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- Michigan Artisan; 1908-09-10
Michigan Artisan; 1908-09-10
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and Twenty-Ninth Year-No.5 SEPTEMBER 10, 1905
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Semi-Monthly
NQ. 166 Sand Belt Ma.:::hine.
''It exceeds Du·r highest!expectations."-The Crown Furniture Co.
"Cannot be excelled/or smoothness of work and saving oj labor."
- J05. Peters Furniture Co.
"Greatest labor sa~'ing device we have ever snn.'·-FiUs·Crabtree
Mfif. Co.
No Otber Sand Belt Accomplisbes Tbis Work
It gives a finished surface superior to hand work and six
times as rapidly on Rounded Mirror Frames, Moulded Dividing
Rails, Moulded Edges of Tables and Dresser Tops, Ogee,
Rounded or Beveled EdR'es of Washstands, Mirror Standards
with Rounded or Square Edges, Rounded and Curved parts of
French Legs, Spirals of Table Legs, Raised Parts of Panels,
etc., etc.
You are doing this class of work atl a tremendous loss
annually, sanding by hand, possibly some part of lit by a com-mon
sand blast, and refinishing it by hand. This work is cost-ing
you hundreds of dollars per year. [Read what users of our
machines are saying:"
WYSONG 8 MILES CO., (].d~':.~,:•• d So•. R. R.. GreensLoro, N. C.
Write for Catalog E.
Thisis the famous Gillette Roller Bearing Factory
Truck-the truck on which it is said, "One man
can move a loa.d of 3000 pounds while with
the other trucks it takes three men."
This is the truck tbat is strong where otbers are
weak-the truck that has an unbreakable
malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are looking for if you wisb
to invest in rather than waste money on factory
trucks.
The Best Truck--The Strongest Truck
Gillette Roller Bearing Co.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
The Lightest Runninj.
Longest Lasting Truck -------------~
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RUNS LIfiE A "WAGON
Our trucks have the large center wheels revolving
on turned, taper bearing axles, just like a wagon.
Eight
Bearings
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No
Regular Box
Sizes
No.1.
Built of best materials, Michigan hard maple bodies and high grade castings made \0 speci~1
patterns, our trucks give best returns for your investment. There is nothing about tbem easily broken
or that might get out of order. Just built in quality. Better send for catalog and prices.
Grand Rapids Hand Screw Company
MANO,SCA-EWS. BENOHES. OLAMPS
918 Jefferson Avenue. GRAND RAPIDS. MICHIGAN
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SLIDING SHOE FOR USE ON DESK LEGS
This shoe does the work of a caskr yet
allows the desk legs to set close to floor.
Fastened with flat head wood screw and furn-ished
in three sizes.
SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
No. 1493 PULL
A very fine h"ndle for desks in the square effect.
Something different from the regular bar pulls.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO. GRAND RAPIDS,
MLCHWAN
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",11 C II 1G A N ARTISAN
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Veneer Presses. different kinds and sizes. (Patented)
Veneer Presses
Glup Spreaders
Glue Healers
Trucks, Etc" Etc.
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Peed Glue Spl'eading Machine, Sinll"le.
Double and Combination. (Patented)
(Sizes 12 in. to 84 in wide.)
Hand Feed GlueinK Maebine (Patent
pendinll:.) Many stylet and sizes.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
~ET us KNOW
YOUR WANTS
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h _ GRAS E. FRANCIS & BRO., Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. No. 6 Glue HoatM. •
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T"E fURNITURE MAK(R
AND ALL WOOD fiNISHERS
are interested in the perfection of the art of staining, filling, and
finishing wood.
Wood finishing, today, has really become an art.
We manufacture every kind of a stain or filler used in wood finishing_
We manufacture and sell the best and the most practical stains
and fillers that are made in this or any other country.
Write us about the finish you are most interested in.
T"E MARIETTA
PAINT AND COLOR COMP'Y
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M4RIETT4 0",0
I•, - - _ .. " I .. Y:'
:1 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
ARTI TIC andINEXPENSIVE /
CATALOGUE COVERS
LET US FIGURE ON YOUR PHOTOGRAPHING
ENGRAVING and PRINTING .
PROMPT
DEUVERIES
COMPLETE
CATALOGS
PERFECT
WORK MICHIGAN ENGRAVING CO. at
Right Prices
GRAND RAPIDS. MICHIGAN
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GHAND RAPIL:S
FUBLIC LIllITAUY
29th Year-No.5. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., SEPTEMBER 10, 1908.
====c== $1.00 per Year.
"Chippendalc"-The Creator of a Style.
Thomas Chippendale, \vho came into hi~ 0\\'11 in the nl':dJle
year~ of the eighteenth century, created a style whichfincls
an echo in every modern villa. Eta a1th~:l1Kh CbiptH'IH!ale is
a name to conjure 'with in the furnishing- t1'a<1e, it meaus
something rnore to the cOlllloisseur.
Chippendale and his sons ha,d their little workshop in St.
~{anin\ Lam:,. ~\t the dawn of the age of mahogany he
readily adapted his designs suitable for workillg ill the new
wood. Ivlahogany. it is tnte, was discovered by Sir \Valter
H.aleigh, who broug-ht specimens home, but it did 110t come
into gel1cr;tl use till after the hrst quarter of the eighteenth
century. The wood used by Chippend8,le was splendid in
{lualily, coming asir did from the gre<lt Ul11'otlched forests,
producing at that time timber the like of which in dinlellsioll
is no\.\' unprocnrable. A novel might be written of the buc-caneering
exploits of British crews who coolly landed and cut
timber from the Spanish IJossessions ill /\merica in spite of
the protests of tile O\l"lwrs. }Jany a stiff fight occurred, and
many lives were lost in shipping this stolen mahogany to
Englalld, to supply the demand for furniture. The nefa,rioH',;
proceedings more than once threatened to hring about a "\var
between England and Spain.
Chippend"tle's early work was in w::duut, and sometimes
even in oak. Settees \vith his characteristic ca.briole legs C\.lld
ball-and-claw feet, sometimes with heavy slat backs and later
with his camel backs with typical pierced centre rail, are
among his most highly prized ex'lmpl('s. Rut as 11e !: ·0-
gre5>sed he employed mahog;\ny ;t5>better "-nited for his elab-orately
carved ribbon pattern and other intricatc desigl1s.
He was a prinee of chair-makers, and there is little won-der
that his masterly adaptations have brought him fame, and
",·h;:\1 is concomitant \\'ith farne in art-a th'Jusancl meretri-cious
copyist:~. Hi5> ball-and-c1aw feet he borrowed from
the spaciolls chairs of old Dutc!l origin. His ribbon p;lt-tern
smacks of the 1"rench 5c11001of c;nvers who tied knots
with Cl1pids and pastoral crooks in the days of Louis Quinze.
llis intri.cate fret".·.o. rk in cbair-back and table-to:) was illll-'0'-t·
eel from China, and Chippendale caugbt the taste from the
fashion set by Sir Vililliant" Chambers, the architect of Somer-set
House, who built the pagoda in Kc",· G;\rdens. His
Gothic style was allother attempt, and a lllisguided one, at
adaptMion. But, like Josiah ""edgewood, who caught the
Greek spirit ~..lH1translated it into English pottery, Chippen-dale,
in his adaptations, bee:tmc original, and they were
sturdy and robust in their new home of adoIltion.
So much for real Chippendale, and the prices obtained for
genuine examples are phenomenal. A Cf"lpJe of his dlairs
have realized £1,100 at Christie's. But if all the furniture
sold as genuinc Chippendale were put·togethcr it would e,hokc
up S1. :"Lntin's Lane from aile end to the other, and it \vould
he the first t;l11e that many (If the spec:'l1ells have found
themselves in the neighborhood of Chippendale's \vork.shop.
The truth is that they \vere made at the same til11e that
Chippendale>, made his own examples, and 'ITere made by con-temporary
('ahilJd makers. It reminds olle of Tennys()flls
pocm, entitled "The Flower," v\rhere "thit",cs from o',er the
walt stole the seed by night," and, in allusion to his own style
of versification. the poct goes on to say: "1Jost can raise the
l1(nvers 11mv, for al1 have got the seed." It was the same
story ,"vith Cllippendalc. Tn 1754 he publis1J~d his·'Director,"
or book of de5>igns, "calculated to improve and r~finc the
present,t;lsk, and suited to the fancy anc ':ircnmstances of
persons in all degrees of life."
_As a matter of fact, every town of importance started a
centre for making furniturc on Chippendale lines; Up and
down thc country, from the confines of Yorkshir~ to the
highlands of DeVOll. master cabinct makers took their cue
frollI the "Director," ;ll1d produced cxceV~nt1y made furni-ture,
with fine joinery and of sound worL-manship. Now-adays
these are the rivals of Chippendale bimsclf in the auc-tion
room,
.:\nd after Chippendale's death generations of craftsmcn
continued the style. So that, for purpOses of c1a.ssificatiolll it
Illa,Y be said that there arc, fIrst, the rarc and genuine speci-l"
nens of fttrniture actuany made by Cbil)pcndale or h;s :-0('11.';
in their workshop. And, >;econdly, there is contemporary
furnitme made after his designs in various tlarts of England
by good craft smell, -..vho readily seized his idea,s. Thirdly,
sprcad over a long period, there is other furniture strongly
influenced by this r.::ontcmporary school, and made _at any
timc after Chipj)cndale's death to early ":neteenth century
da~rs. And bere ends aU Chippendale furniture, or "Chip_
pendale 5>t}·le"furniture, which appeals to tue eollectof.
There is. too, modem furniture in Chirpcndale style, not
pretclH1ing to be other than ".·.h. at it is-modem-made furni~
ture of a parti~,ular dcsign, and, lastly, there is furniture
"Inked" to give it the appearance of age. This is always an
attempted copy of som(: well known pattern. It apes the
grandenr and the fine sweep of curve that t.lle master drew.
Ent it has been artfully, almost artistically madc, with intent
to deceive, nnd it does deceive in nine cases out of ten, and
cbangcs (HVnCrSat a grc~lt profit to the fr:"ldulent maker.
1n view of these [acts, and the public i~ gradually becom-ing
schooled to the various frauds perpetrated upon ,it, the
days of "Chippendale," in inverted comma:" including all else
but furniture made by him or in his day, ;I,re drawing to a
close. He has, to use the trade term, heen '·done to death."
The time was once when all that was not Chippendale was
held to he Sheraton. The two names were bandied about
in the middle-Victorian days as representative of .1,11that the
eighteenth century had left as a heritage. Like 110nsieur
Jourdian, "\"ho learnt, to his amazement, that all was not
poetry \'v·as prose, so the would-be purchaser was taught to
believe that all that \..·as not Chippendale was Sheraton. But
a good deal of lvater has passed nnder London Bridge since
the Renaissance of English modern taste in furniture.
During the month of Angust 40,000 idle freight cars were
pulled off the sidings and put into use in the Pittsburg dis-trict.
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MICHIGAN
DRYING TIMBER IN ENGLAND.
By W. J. Blackmur.
To dry, or not to dry, is the perplexing problem of many
a. cabinet manufacturer. Whether ~it is better to trust to
chance in getting :goods out in good condition, or whether
it should be a matter of scientific calcuhtioll. The ques-tion
is a big one, and upon its decision depends the standing
of the firm. vVhether it is best to keep catching fresh cus-tomers
to take the work of the mill, or whether one should
have standing orders.
AU this is often decided in the question of to dry or not
dry. The problem which presents itself must be solved
either one way or another. Some men will be content to
buy up odd lots of timber, often partially dried, and work
it up to furniture, with the result that complaints, and the
furniture often returns to trouble the manufacturer. Or hc
may hit· upon \1. middle man, who is willing to buy at a price,
anything in the shape of furniture. It may be hideous, in
its design, workmanship and finish, but by skillful adver-tising
and long credit that dealer will be able to palm those
goods upon innocent people who will learn that some furn-iture
is only made to selL Not for use. An this is happen-ing
every day all your side of the world, and in England, so
I need not apoiogize for introducing it. It is always best
to know where we stand, Now the point is, can a man
even doing cheap work dry his wood to give satisfactory
results. We say decidedly yes. even if it is for the most
throat-cutting middle man. The fact of making goods
which will not show cracks and crevices should be sufficient
inducement to the cabinet manufacturer to put down a drying
plant.
It is impossible in a country which produces the timber
to get sufficient dried wood to satisfy the demands of a fairly
sized factory. Mahogany may be imported and used, but
the other woods used for building up purposes, lllust be
dried to turn out work which will give satisfaction.
I am tempted to give some details of English dried timbers,
of how hardwood logs are sawn and stacked for years ex-posed
to the smoke laden atmosphere of our metropolis,
but as it would take too long, I must leave this for another
dme, and give some technical details as to what I have
learned in drying woods.
First and foremost the point which must be considered
is the class of goods to be manufactured. For instance
sideboards are entirely different from overmant1es, and a
bed room suite, or a cabinet, with innumerable drawers, all
need different degrees of time for drying the va.rious timbers,
if aJl economical standpoint has to be considered.
In ordering or making a drying kiln, the only system
which will give entire satisfaction in getting hardwood into
the right condition for ma11ltfacturing purposes is the moist
air kiln. The dry air one is a back number, and however
much economy may press its claims, it should not be for-gotten
that shaken boards, and a, case hardened surfaceupoll
wood is a big item to pay for the saving of a few dollars at
the outset of buying a drying kiln.
Then the insulation of the kiln should be complete. I
have known many failures because of this. By imperfect
manufacture, a lowering of the temperature has taken place,
and insufficient heat during the night, has lengthened the
process of drying. '
The question of proper packing is a serious one, and
ll1us,t be carefully donc, if the re;,;utts are not to he disapoint-ing.
The haphazard placing of sticks between the boards
"",ill allow them to warp to an enormous degree, In ordin-ary
.seasoning, English merchants, make it a cardinal sirt to
have one stick even a fraction out of the perpendicular be-
ARTISAN
neat~ the other. It allows the hoard to go out of the
straight. So successful are they in their drying, that boards
can be used without putting them over the planer, for they
are as straight as left by the saw.
Now in drying this is a point which should be considered,
and there is ai1Dther which is also neglected in the manage-ment
of drying'" kilns. That is to keep· the boards tight
;::,gaillst the sticks. Their weight is not sufficient to with-stand
the unequal tension set tip by the drying proc.ess, and
unless they are held tight against the sticks, they will lift
as the various parts warp. This principle should be more
fully recognized than it is. Tie lip a bundle of green sticks
with strong string in three or four places, and those sticks
wlll dry straight. Put a string arot\ntl the middle and lea,ve
the ends free, and you will find that they will go as the
strains bend them. They will point to all quarte:-s of the
globe. The most successft.tl drying trttcks had this prin-ciple,
of keeping the board perfectly fiat whcn drying, by an
arrangement of screws, which fastened the boa.rds firmly
against each other, and yet allowed them to shrink as they
dried. I am sure that if this is carried iota effect it will re-duc.
e the. work on the over hand planer, or surface as you
ca.11it. In many cases it wilt save timber, for without it
some woods warp so that when they are trued up, they are
below the necessary size. '
A drying kiln's efficiency depends upon the amount of
air which can be taken against the timber in the kiln. Ido
not advise that such a gale should blow through the ki'n
that it will blow the trucks out through the doors. There
is moderation in all things but a moderate current 0'£ air
through a drying kiln is poor economy. The fea.ture of
success is to keep the air in motion, and to use a,s much as
possible the air which has been through the kiln. The air
as it leaves the outlet of the kiln has considerable drying
pow('.rs, mote than the oHtside air, and to 'Use this, itshi;:n.lld,
·when possible, be again conducted to the fa.n. This mixed
with the cold air should be again driven through the header.
Fan wheels are usually made with a consant ratio between
their diameter and width. Then the volume 'of air delivered
depends npon the velocity of the fans. If the speed is di-minished
so is the amount of air, doubling the number of rev-olutions
of the volume of air. Here we run up against the
fact that doubling the speed of the fan does more than
doubles the power required to get that speed. The power
required is as the cube of the speed. As when the speed
is again doubled the power must be increased 2 x 2 x 2 equals
eight. These fads tell us that a fan insufficiently driven
cannot be driven at twice the speed, by the alteration of
the pulleys, unless there is ample engine power. This fact
should be noted as it may save needless experiment and
expense. In trying to increase the speed of the fan without
taking into consideration the fact that the power to drive
it must he quadrupled.
Tbe grea.t point to be considered in designing or making
kilns, is to allow only sufficient space for the trucks and the
passageway for an attendant. Lofty kilns are wasteft11,
yet in many cases they are built. The ideal one is long alid
narrow, perfectly insulated, with outlet in communication
witb the fan and with a header and steam jet, which will
keep up a uniform damp yet hot temperature, with the air
in constant motion.
Rushing Car Repairs.
The railroads have assured the National Manufacturers'
association that tlley are losing r.o ti,me in putting cars need-ing
repairs into condition for service.
An interesting account of the lives of factory hands,
salesmen and office employes in London, England, appears
on another page of the Artisan. It is from the pen of an
Englishman well informed on the subject on which he writes.
1'IICHIGAK ARTISAK ~-----_._-------------_. I
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WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY AT BARGAIN PRICES.
Having purchased the entire Elkhart. Ind" plant of the HulJtphrey Bookca.e Co., we are offering at bolU'gainpt'iee"the following A~1 woodwOTkingtoola=
Band saw, 32 in. Crescent. Jointer, 8 in. hand with 4-!ided head. Rip saw table. with cOllnlershJtand saw. Saw table. 3Ox48 in. with sliding ll'1l8ge.
Band saw. 36 in. Crescent. Knife grinder. 32 in. Buffalo automatic. Rounder, two-Bpindle with counlersnaft. Shapero Utlll.le-spindk. labk 37x.42 in.,
Band saw, 26 in. SU~e., i{on tilUD\:! table. La1ne. Whitrley back-knifewilb counter. Rod. pin and dowel ma.chine No. 2. ~n.
Back-knife 'athe, Whitney. ahaft. Smith, with beads SlllIder. Young'5 new ed!l"e, iron frame
Borinillnachine. 72~ 8-spindle Andrews. Lathe, Trevor automatic 4' 2" between Rod and dQwel machine No. 2, E.s~n and top.
Boring machine, 3-spiodle borizontal. centera, power feed. Slave boll equalizer with two 30" saws.
Borer, No. 21 bench. Slater & Maraclen. Lathe\ r 4 in. cabinetmaker's Egan. Shapero single spind. Colladay with fric. Truch. '38 miscellaneous faclofY trucb.
BORnIl machine, No. 2% Clement hon· Moulder. 14 in. Hermance, 4-sided tion c. s. Tenoner. American double end.
~onlal Molder, sing. hd. Smith F.6 with 4 in. Swin~ sa.w, complete with laW and fell. TenQlJlCI,single head Cordesmlln &: Ellan
Carver, 3-tpindle. with countersnaft. 4-sl'td hd. equip. with cut-off attachment.
Cabinetmake.s· saw, d<luble cut_<lff. Moulder, style F-6 Smith. one side with Sander. two-spindle with ctlunrersha!t. Tenoner, self-feed bJind slat. J. A, Fay.
Chair bending press. Swartz. cap sa5h he&d. Sander. 36 in. Columbia Iriple-drum. T "'noner. 6/1 double head. k. B. Smith.
Chamfer cuUeI with iron frame. table 4B Mortiser and borer, double-end alllol1l~tic. Sander, 42 in. Columbia triple-drum. T enoner. hand_ked blind lIal, J A. Fay.
x30 Laliwn. Morliser and borer. Colburn imp. blind Sticker, 14" Hermance with fegularequip. Tenoner, self-feed adjustabe blind6lal.
Ediling !laW, 36"x I81 with saw arbor. style. Sander, 30 in three-drum Ell'an. Twisl machine. 5hawyer.1 28 in. cent .•
Cut·off saw machine, de~nt double Pla\lel, 30 in. Clement sinw.e cylinder. Saw lable. 38x63 in. wood top. 10 in. Swg,
Clue jointer. Myers. with couDh";rshaft· Planer and matcher. 241 single cylinder Saw table. 29x]Oin. cut_off, rip llnd 8 in Woodworl=-. Parks C<lmbined '-the. rip
Jill' saw, complete wilhregularequipment. 4-roll, matches 141 }. A. Fay. saw. !lnd cuI-off IIlW, shapero etc.
Jointer. Myers llille. Planer. ~nl!. cyL s.urface ZOx.QOCI 6 in. Scrult taW, imn k wood toP, COld'mr'n
Jointer, 20 in. Parler hand. Con'l & D. & Egan.
Correspondence solicited. Price
and de&criptinn, all, application.
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C. C. WORMER MACHINERY CO., 98West Woodbridge St" Delroit, Mith. .I
, --'-'" IMorton House I
I fI 0t;11~)P~2;;ntldi I
(European Plan) Rates $1.00 and Up.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I!
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The Noon Dinner Served at the Pantl.ind fot SOe is
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.
J. BOYD PANTLlND, Prop. ..
,I MACl1INE. t\NIVES PER.FECT QUALITY
I R.IGHT :R::~: Grooving Heada, Miter Machlnea,
Universal Wood Trimmers.
BorlDe: Machines. Etc.
I FOX MACHINE CO. G.a.8o5d NR.apFi•d••o•'MSti.ch. ,I "--------_._-------~ r
PROMPT SERVICE
A&50LUTEGUAkANTEE
The
TIfE CREDIT BUREAU OF THE FURNITURE TRADE
Grand
•I Bldg. LYON
Furniture Agency
ROBERT P. LYON, General M.ana.ter
CREDITS and
COLLECTIONS
Rapids Office, 412-4 J 3 Houseman
GEO. E. GRAVESt Manager
CLAPpERTON &: OWEN, Counsel
THE STANDARD REFERENCE BOOK
CAPITAL, CREDIT AND PAY RATINGS
CLEARING HOUSE OF TRADE EXPERIENCE
THE MOST RELIABLE CREDIT REPORTS
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COLLECTIONS MADE EVERYWHERE
PROMPTLY-REUABLY
r
The "RELIABLE" Kind.
I•
THE FElLWOCK AUTO & MFG. CO.
EVANSVILLE, IND.
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;~~E~'~d'O~~?~I :~~~~tell you their glue is as good as COOPER'S, they admit Cooper's is
the BEST. No one extols his product by comparing it with an inferior
article. Cooper's Glue is the world's standard of excellence. With it
all experiment begins, all comparu.on continues.and all test ends. Sold
continuously since 1820. Its reputation, like itself.STICKS.
Peter Cooper's glue is made from selected hide stock. carefully pre·
pared. No bones or pig stock enler into its composition.
In strength it is uniform, each barrel containing the same kind of
glue that is in every other barrel of the same grade.
ORIN A, WARO GRAND RAPIDS AGENT 403 Asbton Bldg,
CITIZENS PHONE 9333 I•
6 ~[ r CHI G A N ART I SAN
Progress in the Fitting cf Band Rips and Band Resaws.
The introduction of modern band resawing has come about
largely within the past ten years, and that of modern ban.:1
rip sawing within the past five years, and now these econom-ical
agents for s8.,',,-ing a minimum kerf and at a maximum
fate of feed a e fOU'll(l very generally in USe in the better class
woodworking plants, particularly in furniture factories, plan-ing
mills, car shops, etc. Up to Jifteen years ago there
wefe compar;:tively ve:"y few band rcsawing machines in use
on which 5;;"V3 were employed over three inches wide. Now
the !iale for such narrow width saws is limited. The band
wheels have been increased up to fifty-four or sixty or even
seventy-two inches diamete: with face materially wider, on
which ,saws ranging from five to eight inches wide are em-ployed.
Indeed, there are some makes of band resaws that
in all respects approximate the log band mill, both as regards
general weight of the machine, diameter of the wheel and
the w:dth of its face, the saws being ten or twehre inches
w;dc by' fiftel~n or sixteen inch gage, and there are a dozen or
more concerns in the United States and Canada busily en-gaged
in the manufactu"re and sale of these resawing machines.
S()nH~ of the manufactu~ers offer a considerahle variety of
m:::chinc3, both as regards style of cOl1struct;on and spec:al
ad<:tpt"tion for varying pu,poses and it is surprising on :10\'"
slight a ke~·f SOl"ueof these saws are ftlll successfull./, and
how tbin and how smooth the resawed stoc.k that results.
The rate of the feed ranges up to one hundred or more feet
per minute, and the variety of the stock su\'.rcc1covers about
all of the possibilities in hard and soft woods, both in gTeen
and kiln dried stock. The solid circ.ular and likewise the
segment rf'S~IWS tor 11,al1y J)llrposes have become back nUlll-bers
rega~'dless of the excellent record behind m:~ny of these
machines.
The above changing condition has similarly brought about
a radical ch::tnge in the care of the saws ilnd lve now fInd the
modern filing room equipped with a variety of saw fitting
appliances hardly thought of, or at !e:l.,>t rarely found in use,
fifteen years ago.
The, old method of setting the teeth and tiling by hand
,,\'ith little attention to the m<:tter of leveling and tensioning
the saw is no longer pracfced, excepting in the sma [[est an I
the poorly equipped filing rooms. In place oi the spring sd
the full swaging of each tooth, so that each tooth does its
prop.ortional share of the sawing, is almost universally em-ployed
and this C',xplains in pa t the increased capacity of the
band sawing machines, that is tl.le adaption of th(; saw to
stand a 111uch faster feed than \-vas formerly customary.
The corners of the teeth are now in most filing rooms side-dresscd
with a swag-e shaper or pressure side dresser, \.\'hich
acts as a mould. beveling the tooth down and hack from
point to afford a perfect clearance, 1cavil1g the face and, point
the widest. Illstead of the file as a mean!:; for sharpening
the teeth the Cll'.ery wheel is employed, llsed on an a.utomatic
band saw sharpener, which !S C:lpahle, by easy adjll~t-ments,
of prochlCing almost any c,onceiv;,bk gullet outline'
both as regards spacing- from point to point. hook, depth and
general outline of g1.111etthat it is p",:cticable to carryon a
saw. These ready aJjustm(~11ts of the automatic sharp-eners
make it possible for the operator to shapc the teeth
with hook and outline of back and general uutline of gullet
whatever "will be most serviceable for the character of the
stock being sawed. Thus the tooth for sawing soft pille
is different horn that suitable for cotton wood or similiar
fibrous wood and likewise different f:om that usually em-ployed
on hard woods, in some mills where a consider-able
variety of stock is handled the filer may adopt a gullet
outline fairly serviceable for all of these different woods, but
in different plants it will be Jlossible to find a hundred dif-ferent
gullet OLIt1inesemployed, no two of which are exactly
alike. The sharp(~l1iug of the saw is accomplished <Ita speed
of some thirty teeth per minute and \,,1ith little or no atten-tion
all the part of the operator of the sharpener, an,l when
the sa"\' comes off the sharpener the width of saw will be
maintained uniformly, the spacing of the teeth will be approx
i:11ately or exactly uniform and the tooth will be fitted ready
to run and do the best possible wo:·k. Again the tensioning
of the saw instead of being doOnewholly by hammering, as
was almost uniformly the case fifteen years ago is now ac-complished
by the use of saw stretcher or roller, whieh
expands all parts of the saw that pass th:oough the ralrer5
prad.ic;l1Jy alike, according to the pressure that may be need-ful,
and the filer who has a stretcher in use and understands
its efficjency has little need to level his saws, because lumps,
bends, ridges and twists are less likely to appear in the saw
if fitted with the appliances above mentioned in an ordinary
skilled fashion.
The care of band r('saws ard indeed of fine tooth band
saws, small circulars and machine knives is becoming a trade
and mill and factory operators look upon the filing room
as one of the most inipottant parts of the mil1. because the
•
WOOD FINISHING MATERIALS I
FILLERS, STAINS, POLISHES, ETC.
tj If in trouble with finishing materials, now is the
time to let us put you right.
fJI We match all sampJef submitted and. fill all
orders promptly.
GRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHING CO.
55-59 EII~ol'th Ave., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
\"anol.ls machines in the mill employed for sawing, }llaning.
etc., depend for their eff!c;ency directly up'on the expertness
of the filer in tutn upon the equipment provided for snch
fitting. If you are the ope:ator of a wood .v..orking plant
it \.-..ill be worth your while to look into this ell:! of yl)Ur
business and determine whether your saws and knives ,trc:
being ii.tted in the best possible fasbion. You call1wt <lffo d
to have any of your machines long idle waiting on the
changing of saws or knives, if such change is due to faulty
fitting. All of the operators of a woodworking plant bear
more or less close relation to each other and it is easily pos-sible
for a waste in time due to poorly fitted saws or knives
to represent an expense that cuts a good deal of :figure in the
profit and loss account at the end of the year.
Other phasis of this subject will be: taken up later Oil.
Excess Charges on a Dresser.:
The combil1cof the express companies which is offering
the establishmcnt of a parcels post by the general govern-ment
with all power at their command, and in the meantime,
engaged in robbing the public by the levying of excessive
charges for servicQs, has been summoned before the pUblic
service commission of 1'\e\'.o'York to i:!.llswer a complaillt
ILlde by 1\Irs.]. II. Coleburn of No. 2000 Grand Avenue, The
Bronx, that the American Express Company had charged at
the rate of one dollar a hundred pounds fat carrying a crated
dresser from twenty-third street, New York, to her home.
It was asserted in the complaint that this ch::'!,rgewas not
only unreasonable but that the company for the same class
of goods clJ.arged only $1.25 a hundred pounds for transpor-tation
between this city' and Buffalo.
:UICIIIGA [Ii
~!
A Power Veneer Press I of Pra&ically Unlimited Capacity
I M'lterial lowered on truck, top beam raised,
leaving the pre~s ready for another set of plates.
QUICK. POWERFUL. STRONG·
Clamps for Every Line of Woodworking.
We aN allNty8 glad to mall ill'IS"Ntled
}I'f'illted 1Iwlfe,' gilling J'uU pQ.rtiCli/a'I'~.
Black Bros. Machinery CO.
~_._-- MENDOTA, ILL.
AnTISAN 7
--------------_._---~I:I!IIII
I ._j ._--------------
The con:n.i.:;siol1 sent the complaint to the company, but
T. B. Hr.r iso!1, Jr., the council for the company, asked that
the complaint be dismissed on the ground that the com-mission
had no jurisdiction in the matter, and had no author-ity
to make any order aT finding.
The re:,;ult of this reply "vas the action of the board in
ordering a public hearing. YVhi]c the complaint itself in-volves
only a small ;~InolHlt it is the intention 01 the board
to t<lke ad,'anl;:tge of the case to determine just what powers
th(' commission has over the express companics. The public
service act states that tr.e c0ll111~issionshall have full author-ity
over COll'.TIlOncarri::!':.;, and it is the belief of the com-mission
that the cxpreocs cotTlpani(:s cou:e lInder this head.
News Items.
Senator \TcCulllber, of North Dakota, dedare~. tbat a
determined effort will be made in congress to remove the
tariff on lumber. The timberless states demand it.
i\nother proof of returning activity in hus;ness is fll:'n-ished
hy the Grand Rapids Blow Pipe and Dust Arrester
Company which has secured :1 !lumbcr of heavy contracb
for sur,plying dllst collecting apparatus for wood working
shops.
An cxtcllsion to the iactory of the Stickky Brothers Com-pany
in Grand Rapids is under cOllstruction. It will cost
$25,000.
A_ catalogue will soon be issued by the \Vest Side TrOll
Vv"orks, Grand Rapids,
A large modern factory is in course of e:-ection at .-\nder-son,
Indiana, for the Union Embossing l\Jachinc. Company.
Prompt deliveries of bigh grade bird's-eye maple are madc
by the l-lcnr.y S. Holden Veneer COlllpallY of Grand Rapids.
T11e: Royal Y'Vhite IHaple Polishing Varnish. mnJ1ufactt1red
by the Royal Varnish Company, of Toledo, Ohio. dries to
recoat every other day ;[tld is ready fOI· polishing in four
or five days,
Barrett's Prinle Shellac Varnish manufactured by ~f. L
U'lrreLt and Company, of Chicago, is a reliable, high grade
pure gum varnish.
/'\ new catalogue illustrating their cutters, cntter grinders,
saw tables, horing hits and drills will soon be issue[l by
i\Jorris \Vood & Sons, of Chicago.
:Jlanager Buss of the Buss :Machine \Vorks, 1-1olland,
:l.lich., reports a steady demand for \.voodworking machinery ..
The company's shops are running to capacity.
Veneer Trade Improving.
The vellur trade .is sh()\iv-ingsigns of improvement. T:H'
furniture manufacturers are beginning to get really busy again,
L
2.nd this, of course, increascs their rCiluirements in the veneer
line in proportion to the increase in their operations. Tbe
majority of them seem to be rather poorly supplied \'Vith both
lumber ,wd veneer. They do not carry a big stock of
veneer excePt in quartered oak or something of tilat kind,
prdering to have theil· veneer cut to special orde··, so they
Jllllstincrease their buying immNliately upon increasing
their operations.
I t is diffi(:(tlt to estimate tlw exact condition of the stock
among veneer manufacturers. As a rule, however. they
make no great effort at carrying a large stock-that is, none
of them except the manufacturers of fine veneer-be-cause.
they argue, it must be cut to special dimensions Oil
orders and. the:-efore, it is impossible to ClIt extensively
ahead of orders in anticipation of the demand. So any
11lcrease in orders means an increase in the operation of
their plants. They may he pretty well provided with ra\\'
llwterial ill logs find blocks, but most of the plants have
been running in a very limited \,,'ay all summer and naturally,
will llilil \\'-ith pleasure this incrc<lse in the volume of de-mand
for furniture.
The manufacturers of mahogany and other finisl1ing and
£ancy figured woods may have a fair amount of stock on
hand, but indications are that they are not so well stocked
up as they might be, and. at least, are not heavily over
stocked. The importation' of mahogany log" during tile
fiscal year ending June 30, 1908, amounted to only 41,678,000
feet. valued at $2.566,954, where as during the fiscal year
cudillg 'with June, 1907. the toial importation was 51,899,000
feel, ""<llued at ~3.263,718. In short, there was a decided
slump ill the amount of mahogany importc£j during the
year as compared with the year before, a slump of more
tban ten million feet in quantity. This taken into COlJ-sideration,
together with the further fact that mahogany
veneer has been about the best seUer of the veneer cade
throughout the dull season, would indicate that !lot only
is thcre no burdensome surplus in mahogany, but with the
increase in operations among the furniture factories there
may develop sufficient scarcity to send the prices of mahog-flny
l1pwanls, unless thcre is au increase ill the volume of
impo~tatiotls that will keep step with the rcnc'\ved operations
amOllg- the furniture plants. \Vhat it really looks like is
that the 'face veneer manufacturers are in good shape-that
is, not overburdened ~...i.t.h stock-aml have a bir tlln
of business heiore them this fall and winter.
;\t the same time, manufacturers of veneer cutting from
native woods, who have been having an extremely dull
time of it this summer, may no\v get busy, probably \vith
/lot nl! they CciJ) do at first; but if the situation continues
to improve they should be fairly busy before cold 'weather.-
St. LOllis Lumberman.
8 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Works and General Offices at 1 to 61 Clancy St.
GRAND RAPlDS. MI'::H., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES - OliVet Machinery ~ •• HI1dMmT ennintJ. SO Climb St., New York·
Oliver Machinery Co., FirSt National Bank Building, Chicago, ro.; Oliver Machinery Co '
Paci6c Building, Seattle. Wash.; Oliver Machinery Co .201-203 [)eansgale, Manchester, En~:
•
Oliver Tool.
"OLIVER"
No. 16. Balld Saw
36lnchel.
Made with or without
mmot drive Metal
'abJe 36'1y; 30". Will
lake I Sf! uDder the
lluide-tilts 45 dellrees
one way and 7 degrees
\he other way. Car-ries
a saw up to 1 ~11
wide. Ollbide bearinJ
10 lower wheel shalt
when nol motor driven.
Weighs 1800 Ibs when
ready to ship.
CHOICE TOOLS FOR FURNITURE MAKERS
II you do nol know lhe ''Oliver'' wood working tools, you had better give
us your address and have ·us teU you all aboul lhem. We make nothing but
Quality lools, the first coSt of which is considerable, but which will make
more profit for each doUar inveSted than any of the cheap mAchines Hood-ing
the country.
"Oliver" New Vanet)' Saw Table No. 11.
WiD take II saw up 10 201 diameter. Arbor bell il 6" wide.
Send forCatalog "S" fordalaon Hand Jointers. Saw Tables, Wood
Lathes, Sanders. Tenoners, Mortisers, Trimmers, Grinders. Work
Benches, Vises, Clamps. Glue Heaters,etc., etc.
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.
•
Save Labor
" Time
.. Tempers
" CO~
I•
TILLIE GUDOUSKY'S WEDDING
Wheels of Industry Halted by a W.eekly Event at the
Factory.
The manager of Factory B of the Ship Ahoy Tick and
Tuck Company, yelled at his foreman down the !cngth of r~le
long room, and that slave of twenty-three dol~ars a week
and a iarge sUTplus of uncapit<:lized idiom hurrieJ to th~~
manager's desk at a gait that threatened to add a spasm or
two to his stock of unclassified. woes.
VVhcn the perspiring foreman brought up sharply at the
manager's desk that highbrow of ticks and tucks cussed
until the already overheated atmosphere for many square
yards thereabout seemed smitten black anJ blue and a trifle
pale around the edges.
"\\Fhat are all the machines stopped for?» he shouted.
Foreman Sandonovitch shook his head.
IITillie Gudousky's gettin' spIked,". he said with some
hesitation. HAin)t it awful, boss?"
"Gctting married 1J1 exclaimed the manager.
"That's it. boss, that's what it is."
"\Vell, is that any reason why the factory should close
down when orders are piling up on us every hour?"
"It's their way. boss, an' I can't stop 'em. They ain't the
kind that's to be suppressed."
"\Vhere are they?"
"Hangin' out the front windows. Everyone of the
two hundred dames is 11Oldin'a pair of old shoes an' a bag
of rice, layin' in wait to sling the whole blamed lot at the
bride when she makes her exit for her matrimony debut."
"Order 'them back on the job at once I" thundered the
manager. "The firm's l'osing millions every minutel"
"It ain't no use. They'd strike. I has tried it before.
It's their custom. :l1:illions doesn't count with them."
J The Ship Ahoy concern's manager was furious.
"I'll settle the matter right here and now!
this Tillie Gudousky a lesson she won't forget.
to me, quick."
, It looked as if Tillie Gudousky were to be eaten alive.
"She's got her dough an' lit out," said the foreman. S11e's
hidin' downstairs near the front door, afraid of the shower
of r;ce an' otd shoes. '
I'll teach
Send her
"So that's it, is it. \VeIl, you go right back on the job.
I'll rout her out. Every minute lost means a million further
away from the Ship Ahoy)s exchequer."
And amid the unusual silence of hushed machines and
breathless clerks with their heads bent low over books· and
papers, and pens suspended in midair, the manager re-buttoned
his collar and made a perspiring dash for the door.
Tillie) in fresh shirtwaist and black picture hat, had been
cowering in the darkness of the .lower stairway, blushing with
happiness and trembling with timidity. It wasn't that she
was really afraid. It had been the custom for all the girls
to hide, and though she was anxious to get home and make
some final preparations for her wedding that evening, it
would have rooked bold not to allow the girls to wait half
an hour or more for her to appear.
A door 'slammed overhead, and looking up, Tillie thought
she discerned a glint of pale gray in the darkness of the
stairway. The manager was the only one who wore pale
gray. At the last turn of the stairway the pale gray suit
burst into full view, coming at a tremendous rate. Tillie
knew and made a break for the street.
There was a wild shout from the windows and a cas-cade
of rice and shoes was Buddenl'y let loose. It was the
hatless manager hims~1f who got the shower, for Tillie had
sped like a hare down the street, only turning when half
a block away to reward the waiting ones for their patient
9
.---------------
I
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
------ ._--_.---.
I ABSOLUTELY NOTHING BETTER THAN OUR
SWELL DRAWER FRONTS
AND VENEERED ROLLS IN ANY KIND OF WOOD AND PROMPT SHIPMENTS.
WALTER CLARK VENEER CO. I I~---- 535 Michigan Trust Building. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
vigil with blushes and halld waves and a bedazzling snccess-ion
of smiles.
Even Tim, the elevator man, had to smile at the man-ager's
predicament, though he. took precious good care not
to let that irate gentleman see him. Timothy \Vooclruff
Dennis had married a girl from this factory himself. It
was ten years before, when th'" present manager wJS a col-lege
boy-Timothy allli others ~ud often \vished he might
have al"'iays remained a college hoy and let the "old gent"
hang 011 longer. They \yould ll;llre done the ·work; they
said so-and Timothy had never forgotten the shower of
rice and old shoes that had descended on the fair head of
his Esther. For one reason Esther! now the mother of
fOUT,had never ceased talking about it when in one of her
\'leek slnce there had been one or mOl"C weddings from the
factory.
They never grew stale to Tim, nor to the ,...o.rld at large
cith;;:or,for the whole street for more than a block was still
8stir, although Tillie 'Nas alm.ost out of ~ight. She would
be standing Ul) before a rabbi answering a lot of questions
and makng aIt sorts of promises before the factory had
closed dmvn for the day; but this was the real wedding.
All the factory girls -'were hanging out of the front win-dows,
and six big windOH's stretching from side to side of
the facto,y six stories high ca~l hold lots of heads. There
they were, black, hrown, auburn, red all shades of blond
and tow, thrust like nestling birds over the stone ledges
of the windows, and everyone of them decorated 'with
white love knots fashioned out of tissue paper.
vVhen the bride did appear and escaped the shower, and
the manager following clOSe on her heels caught it, the
people OIl the sidewalks and tht;' factory girls and men
hanging out of other factory winduws gave vent to their
mirth and cheered lustily. Timothy \Voodruff Dennis
almost had a spasm right then and there.
"An' him a bachelor" he gasped between paroxysms of
pure delight.
The manager 'went back to his revolving ('.hair, the girls
returned to their machines and the street once more took
on its .vorkaday aspect after Tillie Gudousky had passed
entirely out of sight.
"\iVhat was Tillie's dowery?" asked one girl above the
roal" of revitalized ma.chinery, as she put the finishing touches
on the undergarment she was making.
"T\,\io hundred dollars," was the answer from a mouth
stuffed with pins.
".:'vly1An' T lost a whole hour! and I haven't saved up
more'J1 a hundred dollars," wailed the questioner.
Every head of every color bCllt busily over th~~mac'hines.
These Russian girls knew they were not considered marr;'J.ge-able
until they h,HI saved up t""..o or three hundred dollars,
and their parents were anxiolls to get them married as soen
as possibk A girl should have saved up a sufficient Jowry
to attract the cupidity of some man bdore she had lef~ ber
teens.
The manager undoubtedly knew this, but tIe didn't ,seem
the least bit interested in (\0"..'rie5. What he thought about
was the time the firm lost every time this custom of showel--
illg the bride prevailed. Thes weddings were getting too
numerous for him.
"Ii there arc many more marriages like the Tillie Gud-ousky
affair the Ship Ahoy Tick and Tuck Company, Lim-ited,
''''ill be wooing and wedding a bankruptcy petition,
sure thing_"
Foreman Sandonovitc.h heard and said soothingly: "They
don't happen much oftcncr'n once a week, boss-sometimes
twice."-Sun.
HUmidity in the Varnish Room.
Extensive plans ha.ve been instituted with a view of eUmin-ating
this one important draw back to varnish room results!
but despite these apparently best laid plans, humidity con-tinues
to disturb the finisher to a serious extent during Aug-ust
and the early part of September.
rt has come to be recognized that the only factor that
will render humidity harmless is heat introduced in some
effective way to the varnish room. Humidity is part and
parcel of those hot moist days-often called "dog-days,"
although not necessarily included in this unacceptable period
-when the air is surcharged with moisture, and perspiration
flows freely upon the slightest exercise of the individual.
Various expedients are resorted to in order to counteract the
action of the water saturated atmosphere, but the most prac-tical-
and in reality the only effective-system consists of
the introduction 01' heat in a sufficient quantity to dispel k
l:Jrge part, at least, the peculiar dampness ,pervading tile
varnish room. This can be accomplished by means of a
brisk fire in the shop or store, or warmth forced through
steam pipes, or hot air pipes, as the heating arrangements of
the shop may permit. This heat, however, need not, and,
in fact, should not, be long continued, for it fairly goes with-out
saying that air may be made too dry for working varnish
with the best results. A few minutes of good heating by
whatever method is most convenient ",,-ill usually suffice to
condition the air of the room, provided proper ventilation is
furnished, to meet immediate requirements.
vVhat is needed in the varnish room is pure, fresh air
with the greater portion of the moisture extracted, and this
rule holds good whether the month be August or December.
Humidity to excess in the air causes the varnish to draw
itself into a condition similiar to the appearancc of enamaled
leather or silk. Perhaps needless to add! prevention is many
times cheaper than cure in all cases of hl1midity.-Ex.
10 MiCHIGAN ARTISAN
OFFICES:
CINCINNATI-Pickerillil B.ul1dlog. NEW YORK--346 Broadw&.y\.
BOSTON;-18Tremollit St. CHICAGO--134Van Buren St.
GR.AND RAPID$--Housem.an Rid.. JAMESTOWN. N. Y.--Ch.da.koln Bldg.
HIGH POINT. N. C.--Slanton.~elcb Block.
The most satisfactory and up~to·dateCr~dit Service covering the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
The most at::'oura.teand reliable Reference Book Published.
OrigInators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System:"
Collectit",Service Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Drafts.
H. J. DANHOf'. Michigan Man~er.
347·348 House1D.an Sundin ... Grand Rllplds. Mioh.
EVRNSVILLL
Evansville, h..d.) Sept. 2.-Some of the local factone~
are running on full time, yet the average factory is funning
but forty hours a week. The plants of the city have av-cr<
lged forty hOUB all tile seaSOn and the owners say this
is a much better record than that of the factories of many
"th.'r cities. It is the general opinion of the furniture n1(;'"
hert that the general business conditions of the count:-y arc
much better than they were last spring and that it i,; hut
a question of time until things wilt assume t:l.;:oir llrormal
conditiolls.
The Clnirmaker's Union, at Tell City, Ind., extended
nil invitation to the Evansville Manufac::turers' Association
to come to Tell City, Ind., all Labor Day to enjoy some of
Tell City's noted hospitality. A. P. Fenn and Jacob Zoe-cher,
two of the best fellows in Tel] City, were at the head
of the commit'tce on entertainment amI this assured thc
visitors a good time. The Evansville manufacturers were
glad to accept the invitation.
Edwnrd Ploeger, of the Bosse Furniht:'e Company, thinks
Evansville has a great future as a manufactu.-ing city. He
says its location and cheap fuel are bound to bring many
new factories here in the future .
.Fred Deikman, of the Bosse Furniture Company, has
returned from Mammoth Cave, Ky., where he spent his
vacation. He says he had a delightful time.
The Karges and Globe factories arc running full time
and employment 1;:' given a large force of men. These
factories are among the largest and best equipped in this
section of the country.
Gus Stoltz, of the Stoltz-Schmitt factory, thinks business
is improving and says tradc is hound to gct better. "Gus"
1S one of thc best men in the state.
The Buehner Chair Company is grinding away, and,
under the managen~el1t of Theodore Kevekordes, is en-joying
a mighty good business. The factory is turning
out a fine grade of work just now.
Eli D. ').liller says his folding beds are being sold now in
all sections of the country and in many foreign countries.
Eli is a wide awake manufacturer, and never thinks of the
hard times. He says people are not caring as much about
the piano right now as they arc of his folding beds. Eli is
a self made man and has a host of admiring friends.
The new chair factory at Henderson, Ky., has started
up with a force of forty men and twenty dozen chairs a Jay
are turned out. The factory has a capacity of forty dozen
chairs a day and it is expected the plant will be running
futl time before long. The plant was recently moved to
Henderson from Hillsboro, Ohio. Mr. \Veimar, the man-ager
of the factory, informed the writer a few days ago
that orders are coming in faster than they cah be filled;
among them being one for 30,000 of one" particular style
of rocker. Several" car load orders arc nearly ready for
shipment.
Upon the petition of ]. C. Brooke, owner at the Cin-cinnati
Seating Company, at vVashingtfm. Ind., Judge H.
Q. Houghton has Hamed William L. Brown of Mitchell,
rnd., as receiver for the plant. The factory was remov~d
;!-om Harrison, Ohio, to vVashington three years .3.go anJ
,>:nployed in the neighborhood of 150 men. The c')l1lpan....
has enough orders to keep the plant running night and day
for seven months, and UP()]l this showing Judge Houghton
ordered the receiver to issue certificates to the amount of
$10,000 to carry all the business.
\\Tilliam P. Keeney, aged seventeen years, son of William
P. Keeney, the wdl known traveling salesman, left the city
a few days ago on his initial trip as a traveling salesman
of furniture. He went from here to :VYobilc,Ala., and will
make a tour of the southern states.
The Evansville Furniture Manufacturers' Association has
filed a camp taint with the Indiana Railway Commission
against the Baltimore and Ohio railroad and thirty-six other
companies. The Evansville Association alleges that the
shipping ra;;~ un ~,)lding beds is too high and asks th,~ Rail-way
Commission to take the matter up with the Inter state
Commerce Commission. Tl1e furniture manufacturers, ac-cording
to the complaint, are compelled to pay a ,ate 011
folding beds which is one and one-half times as great as
the first class rate. They declare also that only a first
class rate is charged by some roads in Illinois and some
parts of the southern freight territory. This discrimination,
it is daimed, makes it difficult for tbe manufacturers of this
city to compete in the folding bed market with the manu-facturers
in various otber parts of the country. It is as-serted
that the Evansville association have placed their com-plaint
before the classification committee, in ).J"ewYork, but
without satisfactory results.
The Advance Stove \'Vorks of this city, of which William
A. "'j<och, is the efficient president, has been coing a vcry
nice business all season and prospects are good for a splendid
fall and winter trade. It is largely to Mr. Koch's :)mine:-:,s
ability that this company has forged to the front within the
I"ast year or two.
1fayor John \\7 Boehne, interested in local stove and
furniture factories, has returned from the lakes of Minne-sota,
where he spent his vacation. He was gone two week:;
and his family accompanied him. He reports a most pleas-ant
time. 1byor Boehne, who is the democratic candidate
for congress in this district, will "get busy" 50011 -vith his
canvass. C. \V. B,
)J!CHIGAN ARTISAN 11
These saws are
made from No. 1
Steel and we war-rant
every blade. I
We also carry a I
full stock of Bev- :
eled Back Scroll •
Saws. any length 1
and gauge. f
IIII
--------_.~I
lVrite us for
Price List
and discount
31-33 S. FRONT ST". GRAND RAPIDS
._----~
BOYNTON &. CO.II
..--------- I
II
MallllfaClurer~ (If
Emboned and
Turned Mould"
ing ... Embo-.
ed and Spindle
Carvings, and
Automatic
Turning ..
We alw mallu·
fatl:ure II large line
of Emb.o8led
Omllmentl for
Couch Work.
SEND FOR
('ATAI.(l(;HR
419-421 W. fifteenth St., CmCACO, ILL. ~---_._----------------'
---------------~III
,
Wood
Forming
Cutters
We offer exceptional value in Reversible and
One-Way Cutters for Single and Double Spin-dle
Shapers. Largest lists with lowest prices.
Greatest variety to select from. Book free.
Address
---_._-.,I ~le~~en50MnI~(.0.
South Bend. Ind.
Wood T umings,
Turned Moulding,
Dowel, and Dowel
Pins.
Catalogue to Manufac·
turers on Application.
1\1achlne!l fur all porpo8es, and at. prices within the ..... R('h of
all, Every machine bas oor guarantee agalnl!lt breakfu::e for one
yellr.
"Rotary Style" fur Orop Carvings, Emboued Mouldings, Panels.
"Lateral /StYle" for laqe capacity heavy Carvings IUld Veep
EmLossiugs.
We have the Machine you want at a satisfactory pr:lce. Write
for descriptive circulars, Also make dies lor all makes of Ma-chines.
VNION fMBOSSINC MACIiINE CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
--------_._----, rI
MANUFACTURERS OF
HARDWOOD LUMBER &
VENEERS
II SPECIALTIES:
II ~'L"fPEiJQUARO.AK VENEERS MAHOGANY VENEERS
I
IIII~
HOFFMAN
BROTHERS COMPANY
804 W. Main SI., FORT WAYNE, INDIANA I~
12
Raising the Table.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
There has been a 1ong-standing difference of opinion in
the Plunkett family concerning the dining table. Mrs.
Plunkett maintained that its legs were too short and ought
to be lengthened at least half an inch.
''It doesn't fit our chairs, Jared, and you know it," she
contended. "vVben 'we sit dOWil to this table we're too
high above it. You could have pieces of wood glued on
the ends o{ the legs. That would be easier than to saw
off the ends of all the chair legs."
"1 don't agree with your proposition at all, ConIdia,"
said :\1r. Plunkett. "I think the table is just righL But
I'm willing to compromise the matter. You have been want-ing
a hardwood floor in this dining room for a fong time,
haven't you?"
"Yes,"
"Vv~ell, we can have .that new kind of hardwood floor
that i5 laid on top of the old floor. That \'v'ill raise the
table, of course, just so much. How will that do?"
This seemed to be a fair proposition, and without a
moment's hesitation Mrs. Plunkett accepted it as a satis-factory
compromise.- Ex.
A Convenient Drawing Table.
Among the many valuable conveniences manufactured
for use in wood working shops, schaab, offices, for architects,
and engraving plants by the Grand Rapids Hand Screw Com-pany,
is the draughting desk illustrated here\vith.
It is suhstillltially constructed and its utility recognized
at a glance. The company will be pleased to supply further
information in l-egard to the same.
Improvements in Machinery.
Alexander Dodds reports business improving. On a re-cent
visit to his vi'Ood\yorking machine works a twenty-five
spindl e dovetailer was shown ready to· be packed for ship-ment
to Cologne, Germany. This machine has important
improvements not on other machines, but may be had on
future orders. A new No.4 tilting saw table was about
completed for Grand Rapids Furniture Company. Mr.
DOdds has a new lock mortising machine about ready to put
on the market, which will make the key hole at the same
time it makes the mortise. This machine can also be used
as a horizontal boring machine when necessary. ].'lr_ Dodds
believes in making up-to-date maehinery, and in order to do
so must have up-to-date iron and steel working tools to
produce; them. One of the latest of these is a new gear
cutting mac'hine that cost over one thousand dollars. It i5
the best machine of its class on the market.
THE Wellin~lon"olel
Cor. Wabash Aye. &
Jackson· Boulevard
CHICAGO
Remodeled at a cost of
$150,000
Hot and cold running
we.teY and long dillo
lance 'phonell in aU
roomll.
200 rOOII15. 100 with
balh. Sinsleor en suite.
Rates $1·00 and upwards.
One of the most unique
dWiolil rooms in the country.
Our famousIndianCafe.
NOTE~ FOR SERVICE .NO CUSINE
McClintock and Bayfield
PROPS. •
WHEN IN DETROIT
STOP AT Hotel Tuller
I•
New andAInoIutely Fireproof
Cor. Adams Ave. and Pal'£:.St.
Inthe Cenler ofthe Theatre. Shop-pint,
and Business District.
A Ia Carte Cafe
Newellt and FineetGrili
Room in the City.
Oub Breakfast • 40e up
Luncheon - - - 5lk
Table d·hote Dinners _ 75c
MUQcfEom6P. M. to 12 P. M.
Eve.ry 'room has e.pyive.te bath.
EUROPEAN PLAN
Ratelll·$l.50 per day and up.
L. W. TULLER, Prop.
M.A. SHAW, Mgr .
!1
/ 10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALSO MADE WlTH 12, 15, 20 AND 2.') SPINDLES.
DODDS'NEW
DOVETAILING
GEAl\.
MACHINE
This little machine has done more to perfect the drawer work of
furniture manufacturers than anything else in the furniture trade.
For fifteen years it has made periect-fitting, vermJn-proof, dove·
tailed stock a possibility. This has been accomplished at reduced
cost, as the machine cnts dove·taJ1s in gangs of from 9 to 24 at
one operation.
ALEXANDER DODDS, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Reptesented by Schuchart & Schuttll at Berlin. V"aenna, Stockbolm and SI.
Pelel'6bul'lE. Replesentative by Alfred H. Sdiutle at Colollne. Brussels, Uege. Paris.
Milan and B11boa. Represented in Great Britian and Irdand by the Oliver Machinery
Co., F. S. TbolDPSOIl.Mar .• 201·203 DeaB8lil8te. Mandlel!l:er,England.
MICHIC;A:\I ARTISAN
,..-------------------- I
II
II!
I
!II
II
!
!
13
I Oran~Da~i~sDlow Pi~e
I an~Dust Arrester (om~an~
Tn Il LATEST device for hOJl(Uing
shavings alld dust from all wood-
7e'orl~illgmachines. O'urnineteen years
experience ill this class of 'zr ..wrk has
haugilt it uearer perfection than any
other system on the market today_ It
is 1/0 experiJncnt, but a demonstrated
scieJltific fact, as '(:t'C have sCiNral hUIl-dred
of these s'J.'stcms in use, alld !lot a
poor Olle among thent. Our AutOl1Wtic
FUYllGce Feed System .. as S1107J.min th,is
cut, is the 1I10st perfect 7.t1orkhlg dc'vice
of anything in this lille. Write for ollr
prices for equipmellts.
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETAIL WORK WITHOUT EX-PENSE
TO OUR CUSTOMERS.
EXHAUST FANS AND PRES-SURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN
STOCK.
Office and Fa.ctory:
208-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
Citizen. Phone 1282 Sell. Main 1804
-----~~OUR A~UTOM:ATIC FURNAOE FEED SYSTEM •
14 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
I!STABLISt'1ED 1880
Puel.'IlIHIlfCl BT
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO.
ON THE: lOTI-! AND 25TH OF EACH MONTH
O~FICI!~106.110.112 NORTH DIVISION ST•• GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
ENTERED .0.8 MIITTER OF TI-IE SECOHD CLAU
"\\Te sell from six to ten \Vidicomb dressers a week of
a certain pattern, mainly because our salesmen like to sell
it. It has so many good features that it mo\'es easily and
satisfies the purchaser. By offering this dresser in pref-erence
to others of its class. the salesrrell save much
time which they spend in trying to sell other articles of
household use." The manager of the furniture section of
a large department store who utte~ed tile statement quoted
above is an able business man of large experience, who is
ever in the market for articles that will sell as readily as
that certain kind of John Vv'iddicomb dresser. Have you
anything of that kind in your line, :-'Ir. Manufactu-er? .,.,
The habit of looking at freights, not goods, has caused
buyer3 to stand pat against a purchase because of ten or
fifteen cents in the rate, when there was fifty cents dif-ference
in the goods in favor of the more distant market
Such huyers are governed by small things rather than by
large ones.
During the current and the coming year hventy-five sky-scrapers
of enormous size \",ill be erected in the city of New
York. Quite a market foj· furniture will be created ,V:WE
thL'''t' buildings shall be made ready for occupancy.
'.,' 't'
1Iemories ,of pa~t unpleasant experiellces cause lack of
confidence in salesmen. It is wen to forget the past. Look
upwards, as the sailor does when the weather threatens his
life, and push onwa:·d.
"t" "t"
The open opposition of the bankers to the general ad-option
of the Oklahoma system of guaranteeing deposits
furnishes an argument to depositors for supporting the plan.
Isn't, it strange how business continues to improve so
shortly before the presidential election 1 Evidently the people
do not fear the future, whatever the outcome may be.
In salesmanship it is not commendable to give a' buyer a
leader on an article he knows and then "soak" him on the
sale of an article he does not know.
't' 't'
Neither the people who think the worst of you nor the
people who think the best of you are correct in their es-timates
of you.
't' 't'
One factory would serve the needs of a community as
well as ten if the people did not buy more than they actually
need.
The iron and steel mills are fully employed ill filling
orJers. and the prospects fOi a continuance of business are
good.
"..,l." "..,I."
Xine-tenths of human t~linking is unreasonable.
the most of the sane otie-tenth.
l\Iake
"..I." 0..1.0 , ,
There are not so ma.p.y differences of opinion
of the methods employed to express the same.
"f' "t"
as there are
The salesman who is copfident that trade may be gained
by going after it vigo:ously is seldom disappointed.
Some !:ialeSmell are born great, some achieve greatness,
2nd others put up a successful bluff.
The bank will not ca~h a draft on hopc, and yet it is a
good thing to havc.
The salesman who tries to bnd a reason for some of the
things a buyer does is up against a big job.
Trade ~chool Teachers Organize.
A meeting of tellchers employed in trade and training
sc11001slocated in various parts of the United States was held
n J\fuskegon, Mich., recently when an organization was
effected with the following officers:
President, Lui Dratz, Muskegon; vice presiJent, Fred Mc-
Earcheron, Kearney, Neb.; secretary, T. R. Raymond Stahl.
Columbus, Ohio; treasurer, \ValterHanson, St. Joseph, "~:lo.
Tile executive power is vested in a board of six, of which the
secretary is chairman, and Clarence Hardy, Oshkosh, \Vi!:i.;
Alfred J, S. Boucher, Chippewa Falls, \hlis.; Harry Beck,
Quincy, Ills.; Harold Slayton, Minneapolis, Minn.; David
Scull', Burlington, Iowq; and Vilalter "Hanson, St Joseph, :Mo.'
are members. The first annual meeting will be held during
Christmas vacation in Muskegon. The memhership as pres-ent
extends from Ohio to :VIontana and from Minnesota to
Mississippi. The association is alTtlated with the Hackley
Manual Training SchooL
To Manufacture Furniture,
Emerson Furniture Company, Brooklyn; to manufacture
furniture and household goods; capital $5,000. Incorpor-ators:
Samuel D. Kay. Jersey City; David Strausman, No,
81 East Fourth street, New York; Joseph Sookne, No. 2151
83d street, Brooklyn.
Klien Brothers' Bamboo \\Torks, New Yo k; to mnnu~
facture furniture, especially of bamboo; capital, $5,000. In-corporators:
Jake K. Klein, No. 244 West 112th st>eet;
Joseph K. Klein ani Kate Klein, No. 129 West 112th ::itreet,
all of ~ew York.
1\1. J. McCaffrey Company, New York: to manufacture
coffins and caskets; capital, $5,000. Incorporators: George
Tiernan, Charles E. Patton, John G. Hogan, 1\0. 54 \Vall
street, New York.
With the Girrib1e Store.
Everill S. Brower, formerly with the Sligh Furniture
Company, has entered the employ of Gimble Brothers, gell-eral
merchants in Milwaukee.
MICHIGAN AkTISAN ----_._---~._~ II
I Pittsburgh Pl~b!~2n:d~nass
I Plate Glass. Mirrors. Window Glass. Ornamental Figured Glass.
WIRE GLASS, the Great Fire Retardant.
CARRARA GLASS. a New Product Like Polished White Marble.
Company
For anything in Builders' Glass, or anything in Paints, Brushes, or Painters' Sundries, address any
of our branch warehouses, a list of which is given below:
NEW YORK-Hudson &ondVandam. 5ts. CLEVELAND-1430.1434 West Third S1.
BOSTON-·tl~49 Sudbuf')" St•• 1.9 Bowker St. OMAHA -1608·10·12 Harney St.
CHICAGO 442·452 W.baah Ave. ST. PAUL-459·461 Jackson St.
CINCINNATI-Broadway and Court St.. ATLANTA. GA.-30-32 ..34 S. Pryor 8t.
ST. LOUIS-Cor. Tenth and ~ruce 51s. SAVANNAH,GA--74S-749 Wheaton St.
MINNEAI'OLIS-500_S16 S. Tbird St. KA.NSASCITy-rUth and Wy-.ndott. 8ts·
DETROIT-53·59 Ll\rned St., E. B1R,M1NUHAM, ALA.-2nd Ave. and 29th St.
GRA....O RAPIDS, MICH.~39.41 N. Division 8t BUFFALO, N. Y.-312·14·16 ..78 Pearl St.
PITTSBURGH-Iol-I03 Wood St. BROOKLYN 635-637 Fulton St.
MILWAUKRE. W1S.-492.494 Ma1"ketSt. PHILADELPHIA-Pitcairn Bldg.• Arch and 11th-Sts.
ROCHESTER, N. Y.-Wllder Bldg.• Main t1fE.zchangeSta. DAV&NPORT-410-416 Scott St.
BALTIMORE-31Q.12·14 W. Prat1 St.
Sole distributer. of PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS.
~----_._---_.
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures Per Set SOc. OVER 15,000 OF OUR
STEEL RACK VISES IN USE
2;; doz. Clamp Fixtures boug-ht
by one mill last year. We ship
on approval to rated firms. and
,l!"uarantee our goods uncondi-liollally,
lVrite for list of
Sfeel B(tr Clamps, Vises, Bench
Stops, etc.
E.". S"ElDON So CO.
283 Madison St .• Chicago. BAPIO-AOTmG WOODWOBU&'S VISE No.:S: t ___________ .____________ I •
•
I
----_.----.~ p-EL-
(TRADE MARK REGUSTEREDJ I
I
Paint and Varnish Remover I
Things don't grow without nourishment. Manufacturers do not increase their I facilities unless there is a growing demand to supply. In point of sales, Ad·el-ite Paint !
and Varnish Remover is tar ahead of any similar preparation on the market and I
our new, thoroughly equipped plant enables us to give better service than ever before. You will find that Ad-el-ite contains more energy to the gallon, has fewer dis- I
agreeable features and brings better results than anything you can get. Eats down
through any number of old coats of hard paint, varnish, wax, shellac or enamel
leaving the surface in perfect condition for refinishing.
Send for Free Sample.
STA.E CHICAGO j ...._---------------------------~-----------'
15
16 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
WOMEN SELL COFFINS.
Advantages Possessed by Salesladies on the Road.
Salesl'adies have come to stay. The commercial's pros·
pcrity congress recently held in New York afforded a good
chance for il1,quiricson this point. The replies were mouot·
onously unanimous.
"To stay? -VVhy,you coulden't get them out with a ton of
dynamite!"
There is something rueful' in 'a regular knight of the grip
when he talks about his profession~l sisters. One of them
told an especially harrowing tale.
He ran up against his [LT5t female competitor last fall
when he started out ,"lith a line of holiday goods.
He was going on at a leisurely gait, taking a good line of
orders from his old customers, when he struck Cleveland
and disaster. The first dealer he called on met him with
the blithe annOUllcement that he had come to.o late; a "sweet
and aimiablc young WOmall'" had been there and hzd received
the entire holiday order.
"Not the entire order?" stammered the dumfounded man.
"Yes; everything she wanted."
Every customer the man had in Cleveland had gone over
to the enemy.
He hustled on to Columbus. She had been befo:·c him
there. It was the same at Cincinnati and a little more of the
same at Indianapolis. He finally caught up with her at
Denver and proceeded to find out for himself what sort of
wizard this sweet and aimiable person was.
H", had to admit that she was the cleverest, mcist diplo-matic
woman he haj ever met and that her success was legiti-mate.
He found out afterward that it was her first trip
and that when she had been out three weeks her house had to
wire her to holJ on a bit, for she was sendil1g in orders faster
than they coul'd fill theln.
"I know a young woman who sells hats (and so do I
when I can keep ahead of her)," said another salesman in re~
lating his experience; "but let me' drop in behind her and
it's all day with me, fOe·when she strikes a town she carries
away every order in it.
"'But in this she has the advantage of me; sJ:e is Etrjk:ngly
pretty for a milliner's model and tries .on every shape hat
she has for sale among her samples, and sbe places them all
on her pretty head in such a coquettish ano g~acefut ·way
that it shows off the beauties of the hats to perfection. No""\,,
I would look pretty trying on ladies' hats, wouldn't I?
"These women are as a rule a strong, healthy, clear headed
~llld in every way belong to the twentieth century. S~)me
of them do exactly as men do-visit the merchants personally
and solicit orders. Others rent a suite of rooms in the
best hotel in which to display goods, notify their customcrs
and await them there.
"And there is still" another class who catcr to individual
custom~ and these are too very successful. Quite a number
of New York women work in this manner.
"There is one young woman who travels for onc of the
largest houses in Cincinnati. She is of Irish parentage and
has the beautiful eyes and complexion we so often see among
the Irish-American girls. Her figure is simply perfedion,
and all of the madenp garme"nts among- her samples are made
on the wall, and when she .once dons them she shows them
to the best advantage, and she seldom fails to get an order.
"She told me she was a graduate of one of the' leading
colleges for women in America, and has since studied every
art that might be of benefit to her in her business. She has
had many offers of marriage from some ,of her best customers,
but she is happy and conterit to live on her salary of $4,000
a year and commissions, which often run it up to $5,000, be-sides
all of her expenses.
i !
"Her trade is worth $300,000 a year to her house, and this
is enormous when it is considered that for only six months
in the year these goods can be sold."
One of the most successful is a Mount Vernoll woman.
For years she solicited orders for corsets from door to door.
her success was phenomenal beyond the wildest expectations
of the firm she worked for, and they could not comprehend
extraorJinayability. She is now a wholesale representative
for this same firtn of corset manufacturers and commands a
salary of $5,000 yearly.
Another well known woman is one whose husband form-erly
traveled for an underwear house. He died leaving her
with a large family to support, and it occured to her that
she might take up her husband's business.
She accordingly went to the firm and asked f.or the pos-ition.
They demurred at first, fearing to trust a woman to
handle this kind of ~oods; but finally, through sympathy and
a desire to help t9~: 'wife of one who had so long and faith-fully
served them, },ney cons~n.ted to give her a trial. Her
success was prom~re· and stnklllg.
Each mail brought fresh evidence of it and the result is
she is now a cOl1fidental member of the firm.
A Philadelphia w(an-an almost monopolizes the trade of
her territory itl fruit extracts, flavoring and spices. She does
not spend on an av~ragemore than two weeks at home
during the entire ye<4r~:p •• She is but twenty-five, and receives
a salary of $3,500 a~ear and all her expenses.
THE One-half
MICHIGAN Our Trade
now
Dupllcale TRUCK on,
Triplicale
Orders
Every
Purc::haser
Sallsfied
There's a
Reason
HARD·
WOOD
FRAMES
MALLE-ABLE
IRON
CASTINGS
M.M.A
L.OO.
HOllY,
MICH.
One young woman sells coffin trimmings for one of the
large silver manufacturers in COllneticut. Her success has
been wonderful, the house often being obliged to call her
in during the year owing to inability to fin her orders
promptly.
Another woman sells collins, and onc of her "knight"
rivals says she sells so many that undertakers have to make
kindling wood of them to get their stocks reduced, people
don't die fast enough to keep up the demand. Her house
allows her ample money for expenses and pays a liberal
salary besides.
Occupants of Burns' Chair Must Treat.
In one of tbe rooms of a Dumfries public house is an
old arm chair which is said to have been frequently used by
the poet Burns. All who sit in this chail' are expected to
treat everyone who is in the room at the time, and often the
immortal memory of the famous Scottish national poet is
drunk.
Notwithstanding the efforts of the mill operators to re-duce
production, the quantity of lumber cut during the year
1907 was considerably larger than in 1906.
:I] ] CHI C; "\ l\ ;\], T ] S ;\ l\ 17
~----- -----------------_. III,
f!II
Any Practical Mechanic
appreciates the importance of simplicity in machinery.
Our No.5 Table Leg Machine
is far superior in simplkily of construction over any other make of
machiJle, yet embodies a11 tl)l" latest improvements, special attention beitlg'
called to the Cuttel'"head, lhe Variable Friction Feed and the Oaeillating
Carriage.
Consider the above, and then hear in mind that this machine t1lrns
Tou1Jd,octagon, hexagon, square or allY other shape, all with the same
(\1tterhead. Also, that onl:! man with it can do lhe work of ai:lt or eight
hand turners -and we guarantee the work to be llatisfactory.
DOll't you [Iced such a machi11e? Then write II
~._----
c. Mattison Machine Works
863 F;fth Street BELOIT. WISCONSIN.
•i
._--~
II
(tlarence lR. ~::~:fD5 MrCH.1
__ •...1
If your DESIGNS a.re right, people want the Goods.
That makes PRICES right.
I DOES IT
lti3 Madison Avenue-Citizens Phone 1983. '--_._----_. ----_.
._------_.~
IMPROV£O, EASY 'ND El EVATO RS I QUICK RAISINC
Belt, EJectric and Hand Power. f
The Best Hand Power for Furnit",r, Stores I
Send for Catalogue and PriceS'~-
KIMBAll BROS, CO" 1067 Ninlh 51•• Council Bluffs, la,
Kimball ltlevator Co.• 323Prospect St., Cleveland, 0.;
1(1811th St., Omaha, Neb.; lZOCedar St., New York City. ---------_.~
~------------------- I
The Universal Automatic I
CARVING MACHINE
===~PERFORMS THE WORK OF ===~
25 HAND
CARVERS
And tloes the Work Better than it can be Done by Hand
-------MADE BY
Union [MUOSSlnn M1Cnlnr Co.
Indianapolia, Indiafta
Write for Information, Pri<:es Etc •
._-----_._-------
....._--- II
!
West Side 36 Inch Band Saw Machine,
Gleason Palenl Sectional Feed Roll,
----------: -MANUFACTURE!) 8"'"
I
WEST SIDE IRON WORKS:
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH" U. S. A· ;
1!. lV. Petrie, OU/'agent8 f01' Canada. t
OjfiU8, ']'oronto, }lontreal and Vancowver. •1
•
l·--·-------------~
I
1Loufsbabn
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 Livingston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
t. . --l
I
1 Citizens' Telephone 1702.
18 MICHIGAN
MANUAL AND TRADE TRAINING IN
RAPIDS.
GRAND
,
Outgrowth of the Kindergarten System.
P;obably llO subject of study which has been introduced
into the curriculum of the Grand Rapids public schools has
experienced a more rapid growth and a more wide spread
popularity than manual training.
It is the fore-runner and nearest approach to the much
talked of trade school, which has found so much favor in
the east and in the larger public school systems of the
United States.
Having its beginning in the kindergarten and primary
grades, the wo k has spread to the grammar grades and high
school within the last few years. And now a new "l\-1al1ual
Traillin~:r High School" building is to be erected which will
make large provisions for the classes in manual training'
with modern equipment and facilities which will be unequaled
by tiny city of its size in the middle west outside of oti.e de-vOtil1g
an enti~e bU1hllng to this subject'.
The public has taken a wide interest in the work aud last
winter, when for a month the schools gave a public exhibition,
;:t Ryerson library, of practical work in manual training !111,J
domestic science which had been done, there was tnUCil
admiration and interest expressed on the part of the many
who visited the creditable display.
Wood carving is one of the principal things which boys
are taught and what could be more fitting in the world's
Furniture Ci.ty?
But it is not alone in tables, c;lairs and fancy pieccs that
the boys excell but in some taings which savor of real ca'·p-entry.
This is witnessed in the work which the boys in
\ .-"
,.,' , IT IS A BLOT
upon the ability of every lumiture manuladurer,
superintendent, foreman, and salesman to lack a
cotrett knowledge of the fundamental principles
01 sketching, detailing, ornamental drawing and
the period styles, and we have a course 01
instructions that works wonders as an eraser.
Grand Rapids School
of Designing
542-545 Houseman Building, Grand Rapids.
A. KIRKPATRICK, hutruetor and De.i.per.
\
ARTISAN
the trmlnt school did last year in the construction of a lal1nch,
full sized, equipped in every way for practical utle.
Rug weaving is another occup"tioll which approach{·;.; a
trade in thc thoroughness in whicil it is taught.
Mrs Constance Rourke W<lS the tirst to introduce thi" ill
the l()c<~lschools. At the \Viddicomb street ."dlOol, or which
she is principal, she caused the children in the nrst and sec-ond
grades to have miniature frames made upon which they
could weave, thus learning, although in the mil1<'ture, all the
impo,tant principles of weaving a~d the handFng of colors.
In higher grzdcs where heavier work can be managed the
children weave real rugs and mats for the home",
Sewitlg is anothe.r subject which is taught. Little gi Is
make their own aprons, dresses and other articles of wear-ing
apparel. And they make th1ngs for "baby;" hemst:tch
handkerchiefs fo~ "Mamma" el'nd "Papa,"and learn to do
general practical sewing.
There are kitchens in which they receive instruction ill
cooking, and it is wonderful how quickly these Ettie oneS
learn to make hutter, bake b cad and cook numerous other
articles of food. The instruction in this branch is very
-thorough and is of untold value to the·child.
There are nine manual training cente s in the city loc!lted
as follows: Centra! l\{anllal Training school. 117 "Barclay
street, Diamond street school, Hall street school, Jefferson
avenue, Madison avenue, Plainfield avenue, Sigsbee, 5t aight
Street and Turner street sel: ools.
The entire manual training system of the city is under
tlw sl1pervlsion of L. R. Abbott. who is assisted by twenty-
(~ight tcachers including the six domestics.
The first fOll':' grades have folding, cutting, especially free·
hand cutting, clay molding and sand table work. Miss Good-rich
has charge of this work but is assisted in decorating
and designing by Mrs. Helen J. Torrey.
1\1rs. To"rey has entire supervision of the drawing alJd
some very gratifying results have been obtained since, by the
liberality of thc board of education, the equipment for draw-ing
has been greatly increased.
In the fifth and sixth grades the boys have knife work and
the girls have sewing. At present only ·one hour a week
is given to the ·work, but the time will be lengthened to tWIl
hours this coming year.
The seventh and eighth grades have, for the boys carp-entry;
they are taught not only to construct but to use tools
correctly, to do their work aceun~tely 2nd in a, worklll<:.n-]jk~
m<:.nner.
T11e gi.rls are tangllt an the arts of cookin3, and show
much interest and ability in lea·ll:ng.
The amount of time devoted to manual training in thes.e
grades has been dclttbled ;!1lC1now tbe pupils go directly to
the 111<11111<11 trai-ning ccnter ;\nd spend onc entire school scssicn
a week at the work.
Illfr. Abbott has immediate supervision of thc last fOUT
grades which are in excellcnt condition.
Every pupil in the Grand Rapids public schools be·tween
the (Irst and ninth gades take a course in manual train:n:s.
Tn the High school the only work in manual tratnlll::{
at present is mechanical drawing, but as sOOn as the "New
Manual Training High School" is completed, and under
favorable circumstances, it will be ready for USe in about
two years, a thorough advanced course in manual training
will be given with the academical courSe.
Many and varied are the opinions for, and against, a man-ual
training course being of ally practical benefit to the child.
As a rule mothers and teachers notice manifestation of this
benefit in the deportment of the child, the interest he dis~
plays .in his work and the exac.tness with Wh1Chhe does any
task alloted him.
The mother notices how neat John is becoming; in fact!
( Concluded on page 22, ) I•
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YIICIlICAJ\' ARTISAN
SCHOOL LIBRARY
GRAND JlAP1DS HIGH SCHOOl.
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DOMESTIC SCIENCE ROOM
GRAND RAPIDS HIGH SCHOOl-
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MICHIGAK ARTISAN I ROYAL WHITE MAPLE POLISHING VARNISH~
20
ROYAL
White-the Emblem of Purity-our White Maple Polishing Varnish is Pure-and the
WHITEST GOODS on the market. It dries to recoat every other day; can be rubbed
and polished in four to five days. Ask for testing sample.
I
VARNISH COMPANY I
TOLEDO, OHIO I • •
New Belt Sander for Flat and Irregular Work.
The manufacturers of this machine had made it possible
to sand all irregular shaped pieces with the grain and are
making the machines to do it. The indispensible features
of such a ra.bOT saving machine will appeal to every manu·
facturer of case goods, chairs, tables, pianos, wood mantets
your sanding department amI while there arc a few molded
or irregular shapes you may be working over some kind of
sanding' drum, disk, spindle or ordinary belt. you will find it
gOlle over by hand in ,order to get the finish necessary, and
on the majority yOU will find that these shapes are being
sanded by hand from start to fI11i~h. :J ow if yOU "\!ish to
Number 111,\Sand Belt '!'.ladline
and plumbers w.ood work. Not only will these machines
sand and polish the same dass of "vo..-k, whlch the manll-facture~-
s as above stated have been compelled to do by
hand, but as nn advantage over the disk, drum and spindle
sanding would justify these manufacturers in throwing every
one of tbem out, and mally of the largest and 1110st pros~
perOU5 w,ood workng plants have already seen fit to do so.
:Mal1Ymanufacturers have been using a two to three drum
sand('x and even 11l,ore for years, paid likely a thousand dol-lars
for each, consider same indispensible and the onty thing
you can sand on same is flat surfaces. Now, since one-half
or two-thirds of the pieces in the construction are irregular
shapes, would not a sand belt machine, capable of sanding
this class of work to a perfect finish with the grain as weB
as for polishing 11at surfaces, be just as indispensible and
even more profitable. The drum sander is considered in-dispensible.
This is due to. the fact that manufacturers ~lavc
always been accustomed to sanding or finishing irregular
shaped pieces by hand and expect nothing el'se. It is no
more necessary for y.ou to sand this class of work by hand
than it is the flat surfaces. You may be under the im-pression
that these irregular shapes are being sanded by
some kind of sanding device in your factory and of course
know that you cannot afford to do it by ~land when there is
a machine to be had, which will do it better, and the above
sand belt will. It is well worth your time to investlgate in
•
abandon hand sanding and get a more perfect finish than
you are now getting and at less cost would advise that you
communicate with the vVysong & Miles Company, of Greens-boro,
N. C, who a.re making a specialty of sand belt machines
for doing the class of work in question. By the use of ma-chines,
which they have brought out, it is ffi(-lde possible for
wood working manufacturers in almost every line to abandon
sanding by hane!' They arc building abDut eight different
salld belt mac1lincs adapted especially to the requirements
of every wood \-vorker and they do not try to apply one ma-chine
to everybody's I"cGuirements, which never has nor neveI"
will be done successfully, Drop a line sta.ting what you aI"e
manufacturinf: ar,d ask them to send cut <lud full particulars
ni the 'mach!11e, which they recommend for your requin>-
l11(;nt~. [-(. the fc1l6witig addresses o'i the lTI:wufadurers:
\Vysong & Miles Company, Cedar street and Southern R. R,
Greensboro, N. C
Suspicious.
Manufacturer-"l can ]lot put faith in that tra.veling
designer.
Salesman-"Why?"
Manufac.turer-"He did not tell me 1 do not know how
to manufacture and sell furniture:~
~'------ I
III
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~1I CHI G A K ART I S A K 21 ._------------_._----_._-_.~I
It makes a perfect imitation of any open grain because it uses the wood itself to print from, and one operator and a
boys can do more work with it than a dozen men with any other so·called machine or pads on the market.
That's Why It's a Money Maker. It Imitates Perfectly.
couple of THIS MACHINE MAKES THE MONEY
50
Machines
Sold
Las! Year
-:I 50 I
More I
Satisfied I
Manufacturers IIII
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Plain or Quartered Oa.k, Mahogany, Walnut. Elm. Ash ot' any other wood with open grain.
Posselius Bros. Furniture Manufacturing Co.
Fot' Prices and Full Particulars. Mention the Michigan Artisan,
Write the
Detroit,
Mich.
HELLO GIRLS TRAIN FOR JOBS.
7.000,000 Telephones in Use-13,OOO,OOOMiles ot Wires in
This Country.
''Few people know lhat there are 7,000,000 telepholles now
ill llse in the UniLed States," said a well-posted telcpllone ntan
in speaking of the remarkable growth of the telephone in
recent years, "Env know, too, that there are abollt 13,000,000
miles of telephone wlres in operation in this country, not to
speak of the many miles of wires w:;cd in switchboards and
other apparatlls under root.
The wires reach from coast to coast and from Canada to
;"[exico, and a man ill )[cw YO;'k call talk to al\other man in
Omaha .. and each can hear the other <15 distinctly as though
one ',vere in the Bn:mx and the otber at the Battery. There
wilt soon come a time \,\'heo )JCIV Yorkers can talk ,vith
San Francisco or other cities along the Pacific Coast.
"Some surprising fignres are :=;hOv..'1l in tbe cost of oper-ating
this va!5t system. For instance, th~ ·value of the wire
and other apparatu"l and the labor cost for installation alll-ounts
to about $175,000,000, Tbcre are about 25,COO,OOO tol!
connections tbroughout the Ullited Stales and more than
8,OOO,OOO,COO exchange connections. Th~~cost of mainta.ining
the standard oi senrice is enormous. Last. year the various
telephone companies paid about $54,0(;0,000 fOt- maintenance
and reconstruction of plants. Dne SySt;;1T1. alone, the Bell,
spent $36rOOO,COOlast year.
"\Vhi1e the Bell syst<:m is by far the largest in this
country there are several hundred ::;maller and independent
telephone concerns that maintain all e:xccllent service,
"The whole territory of the Bell Company and its sub-sidiaries
has beell divided into dcparirnents, and over each
has been placed a 111an 1,,,ho is responsible to the Directors.
The lIC~' system includes the business, plant, and traffic
departments, and each of these dcparl1nel1ts is sub-divided,
anu every head 01 a department 01' sub-department an the
way up the line is responsible to a man higher up. wbo in
tDrn is responsible to the one still higher up, unt.il it gets
to tbe manager of one of t.he three departments.
"In rccent years the system oi obtaining operators has
changed. ::.\"0 long ago a 'Jlcllo' girl was employed aft,:.r
<I .<;111)(J'1icial course of instrt1ctiol1_ Puo" servic,~ was the
rcsult. ~ow the telephone compallies have schools of in-struction
Sor the telephone operators. Sometimes it takes
weeks for a 'bello' girl to get all the detail.s of the work. and
to be graduated as a reliable operator, Often there are
cases "INhere girls £Ire found unsuited for the W01-k. These
schools of illstructioll cost. the Citudents nothing. The in-structors
arc expert who have been in the employ of the
company for several years.
"In these schools of instruction the prospe~tive 'hello'
girl is drilled in calming' the irritable customer who wants
a Humber ;1nd W<ll1tsit Quick; also the customer who makes
all tbe trouble he call for the girl at the switchboard. There
is a set phraseology of replies to certain queries. All these
she has to leam ktter perfect
"The experts say that a. girl must have imagination to
become a good operator. She has to see in her mind's eye
all that is taking place on the wires and to be n:<1dy for every
emergency. \Vithout that the 'hello' girl will always prove
a failure."-T.in1t's,
Long Time Leases.
The permanency of the Grand R;lpids Furniture Ex~
position is assure(L 11any manufacturers ha"l/e taken leases
for ten years in the exposition buildings.
22 MICHIGAN
Manual and Teade Training in Grand Ra.pids.
( COlJthllled from paRe 18 )
he now puts his tools in their chest, hangs his hat on the
rack, ne\r'er leaves his umb~ella lying around. His mother
begins to understand \-vhen slJC remembers that John made
the tool chest and hat and umbrella racks himself and Jle
loves to use the things he made and by so doing is fDrming
d habit of neatness.
\-Vhen he has grown to manhood and left home these
things will be cherished by lllotilCr. So, mothers appreciate
manual training, for their children,
It is a real help to tired mothers when they can trust
their d~t1ghte;'s to do some sewing 'which the mothers can-not
ftnd time to do themselves.
The teaciJcr notices how prompt John is getting to school.
How business~likc is his bearing. How accurate he is in
the performance of his school dutics and how inten.'.sted he
is in his work.
Manufacturers arc taking every graduate from the manual
Caining .schools and pl'acing them in positions which were
formerly- .occupied by workmen of long experience; thls, of
course, causes some antagonistic feeling on the part of the
displaced workmen.
Some of our local machinist mechanics, printers, and
others can see no practical benefit derive.d from a manual
training course.
Oue gentleman, a leader in graft, said: ;'1 do not see that
any practi.cal benefit is obtained thr.ough a manual training
course. In fact were r to choose the way a child should
obtain his education in trade work 1 would place him in a
shop as' I do not 'approve of either the trade or manual
training schools. My objections to the manual training
school are iirst: The teachers are not competent to instT'uct
t:1e pupil, not being mechanics themselves, secondly; the
schools do not have the necessary equipment and facilities
for completing: the courSe properly."
Mr. J. D. FJaliagan, Secretary of Typographical Union.
said: "The manual trailling proposition isa rather broad
Cjuestion. J t closc1'y dovetails with the old apprentice system.
Technical and trade schoob cannot be intelligently treated
in tIle abstract."
.He furth~r said that he had a step SOil who became p:-o-ficient
ill the making of tabourettes in the local manual train~
ing schools, but on leaving sellenl found that there was no
demand for tabourettc makers and considers that tl1e course
he completed in school was of 110 practical benefit to hi.m.
Speaking of the demand fa:' all-\'oulH~ v,rorkmen in the
A.LHOlCOMD &CO@
MANUFACTURER5~ODEALER5
IN HIGH GRADE BAND AND SCROLL
SA~S
REFAIRING-SATI5fACTION GUARANTEED
ClT1ZEN5 PHONE 1239 27 N MARKET 51
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
ARTISAN
J)"illtillg husiness, with V,.h·ell he is familiar, he said: "There
are few openings for them, as the workmen are classitied ac-cording
to their ability and ad,1ptability."
Others disagrec- with file above opinions. One gentle-mall
declared that a cour:se in manual training taught his
boy how to use his hands, how to calculate and use his brain
to tllC best advantage. v\lhile some of the things taught
moly never be put into practi('.al use, at the same time they
help -botll the boy and the girl to concentrate their thoughts.
to give their undivi.ded attention to the work in which they
arc engaged and to make them more observant than one who
has taken no such cOlt-se, as the average man sees im-p<.~
rfectly.
P. of. James says: ;'His images have broad fringes:"
An employer, .also a father, was very emphatic in decl<1ring
that the Grand Rapids manual training syste.m was very ben-eficial,
not only to the pupil, but the .factories of the city;
although at present it was opposed by some employers it
would triumph -in the end by bringing forward men with a
better industrial education.
To sum up the result of many interviews with those both
for and against the extension of manual training, it is safe
to say that where one is opposed t~lere are twenty who
favor it and that opposition will die a natural death in the
course of a few years.
•
(1". :D3. '!batfiel".
lDe&tgner
Working drawings fllrnishcd for
fine and medium Furniture,
Chaitll and fallcy articles in
modern and dassic: iltyles.
Blodifett Bldg.. Grand Rapids. Mh::lt. Gllaf'tmteed .sellers.
•
WRITE FOR PR.ICES AND DISCOUNT
WABASH
B. WALTER & CO. INDIANA
Manufacturen nt T ABLE SLIDES Exclusively
•
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====:SEE:====
West Michigan Machine & Tool Co., ltd.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
for "Ill" GRADE PUNC"ES and DIES
•
• • I ~~M[I~We can help you. Time
saved and when done I leave$ are hound (by your-self)
and indexed by Boors
or departments.
BARLOW BROS.,
Gnwd R~id •• Mkh.
Writt! Rigkt Now. • •
WHITE PRINTING CO., GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
PRlNlERS OF CATALOGUES
and eve')'thing needed by buoineoa men
~lTCHIGA)! ARTISA:\ 23
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I STANDARD SHADES ADOPTED BY THE CRAND RAPIDS
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS' ASSOCIATION
(jj Uniformity and a definite standard for all popular finishes will soon be possible_ The
above Association has adopted, after carefully considering many different shades of the
popular finishes, a set, which will be known as nStandard,n thus enabling a chair manufac-turer
to produce the same Early English as the table manufacturer. The dea)er will no
longer have the matching difficulty.
II We expect to have board samples ready in another month, and shall forward a set of
boards and enough stain powder of each shade for experimental purposes for $1.00. This
we figure ....i.ll just about cover the expense. Sets will be forwarded in rotation of orders
received. Cash must come with orders. The samples. directions, and suggestiolls for the
production of these certainly are worth much more, but we feel in a measure obligated to
our p:ltrons. therefore the propositioll. Attend to the order now.
---------~,,
WALTER K. SCHMIDT COMPANY II
LGRAND RAPIDS=,=====_========MICHIGAN
S4-SS CANAL STREET
Veneer and Furniture.
Ther-e is such close association between fUrJliture ~ll1d
the face veneer that 'when the furniture tr<lde i;;; slovv the
'\-'t'lleer trade is correspondingly sluggish. Flt~niturc 111;1ll-lIfactl1rtrs
afe not the only people who lIse veneer hy ally
means, but the fun,iture tmde docs furnish a sort ,of ther-mometer
to the ups and downs of the veneer business. And
this year, in addition to the furniture trade being hit hard
with the depression, the building t:·ade and consequently
the planing mills got their share. too, and this added tn the
c1epl"E,:ssionin the veneer market. for the planing mills !la,'c
come to be quite prominent in the veneer llsing trade. A
queer thing about it all is that the piano manufacturers do
not seern to have suffereel as much as the furniture people.
aud compar;Jtivcly spe<lkillg thee has seemingly beeu ;'
betler demand for mahogany veneer than for native ·WOO(!.
In fact, ,vhile th<: mahogany trade ha:~ suffered somcwhat.
it has realty done fairly welt, exceptionally well considcnng
the slow lumber market in all other lines. The only t'hlug
that has done better has heen quartcrd oak, and that \\ a;;
in lumber instead of yen('Cl". It has been a little difficci1t
to understand why <-luartere(( oak has /)e('11 in such g·oad
demand "vhile quartered oak veneer has been rather slow.
It is probably because there have been other prominent calls
for quartered lumber Qutside of the furniture nnd building
trades p~oper. So 011e seems to he able to ex.plain hO\\'
it happened that the piano trade has kept up practically to
its normal during the full period,
Probably it was because it would have been ctlormonsly
big had the counLy continued to prosper in the old way,
and is really small in proportion t.o what it would have heen
and yet large compared to the demand for furniture. l-'iano
manufacturers, of COUI·se, have been running: it little COI1-
servative and not buying as eTlthusiastically as thcy would
if times were better, bttt for all that .it is said tJ);lt they ball
I•
a splendid year. T'j,e furniture trade is now showil1g sign"
of recovery; the foreign trade has been pretty slow.-Ex.
A Mighty Cast.
John \Vaddcll. ]nesic!cnt of the vVaddell Manufactnri;:\.s
Company \-\'Ot1 tbe clWlllpiollShip of the fly caste~s assoe.ia-
John Waddell.
tion of the Unrted Slate,s recently. He cast a salmon fly
127 feet and eight inches, defeating Perry D. Frazer, the-ho1c.
ler of the medal. IvL \Vaddell is justly proud of the
trophy.
24 MICHIGAC'J ARTISAN
Unsound Business Conditions.
"The commercial traveler has it within his power to go
the limit, yielding or not to the temptation of the grafting
buyer and to the demand for exceessive time allowances for
payment, hoth of which arc symptoms of unsound business
conditions. These can be curtailed by the salesman them-selves
in many instances, and with their competitors acting
in good faith along the same lines, can be eliminated en-tirely,"
said Henry Clews, in an address to a convention of
tTaveling salesman. Continuing, Iv1r. Clews said:
"1 can ~ot11ing in the immediate future," declared the
banker, "but what is promising, and our business s<':tb;u;:~(
last year should be considered merely as a passing cloud
to he followed by national prosperity still greater than before.
The time has now come to cheer up and be brave in OUr
business undertakings. Hereafter, day by day, we will be
able to more clearly see the Phoenix arising from the' ashes
of the recent panic."
Just at present many of the smaller merchants in our
country are like setting hens, and will lay no golden eggs.
Shoo t11em off their nests and compel them to get busy.
Money is plentiful and will be for a long time to come. En-courage
them to get into debt. They are overcautious now
and W~H1to be prodded a little. Down in \Vall Street we
have all waked up during the past few weeks, and the troubles
of last,year are but a nightmare. \Vall Street has always
been the barometer of trade, and I believe it foretells great
activity in the commercial world during the coming months.
New Yorkers who recently went to the Denver COll-vention
and did some traveling in Kansas during their trip
had theirey':es opened to the conditions prevailing in that
section of the country. They report the farmers as almost
all havi1tg <1utomobiles to go to market in, thus showing
their affiueJ¥ ';condition-and why not? They have had
those eYend~l eight years of bountiful crops, which they
have soId at_high prices, so that the strongest backlog that
this co'i!ntry)w.s today against a continuation of panicky or
depres~ed cooditions is the wealth of our farmers, who rep-resentthirtrfive
per cent of thc labor class of the nation.
The indust;pJ'nl manufacturers of this country represellt
twenty-five percent of the, rabor class, who have enjoyed
equal prosperity with the farmers except during the past
year. These two great interests represent sixty per cent of
the labor class, almost two-thirds of the whole popUlation."
The Retailer's Side.
The puhlic in general believes that no merchants have
right to combine to prevent price cutting. They argue that
if a man can sell lower than another he is the better mer-chant.
In some few cases this is true hut as a rule the
price-cutter is not making money. He is not demonstrating
his merchantilc ability, but is merely ruining himself and all
his brother merchants. \Vhen that is the situation, mer"
chandising is being injured seriously, and a momentary ad-vantage
is heil1g gained for the public. It will surely change,
and the public will be oblige(l to pay for it all in full measure.
The retailer has a right to his fair profit, and he has a legiti-mate
fight to wage in preventing methods which bid fair to
do harm only. Price cutting is the ill wind that blows nO·
body good.-Oregon Tradesman.
Sanitary Furniture.
Something entirely new in furniture for combination day
coaches and sleepers for railroads and for hotels and general
use will be mallt.tfacturcd by the Sanitary Furniture and Car
Seat Company, which will establish a factory, giving e.m-ployment
to twenty-five men in Spokane. A Sekyra is pres-ident
of the company, the secretary being N. H. Douchette.
Mr. Sykra said: ,ql\le have organized a stock company
with a capitalization of $100,000 divideJ into 100,000 shares
of $1.00 par value and non-assessable, for the. purpose of
manufacturing our patented c.ombination sleeping car and
day coach beds, which are especially adapted for electric
railway cars. Our inventions consist of furnishing for .all
ordinary day coach which can be converted into a sleeping
car 011 short notice, making compartments with plenty of
air and comfort which we all know the old-style sleeping
car lacks, and when wanted for day use all the heavy ob-structions
and stuffy parts disappear, making a fine sani-tary
day coach with plenty of air. OUT inventions are a150
adapted for use in hotels, lodging houses, private homes,
steamboats and every lllac,e there is use for nice, sanitary
beds and the use of the same space in the day time is wanted.
\\Fe have other lines in connection with the foregoing."
Will Erect a Warehouse.
Twenty-five thousand dollars will be expended by Cohn
Br.others, of Spokane, on a three-story furniture warehouse.
The structure will be of brick and stone and cover 100 by HlO
feet. It will be in two sections, the first to be built this
fall and completed next spring. It will contain 30,000 feet
of floor space> equipped with elevators and a modern sprink-ler
system with other means fo;' fire protection. The firm
will do the building by day labor to push it to completion.
J. Cohn, buyer for the fi.rm, has just returned from Grand
Rapids, St Louis and Chicago, where he bought $50,000
worth of goods for fall delivery. H. Cohn says that the
year so far has been the best in the two years the firm has
been in business in Spokane, "and,"he added, "the next
twelvemonths we believe will exceed anything in Spokane
history as the oevelopement of the state of Washington is
phenomenal. During the next two years Spokane should
add 40,000 to the population. We have every reason to
believe that before the close of 1910 the hopes of the 150,000
club will have been realized." ~• --_._-------------..
Mr. Manufacturer:: Do You ever CQnsider what joint 81uW&" com? The
repaatDn and wooden wedges. if you use lhem and many do, are a large item of
expense accolUllsj but this is tn:IaD compared to wqe accounts of workmen who wear
them out with a bllIQJIlel'.and then a lafie per celll of tbe ;mnts are faiIures by tbe
insecwitr of this meam. RE5UL T. it hat to be done over agaill. if poSsible. H you
Qge iJldependent screw clamps the result is bettet. but slower. a1to~tbertoo slow. Let
lIS IelI you of something bettet, PALMER'S CLAMPS. AU aleel and iron. No
wedies, no separators, adjust!<) any width. clamp ini!lantly yet .eeurely. releases even
faster. Poeitively one-third more work with Dnt!l-third kSlI help. In seven tizes up !<)
60 inches, any thiclness Up 1(12 inches. 200 factoriet in 1906. Why Mt you in
1908 ? Alth<!u2h sold by dealers everywhere let UI. $CIlQ you palticulan.
1\. E. Palmer & Sons. Owosso. MIGh.
FOREIGN AGENTS: ProieclileCo.. London, EnsJand.
Sehuebardl & Schutte. Berlin. Gennany;
<-- -
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MICHIGAN ARTISAN
lOG. 110.112
I norl~Division Sf. ~ ..~~ ~~
Oran~Ra~i~s
lOG, 110,112
norl~Division Sf. I
Orand napMs
OUR BUILDING
Michigan Engraving Company :: White Printing Company
Michigan Artisan Company
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BIND
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Erected by White Printing Company, Grand Rapids. 1907.
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BIN
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26 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
III
I
No. 20. COMMQDE BUTTON. NO.21. DFlAWER I(NOB.
SCHOOLS TAKE UP VOCATIONAL WORK.
Increased Industrial Training to be Prescribed for All Boys
of Twelve or More.
\Vitbil1 two weeks New York will begin its experiment in
vocational training, regarded by educators as the most impor-tant
innovation introduced in the public schools in many
years.
"As the armor of the Middle Ages would be wholly in-adequate
to resist- the modern build, so the ancient equip-ment
of the three R's is totally inadequate to equip the
coming generation fOf. the place that they must take in our
essentially industrial civilization," declared Commissioner
Frederic R. Coudert, Chairman of the Special Committee 011
Trade Schools, in his repoft urging a trial of fhe experiment.
Commissioner Coudert and his commttee. who gave
nearly six months of study to the situation in New York,
say that the educational institutions of the city have not
adapted themselves to the new conditions forced upon the
people in the last two-score years by the vast changes re-sultant
from the applications of science to industry. To
meet the new problems and to place industrial training
within the reach of boys and girls who do not wish to enter
the professions or have not the aptitude or the opportunity
to do so, the board of education, following out the plan
suggested by its committee, has decided upon a twofold
action.
Effort will be made to improve the efficiency of the pres-ent
system already i1).operation in the schools by reorgan-izing
the manual training from a vocational point of view,
so that it may bear a direct relation to the industrial effi-ciency
of pupilE/ when they leave schooL
The city has" 110W a great many schools without work-shops,
i.n which there are boys in the seventh and eighth
years. The board 'I;\.'iltintroduce workshops in SUdl schools
throughout the city as rapidly as possible, adding to the
tools now in use a turning lathe, combination saw and
grinder. It is expected by this means to develop higher
forms .of work than now attempted and to familiarize the
older pupils with simple power machinery.
As not a fe"'" boys reach the age of fourteen a11d are
obliged to go to work befo,·e entering the sixth year, as is
often the case on the upper and lower east sides, it is plan-ned
also to give them early knowledge of the use of as many
tools as possible and the advantages of shopwork. Just
how this can be done has not been whol1y worked out.
Some members of the board of education think it would
be wise to curtail the time now given to the ordinary sub-jects
of the common school curriculum, while other" say
this would not be done. but that the additional time for
shop work may he found by opening tile shops between
In Maple, Birch. Oak or Mahogany.
High grade. Nicely sanded.
Choice of futenings.
Write for catalogue and sampLes.
Henry Rowe Mfg. Co.,
NEWAYGO. MICH.
th ~ee and five o'clock each afternoon, on Saturday morn-ings.
and, if necessary, in the evenings. Those favoring
the latter plan argue that this will not be injurious as the
use of tools involves the exercise of a great number of
muscles not usually employed by a boy, and manual train-ing
has always been popular with the boys.
The board purposes to open special schools for boys ill
the secondary ninth and tenth school years which shalt give
training for particular vocations 0_· industries. Several
types of these schools are to be organized, the course in
each to be two years in length, the pupils to be those who
have graduated Lom the public elementary schools or have
reached the age .of fourteen and arc prepared to undertake
the required work. A genera.l course will be prescribed
to be taken by all the pnpils up to a certain 'point, and after
that, a variety of industrial courses will be offered, anyone
of which may be selected by the students on entrance.
The board docs not expect these vocational schools to
graduate journeyrr,cn or skilled mechanics, but to give the
pupils skill in the use of tools and a knowledge of those
processes and principles underlying constructive work, so
that the pupil" may be able to apply the knowledge thus
gained to definite and concrete p:-oblems. It is also hoped
to do away, to a certain extent, with the situation created
by the specialization in industries whieh has rendered it 50
difficult for "t young man to learn anyone trade completely.
The board will establish additional night schools, primarily in-tended
for young men al eady en:raged ::tS apprcntjc~s in
trarles. Two such schools <He now in operation, one in
l.. ong Island City and the other i:l Brooklyn, and it is
proposed that a third shalt be established this session in the
Stuyvesant high school building, where there is already
adequate equipment for the work.
Girls are also to share in this industrial education. As
there is at p esent no sewing taught in the seventh and
eighth years, it is pointed out by the commissioners that
much the girls have already learned about sewing is for-gotten
before they graduated. The boa~d will therefore
introduce sewing as a required subject in all girls' schools
where there are seventh and eighth yea,' classes, and wilt
open in Brooklyn a separate vocational school for girls be-tween
fourteen and sixteen.-Ncw York Times.
j
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Reedcraft Furniture.
E. E. Dryden, for many yea.rs known to the trade as a
commercial designer. with a residence in G. and ~ap:ds, is
engaged in the manufacture of "Reedcraft" ft<rniture in San
Francisco. The name adopted suggests reed furnitur'~,
although Mr. Dryden says his processes aT.' ':0vered by
letters patent.
:cllCHIGAN
Freight Often Goes Asttay.
"VVhy in blazes haven't you filled our order of August! ?'.
writes the illdig1lallt customer who has bought of the Chicngo
wholesale honse.
"What in blazes did yOll do ,vith flur shipment of August
2, billed to SO-;:IllCl-so, Skagtnwn?" writes the wholesale
house to the ng-ellt at tJ](, railroad depot f:OIn which the
goods should have been sent.
"'vVhat in blazes arc t,Tor(':~-()ods, Packingcase & Co. kick-ing
about?" wriu's the St2tiOll agent to the claim tlcpartml'l1t
of the railroad at head(jll<l. ters.
After which the claim clerk of the railroad gets busy.
For the lost, ~Lay('d, or stolen shipment wbich doesn't
arrive costs a railroad company more \\'or;'y and bother than
all the wrecked goods knocked Railey \\'est from crooked.
I\t least ill case of wreek the railroad knows 'INhere to look
for dalnagc."i 1n the case of the lost shipment everything
is gttess\vork as to how, when, and ·where of it.
How does a package of freight get lost? The ways are
multitudinous, Tn general there ;>;'c threc main possibilitics.
It is loaJ.ell llltO the wrong car; or t1,('. gaOl\::; have been
packed in a box at second hand, leaving the old stencil mark
standi.ng out plainly as lH~\"';01' the w<iybiH blow;::, out of the
band of t:,e train conductor Lom the rear end of the caboo5e,
is mislaid by the stati.on agent at the receiving point, or
disappears goodness knows how or l,V!lCIl.
::.\attFally, the tl"llCkm;!ll \\·ho earns his bread loading
freight ;~ta depot. i.~ll't fitted for m;:lIlaging either it Sunday
school or a wholesale business house. He l02ds sluff Oil
a trtlck. trundles it out. on the platfo:-m, and wants t.o <l11m;J
it as soon as pos"ible in the ·waiting: car. But there may
be twenty or lift.y C,lrs to he loaded, headed for every point
of t.he compass. A long car mllnhe~, snell as 179t567, stand-ing;
close to a car cumbered SG797 is likely to be confusillg to
hi1ll-'-<lnd a pnckag-e or a truck load of them get into the
wrong pC\v.
"\'\"h;lt. in blaxes became of that "hipmellt of Angust 2?"
i" started at once.
Cars at these platforms may have been loaded for Jive
big terminal stations on the line and at such distances apart
that a travelilLg claim clerk would need to spend a \veek
visiting Hlem all. So the claim clerk starts it tr:J.ce:· through
means of correspondence. H.as ally ag"Cllt at any of these
station:> checked one pack;lge "over," billed to John Smith
& Company, Skagtowl1?
Just here tIle enreless shipper, using the o1.d packing case
from which the old address has not been removed, may
<':-lIt,·,: into tb(' myst.ery,
"No," reports the agent from .:\Tilledg·eville, far to the
<;ontlw,'est. "But w<.:- ;\l-t; 'over' one package addressed to
\Villianl Jones & Company, Jonesville."
\\'ell, tkl.t doesn't 111can nltlch to the clai\11 ckp<l.rtment,
f01" Jones & Company haven't. raised a row abDut anything
of the kind. \Vhat has become of the stuff for Smith &
Company: \nd tlw claim departmcnt gets busier thall
evcr,
[n the I1H',llltiI1le the agent at. }Iilledgeville is holding t],e
Joncs & Company shilJlpellt, for the reason that it had no
bill of lading ,,\ccomp:1l1ying it and he doesn't wan't to for-ward
it unt.il he knows \vhether it was prepaid or for col-lection
at dcstillntioll.
[n mally depots on many lines of road there is an "over"
1'00111 0" corner in the building devoted to the storage of
such p<lckages After a few (];-\ys the package for Jones
& Company Ends its \va,Y into this "ovc:r' room,'3!:;tn(}'tl,s
m.arked side up I"eady for the first ~~l.il of the traye!iug
clerk, ,,1.'110 !Hay be sent (lown the line in .se:Fcll of such
claims.
One day, lrrlt;lted and stn 'millg, the claim ilgent comes
into the depot ill search of the missing Smith & C')I11P.:ll1Y
package:, The Jones & Company case is there plain enough,
J
~
ARTISAN 27
but in the rest of the heaped up matter nothing is
the Smith & Company'S missing cOllsignmcnt,
perhaps, the claim agent kicks over the JOlles &
case. And there 011 the bottom of the box as
reads;
found of
In anger,
Company
it. sat he
* * * * * * * * * * * *
* SMITH & CO .. *
* SKAGTOW:\" MlCH. *
* " * * * * '" * * * * *
Do you wondel' that the claim agent swears, and the
claim orflce s\vears and the shipper s\vears, and the con-signee.
too? But the chid fault .,vas with the shipper, who
didn't destroy the old marking on the box before he packed
it again.
Loading a shipment into a wrong car always has been a
prolific source: of trouble to t.he claim department, Yea!""s
ago J. F . .:\10I"tOll, now with the Chicago Association of
Sketch by Oharles De Lana, Student in the Grand Rapids
School of Furniture Designing.
Corml1('rce, W"S agent for the Siltltbern Railway at Col-umbia,
S. c., and, suffering from this f:equent. errOl" of
t \lCknWH, adoph'd a SChel\.le to \HC-vent l11.istak(',s. Incident-ally,
1lot all of t.he trouble came to the claim department,
either, for it \Va" uo UllC0111tTHJll thing to discoV('T an error
had 1)(.. '('11 made with certain freight that had been lO<lded
11rst into ,1 ca;' and \",hell the ('nor \<va;:; di;:;covered t:·lE~ car
was already nearly full.
.:\1r. Morton's scheme was to disregard the ofllcial number
of e,lrs tbd stood ready for loadil1g and to number them
COlbl'Cl1ti\"cly' from one up t.o seven or f.\:velve, as tfle case
might demand. As each truckman received his load he
was handed a slip of paper on \vhich was written the number
of the car to which it should go, At right augles to the:
car was post.ed a board all which from either side the temp-
Ol",ll":r "imple Humber could be read by t~'c truckman. In-side
the car was posted a block of printe:d t.ickets coriespoud-ing
to tlle car number outside. The dnty of the truckman
\\-·;)s to retain his penciled slip, unload his truck, teal' off
one of the p intecl numbers inside, and return, handing both
slips to the forC111'l.n superilltending the loading.
Joseph Howells,
28 MICHIGAN
THE LONDON WORKMAN.
by W. J. Blackmur.
Generally his name is Bill. Call out Bill in a London
crowd, and three out- of six men will turn sharply to see
who wants them.
Now to really think of the London workman, you must
always disassocia.te your mind from any idea that he is at all
like John Bull, that he is portly, has an upright bearing, looks-every-
man-in-thc-face kind of mantler, and that he carries <1,
stick, or turns up his trousers. That may be the way of
the aristocratic English youth who adorns New "York with
his presence, but London Dill, dees not trouhle about a little
mud round the bottom of his trousers.
At six in the morning, tllC priJ1cipal railway termini are
crowded by men who have just arrived in London from the
suburbs by the workman"s trains. They hurry out of the
station, all with dead set faces, very few speaking to any
one else, ,",,"ithtrue English reserve, they are in units, instead
of groups in making up the crowd. The carly trains arc
filled principally with the artisan, mechanic and laboming
c:las5, The hours of commencing work range from six, six
thirty to seven for nearly all the manual and mechanical
t~ades; the passengers ,...h.ich come by the chea.p '\o....orkmc!l,
after seven o'clock, are composed of warehouse-men, and
others engaged in clerical labor, who would indignantly
refuse to be labelled by the title of workmen, although
this class indignantly deny that they are "Yorkmen, but are
officjals with weekly salaries, and not wages; they do not
refuse to take advantage of the cheap trains which are run
solely for the con\'eHi~~nce of workmcn. The <lrtiS<ln or
mechanic, with his nine or ten dollars a week, looks on those
officials with a half patronizing, hLif contemptuous a.ir and
shakes his coins in his pocket, knowing that he does not
have to provide clothing for a stockhroker, out of a salary
which is equal to half that of a mechanic. Indeed in some
works, this idea i;:;carried to such an extent, that the officials,
those who are engaged in the cle:lcal work, are not allowed
to speak beyond business affairs with the workmen. This
is a source of great fun to the workman, who, in receipt of
greater wages, laughs at the poses t:~.kenby the poor officials
who drive their pen OVCT the paper.
"Penpusher" i:.; quite a word of contempt, and w"hen a
workman comes into contact with the poorly paid official
it follows that the dignity of that pe~SOl1 is considerably
hurt by the process. Y (in can imagine it, one man in
clothes ,bearing the grill:e of toil, quick~wjtted and rude, the
other ilt fed, yet well clothed, <inHering from striving to keep
up a position on a small SU111, and with a sense of inferiority
to the workman at the b:,.ck of his brain to Loonent him.
Not only is the London ,vorkman keen to ruh his ,",,"its
against the oflicial but he cares very little who comes into
conflict with his 5ha. p tonguc. Ask him about the boss,
and he \vill candidly tell you that the bl1siness is not run as
he would .rttn it. Of course, there i~ a huge profit, the mall
who is emplQying him is coining money. Hc can prove it.
Yes the first fruits of the Education Acts has heen used by
the workmcn to cetlculate the profLts of his employers, and yet
strange to say, al:cl it seen",s aln:ost all anomaly, he wilt in-variably
reckc'l up his wages with the help of a ready
reckoner.
\Vhen the London lad has passed the fifth standard, and
he is fourteen, he is ready to take his place in the world, and
if he is fortunate, will pick up some trade or craft by which
he may gain his living. At the present time, the apprentice
system in England is almost dead. There- are so few
apprentices, that it '''ould seem as if the various craits would
die out were'it not that meJ] and youths enter them in various
ways. Still, although the trades arc heing recruited by
untrained helpers, there are an enormous number of lads
working on machines, or forming links in the process of
manufacturing articlcs, who will be thrown upon the labor
ARTISAN
market when they have reached manhood, without even the
hard muscles for manual labor to help them to get a living.
Their work is boys work, and the ever growing- army of boys
wilt take their place as the others reach manhood, In some
cases parents will apprentice their sons, and in proportion to
their income pay a large premium, In one or two instances
under my own notice hays have been apprenticed to shop
titting and joillcry. A sum of twenty pounds was paid, and
for the first year, the lad was kept busy pushing a truck,
taking goods from the workshop to their destination. Out
in all weathers, and with l~ot a cent letun:ed during the first
year as wages, this was not an ideal bC6'inr!lllg for a lad.
The truth was, that the employ2r wanted tl-.e pren-.ium, and
madc things as unpleasant as he could for the boys, till th:::y
(luitted the works, <lnd he was able to take on oth~rs, and
obtain another pren~il1m.
vVhen the Lordoil workman has mastered his trade. a:~d
he is able to comn~al1d trade union rates, he become;;; very
independent. As Lor;don is some twenty miles wide from
Ilford to .ActOll, from Enfield to Croydon, it follows that
there are a large Dumb:':'r of men who do not go home to
dinner. 1\11 over Locdo:l are coffee stalls, in some places
near thc stations there are two or three. In thc winter
each has a huge coke fire blazing <l\vay in a devil by the
side of the stall, which is a huge box upon wheels, it cloor
at the back, at:d with half the front ·opening and f0<'l11ing
the coullter. The coffee and tea is kept hot over a small
coke fire, amI' the brasswork on the urns is most dazzling
bright. On three or four dishes arc varieties of cakes, and
bread and butter, jam and marmalade.
Every ",iorkll1an stops and has a cup of toffee, which is
served boiling hot, and a slice of currant cake "better than
mother makes," as the coffee stall man will facetiously
say. The bread '<Uld butter is only bought by the very old
men, who disdain cakes or pastry. None of the men walt
f()r the coffee to cool, but poor it into the saucer, blow it.
then sip it with great gusto. Indeed on a cold mornin~,
with a west wind blowing which chills one to the bone,
there are n~al~y worse beverages than cven thi5 coffee. A
workman would lose a quarter or two hours, sooner than
miss his coffee. Indeed the London workman has a g~eat
idea of what is necessary to keep him in perfect condition.
He knows wl1<tthe wants and he gets it.
Those wl,o work too far from home have to go to the
coffee shop for their meats. .As an institution, the London
coffee shop is pcculiarly a growth of the great city from the
Dickens period. Tl:e shop is generally Ol,e with the door
in the cener, a few illustrated picfUTt:S, milch fly blown in
the window. and with seYt~:al vegdables and joints below
These are the uncooked dishes to tempt the epicures of
workmen to come next day and feast off the tasty morsels.
At eight in the n~ornil1g there is a rush into the coffee shop;
the mcn hayc been at work since six o'clock. They are
hungry, h",.ve but little time to spare, and ,vant their coffee
or te"l as SOOlJ as they sit down. Then they must have their
relish. y ~'S a workman would as soon think of going to;)
church in Lis working clothes as to go witho'ut his relish.
"Two and a bloater," "Pair and three," "Three and half,"
"Two and a rasher and three of tea, lllissis, and look bloominoS
sharp," "Two of jam and half a soused mackerel." 'Ere
Liza, bring us up my tea. Do you think I'm a stuffr:d dummy?"
Liza has a retort which is cutting, and attracts the attention
of the shop,
Just a little explanation about the orders. Slices of
bread and butter arc either named as a number or called
"doorsteps." Then a number combined with a rasher, Lel!~
,,,hat eggs are required. Three of tea means, three cents
worth. Two of jam, and the relish of half a soused mac~-
erel to eat with it is not at all unusual. Indeed some men
will eat the most strange mixtures with the greatest pleas-ure.
The coffee, kippers, bread a'nd rashers arc rapidl>"
---------------------------------
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 29
r----------;;~;;_~PECIALTV --j
I BIRD'S EYE MAPLE I
I
, (MadE and dried right, and wltile. Samples furnished on application. ) t
500,000 ft. 1-20 inch Quarter Sawed Oak carried in stock. Come in and see it. Birch aDd Poplar I crossbanding and rotary cut Oak. Birch, Maple, Basswood, Poplar and Gum Drawer Bottoms.
PROMPT DELIVERY. ALL PRIME STOCK. I
FIGURED WOODS. MAHOGANY. WALNUT. QTR. SAWED OAK. BIRCH. I
I I HENRY . HOLDEN VENEER CO I L .::.:~~~ER ST., GRAND_R_A_P_ID__MS__I, C_H_. . s "J
served out. and ill about lihecn minutes the meJ1 haY(; de-voured
their breakfast, and go outside for a smoke. They
would not miss the opportunity for a whiff for worlds, "iNert
those huge globes presentables <to,; substitute:;,
At half past eight another gang of workmen rush in, who
breakfast haJi hour latcr than the others; usually these men
arc those wl"lo start at seven o'clocK.
The coffee shop cle:1Ts and until twelve it only receives
stray cust'lll1ers, snell as carmen. At twelve the bnilding
and allied tr;\(\es go to dinner. The bed which laid in the
morning sun yesterday, has hCCll :::;tewed and baked, :\ncl is
now one of the joints 011. The u\'crage shop n1tl5 two
joint:" beet ;\i,d n,utto\\. Bed freshly conked one day, mut-ton
the llext. If yOIl \\'ill tip Liza, she wi1l tell yon the day,
so yon lvill be .able to avoid the reheated meat. Besides
the two joints. there ~11"e,dW£lYS steak puddings. These are
always ill stock. Let me whispu thM the steak is the beef
or mntton which is tlcsuJd on the third clay, £lnd is v.rorked
IIp into steak pudding, or "babies heads," to l1se their commOn
name. Stewed steak is also a favorite dish o£ the workman.
This \17i11appear 8.bout Tuesday and Fridays'. Lizu will
tell you if you tempt hel-, that the amount of ste\\, is ob-tained
by lHlrboiling the beef and mutton to get more stock
as well as to make the meat tender. T"vo vegetables and a
cut from the joint tor twelvc cents is the average price. A
fel<vof the coffee shops 11<l\'C a p
- Date Created:
- 1908-09-10T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 29:5
- 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/180