- Home
- Michigan Artisan; 1909-04-10
Michigan Artisan; 1909-04-10
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published in Grand Rapids, Mich. It was published twice monthly, beginning in 1880. and --. - ~._~-------------------~...,
GRAND RAPIDS
m 1 'n'!! ny JqIl j
Twenty-Ninth Yea.r-No. 19 APRIL 10. 1909
r-------------'---'--- II
1III
IIII
j
I
I,
I:,I
III
Semi-Monthly
•
Purchase a I
Moore Flat Surface Belt Sander
Here's Your Chance to
which has been discarded in favor of
our No, 171 Sand Belt Machine (see
ad. on back cover.) We can also
offer you Drum, Disk and Drum,
Spindle, Spindle and Drum. Sanders,
replaced by our machine.
Write for particulars.
WYSONG 8 MILES CO., Cedar Street and Son. R. R. GREENSBORO, N. C.
~ ...The Best Truck--The Strongest Truck
This is the famousGillette Roller Bearing Factory
Truck-the truck on which it is said, "One man
can move a load of 3000 pounds while with
the other trucks it takes three men."
This is the truck that is strong where others are
weak-the truck that has an unbroeakable
malleable iron fork.
This is the truck YOU are looking for if you wish
to invest in rather than wllste money on factory
trucks.
11
-'"
Gillette Roller Bearing Co.
GRAND RAPIDS,MICHIGAN
The Lightest Running,
Longest Lasting Truck ....._----------~ ~... _IJL
"ABC" Vertic:al Self-Oiling Engines are
Arrtl.nged for Direct Conneetion to
Any Make of Generator
"The highest quality of material.
workmanship and finish ever
embodied in steam engine con-struction:'
"ABC" Questions on Lighting
If you need a boiler to run your engine and you use Ex-haust
Steam for heating and drying, how in the world can any-one
sell you electric current for lighting your mill, factory
and yard as cheaply as you can generate your own?
Can you aiford to belt a generator from your line shaft or
can you direct connect a dynamo to any ordinary steam engine
when an "ABC" VERTICAL ENCLOSED SELF-OILING
ENGINE WILL PAY FOR ITSELF IN ONE YEAR IN
SAVINGS OF OIL AND FUEL?
You can aiford an "ABC" ENGINE and we can prove it.
Write us number of lights or kilo-watts wanted, together
with steam pressure carried-for proposition. Get catalog
232 M. A. anyway.
'11111"''''11",I1"III'''+'''lil.'Ii''''''''''I~'1 Principal Office: 'Ih I fm'l DETROIT, MICH.
'I IJ.J I I Worlu,
'111"""'" lilli".",,,, 11,1,,,,,,,,,',111 DETROIT, MICH. and TROY, N. Y.
MANUFACTURERS
MENOCISLTOSAEIDR DSRELYFKOILIUNNSC. ENGINES. "DETROIT" SNEOPNA-RRAETTUINRCN ToRr APS.
HEATlNG AND VENTILATING APPARATUS. AUTOMATIC RETURN TRAPS.
1Nl:!wYork. Chieago,
Sales Offices St.Louis. Philadelphia.
Pitt.burl', Allaala.
"ABC"
1
SLIDING SHOE FOR USE ON DESK LEGS
This shoe does the work of a castu yet
allows the desk legs to set close to floor.
Fastened with flat head wood screw and furn-ished
in three sizes.
SEND FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES
No 1493 PULL
A very fine handle for desks in the square effect.
Something different from the regular bar pUlls.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO. GRAND RAPIDS,
MICHIGAN
l\! [ C Il I G A N A I{ T [ SAN
~---------------------------------------------------._--------------------------------~
fHERMOME,ER .1 Stop Your Glue Heater Trouble
and Save the Difference
This Glue Cooker i~fast replacing all olher styles of Clue Heaters ()f Cookers.
Every experienced glue user readily recognizes its exceptional value.
The Patented Glue Thermometer Auachment adds greatly to its value.
No thin. flimsy tanks-no poor construction. Tanks are either of Heavy Copper,
Cast Iron or Galvanized Heavy Plate Iron.
And don't overlook our Glue Spreaders and Veneer Presses (in me in hundreds
and hundreds of factories), as they are absolutely necessary for the best and most economi-cal
results,
Always glad to correspond with you.
I CHAS. E. FRANCIS CO.
I Factory Office ( E,"br,hed 188J.) RUSHVILLE, IND
(Patents Pellding.) ~-----------------------------~--------------------------~---------- --------~
(,LJJ~
, O'.i~LLT
....-----------.---------------- ...---------.---------------------------------- --'1
I,I11
11
I
I1I
I!
1I1
I
famous Marietta Fillers
Marietta Fillers are noted for their easy working
and practical qualities al.d are conceded by some of the
best known wood finishers in this country, who have
been using them for years, to be superior to all other
fillers on the market.
Marietta Fillers
pack well under the
pad and fill per-fectly.
I The Marietta pain~-&. Color Co. ! Marietta, O.
1~------------------------
Marietta Fillers
dry perfectly in from
ten to twelve hours.
'Ghe
~IETTA
PAINT
AND CoLOR
@.
I ,I
The Marietta Paint &. Color Co. I1
Marietta, O. II
.--.-----------_._-------------_-.------------------------.1 , -------------------------- ------...,
WHITE PRINTING CO. 1I
I I GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I I
Il---H-IG-H--G-RA----!COAETALOGS COrlPLETE I
~ ---- ....
· i
2 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
,
The magnet that draws
dealers from everywhere
The magnetic<lines shown constitute
the magnet. Is your line one of them?
Manufacturers'rl~iMtion DUildin~Co.'
1319 Michigan Avenue, CHICAGO
•
29th Year-No. 19. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., APRIL 10, 1909. $1.00 per Year.
Differential Rates Threatened.
The proposed abolition of rail differentials in the
New England statts has caused a commotion among
the manufacturers and jobbers of that region. Enor-mous
interests would be affected diversely, and the
business associations of Boston have called a conven-tion
of representatives of six states to take concerted
action in regard to the matter. It is dain'lcd that New
England produces fifty-two per ccnt of all the cloth
produced in the United States, thirty-one per cent of
the paper, thirty-five per cent of the leather and its
products, twenty-three per cent of the marble am}
stonc. 1fassachusetts itself produces forty-five per
cent of all shoes, thirty-one per cent of all woolen
goods, twenty-eight per cent of all cotton goods, thir-ty-
one per cent of all worsted goods, seventeen per
cent of all paper and wood pUlp, twenty-two per cent
of all rubber and clastic goods. Metropolitan Boston
alone has increased its industries fifty-six per cent in a
decade.
In discussing the proposition, P. A. O'Connell, vice
president o[ the New England Dry Goods Association,
said: (lIt would be a great blow to our industries,
and would tend to create a loss to other industries in
general throughout New England. To offset the loss
of differentials the manufacturer must either move or
put up his prices. Either of these alternatives would
reduce the purchasing power which would chiefly in-jure
the dry goods business. I doubt if the increased
price of sending freight would make much difference
to 115. This is of minor importance as compared to the
loss of purchasing power, for the public would have to
pay the extra cost." .
@ * @I
Government in the Market for Furniture.
The government of the United States has solicited
hids for 2,600 desks, 2,600 bookcases, 2,600 tables and
2,600 chairs for use in furnishing army posts. On
April 10 Mr. Ricc, representing Snellenberg & Co., and
Royal T. Smith, the special contract agent of Gimble
Brothers, Philadelphia, arrived in Grand Rapids and
solicited b1ds of manufacturers for furnishing the
goods.
In discussing the proceeding, a gentleman promi-nent
in the industry remarked: "It seems very strange
that the government should purchase its supplies so
largely of retailers. lly dealing direct with the man-ufacturers
the retailers' commission of two or three
per cent might be saved and if the total amount ex-pended
by the government for supplies is considered
the amounts so saved to the federal treasury would
aggregate a vast sum."
A manufacturer who had unsuccessfully tendered
bids for supplying the government with furniture,
hearing the remark quoted above, said: "There seems
to he no means by which manufacturers could handle
government contracts independently of the dealer.
The plans and specifications submitted by the govern-ment
are defective, while those presented by the retail-er
are practically perfect. Despairing of his ability to
deal with the government directly, he submits his bids
to the retailer as a matter of necessity. No other
course is open to him."
Rids will be opened in a few days and the awards
of contracts announced.
@ * @
"Serious Attention."
A story is afloat in the furniture trade (whether it
true or not is of small consequence) to the effect that
when the communication of the National Case Makers'
Association, protestng against the enactment of the
mirror glass schedule, as reported in the Payne tariff
bill, reached the hand of a prominent member of the
senate, whose name is so commonly known that it need
not he mentioned! the usual courteous reply was pre-pared
and mailed by the senator's very courteous and
extremely obsequious secretary, as follows:
HI respectfully acknowledg-e the receipt of your
esteemed favor of recent date in respect to the tariff
bill, pending action in the house. Be assured that
when the bill shall have passed the house and brought
before the senate for consideration, it shall be my
duty to give the paragraph relating to raw cotton ser-ious
consideration.
"\Vith assurances of my great respect and esteem,
r am," etc.
@ * @
The manufacture of furniture will he undertaken by
the Atlantic Furniture and Lumber company of Lineville,
Ala., \vhen a factory in course of erection, shall be ready
for their occupancy.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
A New Mortising Machine.
J\1any of the chair and furniture factories, as well as
other wood working plants, have small mortises to
make and there has always been more or less trouhle
connected with this work, due to the breakage of chis-els
and the tendency to split the lighter material and
the tendency to breakage one hundred per cent or
mOTCand at the same time make the mortises with
greater rapidity than they can be made on any other
machine. This machine also eliminates the boring of
a hole for the mortise, as the boring bit is placed inside·
the square chisel and the mortise is made entire and
Wysong & Miles Company Mortiser.
the chips left in the mortise by the chisel, necessitat-ing
the taking as much· time to clean the chips Qut as
to make the mortise. The \Vysong & Miles Company
of Greensboro, 1'\. C., have recently placed upon the
market a square chisel post mortiser that has overcome
these difficulties. The stroke of the chisel is con-trolled
by the operator's foot and by favoring the chis-el,
when using the smaller sized chisels, he can reduce
complete at one operation, or with one stroke of the
chisel, all chips are forced out at the same time, leav-ing
the mortise clean and perfect. The machine is
recommended for making mortises from ~-inch to %-
inch square in hard wood or ;}4:-inch square in soft
wood. The machine is extremely rapid and the man-ufacturers
claim that as many as forty square holes
per minute have been made by -this md-chine in soft
MICHIGAN
wood with a }i-inch chiseL Dy removing the chisel,
which can easily be done, this machine makes the
most perfect boring machine ever designed for furni-ture
work. For further particulars address the \Vy-song
& IvEles Company, Cedar street and Southern
Railroad, Greensboro, :N. C.
@ * @
Wood ~arving in History.
HThe interest of wood carving is not confined to its
actual practice; the history of the art as revealed in the
annals of its craftsmen is intensely interesting. \!lie are
led to it by the study of examples of different styles,
periods and countries; it takes lIS into many cur-ious
byways of history, and this \s espcc:ially
the case \vith French wood carving.
France has always been one of the leading
countries in art, and this particular craft has been
encouraged and fostered there. The history of
the joiners, carpentcrs, and cabinct-makers in
the middle ages is. in France. also the history of
"wod carvers, as for a long tillle these crafts
were combined. These craftsmen were found in
close connection with the court of the king and
the courts of his great vassals. In a very inter-esting
book called 'iLe 1\Jellble," written by 1\10n-siellr
de Champeau~ he tells hD\ ..•..the furniture of
those days followed the king- and his court frorn
one royal palace to another. The beds wcre
packed in large coffers, the plate, rich hangings,
and all movahle furniture of the rooms were
stowed in large chests. Heds, chairs, tables,
armDires, lecterns or lutrins, as they were called,
all were decorated with carvings or metal work,
and they \vere generally unique ~'pecilllens, not
produced in hundreds like our modem furniture
suites. They were real valuables, only found in
king's and noblemen's houses, or the houses of
wealthy merchants. .?vfonsictlr de Champeau
gives the name of a famous craftsman, Richard
d' Aragon, a joiner as well as a wood carver,
who lived early in the fourteenth century, among
whose works were a chest for Philippe V of
France, to keep the royal robes in, and another
for the queen. There arc still a few of these early
chests to be secn in the collections in Paris. one
at the 1\1usee Carnavalet, and :.:ome in the l\lusee
de Cluny. In 1352 there lived a painter known
as Girard crOrleans, whD was also a wood carver~
cabinet m.aker and joiner. He made chests and
chairs and tables for the king, and the record of
his charges for the same is still extant. He worked
for King John, of France, and accompanied him
to England when he was taken prisoner by Ed-ward
the Black Prince. While he was lodged in the tower
of London, Girard made him a new chair~ and there is al-so
record of a carved wooden table made by this artist for
Charles V of Prance. This was eluring the tinle that the
Gothic ~tylc prevailed, but the \vood carver had an equal
prominence through the following period when that most
ARTISAN 5
beautiful :"tyle of \-voael carving known as the early
French rcnais~ance, was perfected, lasting from Francis
1. days until Henry IV. This style, the outcome of the
revelation of the treasures of Italy to the eyes of the
French artist, was quickly assimilated by the artists and
craftsmen ,"'ho, grafting Italian ideas on to their own
individuality, produced the most exquisite work. All the
time the artists and craftsmen were encouraged and hon-ored
by the kings of France, lodged in thcir palaces; hav-ing
rooms assigned them in the Louvre in Paris, and
evidently filling a position in :::ociety quite unknown to
any of the present English cabinet makers or carvers.
During this period are found s11ch b:110:1S r::en as Ger-
Wysong fI< Miles Company Mortiser.
,
main Pillon rtnd J can Goujon, and their eminence con-tinued
through the French styles of the three Louis, un-til
the art of the \vcocl carver gradually declined before
the introduction of the marqueterie and ormolu worker.
Furniture was decorated with china plaques, precious
stolles, and veneers of precious woods, until most of the
6 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
• •
PITTSBURGH PLATE GLASS COMPANY
LARGEST .JOBBERS AND MANUFAOTURERS OF
GLASS INTHE WORLD
Mirrors, Benl Glass, Leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plale Glass, Window Glass
WIRE GLASS
Plale Glass lor Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beaulifullhan while marble.
QENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN AOED VARNISHES.
lIj For anything in Builders' Glass. or anything in Paints, Varnishes, Brushes or Painters' Sundries, address any of our branch
warehouses, a list of which is Riven below:
NEW YORK-DudsGD aDd Vandam St••
BOSTON-41.49 Sudb1lry St •• 1_9Bowker St.
CHICAGO - 442-4S2 w&.baab A...e.
CINCINNATI-Broadway and Court 8t8.
ST. LOUIS-Cor. Tenth aDd Spruce St••
MINNEAPOLIS-SOO-SI6 S. Tblrd St.
DETI\OIT-53·59 Luoed St••E.
G&ANDRAP1D~ MICtl.-39.41 N. DI,.I.I.o" St.
PITTSBUR.GH-IOt-I03 Wood St.
MILWAUKEIt, WIS.-492·494 Market St.
ROCHESTEa. N. y ,-Wilder ald•••MaiDlit EzchaDge St••
aAL TIMORE-3t 0·12:. t 4 W. Pratt St.
CLEVELAND-1430.t434 Weet Tblrd 8t.
OMAHA-II01-II07 Howard St.
ST· PAUL-459·461 Ja.ckson St.
ATLANTA, GA.-30-3Z_34 S. Pryor St.
SAVANNAH. OA.-74S.149 Wheaton St.
KANSAS CITY-Fifth and WJ'.ndoU. St8'
BIRMINGHAM.!_ALA.-and Ave. and 19th St.
ll'UP'FALO. N. "Y .-372.14-76-78 Peart St.
BaOOKLYN-635~631 FuttOD St.
PHILADELPHIA-PltcalrD Bldg., Arch aDd 11th Sta.
DAVItNPORT-410.416 Scott St. ~----------------------_._-----------------'
work of the artist craftsman went completely out of
fashion during the terrible years of the French revolution,
dying for want of the patronage it had hitherto received
in such abundance.
All this art history is not confined to Paris. North,
south,east, and west France was full of art centers, such
as Lyons, Orleans, Rheims, and Rauen; where crafts-men
worked in their own style and never thought of
copying a dead one; never merely reproducing the art of
the past as is done so much in modern English work-shops,
but studying these former styles carefnlly as a
basis on which to develop their own ideas, until they too
had evolved a style on which their successors could
build.
All this can be seen by any wood carver who, when
au his travels, will take the trouble to study the subject
both in the museums and in the private collections of
France, and the student will be well repaid by the added
interest with which he will return to his own efforts in
the craft that has given material for such a noble chap-ter
in the history of art.
The above is taken from a book called "Some Arts
and Crafts" for which seven writers contributed, discus-ing
a number of subjects including furniture and decora-tion,
wood carving, art of enamelling, book-binding and
other topics. The book is iu the Ryerson Public Library,
Grand Rapids.
@ *@
He Knew His Business.
Wm. H. Rouse, who for several years has been in
charge of the Grand Ledge Chair Company's show rooms
in Grand Rapids, was for many years a traveling sales-men.
When the Old \Volverine Chair Company was in
business, (making as good walnut diners as ever came
out of a factory) Mr. Rouse took the photos one day and
went to New York. There was an eccentric in the furn-iture
business of that city whom we wiII call Jones, a ter-ror
to the traveling man. l\fr. Rouse went into the store
and found Jones busy in his office, and presented his
card. Jones looked up at him and blurted out "Youug
man, didn't you see that sign out there indicating the
time when drummers would be received?
HI did not come here hunting for signs, sir, I came
here for business," was the reply.
"Well, I want you to understand that that sign means
what it says. If you corne here at two o'clock, (not five
minutes to two or five minutes after) I'll see what you
have.'J
"All right, I wiII be here," was Mr. Rouse's reply, and
he arrived on time and so did Jones.
Jones took UP one of the photos and said, "How wide
is the front of this chair?"
"Eighteen inches."
"What is the length of the front stretcher?"
"Fourteen and three-quarter inches."
"Back stretcher?"
"Thirteen and a half inches."
"Width of chair at top of back 1"
"Fifteen inches."
"Distance between back posts at back of seat?"
"Twelve and one-quarter inches."
"vVelI, young man, you know your business, and I will
give you an order. I am tired of the fellows who corne
here aud dou't know anything about the goods they are
seIling."
@ * @
Millions for New Hotels.
Capitalists of Spokane, Washington, have financed
two important hotel enterprises, to be undertaken this
year. An enlargement of the Pfister and a new hotel
for ""V. H. Cowles involve the expenditure of millions
for construction, equipment and furnishings. The
last item will not be the least important.
@ * @
Additions to the works of the Standard Furniture
company at Nashville, Tenn" are under construction.
The company will add chairs to its line of manufacture
and enlarge the fiuishing aud shipping departments.
:VllCHIGAN
What Carelessness Costs,
Even the elevator passengers and the operator can
throwaway money for the OV.lncr of a building. ::-Jot
counting the wear and tear on the machinery, cables
and other equipment, the expense of funning a car back
to a floor which it has passed a few inches has a notice-able
effect on the mouthy cost sheet. \Vhen an elec-tric
elevator starts up or do,vn, empty or loaded, the
first four seconds after throwing the lever cost as much
money as traversing three floors after full speed is at-tained.
Reducing this to figures for a large size pas-senger
elevator it is safe to say that is costs half a cent
to start it.
Take a twelve story lHlilding with five elevators.
Assume that in each trip, both up and down, two errors
wefe made, partly owing to the passengers and partly
to the operator. Thus for every round trtp of each
Sketch by K. J. Hoagland, Little Falla, Minn.
elevator there will be four errors made in bringing the
car to the proper level. Assuming these to cost half
a cent each there will be a loss of ten cents in the time
required for all the elevators to make one round trip.
In an office building with five elevators running contin-uously
for eight hours at twenty round trips an hour
or 160 round trips a day each, the added expense would
be $16 a day,
Thus in a building where traffic is heavy all day, as
in those of the financial district, 'where messengers arc
continually going in and out of the buildings and the
cars are large, it can be seen that this item is to be ser-iously
considcred. 'With 300 working days a year this
loss, counting the wear and tear, could easily amount
to $4,000 if electricity were paid for at ten cents a
kilowatt hour. The more rapid depreciation of the
controler, magnets, contacts, motors, cables and power
transmission, such as the steel worm and the bronze
gear wheel, are all items which it would be difficult to
measure accurately.-Exchange.
ARTISAN 7 ~,---,--------_._---- II
I
•
Spiral Grooyed and Beyel Pointed
DOWEL PINS
Note how the ,tIue: In the Spiral
Groove forma Thread like BScrew.
Be\lel Pointed, eBSY to drive.
Straight so will not split the
frames. Prices and discounts on
application.
STEPHENSON MFG. CO.,
SOUTH BEND, IND.
• •
• I, WHBN IN DBTROIT
STOP AT Hotel TuIIer
, New and Absolutely Fireproof
Cor. Adams Ave. and Padio. St.
In the unlet of the The4tre. Shop-pjnll.
and Bllanell/! Dilstrict.
A la Carte C.f.,
I Newest and Finest Grill
I Room in the City.
, Dub Breakfut - • • 40e up ILuncheon ~ - ~ - 501'.
Table d'hole Dinners - 751'. (
Muslcltllm6P.M.lol2P.M. ,
• Every roOI11 hu a private bath.
• EUROPEAN PLAN
: Ratell: $1.50 per day and up.
I L. W. TUlLER, ProP.
M. A. SHAW. Mgr. •
•
:~~~\;:~~;~~
,~
-C'p
THE Wellin~on notel
CO't. Wabash Ave. 8r:
Jackson Boulevard
CHICAGO
: Rell10deled at a cost of I $1501000
I
Hot and cold running
water and lon, dis.-
tance 'phone. In all
room ••
200 rooms. 100 with I bath. Sill8le or en luite.
Rate6 $1.00 and upwards. lOne of the mOllt unique
diniDll JOOmlI in the country.
Our famous Indian Cafe.
I
NQT~O FO•• HVlC~ A"" CUI""~
McClinfock and Ba~field
I PROPS. •
ROllS THE "RELIABLE" KIND
THE FELLWOCK AUTO & MFG. CO.
EVANSVILLE, INDIANA,
8 MICHIGA!\ ARTISA!\
Horrible Things in Arts and Cralts.
The exceedingly interesting, and for the most part
beautiful, examples of the household art of the eigh-teenth
century, which have been on view at the Colony
Cll1b1 New York, for its members and invited guests,
have much more than a merely esthetic value for those
fortunate enough to see them.
On every side keen interest is manifested in the arts
and crafts movement, both in this country and abroad,
and mingled virith expressions of interest and approval
are, quite naturally and properly, criticisms as to
methods and results. But mainly, Or at least most in-sistently,
is heard the complaint of prices as being too
high. That may well be for the purses of many would-be
purchasers, but the point to be remembered is that
beautiful examples of handwork \overe never cheap, and
were intended only for those who could pay for the
beauty so ardently desired. As for the multitude, they
must go without. For the multitude today there is
good and inoffensive machine work that is far better
than that possessed by any but the very rich in those
days of dainty romanticism and squalid misery.
Nir. Lawrence Binyon, in the London Saturday Re-view,
has a word of warning to say in regard to the
present state of the Arts and Crafts in England that
may veryw,ell-be taken to heart here: "There is so
much gratuitous hideousness in our houses and sur-roundings,
and life for so much of our population has
been so joylessly dehumanized by modern industrial
conditions, that we ought to see good in every effort
toward bringing back a sense of the pleasures of art
into manufactures. Horrible things, no doubt, have,
been produced in the name of the Arts and Crafts
movement, more especially on the continent; but after
a complete rupture in tradition one cannot expect the
finest results all at once. The general weakness of
the revived handicrafts is a desire for personal origi-nality,
and a lack of patience which results in a kind
of coarseness. But things are improving."
Mrs. Blashfield, in her delightful brochure, "L' Art
de la Maison XVIII. Siec1e," written on the occasion
of the Colony Club's exhibition draws attention to a
consideration too often forgotten in discussions of the
cost of beautiful handwrought articl~s. whether of to-day
or of an earlier period. In speaking of the eigh-teenth
century she says:
"Then the artisan, if not an artist, was a well-trained
craftsman, furnished with sound traditions
and equipped for his work by a long apprenticeship.
Pretty things, the decoration of life, were not made by
the gross then, and each one, if not a separate inven-tion
of the maker, was the product of patient, often en-thusiastic
effort, and sometimes was a-masterpiece exe-
,uted under high pressure oUervor and delight. vVith
.'ess knowledge there was more feeling than we pos-
3ess. Formery there ,""ere fewer industrial artists be-cause
then no one followed art without ardor and love
enough for it to struggle with difficulties. Now with
~he planing away of-'technical obstacles, everyone rl3b-bles
in art, and the result is mediocrity. The general
(mblic, too, has ceased to discriminate between the real
creative pr9duct and its feeble imitation or weakened
copy.
"Enthusiasm was not confined to the handicrafts-man;
it was shared by his patrons. The industrial
arts counted all the Louises from the Thirteenth to the
Sixteenth among their promoters. The history of
Sevres porcelain, of Gobelin tapestry, of the Savonner-ie
carpets, is a record of royal favors. And the prices
paid for a set of Gouthierc fire irons, a desk of BoulIe,
1. coffee service by Germain, when we consider the rel-ative
purchasing power of money in the two periods
Ivere far greater than .the sums given today for some
Htrvival of this golden age of handicrafts."-Exchange.
@ * @
A Busy Man's Recreation.
VV. D. Trump, the general superintendent of the
Pere Marquette railroad, operating one of the most ex-tensive
systems of transportation in the world, is a
very busy man, but, like all wise busy men, does not
allow the performance of his duties to call for the full
employment of his time. Recreation is necessary for
his physical and mental welfare, as it is for every suc-cessful
man in business. In his leisure hours Mr.
Trump is a cabinet maker. The spacious attic of his
house in Detroit is provided with the tools, benches
and other conveniences necessary to the cabinet maker,
and the articles produced would do credit to an expert.
='Jot only in fashioning original designs, but in re-building
old pieces Mr. Trump is successful. One
day he decided to construct a davenport and in study-ing
the material on hand his mind recalled a discarded
bedstead stored in the barn. Bear in mind fhat IHr.
~rrump is not addicted to the practice of sawing chairs
out of \vhiskey barrels, converting step ladders into
easels, packing cases into chinac10sets or box couches ..
but when his skilled mechanical eye recognizes the
practicahility of cutting the head of an empire bed-stead
into two parts for the purpose of using the same
for ends to a davenport, there is merit in the plan. Mr.
Trump construets, chairs, cabinets, tables and like ar-ticles
and presents many of the pieces to friends. His
,"vark room is very handsomely decorated; the con-struction
and ornamentation was by his own hands.
After a week of exhausting -labor in the office or on the
road, a few hours spent in his little cabinet shop pre-pares
him to cheerfully take up again the railroad man-ager's
burden.
@ * @
Humphrey-Widman Company.
The plant of the Humphrey Bookcase Company of
Detroit was sold recently to J. C. v'l1idman, who took
immediate possession and resumed the manufacture of
sectional bookcases, under the name of the I-Ium-phrey-
Widman Company. The plant was sold for
$22,000 and creditors will realize about thirty-three per
cent of their claims. The new company is wellsnp-plied
\'vith orders.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN <)
~"-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------1
: Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures Per Set SOc. OVER15 000 OFOUR Price $2.80 to $4.00 :
I , I
: STEEL RACK VISES IN USE i
II 25 doz. Clamp Fixtures bought I b~'one mill last ~·ea(. \Ve ship I all approval to rated firms, alld I Iluarantee our goods uncondi-tionally.
Write lor list of I Steel Bar OlamlJ8, Vises, Bench
• ~,dc. I
I E. H. SHELDON So CO. I
: 283 Madison St.. Chicago. &APID-AO'fma WOODWORKER'SVISE No.3;. i
~------------------------------------------------------------------ ~
Furniture Men "Kick."
]. S. Linton, secretary of the National Association
of Case Goods IVlanufacturers, recently issued a letter
to every furniture manufacturer in the country, urging
activify against the plate glass schedule in the Payne
tariff bilL The present tariff on plate glass 16 x 24
inches is eight cents, and the proposed rate is 10 cent~".
The rate on sizes up to 24 x 30 is 10 cents and the pro-pu:;
ed rate is 120 cents. The present tariff on larger
larger than 24 x 30 and not exceeding 24 x 60 is 227~
cents, and that is not changed.
In his letter =.\fr. l..inton points out the proposer}
changes and then says:
"All glass used in the manufacture of furniture, ex-cept
the larger sizes, is to be advanced. *' '" ,t The
smaller sizes used for the cheaper furniture which goes
into the homes of the poorer people bearing such ad-vance.
This proposed advance is in defiance of pub-lic
sentilllent. in complete disreg-anl of the rightful in-terests
of the consmllcr, contrary to the spirit of the
protective principle and ante-election promises) op-posed
to good public policy and inirn:cal to the inter-ests
of the furniture industry. The manufacturers of
glass, having already been llberally aided and thor-oughly
established, have no right to demand that this
tax shall nov~rbe increased.
".Every effort \vill be made to pnsh this rneasure
through as drafted. If we are to prevent this ad-vance
in the glass schedules it is imperative that every
manufacturer act at once. \\Trite a letter to the rep-resentative
of your (listrict and to the representatives
from other districts in your state; \vnte the senators
frOln your state, calling their attention to this matter
and demanding that these tariff schedules shall not be
>"----------"---- IIIIII
II
II
advanced. Do this in COHlmon justice to your own
industry and to the public welfare. The schedule
once passed \vill probably remain unchanged for the
next ten years. It is a matter, therefore, of the 11t-most
importance to our industry and the whole people
that the bill as finally passed shall bE made as nearly
equitable as possible""-Grand Rapids Herald.
It has already been explained that when the bill
reaches the senate, the skilled manipulator of sched-ules,
1fr. i\ldrich. will engage in an extended swapping
campaign, and that in the end every interest will gain
what it seeks. The mirror glass makers, the silverers,
the bevelers and others having special interests to fos-ter,
are not \vorrying over the outcome.
@ * @
Might Have Beens.
"I might bave been a millionaire, if I only had done
so and so vdlCn I had the chance," is a saying common
among men. "1 might have been in the firm and mak-ing
a pile, instead of head bookkeeper at a salary, if ]
only had developed the p(HVerS within me instead of
chasing pleasure and wooing folly. It's too late now,
and a drudge I'll be to the end.p Young man, don't
make the mistake of being satisfied to take things as
they come, writes an old business man. Study your-self
and then with all your might develop your gifts.
Each step forward increases your opportunities and
makes possible victories that at the start were not
within the range of your thoughts. If you fail to se-cure
an entrance at olle door of advancement, try an-other.
There are fields where your peculiar talents
are needed. Seek thern patientl y and lay hold of every
legitimate advantage that comes your way.
-------------------------------------------------------------.
OFFICES:
CINCIN...,ATI--Second National Bank Building. NEW YORK--346 Broadway.
B05TON--18 Tremont St. CHICAGO--134 Van Buren St.
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Bldg. JAMESTOWN, N. Y.--ChlLdakotn Bldg.
HIGH POINT. N. C.--Slanton-Welch Block.
The most satisfactory and up-to-date Credit Service covering the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
III
I
I
H. J. DANHOF. Michigan Manager,
347·348 Housernan BulldlnC. Grand Rapids, Mich. -~.._------_.-------~
The most accura.te and reliable Reference Book Published.
Originators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System."
ColfecliollService Unsurpassed-Send for Book oj R,d Drafts.
h .: _
10 ;,1ICHIGAN ARTISAN
f FOX SAW DADO
SMOOTHEST
GR.OOVES
FASTEST
CUT
LEAST
POWER
LONGEST
LIFE
LEAST
TROUBLE
PERFItCT
SAFETY
Also Machine
Knlve.l'. Miter
Machin ••• Etc.
We'1I a1adb tell
YOU aU about
It.
PERMANENT ECONOMY FOX MACHIN....CO. '85 N. F•• n' • .a;.,. Grand R.apid•S•t•M••tcth• •,
These saws are :
made from No. 1 I Steel and we war-rant
every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
Write us for
rrlce List
and discount
31-33 S. FRONT ST., GRAND RAPIDS
f
DON'T BURN YOUR MOULDING.
Blackened edges so of-ten
found in hard-wood
Mouldings indicate the
use of inferior tools, which
friction and burn beca.use
of their failure to have
proper clearance. The
Shimer Reversible and
:Non-Reversible Cutters are made of the finest tool steel
by experienced workmen. In design and construction
they are superior to anything 011 the market. They cut
well and retain their shape until worn out, Send us
dra, •..-ings or wood samples for estimates on special
cutters. 'lVIany useful designs, with prices, are give:l
in our catalogue,
SAMUEL J. SHIMER'" SONS, MILTON, PENN.
Manufacturers of the Shimer Cutter Heads for Flooring, Ceiling, Siding,
Doors, Sash, etc . •i
IMo(rton House~ Amenean PI.n ) Rate. $2.50 and Up.
Hotel PantJind
(European Plan) Rates $1.00 and Up.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
!I
The Noon Dinner Served :a1 the Pantlind for 50c is
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.
J. BOYD PANTLIND, Prop.
CHICAGO, Ill., ApriI8.-Mr. Jackson, secretary of
the Manufacturers' Exhibition Building Company, 1319
1\1ichigan avenue, says the prospects are flattering for
a big exhibit in the big building in July. Every space
will be occupied and more could be sold if there was
more to be sold.
The Seng Company have brought out an improved
Harrington spring for platform rockers, and although
the price will not be increased, they will put a five-year
guarantee on every set. When one remembers
that no one ever thought of guaranteeing a rocker
spring for more than one year, it is a pretty positive ev-idence
that Frank Seng has hit upon something better
than was ever put on platform rockers before.
Louis F. Nonnast has moved into his new factory
on Goose Island, and it is said to be one of the )liodel
furniture factories of Chicago.
The Koenig Furniture Company will soon move to
their new factory, at North Green and Chicago ave-nues.
Charles L. Gamer, for nearly forty years a manu-facturer
of furniture in Chicago, has packed his house-hold
goods and taken his family to Germany, where
he will probably make his home. The old firm of
Koenig & Gamer was one of the best known in Chicago
and when Mr. Gamer sold out his interest he did not
feel like starting in business again. May his home
in the fatherland be all that he anticipates, and may he
live to a ripe old age-even as old as was Moses when
he went to the top of Pisgah to view the promised land
-one hundred aud twenty years.
L)'man R. Lathrop, manager of the Fourteen-Elev-en
Company, say a fire there demoustrated that theirs
is a fireproof building-the only one, he thinks, in the
whole bunch of furniture exhibition buildings. He
expects to have 1411 so full of exhibits in July that
there won't be room even for cuspidors.
The Johnson Chair Company will soon be located
in their new factory at North avenue and West For-tieth
street.
S. Karpen· & Brothers will in July place on the mar-ket
a new davenport sofa bed.
@ * @
Locate at Traverse Cit)'.
The Grand Rapids Cookerette Company will es-tablish
a factory at Traverse City, Mich., aud trans-fer
their manufacturiug business to that place. A. T.
Halleck, the manager, is negotiating for a site.
@ * @
An addition to the factory of the Henderson (Ky.)
Desk company's factot)' is under constructiou. It will be
used for finishing and storage .
]
•
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Not Interested in War.
During his stay in Nic:araugua E. H, Foote, treas-urer
of the Grand Rapids Chair Company, "vas so bus-ily
employed fishing and pleasure hunting that he paid
no attention to the revolution against the government.
It is said that he would not attend a dress parade of the
George D. Emery company's armed force of 2,000 lum-ber
jacks. There might have been a half dozen revo-lutions
in full operation for all that he cared, or there
might have been none. I-Iaving participated in the
war between the states and knowing the horrors of real
fighting, the little comic opera outbreaks so irequently
indulged in by the South Americans fail to create the
slightest interest in the mind of NIr. Foote. The
Emery Company (a Boston corporation) controls
about all the mahogany bearing lands in Nicaraugua
and the government sought to restrict their operations.
A few blank cartridges were exploded and then the
government at Vvashington raised its index finger and
the misunderstanding will be "fixed up" peacably. 1V1r.
Foote visited Panama and inspected the canal and
came home via Jamaica and New York. I-Ie had a
good time, and upon arriving in Grand Rapids was as
ready for work as a newly arrived emigrant from Italy
or Russia.
@ * @
Valued for Rude Beauty.
·.fhe Charles P. Litl1bcrt company, of Holland manu-facturers
of arts and crafts furniture, get many ideas
from the Holland \vorkmen employed in the factory;
many of \vhom were born in the old country and well
acquainted \'I.'ith old country styles. 'They are steady, in-dustrious
and skillful, and some of the suggestions they
have made in designing the furniture have been of great
valuc.
Very little furniture manufactured in the Netherlands
is to be found in Holland, Mich. The Michigan pioneers
had the long ocean voyage to make, then the trip by
canal boat and Lake Erie to Detroit and finally by wagon
across the state to their place of settlement on Black
Lake, Michigan. With such a trip in prospect bulky
goods \vere left behind. The pioneers made such furni-ture
as they required when they had built houses to live
in. It was of native timber, sa\<\.'edand chiseled out of the
tree cut from the land l;vhich they were tryling to clear for
farming purposes. This old hand~made furniture was for
the most part discarded when times improved and better
furniture could be procured, but a few pieces have sur-vived
the ycars and afe valued highly as relics and for
their rude beauty.
@ * @
Murch & Loomis Open.
Thomas B. Murch, formerly of Morris, Murch &
Butler, Boston, recently entered into a co-partnership
with a IVlr. Loomis and the firm opened a new stock of
furniture at 45 Bowker street in that city recently.
The firm occupies a large store, centrally located, and
deals in medium and fine furniture.
11
Ii IMPROVED, EASY "D ELEVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt. Electric and Hand Power.
The Best Hand Power for Furniture StortS I Send for Catalogue and Prices.
KIMBALL BROS. CO,. 1081 HI ... st.. Council Bluffs, la, I
I ' Kimba.ll Elevator Co •• :uJ Prospect St., Cleveland, 0.\ I 1081lth St., Omaha, Neb.; 12&Cedar St., New York City. ~-------- .-"" ~-------
III:
163 Madison Avenue-Citizens Phone 1983. ~_._---
•I
I
11your DESIGNS are right, people want the Goods.
That makes PRICES right.
(t[arence 1R.btus
DOES IT
GRAND R~PIDS, MICH.
I
t---- ----.------.
:1: AKIN1G
N I' [~~s~elrl)~and·i:nd.exted::hy~flO&OfS /;::~
or deparlmepl:s.
BARLOW BROS.. I Grabd Rapid •• Mich.
Write Right NoW. ,
•
I~--_._------
i 1ou{s babn
DESIGNS AND DETAILS
OF FURNITURE
154 LivingstonSt.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
~----- -------..!.
Citizens'Telephone 1702.
A. L. HOLCOMB & CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
GROOVINO SAWS
up to 5-16 thlck. ---
Repatrlft ..... Sattsfa.ctlon g.. aranteed.
Citizens' Phone 1,289.
._-2-7 N-. Market St •• Gl"aad Rapids, Mich. .f
'-west Michigan Ma;~~ooi Co.,ltd.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
for ",GH GRADE PUNCHES and DIES
•
~--_._---_._----------1~
• WABASH
INDIANA
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT ~._--------_._---------4
12 MICHIGAN ARTISA};
Quick Action Vises.
"Oliver" quick acting vises Nos. 150 to 153 inclu-sive,
are bound to satisfy users because of their qual-ity
of finish and cheapness of price. They are power-ful
and well adapted for educational institutions, pat-tern
shops and wood workers in general. The screw
is steel l?i inches in diameter! and has buttress thread
which makes it a smooth acting vise. The guides are
%-inch diameter steel. The nut is solid bronze. The
handle tee (1') is malleable iron. All of the other
parts are iron. The back jaw is screwed to the bench
and supports. from its farthest end, all of the
"Oliver" Quick Action Vise No. 150.
remaining parts of the vise on t"tf-inch steel tnmions.
The bronze nut is underneath the screw and is sup-ported
in a pocket cast under the back jaw.
To get the quick action it is only necessary to lift
up the sere,,,,, and it will he free from contact with the
nut. Then the front jaw may be pushed in or out
with the greatest ease. At any position the front jaw
may be let go and the sere1.-vat once drops down into
the nut and is engaged for screwing any distance, This
vise is easy to operate, exceptionally powerful, and will
not give any trouble.
@ * @
Patented Chair Machinery.
The chair manufa-etufcrs throughout this country
will probably be interested in the new chair mortiser,
the chair back and seat mortiser and the new chair
hack sander recently placed on the market by the Wy-song
& Miles Company of Greensboro, N. C. This
company arc making a specialty of sanding and mortis-ing
machinery and are shipping their patented ma-chines
to all sections of the United States and Canada
and have also made shipments to Scotland and Ger-many,
as 1.-vellas Cuba and :i\fexieo.
This new chair back and seat mortiser clamps the
back to the circle to which it is bent, makes the mor-t:
ses accurately and relea:;;es the back and it is capable
of making one, two, three, five or more mortises and
it is capable of making mortises varying in length from
a round hole up to sixteen inches in length.
The chair post mortiser will make three or four
mortises simultaneously; it automatically clamps the
fost and springs it to its true position, makes the mor-fses
accurately of varying lengths and in or out of line
and automatically releases the post.
For further information in regard to these machines
and other patented mortising and sanding machinery,
write the 'Wysong & Miles Company, Cedar street and
Southern railroad, Greensboro, N. C.
(§) * @
Part of the Price.
1t is interesting to observe that a great deal of the
expense of doing business is made necessary to pre-vent
dishonesty. There are many overseers whose
chief business is to see that others keep at work. There
are elaborate systems of bookkeeping and checking
which are designed primarily to prevent misdealing.
From the time a piece of raw material is taken from its
original source, until the goods are made and delivered
and receipted fOf, there is this constantly accumulat-ing
expense for protection. The public at last pays
for it. Every high price, and every low bank account,
every skimped luxury or necessity, and every unsatis-fied
need is, in some degree, a reminder that one is
helping to pay the price of insincerity and dishonesty.
It ought to make the opposite virtues much admired by
those who prefer to enjoy the full fruits of their labor.
-Collier's.
@ * @
Reincorporated.
The Luce Furniture Company, Grand Rapids, have
reincorporated under the laws of the state of Michigan,
with $300,000 capital, one-half of whieh is preferred.
Among the largest snbscribers to stock are Manager
John Hoult, Secretary A. S. Goodman, Gregory M.
Luce and Mrs. C. C. 1.uce. The original company was
organized in the year 1879 under the name of the Mc-
Cord & Bradfield Furniture Company and for a num-ber
of years mannfactured a folding table and a few
patterns of bedsteads. The business grew rapidly.
The company has since acquired distinction in the
manufacture of medium and high grade furniture for
the dining room and the chamber.
@ * @
New Hotels in Washington.
Local capitalists have contribnted to a fund of $50,-
000 to be used in the erection of a hotel at Ritzville,
\N ashington. It will be three stories high, of brick.
The Pythian fraternity of Elma, 'Washington, has
completed the erection of a hotel of sixty rooms, cost-ing
$30,000.
AS TO BEING ONE'S OWN BOSS.
MICHIGA!\ ARTISAN 1 .,
.. ,)
No Man, No Matter How High Up. Really Free to Do
as He Pleases.
'(~1y impatient nephe\v," sald Uncle Bill, "says
that what he wants is to be his own boss; he's tired of
working for other people. He's tired of hearing the
boss where he works say to him: 'Here, Jim, do
this,' or iDo that,' or "Hurry up, no'\',' or 'Get a move
on,' Or '\Vhat's the matter with you? Don't go to
sleep l'
"It makes him tired ..Jim says, to be bossed around,
and he wants to be his o\vn boss_
"Poor Jim! He doesn't know that nobody ever is
his own boss in the sense that he means, so that he
can't be ordered around. Never was a greater clc111-
51011, Lots of people think that if they can get one
step up, or get a business of their o"vn. why, then
they'd be free, be thcir own boss; but goodness grac-ious,
no man in the world ever getss-o· high up but
what he still has a boss-somebody or SOlllething over
him.
"",Vh}'",the earth itself that ,ve live on, T tell Jilll,
has a boss in the rest of the universe, Suppose the
earth should some day get tired of being bossed ar0und
the ""vayJim does, and sa:r to itself:
Ii 'I'm sick of this turning around every day, just
so, every tvventy-four hours, and following the same
great circle besides year arter year. 1'rn sick of hav-ing
to do this same old grind clay after day and year
after year. being bossed around like this, and I'm going
to be my Own boss.'
"Suppose some day the impatient earth shollhl trv
this, sh.ould try setti.ng up on. i.ts own account; why, in
about onc minute and three-quarters the whole busi-ness
"vould be going to goldinged everlasting eternal
smash, and us along with it, The faet is that there
isn't anything or anybody but \vhat has something or
somebody over it or hin1. ,!-." e can't. any of us, be our
boss in the sense that Jim is thinking of, frce to do
what we like.
"Yoll take, for instance, jim's boss, Jim seems to
have an idea that his boss can do what he's a mind to;
that he's the head of the \\Thole outfit and free to do as
he pleases; hut heavens and earth! If Jim's boss has
got the gumption I give hirn credit for he's got a hun-dred
bosses, a hoss in every customer that comes into
the store. If Jim's hoss has the brains and common
sense that he appears to have he treats everyone of
these customers politely and squarely, puts up \vith the
peculiarities of everyone of thexrI, whether he likes
them or not, serves everyone of these hundred bosses
to the very best of his ability, just as Jim o1tght to
serve his one boss.
"But his custOlners arc not the only bosses Jit11·s
boss has by a long shot. Suppose jim's boss, like
many another man, is doing business on insufficient
capital. Then he has to borrow money to carryon
his business; and every man that lends him is sure
enough his boss, and he may be a hard boss.
"Suppose tracle is dull and Jim's boss has to get
out and hustle for business. vVhy, every man he
meets is his hoss, after a fashion, and many of them
turn Jim's boss dov.rn in a way that woulJn't please
Jim a bit.
"Jim"'s boss may even find it hard sometimes to get
together the money to pay his help, ] im included, on
Saturday night. Humph! Jim wants to be his own
boss! He thinks if he ""vas he'd find life pleasanter.
IIe doesn't know.
liThe faet is that no man in the world is. e.ver h;~
o\vn boss completely and it's a good thing for many
of uS that \ve can't be. Some of us if we could would
be idter~, loafers, tramps, shLwning off all rC'sponsihil-it)".
doing as \ve pleased. Such may be restnined by
NATIVE FURNITURE LUMBER
--------~
the necessity of providing for others; we can't idle or
loaf; but I tell Jim that you take the rim of people, the
great majority who work and who never think of do-ing
anything but work, and there is not one of them
but ,:vhat has somebody over him, or a boss in the
shape of the restraints of la\vs and C11stoms.
il)J0 man can do as he pleases, 110 man can get so
high hut what he has sOlnething or somebody over
him, Stop and think of any man yon know; there's
sOlneho(ly over him, or he has to conform to some re-straining
po\,\rer. This is so all the way up, clean to
the top.
'If suppo51e Jim would think that the president of
the United States is his ovvn boss because he is the
highest up man in the lan(l; b11t good heavens, he has
eighty million bosses scattered allover the country, to
say nothing about the few thousands or few hundreds
or fc\v score \vho are near enough to him so that they
can make him hear, and who are continually hollering
at him to do this or that or the other thing.
"~o man can ever be his own boss in the way that
.~ :111 is tbillking about-free to do as he pleases. One
thing a man can do, if he has got the stuff in him-he
can by the exercise of ~eJf-control boss himself; and
the fnallwho can do this is a big man; but I suppose
the man that comes nearest to being a real boss is the
man that gives the best service.
"1\J aybe Jim will come to understand some of these
things ~o1l1etillle."--Kew York Sun.
@ * @
Will Erect a Large Factory.
The John \Vicldicomb Company are preparing to
crf'ct a factory with a capacity for the employment of
1.000 Illen. in Grand Rapids. \Vork on the plant will
prohably be commenced during the current year.
14 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Marking Freight.
There seems to be a great need of some method of
marking packages so as to Cl1t down the amount of
freight that goes astray. In the roug! handling which
freight almost necessarily receives it is not to be wor:-
dered at that many.tags come off and the packages can
i5ketch by K.J. Hoagland, Little Falls, Minn.
not be sent to the' proper destination. \Vhen to this
condition is arlded the confusion resltlting from old
markings on second-hand boxes, insufficient marbng-on
some portion of the shipment, and tags that have
faded Qut in the sun-a very common thing-it causes
much trouble on the part of the railroads and perhaps
more on the part of the shipper or consignee. The
loss is often far greater than the cost of the goods, as
is the case when a single casting is needed to complete
a machine, or to go on with certain work, and without
1t there is a deadlock or an expensive delay. Season-able
goods delayed beyond the wonted time are often
worthless, in addition to the loss and inconvenience oc-casioned
by their delay. Much of this trouble could
be obviated if railroads would more carefully inspect
the markings of freight received, a~d shippers were
ig~piQs.f\ich:
impressed with the importance of eliminating care-lessness
in the marking of goods sent out.-Colliers'.
@ * @I
American Furniture Fails to Interest Frenchmen.
George H. Jackson, one of the numerous consuls
representing the United States in France, in a report
recently submitted states that American furniture,
with one exception, "had failed to interest the French
public. They have very fixed views on this subject,"
he continues. "considering nothing an improvement On
the beauty of the historic lines of Henry II, Louis XIV,
Louis XV, Louis XVI and l'Empire. They do, how-ever,
distinguish in this regard between the aesthetic
and the practical. It is this latter which will make
its way in France. The exception referred to is the
roll-top desk. This article is finding its way every-where,
and close upon its track will doubtless follow
the American revolving office chair and office files.
The furniture purchased by the poor here is very infer-ior
and very dear; especially bedroom suites. Amer-ican
cheap furniture must be seen in France to be ap-preciated."
@ * @l
Remarkable Engine.
The American Blower Company of Detroit, Mich.,
received the following letter reporting the excellent
service rendered by a self-oiling engine furnished the
Provident Chemical INorks by the company: An-sv.
rering your favor of the 14th inst., will say the gen-erator
direct connected to one of your type A self-oiling
engines pl1rchased by us some four or five months ago,
is doing fine service, and we take much pleasure in tes-tifying
to the excellent satisfaction it is giving us. As
to the cost of oper.ation, it is so small, our engineer has
never been able to figure it out, but he is· confident the
cost does not exceed $7.50 per mouth for about 120 six-teen
candle pm/ver lamps ,:ve arc bt.1rning. VV~e figure
the cost of the entire outfit. will be saved in considera-hly-
Iess than a year's -time from date of installment.
Our ouly regret is we did uot install this outfit long
ago. Provident Chemical Works, by S. H. Thomson,
Treas. _
@ * @
A factory is under construction at Salamanca, N. Y.,
for the use of the Sterling Furniture company.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
~------------------------------------. !I!II
IIII
I
I firan~ Dapi~s 610\'1 Pipe
I an~Dust Arrester (om~an~
I
I
I!
15
i.
•
I'. i,
~I
I
THE LATEST device for handling
shavings and dust from all zvood-
7.f.wrkin,gmachines. Our nineteen years
experience in this class of 'uJork has
brought it nearer perfection than an')'
other system on the market today. It
is no exper£J1zent) but a del1Wl'lstrated
scientific fact, as 'li!e have SC'iJcral hun-dred
of these Sjlstems hi use, and 110t a
poor one ontong the111. Ou-r AUtOl1WtiC
Furnace Feed Syst(111) as sh07.J.m in this
cut, 1~}the lltOS! perfect zewrking device
of anything in this line. Write for our
prices for equipments.
WE MAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETAIL WORK WITHOUT EX-
, PENSE TO OUR CUSTOMERS.
EXHAUST FANS AND PRES-SURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN
STOCK.
Offioe and Factory:
I 208-210 Canal Street G~AND ~APIDS.MICH.
•
Cltlsen. 'bon. 1282 Bell. M..in 1804
••
1G MICHIGAN ARTISAJ'i
Essays on Industrial Education.
A book composed' of essays on the subject of "In-dustrial
Education" by Paul H. Hanus, is in the Ryer-fion
Library, Grand Rapids. l'vlr. Hanus was chair-man
of a commission appointed a few years ago by
Governor Guild of l\-1assachusetts to investigate condi-tions
in the factories of that state and propose a way
to remedy industrial troubles and to establish indus-trial
schools. Many public speeches were made by
members of the commission in an effort to interest the
public generally in the subject. Mr. Hanus believes
that boys and girls who wish to gain an industrial edu-cation
should receive help from schools founded es-pecially
for that purpose.
111Germany what are called "continuation" schools
take the pupils who have finished the elementary
grades and give them instruction in whatever trade
they care to make themselves proficient ill. Manufac-turers
in the United States are handicapped by the lack
of skilled labor. If schools giving a four years' courSe
of instruction were open to receive the young men
anxiotls to learn their trade, this obstacle in the path of
the manufacturer would be removed. Instructions
should include the study of mathematics, natural
science, dravl"ing, the history of industry and com-merce,
civics, shop and business English. in addition
to shop work. These studies should be pursued for
the first two years, the last two years to be devoted
to .<;peeialized instruction in the tradcs appropriate to a
g-ivcn locality. The same line of study as before
should be pursued and part of the time should be spent
in the "factory. l\.1anual training schools could carry
Ollt this work easily. Tvianual training in itself is of
too general a nature to do morc than give a knowledge
of the principles of all trades and teach them. In
industrial schools everything studied has its specific
application and so lS of inestimable value to the stu-dent.
By beginnlng at fourteen a young man in four
or five years devoted to a vocational training could
become a skilled workman able to earn a living wage.
The need for these schools is becoming greater con-tinually.
The manufacturers cannot secure trained On account of the rapid advance of the movement
help, although several schools have already been start- toward prohibition in the sale of intoxicating liquorsl
ed by municipalities co-operating with the state indus- especially in the southern states, the manufacturers of
trial commission of :Massachusetts. This commission billiard tables have suffered heavy losses in trade.
makes an annual report to the legislature of the pro- H_undreds of billiard room outfits, purchased on con-gress
made in creating industrial schools in that state. tract, have been returned, and the 'warehouses are
It is suggested that a boy's fitness for any mechani- filled with second-hand goods. Supposing that many
cal trade would be discovered by "trying them out" by of the saloons would be converted into bowling alleys,
a two years' course of. ~tudy, and what especial trade!- manufacturers of bowling materials stocked up heav-they
are fitted for. Schools established to teach'th'e' ily and now have the goods on hand. It is stated that
subjects above mentioned would give both boys and the Brunswick & Balke factory at Muskegon will be
girls a chance to prepare themselves for work in the '- operated in the manufacture of bank and office furni-skilled
industries. The workman needs a training iti _ ture hereafter.
all the processes of -his' trade, 'instead of a single .p'rd~:
cess, in order to prevent his becoming a narrow me- Gimbel Brothers, the great merchants of Philadel-chanic.
phia, will establish a store in New York. A huilding
.:\{en of forty or more now employed in factories feel 200 x 400 feet in size and thirteen stories high will be
the need of iurther jn~tr:l1c:;tiQnfor_ their own imprQv.e-,,__ erected for their use.
ment and for the betterment of their chances in the in-dustrial
world. The two schools of trades in Spring-field
and Cambridge, Mass., show that there is a
widespread demand for that kind of instruction, as
also do the correspondence schools and Y. M. C. A.
classes,
I t is interesting to learn about the ((cont"inuation""
schools of )\,1unich. Continuation school education is
compulsory for three, sometimes fOUlt, years in Bavaria
for all elementary graduates. Employers are required
by la\v to give their employes the necessary time, six
to twelve hours a \veek, for the purpose of attending
these schools, the number of hours depending on the
school. Each pupil is required to study the trade or
business in which he has found employment. These
schools have been institnted since 1900 to replace the
evening elementary schools. There are thirty-eight
now in operation in Munich and every trade imagin-able
is included in the list, from chimney sweeping to
cabinet making. Instruction is given by members of
trades in the city or by day school teachers. Relig-ion
is taught by members of the different faiths, each
to the people of his faith, as the law requires it. A
committee in charge of each school is responsible to
the school authorities and special pains are taken to
secure the best representatives from the trades or busi-ness
for which a school stands. In the school for car-penters
and cabinet makers studies include religion,
arithmetic and bookkeeping (suitable to the trade),
reading and business compositionlstuJies in life and
citizenship, drawing and practical technology. Detail
descriptions of the work done in each school is pub-lished
by the city. Results are good. So every effi-cient
worker must have a general education and also
technical preparation for the work he is to do. And
now is the time for more American municipalities to
make a start in the same direction.
@ * @
Manufacturers of Bowling Alleys and Billiard Tables
Suffer from Prohibition.
@ * @
I
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 17
,,
I,I
I,I
I!,
I
I ' I I
Michigan Artisan Co.II I Wrl"~ __ , ... ,No.'A.
110 N. DIvision St., Grand Rapids, Mich. I I 2714_2:~~~~~St.WOOD & S~~C~gO' Ill. . --,---_._----
r---------------------------------------1 r
I List of Buyers II
! I I
I I ,,I f,,
I I I I I I
List of Buyers! t
II,II•
Doyou want it?
Doyou want it?
List of Buyers
Doyou want it?
If so send in your order
with 25 cents at once.
list of Buyers
--------.,
ralm6r'S rat6nt 61uloo GlamDSI!
The abo\'c cut hi taken dh'ect from a pbotogrn.ph, aud ~hoWEi
the range of one &izfJonly, our No.1, 24-tueb Cllt.mp. ",Ve
make ~i:l: (.ther liiizcl'l, taking in stock up to 60 focheR wide
and 2 inches thick. Ours i\l, th~ mOllt practical method I[)f
clamping glued st()('k in ust'! at the present time. Hondreds of
fadories have ad(~Fted OUTway the past year and hundreds more
will in the future. J~et U\l,show you, Let us send yoU the
tunnel> of nearly l(}O :fal~tl:Il:,l.es(only a fmctiou of our list) who
hfl\'C ordered and reordered many times. proof positive our way
is the be!;t. A post car.1 will bring it, .~atalog inclUded. Don't
delay, but write today. i
I~ _...i
A. f. PALMER &. SONS. Owosso. Mich.
Foreign Rellr(Jsentativcs: The Proj~tile Co., LGudon, Eng-lllnd;
Eiflm('fmrdt &': Schutte, Berlin, Gerwany; Alfred H.
S('hutte, C()logne, l'aris, Rrussell>, Liege, Milan, Tndn, Ba-rcelona,
und Bilboa.
•
The result of thirty-fiYe years of Cutter making ex-perience.
Insist on having your new jointer fitted with
the genuine i\lorris \Vood & Sons' 20th Century Solid
Steel Glue Joint Cutters, for there are no others just as
good. They cut the same perfect joint, when new,
pa,rtly or fuEy woro ant. They never burn. Require
l~ss grinding than any other make, saving time and cut-ter.
No time wasted setting up as with knives, and
cost no morc than other makes. Try a pair and be con-vinced.
.. •
- - - -------'
18 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
lESTABLl5HED 1880
"UBl.I5HCD • .,
MiCHIGAN ARTiSAN CO.
ON THIE 10TH AND 25TH O~ EACH MONTH
OFP'ICE-10a, 110. 112 NORTH DIVISION ST., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
ENTERiO IN THE POSTOFI'roE AT &ItANI> It,o,PIl>9, MICH., ,\8 BECO"'D 0LA1i8 "A.,TIUI,
In aU probability the advanced rates on mirrors dud
the imposition of a duty on mahogany, contained in the
tariff bill passed by the national house of representat!ve~,
will be retained by the senate. Manufacturers of furni-ture
and kindred lines will be obliged to add the adcli-tional
cost of these materials to the goods now in prepar-ation
for the fall season of trade. With a dull market
and no immediate prospects for a revival. higher price~
for goods will not put life into trade.
+ ..
Having advanced freight rates to cover the shortage
in their receipts since the two cent-a-mile laws for trans-porting
passengers in many states took effect, railroad
magnates are now busily engaged in the courts and legis-latures
in efforts to restore the three cent per mile rate
for passengers. The money is needed to pay dividends
on watered stock.
.. ..
Quite a number of manufacturers of furniture who
wisely invested a part of the profits acquired during the
long-to-be remembe<ed years of 190617 in sugar stocks,
are said to be quite indifferent in the matter of higher
duties on mirrors and mi~ror plates proposed in congress,
so long as the sugar schedule remains practically un-changed.
.. ..
It is stated that President Taft was inspired by an
economical impulse when he appointed General Dickin-son
to the office of Secretary of War. General Dickin-son
is as large as the president, and his appointment
would save the cost of a chair for the secretary.
.. ..
Marquetry is used but moderately. In the west and
south there is practically no call for it. When applied
in moderation this form of decoration appeals to re-fined
tastes. It is seen to the best advantage on pianos,
music and parlor cabinets... ..
The proposition pending in congress to levy a tax of
five per cent upon mahogany logs, equal to about $5 per
M. does not afford unalloyed pleasure to the manufactur-ers
of medium and high grade furniture.
.. '"
The agency that ordered 1,000 saw mills shut down
pending advancement in prices for lumber is not a trust,
lumbermen declare, but it serves trust purposes ven'
efficiently.
'" '"
The way a man receives something new reveals his
standing ,either as a uhas been," a Hnever was,'l or an
"up-ta-date" individual.
.. ..
The liberty to express one's talents in ways that serve
the common good, is a great inheritance.
.. ..
The manufacture of carved elettrical fixtures of woodl
is an important industry in New York.
@ * @
Valuable Timber on Coos Bay.
The vast quantity of standing timber in the Coos
Bay country can scarcely be realized for there is proba-bly
not another place iu the world where so much timber
is found near a fine harbor affording manufacturing and
shipping advantages.
It is estimated that within a radius of sixty or seventy
miles from Coos Bay and so located that the harbor is a
natural outlet there is something like a hundred billion
feet of standing timber-that is, about one-third of the
standing timber in Oregon and one-tenth of that in the
entire United States is here.
The principle variety is fir intermixed with spruce. red
cedar and the Port Orford or Coos Bay white cedar,
which is very valuable in ship building or wherever the
lumber is to be subjected to the action of water. There
are also maple, ash, alder and myrtle, the latter admitting
of a beautiful polish, moderately used for furniture and
residence fittings.
@) '" @)
Chippendale Copied designs.
More credit is given to Chippendale than is due. in
the estimation of many art connoisseurs. It is charged
that his designs were virtually copied from the French,
the Gothic and Chiuese styles.
@ * €I
Sheraton Wen Sustained.
Sheraton occupies a well sustained position of emi-nence
in the art world on account of his inlays, carving
and delicate paintings ,applied in the construction of turn·
iture.
@ * @
Grandeur, Elegance and Grace.
The style of Louis XIV is noted for its grandeur in
ornament; of Louis XV for its elegance and of Louis
XVI for its grace.
@) * @
\Vhite enamel furniture was introduced in France
during the life of Marie Antoinette.
@ * @
Light and graceful designs won favor with the public
during the Jacobean period.
- -- -----------------------------,
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Improved Boring Machines.
The boring machines sho\:\,'11belmvl are manufactured
and carried in stock by l\.forris \Vood &50115, 27T1-1tl
Tu}o Bit Boring lliachine.
Furnished With or vVithout Foot treadle.
w. Lake St., Chicago, Ill. Their late catalog shows many
styles of boring machines as well as tools, drills and cot-
Multiple Spindte Machine.
ters for woodworkers. This catalog should be i11 the
hands of every woodworker who wants the best, and will
be sent on application.
@) * @)
Unsafe Conclusions.
The livng root of most of the errors that infest the
business world-whether those errors concern the ad-ministrative
policy of a railroad president or the way the
office-boy puts the stamps D nthe envelopes-will be found
in a certain inherent trait of the human mind. It is the
habitual tendency of every human being to reduce his
observations to dogmatic condt1.sions, and to begin sub-sequent
thought from that point. A composite of the
dogmatic spirit is the policy which says: "I always handle
that sort of thing this way." Examine a cross-section of
the average mentality and you will fiud it filled with little
conclusions. Trac.c many of those conclusions back to
their beginnings and you will find that they have been
reached by one or two feeble observations, hastily inter-preted)
and a large measure of unfounded guesswork.
The key is turned on that point, and that conclusion, no
matter how inadequate, becomes a factor in all subse-
19
qnent thinking. Any new thought that disagrees with
that condn~ion is regarded with suspicion if not with
contempt. Possession of a dogmaticconc1usion is nine
points of the law of loose thinking. The lazy mind de-lights
in a short cut, and the more it gets used to these
short cuts the more lazy it becomes. \i\Thcn the mind
gets dogged up. and thoughts do not flow freely, it is
almost a certainty that one of these little conclusions
forms the obstruction. The mind that is ever seeking to
know is alive. The one that is satisfied that it knows,
and condemns every conflicting opinion, and will listen to
no more evidence, has ceased growing. Fear of new
evidenc.e is a self-conviction of insecurity and all utlwill-ingness
to be found out. A fixed conclusion, based on
meager and untypical observation, and that misinter-preted,
is the most dangerous instrument ever devised by
man. Progress is largely a matter of breaking up such
cOlleJusiollS.-Ex.
@ * @
Tube Cutters.
A new catalogue of pipe and tube cutters has been
issued by the Fox )VIachine company of Grand Rapids.
One of these machines is extra heavy, provided \vith a
motor drive) and is used in cutting off boiler fiues, and
by steam fitters and plumbers. The smaIler machines are
adapted for cutting light brass tubes and bicycle tubing.
@ * @
Chairs \vere first used in England during the reign of
Henry VIII.
•
FOR SALE
io
o
,~,.". ,,0 "..
~
'""
..o.. o<:~ o~ L~
",- ooz
The owner desiring to retire from the manufac-turing
business offers this plant for sale.
H is perfectly equipped for the manufacture of
case goods, and is turning out the best known line of I mediul11 priced office desks on the market.
Correspo:tdence or personal visit in'l:lted.
I
I
I
I
---
20 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
.----_.
j
I
---_._---._--------- ...
~----_._---_.
•II!
OCTAGON PEDESTALS AND
TABLE LEGS
That 1:;; the question; and a. hlg one, too. How
do )'UU makE': them? How much do they cost you?
How good al'e they, and aTC they uniform? Just
take a. little time and let these questions soak in.
Hel:aulOc yOUlTIay he wasting on the manufacture
of the Pedestals and Legs what yOU save by eeo-nomica.(
Manufacture Vel the Tops. Your profits
are then cut down. Make the lCost of the diffet'ent
pa.ds l:mJanc",. One man wlth our
LEG AND PEDESTAL MACHINE
will ma.ke Octagon and polygonal ~haped turnings
at one-tenOJ to on'>twentleth of what It costs by
ha.nd; round ones at one-sixth to one-tenth. The
SIll'i.ng in time uod labor is what ffia,kes that bal-ance
we were just talking about. Now, don't S9,Y
"that sounds pl"etty good," and let it slip your
mind. Just ''\Tite us to-day.
-------_._--- c. MATTISON MACHINE WORKS
863 Fifth st" BELOIT, WISCONSIN,
Grand Rapids and New York the "Greatest."
"New York is the greatest furniture market in the
country and Grand Rapids (Mich.) the greatest manu-facturing
center/l declared the New York Sun recent-ly.
"Jamestown is a dose second to Grand Rapids
and a great deal of manufacturing is done in Chicago."
Continuing) the Sun said: "Three furniture exposi-tions
are held during the year. The first and most
notable, at Grand Rapids, opens on January 2. This
is of so much importance to the trade that a large party
[ THE NEW GRAND RAPIDS
MACHINERY STORE
Wood Working Machinery
Factory Equipment
Machine Knives, Bits, Etc.
Everything in Equipment for tbe Woodworker.
Offic. and Store,
58 South looUt. St ••
Oppo,ite Uuioo DC!lpot. McMULLEN MACHINERY CO.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH. >----_._-----------~
of New York and eastern buyers went to it from the
metropolis this year in a special Pullman car.
"The second is held at Chicago immedately after the
close of the Grand Rapids exposition. The third is
opened in this city about the middle of January.
"The main object of these expositions is to present
the new styles prepared for the market. It has been
stated that 150 carloads, comprising 15,000 pieces,
were shown this year at Grand Rapids.
uThe season opened in marked contrast with last
season. Last year many factories had shut down and
those which kept running had generally rednced their
working force so that thousands of workmen had been
tbrown ant of employment. ,Vitb the opening of this
year the reverse was the case. The factories were all
running on full time in view of the known fact that
stocks in the hands of dealers were unusually low.
"The large attendance of eastern buyers at the
•
Grand Rapids exposition was regarded as an early
justification of the manufacturers' hopeful anticipa-tions,
and consequently there ,vas a prevailing feeling
of encouragement. rrhe manufacturers had their
samples ready in ample time for the exposition, and it
was admitted they had done jnstice to the ideas of tbe
designers.
"The feeling in New York as to the future is fairly
expressed by the following utterance of a recognized
authori(Y in the trade: 'This season is likely to prove
a satisfactory one to the manufacturers generally, to
all who can give dollar for dollar in strong selling val-
11,es. The fact that buying is nOW being done on a
steady, and even strong, market, will make for the
benefit of the trade as well. Indeed there are instances
as in the case of mirror plates, where an advance has
taken place.) "
Several statements contained in the above are inac-curate
as follows: HIt is admitted that the manufac-turers
had done justice to the ideas of the designers."
Corrected, the statement would read, "the designers
had done justice to the ideas of the manufacturers."
Six, instead of three, expositions are held annually in
the trade centers mentioned.
Fifteen thousand pieces would scarcely represent
the lines manufactured in Grand Rapidsl not to men-tion
the out-of-town lines,
Chicago outranks Jamestown in the quantity of
goods produced.
@ * @
Will Furnish the Blackstone.
The Nelson-Matter Furniture Company of Grand
Rapids will furnish the furniture for the bedrooms cOn-tained
in the new Hotel Blackstone, now under con-struction
in Chicago. The contract cans for suites
amounting in value to $100,000. The Blackstone will
be a mammotb, modern house, costing $1,500,000, and
thc furnishings $750,000.
@ * @
Bulman Will Help Duncan.
Frank R. Bulman has been engaged by the Duncan-
Scbell Company of Keokuk, Iowa, to assist Mr. Dun-can
in buying stock for the firm.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
..._-------------------------------------_._.--
"ere are the Exact Shades Adopted by the
Qran~Ra~i~sfurniture Manufacturers'Ass'n
Their "Golden Oak Oil Stain" is our No. 3424.
Their "Early English Stain" is our No. 3425 Oil Stain.
Their "Weathered Oak Stain" is our No. 3426 Oil Stain.
Their "fumed Oak" is our No. 3427 New Process fuming liquid.
Their "light Mahogany Stain" is our No. 3428 Dry Mahogany Stain soluble in water.
Their "Dark Mahogany Stain" is our No. 3429 Dry Mahogany Stain soluble in water.
Send for Samples and Information.
III!
~-
WE SUPPLY EVERYT"ING NEEDED IN T"E flNISmNG ROOM.
G"ICAGO NEW YORK
----------- THE AO-EL_ITE F='EOF"LE ------------------_._-
~e1fridge's Arr.erican Department Stcre in Londen.
.At last a modern department store has been opened
in LOl1(lon by II. G. Selfridge, a forrner Chicagoan.
'Ihe event "vas celebrated 011 11arch 15. vvhen 200,000
people thronged the store and expressed their surprise
and Je1ight at the beautiful and complete arrange-ments.
For the first time the other large stores llsed
advertisernents in the nCvvspapers illustrated by signed
dra,vings of well known artists of the Punch staff. J\fr.
Setridge received many cahlegram~ from Chicago
friends wishing him success.
The store is of eight stories and has three stories
belOV\7 the street. No skyscrapers are allowed to be
constructed in London.
In an intervie"\v 1\-Ir. Selfridge said: "1 think v.,ie
have had a successful opening. Please tell my former
fellow merchants in the United States of America, and
especially those in Chicago, how pleased I have been
to get their congratulatory telegrams. I hope to show
London vvhat the genuinely modern store ought to be.
I am here in the center of a population of twelve mil-lions
of people and am sure there is room and business
enough for us all. I intend to do Lusiness strictly on
English lines. I am not trying to Americanize the
trade here."
'fhere is only one picture in Selfridge's office; that
is a big portrait of l\larshall Field.
The eh ief point in Selfridge's advertising is the dig-nity
an(} moderation of his statement. Selfridge's bus-iness
maxims, reiterated in every advertisement, are
dignity, courtesy, energy, integrity, originality, liber-ality
and value. Here is a characteristic paragraph
from his advertise,ment:
i'Uere the charm of nevvness is to be experienced to
the full. for at Selfridge's everything is new except the
splendid old, time-tried principles that must govern it
--integrity, sincerity, liberality in dealing and courte-
OltS service,"
Harrod's store, Selfridge's chiefest rival, discovered
that it was entitled to a diamond jubilee and advertised
it heavily! that day in order to offset Selfridge's open-ing-.
London, hO"vvever,packed Selfridge's to the doors.
@ * @
Co-Operative Buying Practical.
The executive committee of the );linnesota associa~
tion of retailers, several months ago, decided to test the
value of co-operative buying. The movement received
the hearty support of members of the association and
the sum of $7,000 \-vas invested in staples. By plac-ing
large cash orders the SU111 of $1,200 was saved.
The assodation will prosecllte the plan vigorously,
purchasing only such goods as the mail order houses
handle. It has been shown that co-operative buying
enables the retailer to compete successfully with the
mail order houses.
@) * @)
A statue of the Venus of '\Iilo with a clock imbed-ded
in her stomach is one of the freaky things seen in
a jewelry store.
21
22 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
,I
I Write us for Prices on
I CROSSBANDING
. In Poplar, Birch and Gum. II
Walter Clarh Veneer Company
535 Michigan Trust Building, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Trained for His Duties.
H. C. Leonard, the superintendent of the great
plant of the Grand Rapids Refrigerator Company, pre-
H. L. Leonard, Superintendent Grand Rapids Refri~rator Company,
pared himself for the position he occupies by spending
five years in the factory and office of the company.
•I S0VNT0N ex. C0.
ManufaCturers of
Emho-.'ed aDd
Turned Mould-ing"
EmboN-ed
and Spindle
Carvings, and
Automatie
"cumin....
We aJ.w:, manu-fad:
ure a llllile line
of Emb.oned
Ornaments for
Couch Work.
I
II
•
419·421 W. fifteenth St .. C"ICAGO, ILL
Commencing in the least important department he
mastered its details and then entered another and still
another, until he had acquired a comprehensive know:-
ledge of the business he would soon engage in, in an
important capacity. A few mOnths in the office com-pleted
his education as a manufacturer. Previous to
his entry into the active duties of superintendent Mr.
Leonard had spent years in the public schools and in
college thoroughly equipping himself for engaging in
the large commercial and financial affairs of the com-pany.
In the big factory under his superintendence
six hundred men are employed and the system followed
results in a large product at minimum cost.
® * @
Well Supplied With Quartered Oak.
Walter Clark has a large supply of quarter-sawed
oak veneers in his warehouse in Grand Rapids. It is
customary for furniture manufacturers to go to his
warehouse and make their oWn selections, but the eut-of-
town manufacturers send in their orders and receive
as careful and prompt attention. ,Valter Clark's ad-dress
is 535 Michigan Trust building, Grand Rapids.
He operates a large veneer mill in IVIississippi, seven
miles from Vicksburg, running on oak and cottonwood
and has close business relations with other mills, en-abling
him to furnish customers at all times with the
choicest veneers, croo:;:c;-banding, drawer fronts and bot-toms,
mirror backs and everything that the furniture
manufacturer needs from the lumberman.
,
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
/,-----\ 10 SPINDLE MACHINIt
ALSO MADE WITH 12, 15, 20 AND 25 SPINDLES.
DODDS' NE.W GE.AR.
DOVET AILING MACHINE
This little machine has dOl1emore to perfect the drawer work of
furniture manulac.turers than an},thing else in the fUDliture trade.
For fifteen years It has made perfect-fitting, vermin-proof, dove·
tailed stock a possibility. This bas been accomplished at reduced
cost, as the. machine cuts dove-tails in gangs of from 9 to 24 ;l.t
one opemtlOll.
ALEXANDER DODDS. Grand Rapids. Michigan.
Represented by Schuchart & Schutle at Berlin, Vienna, Stockholm aIld 5t
Pe.lersb\Ull. Represented by Alfred H. SchUlte at Colollne, Brussels, ~, Paris
Milan and Bilboa· Repreaented in Greal Bolian and Ireland by the Oliver Machinery c.:.., F. S, Tbompeon, MilT., 201·203 DeaDllllate, Manchc:5let, Enilland.
~ --~
I The capacity of your jointer is limited !I
! ~ the cutting capacity of. the cutters.
I •
Unless you are using the Genuine Morris Wood {iI
Sons 20th Century Solid Steel Glue Joint Cutters
you are not getting the full value out of your machine.
They are harder and require less grinding than any other
maker and when they do need grinding the cutting surface
is so small that it only takes a few minutes to put them in
order again.
Write for catalog No. 35A. It tells aU about the cutters
and will help you to increase your profits.
MORRIS WOOD &.
2714-2716 W. Lake St.
SONS
"-----_._--- Chicago, Ill. ....I ----_._-_. _. ---------
Do You Want the Daily?
Orders for the Midsummer
Edition of the
DAILY ARTISAN.RECORD
Should be Mailed to the
Publishers Now.
PRICE FOR
THE SEASON FIFTY CENTS
Address Daily Artisan-Record
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN.
23
24 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
!:Ii !Ii I BARRETT'S PRIME SHELLAC VARNISH !Ii y;
!:Ii made from strictly pure Shellac Gum cut in Specially Denatured or !:Ii
!:Ii Wood Alcohol. The results of 25 years' experience in the importa- tion of gums, in the use of solvents, and in the manufacture of varnish !Ii
!:Ii embodied in "Barrett's Prime." Ask for samples and prices. !:Ii .
!:Ii !Ii M. L. BARRETT &. CO., I !:Ii !:Ii 219 LAKE ST... CHICAGO
Discontinued the Manufacture of Furniture and Ac-quired
Millions.
In the year 1880 Seneca B. Anderson engaged in the
manufacture of bedsteads in a small way in a small town
in southwestern I\lichigan. The tracks of a forty mile
line of railway were stretched through the village, and
whenever the engineer did not forget to stop, persons
desiring tD enter or leave the cars at Berlamont were
permitted to do so. If such persons were in a hurry
they walked to Grand Junction, three miles distant, a
point where all trains from the fOUf quarters of Van
Buren county were compelled by law to pause if but for
a moment. 1,1r. Anderson had an advantage in the prose-cution
of his industry, in a tract of choice hardwood tim-ber,
and the disposition of the yeomanry of the section to
accept modest wages for their services, aided in the win-ning
of a fair measure of success. The shipping facilities
of the Kalamazoo & South Haven railroad were none too
good. Occasionally one of the three freight cars owned
by the corporation would go astray and in that event J\Ir.
Anderson was obligued to carry his output of bedsteads
to Grand Junction on a wagon. After several years of
operation, good fortune visited Mr. Anderson. His
factory was destroyed by fire late one dark night and
relieved him of the burden of his investment. His pockets
were emptied, after paying his bills, but Mr. Anderson,
freed of harrassing burdens, sought for fresh fields for
exploitation. Endowed by nature with a good constitu-tion,
tact, energy, "gumption" and sagacity by inheritance
and acquirement, Mr. Anderson became an explorer of
the woodlands of Tennessee, Arkansas, 1iississippi and
Kentucky and in a few years his knowledge and ability
were found to be so valuable by investors that he found
full employment for his energies. Locating at l\femphis
he engaged in the manufacture of hardwood lumber and
veneers, dealing mainly in gum and cotton wood. A great
factory is operated under the name of the Anderson-Tully
company, and the owners are rated as multimillionaires
by the agencies. l\llr. Anderson has not forgotten his ex-periences
at little old Berlamont, although the place is no
longer written on the maps, and a dear old mother, living
at South Haven, where ~1r.Anderson was born, frequent-
Jy calls the rich, hustling lumberman to the hearth side.
A dutyful son, he never fails to respond.
Furniture Dealers May Meet in Evansville.
A letter from Evansville states that the July meet-ing
of the National Association of Retail Furniture
Dealers will probably be held in that city, and it seems
fair to suppose that Chicago has given consent to the
change. During the past five years Chicago has
claimed the association for its own, and in permitting
the association to hold a convention in Evansville, the
big city evidences tender regard for the thriving .town
founded by Bob Evans on the Ohio one-half a century ._---_._----~
f
AN OPPORTUNrTY OF A LIFE TrME
is offered to the right party. A splendidly equipped
Furniture Factory located in Indiana, one hundred
miles from Chicago. Factory is brick, mill construc-tion,
about 73,000 feet floor space, with never failing
water power, steam as an auxiliary, trunk line rail-road
spur to the shipping room door and into the
lumber yard. Will sell property on long terms or
lease same with machinery, also have one million feet
dry lumber, factory is in full operation the year
round. Declining health compels the owner to dis-pose
of the business. For full particulars address
Hoosier 62, care Michigan Artisan,
Grand Rapids, Mich. 1
and perhaps more ago. Evansville is well located
geographicaUy and it has the conveniences necessary
to accommodate and entertain a large crowd. The
new furniture exchange and the thirty factories in op-eration
in that city will prove of more than common in-terest
to dealers attending the convention. The state
of Indiana is largely represented in the membership of
the association, and the ever busy Hoosiers will appre-ciate
the change to Ohio river water after so many
years of experiment with the mystifying fluid pumped
out of Lake l\1iehigan. It is understood that Evans-ville
has given a bond to return the association in good
order to Chicago, and to guard it especially against the
danger growing out of Mike Mulvihill's desire to make
St. Louis the future abode of the association.
@ * @
To put a fine point upon a business proposition it is
not necessary to sharpen a pencil upon a buzz planer. A
young man living in Grand Rapids tried to do so recently.
The attending surgeon dressed the remains of two fingers;
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 25 -----_._----_._---------------------------.
II
I Cabinet Makers
In these days of close competition, need the best
possible equipment, and this they can have in
BARNES'
== HAND and FOOT POWER ===
MACHINERY
Send for Our New Catalogue.
w. F. & John
o.u· New Hand and Fool Power Circular Saw No.4.
The stroR/lest, most powerful, and in every WU}' the best
ma<:hine of its kin,d ever made, for ripping;::cross-cutting,
bormg and grOOVlIlg.
Barnes Co.
654 Ruby Street, Rockford. Ill.
r-----------------------------------------------------
II
iII
BECAUSE
IT IS PREP/IRED TO INTEREST RETAILERS
THE JIERCANTILE EDiTION OF THE k[[CHI-GAN
ARTISAN IS THE MOST VALUABLE AD-VfiRTISING
MEDIUM FOR lvlANUFACTURERS
OF FURNITURE A/·m KINDRED GOODS.
I! "'---- -------
~-------------------------------_._-----------_._-------------
----------
III
II
I
! __ .__ J
I
j
II
II
III
I1
26 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
rill lill/ll GOLDEN OAK
STAINS
Our improved process of Slain-Making produces
STftrnOTn. prnnDATlOn and uun flAKrS
No. 1918 -A Warm Brown, No. 19t4-Medium 8rown, No. 1911l-A Dark Brown, No. 1919-Extra Dark Brown'
A'Certain Test of Good Taste.
There is 110mOre certain test of good taste than the
involuntary selection of subjects by the eye on viewing
for the first time ornament in objects of art. Nature
works on so large and true a scale that few judge her
amiss. That which is maj estic, noble, picturesque, Of
simply beautiful as a whole, classes itself at once in all
minds, and the fact of a common decision on these
points demonstrates the genuineness of the laws of
taste. The common mind differs from the cultivated
in its knowledge and appreciation of nature's beauty in
detail. The former sees only partially, the latter
grasps the whole and distinguishes the parts; nothing,
however humble, which goes to make up the chord of
beauty, escapes its notice. V\There the appreciation
of the one ends, the pleasure of the other is but begun,
Over GOLDEN OAK STAINS USB the L Mac E,
NO, 506 TRANSPARENT FILLER,
LYON FURNITURE
For Plain Oak
COMBINATION GOLDEN OAK FILLER NO, 1672.
The tiller lhal "FlllS"-alwars gives pertelll satisfaction.
THE LAWRENCE -McFADDEN COMPANY PHILADELPHIA, PA.
,..
=
"'"
so that his delight is as true and infinite as nature her-self.
The natural eye, therefore, sees all things as in
a glass, darkly-the cnltivated penetrates the film of
nature, and looks into her heart.-James J. Jarvis.
@ * l§l
One Hundred Bedrooms to Furnish.
An addition to the Hotel Piedmont at Atlanta, Ga.,
will be erected during the current year, involving an
expenditure of $200,000. A ball room, a convention
hall and one hundred bedrooms will be added to the
accommodations of the house. The furniture for the
original structure, manufactured in the south, in def-erence
to local pride, was of inferior quality and it is
presumed the owners will not repeat the mistake of
shutting out northern competition . .--------------_._----------------------.
I THE AGENCY
CREDITS AND: COLLECTIONS New York
Orand Rapids
Philadel~hla
Boston
Cincinnati
Chlcaao
St Louis
Jamestown
Hll;Ih Point
Capital, Credit and Pay Ratings.
Clearinl!.House of Trade Experience.
The Most Reliable Credit Reports.
RAPID COLLECTIONS.
ROBERT P. LYON, Ceneral Manager.
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
OF THE
FURNITURE, CARPET. UPHOL.STERY,
UNDERTAKING, I=I'ICTURE FRAME, MIRROR,
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES,
IMPROVED M£THODS
Wi: ALSO i'lEPORTT ...E PRINCIPAL DRY GOODS,
DEPARTMENT AND QENERAL STORE$,
GRAND RAPIDS OFFICE. 412-413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
C. C, NEVERS, Michigan M.anager.
II
_------------------------.------------1
f·----- --MI-CH-IGA-N---_ART.ISA_N -------_.
I
2i
-----~
The LEONARD Furniture Exhibition Buildinrr
Is rapidly filling up. Some of the finest lines in the country will exhibit here by
manufacturers desiring space in a central location, cheap insurance, R. R. sieling
and team track at floor level; no smashing of goods by dumping them on the side
walk and then down a chute. Elevator and electric light service first class. No
danger of losing your samples by fire just when you need them most, as the prop-erty
is sprinkled. In addition to all these advantages there is a GREAT SAVING
IN EXPENSE caused by our low rates. Write to
c. H. LEONARD, PRES.
LEONARD EXHIBITION BUILDING CO., - GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
P. S. Do it now or you n~ay be too late.
I~----_. ------
TRADE NOTES.
The George Yale Hardware and Furniture Corn-pany
is engaging in business at Bay City, Oregon.
Califf Brothers arc starting a furniture store at
Vancouver, 'vVashington.
George Propeck has purchased a building in Free-
Bketch by K. J. Hoegland. Little Falls, Minn.
watef, Oregon, and has opened a new furniture store.
\i\Tatters & \Vatters have started a furniture store at
Slayton, Oregon.
Veatch & La\vson, furniture finn at Cottage Grove,
Oregon, have solel out to \Yalker & King. Me
Veatch has reserved the undertaking, piano and scvv-ing
machine departments.
Recently one morning, just as the department store
of L Gevurtz & Sons, Portland. Oregon, \vas being
opened, three Blen entered and boldly snatched some
1
jewelry from a tray and fleeL Later suspects were ar-rested
by the police, as they vvere trying to dispose of
some jewelry similar to the description of that taken.
O. II. James, F. I-I. Stege and F. J. Chapman have
organized a corporation at Salem, Oregon, \vith the
title of the Imperial Furntture Company.
H. A. Sampson has purchased B. F. ::\forse's stock
in the Lakeside Furniture Company, Coeur d'Alene,
Idaho.
\Y. G. Seeley has succeeded McGilvery & Seeley,
furniture, at Lewiston, Idaho.
@ * @
Returned From the Pacific Coast.
J. 'N. Oliver, president of the Oliver }fachinery
Company, manufacturers of high grade wood working
machinery, returned to Grand Rapids on April 8, after
l~- FOR SALE-Fully Equipped Woodworking Plant
Suitable for planin~ mill, box factory. furniture manu- I facturing or any kmd of woodworking business. Splendidly
located in l<lichigan. Better than a bonus. Investigation
solicited. Address L. M. M., care Michigan Artisan,
•
•
spending two months on the Pacific coast, Naturally
the wood working plants in California, Oregon and
\Vashington interested him very much. =Vlanufactur~
ing industries have been developed very rapidly with-in
recent years "on the coast," and 1\.1r. Oliver wit-nessed
evidences of prosperity on every hand. ,.
---------------- - - -
28 ;\lICHIGAN ARTISAN
ARTISTIC and INEXPENSIVE
CATALOGUE COVERS
LET US FIGURE ON YOUR PHOTOGRAPHING
ENGRAVING and PRINTING
PROMPT
DEUVERIES
COMPLETE
CATALOGS
PERFECT
WORK MICHIGAN ENGRAVING CO. at
Right Pric:es
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
•
ICHOICE -rOOLS--POR -FURNITURE--MAKERS"j I I
I I
i: If you do not know the "Oliver" wood working tools, you had better give "OLIVER" Wi your address.and have us teUyou all about them. We make nothing but No, ~~. :eahne~.Saw f
: Quality tools, the first co!ft of which is considerable, but which will make Made with or witlwul :
I
,more profit for each dollar inveSted than any of the cheap machines flood~ ~b~r 3tj~e3<Yl~~iltt
. h take 18" under Ihe I
• mg t e country. iuide - tilts 45 cle~reea I
I ope way and 7 degrees ,
I the olba way. Car· " OII'Yer Tools TieBa saw up 10 1}6" I l ~idb'w?rub~eat£~:f~ :
Save Labor when notmotordriven. I Wei.llhs 1800 Ibs when
: . Time ready to ship. I .'.. ::~o:'" I
: : • I
I "Oliver" New Variety Saw Table No. 11· I
: Will take a wow up 10 20ft diameter. Arbor belt is 6' wide. :!t
!,•
II•
----------------_._--~
!
II BRANCH OFFICES -Oliver Machmery Co. Hudron Terminal, 50 Churctt St·, New York;
Oliver Machinery Co., First National Bank Building, Chicago, Ill_; Oliver Machinery Co.,
Pacific Building. Sel!lttle, Wash.; Oliver Machinery Co ,201-203 Del!lnsgale, Manchester, Enll· ~------------_. ---_.
MICHIGAN
Send fQ( Catalog "8" for data on Hand Jointers, Saw Tables, Wood
Lathes, Sanders, Tenoners, Mortisers, Trimmers, Grinders, Work
Benches, Vises, Clamps, Glue Heaters, etc., etc.
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.
Works and General Office. at 1 to 51 Clancy St.
GRAND RAPIDS. MICH .• U. S. A.
Museum of Bad Taste.
The world's first "l\luseum of Bad Taste" has been
opened in Stuttgart, the capital of \Vurtenlberg. It is
intcnded to make it a permanent exhibition of "horrible
examples" in the domain of the liberal arts.
It consists for the present of a be\vilclering "i'ariety
of objects representing the most classic:. departures
fronl the dictates of good taste \·vhich the human race
has committed, and it will be added to from time to
time. as often as fresh freaks come to the museum's no-tice.
The project originated with Professor Pazau-rek
l the director of the Industrial :\hlseum, which has
devoted a special section of its buildings to the pur-pose,
The "bad taste" museum is divided into three sep-arate
departmcnts-improper use of materials, offense
against constnlctionl ideals, and anomaly in decorative
effects.
I'llustratlve of misused materials is shmvn a col-lection
of articles \vherein v'lOod, iron, ceramics) and
other substances are employed to represent something
else than that vvhich they really are.
Among the "sins of construction" is an array of ob-jects
which are plainly unsuitable for the purpose for
which they appear to be designed, such as vessels
which do not stand firmly and cannot be cleaned.
dishes \vith grotesquely cut corners or projections, and
absurd contradictions between form and object, snch
as thermometers in the shape of riding whips, inkstands
shaped like revolvers. etc. There are long showcases
ARTISAN 29
full of "bad form" specimens born of speculating upon
patriotic and religious sentiments. Among the fonner
is a collection of freak ideas that originated in connec-tion
\vith the Zeppelin craze last autumn.
In the department devoted to decorative eccentrici-ties
the museum contains examples designed to show
humanity its sins in the direction of overdoing and
u nclerdoing.
1\-Iuscum curators from all parts of Germany are
journeying to Stuttgart to inspect the new museum,
\vhich. it 18 generally agreed, fills a long-felt practi-cal
want.
@ * @
A Nonvegian boasts of having invented a patented
process for colorillR \\Toods. ii\Vhole stems of green
trees are colored; the sap is pressed out of the stem
h)' force and the dye injected in its place. It is claimed
that wood treated by this process is much more dur-able
than ordinary wood and "ivill 110t warp." The
process rnay be ne\v, but the result is of no more value
than the green stains of 1880.
@ * @
]'he basis of style should be utility, determined in
accordance \\lith one's occupation or habits; then form
should be designed, embracing certain general charac-teristics
which could gradually be developed along the
lines of individual taste. The style of last year is the
anomaly of this in certain branches of the furniture
trade.
30 1\1I CHI G A N ART I SAN
I
TWO WINNERS IN VARNISH I
THE EMBLEM OF SUPERIORITY This is the verdict of the furniture manufacturer who KNOWS
Is the best high-grade, quick-rubbing varnish ever produced. Can be re-coated
every day and last coat rubbed safely in three days.
Is our high-grade first or second coat varnish. Dries hard to sandpaper over
night. Last coat can be rubbed in twenty-four hours.
The man who KNOWS is the man who WINS
j Color • l Lead and
DETROIT, MICHIGAN
......._~_._--_._-_.------- -----
Paradox Rubbing
Ti- Ki- Lac
VARNISH DEPARTMENT.
Acme White Works
Vocational School at Fitchburg.
The state of Massachusetts has appropriated $75,-
000 for the purpose of erecting a vocational school at
Fitchburg, Furtber appropriations will be supplied
when needed, Teachers will be provided by the state,
but the city of Fitchburg will pay a per capita tax for
each pupil in attendance, Pupils will be instructed
in practical business affairs, commercial arithmetic,
mechanical drawing and designing will be included in
the course of instruction, Girls will be taught domes-tic
science, sewing and housekeeping. Boys will be
trained to fill positions in the industries and in com-merce.
The work will be elementary, that of the
craftsman. rather than the mechanic or machinist. ~._----
II
Mahogany, C
I Circassian Walnut, ee"" O. Quartered Oak, ,,: ..
Walnut, e:tt'll Curly Maple. ;\.1. :tt'l :..~ 'Jeneers
Bird's Eye Maple. 't..1'0 Ue..~ . 1.. Gra.de
Basswood. S p . \\1g11-
~f~', \-\e:tt'l~ ..1 Dea.\erS ~DS' M\c\'l\G~
Birch, :.. ~ .. J .. a.nU St. Gtl/»t\D
Maple, f'''"C\\1rer.. 3 so,,,,,,·' ' Poplar, ",II-~U:... Z
Gum, \" ..o.a~
Oak.
Period Styles.
The Trade Periodical Company of Chicago have
issued an illustrated volume of 220 pages, giving the
history of the period styles in furniture. The author
is Herbert E. Brinstead, editor of the "Furniture Rec-ord
and Furnisher" of London, with chapters on "Mod-ern
yIission" and "Craftsmen Furniture" by J. Newton
Nind and Gustave Stickley, The book is dedicated
Hto the increasing number of furniture dealers and fur-niture
salesmen in America who want to know the his-tory
of design and the influences which inspired artists
and craftsmen in the production of styles which have
endured." ]'he book is neatly printed and bound, hut
there is room for improvement in the illustrations.
••
Foreign and
Domestic Woods.
Rotary. Sliced, Sawed.
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 31
"I suppose iI's a fact." sai,l Mr. 'VIacWhackt. "that
about the \vorst habit you could contract is that of sitting
down and waiting for something to turn up.
OiI'vc knmvn a lot of men tbat have had this habit, bLlt
I have never known one of them to have anything come
to him yet. Of course there.'s a chance of a
man's being struck by lightning, but if you
take the total population of the world and
divide by the number struck you would find
that the chances of being s.truck are very small,
and the chances of anything corning to a man
who is \vaiting for something to turl1 up are a
great deal smaller still.
"Yo11 see. as I tell Illy son, \Villiam ?vTac-
\\Thackt. Jr., something, that is to say the SOll1C- lI·ili*~IIIil:!iS"""'~il~"':"',=,,:
thing that we are ahvays looking for to turn I·
up, is really not, as you might ~ay! a thing of
a migratory nature. that i::-, not a thing that
seeks people. In fact one of its chief charac-teristics
consists in its inclination to stick
somewhere, g·entrally more or less far ofi. in
\vhich it is like gold in its ra\\' shape, ·which
lies buried in the earth at a great distance,
,~rhere ,ve must go and dig for it and <:hg hard
if we \vant to get it. }\feasles and various
other afflictions come to us, but not so, as a
rule, with something, meaning prosperity,
which we must go out and seek.
"So I tell William that I hope he won't join the great
army of those who sit down and \vait for something to
turn up. He might be struck by lightning, but the
chances are so much against it that it "vou1U.be a terrible
waste of time to figure 'em out and there wouldn't be
anything coming to him then.
"What I hope is that William will get out and look
and dig for \vhat he wants and not sit down and wait,
and he won't find the competition as keen as perhaps he
thinks, for really there are not 5'uch an everlasting lot of
steady, stick to it diggers. There's a chance that if he
doesn't get the biggest prize in the whole world he'lI get
something, ann something worth having, if he'll only get
out and get to work around among men in the places
where the diggins are found.
"That's \vhat I'm hoping \Villiam, Jr., will do-go out
and work like a man for what he wants; the thing of all
others that I hope he \von't do is to sit clown and "vait for
something to turn up." -Ex.
THE WAIrING HABIT,
Which Mr. MacWhackt Hopes MacWhackt, Junior.
Will Never Contract.
the upper vacancies ,vith outsiders. This does not dis-turb
the long- experienced vvorkers who have grown used
to their tasks and \vould not thrive on a change. 'fhe
outsiders can quickly learn from these \vorkers enough
to enable them to fill the place. The effect is qttick and
permanent. The shiny appearance gives way to the dull
finish ,vith the first few rnbs, and soon t011es down to a.
darker shade. 'rhe same effect may be secured by ill
temper and red tape. but there are always some spots in
the organization ,,,hich continue to shine, even if feebly,
@ :>i' @
The Dull Finish.
Employers ,vho may prefer to have their organiza-tion
done in the popular dull finish, and avoid the vulgar
shiny effect that is occasioned by life, can bring about the
change with little difficulty. The work is so simple that
no experience is required. Any short-sig-hted employer
can do it with ease. Some have found it effective to fill
.--- Sketch by C. R. Hills, Grand Rapids.
in spite of these measures, whereas the other method
removes all these shiny spots and distributes the dull finish
quite evenly, and prevents it from \vearing off. Samples
of this sort of work may be seen in a great many places.
-Ex.
@ * @
Discovered by Raleigh.
Sir \Valte:r Raleigh carried mahogany timber fwm
the West Indies to England for the first time. Its adapt-ability'
in the manufacture of furniture was soon learnerl,
and It has since helrl its place as the most valuable of all
woods.
, ------------------..,
I MANUFACTURERS OF !
I HARDWOOD ~~~~I i~~
I I
I I II
SPECIALTIES:
~'i~"fE'l'lQUARO. AK VENEERS
MAHOGANY VENEERS
HOFFMAN
BROTHERS COMPANY
~804-W-._Main.S_I., --- FORT WAYNE, INDIANA
32 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
, ~
I
:-,-E- stablished 1838. CINCINNATI, O. -1
We Import Direct, and Manufacture
Circassian Veneers
GENUINE PERSIAN WOOD.
The Albro Veneer Co.
Short History of American Art,
vVe should all be familiar with the history of our
own country. This is just as trl1e of art as of other
matters. The fact that we are short on old masters
and long on chromos should make no difference in OUf
reverent appreciation of our own ideal. Draw near,
therefore, litte children, that you may become cultured
and educated.
The first evidence of art in our dear country is dis-covered
in the rude d weIlings of our forefathers. This
is what might be called the New England Church per-iod.
Dy some it is called the Colonial. This period
has found its culmination in the arrangement of the
New England back parloL One the one side is the
glass case, filled with specimens of flora and fauna, and
on the other side, on the white marble table, imported
at great expense from the mother country, is the fam-ly
autograph album, Underneath is the rag carpet,
and overhead is the blue ceiling, This was high art in
the Colonial period,
The next period is the Paternal or Motto period, a
~ort of C'0mbination of father-of-his-country chromos
and God Hiess OUf Home. No home was considered
to be a true center of art in its highest phase that did
not have a picture of George \Vashington crossing the
Delaware in the front hall, and a worsted motto,
worked with loving care by the lO-year-old feminine
prodigy of the family, bung up in tbe front room, This
period held undisputed sway for nearly half a century
and even now its influence may be seen.
The next was the gashouse period, or the period
when panoramas of the battle of Gettysburg \vere dis-played
in every important center, and no child was
considered properly educated unless he had had the
principal points in the battlefield pointed out by a vet-eran
of the late war, who was drawing a pension and
getting a rake-off on the gate receipts at the same time,
\Ve then began to have so many periods that it is
(hfficult for the earnest student to differentiate among
all of tbem, We shall, however, do the best we can,
When we have begun to get a respectable collec-tion
of heroes together it was inevitable that statnes
should be erected to their blessed memories, This
was accordingly done, with the result that now no park
is complete without the counterfeit presentments of
1110st of the politicians of the past, and a few of those
VI/horn we really love, all done into brass or an alloy
by workmen who didn't belong to a union. These
statues are most of them imperishable. \Ve couldn't
get rid of them if we wanted to. They are here to
stay. Nature may protest, and the wind and rain do
their best, but they are manufactured of too stern stuff.
At the same time that this was happening our arch-itecture
\,,'as beginning to took up. Now it is On such
a high planc that our principal buildings are mostly
capped with sno"v. And safar as oil paintings are
concerned, we have them to burn-only we do not
burn them.
What is now termed the modern period of Ameri-can
art is one in which the department store vies with
the paint factories to produce the greatest amount of
color in the smallest space, Culture clubs throughout
the country arc giving talks about old masters, illus-trated
with moving pictures; a collector is doing his
best to keep the old masters all out of the country by
storing them in England until the tariff is lowered;
magazines are reproducing our principal actresses in a
glorious Renaissance of halftones; frames were never
so cheap, and cozy corners were never so uncomfort-abh
On the whole, art is booming. Vlith a kodak in
one hand. and a blowpipe in the other we can reproduce
almost e"verything that nature gives out, from a red,
white and blue landscape to \Vall street water coloL-New
York Times.
@ * @
When J. B, Howard of the Grand Rapids Chair
Company returned from St. Louis recently, a friend
asked: "How did you find the Annhyserbooshvill-ians,
Jim?" "Kicking," the salesman replied. An
instant's reflection supplies the explanation, \'I/hy
should not kicking prevail in St Louis? That city is
he most important mule market in world.
@ * @
Intelligent composition is permissable in the fur-niture
trade, but when a cabinet maker places Louis
XV. chair backs on Roman stools it is time to ring the
fire alarm bells and call out the police reserves.
- - - -- --------------~---------- ...
MICHIGAN ARTISAN 3:\
Hotel Furniture Buyers Arrive in Grand Rapids.
On April l-:l:, C. ]. Owens, manager of the :;c\\! .A.d-dison
hotel in 1'1inneapolis, arrived in Grand Eapids for
the purpose of purchasing furniture. He was accom-panied
by "Valter D. Boutell, Otto ]. ivlarewetz and \V.
F. ]-~ehrens. The hotel is to be one of the finest and best
appointed houses of its class in the llortlnvest and \vill
contain 335 rooms. The furnishing-s arc to be artistic
throughout and ,vill represent an invesbncnt of more than
$200,000, It is estimated that the furniture alone will
cost $100,000 and 1t is certain IT\i..lch of this will be of
Grand Rapids production. In general it will 1:",011s15t of
mabogany and Circassian \valnut. \VaLlack Brothers, who
own and operate hotels in 1\"- e\v York and Cleveland, ar-rived
on the same day and placed orders.
@ -,' @
Addition to the John Widdicomb Factory,
\\Tork has been beg-ull on the addition to the Fifth
Street factory of the John Vviddicornb company, Gcnd
Rapids. The timber used will be \\" ashington fir, 100,000
feet of\vhieh is called for. The addition will he to the
south of the present building, l03x140 feet, four stories,
to cost $20,000. I.t will be completed in three months.
@> * @>
Adding Furniture.
Quish & Pratt, dealers in hard\,·,rare, Dexter. }{rch.,
will add furniture and would be pleased to receive cata-logues.
@ * @
::.\fany applications for space in the furniture exposi-tions
of Grand Rapids! assure the usual large number of
exhibits at the midsummer exposition.
@ :[;@
B. J. Rosenthal has had plans drav'-'tl for a furniture
exhibition building \'\-'hich he proposes to erect in Chicago.
@ * @
The manufacture of tables will soon be commenced
at High Point, N, C. by E. L. and E. V, Crouch.
@ * @
The woodworking company will replace their plant
recently burned at Germantown, Pa.
@ *' @
July 12 is the date chosen for the opening of the New
York Furniture exposition.
@ * @
The factory of the Row"lett Desk company, Richmond.
Ind., is offered for sale.
@ * @
Brown & 1tcCellcy purpose to crect a chair factory
at Winchendon, l\:Iass.
@ * @
A planing mill win be erected by \V right & Kllntz at
Piqua, O.
•IIIII!
Whatever your needs may be m
III
III
IIII
I,
II
IIf
II
IIf
••
I,
II
,f
j
I
Benches, Trucks,
Hand Screws or
Furniture Clamps
Remember that we are headquarters for
these articles. Our catalogue describing
the eutire line is yours for the asking.
-----WRITE TODAY-----
Name .. l\
" .:"'',:.''.'.....,....... I
\It
--------~--..-~.-./ -----_...
Address
I
II
II~----
Grand Rapids Hand Screw Co.
~15Jefferson Av~.• GRAND RApIDS, MICH,
•
34 MICHIGAN ARTISAN
Factory Economies
Almost every advance in business development in-volves
the discovery of new economies. New machinery
usually has one unanswerable point in its favor in that it
effects economies before unthought of. A new idea of
business procedure usually means a greater revenue or a
greater saving, In any event it is the making use of
opportunities hitherto unappreciated.
Atterition is turning. and will doubtless continue more
alid morc to turn, to the great possible economies in de-veloping
the productivity
of employees. '['he ill-crease
of ability, in re-sponse
to instruction and
encouragement, is very
great. The value of an
employee increaSes more
rapidly than the need of
increasing his salary,
even if adequate encour-agement
be given him
for his improvement.
~\1any an employer is
paying $100 for service
that another employer
gets doue for $50. This
is not because the first
employer pays better
wages than the other, for
ofteri he not only docs
not do that, but he keeps
his employees in a rut
v-:here, after ten years, they are worth scarcely morc to
him or another. The second employer gets the work
done for $50 because he took an employee who~ for lack
of training, was un.able to command a higher \vage., and
by a systematic effort to bring out the best there \\'as in
him, soon had a more efficient employee for his business
than the other man who paid enough to command the
services of an employee who had been trained elsewhere,
or, as is more often the case, who paid for two or three
untrained employees to accomplish the work of one train-ed
employee.
\iVhen the possibilities for economy in training em-
Sketch by K. J. Haegland,
Little Falls, Minn.
The Weatherly Co.
Gt-and Rapid •• Mich.
THE
WEATHERLY
INDIVIDUAL
Glue Heater
Send Yl)ur address aDd
and n:oeive desct-iptive
circular oE Glue Heaters.
Gluli!iCooli:en and Hot
Boxes whit prices.
ployees becomes more generally recognized, we may look
for radical changes in the present methods of many in-stitlltions,
where business system is composed largely of
nIles as to what employees are not permitted to do, and
involves very little to inspire them to develop greater
and greater ability in their work.
Success will attend such efforts for development in
the proportion that employers, and especially their lieu-tenants,
learn the economic difference between driving
employees by constant fear of censure and leading them
by awakening the potent influences of their better nature.
The man whose faith in human nature is so blunted
that he can not see the possibilities for individnal devel-opment,
and who defends coercive measures as the only
fruitful ones, is least of all capable of being an econom-ical
manager. He may for a time deceive himself and his
employers, and continue to kill the goose of spontaneity
that lays the golden eggs of results, but as surely as the
• * d
ONE COAT FUMED OAK STAIN No. 46
0«, latest prod«ctian,
Matches the new standard shade.
Red«ces the labor-cost of finishing.
The only one coat f«med stain. on the market that
is giving satisfaction.
Man«fact«red by
GRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHING CO.
55-59 ElhwOl'th Ave., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
world is growing mQre enlightened, the time approaches
when such managers and such methods will be seet! to be
the most wasteful extravagances in business, which prog-ress
and the economic law will inevitably eliminate.-~-Ex.
@ * @
The Sterling-Welch company are preparing to take
POssession of their new building in Cleveland. One 1100r
86x500 feet in size, will be used in the sale of furniture.
@ * @)
B. Rich, (he ought to be) of Nashville, Tenn., will
erect a factory for the use of tbe Rothschild Lussky Man-ufacturing
company.
@ * @
A large plant, to be operated in the manufacture of
.interior finish, sash and doors, will be erected at Tacoma,
Washiugton, by the West End Manufacturing company.
@ * @
The manufacture of furniture will be commenced at
Talladega, Ala., by John L. Love, so soon as he can
complete and equip a factory, under construction.
@ * @
Brockton, Mass., will establish a school for tralIlIng
boys for foremanships and superindendencies of factories.
r- --- - ------------------., ; l_THE _BIC?W~ITE ~HOPj
! We Furnish Every Article of Printing II
I Needed by Business Men
II
I,i
I
!Ii
r-THE--BIG WHITE -s-Hopl , - -_. . .
, II
III
II
MICHIGAN ARTISAN
WHITE PRINTING COMPANY
108, 110, and 112 North Division Street,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
35
I
I
II
,
1I
MICHIGAN
IMISCELLANEOUS ADVERTISEMENTS I
WANTED
WANTED-WOOD SEAT CHAIR FACTORY
To locate on our property at Columbus, Mississippi; unlimit-ed
supply of fed and white oak; red and sap gum and beech at
extremely low cost; plenty cheap labor; fine factory sitej un-eXcelled
shipping facilities and low freight rates to good mar-ket.
Might take some stock in well managed· company. Ad-dress
Interstate Lumber Company. Downing Building, Erie,
Pa.
WANTED-FIRST CLASS COMMISSION MEN
To handle the Peerless Automatic Morris chair in every state
in the Union. We have the best selling proposition in the
country, and want none but hustlers. Address, stating ter-ritory.
experience, and lines nOw carried, Peerless Chair Co.,
Sturgis, Mich. 4-10-2'
WANTED-AN UP-TO-DATE WORKING FOREMAN
AND DESIGNER
For factory making case goods. Reference required. Address
B.~ox--50-0-, -ca-re--o-f -M_ic.h_iga-n Artisan. 4-lo----Zt ---. ~- -_..~---
WANTED-TRAVELING SALESMAN ON COMMIS-SION.
To handle a line of cabinet and furniture hardware as a si.de
line in Ohio. West Virginia, western New Yark, western
Pennsylvania and Indiana. H. W. Leutkemeyer & Sons,
Cleveland, O. 4-1D--Zt
WANTED-SALESMEN
For an uP~to.date sectional bookcase line; makes the dealer
a profit of 50 per cent. Humphrey-Widman Bookcase Com-pany,
Detroit, Mich. 4-1Q--2t
WANTED-TRAVELING SALESMAN ON COMMIS-SION
to handle a line of Bird's-eye Maple kitchen cabinets in In-diana,
Ohio, IllInois, West Virginia, Iowa and Missouri. Give
reference and experience. Baines, Mosier & Co., Allegan,
Mich. 3-10-2'.
ARTISAN
WANTED-TRAVELING SALESMAN
On commission for a line of kitchen cabinetsl cupboaros- and
wardrobes for Michigan. Indiana. Ohio and II inois. Answer
at once. Edon Furniture ManufacturingCompa.ny, Edon,
Ohio. 4-10---1,
WANTED-DRAUGHTSMAN.
Must be experienced in store. bank and general cabinet
work. Good place. good salary· to competent man. Loca-tion
in large city in Missouri: State full particulars. Ad-dress
"A. R. J.," care of Michigan Artisan. 4~10-lt
WANTED-LINES
To design by one experienced in mission work, not fully oc-cupied.
Address" A. B.••• care of this office. 4-10
WANTED-SALESMEN
To handle first-class new line parlor furniture, medium and
high grade. This is a first~c'lass opportunity for enterprising
men. Address Box F., care of Michigan Artisan. 2-10-3t.
FOR SALE
FOR SALE.
The furniture factory occupied by Blum & Company, Ham-ilton,
Ohio. is for sale. Correspondence solicited by E. F.
Blum, Mgr. 1-10-4' .
Sketch by C. R. Hills, Grand Rapids, Mich.
INDEX TO ADVERTISEMENTS.
Acme White Lead and .Color Works .. , . . . . . . , .30
Adams & Elting........................... . 21
Albro Veneer Company, The.. . . .. 3'2
American Blower Company Cover
Barlow Brothers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 11
Barnes, W. F. & John,. Company...... . "'" .25
Barrett. M. L., & Company. . . . . . . . . 24
Boynton & Company............... . 22
Buss Machine Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cover
Cordesman-Rechtin Company . .Cover
Clark, Walter, Veneer Company 22
'Daily Artisan-Record . 23
"Dodds. Alexander..... . .. 23
Edge, Frank, & Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 10
Fellwock Auto & Manufacturing Company. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 7
Fox Machine Company, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
Francis, Charles E., & Brother..... . . . . . 1
Furniture Commercial Agency .. , . . . . . . . . . .. . .. , 9
Gillette. RoUer Bearing Company , Cover
Grand Rapids Blow Pipe & Dust Arrester Company 15
Grand Rapids Brass Company .. , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Cover
Grand Rapids Electrotype Company 12
Grand Rapids Hand Screw Company. . . . . . ,33
Grand Rapids Wood Finishing Company....... .,.; .. " ~34
Hahn, Louis., ,.............. . 11
Hills. Clarence R ,........ . .. , .. 11
Hoffman Brothers Company 31
Holcomb, A. L., & Company................... .11
Hood & Wright , 14
"Hoosier" , , , 24
Hotel Tuller ,., " ; , , 1
Holden, Henry S.• Veneer Company , 30
Hotel Pantlind , , ','" .. , , 10
Kimball Brothers . . . . . . . . . .. . 11
Lawrence-McFadden Company. The... . 26
Leonard Furniture Exhibition Building,.... . . . . ,27
Lyon Furniture Agency , , " .26
L. M. M 21
List of 'Furniture Buyers , , , , , ,11
Manufacturers' Exhibition·· Building Company..... . . . . . . .. 2
Marietta Paint & Color Company , . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1
Mattison Machine Works , , ,., " .20
McMullen Machinery Company , , , 20
Michigan Artisan Company , Cover-25
Michigan Engravin g Company.. . . . . . . . . 28
Miscellaneous '" . '" , . .. .. .. . 36
Montgomery Hardwood Lumber Company , 13
Morton HouEe , 10
Oliver Machinery Company , , 29
Pa1mer~A. E., & 80ns , 17
Pitt£burg Plate Glass Company .. " , . , -6
Rowlett Desk Manufacturing Company " .19
Sheldon, E. H., & Company............ . • .. . .. . . . . .. . 9
Shimer & Sons " '" " , , .10
Stephenson Manufacturing Company , . . . .. '1
Sirocco Engineering Company .', , Cover
Walter B., & Company ,. .., , 11
Ward. O. A 22
Weatherly Company, The,_.... .,. '" .34
West Michigan Machine & Tool Company , , .11
Wellington HoteJ '" , '" ~.,. 7
White Printing Company 1....35
Wood. Morri~ & Sons .. ,..... . , 17~23
Wysong & Miles Company'. . . . . . . . . , , cover
\I THIS IS THE Mf\6H1NE that brlnos In 16tt6rS Iik6 th6 followino:
I
I!I
I
I,
BUSS NEW No.4 CABINET PLANER.
•
•
You". v.!,;;' c.uly,
The Buss :i\fachine vVorks are having marked success \\lit11this ne\\' design of cabinet planer. The new
method of belting-feed gears machine cut-together \vith the steel spring sectional front feeu roll and the
late new sectional chipbreakcr, rnake a cabinet planer second to none on the market today, The Buss 11achine
Works are old ll1anl1factnrers of cabinet planers and other woodworking tools, and keep abreast with the
times \vith machines of great efficiency. YV"ondworkers of all kinds will not make a mistake by writing direct
or to their nearest selling representative regarding any point on up-ta-date cabinet planers. These are the
days when the live woodworker ,vants to cut the expense of sanding.
HOLLAND,MICH. BUSS MACHINE WORKS GRAND RAPIDS,MICH •
•
• •
MAKE THE FACT KNOWN
Want and For Sale Columns
Do
It
Now
If you are in the market for
anything or want to dispose
of something
THROUGH THE
.,. OF ...
The Michigan Artisan
(FACTORY
GRAND RAPIDS.
ECITION)
MICHIGAN I
"'-------------~
i..-
I
P~L1~~iior-F-·l-a-t--S--u-Srf-aac-en·-d-e-r·1
Why install any Sand Belt Machine for Flat Surfaces except the Wysong & Miles?
You will pay twice as much for other makes and will get an inferior machine
If you do not believe this, communicate with us and be convinced.
No. 171 SAND BELT MACHINE.
ASK FOR CATALOG E.
WYSONG 8 MILES CO., Cedar St. and Sou. R. R., GREENS80RO, N. C.
t 1
I
Saw Mandrels
and
Duages
We are not only prepared to take care of your
wants in the larg-e woodworking machine line, but
also give special attention to the supply line. Our
rip and Cro5S-CUt gauges and saw mandrels are
different than the ordinary run of supplies in this
line. Want a circular describinj( them '!
Keep \18 advised a. to your requirements
in the Woodworking Machinery line.
THE CORDESMAN-RECHTIN CO.
CINCINNATI, OHIO
•
,
I
I
I•
- Date Created:
- 1909-04-10T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 29:19
- 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/117