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- Michigan Artisan; 1905-08-10
Michigan Artisan; 1905-08-10
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and '"
Twenty-sixth Year-No 3 AUGUST 10. 1905 Semi.Monthly
FOREMEN
SUPERINTENDENTS
SALESMEN
we want to teach you by mail our system of
FURNITURE DESIGN
Weare proud of the results of our
school, and the quahty of the work
our students are turning out. Write
for full particulars.
THE ONLY SCHOOL IN THE WORLD TEACHING ROD MAKING AND
STOCK BlLUNG WITH THE REGULAR COURSE.
Grand Rapids School of Furniture Design
ARTHUR KIRKPATRICK, Pwprietor.
543 Houseman Building, Grand Rapids, Mich.
"GI LLETTE"
If "almost anything win do" in trucks they can be had "almost anywhere" and at "almost any price.
If on the other hand the demand is for "the best" in trucks as in other things - for a compact and
strongly built, all steel and malleable iron frame- for malleable iron wheels carefully bored
and reamed to secure a perfect bearing surface - for a practical and effective roller
bearing which is neither a freak. a failure nor an infringement - it can be. met
only by the purchase of the Gillette trucks. Made in but one quality-the
best, and in all types and sizes. Prices reasonable.
TRUCKS
of all kinds
for factory
and kiln
purposes.
Carts for
milland yard
use.
VEHICLE
, AXLES III square,
coach bed
and "round.
in all sizes
from I 10
3 inches
6 FOOT TRUCK FOR CROSS-WISE: PIL.ING
GILLETTE ROLLER BEARING CO.
GRAND
PATE.NTEES AND SOLE MANUFACTURE:AS
U. S. A.
WHEELER'S PATENT WOOD
RAPIDS, MICHIGAN,
.........-----"TRUCKS"--------
THE BRIDGEPORT WOOD FINISHING CO.-New Milford. Conn.
F I L L E R Forms a _permanent fnunrlation. Brings out the full life and beaut v of the
wood. Goes further and saves labor and material, hence cheaper than
other fillers.
55 Fulton St •• New York. 79 W.lake St., Chicago. 231 Dock'St .. Philadelphia.
SPARTAN PASTE FILLER
Made in Marietta.
A High Grade Article in Every Respect, possessing qualities that put it easily
ahead of other fillers from the fineness and character of the
ingredients that make up its composition.
We produce this in all of the leading shades, including our
FAMOUS GOLDEN OAK
IMITATION QUARTERED OAK
TRY OUR SPECIAL FILLERS AND STAMPING INKS
We are producing-the goods of this nature that brin/{ results to perfection. Sample our Fillers
No. 800 and No.810 and our Inks Nos. 5, 6 and 11. .
In OIL STAINS, remember, we lead! Our Golden Oak and Mahogany Stains stand
without a rival. Write us for samples and full information.
The Marietta Paint and Color Co.
MARIETTA.0Ii10.
TO THE TRADE:
We have purchased the business of the Benedict Furniture Clamp
Company of this city, including all patents, patterns, machinery and
stock owned by them, and we will continue the business under our
own name.
We will be prepared to furnish any of the Benedict Clamps and
other devices made under the Benedict patents after August 15th.
The addition of the Benedict line gives us the most complete line
of factory furnishings on the market. Every furniture factory should
have our new catalog, which will be out September 1st. Write for
a copy of it.
GRAND RAPIDS HAND SCREW CO.
Bartlett and Ionia Streets, Grand Rapids, Mich.
I,
Wood-Working
Machinery
and Supplies
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Veneer Presses, all kinds and sizes Hand Fel!'d GlueingMac:hine. (Patent
pending,) Eigbt Styles and Sizes.
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc.. Etc. Power Feed Glue Spreading Machine. (PatE'nt
8.pplied for). Single, double and combiuation LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
419-421 E. Eighth St.
-C"AS. E. fRANCIS s.. BRO.D CINCINNATI, O. No. 20 Glue Heater
No.6 Glue Heater
The Pittsburg Plate Glass Company
~lANUF.-\CTURRRS AND JOfWBRS OF
Plain and Beveled Mirrors, Bent Glass for China Cabinets
Plate Glass for Desks, Table Tops and Shelves
Our facilities for supplying furniture manufacturers will be understood when we state that we have 10 Glas.'i factories, extending
from Pennsylvania to Missouri; and 13
Mirror plants, located as follows: Also, our 22 jobbina houses carry heavy stocks in all lines of "lass, paints. varnishes and brushes:
and are located in the cities named below:
New York Boston Phlla.delphia.
But'falo Cincinnati St. Louis
Minneapolis Atlanta Kokomo. Ind.
Ford City. Pa. High Point. N. C.
Davenport Crystal City, Mo.
NEW YORK-Hudson aud Vandam Streets.
BOSTO~-41-49 Sudbury St., 1-9 BowkeT 5t.
CHICAGO-442-4,52 Wabash A\·euue.
CINCINNATI-Broadway and Court Streets.
ST. LOUIS-Cor, Izth and St Charles Streets.
MINNEAPOLIS-,500-5IO S. Third Street
DETROIT -53-55 Larned Street E
PITTSBURGH-mt-to::, \VOQrl StTeet.
MIL WAUKEE, WIS.-492-494 Market Stred.
ROCHESTER, N. Y,-Wilder Rllilding, Mflin
and Exchange Sts.
HALTIMORE-22I-223 W. Pratt Street.
BUFF ALO-372-4-6-8 Pearl Street.
BROOKLYN -635 and 637 Fulton Street.
PHILADELPHIA-Pitcairn Building, Arch and
Eleventh Streets. , ,
DAVENPORT-4Io-416 Scott Street.
CLEVELAND-149*5i-53 Selleca Street.
OMAHA-I008-1o-U Harney Street.
ST. P AUL-34l.r51 Minnesota Stt"eet.
ATLANTA, GA.-so, 32 and 34 S. Pryor Street.
SAVANNAH, GA.-745-749 Wheaton Street.
KANSAS CITY-Fifth and Wyandott Sts.
BIRMINGHAM, ALA.-2nd A,-e. aud 29th St.
It needs no argument to show what
advantages may be derived from dealing
directly with us.
AGENTS FOR THE COULSON PATENT CORNER POSTS AND BATS.
Indianapolis. Indiana
Write lor Information, Prices Etc.
The Universal Automatic
CARVINO MACHINE
'-= PERFORMS THE WORK OF 25 HAND
CARVERS
And does the Work Better than it can be Done b~ Hand
=======~MADE BY
Union [noosslna MA(U1nr(0.
1
,.....-------------------
2
26th Year-No.3. GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.. AUGUST 10. 1905.
Manufacturers Misrepresented in Congress.
A question that is often asked is, whether manufacturers
are adequately represented in congress. It is a question that
manufacturers, as often answer in the negative, emphaticany
in the negative. Every time nominations for congressmen
are to be made, the query is circulaled among manufacturers
as to what man among them is fit and able to represent them,
to look after their tlltere'6ts in the hom,e. as they would them-
!'ielves look after the interests of their own business. Over
and over again the question has been put, and over and over
again manufacturers-whose great and varied interests re-quire
men of the very first calibre to look afteT them-have
been met 'I\lith the same difficulties. Almost invariably it has
been found that there is no man in the community ·who is
both willing and able to represcnt them in congress.
The natural, but no less unsatisfactory result or this is that
a makeshift is llomillated and elected. It is illcomprehensible
how such a state of things can be tolerated. As a body, man-ufacturers
are a powerful set of men, intellectually and finan-cially,
and yet, year after y('.ar, their intcrests ate flagrantly
misrepresented. T f ample proof of this were not in evidence.
it ·would only be necessary to turn to such a question as the
present aprarent impotence of manufacturers to free alcohol
required for industrial purposes {roul the import duties and
inland revenue taxes that at present hamper the development
of that commodity a5 a powerful agent in extending and
broadening a number of important industries in which alcohol
is extensively used. Congressmen whose powers of intelli-gence
can perceive no distinction beh ..·.ecn the vastly diffcrent
purposes for which alcohol can be used, and who are willing
to sit still and givc their tacit consent to the equal taxation of
alcohol, whether it be [or drinking purposes or for industrial
uses; or who diHcgard the calls of manufacturers for the re-vision
of the tariff regulations on lumber and glass, and other
articles whose taxation holds back important American in-dustries,
such men, we think, show themselves to be lac.king
in the first principles of statescraft, and at the next elections
a supreme effort should be made to turn them out of their
high places to make room {or abler and more progressive rep-resentatives
of the manufacturers, with whose interests those
o{ the people are so closely bound up.
Stalwart champions of right and progress should be sought
out, and at the time of election manufacturers should combine
in a united endeavor to get the right men into congress as
their represcntatives. The power of the manufacturers has
been little realized, or used. That power should be brought
out and demonstrated. During the campaign of 1896, manu-facturers
roused themselves to some extent. Bnt it would
seem that that campaign, commendable as it was, almost ex-hausted
their energies. Since that time manufacturers have
retired within the walls of their factories, and, as a gentleman
expressively put it the other day, have gone off to sleep agatl1.
Let them be warned in time, else, too late, their somnolenCe
will be disturbed and, yawning with discontent at the results
of the elections in which they have taken so small a share,
they will find that many of the old incompetents, an{l a nnm-
$1.00 per Year.
ber of new incompetents, have been duly elected, and that
manufacturing interests will have about as rosy a prospect
of being properly looked after as they have at the present
time.-Buffalo 1\Jal1ufactmer.
Furniture Exposition in Prague.
Consul Ledoux, of Prague, Austria-Hungary, reports that
the exposition committee of the Association of Cabinetmakers
of Prague and suburbs invites the co-operation of foreign ex-hibitors
for their exposition of furniture and kindred manu-fectures,
to be held at the Industrial palace from August 20
to September 30. Under the supervision o{ the Technological
museum of Prague, a special international technical depart-ment
is to be established, comprising motors, woodworking
machinery o{ all kinds, cabiI1etmakers' and jointers' tools of
all kinds and appliances, metal fittings and decorations, fur-niture
coverings of cloth and leather, varnished and half-fin-ished
materials used by joiners and cabinetmakers. Patents
and new inventions and processes for these trades wilt receive
particular attention. Mr. Arthur Gobiet, of Prague-Karolin-enthal,
Bohemia, has been appointed agent of the exposition,
and is prepared to represent foreign exhibitors and to furnish
all desired information. The exhibition is held under the
patronage of the Chamber of Commerce of Pragu'e.
THE CORRECT
Stains and fillers.
THE MOST
SATISFACTORY
first Coaters and
Varnishes
MANUFAr:TURCD DlfLY 8 Y
CHICAGO WOOD FINISHING CD.
Z59·63 ELSTONAVE.'" Z·16 SLOAN ST.
CHI CACO.
WADDELL ~~~A~!A~TUM~~~~u~~:
FURNITURE ORNAMENTS IN WOOD 220 PAGE CATALOGUE; NEARLY 15()()ILLUSTRATIONS, l\WLED ON RECEIPT OF 15 CENTS INSTAMPS
LABORERS' INSURANCE IN FOREIGN COUNTRIES.
Twelve Countries of Europe Have Attempted a Practical
So}ution of the Question----:.Germany's System Leads
the World.
United States Consul Haynes, of Rouen, France, who has
made a careful study of labor conditions abroad, has written
an interesting article on the question of illsurance [or -..vork-men
in a number of foreign countries ,'vhere it has received
more 01' less of a 1)racticrrl solution. At the present time such
protectio!l, obligatory or voluntary, is afforded the workmen
of England, Belgium, Austria. Denmark, S\\'edcll. Nrjt'way,
Hungary, Italy, Finland, Switzerland, N('w Zealand and Ger-man}'.
In England there is a voluntary insurance against disabil-ity,
which assures to those employed in industrial or agri-n\
ltural labor, and whose carnings do not exceed ~480, an
av::rage annuity of $85. The insurance is directed toward
millers in Belgium, and Austria as well, but in the latter
country there is also an obligatory sick alld accident insur-ance
for all classes of labor. Pas.t the sixtieth year, the needy
in Denmark arc looked after by the state and commune.
A workmen's insurance committee has existed in Sweden
for the past sixtcen years. Gottenborg, famous for its ex-cellent
habitations for workmen, is one of the first cities to
solve successfully the question of insurance for workmen
employed in the cily's public works. There are ],500 of these
laborers intbat city. The question is fully and effectively
met by according a retiring pension to all superintendents,
chiefs, inspectors and workmen employed by the city, upon
their baving reached sixty~f1ve years of age, providing they
have bccn in its service for-at least t\venty-five years. The
pensions are divided into five classes, ranging from $289
10 $80.
Insurance is compulsory in Norway for all industrially
employed workmen. Hungary offers an oblig-atory insurance
for all employes of both sexes. There exists in Italy a volun-tary
insurance against sickness and disability, and an obliga-tory
insurance against accident·. In Finland all workmen are
authorized to insure against s.ickness, the cost being' borne
equally by employer and emplqye. Every workrnan in an in-dltlstrial
estblishmcllt gailling more than $145 is compelled
1
insure against accidents.
GERIVJA"IY AFFORDS nEST PROTlcCTlON.
HThere is perhaps no conntry in the world," says Consul
aynes, "where workmen are so protected by the state or
a e so cared for as in Germany. Even clerks, shop assistants.
ahd servants, are compelled to insure. The insurance is
effected by pasting into a book certain stamps every -week,
"t1d it is tbe duty of every employer to see that this is faith-f
l11ydone. In the Gern:-an empire .there are three il.1s.urances
f r workmen, all of WhlCh are oblIgatory and under the <1U-
,tority of the imperial insurance office, viz: Sickness, acci-d
nt, old ag"e, or infirmity. This insurance is mutual, and its
a ministration autonomous llnder state control It embraces
W11ithoutdistinctioll of llationality, all per:-i()J~s w(;rking it~
ermany.
"Insurance against sickness is especially for those occu-pied
in industry and commerce receiving a yearly salary of
$480 or more; but the law allows other \vorkmen, comprising
domestic servants, voluntarily to take advantage of it. It has
22,672 local offices, and 9,500,000 workmen g(~t the ycarly
benefit of $36,500,000. The object of this insurance is to guar-antee
to the insurcd a Slife and efficacious aid for at least
thirteen weeks from the .beginning of sickness.
"VI,"orkmen ill the illdustries and in agriculture, ete., farm-ers,
renters, day workmen, etc., gaining less than $482, must
insure against accident. In certain- cases those gaining more
5
than $482 are allowed, and sometimes compelled, to insure.
A complimentary law insures soldiers against accident, and
the aid to all the employed in the empire embraced in the in-surance
law against accident, is in the form of state pensions.
This insurance is an emp1oycrs' mutual insurance with a state
gLlaranty, and its bureaus have a civil personality with COlll-plete
administrative independence.
"Everyone insured in case of accident during work at a
wage has a right to gratuti.tous medical treatment. If the
v'I'ounded is not insurerl against sickness, the owner of the
establishment in which he is employed must accord to him
from his private purse the same treatment he \vould have re-ceived
from the bureau of illSUrallCe against sickness had he
been insured thcr-::in. If the wounded is also insured against
sickness, his pecuniary aid can amount to two-thirds of his
\:vages. Builders and farm and forest workmen are treated
for the first thirteen weeks at the expense of the commune in
which the acc.ident occurred.
ACCIDENT INSURANCE COMPULSORY.
"Accident insurance pensions are not calculated according
to the personal gain of the vieti.m, but according to the aver-age
wages fixed by age and sex. The amount paid in by em-ployers
is not determined by the number of workmen em-ployed,
but by their direct taxes. Small proprietors can be
exempted, totally or partially, from any dues.
"This insurance in the German empire is obligatory from
the sixleenth year, alld embraces every workman earning over
$482. It is optional for workmen whose annual earnings are
1110re than $724. The resources for this insurance are fur-nished
by the employer, the emp10yed, and the state, the lat-ter
giving toward each pension a uniform subvention of $12
and raying the workman's dues during the time he is serving
his military term. All remaining expenses are shared equally
by the employer and employe, who pay according to the five
classes into which the imperial insurance offtce has arranged
the insured, vi7-: (r) \Vorkmen gaining no more than $84
pay 3.3 cents per week; (2) a wage not greater than $1,33pays
4..8cents \",eekly; (3) a maximum wage of $205 :pays 5.8 cents;
(4) a maximl1111wage of $277 pays 7.24 cents, and (5) a wage
beh\7een $277 and $482.50 pays 8.68 cents weekly. The amount
paid by the workman is deposited in the bureau by the em-ployer,
who buys s:r;ecial stamps and aftixes them to the em-p1oye's
receipt, after having deducted from his wages the
amount due.
;;An old-age pension is paid to every insured workman of
seventy years or over 'who has deposited not less than 1,200
weekly dues, The dues de~osited for the employe by the
state during military service is counted among these 1,200, as
well as temporary interruptio·ns. Old-age pensions of the
first class amount to $26, second class $;H, third class $41,
fourth class $48, and fifth class $55.50."
Jamestown Company StiIl Doing Business.
Since the destruction of its factory by fire July 4, reports
have been circulated that the Jamestown Pauel & Veneer
company was Ollt of bllsiuess. Such is not the case. To the
contrary, the company has leased a factory bnilding of ample
size at J ame,-;towl1, which it will occupy while rebuilding, and
is at present in a position to suppy its customers with its
usual promptness. The company will rebuild as rapidly as
possible, and expect to be in a new factory by December I,
\'\7hen it will bc capable of double the capacity of the past.
Bill Dismissed.
The bill to enjoin infringement of letters brought against
Charles Kaiper'.s Sons, by Charles F. Streit in the United
States District court, southern district of Ohio, has been dis-missed
at the complainant's costs.
l
Long-Knight Lumber Co.
==============SPEC IALTY:==============
QUARTERED RED AND
WHITE OAK
INDIANAPOLIS,--------------------IINDIANA
We were Pioneer .. fn Produefng a Succ.ssful and Practical Rub_
btDIt and. Polishing Machine and a PERFECT Sander
As II ~..mdel', it will do !Ill tl18t tiny othel' nJlld/ln" will do,
and Ilially tllill.e:~ tllatllo OtlWl' lll~l"hine can do, HU1ldl'ed~
ofmll.clllne~ in constant use workiul!: UpOll woo<], varnish,
brass. copper. slate, marble, \V01'';';many faetoril's using
from 6 to 14each Cor sanding, rUboiuk and polIshIng,
MAD DO X MAC H I NEe 0 M PAN Y, JAMESTOWN, NEW YORK
TffE CREDIT BUREAU OF TffE FURNITURE TRADE
The LYON
FURNITURE AGENCY
Grand Rapids Ollice, 412-413 Houseman Bldg.
GEO. E, GRAVES, Manager
CLAPPERTQN & OWEN, CounseJ
ROBERT P. LYON, General Manager THE STANDARD REFERENCE BOOK
CAPITAL. CREDIT AND PAY RATINGS
CLEARING HOUSE OF TRADE EXPERIENCE
THE MOST RELIABLE CREDIT REPORTS CREDITS and
COLLECTIONS
IMPROVED METHODS
COLLECTIOMNASDEEVERYWHERE
PROMPTLY - REUABLY
Various Matters.
The St. Johns Table company, having decided to move
their manufacturing business to Cadillac, :r-dich.,."here finan-cial
aid awaits the corporation, the people of St. Johns pro-pose
to bond the city for a sufficient sum to purchase the old
plant and offer its occupancy for a nominal sum to some in-dividual
or corporation to fit up and operate the same. The
plan is a good one and should speedily attract the attention
of those seeking a location in which to establish a manufac-turing
business. The occupant would pay no taxes upon the
real estate and but l11wleratc rent. The plan is an improve-ment
upon the boous system so generally pursued by munici-palities
in their efforts to develup manufacturing inrlllstries
within their horders.
• • •
Manufacturers of case work h.ave practicaJJy abandoned
the graceful swell ends and fronts used so successfully during
recent years of the past. The old square. box-like shape re-turns
with the. demand for early English and the mission and
Dutch forms in furniture. It does not look so "s\vell" as the
cnrved forms, and its use make!; the artistic furnishing of
rooms a more difficult problem for the decorator.
• * •
Manufacturers of case work in the English, Dutch and
mission styles find it more economical to cut the strap band
hinges and handles used on dressers and doors than to pur-chase
the same from metal working factories.
• * *
Other manufacturers tan the hides used in the manufac-ture
of furniture covered or partly covered with leather, and
cast the metal lamps, vases and like pieces considered neces-sary
for properly decorating the plain, straig"ht furniture in
vogue.
• * •
Because a piece fails to sell well this season accords no
ground for supporting the presumption that it will not ,sell
easily in the sea>ian to follow. Very often a. piece that fails
to attract attention and appreciation when first shown proves
to the buyer, after he has had an opportunity to calmly con-sider
the same, to be a very meritorious production. This fact
proves that the second judgment of a buyer is often more
valuable than the first.
• • •
;;The panic of 1893 was a blessing to the manufacturers
of furniture in one way," remarked a gentleman with a pain-ful
recollection of the hard conditions of manufacture during
that and the following three years. "Any old thing- having
the semblance of an article of furniture would sell, and the
designers were not permitted to give expression to the artistic
taste and skill gained in the schools 'of design and the factory.
But a great lesson was learned during the years of the trade
panic, and the manufacturers have since given the designers
greater freedom. Only articles of recognized merit find pur-chasers
in these years of prosperity, and the designer is COlJ-sidered
of great importancE'. by the trade. \Vith the booming
trade prevailing, however, there is a disposition to contract
the field of usefulness filled by the designer, and another
panic may be necessary to teach the manufacturers again the
lesson they learned in J893."
• • •
The demand for golden oak is not so great since the in-troduction
of the \'veathcred and early English fmislles. The
big figured oak flakes covered with shellac and polished var-nish
jars the artistic sensibilities of per!;ons of refined tastes.
The quiet, unobtrusive wax finish soothes and satisfies the
user. The big, noisy figures of the oak, when filled with
stains of gold, then varnished and polished like a mirror, is
as startling as the unexpected explosion of a powder mill or
7
a mine charged with dynamite. Quiet tones will grow in de-mand
as the people progress 1I1 their studies of art in the
home.
* • *
To those who never saw him in action, the work of W. A.
Harker, the buyer for the Pacific Purchasing company, of
Los Angeles, in the warerooms of Grand Rapids during the
past month, was a revelation. Mr. Barker needed one-half
million dollars' worth of goods for immediate shipment. The
eight stores of the company handle $2,5°0,000 worth of fur-nitme
annually, and the man who buys for the combination
has full employment for his time. \\Then Mr. Barker entered
a wareroom he brought an air of earnestness and energy that
suggested the hero of the squared ring. Throwing off hat,
coat, vest, collar, cuffs and tie, be rolled up his sleeves, took
a reef in the legs of his pants and sailed in. Running through a
line with the speed of a colkgc pedestrian, he would bring up
at the starting place and call for a stenographer to take his
order. Unless the follower of Ben Pittman or Graham pos-sessed
great speed, the huyer was plainly impatient and irri-tated.
It is within bounds to say that .11r. Barker bopght four
carloads of ladies' desks and music cabinets from the Grand
Rapids Fancy Furniture company in less time than has been
taken by the writer to prepare this paragraph, and the writer
fancies that he is not slow. In other lines Mr. Barker kept
up his break-neck, nerve destroying, brain-racking pace.
* * *
It can be readily seen why a man upon whom rests so
much work and responsibility as has been put upon Mr. Bar-ker
by the Pacific Purchasing company should urge that one
exposition ce held by the manufacturers, and that sucn a one
be located in Grand Rapids. It would save so much time and
expense. It did not Occur to Mr. Barker that no single fur-niture
exposition town could accommodate all manufacturers
who .vOL1ldrequire space for showing their lines.
• * •
The Chicago Journal continues to misrepresent the Grand
Rapids market. The latest issue contains this paragraph:
''In Grand Rapids the total of the visiting buyers was 869."
The truth is that the total was over 1,000, and at this date
(August 1), they are still coming.
* • *
The printers, the engravers and the photographers suffer
heavy loss Oil account of the uIlusually active trane in the
furniture exposition towns last month. Many orders for
catalogues have been cancelled.
• • •
During the past month one of the local newspapers of
Grand Rapids assigned reporters to the task of ascertaining
the views of manufacturers in regard to the proposed reduc~
tion of the tariff. Very emphatic statements were made by
E. H, Footc, Charles R. Sligh, and others, in support of the
demand for reductions in the duties levied upon articles used
in the furniture manufacturing business. The low priced
lumber of Canada, the cheap mirror plates of Belgium and
Germany, would 'be available for the manufacturers but for
the excessive duties imposed by congress. Mahogany is not
grown in the United States, and no industry is benefited by
the duty exacted from the importers and by the importers
from the consumers. Secretary John A. Covode, of the Ber~
key & Gay Furniture company, would not disturb the existing
schedules. • • •
"They" (the manufacturers of Grand Rapids), "are likely
to find their position" (as leading manufacturers), "not so
conspicuous a few years from now, as it is at the present
time."-Chicago Furniture JournaL The wish' is father to
the thought.
Mahogany Silacene!
WHAT. IS IT?
~
\.~~
~~
~~
IT IS NOT a Shellac SUbstitute, but IT IS a FIRST COATER
or primary coat, to be used over mahogany water stain when imitating
mahogany on birch, maple, beech, elm, etc., etc.
IT IS superior to shellac for tbis class of work for many reasons.
Here are a few of them:
IT works more freely under the brusb and flows out over the work and
levels itself away more smoothly than does shellac and does not set up
so rapidly as does shellac.
IT WILL NOT bleed the color of the stain as does shellac.
IT WILL enhance the tone of the stain, giving a greater depth of
color and much clearer results.
IT WILL NOT raise the grain of the wood as does shellac, but IT
WILL stop absorption and hold out the subsequent coats of varnish,
givinl< the work a much heavier body than does shellac.
MAHOGANY SILACENE dries hard and flat in from six to
eight bours, can be tbinued from 75 to 100 per cent and covers 1000
square feet of surface per thinned gallon.
IT IS NOT a spirit preparatiou.
Last but not least comes the question of cost, and where we clinch
our nail good and hard. We can furnish you MAHOGANY
SILACENE at just about balf tbe cost of shellac.
WHEN ORDERING SPECIFY 354-2.
Our Catalogue will give you our best selling shades in all of our
specialties but
I WE CAN MATCH ANYTHING I
Send us a sample of what you want matched and we will do the rest. A copy of
"Lindeman, the Filler naker,"
can be had for the asking. We carry a full line of
FILLERS
STAINS
PRIMERS
SURFACERS
JAPAN COATERS
ENAMELS
LACQUERS
and everything needed in the Finishing RO?m.
ft
~~ 4
~
~
~~
The Barrett=Lindeman Company
1400=2=4 Frankford Avenue PHILADELPHIA, PA.
No. 146 Band Rip and Resaw.
The combination of a band rip saw and a band resa ..".
will certainly be recognized by experienced operators as
1l10iit desirable and convenient, having all the advantages
of two macmncs and yet occupying the floor space of one.
VY'hile the combination is nev,,' the mechanism for both
operations embodies the featllres that have bcen so successful
in our single tools. The machine has three patents and it
soon repays its COiit. The LIpper wheel is free from vibration,
and saws of ·varying length may be nsed. The upper wheel is
fitted with OUTpat.ent knife edge straining device, always giv~
ing an eVen tension to the blade, thl1s prolonging its life.
The lower wheel is solid (or wehhed), lessening vibration,
circulation of dust, and preventing over-Tunning. The wheels
arc forty-two inches in diamet.cl" and carry a three-inch blade.
The table is mounted on a rocker bearing, rermitting it to be
9
The feed is regulated by variable speed frictions operated
by lever convenient. to operator. For resawing it may be
varied from ten to fifty feet per mirltltc, and for ripping from
thirty to one hundred and forty feet.. A brake mechanism is
furnished to instantly sU)~)machine. Further particulars can
be had from thc makers, L A. Fay & Egan company, of No.
505 to No. 525 \"1>./. Front street, Cincinnati, O. Also ask for
catalog'ue or books on band saws and sanderii.
Ended Convention With a Spread.
The ),Jarietta Paint & Color comp~ny's employes fittingly
brought to a close their recent convention at Marietta, Ohio,
with a sumptllOl1S l:anquct, at which the officers of the com-iCany
and traveling salesmen wcre the guests of honor. The
ev::nt ·was attended by Pr(:~ident C. S. Dana, Vice President
angled fifteen degrees for bevel sawing, and is made in two
parts. The front part, carrying the resaw rolls. is instantly
reversible, and t.he lower side, ,"v'hen reversed, forms a per-fectly
clear table for ripping, and upon which arc friction
rolls to facilitate the ieed.
The resawing rolls are arranged to self center, or by
moving the lever pin onc set of rolls can be made rig'id to
saw from one side of board. Boards up to eigllteen inches
wide may he resawed, and the rolls open t.o saw to the center
of eight inches. The feed rolls for ripping are carried on an
adjustablc dovetail slide fitted onto the upper bearing arm,
and the distance between the feed in and feed out ones is
short, to permit feeding short stock. The machine can he
almoiit. instantly changed from a rip saw to a resaw, or vice
versa, and by one man. The fence is a. new eccentric locking
type and can be moved back to permil sawing up to twcnty-four
inches wide. The saw guides are new and improved and
are placed close to cnt of saw.
c. J. La Vallee, Superintendent I~obert \Valker, P. 1\-1. Sey-mom,
of the :"l. C. & c.; A. H. Snyder, of t.he B. & 0.; \V,
C. Adams, of the Pennsylvania lines; Joseph Gobel, of the
First. National bank, and the traveling salesmen, as follows:
John Reiver, S11dbyville, Ind.; ::\1. ]. \V01z, Grand Rapids.,
Mich.; C. G. Edwards, vVilliamsport, Pa.; John \V. Marsh,
Thomasville, N. c.; Vv'. C. Patterson, Boston, Mass.; R. S,
I\IcKay, lvIcConneltsviIle, Ohio; H. V. Gresang, Minneapolis,
'\Jinn.; V'l. J. Stevenson, Parkersburg. W. Va.; C. F. Dabold,
and H. F. Dahold, Marietta.
At t.he conclusion of a detectable four-course menu, toasts
",,'ere responded to by the following, C. S. Dana acting as
toastmaster: C. J. La Valle, Robert \Valker, T. J, Kelly,
John Reiver, C. G. Edwards, 11. J. v\'!olz, John W, 1hrsh, C.
F. Dabold, \V. J. Stephenson, H. F. Dabold, \V. C. Patterson.
R. S. McKay, J. S. Gobel, Dr. C. F. Batlard, P. ~L Seymour,
A. H. Snider, and W. C. Adams.
10
BUIL~UP PANELS AND VENEERS FOR FURNITURE. MANUFACTURERS
We can furnish you 2, 3 or 5 ply Panels in Quartered Oak, Mahogany, Plain Oak, Ash,
Elm, Birch, Maple or Basswood; and guarantee same in every respect. We use high grade
Glue in our work and our Veneers are thoroughly dry and our Machinery up·to-date.
Our 2 and 3 ply Drawer Bottoms and Glass Backs are the finest on the market.
We can also furnish you with Rotary Cut Maple, Birch and Elm Veneers in 1·30, 1-20,
1-16 and 1-8 inches thick. All of <;mrVeneers are dried in the new Coe Roller Dryer, and
lay flat and are free from crinkle.
If you wish to buy Panels and Veneers that are RIGHT AND THAT "WILL STAY
RIGHT, give us a chance to figure with you and submit samples and prices.
MT. PLEASANT, MICU.
THE GORHAM BROS. CO. Do you see the
We do not cla.im to be· lower
in price, but we do claim
our pa.nels are cheaper in
the lona run. a.r they .10 .A .10
Submit your wants and let uS make you happy.
WorKs,
TILLOTSON TOILET FASTENER
Full Size
of No. o.
No. 0, ~ x 2M"in. bolt, for very li~ht work, such as shaving stands,
dressing tables, etc. Packed 100 in box. Net price, fi.5 per
thousllnd.
No. I, 5-16 x 3 in. bolt, fM medium toilet standards. Packed 100 in
box. Net price, $20 per thousand.
No.~, 11-32x 3% ill holt, for heavy standards. Packed 50 in box. Net
prke, $30 per thousand.
No.3, % x 4 in. bolt, for extra heavy standards and sideboard backs.
Packea 50 in bOl:o Net price, $40 per thousand.
MAN~C~<;J~~~~YBY GRAND RAPIDS BRASS COMPANY
156.166 Courl Sireel, Grand Rapids, Mlch .. U. S. A.
This article is designed for fastening toilet standards to dressing cases, chiffoniers and washstands.
It is also used for the backs of sideboards and for any piece of furniture that is made in two or more
parts for convenience in packing and shipping.
All boring is done to g-auge in the factory, and as the nut is in-serted
in place by the case maker (projecting slightly) it can never
drop ont or he lost.
After the bolt is
screwed in standards
by the trimmer the
Toilet and case are
both ready for pack-ing
and the manu-facturer
can feel safe
that they will}it and
go together when the
goods reach their des-tination.
Dealers are
daily growing more
appreciative of the
merit of this device over wood strips or other fastenings.
Sample models showing their application will be sent to furniture
makers on request.
THE MAN WHO fiNOWS
He has a good thing is always glad to send it out on trial for he
knows that is the best way meritorious goods can get an even
show with weaker imitations. If you are going to buy a Swage
or Swage Shaper, ask your filer if he don't want to try a
Hanchett Adjustable Saw Swage
and Swage Shapero
We will gladly lend you one for 30 days' use, and if at the end of
tbat time you feel you call do without it, return it at
our expense. That's fair, iSll't it?
Hanchett Circular Saw SW3{lewith 861\ch Our Circular "L" tells all about it, Send for it.
Attachment and Jointer.
Hanchett Swage Hanchett Circular Swage Shapero
Big Rapids, Mich., U. S. A.
IGNORE THE "TOUCH."
Manufacturers of Wood Working Machinery Divide Profits
with Superintendents and Foremen No More.
"Grafting doesn't end with men in public affairs, and every
grafter isn't after the big graft," said a well-known manufac-turer
of wood ·working machinery the other day. The sub-ject
had been brought up through his expression of his free
and unbiased opinion of the misdirected enterprise of one of
the city fathers of his town. Suspicions wE'fe held that the
same city father's eft'orts to gain possession of a certain piece
o( real estate were not of so purely paternal a nature as befit
his office.
;...~{Gu'll find the man with the outstretched palm and elastic
conscience is unpleasantly conspicuous in mercantile concerns
and quite noticeable in ours. '!I,Te have had little trouble with
them recently, but a few years ago they were the one partic-
Illar dark spot in om otherwise bright and happy life.
"I rcc.all one instance wJlere this spirjt of corruption was
made manifest, and, incidentally, the uugrateful side of hu-man
nature. There was, a wood carver here in the state of
financial embarrassment through lack of a job on whom I
had pity. He was a good man at his trade and I secured em-ployment
for him with a firm at Rochester, N. Y. Soon after
that we sold this firm several planers and shapers. Immedi-ately
following the delivery of the goods came a letter from
the man I had befriended politely requesting ten per cent
commlSSlOn. His part in the whole transaction had been the
fact that he had hailed from the city where the machines were
made, and, also, had been on speaking terms with th~ manu-facturer.
No need of his ever taking any celery for his system.
"But the incident which stands out most conspicuously in
the events of that time ,"vas connected with an order sent to
a firm in Chillicothe, O. Soon after. we had sent the machine,
which was a planer, we received word that it wasn't working
well. There was an excursion 10 Toled0 about dut time, so
1 went down there.
"1 succeeded in getting into the factory and locating the
machine without being challenged. I found a boy working
oue spindle at the time, and I soon learned that the entire ma-chine
was in perfect order. I then hunted up the superintend-ent
and told him so. He said the machine was all right, but
he wanted $10. He got the ten.
"How do I account for the discontinuance of graft solici-tors
in my business? Simply because they have discovered
that we are no longer susceptible to the 'touch.'''
WOODPECKERS MAKE BIRDSEYE MAPLE.
Maine Man Has 1,000 Birds Making Valuable Timber.
"\i'"Thena man has spent eighty years and more than $7.,,-
000 in studying the ways of wild things," said Greenleaf
Davis, "it would seem as if he should know something about
the nature of animals and birds, but I am obliged to own that
T am more ignorant today than 1 was when my father came
here from Massachusetls and built a sawmill in 1824, when
J was nine years old. He left .all his property to me, including
miles of timber lands and money in bank, and I have spent all
of it except this spot where my camp stands.
"\-Vhat have I accomplished? That depends very much
upon how you 'look at it. The way the world seeS things, my
life has been wasted. Instead of being rich, J am very poor,
so poor that the town keeps me in the almshouse free of cost
through the cold weather. I have almost assured myself of
very many facts, though I am not absolutely certain of any
except two.
"The first is that every woodpecker that digs a hole in a
tree for a nest chooses the east side. I have spent more than
half a century studying woodpeckers. Within half a mile of
11
my camp are 612 woodpecker nests. I have the largest col-lection
of woodpeckers in the world, though none of them is
tame or more than lwlf domesticated. J have spent as much
as $250 in a year buying meat to feed the woodpeckers. -No-body,
living or dead, has studied the woodpeckers S0 111llchas
1 have, but the SUl11 of my knowledge is very small.
"I know that these birds insist on having the holes that
enter their nests face the east. because I have --waited until the
eggs were laid in the holes in posts [ had put out and tllcn
turned the posts abont. I have done this when the birds were
away, and never has any bird continued to incubate her young
when the hole was changed from due east. I think the wood~
peekers choose an eastern aspect for the reason that they can
know when the sun is up. They are all early risers and, hav~
ing no alarm clocks, they make sun dials of their nests.
"11y second discovery is of some commercial use. For
hnndreds of years lumbermen and cabinet makers have been
stndying to learn what causes maple wood to assume the mot-tled
and spotted form known as 'birdseye.' In a hundred rock
Juaple trees, perhaps one is a birdseye. Nobody can pick the
specific tree out by inspecting the bark or the manner of
growth. You may have to chop two hundred trees before you
rind one, but it is worth the sacrifice.
"Fact is, the woodpeckers make all the birdseye maple
there is in the world. In flying about the woods, they come
to a rock maple tree that yields very sweet sap in the seaS01l
when sap is mnning. 1\'10st birds like sweets-woodpeckers
are very fond of Sl1gar. Having found a tree yielding a large
per cent of sugar, the birds peck holes in the trunk and then
stand against the bark and drink the sap as it oozes out.
"After the sap has ceased to flow and the trees have leaved
out, ncw \,-voodand bark form in those small holes. The peck-ing
and sap gathering goes on for years until the tree, having
given up so much Sap to the birds, begins to furnish fluid con-taining
less sugar. In ten or twelve years after the birds quit
a tree the holes are grown up, and nobody can pick out the
big birdseyes from other trees that the woodpeckers did not
visit,
"1.Jore than fifty years ago I started in to induce the wood-peckers
to help me make birdseye maples. This spring I had
more than one thousand birds in my employ for two months.
On the side hill overlooking my camp are about three hun-dred
birdseye maples of my own make. I know everyone of
them, though nobody else can guess at the valuable trees.
If I live a few years longer I am going to begin cutting, after
which I shall have more money than I can spend. If I die,
I have left a record of every tree, so that the Audubon society
can market the wood and dcvote the money to giving protec-tion
to woodpeckers."-Ex.
Simply a Case of Hoss an' Hoss.
A lockout and a strike are legal and have been placed in
the same relative category by the supreme court of Pennsyl-vania.
In a recent decision by Judge Clark, in the case of the
City Trust Safe Deposit & Security company, of Philadelphia,
against \Valdheuer, he stated that in so far as restraint of
trade is concerned a 10eko11t is no greater restraint of trade
than a strike, :lnd yet a strike is 110tunlawful.
Death of August Spiegel.
August Spiegel. formerly the head of Spiegel, Thoms &
Co., for many years a-leading firm in the manufacture of fur-niture
at Indianapolis, died in that city recently, aged eighty
years. The fIrm retired from business in 1895, when Christian
Spiegel, a brother of deceased and a member of the firm.
moved to Shelbyville and, with the assistance of his sons, or-ganized
the Spiegel Furniture company. Deceased was highly
esteemed by the people of Indianapolis and by hundreds of
friends in the furniturc trade.
Citizens Phone 1282 Bell, M..ln 1804
Oran~ Da~i~5 Dlow Pi~e
an~ Dust'Arrester (om~anJ
THE latest device for handling" shav-ings
and dust from all wood wood-working
machines. OUf eighteen YE'ars
experierlce in this class of work has
brought it nearer perfection than any
other system on the market today. It
is no experimen tJ but a demonstrated
scientific fact, as we have several
, hundred of these systems in use, ai1d
not a poor one among them. Our
Automatic Furnace Feed System, as
shown in this cut, is the most perfect
working device of anything in its line.
Write for our prices for equipment".
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DET AIL WORK WITHOUT EX-PENSE
TO OUR CUSTO MERS
EXHAUST B'ANS AND PRESSURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN STOCK
Office and Factory:
20&-210 Canal Street
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
OUR AUTOMAT1C FURNACE FEED SYSTEM
How to Handle Shop Hands.
'''lhen ;m employer appreciates the value of capable em-ployes
and knows how to secure them he bas only begun to
solve the employment problem. Competent men will be
worth no more to him than men of mediocre ability, unless
he knows how to use them. To he really slH:cess{lll he mllst
be able to get the be,st possible results out of every man in
his employ and to retain those who make good. Andrnv
Ca:negie puts tl1;S matter well when he says that his success
\-vas due llot only to surrollnding' himself with clever men,
but also to knowing how to nse. them to the best advantage.
Ko employer is so nearly perfect that he \...-illnot occa-
~,iollally be deceived in men and engage a few who prove had
investments, either incompetence, lack of adaptability to the
w'ork, or some other cause, lIe can, however, remedy such
11l.istakes if be will watch the work of h~s employes closely
and promptly dismiss those ,,,,ho do not make good.
USE CARE TN SELECTING MEN.
1£ you use care in selecting- your employes everyone of
them is worth a t~ardul trial and ShO'tl1d not be dismissed
without thorough consideration of the reaSOllS for his not
coming up to your expectations. Perhaps the failure is not
entirely his own fault, but is due to conditions ,,,,,hich may be
remedied. Another point to remember is that it takes some
men longer than others to ad<l.lAthemselves to new work
and often the most capable mall will be 510\\'e5t to sho,,,, what
is really in him.
Vv'hen you are unable to find a way of getting results out
of him, do not hesitate to dismiss him at oneco To keep a
man "\vho is not making good is doing him a wrong, for in
some other positioJ1 better suited to his ability he might be
able to succeed.
lNCOMPETENTS SPOIL GOOD MEN.
It is also of importance to remember the demoralizing
effect which a few incompetents retained in yOllf service will
have upon the capable men. The carable men, seeing incom-petent
otles kept on the pay rolls month after month, say to
themselves, "If these men can hold their jobs, there is cer-tainly
no need for us tu feaT, so we can take things a little
easier." In this wa.y trouble has begun in many a firm, and
before it is remedied by the discharge of the incompetent men
it destroys the efficiency of the force and causes actual losses
of thousands of dollars.
Tl1C".wise employer wil1 not put off firing his bad clerke;
1l11tilthey have lit 011t with the pett.l{ cash, llOf will he put off
raising the salaries of his good ones until his competitors
have stolen them.
TRAINING WORKERS NOT PROFITABLE.
It seems hardly a profitable experiment to make an estab-lishment
a training school for competitors. If a man's meth-ods
are worth anything at ail, he cannot afford to keep train-ing
up young men to a POillt where they will not work without
more money, and then Jet them go ever to his rival to give
him the belle fit of the exverictlce they have acquired. Some
Srms do this. They pay a slllall percentage of their Illen laq{i'
salaries, and the rest they keep down to the lowest possible
figures. The result is that their young men are constantly
leaving and taking positions with other houses in tIle same
line. Soon these firms gain reputations as schools for clerks
and men who have had experience with them are in great
demand and cummand high prices fnjrn otht'r employers.
RAISI"iG OFTEN DOESN'T PAY.
l\Iany employers seem to think that the only "lay to retain
good men is to keep raising their salaries, and that economy,
therefore, makes frequent changes necessary. The truth is,
a little talk will often do more to retain a man than a d07.en
13
advances in salary. What the :ivcrage employe wants is to
feel that his interests and his employer's are identical, and
that the employer wants to retain him so long as he makes
good.
\Vhel1 you get your entire force together give them a talk
about the past, present and future of your business; and you
will be surprised at the results. The 10yalty,andenthl1siasm
of capable men will increase in proportion to their knowledge
01 the general aim of your business, its successes, and its
possibilities.
GOOD EMPLOYE A GOOD ADVERTISl':R.
rf yOllr employes are familiar with the details of your
business-such details as can be made public-and are inter-ested
in it, they can exert a tremendous advertising force in
your behalf, Vlhcll yOll set out to fight for foreign trade, and
open forccs in AtlstraJia and South Africa., they will spread
the news among their friellds. They will· advertise the fact
that the se'\vingmachines yotl make are tlse.d the world over,
even in Lapland; that your food products are turned out in
the cleanest factory in the United States--or a hundred and
011e other things which it is good to have the public kna ..v...
In short, an employe who is familiar with, -and interested in,
a busi.ness can prOve of as mu.;:-h advertising value. as many
dollars' "\'\;orth of newspaper or magazine space.
Hy far the most imponant factor in retaining capable
employes in an intimate and thorough knowledge of them.
DIFFERENT TREAT3iIENT FOR WORKERS.
No two men can be handled in exactly the same manner.
One will produce the best results when he is constantly under
the lash, and another can do well only when frequently en-couraged.
A word of praise might ruin one of the former
type, and harsh criticism would prove equally disastrous to
one of the latter.
Men are not machines and they resent being treated as
such. They can do their best work only when they are sat-isfLed
and enthusiastic, and the wise employer, by courtesy,
consideration and a careful study of their various tempera-ments,
will always strive to make them so.
A loyal, enthusiastic, rcsult producing force of employes
is a prime essential to modern business success. The ideal
force is still a long way from us, but employers are constantly
dra" ... illg nearer to it when they use system to find out which
of their men are worth retaining, and then use tact to retain
them and get from them the best possible work.-H. J. H. in
Chicago Trihune.
How Soft Wood Can Be Made Hard.
It hal> fallen to the lot of a French engineer to show the
world how soft woods can in many eases be substituted suc-cessfully
for hard woods. The difficulty in the past has been
the rapidity of decay around the spikes and bolts through the
oxidation of the metal.
The Frenchman's method overcomes this by a device con-sisting
of a screw dowel composed of a cylindrical piecc of
well-seasoned and creosoted beech or birch wood. This
piece of wood is in the form of a screw with au exceedingly
wide thread. A hole is bored in the center to admit a screw
bit or ordinary spike.
Tn bridge building and other construction wb:rk the ill-l'eLltion
is ca1c1Jlated to be of great valuc.
New Factory in Operation.
1'11e Henry Rowe )'lanufactming company, of Newaygo,
lVlich., has commenced operations in its recently established
factory, and made its first shipmcnts. The company manu-factures
dm'lel pillS and rods, automatic turnings, mouldings,
etc.
14
BUSS MACHINE WORKS HOLLAND,
MICHIGAN
~:t~::',~~;W::~o3ofd Work.ing Machinery ~~~1,.:~Pl~an,ers, Vertical Sanders and Glue Jointers
Write for Descriptive Circulars and Illustrations
Improved clamps have
now become an absolute
necessity. We believe
ours meets all require-ments,
and why.
Palmer
Oluing
Clamps
Patented April lI,I8<}3.
May 16, 18gq;
March 22, 1904.
FIJlsT-They have unlimited stren/{th and power; clamp instantly. yet
securely, instantly released and the work removed as fast as it can be
handled
SllcoNv-They w111adjust themseh'es to am' width or thickness (not to
exeeed the limit of size clamp used) and can be used to put a truck
load under pressure while still on the truck. ..
THIRD-Very durable, being" all malleable iron and steel, and not easily
broken or ~ot out of order under any condition, no l:llatter by whom
or how used.
Catalogue explains all-write for it.
A.E.PALMER NORVELLj MICH.
Jackson County
Concerning Your Backing
Are You Usiug the New Travers Adjustable
Spring Back on Your Typewriter Chairs?
An improved, practical, tlJodem
chair iron of low prices and
durability. T his sutteasful
chair back is the product of
mUch effort and long ~xDeri·
ence. Furniture men will find
in 0 U T met a 1 chair fittings,
something- that will put doHars
in the till. You fumish tht'
woodwork and our irons will
perfect it.
WRITE TODAV FOR
SAME'LE AND PRICIUio
Western Malleable and Grey Iron Works
903 Chase St., MIL WAUKEE, WIS.
Our Clamps received
GOlD MfD4l
World's fair,
St. louis
CHAJNCLAMP
tPatentedlJune 30, 1903.
PILING CLAMP
BLACK BROS.
MACHINERY co.
MENOoTA. ILL.
VENE.ER. PRESS
Patented June 30, 1903
GLOBE TRUCKS ARE COMERS.
Convincing Features of a Practical Nature Win Admirers
Wherever They Become Known.
Tl1e excellent satisfactioll given by tlJe Globe Trucb,
manufactured by the Globe Vise & Truck comlCany, has re-sulted
in their attainng almost instantaneous popularity in
every town or city where they have been introduced. Hun-dr~
ds of them are now in operation on the floors of the
large1- factories and smaller shops throughout the country,
and the replies received from their l1scrs arc strong testi-tllonials
uf their merit. 111 each instalLce they are meeting
with the :o;arIle uniform success, proof of \vhich is clearly dem-onstrated
hy the SllcccS!-iive orders received from every place
where they have once been introduced.
The trucks are manufactured in two styles, No. 21 and No.
24. No. 2T is equipped with Gillt;'l1.e's frictionless rollcr bear-illgS.
No. 24 is made with a smooth turned axle, chilled huhs
and boxes. The wheels to this truck revolvc on the axle, the
axle in turn revolving in the boxes. The regular sizc of the
shop truck is twenty-five inches by forty-eight inches. The
stakes to the truck stand thirty inches above the platform.
A sufficient stock is ah ..·.a.ys carried on hand to insmc
prompt shipment of every order. The company is pleased at
all times to answer any inquiries, and to furnish fllll ill{orma-tion
and price list of trucks whellcvcr desired.
Electricity for Light and Power.
Leading, yet keeping far ahead in the industrial progress
of the \-vorld. the little electric spark of Benjamin Franklin's
time has reached a state of development which the ordillary
person, though aware of, fails to reali;::e. It is not surprising,
for the ascendancy of elo::·.ctricityto the position of the world's
greatest power has, for the most part, been an unostentatious
one. Not but what the discovery of each new invention of
which it is the life has becn duly recorded in the public press
at home and abroad; still its rapid strides in sllpplanting every
other known motive power is almost beyond comprehension.
15
A fe'''' years ago electricity was considered in the light of
a luxury and too expensive-to be of any use in promoting the
industrial growth of the city. Its introduction was gradual
and its first recognition came as a sour~e of light. Many
factories at the time were using the primitive kerosene lamp
to light the dark nooks and corners, with perhaps an occa-sional
arc lamp. At length, although this semi-darkness pre-vailed
fOl' the workmcn, light dawned in the minds of the
elnptoyers and several loo-light machines were installed in
the largcr factories. The success of this step, as shown by
the increased amount of work derived from the employes, led
to the installation in a few years of SOD and I,ooo-light ma-chines.
The ultimate result was the introduction of single
lights over the bench of each "\yorkman.
Electricity as a power followed, and during the past ten
years has become daily more popular. Its practical and
cconomic side is best exemplified in the case of small fac.1o-ries.
Few plants of ordinary capacity being erected today
but what depend upon the electric fluid for motive power.
The saving is in the power house, engines, boilers and miles
of beltit1g clnd ~haftillg. Instead of these motors are in-stalled,
the power beillg Sl1PDliedby the local or nearby power
compclny.
The capacity of the,se motors ranges irom two to fifty
horse-power. depending urOI1 their arrangement and the work
dcmanded of them. In some factories individual motors are
used, one being- installed for every machine. In others the
machines are grouped to a sing-1c motor of sufficient power,
()l- a motor for each /-loor. Every plant is an individual case,
requiring different trcatment, so that no fixed principle or
Ttl1c can he followed. The arrangement depends solely upon
the conditions and the amollnt of power required.
In the larger plants steam is often necessary, which admits
of the ma11tdacturc of their own power. Dynamos are in-stalled
with the motors and the building wired to carry the
cm-rent to all parts of the shop. It is stated by experts on
tbe subject that the loss of power through loose belting and
shafting is from twenty-five to fifty per cent, while wher(~
electric I11otors are used it does not exceed fLfteen per cent.
[n addition to the saving in power is the total elimination of
all danger to eDll;loyes, and of fire throngh oily waste and
friction about belts and shafts.
Morse Buys Samples.
Among the huyers of large quantities of samples during
the past month was GeorgeM. Morse, of the 'Morse Dry
Goods cOl11pany, Grand Rapids. The IvIorses burned out
early in the year and, having acquired a fortune, the an-uouncement
was made that they would retire. An option was
granted a gentleman from Chicago for the lease, good will
and equipments of the establishment, but his failure to accept
tbe same forced the l\Iorse brothers to resume, Their store,
in which merchandise of every description is sold, is one of
the hngest in the state of IVlichigan.
Will Try the Co-Operative Plan.
One E. F. lVIaho[lcy, a ,vorkmall, is promoting the organi-zation
of a comrany on the co-operative plan to ellgage in
the manufacture of fnrniture in Logansport, T nd. He is look-ing
for twenty-five practical workmen with $1,000 each. or
fifty with $500 each, to associate with himself in the organi-zation
of the company. Factories, except in rare instances,
have not been successful when operated on the co-operative
plan in the woodworkillg industries, but perhaps Mr. Mahoney
is possessed of the tact and managerial powers necessary to
prove himself the exception to the rule that has caused fail-ures
in the past.
16 ;tI~TI'{-:rQ .,.-
•
WITHOUT DOUBT Workmen do more and better work in comfortably
heated building.,. than when shivering with the coldAAA
With no system can the desired results "A 'R. C" be secured so rea.dily as with the V Fan System
THE NATIONALWOOOgNWARE Co. of Grand Rapids. Mich, recommend it in the following language:
"We are pleased to state that we have made a thnrouJlh test of the H1!lll.terwhich we purchased of you about two years a~, and find it satisfactory
in every way. We. find that it promotes a unifonnity of temperature, the best of ventilation, aod little expense in operation. We will be gilld to recom-lr..
cnd your Heatus to any olle who wishes a thorollgh and effective healing system."
It's none too early to prepare for winter. We would like a chance h sol",e your pl"OblelD.
AMERICAN BLO WER r'-o",.,DetTOI°, t M'~ch. -FaDS aDd Blow... for all PurDoa.s- NEW YORK CHICAGO ATLANTA LONDON
INSIST ON HAVING
Morris Woo~ 3 ~ons' SoM ~teel Qlue Joint (utters
fol' there are no otherJ' "ju.rt aJ' good ..
They cut a clean perfect joint always Never burn owing
to the GRADUAL CLEARAI\CE (made this way only by
us), require little grinding, saving time and cutters. No time
wasted setting up and cost no more than other makes.
Try a pair and be convinced. Catalogue No. 10 and prices
on application.
MORRIS WOOD ®. SONS
Thirty-one years at 31-33 S. Canal Street. CHICAGO. ILL.
STlI.ffORD
fURNITURE
ENGRII.VING
Our half tones are deep,
sharp, Clear; giving them
long wear and ease
of make-ready.
Every plate is precisely t,!<"pe-lugh,
mounted on a perfectly
sq,uared, seasoned block
trImmed to pica standard. All
llre proved and tooled until th ..
hest possible priJlting quality is
devel ...p.ed. Specimens mailed
on request.
STAFFORD ENGRAVING CD.
"Th~ House of ldea8',
I'\lDIA.NA.POUS. INOII\NA.
Jamestown Panel an~ Veneer (0. (INCORPOR.ATED)
========'~f A N UF ACT U R ER 5 0 F=======
Veneered Panels and Table Tops
Lll.RGEST STOCK Of VENEERS
MAtiOGANV, QUARTERED OAK, RlRDSEYE MAPLE, CURLY
BIRCH, WALNUT, PLAIN OAK. PLAIN BiRCH,
MAPLE, eROS$- BANDING.
The Best Workmanship and Finish
Office. 50.58 Steele St. JAMESTOWN.N. Y.
TWOLARGEfACTORIES-Jamestown. N.Y. AshVille, N.Y.
Get our prices before buying elsewhere. Samples on application.
.1
7IR'r I.s' JI.l'J"
M# ? $r. 17
WALTER CLARK 535 Michigan Trust Building
Citizens Phone 593 3
WALTER CLARK has a fine, large stock ot
PLAIN VENEERS
In OAK, BIRCH, MAPLE AND POPLAR. Just the thing for
Backing, Cross- Banding and Facing
G RAN D RAP IDS, M I CHI G A N
EXPANSION AND CONTRACTION OF WOODS.
Timber That Causes No End of Trouble While Going From
the Dry Kiln to the Finishing Room.
One of the great difficulties with vvbich the wood\vorker
111 the furniture industry has to contend is the s\'\-elling"
and shrinkage of woods after they have left the dry kiln. The
effect of the climatic conditions ie.; similar to the expansion
and contraction of iron by heat and cold. There is OllC great
and all-important difference, h{HVever. an(! that is the effect
of varying temperatures on iron has been reduced to a scien-tific
basis, mathematically computed and involved in engineer-ing
principles, ,'vhich are religiously taken into consideration
in all iron structural work of today. vor the workel'" in woods
there is no such guidance, because the uncertain ~ll1ality of
his raw material in this respect vv"illnot permit of its b~ing
accurately gauged. For much of the following information
on the expansion and contraction of woods the Artisan is in-debted
to J aIm T. Strahan, ~ well-known and experienced
superintendent in the manufacture of furniture.
So long as there is any life in a wood it will shrink and
swell. The extent of this diversion frol11 the dimensions orig-inally
established by the saw may depend upon four things-the
ql1ality of the wood, the couHtry of which it is native, the
conditions lInder which it is cut, and the climate in which it
is used. All of these exert a vital influence. JiIany 'NOorl'i
have a tendency to s\vell or eXfand in summer and to shrink
in winter. This is because the dry kiln process does not kill
all of the life in the wood. This is ,vel! illustrated in the aver"
age house. A door, even though it has been in llse several
years, ·will sometimes swell in the summer through the wood
having absorhed the atmospheric moisture to such an cxtent
that it 'will require considerable planing to induce it to close.
If it is planed too much, a wide crack will he found in the
winter between the edge of the door and the casing, alld the
housewife will wonder why. This is shrinkage or contraction
of the wood through the thorough dryin/S out of its pores
again.
But, although the expansion and contraction of woods may
well be considered a universal property, there are some woods
in which it is more marked than in others. Among the woods
that are noted for the amount of moisture they will absorb
after leaving the kiln are poplar, basswood, elm and cotton-wood.
A cottollwood board one foot. in width will. under
certain conditiolls, expalld one-quarter of an inch or more.
This wood will also contract in abollt the same proportion.
Plain oak belongs to the class of woods prominent for their
shrinkage in width. Quartered oak and sycamore ,,, ...ill not
shrink in width. but will contract in thickness. This is a
characteristic attributed to all varielies of qnartered woods.
Thoronghly air-dried and kiln dried ll1lnbcr will not sho-w
this shrinkage and swelling.
Efforts are made by the woodworker to uvercome these
deviolls and uncertain traits of his material by a combination
of veneering and oifferent kinds of wooos. This accounts for
the amount of frame and panel work of today. In all cases
where there is a large surface, as in bureau and table tops and
some forms of piano work, the five and sevell-ply work is used
in an attempt to overcome this difficulty. In this respect it
is not always effective ·where the surface dimensions exceed
four inches. It is almost impossible, according to the best
authorities, to make good furniture out of lumber that is not
air-dried or seasoned eefore it is kiln dried.
Po.rters Enlarge Factory.
C. O. & !\. D. Porter, of Grand Rapids, manufacturers of
vvood working machinery, have been obliged to add 2,300
square feet of floor space to their factory on account of in-creased
bllsiness. They state that their business this season
far exceeds that of a year ago and that orders on hand are
keering them working to fun caracity, with no let-up in
sight.
Appellate Judges to Define Boycott.
The appellate court will shortly be called upon to consider
the question of whether uuion labor methods of denoullcing
non-union hOl1ses by publicity, appealing to patrons to throw
their trade to other firms, can be termed a boycott. The mat-ter
will be brought before the higher court through an apr;eal
by the president of the union barbers. It will involve many
interesting points of value to labor leaders.
Eulogized William Roscher.
The St. Louis (Mo) Furniture Board of Trade, at their
monthly meeting on August I, adopted resolutions of respect
to the memory of the late William Roscher, formerly the
president of the board. Remarks eulogistic of the deceased
were made by J-I. ]. Kentnor, G. 1'. Parker, ]. A. Reardon, and
others.
NEW YORK AND PHILADELPHIA.
Via
GRAND TRUNK·LEHIGH VALLEY ROUTE.
Three fast trains leave Grand Rapids 9:30 a. m. daily, ex-cept
Sunday, arrive New York 10:50 a. m., Philadelphia, 10:30
a. m. Leave Grand Rapids 2:45 p. m. daily except Sunday, ar-rive
New York 4:30 p. m., Philadelphia, 3:40 p. m. Leave
Grand Rapids 5 :30 p. m. daily except Sunday, arrive New
York 8:40 p. 111.; Philadelphia, 7:25 p. m. Sleeping car Detroit
to l\~ew York all 9:30 a. m. train; sleeping cars Durand and
Detroit to New York on 2AS and 5:30 p. tn. trains,
C. A. JUSTIN, C. P. & T. A.
18
ESTABLiSHED 1880
PUBLISH EO BY
MICHIGAN ARTISAN CO,
ON THE 10TH AND 25TH OF EACH MONTH
OFFICE-2-20 LYON ST.• GRANO RAPIDS, MICH.
ENTERED AS MATTER OF THE SECOND CLASS
An exchange discusses the possibility of developing a typ-ical
American style, as follows: "Most writers on the subject
make a serious mistake by looking for some sort of style in
handicraft. Never, my masters! The most typical American
feature is the use of machinery. America is the greatest ma-chine-
using nation, and the American style will be one
adapted to machine manufacture. Its first "samples" may be
made by hand, but the thing that must be made by hand only
will never be of sufficient import to form and uphold an
American style. Tn a Paris of a few hundred thousand peo-ple,
the life centered in the courts with its thousand or so
people, a style-hand-made-could live and make a mark; in
an America of 80,000,000 the single hand is lost; ten thousand
looms, woodworking machines, raper printing machines, must
work at the same style before it becomes existent."
Let us look into this matter a little further. The style that
typifies the character of the American character is plain, neat
and substantial-the kind of furnitnre that was first made by
the monks in the missions of southern California. \Vere not
the monk cabinetmakers Americans, and the missions where
their furniture was built in America? The style the monks
originated fulfills the requirements suggested 'In the para-graph
quoted above.
The newly organized association of manufacturers of fnr-nihue
has already served a good purpose. It practically pre-vented
price cutting during the late exposition season. A
few cases of reduced prices were reported, due to over-anxiety
to sell when the prospects for the season were not encourag~
ing. The association might serve another good purpose by
instituting an investigation of the buyers and sellers' com-bine,
operated to the loss of both the manufacturers -and the
merchants. "Graft" is not confined to the factory department
of the furniture business.
Manufacturers of good furniture long ago realized that it
IS impossible to finish a piece proj)erly so long as the least
bit of moisture remains in the wood. \"lhen a water stain is
applied, means must be taken to extract the least bit of mois-tnre
before the work shall be filled. The moisture in glued-up
work must also be extracted, and in properly equipped fac-to'ries
dry kilns form a part. Very often it is advisable to
permit wood to season before the process of mannfact1.1re is
completed, to escape the evils following the contraction of
the grain.
Having sllccessfully grafted the American walnut with the
English walnut and produced a fast-growing tree that will
be of great value in commerce, it is said that Luther Burbank
is considering the practicability of grafting the bird's-eye
maple with mahogany. \Vha! a wonderful example of figure
and color would result if the graft proved successful.
It is stated that twenty thousand
by the mail order houses of Chicago,
persons are employed
All kinds of merchan-dise
is sold, and a very considerable part is furniture and
kindred goods. The trade of these honses is greatly esteemed
by the manufacturers of furniture, especially when their ware-houses
have been filled and trade is dull.
In the opinion of the Chicago Furniture Journal the at-tendance
of buyers upon the semi-annual furniture exposi-tions
in Grand Rapids will not increase in number, while a
steady il1C'xcasemay be looked for in Chicago. Of course.
The knocker sees only his side of a proposition.
The sale of sample lines of furniture in Grand Rapids is
badly split up, every retailer of note having engaged in the
game. Buyers have learned that samples are sold in Chicago
and other cities, and the trade is not of so much importance
by fifty per cent in Grand Rapids as formerly.
Rothschild, of Chicago, is selling a stock of chamber suites
the house claims to have purchased for sixty cents off list
prices. In the eyes of the public the profits of the manufac-turer
of furniture mllst appear to be enormous.
Any cabinet maker can make a piece of furniture; some
cabinet makers can sell it; but thccabinet maker who ean
make a pieee of furnitme, sell it for a profit and make good
use of it, cheats folly and becomes wise.
Perhaps if the sample selling business was not so well
advertised there would not be so many samples offered in the
markets. In this connection it is proper to inquire, "Does
advertising pay?"
When the beef trust shall be rooted out, the C05t of glue
should be reduced. This statement is made with deliberation.
It will be noticed that the word "when" is employed.
Reports from Chicago show that all of the striking furni·
ture wagon drivers have been restored to work by their em·
ployers, the furnitme dealers.
The most valuatlc woods for manufacturers of furniture
are mahogany and maple. Neither will swell or shrink during
the process of manufacture.
Spindles are freely used in
the manufacturers this season.
ing? Queenanllward?
many of the
\Vhither is
lines offered by
the trade drift-
The buyer can he driven through a line of samples, but
he cannot be made to buy if he fails to see merit in what is
offered.
Queen City Furniture Club Entertain Ladies.
"Ladies' Day" was fittingly observed by the Queen City
Furnitllfe club, Cincinnati, at Krollman's garden. The event
was carefully planned and successfully carried out. A feature
of the day was the canquet in the evening, at which covers
were laid for abol1t one hundred members of the club and
their friends. An excellent menu was served, followed by
speeches and music, making it a memorable occasion for all
who participated. David Tappe, president of the Modern
Furniture company, is president of the club.
DIFFERENT METHODS OF PAYING SALESMEN.
Sales Mana~ers of Prominent Houses Give Plans That They
Have Found Effective Through Practical Experience.
In answer to the question, "What system of paying- sales
people secures the greatest efficiency and the best results?"
"System" prints four intervic'wi-i with sales managers who
have tried different ones in actual operation. Two of these
men are managers of retail stores and two of manufacturing
houses that sell direct to the consumer. Their replies show
that the rate of c()mpell~ation is many times governed by the
character of the business as wel1 as the qualifications of the
salesman. The interviews in part follow.
J. J. Blumenfeld, general manager of the Eoston Store,
Chicago, says: "Make the money relation right-instill the
feeling that the employe is getting .vhat is coming to him-then
you will get loyalty. Ten per cent of am employes have
been with us ten years; twenty-five per cent were in onr em-ploy
five years ago; fifty per cent have heen with us at least
two years. These facts and fig-UTes talk and scarcely need
any comment. They are the result of two principles laid
down: First, the ideal money relation which \ve have estalJ-lished-
the s,ystem by "vhich clerks are paid according to the
work they do and the results they obtain; second, because of
the general friendly, fair treatment we accord to them at aU
times.
SMALL SALARY AND GOOD CO"I"lISS[().)L
"\'Ve pay our employes a comparatively small salary, hut
in addition to this we pay them a special commission upon
every sale they make. Thus, if they have the 'stuff' in them,
their real stilary is higher than the average paid to retail
sales people. :-'leetings of the clerks are held on every floor
of the house nearly every night. l'donthly meetings of in-spectors,
cashiers, buyers, floor walkers and department man-agers
are held. At all of these the (:;rincipal subject of dis-cussion
is 'Sales'~why they were not higher, how thcy can
be increased. And these meetings bind the saks force to-gether-
creatc a feeling of llnity. Vle have a book in which
are recorded the llames of the three salesmen making the
highest fales for a given period, and the names of the three
making the least. The strife to have the honor of a name
among the first three is very keen among the sales people.
These names are known to everyone in the store each month.
The names of the lowest are not made public."
D. F. Kelly, manager of Mandel Brothers, says: "\Ve em-ploy
a modification of the straight salary system of paying
sales people and believe this gets the best possible results in
a retail business. Vo/e do not use the commission system, as
'·...e believe this is a subterfuge to get the salesman to work
off unprofLtable stock. V"/e have worked out a method. henv-ever,
of managing our salary system which gives a salesman
the same spur and incelltive to boost his sales. This is ac-complished
in three ways.
"First, we judge of a man's sales ability when we hire
him, by his appearance, personality and previous experience.
We then fix his salary on the basis of his apparent selling
ability. QUI' sales people are divided into several classes,
according to their sales, the people in the same class receiving
approximately the same salary. Second, we have a schedule
of sales for the sales people in each class. A salesman must
approximate this amount each day to keep his record good.
there is a fixed amount below ".·.h. ich his sales should not fa.ll.
Third, we keep a schedule, and the resl1lts of each sales per-son's
efforts are placed before them continually hy verbal
praise and repriman[ls. 1t is for these reasons that I helieve
a sales force should be made up of high-priced, experienced
men. The returns they bring in are worth more net profit to
any concern. It is a false idea to suppose that sales can be
inflated by the commission system."
19
TRYING OUT THREE SYSTEMS.
I-Tarry M. Ballard, district manager of the Fox Typewriter
company, mentions three systems which his finn is experi-menting
with at present with a ,,~iew toward obtaining the
bcst results. "First, there is the straight salary," says Mr.
Ballard. "This has its limitations. if a firm had a force of
sal,esmen all of whom had been tried out and found to be
First-class, this would be the ideal system. nut it takes three
months to tryout anew man. Then he may do just well
enough so that we give him a chance to hang on three months
longer. If he then proves a failure we are compelled to dis~
charge him and the six months' salary has been wasted.
"Second is the system of paying a salary and commission,
which is now employed by most of the tyrewriter comranies.
This method is unfair to the man who makes the highest
sales. Third is the straight commission payment. This se-cures
good results to a certain extent, but it has its draw-
]lacks. The main difficulty with it is that the sales manager
is not able to keep a firm hold on his men. If a salesman re-ceives
only a commission he becomes too independent. He
may become irregular in his hours of work. This is demor-alizing
to any sales force."
Joseph T. Leimert, manager of the retail department of
the Cable Piano company, says: "This question resolves
itself into the proposition of how to sell the greatest number
of pianos at the least possible expense. There are three plans
of paying salesmen in general use-a straight salary, salary
and conunission, and the straight commission. I have worked
l1nder each plan and have operated sales forces under each
plan. }ly experience has convillced me that the straight
salary is by far the most satisfactory to both employer and
enlploye. Atv reasons for this ,conviction may be summed
up under the following heads:
"First, a straight salary secures more perfect team work
among the salesmen, which is very important in selling pi-anos.
Second, it avoids destructive competition among sales-men
of the same house. Third, it avoid!'; loss of time and
frequently the loss of a sale. Fourth, the straight salary
system makes for kgitimate methods in selling. The sales-man
is not allxions to sell at any price to get a paltry com-mission.
Fifth, the straight salary system secures a better
quality of salesmen, and therefore a better grade of business."
Are Wearing That Happy-Surprised Look.
Good, steady trade is reported by the lll"addell Manufac-turing
company, with every indication for its continuance
through the fall months. "I have just returned from a trip
through the east," said Mr. W'addell, "and I saw big crops
on the farms through Michigan, Canada, New York and
Pennsylvania. This speaks well for the fall financial condi-tion
of the farmers, and it is a recognized fact that the life
of trade comes from the soil. Locally, 1 fmd the business
men wearing a sort of happy-surprise look. All, invariably,
report good business, which is contrary to their expectations
of last spring."
For the Benefit of Creditors.
In the case of the L"tica Fire Alarm Telegraph company
against the \Vaggoner \Vatchman Clock company, which has
been on trial in the Grand Rapids courts, the receiver for the
defendant has been granted autbority to dispose of some of
the property for the benefit of creditors.
A "Shut-Up" Bed.
The introduction of the folding bed in this country dates
hack to 'lye Ilfesse bedstead," which appeared about 1653. It
is defined in Johnson's dictionary asa bed so formed as to be
shut up in a case.
20
Furnishing a Honeymoon Flat.
By HARVEY J. O'HIGGINS.
1.
The ferry house clock, at the foot of Christopher ~treet.
marked fifteen minutes r ast five, and all the trucks of the
wholesale district were hurrying in, over the paving stones of
the side streets, to the wide esplanade of asphalt that lies
along this stretch of the New York water front. They kept
coming like the straggling rout of a commissariat, with noise
and confusion, clattering over the uneven pavements and
bumping across the car tracks. Already, hundrd.s of them,
their empty shafts thrown up before them like stiff arms, sup-plicated
the sunset in long rows, cart-tail to cart-tail; and
down the open passageways between them, the driver:=-,jolt-ing
along on the fat backs of horses with dangling traces and
swinging n0se bags, raced to the boarding stables like farm
boys, free for the night.
Carney was late. He had hoped to have his teac!! stalled
by five o'clock, but his last delivery of packing cases had not
been taken off his hands until ten minntes fast five. Now he
came down Christopher street like a Roman chariot racer,
standing behind the high seat of his double truck, shaken
to the ears with the jarring of the axles, his hug,,_Clydesdales
pounding along as if to break their hoofs. He tllfJlE'rl in on
the asphalt at full speed, and wheeled with the recklessness
of a battery going into action; and before the h~.'Ul1 {"Ollld
catch breath, he had unhitched the tugs, freed the pole,
vaulted on to "Sharkey's" back, and set off at a gallop to the
stables.
He hoped to be married that night-or, rathl"r, there was
a fearfully alluring possibility that he might he -amI his
bride-elect would leave Sturm & Bergman's displrry re-om.; at
six. She might wait for him and she might not.
It was already half-past five when he hurried into a. water
front saloon to get the bundle of clothes which he had left
with the barkeeper that morning; and he struggled for what
seemed hours, in the· little washroom there~fighting with
starched linen and twisted suspenders-to get himself into
his wedding garments. It was a hot August evening". His
fingers were slippery with perspiration; his neck was !:m'-ell~d
with blood; he strangled in his efforts to fasten his celluloid
collar; and every time that he paused to take breath. a l'lumb
fear quaked in his inside at thought of the uncertainty he was
facing, and he wiped his forehead limply on his shirtsleeves
and sighed hard.
He ran for a street car with his coat over his arm, pawing
at the back of his necktie in a vain attempt to catch it under
his collar button. The conductor pulled him to the platform
as the car started with a jerk. "Wha's the time?" he gasped.
The conductor thrust him aside. "Quart' t' six." He clung
to the brass hand rail weakly. He had had. no food since
breakfast, except a glass of beer and some free lunch biscuits;
his legs were aching from the vibration of the truck; he
swayed with the motion of the car; and every now and then-overtaken
by the fear that she might have been merely giving
him" a jolly"-he blinked like a man in a "drop" elevator
when the cage floor leaves his feet.
Not so the lady. She was a cloak model, "36 figure," in
Sturm & Bergman's; and she had been parading all day in
various winter furs and jackets before. the critical eyes of
wholesale buyers from out of town. She had walked up and
down interminably, as graceful as a drawing room belle, but
as indifferent as a dummy. One of the younger buyers, ad-miring
the stately creature in her "princess" gown of black
brilliantine that fitted her like a mold, asked her with an air
of gallantry whether she did not ever tire. She lowered a
supercilious stare on him, and said "Ugh?" The salesman
interposed hastily: "Now here's one of our newest de-signs--"
At six o'clock she turned from the window where she had
been idle, and went to the dressing room to put of her lihar,·
ness' and elothe herself for the street. She did not hurry.
The younger girls giggled and chattered around her, array-ing
themselves in open-work finery and picture hats. She
was the last to leave. Her face had lost its work-hour hcavi-ness
and flushed with the faintest twinkle of excitement.
It returned to affected indifference when she saw Carney
across the street. They met as if by accident, at the corner.
"Well?" she said .
.He reached his hat brim awkwardly, his coat pinching him
under the arms. "How yuh he'n?"
"Fine. How're you?"
"A' right."
And suddenly there was nothing more to say. Carney
usually relapsed into this satisfied silence as soon as they
met; and she, tonight, instead of making conversation for
him, looked straight before her with an air of saying: "Go on.
now. I've helped yon all I intend to. You'll have to do this
by yourself."
They walked up Broadway together, as they had done a
score of times before. jostled by the crowds that poured from
the stores and office buildings. Neither of them spoke.
When they came to Astor Place, she turned east toward
Third avenue, as if she were going home. "Hal' on," he said.
"Ain't yuh~-"
She'looked at him. "Ain't I what?"
He hitched up his neck in his tight collar. "Ain't yuh-gain'
to have somethin' t' eat?"
She could see that this was not the question he wished to
ask, but she pretended to notice nothing. "Where'll we go?"
"What's the matter with Dinkey's?"
All right."
It was six months before that she had met Carney-one
midday-as she was going out to her luncheon and he was
delivering a load of goods to the freight elevator of Sturm &
Berman's. She had recognized him at once by the scar on
his upper lip, and she remembered the day she had given him
that wound accidentally. (She had been breaking up a box
for her mother's firing, and the head had slip~ed off the
hatchet and struck him in the mouth.) He had been little
Ph illy Carney then, going to school; and she had been "Clare"
Walsh, carrying parcels for "Madame Gilligan," of Ninth
street.
That was fifteen years ago now. They had been neighbors
in Cherry Hill's "Dublin Row" at the time. But when her
widowed mother died, she revolted against the slavery of her
apprenticeship to the dressemaker and went on the stage as
a chorus girl for three contemptuous years. The vanities of
the theater had sickened her sturdy independence; she had
returned to the working world as a shop girl and accepted
a better position as a cloak model.
When_Carney met her, she was adrift on the life of the
city in a sort of unambitious isolation, working stolidly,
lonely among the younger girls with whom she had no sym-pathy,
and bruskly repelling any flippant advances from the
men. She had lost track of all her girlhood acquaintances.
"Dublin Row" had long since been torn down. And when
she saw Carney with his truck, it was like meeting an old
friend in a world of strangers,
II.
"What'll yuh take?"
She looked over the greasy bill of fare, her arms on the
little table. They werc in a basement restaurant that offered
a "regular" dinner for .twenty-five cents. There were ants
in the sugar bowl and gravy stains in the saltcellars. "I could
..:at a horse," she said.
He turned to the unshaven waiter absent-mindedly. "Same
fer me,"
When he stopped laughing with her at his
was more at ease with himself and his clothes.
that's a joke," he said, as soon as the waiter had
bring soup.
She patted her back hair, looking at him with that flirta-tious
air which is proper to a cafe dinner. For him. the
sparkle in her face was so hrilliant that he could not see any
defect of beauty ill her high cheek bones and her lean mouth.
She dazzled him. He weighed his fork on his big fingers.
"Say," he asked huskily. "did yuh mean that, las' night,,"
She reddened, startled. "Mean what?"
"You know:'
She tried to laugh. "Did you?"
"I seen Father Dumphy this afternoon."·
;;You did!" Her lips still held the wrinkles of their smile;
but her eyes, fixed on him, kept twitching in and widening
out in an alternation of incredulity and hope.
"I thought you-I tal' 'm we'd be aroun' to see 'm t'night
-if yuh'd come."
mistake, he
';WeIL an'
left them to
21
She had to continue in charge of the dinner, because Car-ney
was in no condition to do more than eat; and he ate as
if he did not know what he was putting into his mouth. All
day, there had been but one thought in his mind; did she really
mean to marry him? Now, with her assurance that she meant
it, this woman with the walk of a goddess had suddenly
stepped into his blank future and filled it with a bewildering
richness; he went about his meal in a dazed attempt to re-construct
his view of his life around that glowing vision. At
one moment, he devoured his food; at the next, he sat with
meat impaled on the tines of his fork, forgetting to open his
mouth for it; and when she spoke to him, he listened, smiling,
without any apparent comprehension.
She left him to his silence at last, and they finished their
dilll1er without a word. He sat over the empty dishes, until
she said: "Vv'el1?"
I-Ie grinned.
;;When did you say you'd be there?"
;'Where?"
She did 110treply, and he looked up at her timorously. Her
gaze searched his face like a light that took him full in the
eyes and confused him. He stammered, "l-I~ "
The waiter shuffled up with their soup and interrupted
them. Camcy, in his embarrassment, gulped a steaming
spoonful and burned his throat. He felt her smile on him
and met it with a twisted mouth. She choked hysterically.
"Did-did yuh mean it?" he insisted.
She answered, behind her handkerchief; ';l guess so-if
you did."
She heard his spoon clatter nervously in the soup plate,
\Vhen she had \viped her eyes, she saw him ''v'ith another
scalding mOllthfnl at his lips, and she cried: "You'll hurn
yourself!"
He spilled it into the plate. He wiped the splatter from
his coat front with his table na:lkin and mopped his forehead,
;;Gcc\" he said.
She leaned back in her chah a:lc! watched him amusedly.
';Fish?" the waiter asked, behind her.
';Yep. Fish," she answered; and slle spoke in the voice of
a woman who '...a.s henceforth to do the ordering for two.
She straighten:!J her hat, trying to look up at it through
her eyebrows. "Father Dumphy's."
He came down to earth with a pe,rceptible jolt; he had
forgotten that part of the affair. He was like a man unex-pectedly
left a fortune; he was so busy planning his new life
that he, had forgotten to consider the legal procedure incident
to the inheritance.
1-1 e had Iorgotten more than that, as she discovered when
they came down the stone steps of the church into the night,
man and wife. She was both laughing and exasperated.
"You're a peach:' she said. "How'd you think we could get
married without a ring?" He shook his head, blissfUlly
shamefaced. "It's bad luck," she said. "Besides, that ain't a
"wedding ring at alL"
He looked hopelessly at his father's big seal ring on her'
outstretched j-inger. "Well, say. Come and get one."
';Yesl \!\.There'll we get one at this time of night?"
"T don't know."
"N o. Neither do 1. Put on your hat, silly,"
He put it on. They walked to the corner. He hesitated
there, fumbling in his poc.kets.
22
"Well?"
""Vhere-where 're we gain' to go?" he faltered.
"What!"
"1-1 didn't know whether yuh meant it," he pleaded. J "An
Ididn't make 00- lvly place ain't fit- It took all the money
I hadto payhim. 1--"
"Well, Phil Carney," she cried. "If you ain't the limit!"
He did not deny it. He looked all around him at the
passersby, as if he thought they could help him.
"What're yuh gain' to do?" she demanded.
He had money in the savings bank, but that was out of
rc.ach till morning. He had a brother in Brooklyn. but they
were not on very friendly terms. He might borrow some-where-
enough for one night in a hotel anyway-perhaps
,-from Mrs. Kohn, from whom he had rented his room, or from
his friend the barkccrer with whom he had left his clothes.
But those two were at opposite ends of the town; and while
he was trying to decide which h~ should apply to, she walked
out into the road to reach an approaching street car.
"Where yuh gain'?"
"I'm going back to my room," she said disgustedly. "You
can go where yOUlike."
7lRTI0'JI~
&3 7%+
he hired out by the day instead of by the week-for he had
the finest horses on thc water front, and he wished to reserve
the right to keep them in their stalls whenever the streds
werc too dangerously iced in winter, or too dangerously sun-beatcn
in summer, for them to be at work. So, when he w:)ke
next mornin, he was under no necessity to ask leave of ab-sence
for the day.
Long before the other drivers had arrived at their stables,
he was hitched up, and by the time the water front had wak-ened
to the day's work, he was driving up and down the cross
streets of the East Side, reading notices of flats to let. The
janitors were putting out the ash cans. He hailed them from
his high seat with "How much 're yer rooms?" Then, with
the price in his eye, he "sized up" the front of the building,
shook his head, and drove on.
He wanted something new; no "second-hand" flats for
him. He did not intend to .pay more than fifteen dollars a
month rent; and he did not wish more than four or five rooms.
It was eight o'clock before he came on the row of apart-ment
houses that are known to the neighborhood of Second
avenue and Twelfth street as "The Honeymoon Flats;" but
it did not take him ten minutes to decide that he had found
And when Carney t!nlered that parlor, he took oft his hat.
"\Vell, say," he protested. "his home. The last of the buildings had just been opened for
"Well, say," she mocked him. wrhe next time you ask a occupancy; it was in red" brick striped with white stone fac-girl
to get ma.rricd, you'd better have some place to take her ings; there was a shining brass hand rail down the front
to. I can't live in the streets, can I?" steps; the halls were gay with crimson burlaps; and on the
That silenced him. He stood beside the car step forlornly fifth floor there was a flat of five rooms, papered in gorgeous
as she got aboard. "Good night;" she said. "I'll see you to- designs of red, green, and gold, to rent for twenty dollars a
morrow." month.
He remained in the middle orthe street-watching the car The fact that the houses were called "The Honeymoon
climb the slope of the avenlle-until a moving van almost fan Flats" because none but inexperienced housekeepers would
him down. The shouts of the driver sent him back to the try to live in them was not known to Carney. They were un-sidewalk;
the movement of the late shoppers turned him heated, except by gas grates, but he was not one to think of
round; he drifted away aimlessly. heating arrangements in midsummer, and the gates were
About midnight, he came to the foot of Christopher street bronzed and glittering. There were "cracks anjund the win-and
stOOQlooking Qut at the bivouac of the army of trucks dow frames large enough to put a finger in, had he looked for
like a deserter returned to his camp. Ilis hat was slanted them-but he did 11ot. He saw gasoliers as resplendent as
dejectedly down over his eyes; the torn ends of his celluloid the most gorgeous he had ever seen in a saloon; and they
collar were rrotuding under his chin; he carried his coat over hung from ceilings that were bright with squirt-brush deco-one
shoulder. He stepped down heavily into the gutter and rations of red and blue flowers and red and green fruit. The
stumbled across the road. lathroom shone like a plumber's window display.
"A' right, Jim," he answered meekly, to the challenge of Carney nodded. "'5 all right," he said. "'S all right."
the watchman, "I'm gain' to sleep in the cart." He left his watch as a "deposit" and drove off to his break-fast;
but he went round about, ~by way of Third avenue and
Canal street, slowly, on the lookout for furniture stores.
When he came to one with a gold sign, in letters a yard high
-"Everything for Housekeeping," he stopped short. Below
III.
Like the majority of New York truckmen, Carney owned
his own team and wagon; but unlike the majority of them,
it, on a net banner, he read: "Ask to see Ollf $T29 flat, fur-nished
complete. Ten per cent off for cash. One do1Jar
opens an account He read it twice, muttering it over. Then
he whipped tip his horses suddenly and rattled down the
street with as much noise as a tally-ho.
"Gee!" he laughed as he swung the corner. "T11is'll b\.1st
the bank."
On the fourth floor of .i\littellJaull1 & Schwarz's "l<llrni-ture
Emporilltn," the enterprising manager had screened off
four compartments to represent a parlor. a beclrooll1, a
kitchen, and a dining roolU. And \,.,,-11(C'1a1r11ey entered that
parlor, behveen pea-gre('n portieres beautiful ,,,,ith yello\''''1Jall-fringe,
he took off his hat. Four ricb red ;;damask" chairs
and a sofa were arranged symmetrically abollt tbe walls; a
square "parlor" table, as big as a chessboard, stood in the
eX3.ct center of the room on the exact center of an ;'Oriental"
rug that was made of a yard of cheap carpet with a border
sewn on it; and in the eX;Jct center of the table, a very small
lamp supported by a very large globe shade that was decorated
like a dyed Easter egg.
A ;'pier mirror of French glass" distorted reflections from
the wall opposite the doorway. .l\ chromo au a bamboo easel
stood before a pair of lace curtains that were hung to repre-sent
a window. Everything was brilliant with varnish, rich
with scroll saw carving, upholstered in imitation plushes and
ball-fringe. Carncy looked around him in awed silence; and
when the salesman turned his back to lead the way into the
bedroom, the big truckman furtively smoothed his hair.
That bedroom-from its "golden oak dressing case and
wash stand" to its ';elegant, brass-trimmed, steel, enameled
bed"-was luxuriously complete. In the dining room, an
"oak" table was set with "decorated English" dishes, as thick
as quick-lunch china. An ;;e1egant sewing machine with a
five year guarantee' stood at the foot of the puffy leather
couch. There were forty pieces of tinware in the kitcheu, a
Hgolden oak" refrigerator, ten yards of oilcloth-;'everything
to make home comfortable and a woman happy."
Carney said, with a heavy affectation of nonchalance: "1
guess this'll do." He went down into his bulging trousers
pocket for the roll of bills be had drawn from the bank. ;'1
got my truck outside. I'll just take the stuff along with me."
There were difficulties, but he overcame them al1. No car-pets
went with the $129 flat; he paid extra for them and got
a superb design of yellow flowers, as big as pUlTJ.pkins,on a
flaming scarlet ground. There "vas a cotton"'batting ;'down
comfortable" on the bed, but no sheets or blankets; he
hought them \"iholesale on the lower floors. If there was any-thing
he seemed likely to forget, the salc::::man tactfully re-minded
him. He hired )''1itteIbaum & ScIl\",arz's official carpet
layer to help him move. in; and having paid $25 on account
and signed an agreement to pay $2 a week thereafter, he took
his center table in one hand and his parlor lamp in the other
and led a procession of employes with chairs, tables, pillows
and tinware to his truck.
"Shake yerselvcs, now, hoys," he said. "I ain't got all clay
on this job."
They shook themselves. By midday, the parlor carpet. was
laid; a green matting ,'vas down in the dining room; the ten
yards of oilcloth adorned the kitchen, and Carney, standing in
the disorder of the bedroom where all the fllrnitllre ,vas piled,
smiled around him on the beginnings of his happiness-and
felt hungry. It reminded him that his team had not been fed.
He was alone in his own house all aftenioon, putting
things to rights. The front room \,,,'as easily arranged, be-cause
he remembered exactly how it had been set up in the:
furniture store; but the bedroom gave him a bad haH hour.
The side pieces of the bed did not tit the ends; the brass hall
trimmings came off in his impatient grip; the pillows would
not go into their slips until he took them fairly between his
23
knees and drew the cases on like stockings. The pillow shams
he spread all the wash stand and dressing table.
By four o'clock he had the forty pieces of tinware arranged
on hooks around the kitchen, and the agate-ware kettle, filled
with water, set on the gas stove. It was then he found that
there was no gas in the pipes; but the janitor, frantically sum-moned.
led him to the meter in the bathroom-a "quarter-in-the-
slot" tenement house meter-made change of a dollar for
him, and shO\>,iedhim ho\',,' to put his money in. The rest was
a matter of hanging the curtains and the ('hromos in the front
mum. Carney shook his head doubtfully at one of the latter
-a pictme of a yellow horse dragging a sleigh-load of wood
lip a forest road in a snowstorm. "Darn mut," he said. He'd
ought t' 've had a team for that haul."
But the crowning audacity of his day was the purchasing
of a delicatessen dinner-cold chicken, sweet pickles! potato
falad, Swiss cheese, bologna, rye bread, a wooden plate of
butter, and fOUTbottles of imported English ale. He spread
it on th~ table, in the dishes of the ';decorated English tea
set," drew up two chairs ,md surveyed his work from the
doonvay with a chuckle of uncontainable delight.
IV.
1£ Mrs. Carney had been a bride out of a book, she would
have entered that flat in the most adorable ecstacies of appre-ciation.
But, unfortunately for Carney, her mind was not fic~
tional, and she had been using it all day.
She had repented of leaving him, the night before, as soon
as she had irrevocably laid her street car fare; and she had
hurried down to her work, that morning, expecting to find
him at Sturm & Bergman's side door. When he had not ap-peared
at luncheon hour, she had been so worried that she
could not eat; and the afternoon's parade in fall costumes,
with the thermometer at eighty-six degrees, had worn her
weak. At six o'clock she came out, desperately resolved to
inquire for him at his rooms. And he was at the corner to
greet her with a smile that: in the circumstances was idiotic.
His explanations were irritatingly incomplete and incoher-ent.
It exasperated her still more to find that her bad temper
could not chafe a geniality in him that had no adequate cause
apparent. She had to remind him again that she had no wed-ding
ring as yet; and he blithely put her off with a promise
that they should get one in the morning. She was peevish
with hunger. She ",...ished her dinner at once. There was no
sort of setlse in going to look for flats before they ate.
Bnt just this one, Carney pleaded. They could get their
dinner right near it.
She would have left him again, but her day's experience
had made her wise. She yielded at last in a sulky exhaustion,
unable t.o argue with a man that did nothing but grin. They
bad to stand in the street car. She mounted the four flights
of stairs to the flat ,,,,ith her jaw set on a determination to
disappoint the eager assurance 'with which he led the way.
He unlocked the I:arlor door and ushered her in. She
glanced around coldly. "What do you want to rent a fur-nisbed
flat for?"
"r didn't," he buhbled. "I rented it empty, an' furnished it
myself."
"Today?" she cried.
dYah," he confessed more doubtfully.
"'And that's what you've been doing all day!"
He nodded.
"v..'ell, Phil Carney!" she wailed. "If that ain't the mean-est!
\\rhy-why-" She choked up with tears and anger.
';\,Vhy, that's all the fun!" She sat down in one of his damask
cIlairs, fumbling for her handkerchief.
He closed the door on his fiasco. "Well, say," he began.
"A "'/, shut up," she wept. ;;You go 'n' do everything
wrong. r bet yOll got the dangdest lot of old jUl1k~-"
..I ain't," he defended himself. "I got the best they had."
"The best they had!" She summed up the shoddy rnagnifi~
cel1ce of the parlor in a sweeping glance of disgust.
24
He turned his tack on her to look out of the window. She
whisked into the bedroom. "Achl" he heard her cry_ "Pine!
. Cotton battin'! . Excelsior! It ain't even a hair mat-tress!"
She flung into the dining room-and stopped in the
doorway_
The pitiful mute expectation of the two chairs drawn up
to the delicatessen dinner confronted her with a dumb re4
proach. Her face changed slowly, her eyebrows still knitted
in a scowl that began to twitch uncertainly, her mouth trem-bling
in a doubtful slant.
When she came back to him in the front room, sht; took
him by the two ears, from behind, and shook his head from
side to side. "Darn you, Phil," she said, between laughing
and crying, "jf you ain't the darncdest big baby--"
He turned around and saw her face. ;;Well,say--"
That was the beginning of a change in Mrs. Carney. She
had come to marriage as a strayed cat comes to a saucer of
milk, with a boldness that is born of hunger, and a tense
weariness that does not relax under the first caress. To e's-cape
from her single life of self··supported loneliness, she
would .have married anyone of whom she was not altogether
afraid; and she was not afraid of Carney. She had for him a
feeling that was lightly conteml.tuOtlS even when it was most
tender---'--afeeling that held him off and smiled at him with an
amused tolerance, at best.
It was with this smile that she sat down to their cold dHl-ner.
But in the middle of the meal, she gathered~from some-thing
Carney said-that he did not expect her to go back to
her work in Sturm & Bergman's; and she was struck dumb.
(She had been prepared to work until thc care of a family
should keep her at home.) She listened to him with a pathetic
expression of wistfulness and doubt, while he-in clumsy
apology for having furnished the Hat without consulting her-took
out his bank book and explained his indebtedness to the
';Furniture Emporium." "The stuff ain't all paid fer," he said,
;;au' we ·won't never pay fer it unless they take hack what yuh
don't like an' give you somethin' else fer it."
He t:asscd the book to her to keep, as the treasurer of the
household. She turned it over in her Jlands as jf it had been
a jewel box. ';You better look out," she said with a tremu-lous
laugh. "Ill break you!"
Carney looked at her solemnly trustful. "A' right. We
go broke together now,"
And suddenly she put her hands up to her face and began
to sob.
She was somewhat tearful again in the morning when he
left her to go to his work; and she hung out of the front win-dow
to wave him good-bye as he turned the corner far below
her. I-Ie was taking 'wonl to Sturm & Bergman's that their
cloak model had left them; and she drew in from the window
sill, and turned to look down the little flat, with a. new light
in her face, all the domestic instincts stirring in her chokingly.
The inherited desire to be protected, sheltered, housed in re-spect
and love, took ber in its fulfilment with a hysteric swell-ing
of the heart; and she clasped her hands under her breast
and drew in a long breath, her eyes still shining with tears,
her thin lips set in that hungry pout with which a child asks
for either food or kisses.
She walked slowly back to the dining room and sat in
Carney's chair, stroking the handle of his knife caressingly.
And when she was taking up the dishes to carry them out to
the kitchen to be washed, she stooped over them and cuddled
them and laughed.
It was some six weeks later that Mr. Philip Carney, in his
shirt sleeves, with his pipe in his mouth and his wife on his
knee, sat in the breeze of the parlor window, enjoying the
evening air. "Well," he said, "how d' yuh like bein' married?"
She tweaked his sunburned nose smilingly; cooing to him
in that ridiculous "baby talk" which seems to be the universal
language of young married couples.
He rescued his pipe. "Here," he laughed. ';Don't do that.
Yuh tickle the roof 0' me mouth."
She pinched his lirs, puckering up the cut she had given
him in Dublin Row when she struck her "Philly wif 'm
hatchet," as she said. There was a sort of fierce playfulness
in her manner, a rough fondness that recalled her old im~
pcrious treatment of him.
"H uh 1" he teased her. "That ain't the way yuh talked
that night when yuh Ie£' me 'n Ninth av--"
She clapped a hand over his mouth. "You promised you'd
never--"
hand. "A' right," he said.
But how did yuh like the
"Not au-furnished
He caught away her
other· word about it. .
flat that day---:: Ouch!"
She was pulling his hair. "Shut up, then, will you?"
"Ow! Ye-e-es! Quit it! I'll shut up."
She settled back against his shoulder, He grunted as he
got his teeth into the worn mouthpiece of his pipe again; and
in the contented silence that ensued-looking out over the
bouses that had once been merely street walls to them, and
remembering the lives they had led on the pavements and in
the stores-those two waifs of the city were vaguely con-scious
of the eternal miracle of domesticity and mildness that
had been worked in them by the Honeymoon Flat.
New Woodworking Factories at Knoxville.
Knoxville, Tenn., is steadily increasing in importance as a
woodworking center. \Vithin the past few years about thirty
factories, a considerable number of which are operated in the
manufacture of furniture and kindred goods, have been estab-lished
in that place, and their number will soon be inaeased
by the erection of a large factory by Sterchi Brothers, who
will operate it in the manufacture of sideboards exclusively,
The firm manufacture chamber suites on a large scale' and,
having ria facilities for the manufacture of sideboards, the
firm decided to erect a new factory.
The Knoxville Moulding & Carving company is the name
of a firtn organized recently by a number of young men re-cently
connected with the woodworking indllstries of Grand
Rapids. TJle manllfact!lre of mouldings and carvings will be
commenced as soon as a large factory, leased for the puq~ose,
can be made ready for occupancy. The machinery and equip-ment
necessary in the operation of the factory is in the course
'1f installation. C. Evan Johnson, formerly of the Waddell
11anufacturing company, is at the head of the firm.
Jarr.es Waddell Takes to the Road.
James Waddell, a son of George \Vaddell (deceased), has
succeeded C. E,van Johnson as the traveling representative of
the \Aladdell IVlallufacturing company. He is a yOtlllg man
possessed of fine business attainments, and the Artisan com-mends
him to the kindly consideration of the trade. His
father was one of the organizers of the Waddell Manufactur-ing
company, and his connection with the corporation con-tinued
ulltil his death.
Nice Export Order.
The Cordesman l'.'Iachine company, of Cincinnati, Ohio.
ha'le just recei"'ed an order from the Argentine Republic gov-ernment,
of South America, through their New York repre-sentative,
for some thirteen different ma~hines, among them
heing one of their well-known No, 3;::; 1:and resaws.
Mr. Garratt's Summer Home at Wequetonsing.
Thomas F. Garratt, of the Michigan Chair company.
Grand Rapids, owns a beautiful summer home at vVequeton-sing,
on Little Traverse bay, northern Michigan. His family
spends the summer there, and Mr. Garratt usually joins them
for a day or two at a time, as the business of the company
permits.
We carry a line of Rebuilt Wood-
Working Machinery for Pattern
Shops. Furniture Factories. Sash
and Door Manufacturers. Car:
penters. Planing Mills.Etc. AI AI
When in the market let us send you our list of machines and we aTe
~Urt~that we can interest you ill prices and quality of machines offered
EDWARDS MACHINE CO, 34-36 W. Washington St.
CHICAGO, ILL
Points on Photographing
I t is not necessary for any manufacturer to spend time and money in hauling his samples
from one to five miles and take from four to twelve days to get a line photographed.
THE BEST AND CHEAPEST WAY
is to have our photographer come direct to your factory and do all the necessary work
in less than two days if the line does not exceed a hundred and fifty pieces. No haul-ing-
no waiting for others-and work done under your own supervision.
Our booklet giving details and prices will be mailed to you on request.
You may also be relieved of annoyance if you place your order with us for
ENGRAVING and PRINTING. Let us submit samples and explain how it is done.
THE JAMES BAYNE COMPANY
PHOTOGRAPHERS
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH .
ENGRAVERS PRINTERS
..Relia~le" Rolls
..Relia~le" Panels
THE FmWOCK
ROLL AND PANEL
COMPANY
Mfrs. of "RelL'l.1>le" Built
up Veneeled Rolls and
Plural Ply Pal Ids for all
PUfp"se~. Correspondence
solicited.
EVANSVILLE,II'D.
Improved Cyclone Dust ColJector~ Automatic
Fumace Feeders, Steel Plate Exhaust Fans,
Exhaust and Blow Piping .
Complete systems cbigned,
rnanufao:tured. inslalled and
guaranteed. Old systems
remodeled on modem lines
on mosl economical pliI.Ds.
Supplementary s y s I ems
added where pff8enl sys-tems
ate QulgrQwn. De-fective
sy S I e m8 corrected
and put in proper worki"g
0....
12 and 14 s. Clinton St.
CHICAGO. • ILL.
26
BE UP-TO-DATE. Get one of the New Electric
Spindle Carvers
and keep abreast of the times. You cannot
afford to let the "other fellow" have the
work you should be doing. The Electric
Carver will keep the trade you have and get
more for you. Our Carving Cutters are of
the be.t.
Wesf Mi(~i~anMa(~inean~ Tool(o.,lM.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
G. R. &. I. fLYERS
BETWEEN
Grand Rapids
and Chicago
To Chicago
Lv. GRAND RAPIDS, Ex. Sun 7.10 A. M.
Ar. CHICAGO ..•.. " 12.35 Noon
R\1ff.t Parlor Car
Lv. GRAND RAPIDS, Ex. Sun 12.00 Noon
Ar. CHICAGO ..... " .................• 4.50 P. M.
Parlor and DlnlrrollCar
Lv. GRAND RAPIDS, Daily 12.35 Night
Ar. CHICAGO " 7.15 A. M.
Eleotrlc Lighted Sleeping Ca.r
Phone Union Stal10n for R••• "atioD.
Peter 'Cooper's Glue
If yOll have any trouble this warm weather with your glue, has jf oc4
curred to you to use PETER COOPER.'S? When other manufactur-ers
or agents teU you that their glue is as good as COOPER.'S. they
admit Cooper's is the BEST. No one extols his product hy comparing
it with an inferior article. Cooper's Glue is the world's standard of ex-cellence.
With it all experiment begins, all comparisons cominues, and
all test:s ends Sold continuously since I ho. Its reputation, like itself,
STICKS. Peter Cooper's glue is made from selected hide stock, care-fully
prepared. No bones or pig stock enter into it:s composition. In
stTength it is uniform, each barrel containing the same kind of glue that
is in every other barrel of the same grade.
ORIN A. WARD, Grand Rapid. Agent
S03 Pytblan Temple
ClllzeD& Phone 3333
ToG ran d Ra pi d s
Lv. CHICAGO, ~ihCSt~~~~~E~x~. Sun 1.15 P. M.
Ar. GRAND RAPIDS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5.50 P. M.
Buffet PaTIo.. Car
Lv. CHICAGO, NihCst~~{~l~E~x. Sun 6.55 P. M.
Ar. GRAND RAPIDS " 11.50 P. M.
Parlor and Dlnlnli Car
Lv. CHICAGO, r:ihCSt~~~r;D::=aily 11.55 Night
Ar. GRAND RAPIDS.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. 7.00 A. M.
Electric Llghn-.d SI.ep'ng Ca.r
Phen.e Michigan Central City Ticket Offfll;le
for Reservations. 119 Adams Street
t~","·· "'I" :t··~t' $""" Stephenson nt~.(0.
. • • Soutb Bend. Ind.
".
Wood T umings,
Turned Moulding.
Dowels and Dowel
Pins.
Catalogue to Manufac_
turers on Application.
SOUTHERN TRADE NEVER LOOKED BRIGHTER.
Unusual Prosperity Seems to Prevail in All Sections-Scar-city
of Walnut Wood and Its Effect.
Although latc in placing their orders, due to the llllcer-tainty
of the cotton croj) and its low price of a few months
ago, the Chattanooga fnrniture manufacturers now anticipate
an acti'le trade from die 1st of August through to the close
of the year. Their salesmen are now making all active can-vas>;
of the territory [rol11 the Carolinas down lo Tcyas.
Conditions of the early summer months, for which the' de-pressing
effect of rain on the corn crop!; of the southern and
western COUOll states was rcsj:ollsihk, have underwent a
wonderful improvement.
The tendency of new dCl,'elopment in manufacturing en-terprises
is southward, and this. combined with the large
amount of mon(~y now being inve,sted in southern enterprises,
practically insnres active and prosperous bu"iness condi-tions
for the next succeeding years. Both the sonthern banks
and the merchants are in the best financial condition in their
history. Southern manufacturers are steadily and rapidly
extending their territory into the north and ,,,'estern sections
of the country, particularly in New England and states north
of the Ohio river. By adding to their lines and correspond-ingly
improving the quality of their goods, they are meeting
with liberal encouragement from the dealers.
Southern manufacturers, with tho"e ill the north, are con-fromed
with the harrlwood problem. The south has been the
great :l-ield for the production of oak !umher, and the supply
is rapidly becoming exhausted, tbe quality deteriorating in
the same proportion. A" a result of this, it is predicted that
there will ce a tendel1cy to increase the output of iron furni-ture,
particularly beds. There hi!; never been a greater de-mand
among southern mills for oak lumber, and in pine
neatly all the mills are short of stock. This class of lumber
goes into building lines. In this respect the same extensive
building activity of the north and \vest this year is being
duplicated in the prosperous cities of the south. Phenomenal
growth in the iron and coal industries, coupled with unusual
stridcs in the advancement of railroad construction work,
add to the prosperity of the country and promise much for
the progress of the southern states during the next decade.
Development of the Chest of Drawers-and the Trunk.
There is "nothing new under the sun," is a statement im-pressed
upon the mind of the average reader nearly every
day of his life. Ideas and inventions are continually ad-vanced
that seem to be no more than a repetition of some-thing
we may discover hidden cack in the catacombs of
history. Yet, despite the fact that "hiMory repeats itself,"
the ,,,,'orld is progressing. A modern writer recently aptly
27
portrayed the idea when he likened the world's progress to
a spiral stairway. Its general course may be circular, but it
is always tending upward to something higher and better.
There bas heen placed upon the market during the last
year or two what might be considered a decided novelty in
trunks. This trunk is constructed with a complete set of
drawers, instead of being the usual box-like affair, and
is calculated to preserve the orderly shape of one's be-longings
while passing- through the gentle care of the av-erage
haggage smasher. Yet the idea was anticipated in a
crude form hy the cabinet makers of the J7th century. A
trunk of this pattem is mentioned in "The Furniture of Our
Forefathers." The trunk is built with a heavy case, square
and stolid in appearance, and contains four drawers. Each
of thcse bas a lock, on each side of which is a dropped ring
knob of brass. It is covered with red leather and studded
with brass nails arranged to form a border of rose, thistle
and shamrock. Upon the top is the monogram "A. R." It
is said to have been the traveling trunk of Queen Anne. Par-ticular
interest is attached to the work as showing the devel-opment
of the chast of drawers from the most elementary
form of chc,st.
Webster's Bill That Grew.
Daniel \Vebster was never noted for attention to detail in
business matters. His well-known failings wcrc often taken
advantage of by ullscrupulous creditors, who gave no receipts
for paid bills, simply because they were not demanded. Web-ster
was \-vell aware of this, but it seemed to trouble him very
little.
On one occasion a creditor presented a bill which seemed
familiar, and \\Tebster asked: "Isn't this bill pretty large?"
"1 think not," replied the maker of it, confidently.
"\Vell," said Vl ebster, handing over the money, "every
time 1 ha,,re paid that bill it has seemed to me a trifle lafier."
Armchair of Historic Value.
A historic piece of furnitme is now on exhibition in
Milwaukee in the shape of an old iron armchair which wa$
at one time the favorite restil1g place of President Martin
Va.n Buren, and played an important part in the demo-cratic
councils of the ante-bellum days in New York. The
chair hecame distinguished through having for fifty years
been intimately connected with the life of the late William
E. Cramer, the veteran editor of the Evening Wisconsin,
vvho was a warm personal friend of President Van Buren.
It was recently rescued from oblivion and underwent
thorough repairs at the plant of the Ferronx Brazing com-pany
and reupholstering by the Slater-Price-Leidig com-pany,
1\Jilwaukee.
IF YOU HAV E NEVER T R lED OUR
~
RUBBING
AND '"POLISHING
DETROIT FACTORY VARNISHES CANADIAN FACTORY
YOU HAVE YET TO LEARN THE
WHY NOT PUT IT TO
F"ULL POSSIBILITIES OF" THIS CLASS
THE TEST BY GIVING US A TRIAL ORDER
OF" GOODS
PHILADELPHIA BALTIMORE
BERRY BROTHERS, LIMITED, VARNISH MANUFACTURERS
NE:W YORK BOSTON CHICAGO ST. LOUIS CINCiNNATI SAN FRANCiSCO
FACTORY AND MAIN OFFICE, DETROIT CANADIAN FACTORY WALK£RYILLE, ONT.
28
Bolton Band Saw filer lor Saws ;4 inch up.
111V ....sligat~ our
Line.
Saw and Knife Fitting Machinery and Tools r~ne,B~g,~'~I,~;~,~:.'t
Baldwin. Tuthill a>. Bolton
Grand aaplds. Mich.
Filers. Setters.
Sharpeners,
Grinllers.
Swages,
Stretchers.
Brazing and
FilinG Clamps,
Knife Balances.
Hammering
Tools.
New 200 paj!8
Catalo£ue for
1905 Free.
B. T. & B. Style D, Knife Grinder. Full Automatic. \Vet or dry
CABINET
MAfiERS
BARNES'
Hand and Foot
Power Machinery
Our New "and and foot Power Circular Saw NO.4
Tbe strongest, most powerful, and in every way the best
machine of its kind ever made, for ripping,
cross-cutting, bOTing and grooving.
In these Clays of close competition,
need the best possible eqnipment,
and this they can have in .
Send for our New Catalogue.
"W. F. ®., JOHN BARNES CO.
654 Ruby Street. Rochford. Ill.
-OFFICES
Boston New York Jamestown High Point Cincinnati Detroit Grand R.aplds Chicago St. Lou.is Minneapolis
Associate Offices Ilnd Bonded Attorneys in all Principal Cities
The Furniture Agency
REPORTING FURNITURE. UNDERTAK.ERS, CARPET,
HARDWARE AND KINDRED TRADER. COLLEC-TIONS
MADE BY AN UN,RIVALLED SYSTEM
THROU(TH OUR COLLECTION DEPARTMRN'T' .•
WI<:PRODUCK RI<SULTS WHERE OTHK"S-JlAIL WI<ITE I'HI<
PARTICULARS AND YOU WILL SEND US YOUR; BUSINESS.
Our Complaint and Adjustment
Department Red Drafts Collect
L. J. STEVENSON, Michigan M4nager
WOODS PRESERVED IN SUGAR.
Another Method Is Through Use of Live Stearn, Which Also
Lightens Freight Bills.
An exchange gives the following two measures for sea~()n-ing
timber and preventing the growth of dry rot and other
diseases to v"hith it is liable:
"One method advotates the ringing by the removal of a
wide strip of bark, including the bast and sap layers, of those
t1"E~es which are to be felled in the autumn, as S0011 as the
leaves or new fir needles have been formed. The ascent of
moisture from the ground being thus hindered. the foliage
extracts from the trunk all the sap and liquid particles in the
cells. Moreover, ,".'ood thus treated dries rapidly after being
felled.
"Another process recently brought forward is that in
which beet sugar or saccharine replaces the sap in the trees
and drives out the natural humidity. The log is rolled into a
huge cylinder provided with pipes and supplied with sugar.
The heat from the hot water forced through the pipes boils
the sugar, \"...hich penetrates the pores of the \~,rood. Cold
water is then sent through the pipes, and the log is conveyed
into a special room, where it is dried by hot air. After being
again cooled. the wood is left in such condition that insects
cannot destroy it."
Superintendent John l\fuwatt, of the Grand Rapids Chair
company, in commenting on the above, said:
"I have no doubt but what both of the methods set forth
are effective in the results obtained, but it strikes me that
the latter one 1,.vouldbe rather too expensive to be thoroughly
practical.
"A similar, yet simpler, form of the last protess mel1tiol1cd
is now in ltse by a mahogany lumber dealer in BostOll. After
the log has been cut iuto boards they are placed all a steel
truck and run into a large boiler. In this iron kiln thc lum-ber
is subjected to live steam at an ul111sl.1allyhigh pressure.
"If T am not mistaken, the lumber is left in there no longer
than half an hour. The live steam penetrates every cel1 of
the \vood and destroys every living organism that it could
contain. The drying process is rapid, and ·wbile one load is
in the kiln another is being prepared to follow it. An addi-tional
advantage to the dealer, aside from the complete pres-ervatioll
of the wood, is that. as wood is much lighter dry,
this process greatly lessens his freight bills."
Judge Reed on the Necessity for Trade Schools.
Judge \hlarren A. Rced, whom Governor Douglas, of Mas-sachusetts,
has appointed a member of the commission to in-vestigate
trade schools, is an enthusiast on the subject. Judge
Reed's idea of what a trade school should be is a place where
young people who have reached the age when they aH, of lit-tle
value in a business way, when the education they have re-ceived
is all right so far as it goes. but hardly Gts them for
actual working flaces. may get the proper training to enter
some branch of actual work. lIe feels that such a school
should take up a boy or girl on their leaving grammar school
studies and teach about the same studies as ate nO\v handled
in the high schools, and, in addition, should furnish experts
to teach certain trades, giving the pupil a chance so that he
may pick out vvhichever trade he thinks he is best st1ited foT.
Two. three or four years in such a school as this wo·~ld grad-uate
a pupil v..·.ith a far better general education than he had
on entering, and at the same time would leave him fitted to
take up a position \vhere be could become a skilled workman,
could command good wages and be sure of a place in the
world's work. The whole course should be devoted to the
teaching of the trade. Principles of manhood. citizenship,
history of the country's achievements, mathematics, langnage
a.nd other general knowledge should be instilled in the pupil's
mind.
29
Haste and Waste.
TTaste and ..v..aste are extravagances that often go together.
"The more haste the less speed" is an old and trite saying, and
nowhere ahout the furniture factnry is it more applicable than
at the swing cnt-off saw. This is at the beginning of things,
and while an expert sawyer may do a fair day's work with a
poor machine, an ordinary sawycr will waste more in time and
lumber than his \\,'ages and interest on the machine comes to.
Unless the frame is rigid and the saw nms true, the cut will
not be straight. thus necessilating a second cut, which is a
vvaste of bot11 time and lumber.
Vlith a Cordesl11an Machine company's patent iron frame
swing- cut-off saw, with patent double balance weights, as
shov·...n in the i[lustratioll herewith, there is only carelessness
or incompetency at fanlt if the best results are not attained.
This machine is hllilt for cross-cutting all kinds of rough
stock, and may be depended On to cut at all times perfectly
s(jtlare, Eor dIe reason that tb.c frame heing cast in one piece
is stiff and rigid, and the 'balance weights being placed on
each side of the machine equalizes the wear of the swinging
journals. The Cordes man Machine company pride them-
:;elves on this machine, and well they may. For further par-ticula
- Date Created:
- 1905-08-10T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 26:3
- 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/50