t April
Her claIm is based on the allegation that the fire was clue to
the 11legal presence of gasoline and benzine in the chair fac-tory
She has attached all the property of the :\ ew England
Chair company, which, at the time of the fire was owned hy
the Ford & Johnson company.
::Yreekins, Packard & Wheat, leading furnitnre dealers
and house furnishers of Springfield, Mass, have recently filled
se, eral contracts of unusual importance Amon~ them were
ordet s for the entire window shade equipment of the big new
office building of the Fore River shipbuilding company of
Quincy. secured in competition with the leading Boston houses,
and fOJ the solid maho!:;anv fm niture for the ne\\ office butld-
1l1g of the Springfield Gas Light company and fOl the Sprrng-field
Fiye Cents savings bank Each of these la'3t two con-t!
acts mclucled a massiYe dll ectors' table in solid mahogany
\\ hich \\ CIe made in the firm's own workshop
The 1eftections cast bv a mlrror do not provc that It IS
\\ Jthout a flaw. , '1 ;,'v'
THE ~ndttpARLOR NEWA..U BED
Need not be moved
from tbe waIl
Alway. ready wit h
bedding in place
So .impl., 80 easy, a
child can operate it,
Hall roomy war-drobe
box.
CHICAGO. Erie & Sedgwick NEW YORK, Norman & Monitor.
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most Atfractive Inducements for Car Load Buyers
II•
•I THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
I Manufacturers of Cl amber SUites, Wardrobes. Chiffoniers, Odd Dressers, Chifforobes
•I THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
I Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K D. Wardrobes. Cupboards and Safes, in ImitatIOn
I golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
I THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
I
I
Are Off€ red by the
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Folding Beds. Buffets, Hall Trees, China Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plaIDoak, imltalion quartered oak, and solid quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and Chiffoniers In Imltalion quartered oak, lJ"Qltalion
mahogany, and Imitalion golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Library, DmIng and Dressing Tables
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by The Karges Furniture Co
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs. Wire Springs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association .
... •••••••• a.a •••
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
Made by Bosse Furmture Compauy. Made by World FurnIture Compauy
Made by Bockstege FurnIture Co.
~ ...••....•... .. ..-_ .. _ ...---------------- .....
-~-----------------------------
Z8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Minnesota Retail Furniture
Dealers' Association
OFFICERS-PreSIdent J R Taylor, Lake Benton, Mmn , Vlce.Presldent, D R Thompson, Rockford, Mmn ,
Treasurer, B A Schoeneberger, Perham, Mmn I Secretary, W L Grapp JanesvIlle Mlnn
EXECUTIVE CO\l\lITTEE-Chalrman, Geo KleIn, Mankato Mlon, 0 SImons, Glencoe, Mmn, W, L
HarrIs Mtrmeapol1s, Mlnn ,C Danielson Cannon Falls
P. A. Peterson for President.
Rockord, Ill, N ov 10- P A Peterson, the \\ ell-kno\\ n
fur11lture manufactUl er, has been noml11ated tOI PI eSldent of
the Illl1101s ManufactUl ers' assoClatlOn, \\ hlch \\ 111 holel Its
annual l11eetl11g 111 ChlCago Decel11bel 2 :\1I Petel son \V dS
nOl11l11ated by a C0l11111ltteeselected b) the boal d ot elll cct Jl ~
Mr Peterson came to RocktOl d \\ Ith hIS pal ents III 1852
hvecl on a farm for fifteen yedl" anel el11bal keel 111 the l11anu-factunng
busmess by orgal11Zl11g a fUll11ttll e factOl \ He IS
"Eureka-We Have Found It...
FOl the last t\\ 0 ) eal s the hm In!; C01l1111lttech,lI c hcen
lookl11g fOl a 1l11eof da\enpolh-one thaI 11<l~\ \(1 1 l.;c)Od~
anel stl11 has the pllce \ \ e ha\ e SCOlUeel the mal keh tlmc and
agam \\'1111e \\ e \\ el e able to get plel1t\ of llllcs at a J111ce
the values \\ el e not thel e To get both comibllled ha" heen a
much hardel PIOposltlon than most of the membel s \\ ould
leah7e
These people al e an old estdbllshed fil111 ha \ mg a J epu-tdtlOn
beh111d them that the\ cannot affOl el to l()~e h\ J1uttl11g
out shabby stuff but al e \\ 111l11gto concede the qUd ntltl pllCe
If \\e can sho\\ them the bus111ess X0\\ It IS up to the mem-bers
to shOll them OUl heal ts al e 111the Ill?,ht place
The spnngs ale of the ~ualanteed (Om!1 ULtl011 ] he
Chase leather IS gualanteeel fOl a .' eal fhe iJ lmc~ ,II e \\ ell
made and full SlLe The fim~h I~ C'-.cellent Jl1 Lilt e\ e1\ thUlg IS
first class as to 111atel1al and \\ 01 kmanshlp
Evel \ 111embel should place an 01 del tOl at lea~t t\\ 0 01
11101e of these da\ el1p01 ts and \\ hen \ ou sec the qualltl ) all
\\ 111duphcate your order
The C01111l1lttecIMS put the club 111) Olll hands nO\\ ~o
to work
FreIght late~ to :\f1l1ne<;ota tran"fcI 8IC pel hundred
THE BUYIKG COil1MITTEE.
pI eSlc1ent of the Rockford Manufacturers' and Shippers' as-
SocIatIon He has taken a deep 1l1terest in good CItizenshIp
and sel \ eel on the hazardous machmery commiSSIOn app01l1t-ed
by GO\ el nor Deneen \\ hlch dre\\ the factory 1l1SpectlOn
hIll passed by the leglslatul e He IS also a member of the em-plO\
els, lJabl11t\ commlSSlOn that has drawn a bIll to submIt
to the ne\.t genel al assembly
Furniture Fires.
fhe Beal :\J attl ess factory at Plymouth, 1'\ H, was
hm neel on :\0\ embel 4 II Ith a 10% of $8 000 to $10,000 and
(ll1h $-!-000 1l1surance,
1 he mal11 bmlcl1l1g m the plant of the [<'01t SmIth (AI k )
]. Ul111tUle :\1anufactunng assouatlOn \\ as destroyed by fire
on :\ member 3 Loss, $30,000. fully msul ed
The chall stock factory owned by John E A Keyes at
\Jell 111\ :\1111s :;; H \\as totally destloyed by fire on No-
\ em1JeJ 5 Loss about $4.000 111surance, $2,25°,
I he stock of \\ Illl1drth & Co , furnIture dealers, of K eyV-P(
II t R I \\ as badl) damaged by smoke and water dUrIng a
hI c 111 the \bl ams block m:;; ovembel 4 TheIr loss IS fully
IT1SUl ed
Ecll\ aHl Olson fUl111tUle dealer and uncle! taker of Coon
\ .dle\ \\ I~ \\ a" burned out completey on Kovember 4 Loss
S3 'j0o pal tlalh 1l1SUled He expects to make arrange-ments
to resume business.
The BIshop Furniture company, dealers, Grand Rapids.
\1lch lost about $1,000 by fire last Monday 111ght The
bla7e \\ as 111 dn adJol111ng bu11cl111gthe upper stOlY at whIch
IS used bv the BIshop company for storage purposes Fully
111sured
Association Jottings.
Do you reallze that Chnstmas tl111e 1\ 111ch I" the furl11-
tllle dealels' hane"t. IS only SIX week:'. a\\ay" No\\ are you
pI epal111g tOl th"t hal \ est, so that you \\ III get your share of
Chnstmas bth111e"s) Do not you th111k about It no\\ ?
Most of the pI ogres SlYe dealers al e beg1l1l11g to reahze
that upon the success ot thell Chllstmas season's bus111es",
depends the pl0fit makmg of the yeal, and thel efOl e, plan
and can y out ad\ ertls1l1g campaigns \v hlch WIll make the
consumer at Chllstmas tIme thmk of ftUl11tUl e msteacl of
somethmg else It can and is be111g done each year. and most
e\ el) busmess pI esents posslbl!ltJeS that the ftlll11tUl e bus111e""
does along thIS 1111e.so It IS up to each 1l1ChVldual metllbel to
make the most of this OppOItumty by commencing now, and
don't be aflalc1 to beg111 to talk Chllstmas presents llght aftcI
the first of December.
The advertJsmg helps the association furnishes you. help
vou to accompllsh and carry out advertising stunts whIch you
as mcll\ Idudl deale I \\ auld never hope to be If you had to ~et
up the oll~lnal So make good use of it.
\,"ould a state-wide collectIOn bureau intet est \ ou a" a
ll1c111\)el of OUl .1~"OCJatron? J f so, let the officers know.
If you dues and subscnptlOl1s are not paId up for the
past year, l"n't It tIme that they were?
MINNESOTA RETAIL FURNITURE DEALERS' ADVERTISING HELPS
~o 218
ThIS IS a fine automatic davenpOl t in
the golden oak or Eng l1sh finIsh It
has d. fme \\ ardluLJe fOI bed<hng and by
Just uloPPIng thE. bac k you have a most
comiol table bed It certaInly IS a fill(
pIece of futllitute the frame beIng fIttul
\\ itll gual anteeu ~tLel constructIOn Natf
the IHd\ ~ cal veLl foot anu the swdl
front It IS a davpnpol t that you wIll be
pI Dud of when standIng upon your flOOIb
'" t'lght 1')0 pounds
PI 1(E' to memhe-rs r41 No 218 in VPlona
111C(' to membf'IS I 41 No 218 In Cha,;;;c
UK J J
?>II{ .H
No. 238
\ stlongly constructed automatIc daY
E'nport Its frame IS fitted \\ lih gualan
b::((1 stE'E'l coush uctlOD v.lih 011 t0m
pel pd <;pllng~ It contaIns a large ward
lobe and by USIng the automaiw attaLh
ment It Lau be turue-d Into a cmnfOl t
able bed Nott.. its swell fI ont and
loun(hng top It IS a magnificent pieu
of furnIture at a moderate price and
one )'OU \\111 be- very ploud of In your
hallIe \\ eIght 225 pounds
PrH'e to members F43 ~o 238 HI\ e-rona
Plll...€'to membeis T'4~ No 23" In Chdsc
PIIU to members F43 No 238 In I f'ather
l'II 1]\1
l'II.H1
KRPI
No. 237
t\ handsome davenport In solId quar
tered oak There IS no competItlOn to
thIS pIece Its arm and front are 5
lucht's and If )-OU WIsh to make a bed
out of same by the automatIc attach
ment you can have the most comfort
able bed, 47 x 74 WhICh has a large ward-lobe
In connection With same for the
beddIng the flame IS fitted WIth guar-anteed
steel constructIOn It IS a daven-port
that :}au can well be proud of and
IS surely worth the money you pay for
It ·Welght. 225 pounds
PriCe to membeIS r43 No 237 in Verona
Price to members F43 No 237 III Chasc
Price to members F43 No 237 III Leather
AA.AK
AA.AK
KI.IA
No. 208
Note hf"avy carved foot ThIS IS not
f'mbossed as is usually the ('ase with
thIS kind of da\ pnports has a wardrobe
for beddIng back drops sO as to make a
beJ. 47 "( 72 It 18 a finp pIeCE' of fUIni
tUI e at a nloderate PIlC€ Frame made
of solid oak and IS fitted WIth gualantef>U
steel constIuctlOil sprIngs all tenlpered
It can be had In golden oak finIsh only
"ught 150 pounds
PIlce to IUt mbet~ r-l{) No 208 In Velona
1 lIce to members r4J No 208 In Chase
Pucp to men1bers J'iJ 1\0 208 In Leather
MPOD
UPOE
KA.EIH
No. 236
\ beautiful automatlC davenpoi t fur
nIshed In thf' Early EnglI<;h only Its
<) Inch posts .11 e made of .$olId oak Its
frarof' IS fitted V\Ith guazanteeJ. steEl
lonstl uctlOn ,\ Ith 011 tempered springs
It has a largf' wardrobe In connectIOIl
fOI beddIng and by Just drOPPIng the
b<1ck you ha, e a full sIzed bed. It IS
a 10\ EJy pIece of furnIture and WIll add
greatl3- to the appealance of any room
"eIght 225 pounds
Pnce to memberb F43 No 236 In Verona
Pllce to Inembers F41 No ...36 In Cha~G
PI Ice to merubers F43 No 236 In Leathel
A)I.TE
AM.TE
KOPJ\I
No. 202
Another good automatIc davenport for
the money made of SJlId qual tered oak
and WIth a polIshed finIsh It has :it 6
lnch arm haVIng a nIce wardrobe fOI
beddIng- If you are to use It for a bed
1» lettIng the back down you can have
a bed 48 x 74 .rhe frame fitted with
gua,ranteed steel construction and the
011 tempered sprIngs IS somethIng you
can "ell be pIoud of Weight 225 lbs
PrIce to memb6ls F43 No 202 in Verona AR ET
PrIce to members F43 No 202 1n Chasc R ET
PrlCe to members F43 No. 202 in Leather .ER.TR
No. 227
1- hIS davenpol t has a quartered oak
al m and front ana has a full SIze auto
matic bed 48 x 74 It also has a large
\\ anlrobe for the beddIng Just notlc€"
thE' swell front and back It CPI talnly
IS wor th the money you pay for it '1'he
irame IS nlade of quarteled oak and is
fittpd \\ Ith guaIanb:.-ed steel COhitructlon
sprIngs 011 tempered Note the heavy
can lngs not beIng embossed as IS. usual
ly the case wIth thIS kInd of davenports
,Veight 150 pounds
Pnce to mt'mbers F43 No 227 In Verona
PncE' to members F43 No 227 In Chase
l-'rice to Hlembers F43 No 227 In Leathe1
MR.AT
MR.AT
KA.FF
No. 2%4
ThIS IS a handsome quartered oak dav
enport contaInIng a large wardrobe for
the beddIng and by USIng the automatIc
attachment you have a 48 x 74 bed It
IS a well constructed pIece of furnIture,
the frame beIng fitted WIth the guaran-teed
stef'l constructIOn It IS not
f'mbossed as 18 usually the case WIth
davenports but 1S a well put up pIece
of furniture and one you can depend
upon WeIght, 225 pounds
PrIce to members F43 No 224 In Verona
Price to members F43 No 224 m Chase
PrIce to members F43 No. 224 In Leather
AT.FK
AT.FK
KO.P~I
No. 220
Another well constructed automatic
davenport finished III quartered oak. It
has a SIX Inch arID and a large ward-robe
In connectIOn with same for the
beddmg and by Just droppmg the back
down you can have a comfortable full
sIzed bed Note the rounded corners and
tufted top and front Its frame IS fitted
WIth guaranteel steel construction and is
somethIng that IS well worth the money
and a lInece of furniture that you can be
proud M WeIght, 225 pounds.
---_.~--------_--:
Pncf>. to members F43 No 220 In Verona .•. M:F.PA
Price to members F43 No 220 in Shasc • MF.PA
Price to members F43 No. 220 in Leather •. KP.AT
30
ttre1y of men and boys Children often find their way to this
en trancing spot.
One day a little mother aged about 9 had camped out on
the doolstep of the blld store vvlth her charge and her em-broldel
y. She sat where in pauses of embroidery she could
catch peeps at the monkeys while the baby trotted about on
the doorstep and a small boy seated opposite dispensed valu-able
mformatlOn a" to the customs of tigers.
A charactensttc sIght before the blrd store wmdows IS
the \ ery young father and mother who have come to show
the cockatoos to baby. Perhaps it is needless to say that
baby is usually asleep.
The toy shop wmdows are very popular with men and
VI' omen of all ages and of course wlth the children who are
brought to see them The 'pon your word children, those
\\ ho are stIll ) outhful and unconscious, always show their
dehght m the same manner. They seem quite overwhelmed
at first and pay no attention to the grownups who urge them
to look at the mmlature automobiles or flying machines. In
absolute sl1ence and wlth open mouth their round eyes travel
11om group to group of toys, when all of a sudden there will
sound a shriek of glee and "Oh, the little bed!" or "The
httle chail!" or some tnflmg thing that happens to strike
thelr fancy.
Boys of all ages, flom 8 to 80, are smitten with the
gIant kl1lfe dlsplayed m the toy shop window. This knife
has a sa\\ and a corkscrew and blades of about seventeen
dlfferent SIZes, and some day sume small boy outside is gomg
to dlssoh e the thlck plate glass wlth the might of his yearn-mg
for that helolc kl1lfe.
Gro\\ n folks are mtel ested in the toy shop windows and
betray cunous remams of sentiment. One fat, well groomed
man \\ hom old fashlOned ladles would have called a man
WEEKLY ARTISAN
QUEER FACTS ABOUT SHOW WINDOWS
Attract Admiring Crowds One Minute. Are
Deserted the Next.
In the shoppmg dlSh !Cts the ebb and flov\ of the wmdow
gazers is a thing to pU7zle 0\ er. At a certam ttme there \\ 111
be a faIr sized crowd befO! e a shop \\ mdO\\ and 1ll fi\ e
minutes it wlll have dIssolved, and appal entl} not a creature
passmg cares to throw a glance m that dtrectlOn.
This phenomenon is common to all shop \\mdows, but
there are pecuhanties about the crowds whlch dlfferent wm-dow
dlt>plays attract. For mstance. a lead1l1g attractton 111 one
appears to be the vacuum cleaner demonstratlOn, but the
curious thing about the throng \\ hlch pl es"es ltS composlte
nose agamst the glass lS that there lS scarcely e\ el a \\ oman
in it. Sometllnes a bnde or a bllde to be, wlth her man m
tow, wlll stop to gaze at the du<:;t devourel, ]Jut she looks at
i"t with the same ecstattc "\agueness \\ Ith \\ hlch she re~ards
in passing a set of old Enghsh slh el or one of Russlan
sables.
The notdble housekeeper, the woman v\ ho usually buys
the machine, rarely looks that way, WIllIe men stand en-tranced
for ten or fifteen mmutes, watchmf; the cleaner eat
up the powder that IS stlewn on the fioO! to leplesent dU'ot
"I suppose it's the mechal1lcal SIde of It that 1l1telests
them," a passmg woman was heal d to sa}. "fol \\ e all kno\\
that any man WIll SIt m a room ttll the dust Ilses and bune~
him rather than be bothered ",ith cleanmg"
Women are often seen gomg mto the bll d stores and are
probably the best customel s of these shops, but the cro\\ d
before the bird store w1l1dow is agam made up almost en-to
------------ ----~-_.--_._._._._-_._.._---,
FOUR NEW
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M 0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in acid and oiL
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Ma.ster Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad·el·ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
•••
Everything in Pamt Specialties and Wood Fmishing materials. Fillers that f111. Stains that satisfy .
i- ._...._._.---------.-.-.-.--------.------.------.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-----------~
WEEKLY ARTISAN 31
r· tII
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t.-. _. __ ._. • • • __ • -------- ------.-----------------~
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures, Per Set SOc.
PaotentMalleable Clamp Fixtures.
E H SHELDON & CO Chlcal(o III
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 25 dozen Clamp FIxture, VI hlCh
we bOuRhtof you a httle over a year ago are gIvIng excellent se"'Vlce We are
well satisfied wIth them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
anything additional In thiS line Yours trulv
SIOUXCIty. Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO. ---
about town stopped before the window and eyed gloomily a
row of so-called natural dolls These dolls have m contra-dIstmctlOn
to the old type a natural chIld's face and a homely
one at that, with small eyes, large mouth and a sunburned
complexion.
"Are those the dolls chIldren play with now?" saId the
man. "vVell, I swear! I lIke dolls to have bIg blue eyes and
flaxen curls."
Of course when it comes to shops where hats and gown:"
are sold there IS scarcely ever a man seen looking in the
wmdow unless he has a profeSSIOnal interest in such matters.
By some queer process, though, the! e is almost never a
cro",-'d before these '" indows. yet scal cely a woman passes
Without looking in if only for a glance The attItude of
women toward the exhIbits IS usually a distmctly personal
one Would or \\ ould not the garment or hat be becoming
to them, they seem to ask. If in their estImation it would
it IS desil able If not it IS an abomination.
Occasionally a suffering husband is taken along to sym-pathIze.
He is lIkely to be elderly, well broken and from out
of town. One such husband. \\ om and weary but still on the
Job. was heard to answer to an indistinct murmur of "Marked
$13, such a bargain !"-
"\Vell, go m If you want to. I'll wait right here for you.
Right here, mmd I" And he is probably still patIently wait-mg
before the hat store wmdow V\ith hIS WIfe's jacket over
hIS arm
An unbelievably chanmng thing happened before a fash-ionable
dressmaker's shop window the other day. There was
dIsplayed a gorgeous gown m the very extreme of skimpi-ness.
Peenng ealnestly at It stood an elderly couple from
the country; he lean and ascetIc looking, she fat and kmdly
but with a very grave and absorbed face.
Of cour:"e the passe! by thought that they were sadly
condemning the shockmg taste of modeln dress and was sur-pnsed
and delIghted when the man pointed with a long lean
---------_._-_._._._.--_. a • _ ... -.~
30 000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
• Vises
IItI
I.I.
Sold on approval and an un con
dltlonal money back guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We sohctt prtvllege of sending samples and
our complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON e;, CO.
RAPID ACTING WOODWOBItEB'S VISE No ~ 328 N. May St., Chicago .
hnger at the garment and turnmg an adoring eye on his wife
saId:
"Mother, I kind of thmk you'd look good in that gownd."
There is one fact establIshed beyond doubt. In the best
SOCIety show figure ladles do not wear heads. Just as much
of them as IS needed to show off a gown IS all that is toler-ated
111the hIghest CIrcles, and their smlrkmg, long eye1ashed
rosy faces wIll soon be no more seen in the shop windows.
Pel haps it's Just as well, for they have been known to lead
to complIcatIOns.
Some mce women new m Ne", York were rather doubt-ful
anyway as to whether or not it looked countnfied to stop
and stare at the store windows. However, they deCIded to
take the chances on a good long stare at a handsome gown
dIsplayed on a show figure with a seraphIc waxen head and
an elaborate COIffure. At that moment the shew man clImbed
mto the window and started to remove the gown from the
wooden model. As he slIpped the frock from ItS shoulders
the three women who had been watching him grabbed each
other's hands and fled gasping "Oh, horrors! He's undress-
111gher right before everybody!"
It has been obsen ed that the folks who seem to enjoy
the pretty dIsplay in the candy shop w111doV\snever go in to
buy. It may be that they are not allowed to eat candy and
are attendmg a BarmeCIde feast. Those who buy candy walk
mto the shop WIthout any hankering inspectIOn of the win-dow
and come out WIth pounds of candy whIch they prob-ably
eat themselves and digest excellently.
As often as not the persons who seem to get the deep-est
pleasure out of the w111dow dIsplays of the pIcture and
book shops are shabby half grown lads. They hang about
these w111dows and gloat over the bargains in fine edItions
and the reproductions of old masters WIth the air of con-nOIsseurs.
Perhaps they're only killmg tIme while they are
supposed to be doing important errands, but maybe they're
buddmg gemuses. \Vho knows?- New York Sun.
, . . , . . .-----1
~ .
"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests; you will then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories, Sash and Door Mills, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others will consult their own interests by using it. AI.o
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa. • • .4I
MANUFACTURED BY
...
32
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
,~_._._.~._--------------------
I Miscellaneous AdvertiseIllents.
SITUATION WANTED
Man age 39 wants posItion wIth large concern as factory
manager or assIstant to general manager. IntellIgent, edu-cated,
honest. HIgh grade executive, good address and cor-respondent.
Systematizer, cost accountIng, pIece work
Good mechanIc-Iron and wood Many years charge large
chaIr and furnIture plant. A "lIve wIre" Best references
Box No 2, care Artisan. 11 2-19
WANTED
PosItion as travelIng salesman. Salary or commIssIon
Thoroughly understand furnIture busIness Best of reference
Address Y, care Weekly ArtIsan 11 12-19-26
POSITION WANTED
A successful salesman W1th 25 years establIshed trade In
Central TerrItory is open for a posItion January 1, 1911, wIth
a good case goods or chaIr house. Have the very hIghest
recommendations. Will go into any territory. Address
W. H. J. care Weekly Artisan. 11 5-12-19.
-----------
WANTED
SuperIntendent. One who thorougWy understands bank,
office and store fixtures, and specIal order work. To the rIght
man this is a rare opportunIty. Address, (statIng expenence
and where you have worked), "Supenntendent," Care of
Weekly Artisan, Grand RapIds, MIch. tf
WANTED.
Commercial salesman for Indiana and Illinois to sell Parlor
and Library Tables. Stat
- Date Created:
- 1910-11-12T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 31:20
- 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/139