- Home
- Weekly Artisan; 1909-10-02
Weekly Artisan; 1909-10-02
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GHAND RAPIDS, MICH., OCTOBER 2,1909
,. --------_. -_.-~--_. -----_.--------
~~THE BETTER MAKE ,,
WE HAVE OVER 400 PIECES IN OUR LINE
BEDROOM and DINING ROOM
FURNITURE
SUITES TO MATCH
..... .. ., ..... •• • •• .,... It . .. .. ...
.:::.::::..:: ..
FACTORY AND !oALE<iHOOM 37 CANAL STREET
CATALOGUE!o ON HEAVY PLATE I'APER TO DEALER!'>
NELSON-MATTER FURNITURE COMPANY, GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.
~---------------------------------------_._._.-------- ._------
~II
I
I
III
I
j
f,I
I,I
I •
ARTHUR S WHITE, PresIdent
ALVAH BROWN, VIce PresIdent
HARRY C WHITE, Sec'y Treas
- <
........ III ,. I" .. ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN
- Veneer Presses, dIfferent 1s and sizes (Patented)
Veneer Presses
Glue Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc., Etc.
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Feed Glue SpreadlOg Machine. Smgle.
Double and ComblOabon. (Patented)
(S,zes 12 10. to 84 10 wide.)
26 1
C' f ) ~ t/) C ( t~ ( .. .._ - _-~,II
~
Hand Feed Glueing Machine (Patent
pendmll.) Many styles and sizes.
Wood· Working
Machinery
and Supplies
LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
No 20 Glue Heater. CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. .... __ a .. No 6 Glue Heater. ~-------_a_. __ .-. _----_.-._.__._..__.. . _.._.------------------_.
I
I'-------
.. ~ - .. -----_ _ _----------------------------~
MARIETTA I
FUMED OAK ACID STAIN
•••••••••• _- •••••••••• - ••••• _- ----- .. a ••••• _ ...
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNT
~------------------- -- -------4f
I I I 10nls lbabn "
I DESIGNS AND DETAILS I
OF FURNITURE
To the finisher who has been using the fuming chamber to produce his
fumed oak our Fumed Oak Acid Stain is a revelation. This stain is in no
wayan experiment but practical working stain, producing a more uniform color,
and giving to different grades of oak the same shade. It is a strong, penetrat ..
ing stain, going into the wood and yet it can be used without injury to the
hands. This is not a substitute for fuming. The stain actually fumes and is
permanent, but it fumes in obtained on red as well as
a different manner ~~-saving white oak. The most con~
the cost of a fuming cham~ vincing evidence of the per ~
ber and the time required feet working qualities of this
in fuming by the old pro~ stain will be manifest in a
cess. Unlike the Fuming single trial. Write us for a
process good results can be sample.
THE MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO" Marietta, O. THE MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO., Marietta, O.
r"·i3." WALTER·&·CO~· . ~~~~~~~~-~
Manufacturen ot TABLE SLIDES Exclusively ,
II
" __ a- _ ••• , •• a_a •••••••• _ •• ~ r :e~~·~j~h:::;~~.:=·L-t::~~·_:I~jl ~~ II'
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH. ,
I,' for U1G" GRADE PUNCHES and DIES I ,'
I ..- ----- ••••• _. -----. - - -_. .• . _... ... ..__ .__a_. _._. .....
154 LlVmg!>ton St.
GRAND RAPIDS, I\fICHIGAlIo
CItizens' felephone 1702.
F -
2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
~, ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
I
I
II
II••
II•
I
IIIII
III
I
•I
I
I
I
III
I
III
II
II,
III
.- . ---.,
SLIGH'S SELECT STYLES SELL AND SATISFY
III
II
!
III
I
j
I,I II II
II
II
IIII
IIIII
I
I
I _ ----- -_. __ .__ -------------------- -~._..---------'
Many New
Features Added
for the Fall Season
Everything for
the Bedroom
[ MedIUm and FlOe QualIty J
Office and Salesroom
corner Prescoll and
Buchanan Streets,
Grand RapId., Mlch
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE
SLIGH
FURNITURE
CO.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
.---------- _------- -- .
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~ $2~
E.ach
Net
E.ach
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
'J SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
The season
for banquets
will soon be
here. Get a
stock of our
Banquet
Table Tops
so as to be
ready to
supply the
demand sure
to come.
A.. _
•
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Our Large New Line of
DINING and OFFICE
TABLES
are the best on the American market
when prices and quality are considered.
STOW &. DRVIS FUKNITUK~ GO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
... ---- .. City Salesroom. 4th floor. Blodgett Bldg. ----------'I --_._._-------
r-·----·------·--------·-------------·-· --_-.-------.---- _ .._... . ~ I I I j
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I : I ! I II
IIII
I
,..--. -_.-._-
iI No. 57
Flat Arm
Racker
... - ..-
._------ ----------_._--- ~-----------------------------1
RICHMOND
CHAIR CO.
RICHMOND INDIANA
r-------------·-----·----- -.-.------.------ --------- -----------------------
II PITTSBURGH LARGEST
IIIII!I
Richmond Tablet
Arm Chair
DOUBLE CANE LINE
"SLIP SEATS" - the
latest and best method of
double seating.
Catalogues to the Trade.
No. 100
-------------- _....---._._..-------------------- - - ..-_._- _. -. ~I
PLATE GLASS COMPANY .JOBBERS AND MANUFAOTURERS OF
GLASS IN THE WORLD
Mirrors, Bent Glass, leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass
WIRE GLASS
Plate Glass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beautiful than white marble.
CENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN ACED VARNISHES.
fJl 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 given below'
NEW YOltX-Hudson and Vandam Sts. CLEVELAND-1430-1434 West Th1l'd St.
BOSTON-41-49 SUdbury st., 1-9 Bowker St. OMAHA-1101-1107 Howard St.
CHICAG0-442-452 Wabash Ave. ST. PAUL--459-461 Jackson st.
CINCINNATI-Broadway and Court Sts. ATLANTA, GA.-30-32-34 S. PryOI' st.
ST. LOUIS-Cor. Tenth and Spruce Sts. SAVANNAH, GA.-745-749 Wheaton St.
MINNEAPOLI5-500-516 S. Third St. XANSAS CITY-Pifth and Wyandotte sts.
DETltOIT-53-59 Larned St., E. BIltMINGHAM, ALA.-2nd Ave. and 29th St.
GltAND ltAPIDS, MICH-39-41 N. Division St. Bl1PPALO, N. Y.-372-74-76-78 Pearl St.
PITTSBUBGH-10l-103 Wood St. BltOOXLYN-635-637 Pulton St.
MILWAUXEE, WIS.--492-494 Market st. PHILADELPHIA-Pitcairn Bldg., Arch and 11th St..
ltOCHESTElt,N.Y.-Wilder Bldg., Main & Exchange Sts. DAVENPOBT--410-416 Scott St.
BALTIMOltE-310-12-14 W. Pratt St. OXLAHOMA CITY, OXLA., 210-212 W. FIrst St.
as _._. _ ••• sa_ ••••• ._-----------_._-----------_._----- - ---.. _. _ .. . -.---'
••• - - - -1
p
4
•
WEEKLY ARTISAN
~ •• __ ••• __ a ••••••••• __ ••• _ ••••••• __ ._ •• • •••••• a •••••• -.-_ •• _._._ •• ---.-1 10 THE LUCE LINE
I,
!
III,I!
III
, .1
SHOW
ROOMS
AT
FACTORY,
GRAND
RAPIDS,
MICH.
oLUCE FURNITURE COMPANY
Many
New Patterns
III
Dining Room
and
Bedroom
Furniture
for the
Fall Season.
~-------- ...._-------------- .._-------------------------------------------------- .... - ...
~ .._._---_ .... --- ....•......•..•. _-- ....
I
• • •• 10'. •••••• • .-..,
II
LUCE~REDMOND CHAIR CO., Ltd.
BIG RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
MANUFACTURERS OF
HIGH GRADE
OFFICE CHAIRS,
DINING
CHAIRS
Reception Chairs and Rockers,
Slippers Rockers,
Colonial Parlor Suites,
Desk and Dressing Chairs
In Dark and Tuna Mahogany, Buch, Blfd' ••eye Maple,
Qyartered Oak and Clrcasslan Walnut
You will find our Exhibit on the Fourth Floor, East Section, Manufacturers' BUlldmg,North Ionia St., Grand Rapids.
~ •••• ••• _a_ •••• _._. wa __ • -~
,
I
2RAN['\ RA.?IDS
YJ) (~~T
L \ ,
30th Year-No. 14 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• OCTOBER 2.1909 Issued Weekly
BRIEF HISTORY OF SLIGH FURNITURE COMPANY
Built Up FroIll a SIllall Beginning Until It Has BecoIlle One of the Largest and Most
Prosperous Furniture Making Institutions in the Country.
The first bmldmg that attracts the eye of a w1de-awake
stranger commg mto Grand RapIJ" over the Grand RapIds &
Ind1ana, the MIchIgan Central or the Pere Marquette raIlroad
from the south, east or west, 1Sthe Shgh furmtUl e factory, wh1ch
parallels the tracks and Buc:hanan street, for a d1stance of 462
feet, The bmldmg 1S four-stones hIgh and extendmg across
the front 1S a sIgn readmg "Everythmg for the Bed Room" in
letters so large th~t they dre eas1ly d10tmgUlshed day or mght
The only Sunday newspaper publtshed m Grand Rap1ds, m 1tS
edItIon of September 26, had a well wntten sketch of the orgamz-at10n
and of the growth of the Shgh Furn1ture Co~pany, wInch
1Shere reproduced wIth some provokmg errOl s, made by pnnte' ')
or proofreaders, corrected
The factory w1th the long frontage on Buchanan streef and
the raIlroad, If exammed closely, w111be seen to be in sev'n ,e"
t1Om. Where the walls of the chfferent sect10ns come tr gether
IS eaSIly traced. ThIS conotruct1On was not the result of design
nor of aCCIdent. It anres from the c1rcumstances, under which
the factory was bmIt Each sect10n marks an epoch ,.1 the com-pany's
career. an expanSIon m ItS capaC:lty A.nd wl'en tile entIre
Buchanan street frontage had been filled the com')811y n.pancled
westward Two adchtlOns ""lth a total frontage of 1 ,1 teee have
been bUllt on the west and last week ground was hro(..ell for the
thIrd addItIon, ""lth a frontage on Prescott street 01 lie! fr'el
The new bmldmg IS to be 96 2x132 6 feet, four stones hIgh
and \'11th a hIgh basement It 1Sto be of bnck, m111constructIon,
spnnkler eqUlP1.wd and steam heated It WIll be used for ware-
110use purposes and It IS expel ted to be cO'''l])l,>tc<1before the
J11,ldmg season doses A sIdmg fr0111 the P~r-e ::\IarL'uette WIll
be b111Jt1ll from the south to the \vJ r~ llt)lJ~e doo-, ')1 ItIJg., ft 0111
t'L (, R & I aheady bOlder the J.IOp, It\ on the ca<;;talld no,th
/ . 11 L basement of 'l,p new om (11'lg ""111be n' exira depth to
f,1\ C , h gh cell'llg and thIS WI] hi 11\, c1 up fO! thf' u~e cf the
(,Illll,,\(c lhere wlll1:Je lavato"lO \\1"(f'''' '50 nL] ca,1 \\a,h Ul/'
elt ,1 l' ," and t01 et roo,nS In '1{J1]' "111be a ;c!11l h 100111 \\hef'e
those who br111g theIr d111nelS may eat and tea and coffee WIll be
~ervcd There WIll be a reachng room and a smok111g room where
the r80n hour may be spent 111 comfort Charles R Sligh
has long contemplated makl11g these provls1Ons for the employes,
but never before had room
In recent months the company has l'een acqumng the pro-perty
adjacent to the factory and now c V"1S the entJre block
descnbed by Buchanan and Prescott street!', GrandVIlle aven'le
and the G R & 1. sldmg except two small lots, for whIch nego-tJatlOns
are now under way The old dwelhng houses on the
property are bel11g removed. The land WIll be used for lumber
yard and storage purposes.
As mdicated by the many sections which compose the fac-tory's
Buchanan street front, the Shgh Furmture Company is a
development. It had a begl11mng that was small, even in the
days when most of the factories were small The story of ItS
growth IS a romance in mdustry
Challes R Shgh at 15 year~ old worked for three months as a
clerk m the offices of County Clerk P. R L PIerce, Just long
enough to find out that he dlel not hke 1t He had an ambItIon
to learn a trade and for four years worked as a tl11smith in the
employ of WIlder D Foster. He graduated to the store and
clerked for five years The prospects for advancement were not
allunng In 1874 be became a travelmg salesman for Berkey &
Gay. He was one of the first to penetrate the wl1ds of Texas
then the frontIer He made h1S tnps by stage coach before the
railroads were bUIlt, and the first Texas orders for Grand RapIds
furmture rewarded his enterpnse
After SlX year ... on the road Mr Shgh determmed to go into
busl11ess for hanseH. The Shgh Furl11ture Company, capital~7ed
at $100,000 was orgal11zed, fihng 1tS papers February 27, '80
The mcorporators were L E Hawkms, A B \Vatson, George
Kendall, EdWl11 F Uhl, J FrederIck Baars, George D. Conger,
\Vllham WIlson, George 0 PeIrce, 'vV P. Sharp and J\Irs Shgh.
The company orgal11ZatlOn was PreSIdent, L E Hawkms; vice
preSIdent, Charles R Shgh, treasUl er, George C Peirce, secre-tary,
George D Conger, d1rectors, the officers and A. B Watson
and Edwm F UhI. The cash actually paId in at the begmning
was $18,500 ThIS was enough to buy a SIte, elect a three-story
50xl00 frame factory bUlldmg and eqUlp It The SIte was pur-chased
of the G R & I, and was 165x275 feet, frontl11g on
Buchanan street It cost $600 At that tune, 30 years ago,
there were no factones m what b now a busy mdustrIal quarter.
and real estate was cheap Four years later when the Shgh Com-pany
wanted more room the lot of the same Slze adJoming the
ongl11al slte on the south wa~ purchd~ed at a cost of $3,000 The
ongmal factory SIte IS shown by the dotted ll11es 111the lower
rIght hand corner of the map of the property now owned by the
company, occupymg the entIre block to GrandVIlle avenue. The
shaded hnes far down m the corner represents the ong111al fac-tory
The sohel hnes descnbe the present plant
The SIte. factory and eqUIpment absorbed all the $] 8,500
ongmally palel m, and when the factory was ready to start the
6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
total of $'29,-
He had gone
stockholders contributed $10,500 more, makmg a
000. Mr. Shgh did not subscllbe the second time
hiS limit m the first mstance
The factory began operatlOns May 8, 1880, with a force of
about 30 men with W P Sharp, a former foreman m the Berkey
& Gay factory and a stockholder III the new enterpnse, as super-mtendent
A cheap line of walnut bureaus wa" produced The
first shipment was to Keenan & J ahn, now Keenan, J ahn & Co ,
of DetrOlt, and the firm IS still one of the most valued customers
of the Sligh company.
The new company prospered from the begmmng The first
year showed a profit of $4,500 The second year the capaClt}
of the factory was mcreased by an addition 36x60 Another addl-o
Lumbe,. ~l1ed
'---------' \:l,..~..
,)
t--
I
II
I,
r\ --·---- .r. \ 1
\ 1 \ , \ , \ I
\ ,
\ 1
\ ' • I
\ I
\ I
\ , \ . \ I
\ I
\ \
\ I
\ I
\ I \1
Dry KIln
5hed T"'mmlftg
P,,-ck.!nq
and.
Wareroom
Wareroom
,---._-- ... _-----
Bl./CHANAN STREET
Map of the 811ghFurniture Company's property bounded by Buchanan
street on the east, Prescott street on the south. Grandvllle avenue on
the west and the railroad on the north. The dotted llnes in lower rlght
corner show orlgmal slte With the onginal factory. The shaded ware-house
represents new bUlldlng Just started.
hon was b11llt, three stones, frame, m 1882, and further enlarge-ments
were made every second year thereafter up to 1892, and
then there was a ten year penod of time markl11g The pa11lc of
'93 hit the furmture llldustry hard The SlIgh suffered \\ Ith the
rest With the return of good times expansIOn wa~ agal11 111
order and '02, '03 and '04 brought forth additIOns to the plant
In 'OJ the paChl11g room and ware house was blllit Kow comes
the 96 2x132 6 addition Before the cataclsym of '93 the old
frame bm1dl11gs had been rebmlt 111 bnck, and they were made
umform1y four stories high
The only capital actually paid III by the stockholders was the
origlllal subscnptlOn of $18,500 and the addition of $10,500 for
work111g capital, a total of $29,000 The additIOns and real e"tate
held and blllldmgs were paid for out of the profib \Vhen the
company was four years old it paid Its first cash dIVidend The
company IS no\\ capltahzed at $100,000 and this mcrease repre-sents
earmngs dlstnbuted III stock diVidends m additIOn to the
cash disbursements
From cheap walnut bureaus the company enlarged Its 1me
until It manufactured "Everythmg for the Bed Room" With
the years It Improved the qualIty of Ib products and now manu-factures
high grade medIUm pnced goods m mahogany, Clrcas-sian
walnut, bird's-eye maple and oak nIr Shgh IS credited
With bemg the "discoverer" of clrcasslan walnut for furmture
He saw a plano case m ClrcaSSlan and brought out a bed room
sUite III that wood It caught the fancy of the trade and today
ClrcaSSlan IS second only to mahogany 111populanty, and It IS
higher III pnce
':\[r Shgh has been connected With the company from the
begllln111g and still directs ItS destimes John D Case has been
"ecretary S111ce1888 James A. Droste began as office boy 111
1899. was advanced to bookkeeper and IS now treasurer Norman
McClave has been vice preSident S111ce1906 George F Keck
has represented the company m the middle west for more than
22 years The other salesmen are \Valdo M Ball, Arthur F.
SWItz, Damel G Blum, George T W nght and Harry M Story
DaVId S ~ckley, supenntendent of the factory began With
the company as a bench hand 16 years ago, won promotions
through several foreman0hlps to the supenntendency SIX years
ago Twenty of the men III the factory have been WIth the com-pany
for 25 years T,vo men are on the pay roll today who were
members of the onglllal force, and se\ eral of the men began as
apprentices 111the factory and have never worked elsewhere
The company IS now employ111g about 400 hands and WIth
the completIOn of the new bU1ldmg the number \\ 111be increased
The company's bus111ess last spnng and thiS fall has been the
best 111Its hIstory and It IS thIS condition With the excellent pros-pects
for the .future that makes this last expan010n necessary
•••••••••••••• 4 _ ~- . ..._ ..-.. . ...., II
I
IIII
I
Give your men tools that are ac-curate
to the one-thousandth part of
an inch. Tools that are straight and
true and hold their cutting edge.
No matter how expensive and per-fect
your machinery may be, if the
cutting tools are not of the best, you
can not turn out good work.
We pride ourselves on the fact that we
have manufactured only the very best for
thirty-five years. Write for our complete
catalog. It shows many new ideas in fme
labor saving tools.
MORRIS WOOD & SONS 1508-1510 W. L.AKE ST., CHICACO,IL.L.. ... .... ....•
WEEKLY
.. __ ~ • • .4. ..
III
"When m doubt where
to buy the best BIrds-eye
Maple goods,
Hitch Your
Wagon
to a
Michigan
Star"
IlII,,,
III
IIII
IIII
_.44 . ~
and get results. Would
a pnce of
$12.00
for this
No. 601
Dresser
IOterest you) Do not
buy unlll you know
the pnce. Ask us for
how much less than
$12 we sell It, and 10-
cldentally ask for a
catalog.
Michigan Star Furniture Co.
ZEELAND, MICH.
• . • '4_~ 4~
I
III
IIIIIII
II
III
I
..------ f
IIIt
I
III
III
I,,
III
III
II
,,,
I,,
I
II
II
II
,IIIIIII
,I
I!I
.. ....--
ARTISAN 7
New Trading Stamps •
The tradmg stamp fad IS generally supposed to have had 1ts
day and to have retIred wIth other "has been;:;" but If the adver-t1sement,
herewIth reproduced from a ChIcago paper, IS truthful
somethmg "equally as good" must be In general use 111that c1ty
It wIll be noticed that the stamps mentIOned m thIS "ad" al e not
called "tradmg stamps" They al e "F1sh's" stamps, but the
:>cheme 111wh1ch they are used 1S practICally the same as that
whIch was qUIte popular a few year, ago and they must be qUlte
popular 1ll ChIcago If they are used by 5,000 merchants m that
C1ty If the promoter u of the i'>cheme would stop now the 5,000
merchants m1ght find 1t to the1r advantage to cont111ue the use
g ~S
l@,h~i}1.et'
FREE for 1Fish Stamp BOOK
If you want to make e"ery dollar count, ThlS CabInet 15 made from thoroughly
trade where you can reCClve Fish sStamps. seasoned hardwood, win not spltt or
)ou must eat,and sleep and live ThIS. Hack It has an unvarmshed, smooth,
of necessIty, costs money In the spend~ close~gralned, whIte top The le~s and
inl1 of money, the art of where to ~pend It sides are finIshed with the very best high
lS the knowled~e great men show in qualIty varnIsh ThIS Cabmet wIll make
building fortunes your kltchen more attractive, and the
What IS true of the great fortune bulld~ work easier It contains flour bin, ca~
ers 1$ hkewlse tfue of those 2,000,000 pacIty about 50 pounds, larg,e center
human bemgs who hve in Chicago In drawu and bread and meat board It
thIS Ilreat elt) there are over 5,000 stores IS handsomely trImmed With brasshandles
whIch handle' FIsh's Stamps These and good casters A hlgh~grade kitchen
merchants sen as low If not lower than adomment and a household necessity
other merchants They deal in every ThlSISJust oneaf hundreds of things
thmg you need They dre located FIsh's Stamps bt'tng, free to you Furnl-on
the North, South and ,",est ture and housefittings of all kinds
SIdes and for many mdes around for the home In every department
Chica~o open to your selection
Save these stamps They are worth dollars to you. One
httle book full of the stamps w,lI make you the oWner
of the Kitchen Cabinet shown above .
Each.
Full,
Book of liisl\s stamps
is wort!:'\,
$,."5.50-
On every"
haseyou
make askfor
Fish"~Stamp's
given F&EE at
Over 6000 stores
of the stamps, but If they cont111ue push111g the1r bus111ess until
all the dealers gIve "free" stamps w1th every purchase there w1ll
be no profit 1111t for an} body except the man who sells the
stamps
L1ke the old scheme 1t 1Sdoubtful that any merchant 1Sreally
benefitted by US1l1gF1sh's stamps It reqUlred several years for
merchant'" to learn that the aId trad111g stamps were a u:>eless
1tem of expense-a mmance 111fact-but they finally reached that
conclUSIOn, qUlte unammously, and 1t does not seem that they
"honld need to learn the lesson aga111
Judgl11g from the 1llustrahon the premIUms offered w1th the
latter day ;:;tamps are not so valuable a" some of those used e1ght
or ten years ago The "kitchen cabmet" looks like a cheap
k1tchen table that should be produced for about $1 30. It 1S
probable, however, that It appeals to those '" ho are unable to
afford anyth111g better and therem lies the only ment in the
tracl111g stamp 1dea-1t enables some people to obtam needed
furnIture who thmk they can not get 1t any other way Somebody
must pay for the stamp" and for the premlUms and usually 1t 1S
the people who rece1ve them The dealer who does not charge
the expense to hIS customers must pay 1t hlm"elf and he has httle
chance to get h1S money back through 111creaJe m hIS trade when
hIS competitors are play111g the same game .
8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
THE NEW YORK MARKET
offers to you, the Furniture Manufacturer, the largest consuming population on this continent. Over six million in the
metropolitan district and five million addItional within six hours ride by rail. Total, eleven million of the largest
wage earners and the most lIberal spenders on earth.
An opportunity to exhibit in this great market now open to all in the magnificent and enormous new home of the
New York Furniture Exchange
containing 1,380,000 square feet of floor space
and ready for occupancy December 1, 1909.
The most accessible location in New York for both resident and visiting buyers. Lexington Avenue to Depew
Place, 46th to 48th Streets. Part of the new Grand Central Station group of splendid modern business buildings.
The plan of extension so long contemplated by the New York Furniture Exchange will now realized and a
showing adequate to the New York Market WIll be made. This addItional strength coupled with the drawing powers of
the carpet, upholstery and other hnes working In harmony WIll beyond question double the attendance of buyers.
This is the time to secure a favorable location as a larger amount of space has already been contracted for than
was available in the present buildmg.
MAKE LEASES NOW
Remember first come, first served.
Address, Chas. E. Spratt, Secretary,
NEW YORK FURNITURE EXCHANGE
Lexington Avenue and 43d Street, NEW YORK.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 9
PRICE "RIGHT" -- PROMPT SHIPMENTS
LET US SEND YOU FURTHER RED GUM SUITE INFORMATION REGARDING THIS
CHAS. BENNETT FURNITURE COMPANY
CHARLOTTE, MICHIGAN
CHAMBER SUITES DRESSERS CHIFFONIERS
GONE --DAFFY" ON EUCALYPTUS.
A Woman's Observations on the Tree That is to
"Solve the Tixnber Problem."
The article on the eucalyptus as a tImber tree, republIshed
from the Sunset Magazme by the 'Weekly ArtIsan laut Saturday
aroused consIderable mterest among the fUfmture manufacturers
of Grand RapIds, but none Df them IS suffiuently mformed as to
the ment~ of the wood to express a po.,ltIve 0plmon on the CalI-forma
"olutlon of the timber problem :i\Imt Df them have read
more 01 less about the wood but, so far a~ known, none of them
has tm d It, and most of them are mclmed to thmk that the
CalIfor11lans WIll be dlsappomted lt1 theIr e'CpectatIOm
Mrs Frances VI Spearman, secretary and bookkeeper for
John B BeckWIth, of the firm of 1. ptegrove & BeckWIth, dealers
m mahogany and veneers, seems to have gIVen more attentIOn
to the CalIfDrma project than any of the furnIture manufactm ers
of Grand RapIds :!VIr., Spearman ~pent July and Augwt WIth her
father and other relatIves and fnend~ m CalI forma and after
readmg the artIcle in the Artisan she saId
"The people 111 Southern Cahforma seem to have gone
'daffy' over the eucalyptus trees They have planted thousands,
ye~ mIllIOns, of them and they reallv belIeve that they have found
a solutIOn fDr the tImber problem It IS easy enough to raIse the
trees T hey grow very rapIdly, and seem to do best when stand-mg
clme together-I don't knoVv how many may be raIsed on an
acre
"I understand there are more than 130 vanetIes of the euca-lypts,
but the kmd on whl~h the CalIforman., have bl11lt such great
expectatIon', IS a natIVe of AustralIa, where It IS known as red
gum Another vanety m K ew Zealand IS called blue gum. It IS
a peculIar tree It sheds Its bark mstead of its leaves It IS
cla:osed as an evergreen and of course It drops ItS leaves also, but
It seems to be sheddmg ItS bark all the tIme The bark comes
off m strips, and the ends hangmg down gIve the trunk a shaggy
appearance The leaves take on a reddIsh color Just before they
fall.
"The trees m groves grow tall and slIm WIthout large lImbs
but when they have room they spread out There IS a bIg Dne,
WIth three or four large branches m my father's yard and I studIed
It ql11te closely. The wood IS qUIte soft when green, but Vvhen
seasoned It IS hard and very strong I saw samples m a store
window. It takes a beautIful fimsh but I do not thmk It has gram
or figure enough to become popular as a furmture wood It
certamly would not satIsfy the current 'furmture taste' whIch
demands crotched or figured woods
"The leaves of the eucalypts have an aromatic, pungent
taste and they are used qUIte extensIvely for medICInal purposes.
They are belIeved to be a remedy for malanal dlseases-a sort of
substitute for cmchona or qumme "
A man may be all nght 111 hIS way, but he wants It to be in hi,
own way
...----------_. ---- --------------------- I
-- ..,
I
II
I~------. -------_._------._----.-.-.-..-.._~
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
.. --.. -. .... --------.of
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures Per Set SOc.
~-----------------------------------------------------
OVER 15,000 OF OUR Price $2.80 to $4.00
STEEl RACK VISES IN USE •IIII
II•
I "'
25 doz Clamp Fixtures bought
by one mill last year. We ShIp
on approval to rated firms and
guarantee our goods uncondl
tlOuall}. Write for list of
Stee/Bar Clamps, Vises Bench
Stops de
E. ". SHELDON &. CO.
283 Madison St. Chicago.
KEIL.ANW AY UPHOLSTERING CO.
------------_._------ --_.-------_.--_._._-----------_ ......
The Latest Addition to the Furniture Industries
of Grand Rapids-Chairs That Fit.
The KeI1- ~nway Company, heretofore mentIOned 111 the
Weekly Artlsan, IS the latest addItIOn to the manufacturers of
upholstered furmture m Grand Rapld~, whIch makes ten 111all
m thIs lme, and makmg thIs C1t), "Ith the SIngle e"\.ceptlOn at
Chicago, the leader 111out put of upholstered iurmtUl e 111 the
west, If not 111the \\ hole countf)
ThIs company IS compmed of O~car ~ Kell and In lng 1
Anway, both practlcal upholsterers of mam ) eal S e,penence
They are located at 18 Huron sheet JII 1-el1 ,\as one of the
charter members of the JIueller &. Slack Companv and \\ as
supenntendent of theIr upholstel111g department He resIgned
hIS pOSItIOn III ~Ia, last, \\Ith the 111tentlOn of locat.l11g 111\\ ash-mgton,
but faIled to find fa, orable conclItlOn~ for 111, J me of
busllless, and returned to Grand RapId, and a~-oclated 11l11..1el't
wIth .i\Ir Am\ay The Compan) fincL all conchtlOn, ia\olable
for theIr hne of goods It IS thelI mtentlon to help keep up the
I eputatlOn of Grand RapId, "\\ here Cluahty pre, aIls '
The ongmals of the accompam mg cuts \\ el e gotten out 111
the spnng of 1l)07 'The, \\ ere made tG fit a per~on d- a gdr-ment,"
~a"s :\Ir Kell ~fter numerou altelatlOn, the lu,hlon~
111the backs \\ ere finall) pronounced pertect -l1'lt (lItficult\ \\ as
expenenced later 111 fittlllg e,ceptlOnall) tall 01 shOl t per"on" and
after much expenment.lIlg ::'\0 117 \\ Ith au'olIan cushIOn~ \\ as
evolved, WIth which we have a chalr or rocker that b) the SImple
addItIon of the aUXIlIary cushIon \\ III fit an} person per tectly
ThiS rocker Without the auxllIan cushIOn \\ as fir,t put on the
market In July, 1907 and sInce then someth1l1g hke 1 ~,OOhave
been shIpped from Grand RapIds, and havmg the first and on-glllal
of these rockers In our possessIOn and 111 constant use \\ e
have been able by personal obsel vatlon to find the \\ edk spots,
and Improve on them and ::'\0 11/ IS the rocker \\ Ith t.he weak
spot~ left out
"One of these rockers "houlcl be In even home for the u~e
of the convale<;cmg mvalId If for no other rea~on -\. chaIr or
rocker that \\ III fit am per"on from a chIld to the tallest pel son
1" "tlreh a th1l1g to be desned \\ e are makIng thIS rocker
\\ lth 01 \\ Ithout the aUAllIary cu"hlOn and the pnce IS WIthIn the
reach of all Havl11g been repeatedly asked to quote th13
111 ImItatIOn leather and haVIng secured a very good grade we
No 117-FltS a Child.
can now put thIS deSIrable rocker \\ Ithl11 the reach of those who
cannot afford a ge lUIne leather article
"The accompanYing cuts WIll be pJt on a dIsplay card and
an} dealer ma) ha\ e one for the ask1l1g It IS needless to say
that thIS dlspla, card \\ III be copynghted " ------------_. --_._----------~., • II
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER I
"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests; you wlll then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Factories, Sash and Door Mills, Railroad Companies, Car BUIlders and others will consult their own interests by using it. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
MANuFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa.
..---- .. ...-- .- .•. ______ ~. ._._._._. • • .-4
II
~III
WEEKLY ARTISAN
....-.-------------. . ..- ._. ---- ----------- -----------_._--- _.-_._--~
III
II•II
II
I
IIII
I
IIII I
II
I
i
..• .......,,4'. "". ., ..... ~ . ••• .. • 4' • . iI
IIII
II
II
I
iII
:.~:::::: ::..
:. =... :.:: .. : ....
KEIL & ANWAY'S No. 117.
FIts a Young Lady.
KEIL & ANWAY'S No. 117.
Same ChaIr FIts a SIx-Foot Man
....--_._-_._._------_._-_._._----- ... .. - - - _.. .. ------ _. ------------------""
11
...- ..I
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
----------------------------- ._~----~~--~~--~~---~_._-_._.~---~---.,
•..•• l!:: •• : "•. sa:
............. .. .. .. ..... e..••...
......... .. .."' .... .... .... "....... .. .. s._ s-.. .. .. .... .. ..
.. .. sa" .. .. '.,: .. : : s : ss.:: .
.... .. .. .. .. f' .).
No. 160.
HeIght 5 ti 6 111 Illdth 4 tt 6 111
Length 6 tt 2 III
IIahogan} "coco
No. 175.
HeIght, 52 In l'vldth, 4 ft 6 In
Leng th, 6 ft 2 111
illahogan} $3100
........ ::..:~~.::.:.:..:::~:;
No. 160~.
Heusht 5 ft 6 111
T ength
\VElth 4 ft 6 111
6 ft 2 111
\1 \hog ,n} $5800
No. 175~.
HeIght 52 111 \Vldth, 4 ft 6 111
Length, 6 ft 2 111
IIahogany $30 00
More of Those Fall Idea., Sent Out to the Trade by
The Warren Table Works, Warren, Pa.
~-- - -- -- _ ...--- ..-. ----------_._-----_. --------_.- . •• .. .. .... .. .. _--4
WEEKLY ARTISAN
The FILI~ER that FILLS.
N
"
-==<, -- -- {
~~~~jii!!!!!::- ..... ~!t---:::::Jl
1" IT -'" /' ---- ......---
11111 -
II" ... :;:- ;;:: ~
~- tt ..
f'·"
I
13
FILLER
The L.
They
They
water
Mac. E. Fillers are noted tor their Uniformity.
work properly, packing well under the pad.
dry hard over night They will not Shrink as we use a
floated Silex
WE CAN MATCH ANYTHING.
Th8 Lawr8nc8-McFadd8n Company PHILADELPHIA, PA.
========-==-==-= ------------
Milwaukee News.
MIlwaukee, VVb, Sept 29 -The \VI"consm }urmture Com-pany,
manufacturers of \iVlsconsm dnd regular pedestal, parlor
lIbrary and kItchen K D tables have orders enough booked ahead
to keep them runnmg up to June 1 , the trade bemg largely on
theIr pedestal extensIOn tables The company IS busy completmg
a number of addItIOns to theIr plant wl11ch Includes a budd-mg
100x150 three stones whIch wIll be used as a machInery and
veneenng department A new bOIler house 40x60 and a car-loadmg
bUlldmg 20xJO three floors are also gOIng up Another
story IS also bemg added to theIr warehouse whIch IS 65x150.
The company has a large trade on the Paufic Coast and the
central states, also Canada
On Octobel 1 the D A Klpp Company who have sold out
recently to the Klel Furmture Company of Kle1, VVIS, wJ11retIre
from busmess B A Klpp who has been 111 the furnIture trade
f01 thIrty years '" 111 retlfe from actIve bUSIness l1fe, but WIll retam
an mterest 111the new company The Kle1 company have pur-chased
adchtlOnal vacant property adJo111111gthe Klpp plant,
whIch IS 270x'363 feet m sIze The KJpp plant covers ground
3:J5x350 A new bUlldll1g IS to be bmIt y"hlch wdl be 270x75
feet and four stones The mam bUlldmg of the Klpp plant IS
220x175 feet The new bwldll1g IS to be ready for spnng busI-ness
The MIlwaukee Metal Ded Company are prepanng to buIld
several notable addltJ.on, to their plant, to be completed
December lOne addItIOn to be uued as a stock room and
enamelll1g department WIll afford 50,000 square feet, WIll be 75x
,jOO feet, three stolles, dnother "tructUl e 50xlOO two stones
wIll have a floor space of 10,000 square feet and w:ll be used fo;
stonng raw matenals and a~ a oll1dmg department The com-pany
IS dlso to bUlld a new powel house whIch WIll gIve them
250 horse powel and YY III mcrease theIr capacIty to 650 non beds
dally and 100 brass beds per day 1he company IS now at work
on theu ne\\ catalog ue of whIch 6000 \\ 111 be sent out December
1 It WIll be a very extenSIVe and elaborate affair Sales Manager
Putnam states the company has been domg a very satIsfactory
volume of busmess smce January 1.
Carpet Wools Are Higher.
Eastern reports state that carpet wools are m better demand
WIth frequent transactlOns at top market pnces. The volume of
busmess passmg 10 restncted, OWll1g to short supplIes and rather
poor selectIOns \\ hlch sellers have to offer Manufacturers of
carpets have finally awakened to the fact that pnces al e not only
advanc111g, but that supplIes are deCIdedly hmlted For months
past Importers and dealers 111carpet wools have been warmng
buyers that such would be the case, and trymg to mduce them to
place orders at an earl} date.
Manufacturers who were well posted on the enormous in-crease
m Imports thIS }ear as compared WIth last, refused to be-lIeve
that supplIes would be shOl t. They contmued to hold off
the market, WIth the expectatIon of lower pnces These same
manufacturers are m the market at the present tIme, and are
paymg stIff advances for the wools needed, and WIll conSIder
themselves lucky If they are able to secure suffiCIent supphes to
meet theIr reqUlrements.
The demand for fimshed goods has been very heavy smce
the season opened last May In spIte of the fact that manufac-turers
",ere faIrly well supphed WIth rdW materIal, large quantItIes
have been used 111meet111g reqUlrements. Few mIlls have SllP-phes
all hand at present, suffiCIent to last any length of tIme and
are com111g 111tOthe market to cover theIr reqUlrements for the
new stason, whIch open~ eady 111November
The theory that love makes the world go round may account
for th(' fact that so many gIrlS are gIddy.
•
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
-------_. ----_._-------_.---._-_._---------~---_.-..... --... --_._-------._._._.----..-..-.-.._ .-~
This Group for i51
Solid Oak; French Plates; Any Finish Desired
Wardrobe Dresser
Combination Dresser
Commode
Dresser
Chiffonier - - - - -
Bed
$18.00
6.50
400
8.75
775
6.00
fiNISHES-Colden Oak. Closs. Dull Colden. Early EngllSh,
Weathered or Fumed
F. O. B. Manistee.
Manistee Mfg, CO.
MANISTEE, MICH. "-------------_.--~ -------------- _. _._._._-_.__.-------_._.-._--_._--- ...."..
SOLUTION OF TIMBER PROBLEM.
Eucalyptus. a Tree Imported From Australia.
May Save America From the Threatened
Hardwood Fan"line.
(BY WILLIC\:,I RO:-.n'E BLC\CKBL-R:;\)
:'1uch haJ been v.ntten concermng the exhaustIOn of our
r;atlOn ~ endowment-Its tImber The necessIty of economy 111
the use of tImber and the consel' atlOn of our to rests cannot be
tbo strongly 111 ged ~ tImber fam111eIS nnmment The pnce ot
hardwood has doubled In the past ten ) ears and naturally \\ 111
1l1crease m greater ratIO untIl It becomes prohIbItIve rrom
statIstIcs compl1ed by our natlOnal forestry bureau 1t 10, ">hO\,n
that our forests conta111 perhaps a twenty ) ear ,,>upph of all
k111ds of timber-about tlllrt) mIllIon acres per ) ear are nO\\
bemg cut-but of hardwood there IS scarceh a fitteen \ edr
supply
In the Southwest 1S seen a ray ot hope d \\ elcome rehet
from the doleful chorus of eVIl prophecy CalI forma has thous-ands
of acre:, of fertIle valle) s upon whIch It 1S posvlble to pro-duce,
In ft om seven to ten) ears, larger forests ot harch\ ood than
could be grown m our more ngorou:, clImates m a hundred
years
About fifty years ago a specIes of rapId growmg hardwood
wa~ 111troduced 111to CalI forma from Au"tralIa, bel11g knO\\ n dS
eucalyptus ThIS tree ha:, long been known to be valuable for
Its medlc111al and heal111g propertIes, but 1tS \\ orth 11 the comme1-
clal world has been known but a comparatIvely :,hort t1me \Vlth-
111the past two yeaL 1t has been :ouccessfully demonstrated by om
government agncultural department and by the natIOnal and Cah-forma
state forestry bureaus that th1s tnnber can be used tor an\
purpose for wh1ch hard woocb are used \\ h1le 1t ranks as th'e
fastest grow111g tImber 111 the v.orld, ) et 1t L denser stlOnger and
tougher than oak, ash or hIckory I or all pe1lpose~ reqmnng a
wood of great :,trength and densIty, hIgh fimsh, proof aga1l1st rot
and decay and the mroads of paraSItes and 111secL, the encalyptus
WIll "atlsfactorlly replace cedar, pl11e and cypress for poles and
pIltng, oak, hIckory, maple and ash 111the manufactone"l , mahog
any, rose wood, walnut and other wood" for the finest cabl11et
and furmture use The substItute WIll, 111most 111"tance~, prove
more des1rable than the wood 1t replace~
To qnote from some of our best authontles, GIfford P111chot
Forester, 111CIrcular 59 Issued by the government agncultural
department, says.
Eucal) ptu:, may be successfully grown m Cahforl11a.
::'everal speCIes have been planted 111FlOrida and along the Gulf
Loast Here, however, occaslOnal frosts have k1lled or severely
111J ured the trees Blue gum (eucalyptus globulus) the one
most largely planted IS cne of the largest and most 1apld grov. mg
trees 111the world Seedlmg stands w1ll average a he1ght growth
ot fifty feet 111SIX) ears and over one hundred feet 111ten yeal s-mcltvldual
trees have 1eached a he1ght of one hundred twenty-B.ve
feet and a dIameter of thlrty-0Ix mches m mne years Blue gum
h pI actlcall) Immune from dlsease,:-growmg trees are not at-tacked
b) lll~ect enemle" '
State lore:, ter Lull of Caltforl11a, says "Late reports from
all 0\ er the state "hO\\ that eucalyptu~ globulus IS yleldl11g an
a, erage profit, on poor land, of over $200 per acre per year
from tIme of plantlllg-thI" for cordwood, raIlway tIes and poles
It cut tor lumber, vehIcle stock, cab1l1et work, etc, the profitt.
\\ ouldln\ e been double In Caltforma, trees, under right condI-Hom,
ten ) ears from plant1l1g, are worth $15 per tree, on an
el\ el age
Comp1latlOn by the Cahforl11a state board shows that vIA
hunch ed and seven eucal) ptus globulus trees on Bady plantatIOn
at ~anta c\nna, Caltformd, the same be111g e1ght years old con-tamed
113,+37 board feet of lumber, ,,",orth 8,080. ThIS IS con-
SIdered as apploxlmatel) the proper amount of tree", per acre
\n estImate recently made of a plantatlOn near Petaluma, Cal,
sho\\ s the present \\ orth of a SIxteen ) ear old grove to be 0\ er
$1 < 000 per acre
1he :\Ielbourne (c\u '-traltd) c\ge say s ., 'L a proof of the
dUJable qualtt) ot eucal) ptus glob'..1lu~ uJec1 for Jettys, "ome of
the pIle" \\ ere ltfted and they were found to be as sound as when
ongmall) clrn en f01ty-SlX ) ears "mce. Tests of the same wood
locH e shO\, n that a pIece two feet long dnel 5x3 111chesbulk stood
a pre,:,ure ot thIrteen tons before It fractnred.
1he Lo"> \ngeles EXa11l111ersays -1\0 l11dustry 111Caltfor-ma
has a bnghter future than the growmg of eucalyptns trees
IS It an) wonder v.hen an acre of them \\;111 yIeld 111seven years a
ClOp \\ 01th $+ 300? ThIS IS theIr value on a baSIS of commer-
Clal de, elopment "
In order to full) grasp ItS value from a commercIal stand-
P0111tthe fact must be constantly kept 111mind that the eucalyptus
reproduce, it om the stump, or root growth, after be111gcut down,
e, en mOl e rapIdly than m the first 111stance and th1S reproduction
\\ 111 cont111ue ll1defimtel)
The large \\ estern raIlway corporatIOns, as well as the lumber
compames and other consumers of lumber and rough tImber are
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
...------- - - - - - - - - - ----------- ----------~------- -- -------------------- _._------------ --_._- ------~ II
III
SENf FOR A FINISHED PANEL OF GI GRSSIR rr- lilt OI SIRI
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO
Weare the only firm preparIng a stain of this
character, which is used on gum wood, preserving t:he
natural beauty of the grain and producing the tone of
the genuine Circassian Walnut in splendid imitation,
Send for a sample No. 2765 and full directions.
._----_._-----_._-------
III
~--------------~--_._--
piantmg large groves but the demand IS so enormous and m-creasmg
so rapIdly that a nsmg market for hardwood may be de-pended
upon for years to come
Eucalyptus \\1111, 111 a great measure, solve the all Important
problem of lumber ~uppl) A v\ ood so remarkable, an mdustry
at such certamty and magmtude, demancb the mo~t careful con-sIderatlon
of every Amencan cItIzen
Sa) s 1\1 D vVelsh m "Barrel and BOA," 1\Iarch, 1909 "The
growmg of these trees IS confined practlcally to the state of CalI-forma
as they cannot be grown In a clImate where the temperature
IS lower at any tlme than 20 degrees FahrenheIt Yet If every
avaIlable acre m CalIforma were to be planted to eucalyptus the
c\.mencan demand could not begm to be supphed.
"A partlal lIst of the artlcles manufactured from eucalyptus
\\ III serve to mdlcate the Immense Importance commercIally of
thIS wonderful tree, whIch has come to us through the tWIlIght
of tIme-fuel, cross tIes, telegraph poles, pI1mg, masts, ShIp buI1d-mg,
staves and headmg for bal reIs, agncultural Implements,
\Vdgons, automobIles, msulator pms, bndge tImbers, pulley blocks
belt wheels, bowlmg alley s, bIlharcl tables, staIrway, floormg
mtenor finishmgs, raIlroad cars, sheathmg, veneer~, hlghc1ass
furmture, panelmg, dIshes, baseball bats, tool handles, carnages,
dOOls, plano cases and vIOlms.
"Capltahsts and shrewd mvestors as well as raIlroad com-pames
and lumbermen are wakmg up to the opportumtles pre-sented
for maklllg vast profits from commercial plantatIOns of
these weIrd \ustralIan exotIcs, and thIS year, whIch marks only
the begmllmg of the rush toward hard"ood gro\\l mg, WIll see
over 25,000 acres planted m eucalyptI
"It I~ a sIgmficdllt fact that the Santa fe raIlway IS plantmg
out 3,000,000 of these tree~, and that the Harnman hnes are thIS
) ear gomg mto It almo;:,t as extensIVel). \V Ith the supply of
\Vood for cross tIes and telephone poles nearly exhausted these
---------------~------- .... Uo ..
compames found It necessary to raIse theIr own supplIes or go
out of busme"s, tles now costmg as hIgh as 85 cents each and poles
from $3 to $10. The eucalyptus of certam vanetles lasts longer
111 the ground than oak, and for plIes they are replacing every-thmg
else, lastmg for half a century under water.
"There IS a small grove of eucalyptus wlthm sIght of my
bungalow that was planted about ten years ago There were
eIghteen of them cut down four yeal s ago From the stumps
of these eIghteen trees I counted seventy-three rampant new
shoots that I am told grow 30 per cent fastel than the anginal
seedlIng,. These shoots measure from four to mne 1l1ches 1ll
dlametel and from thIrty to SIxty-five feet tall.
"If you should ask me why thIS remarkable tree should grow
so fast] \\I auld answer that there IS noth1l1g to prevent ItS grow-
1l1g The Cahforma clImate IS perfectly adapted to ItS rapId
growth There are no pests of an) name or k111d to interfere
WIth ItS growth They grow summer and wmter, day and mght
You can t kIll them WIth a club or WIth an axe, for, If you cut
one down, from three to SIX more WIll grow from the stumps
It grows so fast It has no time to shed ItS leaves, whIch remalll on
all the: ear alound. It begins to shed ItS bark after three years
so as to gIve It more room to expand They are WIthout excep-tIOn
the bUSIest laborers out of doors, groW1l1g straIght as an
arrow, free of black knots and streaks and all defects of every
kmd or nature"
Makes a Line That Sells.
\iV D Sager, manufacturer of stoves and ranges, 330-342 N
\iV'ater street, ChIcago, ha~ an advertIsement 111 thIS issue that
dealers should not fall to read ~lr Sager 1:0 one of the best and
most fl'lIable manufactuers 111 the field he covers The "Medal
Docka<h '--Base Burner-for hard coal IS a stove build to last
a lIfetnne and a lme that sells Send for catalogue
=
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 PER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES $2. 00 PER YEAR.. SINGLE COPIES 5 CENTS
PIJBLICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NORTH DIVISION ST, GRAND RAP DS, MICH
A S WHITE MANAGING EDITOR
Entered as second class matter July '5, 1909 at the post office at Grand RapIds l\lIclllgan
under the act of 'Jarch 3 18i9
LOW GRADE PRICES ARE TOO LOW.
An official of the \atlo 1al Furmture \IanLlfaLtuleb \'so
ClatIon, well 111formed 111regard to the conchtlOn ot the turmture
trade, stated to the r\rtban this VI' eek, that pnces tor low gl ade
chamber furl11tUl e are cheaper at present than pre\ a1led t\\ 0 ) ear"
ago He accounted for this un"at1sfactor) condltlOn by the sale
of large quantItIes of furmture \\ Ithw the P3.st SIXt) da) ~ for
pnces that repre~ent mel el) the labor cost of productlOn "r\
consldel able number of manufacturers, out~lde of the natlOnal
01 gamzatlOn, mostly located 111the southern states \\ ere ~o hardl)
pressed for money as to be compelled to unload at am pnce,
he said "A prom111ent manu factUl111g corporatlOn l(lcated 111
North Carol111a consigned thell e,urplu" e,tock am()Unt111~to S30
000 to an auctlOneer 111 Ch1cago recentl) to be "old tor \\ hat It
would bnng Thel e b no rea "on f01 speculatIOn a~ to the condi-tIOn
of that compan) 1here ha" been a lalger movcment of
goods dunng the cunent month than at an) penod of the pa"t
year, but It 1S doubtful If there I, an) praht \\ orth mentlOl11ng
reahzed by the manu factUl ers
In view ot the above statement It ~eems that tnel e b ~tlll
a great deal of work at hand for the ~ atlonal I url11ture :\Ial1l1-
faLturers' AssouatlOn 1n re\ olutlOnal) tll11e~ Ben) aml1l Frank-
1m addressmg hUl1self to the patnoh ot that era declared \\ e
must hang together or we shall hang ~epal atel) The tmth ot
the statement apphe~ to the tL11l11tLe11tl ade I t the manufacturer~
fall to co-operate 111sUotal1111g pnces the\ \\ III tad m busl11ess
Retal1ers do not applove of the cuttmg ot pnce" to make sales
Stabdlty IS a" essentlal m theIr bl ancl1 of the busl11ess as 111that
of the manufacturers
Travel111g salesmen compla111 blttCrl\ of the lad" of hotel
accommodat1011S and the mhmanagement ot the ~ame 111Cleveland,
OhIo One enterpns111g landlord has engaged a laches' blass
band to play 111the gnll loom from 10 to 1:2 0 dock at 111ght, for
the purpose of attractmg people h om the ~treeb to bu) a fe\\
dnnks Imag111e the mental con(lItlOn of the tlred commercial
traveler, aftel pUtt111g m a strenuous day and retlnng to catrh a
few fretful hours of ~leep preparator} to takmg an early tram
out of town, to be awakened by the blare of a cornet, the grunts
of the tuba, the Clash of C)mbals and the roar of drums soon
after makmg entry mto the land of dl eams 1he manager of
such a hotel would not check the whlstltng bell bo) s, porters and
mght c1erb and the smg111g chamber maIds and r01stenng gl1esb
that make the average hotel a pandemol1lum
The success of that mutual mSurance compam orga1117ed
and managed by Pennsylval1la melchants mentIOned on another
page, IS eVidently due largely to hght losses An average loss of
less than $9,000 per year on 8,238 pohcles covenng nsks aggre-gatmg
over $l1,OOO,OGO IS certaml) low The report receIved
by the r\rtl~an does not state \\hetner It has ever been necessary
to dra\\ on the note reserves but It IS probable that such actlOn
"d" necessary m 1906, \\ hen the losses reached a total of $18,125
\nother sucl1 a loss, even now, would \\Ipe out the company's
la~h re~ources and necessitate a,~essments However, the re-
"erve IS large enough to meet such an annual loss for ten years
ur more, and as there IS no probablhty of such a cont1l1gency
dn~mg the mSU1ance must be considered safe.
.\Ianutacturers are not cuttmg gum lumber WIth a great deal
of confidence, owmg to the fact that the retaders seem to be un-able
to sell It as readdy as had been antICIpated An expenenced
t1ave1111g salesman, after vbltmg all the pnnclpal cltles between
P1ttsburg and Denver, stated that the moderate sale was on ac-count
of the name "gum" The name suggests at once both a
soft and a bnttle thmg, qualttles that should have no place m the
manufacture of fUrl1ltlll e If the trade had been educated to call
lhe \\ ood b\ It:, proper name, Tupelo, not satm walnut, gum
or other I111slead111gdeslgnatlOn~, furmture made of thIS wood
might have \\ on last111g favor m the estlmatlOn of the people.
r\ mercantile assoCIatIOn 111 the state of vVashmgton, 111
annual conventIOn recently "resoh ed" that "all manufacturers
who malket theIr goods under propnetary brands or trade marks
be urged to estabhsh and ma111ta111by contract m11111uumretat!
pnces for whIch such goods shall be sold to the consumer."
[he assoCIatIOn belteves that the adoptlon of such a poltcy would
bc tor the be~t 111tere"b of manufacturers, retaIlers and consumers
1he ~upreme court of Xebraska has upheld an act of the
leglSlcl!ure makIng a flat cut of 25 per cent m the rates charged
b, expl ess compal11es for service performed 111that state The
ca0e \\ III be appealed 111the supreme court of the Umted Statae~
,,0 othel ~tatb that have been expected to adopt the Nebraska
la\\ \\ III probabl) \\ alt awhJ1e-years, perhaps
r\n addItIOn to the Hollenden hotel, 111Cleveland, 0, near-
In~ completIOn WIll conta111 two hundred rooms The ovvner WIll
funmh the rooms m harmony With the heavy two and three mch
~tuff furmshed by the Phoemx Furmture Company twenty years
ago The old stuff, stamed to ll111tate cherry, ha;, stood the oer-
\ Ice so well that the owner Will use more of the same style
La"t \\ edne,da) Grand RapIds entertamed the dlstmgl1lshed
T apane~e gentlemen who are makmg a tour of the country A
\ ear hence \\ e ma) hear ot 'Grand Rap1ds furmture made in
Japan"
Bird s-e\ e maple IS growmg ~trongly 111favor WIth consum-el"
\Vhere the art of preserv111g the color has been acqmred
no \\ ood IS comparable to the beautlful bIrd's-eye
\ consIderable call I" notIced for fmmture made of pnma
\CI a \ \ hlle thIS wood IS ql1lte attractIve It IS not so generally
a(h111recl as blrd\-eye maple
The mablltty to ~upply the goods reqmred by customers
cl1\Crts much valuable trade from the legltlmate dealer to the
mall-order merchant
Eepol ts from the great Iron centers, PIttsburg and Cleveland,
do not mcllcate much activIty 111the furmture trade. The stocks
on hand are large
- ~~-------------------------~---------.,
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
GUESTS FROM THE LAND OF THE RISING SUN
Furniture Manufacturers Assist in Entertaining the Party of Distinguished Japanese
Gentlem.en Who Are Making a Tour of America.
I, urmture men took a promment part m the entertamment
of the dlstmgmshed J apane"e gentlemen who are makmg a tour
of the country and who vI~lted Grand Rapids last vVednesday
The Visitors we1e mVlted to 111spect some of the furmture fac-tone~
and gladly accepted the mVltatlOn They were taken to
the Impenal company's factory where they became so mtensel)
mterested m the dry kilns, the machme room" and the fimshmg
department:> that It was necessary to send messengers to pull
~ome of them out They also vIsited the showroom at the Ber-key
& Gay factory, and two of them accompamed by Herbert
:\Ioore of the Spokane CWash) Chamber of Commerce and
George C, Whitworth, treasurer of the Berkey & Gay company,
spent several haUl ~ m~pect111g the factory, studymg the method~
and operatlOns from lumber yard to salesroom
Baron Nalbu Kanda, who uses good Enghsh was the pnn-
Clpal speakel for the VIsitors at the banquet given them at the
Pantlmd m the eve11lng ~fter mentlOmng the fact that he was
one of those who ~elcomed Ambassador O'Bnen upon his arn-val
m Japan and was glad to meet the ambau"ador among his
fnend.s m his home clt), the Baron expressed his sentiments on
furmtUl e as follows
"On the first page of the I11terestmg pamphlet pre~ented to
the party now enJoymg the hospltahty of this' Furmture City' of
Amenca, I see the followl11g "tatement
.. 'The fur11lture of the ages 1.0 a book, on the pages of which
are mdehbly engraved not anI) the prevallmg architecture of the
people that have occupied the ~tage of the theatre of the world'.s
tannly dunng the vanous penod" of the drama of human eXist-ence,
but In the different scenes of the pIa) marked by the nse
and fall of natlOns and kl11gdomu, change~ that made hlstorv, are
fal th full y portrayed.'
"VYhen I read th1.o and my thoughts went back acros" the
contment and across the broad Pacific to our t) plcal J apane:,e
home.s, without tables and chairs, \\ lthout fireplace.s, without
chandehers and all the other paraphernaha, I asked myself, are
we, like the nomads of the plan};" a people who have played no
part 0,1 the stage of the world'" lllstory? ~o, on the contrary,
true a:, the "tatement of thiS httle pamphlet may be, the character
and SP11lt of the Japanese people, symbohzed by the cherry blo,,-
soms fragrant Ul the mor11lng sun, I, faithfully portrayed m the
very architecture and furmture, such as there 1S, of our home",
m the big outside walls and fences which at once protect our
home.., from the feet of mtrudel s and guard their .sacred pre-uncts
from prYUlg eyes; 111 the simple shdmg partltlOns without
locks and keys, to be thrown open to welcome the mormng sun,
m the pillar.s and cellmgs of fine gramed cedar, without a coat of
pamt or var11l"h, 111 the pure white rush tataml which yields
under the tread of your shoeless feet and fill.., your room with an
odor of the new mown hay In all these characten"tlc features
of OU1homes do we not read the history of a people who have de-veloped
from hut dwellers dnd simple tillers of the 5011, through
over 2,000 year'i of that peaceful natural progress which dls-tl11g111"
hesman from the lower order of creatlOn? '
Roger \V Butterfield, president of the Grand Rapid" Chair
Company, as a representative of the turmture men alluded to the
fnendly relatlOns that have prevailed between Amenca and Japan
He welcomed the vmtor'i not only ac a mark of fnendshlp but
as an opportumty for better acquamtancG He referred to
Japan's splenchd conduct of her war and her vlctones and then
111 deference to the VISitors de..,lre for mformatlOn he spoke of
Grand Rapids and ItS great mdustry
"The CIty IS only 75 years old," he said "ThiS would be
only a short paragrapn 11 the hl'itory of aile of your CO,l1muUltles,
but It IS a pal t of the history of the northwest thlOugh whkh you
have been travehng The fir.ot settlers here found the nver With
It:> rapids and thIS fdct detenmned that Grand Rapids should be
all Il1dustndl Clt) For many ) ea r'i the chief mrlustry was the
manufacture and shIpment of lumber ThiS has cea"ed to be
a local II1dvstry but commen~lI1g W1thm the last 50 yedrs there
ha" grm\ n up SIde b) Side w1th the lumber mdustry, and survlv-mg
It, another 111du"try partakmg ot ItS general nature, but dif-ferent
from It, for as the lumber 1'1clustry had to do w1th the man-ufacture
of the res1l10us woods, tne turmture bus111es" had to do
With the manufactUl e of the magmficent cabmet wooels, wluch a
fe\\ year~ ag 0 ~ ere abundant In th1'i v1c1mty The commence-ment
of tIns mdustry wa" small fhe product was Simple, al-most
to crudene"s, but from the tllne of ItS commencement untIl
the present time, through the overcom111g of many obstacleu, es-pecially
dunng the early part of It<; h1story, 1t ha" steadll) and
cont111uously advanced 111 tne qualIty and value of the good" manu-factured,
and 111Its mfluence a" a factor 1,1 the development of
thiS commumty.
"The local advantages wh1ch were ~o Important 111deter-nnmng
the work the Clt) should do, and by which It should be
bt1l1t up, have long pdssed away The water power which was 111-
adequate, at an) rate, for a bus1l1e'is of the magmtude of the
present ha" faded away w1th the vamshL1g of the forest, and the
motive PO\\ er for our factones 1S ftunhhed by coal hauled from
a dl;,tance Tne oak and mahogany which constitute our pnnci
pal and most eApenslve matenals are hauled, the former from the
outhern stdtes and the latter from Central '\menca and /\.fnca
The amount of matenal for our 111du'itry wh1ch IS produced l11
our 0\\ n ~tate I;, very small vVlth thiS vamshmg of our cheap
power and chedp matenal, we have ceased to manufacture the
cheaper quahty of goods"
2\Ir Butterfield spoke at length of the manner 111which the
Clty\ prem1er mdustr) has been blUlt up, m the face of the fiercest
competition, v\Ithout the aId of special advantages, such as pro-tective
pdtents and tanffs and exceptIOnal sh1ppmg facI!Jtles, and
declared that the greate~t protectIOn enjoyed by Grand Rapids
manufacturers lS to be found 111the words ";Vlade m Grand
Rapids" stamped on her ware"
In clos1l1g h1.o address J\1r Butterfield, speakmg chrectly to
the VISitors, saId
"\\ e, represent1l1g our fello\\ Cltlzen ~ m thiS great common-wealth,
congratuldte you tomght on \\hat you have accomp!Jshed
l11 the attamment of your gl eat Ideal'i Ive gIve you our be"t
Wishes for their ultimate and complete accomphshment '
J\Ir flutterfield' 'i adelre"s was applauded anel the J apane"e
cxpres~ed their appreciatIOn of the ,entlll1ent.., by hft111g their
gla"se, to him.
"\mong the men mtere'ited 111 the furmture factones who
helped to enterta1l1 the V1u1tors and attended tne banquet \\ ere
LeWIS H \Ylthey, Den ~ Hanchett, E K Pntchett, 0 H L
\Ner11lcke, John l\Iowat, DaVid E ChI, Charles R S!Jgh, Robert
\\ Irw1I1, \V D Bishop, A ::, Goodman, Robert ~hanahan
Willard Barnhart, John Wlc1cl!comb, H S Jordan, \\ K Wll-
!Jams and r VV Tobey
PremIUm glVll1g 111 any form, was condemned by the mer-chants
aSSOCIatIOnof \V dsh1l1gton, at the late conventlOn
Dlgmty, elegance and refinement 15 expressed m furmture
correctly deSigned and substantially constructed
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
WE ALWAYS HAVE IT READY TO SHIP
Figured Red Gum Veneer
CLEAR, FACE STOCK IN GOOD SIZES.
Walter Clark Veneer Company 535 Mich. Trust Building
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
RAILROAD FREIGHT ESTIl\fATES.
Cabbage. Onions and Potatoe~ Are Heavier Than
Lumber in Pounds per Acre.
Lumber 1~ OIK ot t1<e C;11d {relght com1110d1tle~ plOduced
by land It~ weIght per acre ~urpa""e" corn barle), oab, \\ heat
and rye, ~a)" one at the latest bullet1l1" bsued b\ the ::\atlOnal
Department of Agnclllture I e\\ people are a \\ are ot the cal e
used by raIlroad" m keep111g taL at the pI OduCt1\ene'" ot land
along theIr lmes from the standpOInt ot the amount of freIght
produced b} vallous ClOpS The heaVIer the crops pel acre the
more b 1smess for the raIlroads "or al ethel e man} people
who tI1mk of lumber as a crop, and one ot the 1110StImp01 tant
crops at that, \\ h1ch contllbute" a large shal e at the tre1gnt blhl
ness of ral1roads
1he quantlt) of frelgnt produced b) a crop depends up all
~011, reglOll and kmd of crop Ral1roads figlll e It tram that
pomt of V1e\\ TheIr plOfit depends upon tonnage <\nelcla"s, and
they want to knO\\ what uop pa\ s the cal ner be"t "lam a\ er-ages
m many 10cahtle0 are nece~"ar) to reach I ehable re, ult,
Care IS necessal y, too, 111apply 111gto one regIon the fif;LHC" 00-
tamed 111 another IndIana, IlhnOls and h.entuck) are the center
of a vast product1\ e regIOn, and average" tl1ere po"se'" a" much
value as th00e of an) other pal t of the countr) but ot com se
they cannot be apphed ever) \\ here -\n acre b CIechted \\ Ith
yIelds as follows
Cabbage ;!1,000 pounds per acre
0111on" 19,930 pound" per aCle
Potatoe" -t ,(,0,0 pounds per acre
Lumbe1 lOOO pound" per aClc
Hay , . .2,~10 paunch per aue
Corn 1 ~.2'3 pounds per <lCIe
Barley .. 1.~1q pounds ptr acre
Oats K/-,() pounc!:' pel aue
Tobacco 8~, I" pound~ p:::r acre
Rye 8!8 pounds per dcre
Wheat ~9.2 pJ11l1d~ per acre
As the 1Ist sho\\ s, the thl ee heaVIest freIght produc111g crops
<ire cabbage, Ol11on~a'1el potatoes Lumber I, iourth Lp to the
present tIme tImber has been cut almost exclUSIvely f1am \\ lId
lanel, WIthout much regard to the aC1e, gone over But the tlme
IS COl11!ngwhen the yIeld of wood per acre WIll be calculated a,
carefully as the yIeld of corn, and as much thought \\ 111be gIven
It, though not as much work fIo\\ much \\ ooel gro\\, on an
acre 111a year?
Some of the abu"eel,
p10duC111g only a 1Ittle
bm nt, wa"hed and nel5lecterl lanrl~ are
It ha~ been estnnated that the t) p1cal
hal cl\\ ood reglOns of f ennessee, where fire 1s kept out, are grow-
1l1g about 'l,COO pounds of wood yeady per acre Gooel stands
at \ oung p1l1e~ In other parts of the country are probably dOll1g
as \\ ell Dr better But thIS IS not the hm1t, for foresters ~ay
\\ oodland can do much better under forestry methods. Good
tImber 1111htbe selected, the poor cut out, Ju"t as the farmer plants
the best kll1do of corn and rejects the poor In E1lrope where
the) Ial.,e (rop~ of t1ee, they get, under favorable condItIons,
<in annual g 10\\ th ot h,:500 pounds to 6,500 pound" of wood p~r
acre fhls count 1) can do at least as well
The freIght can 1ers, however, seldom tran"port the whole
\\ o0d g ro\\ th The \\ aste IS left 111 the woods or at the mill
lhh h much 01 httle, clependmg upon what IS made of the wood
hetm e the tl <\n~p01tatlOn company gets It It b apparent
hO\\ C\ el) that afte1 declllctmg tor \\aste, the growth of an acre
at tImbel tllrl11she, more freH;ht than an acre of anv one at
the agllcultural crop, exccpt ubbage, 01110ns and pota~des. The
quant1t\ ot am one at tde"e th1 ee c01111l10chtlesthat w1l1 go to
the ma1ket IS 11l11lteclb\ demand, but the demand for lumber IS
nllt d111111~1h11l1~ \11 that the torests and planted lots can supph
\\ 111 go to the market
\ \ ooclland, II 1der ca1e, )lelcl~ ) early ClOp as regularly
<h \\ heat field~ The marketable tImber only IS C1)t at regular
1l1tu \ ai, dncl ne\\ gro\\ th IS ah\a)s comll1g on A" a freIght
producer a tImber t1act may be depeneled upon as surelv as a
potato field In tact, It 1S 011rer, for land 111 farm crops' wears
out unless constantl) fertlhzed, but tImberland fertlhzes Itself
\\ Ith ItS leaves and becomes ncher. It will yIeld unduTIll11shecl
crop' fore, er
Tree~ glO\\ on rough la'1d whel e agnculture cannot prohta-hh
be cal ned on, and the freIght and other returns from such
leglOn~ ale la1geh clear gam smce such land \\ould otherWIse
ue procluung !lttle or 110thmg
Hotel Notes.
\ J \ anderbllt ,,111 erect a twent) star) hotel on Fourth
avenue, Thut) -thud and ThIrty-fourth streeh, Ke\>, York. It
\\ 111cost $~,300,000
-\ hotel to cost $.300,000 WIll be erected on the sIte of the
\ven hou'e, at },It Clemen", },I1ch It will be 1eady for occu-jJdI1C\
111 June, 1910
The ,tee! fra111ework of the St Pallim the erectlOn of WhICh
~e,e1al nlll!loll dollars \\ 111 be mve"ted, at St Paul, ;\lmn, I,
plactlcall) c0111pleted and \>,ork upon the walls IS 111 progres.,
The bmlel111g \\ 111 be twelve stone::, hIgh above a basement
dnd ~uh basement and \\ III contam 330 room, It WIll be ready
tor 0CCllpallc\ carl) 111 the comll1g ) ear Costly furl11shmgs
\\ 111be 111Stalled
WEEKLY ARTISAN
..-------------------------_._. --------------_._----------_._----------------_.----
19
.-_. -------...,I
II
IIII
III
IIIII
SLIDING SHOE FOR USE ON DESK LEGS
This shoe does the work of a caster yet allows the
desk legs to set close to floor. Fastened with fiat head
wood screw and furnished 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, MICH.
....... _ ...
Chicago"s Industdal School Experiment.
The Chicago Tnbune, the other day pubhshed an ed1tonal
on a subJ ect that b of great L1tere"t J.nd Importance , not only
to mechanics who expect their son" to follow their own or some
other trade, but abo to manufaLtm ers and other employers of
skilled labor-the m1x1l1g of academ1c and 1I1dustnal educatlOn.
Ch1cago lS to wIL1ess an mterest111g e'<penment m educatlOn,
ray s the Tnbune If 1t 1S successful 1t may have much influence
111 shap111g publIc 0P11110nregardmg the cour"es of study m the
schools The Idea 1S tn the a1r everywhere that the boy and glrl
ale too w1dely separated tn the schoolroom from the avocatlOns
wh1ch they Will follow when ..,chool da) '" are ovel The demand
1Sbecom1ng 1I1"lstent that marked changes be made 111 the subjects
taught and the methods used There 1" no dlsput1l1g the ObV10lb
fJ.ct that the schools have followed old time model.." the needs of
the relatlvel) few be1l1g the 1deal rather than those of the over-
\\ helm1l1g maJonty
There are thousands of pUp1}..,who never get beyond the
gl ammar school Stern necessity pu"hes them out 111tOthe world
of worh. The lack of educat10n proves a conbtant hancltcap. pre-yent111g
the1r advance m the occupJ.tlon they enter In most
cases what they have learned has had only 1I1d1reo::b:teanng upon
the future tOll Lead1l1g men of Ch1cago have been consldenng
the subject With care The) know that It IS be1l1g studied all
over the country It 1S a th111g of v 1tal mterest to natIOnal wel-tare
It 1Sa problem that must be solved The expenment to be
tned here c1ullng the next few month" 1Sone that Will b~ watched
\\ Ith close attentlOn
The Barragut school, located m dn mdu"tllal sectIOn of the
uty, 1S to have t\\ 0 groups of forty boy s For a penoel of two
\\ eeks twenty of these w1ll work 111 larg e estabhshmenb wluch
h'we promised co-operatIOn The other twenty" III stay 111 the
schoolroom, "tud) 1I1g mecha111cal and free hand dra \\ mg, com-l
I--- .-- - .I.
merc1al geograph), Engh"h and other subJeo:::ts deemed parti-cularly
adapted to their speCial needs \Vhen the fortmght end..,
the first group Will elevote a Saturday to show111g the second
group how to pick up the thread" 111 the factor) On .:\Ionda,
the groups w1ll change places, the factory twenty entenng th'e
5choolroom, the schoolroom twenty entenng the factory It w1ll
be an expenment. It may or may not "ucceed But It IS nght
mIme WIth current thought, and If It 1S succe sfnl It may open
the way for great thmgs for Ch1cago boys of tech111cal turn of
m1l1d and may mark the begmnmg of a 1evolutIOn m pubbc
school tra1l1mg here. The hearty l11terest of captall1s of 111-
dustry makes the hope of success stJong
The Chicago expenment Will be \\ atched With much 1 1terest
by member~ of the Grand Rapids board of educatlOn, among
whom are two or three promll1ent manufacturers The Grand
Rap1ds board has been con~ldenng the plan that IS to be tned out
m Ch1cago, but there has been some OpposltlOn, but If the Chicago
expenment proves successful there IS bttle doubt that the socalled
. mneel sy5tem" Will soon be adopted m Grand Rapids and man)
other Cltles
I STANDARD
I
COLORS
-- ...- ------- -- -- -- ----------~
i ~- .- ..- -
UNIFORM
Adopted by the Grand Rapids Furniture Association are produced With our:
Golden Oak Oil Stain No. 1909, Filler No. 736.
Early English Oil Stain No. 55, Filler No. 36.
Weathered Oak Oil Stain No. 1910.
Mahogany Stain Powder, No.9, Filler No. 14.
I Fumed Oak (W) Stain No. 46.
I... _ ...-_ ..---_.
GRAND RAPIDS WOOD FINISHING
5559 Ellsworth Ave GRA"'D RAPIDS, MICH
CO.
I ..-- "
20
SUCCESSFUL MUTUAL INSURANCE. ---_. II
---------- -----
WEEKLY ARTISAN
ROCKFORD, ILL
--~III
I
II
III
IIIII
!
III
--~
UNION FURNITURE CO.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead m Style, ConstructIOn
and Fmlsh See our Catalogue
Our lme on permanent exhibi-tIon
7th Floor, New Manufact.
urers' BUlldmg, Grand Rapids.
----------._--------- ....._--
Manufadurers of
Embolled and
Turned Mould
lngs, Emboas-ed
and Spmdle
CarvIng., and
Automatic
Turnings.
We also manu
fadure a large hne
of Embo •• ed
Ornaments for
Couch Work
SEND FOR C CATALOCUE.
1256-1258 W. Fifteenth St., CHICAGO, ILL.
-'_----_ ..- ..----- ----------------~I _.- _ .. ----.---- .. _ •• - _n" - -". --1
I
II
I
I_. -_._- -......•I
Spiral Grooved and Bevel Pointed
DOWEL PINS
Note how the glue in the Spiral
Groove forms Thread like a Screw
Bevel Pointed, easy to drive
Straight 50 will not spilt the
frames Prices and dIscounts on
application
STEPHENSON MFG. CO.,
SOUTH BEND, IND. [~_-.__ __ _-- __ .
Morton
...._ ..._ .... --...
House
( American Plan) Rates $2.50 and Up.
Hotel Pantlind I (E=.- PJ..,) Rat •• $1.00 and Up, I
I GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. I !I
The Noon Dmner Served at the Pantlmd for 50c IS
THE FINEST IN THE WORLD.
J. BOYD PANTLlND, Prop.
Pennsylvania Retailers Run It at One-Half the
Rates Charged by Old Line Companies.
1 he RetaIl :\lerc:hanb '\ssoclatlOn of Penl1sylva11la OVV ns
controb and operates the Retdllers \lutual Ftre Insurance Com-pany,
vv hleh 1~ shown to have been deCIdedly succes~f111 though
Its rates are only 30 per cent of those eAaded by the old lme
01 board compames The concl1tlOn of the company and Its
,uecess IS shown by the report of the secretary, A. M Howes, of
l~ne ~ub1111ttedat the thIrteenth annual com entlOn of the Retall-el
s \s~oclatlOn held at PottSVIlle recently, m whIch he says
The Retaller- :\ll1tl1al FIre Insl1rance Company of Penn-
'" h ama \\ as chal tered :\ray 27, H103, dnd bsued Its first poltcy
111June On '\ugust 1, 1909, 8,238 pohCles had been Issued for
1l1"Ulcl11Ceamount1l1g to $11,160,191.48 The co~t of thiS m-
Sl1raw:e at standard old 1111erate::. would have been $143,031 72 111
premlUIl'S-an average ot $12 99 pel thou'and :\1embers of the
ClJmp<tny have seHed to ,\UgLlst 1, ]909 $67,180 61111 premlUms,
or cl6 per cent at ,tandal d rates The average savmg has been
Sb 02 per thousand The dverage cost has been $6 97 per thou~-
and '-,111lethe company \\ as estabhshed the fil e losses paId have
eH;glegated $t, 1G8 09 The fire loss has been 29 per cent of
the standard cost
On '\ugust 1 ] 9ml the company had the follmv 111g re-oUlces
Cash 111 tl ea sur}
Certlficdtes of depOSIt 111 ;\ at 1 Banks
I" ur111tIll c
D~le from agentc;
$ 2,335 31
7,00000
31800
76489
La."h re"oUl ce~
Pru111um note 1 e,erve 111 f01ce
In"llrdnce In force
$ 10,618 20
318,63963
'2,7d6,99250
'S1l1ce our la"t annual IepO!t to the convention, 1,694 pohCles
hd\c been \\lltten t01 ~2 2'39 ::'86, WIth a sav111g 111companson
1\ nh ctandal d rates ut $2-tclc38 3() 111 premlUm~ Many of our
merchanh elle say 1l1g more than their annual dues to theIr local
a, ~uctatlOn 111thIS \\ ay ,
The company take, ns!-.s only 011 St01es and stocks located
In fire protected dlstnd~ and eaeh poltey, 111 ca",e It becomes
necessary to lev y a,sesc;ment::" IS hable for fifteen tnnes the
amount of the premium he has paId The fire losses by years are
Ieported as follow~
\: eelr enchne, Dee 31 190 ) (G months) $ 917 26
\: eal end1l1g De~ 11, 190-1 11103
"\ ear cnd1l1g Del 11 1(0) J,RG594
\: eal end1l1g Del n 190b 18,12347
'l edr entllllg Dee 11, liJ07 8,32G 0.1
\: ear endll1g Dec 31, 190'\ 9,,393 20
Thl~ yeal to \ug 1 2,511 96
----
Total for ') year, $+,1,30809
Using Grand Rapids Dry Kilns. J
KU10sha \VI~, .'->ept ;!()- The Kenosha Cllb Company have
reccnth 1l1~talled t\\ 0 dty kl1n~ constructed by the Grand RapId"
"eneel \\ orb \vIth a dally capaClty of ] 2,000 feet Treasurer
L T Hannah state" hI s company has been rllnn1l1g full tIme
smle the first of tlm year The Kenosha Cnb Company have
alaI ge and glO\\ 1l1g trade vv hlch comes from all ,ectlOns of the
l111tecl State and dleo f10m :\Ie>"I':o Cuba and the Hawallan
Island"
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
Must Refund Unearned Dividends.
MagIstrate J ~1 Smedes of CIncInnatI rendered an Impor-tant
deClsIOn the other day whIch, whIle dI~POSIng of some 15
ca~e~ wIll also be used a~ a precedent In more than a score of
other sImIlar SUltS before other magIstrates.
The decIsion ~ as upon an actIOn brought by ~ttorne) \~'. J3
:.\lente, trustee In bankrnptcy of the Hartwell Company, aga111st
the stockholder:, of that company The concern filed a deed of
assIgnment 111the Insolvency Court In June, 1908, and was after-ward
forced Into bankrtiptcy Tru ~tee 1\1ente found asset~
amount111g to about $16,000 and e~tlmated the habllItIes at nearl)
$100,000 He dbo dI~covered that dIvIdends had been paId to
the stockholdeI:" although there were no net earn111gs to wal rant
~uch pal ments, none of the chvldend~ hav111g been paId out of
actual net earn111gs, he charged
Therefore he filed Slllt aga111st J ame \ Green and 1-1others
1\ hIle other smts were filed In other CaUlts aga111st the rest of
the stockholdeI:' 1\ ho had receIved dl\ Idench, ~eekmg to recover
the amount paId to them
l\laglstrate Smedes deCIded the te t case holdl11g that the
company had no nght to pal' c1IvHlend~ except out of net earnmgs
and the bank! uptC) tru"tee Judgment agaIn"t all of the defend-ants
tor the amount so relll\! I'd by them
~\s the deCISIOn hmged upon a que~tIon of fact and the eVI-dence
showed plaml) thdt the d1Vldends "ere not earned the de-fendant~
have nothmg to geun by appeal except to delay payment
of the Judgements WIth Increa~ed CO"t~
Busy Factories at Sheboygan.
Sheboygan, \Vl~, Sept 29-The \orthern FurnIture Com-pany
have been hav111g S111'2eJ ulv the lal gest volume of btb111ess
111theIr hIstory PreSIdent G Huette "tate~ hIS company 'have
found It (hfficult to keep up IV Ith theIr ordel s The trade has been
excellent ~111lethe first of the ) ear, but SInce July It ha~ exceeded
ever) th111g for a hke penod 111 former ) ear" Recentl) the
'\ 01thun 1urmture lumpan) ~ent out ten thousand catalogues
The Phoemx ChaIr Com pan) have anothel of 5hebo) gan' s
btl<;1est fact011es 1he) have been runmng a full force on full
tnne ever sInce January, 1907 The company IS plannmg to
bmld an adclItlOn to theIr plant next spnnl:; whIch IS to be used
a~ a dry hou~e G A Hahn "tate~ they have recently sent out
between fifteen and h\ enty thousand 1909-1910 catalogues
The Sheboygan '\ ovelt) Compan), manufacturers of laches
desks, bookcases and cab1l1et~ relentl) maIled at one tIme ),000
of theIr fall catalogues The cdtalogue IS very handsomely and
convemently gotten up and shows that d lanse number of new
patterns ha\ e been added to the departments of chl11<l closet ~
and buffet~, thelcby affonhng a ldrge as~ortment for the trade
.'::>ecretar)-Trea:,urer '\ F PIper states the company ~ trade 1~
comlclerably dhead of the v olume of last) ear and up to thIS tIme
nearl) equal to that of 1<)07. The company ha" a large general
trade and also eXIJort~ conslClerablj to ::\lexlco.
New Refrigerator Factory.
1 he Traverse CIty (.!'IIlch) Refngerdtor :'IIanufactunng
Company, Just orgamzed WIth $100,000 cdIJltal sto-::k \\111 engage
In the rnanufacture of ref11gerator~ on d large scale :.\1 :3-
Sanders IS preSIdent, R Floyd ClInch, VIce preSIdent, J aIm R
Santo, secretary and Samuel Garland, treasurer
It takes a good bluffer to keep the other fellow from finr1m~
out that we are afraid to fight
Tell a lazy man to hump himself and he will immediately
get his back up about it.
fii~"~~"lLiNDEl~i<
I Indianapolis
Illinois and New York Sts.
I 6 Blocks from UnIOn Depot
2 Blocks from Interurban "tatIOn
250 Rooms
All OutSIde, WIth FIre Escape
J elephone lU hvery l{oom
European Plan
Rates, 75c to $Z 00 Per D"y
Dlnl1lg Room m ConnectlO11
bpeCldI Kates to Famlhes
and Permanent Gue~ts
Ladles rravelIng Alone WIll Fmd
ThIS a Very DeSIrable
Stoppmg Place.
GEO.R. BENTON
Lessee and Manager I
~ _ ..-------------------- . . ~I
~_-_- __ ••• -- •• r _ .....-...
I
FOX SAW DADO HEADS
SMOOTHEST
GROOVES
FASTEST
CUT
LEAST
POWER
LONGEST
LIFE
Also Machine
Knive.r, Mite..
Machines, Etc.
GREATEST
RANGE
QUICKEST
ADJUSTMENT
LEAST
TROUBLE
PERFECT
SAFETY
We'll gladiy tell
you all about
it.
PERMANENT ECONOMY
FOX MACHINE. CO. 185 N. F..ont St..eet,
G..and Rapids, Mich
... _ ' •• a ••••• _ •••••• a._ •• ",
r" .H"O"FFMAN--~:V~E.N~Rj,~i~-l
I I
I HARDWOOD LUMBER II
I ~~~r~~: ~A:T~~{V~E~NGE~ER:~S I
~__ ....---. a ..... ......
~-~~--
I
....--------------_._.--_._-------------------~
These saws are
Made from No. 1
Steel and we war-rant
every blade.
We also carry a
full stock of Bev-eled
Back Scroll
Saws, any length
and gauge.
Write ns for
Price List
and dIscount
31-33 S. Front St., ORAND RAPIDS, MICft. ~------------.._ ..-.~-~._ ....__ ....._~I
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
r-..~ah~:;----- ..._. ._---- ------------ -----------------------_.---_.
I Circassian Walnut •I, Quartered Oak
Walnut I Curly Maple
I Bird's Eye Maple
I Basswood
I Ash I:
Elm
: Birch
: Maple
: Poplar
: Gum
I Oak I~-----------_._------~---_._---
-------.
Foreign and
Dorn estic Woods.
Rotary, Sliced, Sawed.
--------. --- ....--.------ -4
~fust Not Used Small Checks.
By askmg the attorney-general for an op1111Onas to Its ~cope
and a~ to who 15 charged wIth the cluty of Ieport111g 'lOlatIOn~
Charles D Norton, actIng secletar) of the trea~un has called
attentlOn to a provI~lOn 111the pen tl code, as amended and ap
proved m Apnl last whIch forb1cls the u~e of chect~ tor amounts
lese than a dollar Thlo, provNon seems to have been pa~sed b)
congress wIthout dIScu,-s10n and there IS m) ster) m regard to the
purpose, and doubt as to congress hav111g authonty to fix the
m111Imum amount for WhICh a chech may be dra \\ n and used
Congre~s may have authonty to make such a rule f01 natlOna1
bants, but 1t would seem the aITount of a check dra\\ n on a ~tate
or pn" ate bank should be a matter to he determ111ed onh b\ the
slgner, the payee and the payer and It 10 chfficult to uncler,tanc1
why the draw111g or acceptance of a check for less than a clollal
should be cons1dered a cnme There IS chfference 111opmlon a"
tlo the purpose and effect of the 1a\\ Some contend that 1t \\ ,IS
mtended to st1mu1ate the use of postage stamps and money orders
or to mcrease the CIrculatIOn of fractIOnal sIh el coms \\ hl1e
others th111kthat It may have been allned at the 111allorder homes
The law IS to take effect January 1, Fl1 0
Favors Built-in-Furniture.
One of the charms of the mtenors of some moder n houses
1S the amount of fur11lture that IS bUIlt Into them sa, s a \\ [lter
for the Boston Amencan The seats, closets a'1d book s11ehe~
that are now mcludec1 111the fixtures more than half soh e the
problem of furl11sh1l1g.
Furl11ture that IS b111ltto fit the place IS usuall) more decora-tIve
and more comfortable than cletached pieces could be 111 the
Sd111eplace Space IS also sa" ed by thIS means, and a tone 15
gwen for the rest of the fittmg 111the house. A.. house "ith a
Lerta111quantIty of b1111tm furruture never has that bare unhved-
In 100h that S0111ehomes have Even before the final furl11shmg
1S added the elements of ho~pltalrty are present and make them-seh
es tcIt 111the deep \\ llldo\\ seats or the cozy 111g1enook ThI~
I~ true e, en as regards the kItchens
In some recently bwIt bl1Ck houees are two lal ge cl'Jsets
,me! '-111k a convel11ent shelf b) the range and a dresser wIth
shelves abo, e and cupboards beneath In stone houses there
are c10seh 111the pantr), 111cludmg a cold clooet neAt to the burlt-
111 ref 1 Igerator, and 111 the kItchen 1tself are t\\ 0 sets of cupboards
a 'Ink and a 10m; \\ ooden counter
What to Buy and Where.
1 he Henn S Holden \ eneer Company, Leonard Bculdlng,
'ILlrket ~treet (;rancl Raplcb has un hand ready tor plOmpt e!e-
In en a car load of first clas:, bIrd s-e) e maple veneers, 100,000
feet at selected CIrca s~Ian \\ alnut, a cholee lot of crotched C1r-
CeL- Id'l Lll ~e and '-mall and iO,OOO feet of chOIce mahogany
\ eneer e
fhe \\ alter Uarh \ eneer Company, 335 ~.rlchIgan Trust
fl'1tldmg. Granel Rdplds, has 100,000 feet of figmeel reel gum
\ eneer~ ctnctl) face stock all crated and ready to ship
Hooel & II nght, veneers and panels, DIg RapIds, ~1ICh,
ha\ e on hand ready for prompt ~hlp111ent about 2:50,COO feet of
bIrd s e) e maple veneers, cut smooth and dned \\ hlte ALo
500,COO feet ot 1-2~ plaIn maple and Lnrch backmg, WIele and of
good lem;ths
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
r --~--------~--_.._-----._----------------------_._-----~
23
LET US QUOTE YOU PRICES ON OUR OWN MANUFACTURE OF
II
IIIII
II
I
III~-_._--
Gum
Oak, Poplar
Veneers.
The Albro Veneer Co.
CINCINNATI. O.
._--~~~----------._---_._----
III
!..
sketch outnght the clever mechamsm of the running gear
"If I should say that III Bnttany I found 70 valletles of
sabots, It would seem a traveler's tale, but I have them to show as
an eVIdence of good faith III wooden shoes The metal tables one
sees at Compelgne, round forms, wIth compact httle chaIrs, all
over:o,hadowed by gay parasols of green and white stnpped Illlen,
:;hould be used on the lawns of our country houses-at any rate
I ,hall hrlllg a model WIth me, for the effect b so cltfferent from
that of the clumsv affaIr one sees at home."
The fellow" ho biOI's hIS aVo, n horn should be careful not
to come out at the httle end of It
It is better for love to laugh at locksmiths t}>an to CC;1 over
'"pilled milk
Circassian, Mahogany,
and
Established IB3B.
Artistic Basketry in France.
\ representatlve of an Amencan furmture house who has
been III Europe looking for qualllt pIeces and noveltIes says
"In France one see basketry, as apphec.l to furniture of wtl-low,
take 011 almost the attnbutes of art At Contrexeville I
sketched a qualllt sun chaIr of cunous weave, hned, cushIOned
and curtallled WIth bnlltant turkey red chll1tz, at Dleppe a most
pecuhar chaIse lounge of bamboo and malacca cane seemed good
enough to reproduce 111 \\ 1110Wfor a b 1l1galow chaIr, on the way
through N"ormandy, the dall1ty bIrd cages hang1l1~ at the doon,
the plant and flower boxes of \\ IlIow, not to forget the pIctures
que baby baskeb-these thll1gs kept m} penol bll'3) and my head
full of projects to do someth1l1g of the same sort 111 \mencan
"lllow \\ hen I got bdck home At Trouvll1e the most dehghtful
chaIr, set upon a perfect wheeled frame, tempted me beyond re-
SIstance, and I bought outnght for replOductlon, as I could not
CHOICE TOOLS FOR FURNITURE MAKERS
If you do not know the "Oliver" wood working tools, you had better give
us your address and have us tell you all about them. We make nothing but
Quality tools, the first cost of which is considerable, but which will make
more profit for each dollar invested than any of the cheap machines flood-ing
the country.
Oliver Tools
"Oliver" New Variety Saw Table No. 11
Wllllake a saw up to 20' dlamekr Arbor belt IS 6' wlde
Send for Catalog "B" 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.
Work. and General Offices at 1 to 51 Clancy St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A
BRANCH OFFICES-Ohver Ma<hmerl' Co, Hudson Terminal, 50 Chu«h St, New York,
Ohver Machmery Co , Fmll Nallonal Bsnk Budding, Chicago, Ill, Ol,ver Machinery Co ,
Paclfic BUlldma, Seatde, Wash, Ohver Maclunery Co ,201-203 Deansgate, Manchester, Eng
Save Labor
It Tempers
" Cost
"OLIVER"
No. 16. Band Saw
36 Inches.
Made With or WithOut
motor dnve Me tal
lable 36"x 30" Will
take IB" under the
gUlde- bits 45 degrees
one way and 7 degrees
the other way Car-fies
a saw up to 1%"
Wide Outside beanng
to lower wheel shaft
when not motor dnven
Welghs IBOO Ibs when
ready to ship
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Good Equipment Means Better Work
Equip your shop or factory with G. R. Handscrew products;
you'll note a vast difference in the quality and quantity of work
turned out.
All of our factory trucks, benches, clamps, VIses, etc. are the
best that money and skilled labor can produce. We use nothing
but the very best Michigan hard Maple in the construction of all our products. It is not
possible to turn out better goods than we now manufacture; years of manufacturing has
taught us that it pays to use nothing but the very best material possible in the manufactur-ing
of our product.
WRITE FOR CATALOG SHOWING THE
COMPLETE LIST OF FACTORY EQUIPMENT.
GRAND RAPIDS HAND SCREW CO.
918 Jefferson Avenue
--~_._---~.~
• I Palmer's Patent Clulntr Clamps I
I
~ .- -_ ... IIIII
III
I!IIII
I!•
II
IIII
The above cut is taken direct from a photograph, and shows
the range of one size only, our No 1, 24-1DCh Clamp. We
mal<e SIX other sizes taking in stock up to 60 iuches "'de
and 2 inches thick Ours IS the most practICal method of
clamping glued stock in use at the present time Hundreds of
factories have adopted our way the past year and hundreds more
will in the future. Let us show you Let us send you the
names of nearly 100 factories (only a fraction of our list) who
ha"le ordered and reordered many tImes. Proof poslthe our way
is the best. A post card will bring it, catalog included Don't
delay, but write today.
A. E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
Foreign Representatives: The Projectile Co, London, Eng-land;
Schuchardt & Schutte, BerlIn, Germany; Alfred H
Schutte, Cologne, Paris, Brussels, Liege, Milan, TurIn, Barcelona,
and Bilboa. ..--_.--~._---_._~-
Grand Rapids, Michigan
I•
IIII•
II
I•III
II
III••
II
III
IIII•
III
I
IIII
I,I
II
IIII
..
~_._._-_.~------------_._~-._---~_. ,IIII
If
••f,IIIII
II I
Here is
a Rocker
That's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
GEO. SPRATT
8 CO.
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
III•
II..-. No. 592. .--. ! _ ....-.
. .... ~
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS.
L D Martm succeed,; L C Lacey 111 the undertalong busI-ness
at Delta, Cal
The Malvel n Chair COnlp'lny of J\Ialvern, Ark, has been
adjudged bankrupt
vValker & Klnther have succeeded Walker & Kmg, furmture
dealers. at Cottage Grove, Ore
fhe RhocJe,;- Flltch-Colhn~ Fllrmture Company IS erecttng
a $l'3,000 wal ehouse at Jacksonville, Fla
The 'Cmted ~tates Chan Company, manufacturers, Corry,
Pa, has been placed 111 the hands of a receiver.
The Redlands } url11tm e and Carpet Company succeeds the
H W. Goodnch }urmture House of Redlands, Cal
The Standard Furmture \\ ork,; of Shlppen~burg, Pa, ha" e
been 111corporated Capital stock, all paid tn, $25,000
The Old Hickory Chall Company of lIartmsvllle, Ind, have
111CeIased their capital ,;tock fr.om $50,000 to $75,000
The Weeks Hosk111'; Company, dealers 111 office furmture,
etc, at 354 Broadway, N. Y, has been declared bankrupt.
Vaughan Brothers of i\lltance, OhIO, have bought C Kuegel s
furl1lture store at Columblana, OhIO, and Will 111crea,;e the stock
The Hecquar Chatr and Furl11ture Company of Kansas City,
Mo, have 111creased their capital stock from $50,000 to $55,000
The Red LIOn Furmture Company of Red LIOn, Pa, are
now runmng their factory 12 hours per day-three hours over
time.
Thomas Evans of the firm of Evans Bros , furmture dealer",
Champaign, Ill, has sold hiS mtere~t 111the bus1l1ess to hiS brother
Pnce Evans
Lams Schneder, unclel taker of St rrancls, \VIS, has filed
a voluntal y petitIOn m bankrup'c} He report" hiS as~eb at $1,-
i:H-l, habl1lt1es, $3,383
W S Kemble, E L Then ell, N L Bucknell and F H
~angu1l1et have 1l1corporated the Kemble rurmture Company of
Dallas, Tex, capltaltzed at $] 0,000
Fred Remsmlth, furmture dealer of Emaus, Pa, b teanng
down hiS store bUlld1l1g and Will el ect a two-story and basement
bnck bUlldmg, 22xlOO on the same site
Stocker & Pnce, furl1lture dedler~ of St Loms, Mo, ,,111
mvc~t $30,000 111 a new three story bUlld1l1~ at 1926-:30 f't ankhn
avenue They paid $25,e'00 for the site.
The vVmnebago Furl1lture Company of Fond du Lac, \\ I, ,
has started the bUlldmg of a large warehouse to take the place of
one that was burned several months ago.
Edward T Houghton, for many year" a member of the firm
of Houghton & Fraser, furl11ture manufacturers of SprL1gfield,
Macs , died on Sept 2J, aged 61 years
The Dolson-Horn Furl11ture and Carpet Compnay of Galves-ton,
Tex, has been 111corporated by D Dolson, vV C Horn and
Ben Dolson, Sr Capital ctock, all paid m, $20,000
The Constantl11e :l\Ianufactunng Company, go-carts and to} 0,
of Madison, \\ b, have Increased their capital stock from $10,-
roo to $50,000, fOI the purpose of enlargl11l:; the plant
Algot J E Lar"on of the illetal Furmture Company of
Jamectown, NY, and MISS Elm 1\1 Carbtrom, Vvere marned
at the home of the bnde's sister 111that city on Septemb-cr 22
J E Roantlec ha~ sold hiS stach amounting to $5,000,111 the
Cortland Cabmet Company, Canestota, ~ Y, to \'\TIlllam H
Gunlocke of the Gcllliocke Chall C01rpany, \Va} land, N Y
Horace E McKmster m the furl11ture and hvery bmmess at
\V111che5ter, Va, has made an assignment Asseb, $15,000,
habllttles, $13,000 of \\ 11lch $10,COO, due to W111chester ba111{.,I~
secured.
Robert J Montgomery of i'JashVille, Tenn, formerly of the
J\Iontgomery Fllrl11ture ane! l\fanufactullng Company ane! later
~ale" manager for the Standard Fllrmtllre Company which ab::orb-ed
the Montgomery compan}, died September 18, aged 37 y.ears
Phlhp Quayle, who started 111thp retail furl11ture busmess
at Marquette, MICh, about a year ago, Will close out and qwt
haVing accepted a posltlOn as head chel11lst at the Newberry Iron
fUlnace.
The Automatic Cradle Company of ::,tevens Pomt, VVh, are
bwldmg an adchtton to their plant The bwldmg Will be three
stOlles ;JGx5lJ and Will be used for the manufacturmg of mllkmg
machmes
Hall & Bruhn, hardWdre and furl11ture merchants at vVtl-bur,
Wa~h , have chssolved par;nershlp, Mr Hall takmg over Mr
Bruhn's mterest '1 he name of the new firm IS the Hall Hardware
Company
G I Sellers, preSident of the G I Sellers & Son~ Company,
manufacturers of kitchen cabmets, Elwood, Ind, died on Sept-ember
19, aged 53 years The bu"mess Will be contmuecI by hiS
Widow and sons
The Lucore Plano Company of Los Angeles, Cal , have pur-chased
a large mterest m the Salyer-Baumeister Plano Company
and VvIII hereafter carryon the manufactunng and wholesale
bu~mess m adchtlOn to their retail trade
Indlanapohs pap ~I s report that the anticipated shortage in
car" IS beglnnmg to be felt 1'1 that state-that the roads are un-able
to supply the cars now needed by the furl11ture factones at
Evans" tlle, Shelbyville, Indlanapolls and RushVille
Jame., R Crews, furl11ture dealer of Fairfield, Ill, and MISS
Lulu Fetters were married on August 12, up 111the Wilds of WIS-consm
1\1r. Crews returned home soon after the wedd111g but
hiS fnends did not know that he had been ''Fettered'' for hfe
until hiS bnde returned from her vacatIOn on September 25
H G :'IcKenzle of the Doe & Bill Furl11ture Company,
Oklahoma Clty, Okla , gave the pollce a pomter that resulted In
the arrest of a burglar named Alexander Robertson The re-porters
transposed the names and next mornmg not only the local
papers but others 111 wbtern CItIes had Mr McKenZie m ]all
The conti act for metal furl11ture for the new court house
111Cleveland, OhiO, has been awarded to the Art Metal Comp:l11y
of J ame~town, NY, though It I'; claimed the bid of the Van Dorn
Iron Company of Clevela'1d was $18,000 lower than that of the
J ame'itown bldders The furl11tme Will cost about $118,000
Veneer Business is Good.
T ,1e \ Valter Clark" eneer Company reports a fine trade In all
k111d~of veneers, espeCially 111quartered oak, blrd'J-eye maple and
I ed gum l\Ir. Clark says the furmture and plano trade IS 111-
proving nght along and all mdlcatlOns pomt to a long contmued
era d prospenty.
I have on hand for Immediate shipment the following brand
new machines which I will sell at reduced prices
4-Two-spindle Radial Boring Machines to bore
from I;i' to 18 inch centers.
3-Two-spindle Radial Boring Machines to bore
from I to 12 inch centers.
2-Eighteen inch Cabinet Makers' lathes.
I-Sixteen inch Cabinet' Makers' Lathe.
---ADDRESS-- --
J. C. DeBRUYN, 130 Page St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
~--------------- .._ .._-------~ I
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
WEEKLY ARTISAN
HOOD & WRIGHT BIG RAPIDS,
I MICHIGAN
I
I I
I..------_._._.~._._.---- _. - - --------------------_. ------------------~I
27
Since our enlargement we have the largest and best equipped Veneer and Panel plant in North-ern
Michigan. We are prepared to fill orders promptly for all kinds of veneers in native
woods, and especially in birdseye maple and figured birch . We are also makers of panels, mIrror
backs, drawer bottoms, etc., and are prepared to ship in car lots or open freight as desired .
"Getting Back to the Soil_"
That lVIr Redmond of the Luce-Redmond ChaIr Company,
BIg RapIds, JVIIch, who~e farmmg a.ld gardenl11g proclIvItIes were
recently mentIOned 111 the \Veekl) Al tban, l.o not the only fur-
Made by Oharles Bennett Furmture 00 , Charlotte, MlCh
mture man ",ho lIkes to "get back to the sOlI," IS shown by the
followl11g from the 1\lmneapoh s Tnbune of recent date
"Back to the land for ml11e,' says Ii'rank D Rubel, of the
Rubel FurnIture Company "I am the fnend of the farmer
and y\ant to get 1tl touch wIth that bu~1tle~~ m) self "
Then 1\11' Rubel held up a cIustel uf the finest "beefsteak"
tomatoes one ever laId eyes all The) y"ere gro\" n 111 hIs gal-den
patch and the quartet weIghed four pound~
1\11' Rubel IS a busy man, } et he finds ample tIme to raIse
garden truck on hIs lot surround1l1g hIs home at 2428 Portland
avenue He set out about three dozen tomato plants thIS sprIng
and they are now all n are than eIght feet hIgh, clImbl11g skyward
on trellIs work There are many more clusters of the lm-::lOus
vegetable that come wIthl11 tlIe four-pound-mark Beans, cab-bages,
heads the sIze of a young banel, potatIes of championshIp
calIber, and many other garden "egetables have been cultIvated
by Mr Rubel.
Rut he I vcr) proud of hIS tomatoe, They grew lIke the
proverbIal VIne 111 "Jack-1I1-the-Beamtalk" story and there dre
more of them than the amateur gardener's fdmlly can use
"Late to bed, early to rIse, \york the garden and solIloql11se,"
15>thIS amateur farmer's motto "You see I was born on a farm
down In ChIcago," sa)" Rubel, 'and I have alwayu wa lted to
'get back to the land' I have a 50-foot lot and 200 feet deep
I have It all under cultIvatIOn I lea\ e the office as early as I
Cdn and hustle home I work the garden untIl almost too dark
to see, then I am ready for supper
"See these hands-thIs good color?" asked the merchant,
"gol, that IS what one gets when they do garden work Some-tl1ncs
when It IS bnght and moon lIght I go out and brush off the
pototo bugs. You see, I Just can t keep away from that garden
I get up at sunnse and VI' ork untIl breakfast-tIme I have 5>uch
an appetIte that the cook has to work overtIme the mght before
getting the pantry filled for me 111 the mornmg When a man IS
not feelIng well, that chromc feelLlg m the stomach when nothmg
agrees Wltll hIm, If he were to try 'gettmg back to the land' he
would be much better off I have tIled It a,lcl got good results"
Another Inquiry-Who Will Answer?
\Veekly ArtIsan, Grand Rdpld0, l\Ilch,
Gentlemen -Can) ou furmsh me the name of manufacturers
who make damty SIde and corner chaIrs and settees for glldl11g,
111 the whIte, not K D ~ If you ca,l an early reply WIll be appre-
CIated.
Yours truly,
Walter 1\1 Engel,
:331 QU1l1'::y~treet. Borough of Brooklyn, N Y
Sept. 28, 1909 ~_._~-----------_ ... -_. --. --- ._--~
I "THE LINE THAT SELLS"
STOVE OF THE HOUR
BUILT TO LAST A LIFETIME
"MEDAL DOCKASH"
For Hard Coal -Base Burner.
An entirely new production POSitively the
most attractive pattern ever offered In the Dockash
Imp Many new features In ornamentatlon as well
as In construction Fire pot and grate eaSily re-moved
through front mica door Dockash grate or
duplex grate and shakmg nng Douhle healer
Large flues and ash pan
NJckeJ tnmmmgs an hook on and consIst of •
swmg cover, dome or Jacket. name panel, and foot
ralls ReHectm$l Jacket or base Base add legs.
damper handle. hmge pm hps. knobs and turnkeys
InSIde Diameter
of Fire Pol Pnce.
No. 138 13Inches .$28 50
"148 14" 30.50
"158 15" 32.50
"168 16" 34.50
2% 10 days, 60 days net; f. o. b Chicago.
I
II
'-----------_. --~__._._._..-_._---- _._._--_._---_.~
W 0 SAGER 483·497 No Water SI.
I I , CHICACO, ILL.
T~LEPHoN£. RANDOLPH 1372
28 WEEKLY ARTISAN
.......-..- -- ..-..- . ---_. -- . - ---_.~----_._.~.~_--.--~._._- _... ... . ...-
The Beautiful, New
Udell Catalog
is ready for all Retail Furmture Dealers. It
wIll help sell the lIne that of Its kInd has no
superior. It contains 88 pages IllustratIng
41 Library Bookcases, 88 Ladies' Desks,
48 Sheet Music Cabinets, 23 Piano
Player Roll Cabinets, 14 Cylinder Record
Cabinets, 11 Disc Record Cabinets, 19
Medicine Cabinets, 10 Commodes, 9
Folding Tables.
ACT AT ONCE AND WRITE
THE UDELL WORKS
INDIANAPOLIS, IND
No. 679 .- - .
Rushing Times at Rockford.
The furmture factones of Rockford Ill, ale leportce! a~
haVIng the bUSIest fall season they have had ~111ce1906 The out-put
of ~everal of them for the mo.lths of Septembel, October and
Kovember WIll be larger tha.l In any prevIous year
Every factory In that furmture mak111g center IS saId to be
rushed to full capacIty at present and some of the plants are rtm-mng
over time In order to meet the demand fOl Rockford good-
As a result of the present rush the pay rolls for September
WIll be much larger than for August when they aggregated some-th111g
over $150,000, whIch was larger than for any month S111ce
1907
The Frame & hxture Company has been ,,0rkIng Ib ,hlp-pl11g
room overtIme to get the goods out on tIme ~t the Rock-ford
ChaIr Company's plant a portion of the force ha~ been
workmg twelve hours each day, or untIl 7 10 each mght
The practIce of overtime IS as a genel al Hllng, frm' ned on b,
the heads of plants and IS alwa}" aVOIded "here It can pos Ibl) be
done A few years ago It was commO.1 practIce to run the pla'1ts
overtIme several hours each day, but the heads of factOrIes fonne! ~-.-.-_-._....~- ~-_- _. -.---..-------_._._. __._._ ~.._~- .-~--
A. L. HOLCOMB & CO.
Manufacturers of HIGH GRADE
QROOVINQ SA WS Co
up to 5-16 thICk. ----
Repalrlng···Se.tlsfe.ctlon guaranteed.
CItizens' Phone 1239
II7 N. Market St.. Grand Rapids. Mlch I~.-_-.---~----.--~---_-.-_._--------.- . .~..__..~.-._..__~. . lI
.. ~
No. 354
It "as not plOfitable and now overtime IS not resorted to until ab-solntel}
necessary.
The men represent111g the Rockford factOrIes on the road are
findIng con(1ItlOns e'(cellent and say that the fall rush WIll con-tInue
"ell up to the holIday season
Just What the People Want.
Charlotte, ~Ilch, Sept ;;0- The two furnIture compames
In thIS CIty are d0111g finely The Charles Bennett Furmturc
Company has brought out beds, dressers and commodes 111 pla1l1
oak, that are Just \\ hat the buyers have been 100k1l1g for, and are
buy mg ThIS company has also a fOll! pIece chamber sUIte WIth
chOIce of tv\ 0 dresser", 1.1 satl11 walnut, that IS very attractIve
1hIs sUIte IS Illustrated 111 theIr advertIsement 111 thIS week's
-\rtIsan The whole five pIeces may be had for $32 30, whIch
seems lIke plck111g up money 111 the street Trade here IS good
and grO\' I11g better every da}
The Charlotte ).Ianufactunng Company, makers of parlor
and lIbrary tables, are lIav1l1g a fine trade TlIey WIll add no new
patterns before January, as the trade IS bUYl11gtheIr pre'3ent ll11e
111 such quantItIes that there IS no nece%lty of bnngl11g out new
patterns before that tIme
~---~__.. ._-------- ---- -------~---.~
II
I
I!IIIII
IIII
III
We Manufacture the
Largest LlDe of
II
III
III
•I . -- ...
In the U nJled States,
SUItable for Sun day
Schools, Halls, Steam-ers
and all publIc resorts
We also manufacture
Brass Tnmmed I r 0 n
Beds, SprIng Beds, Cots
and CrIbs In a large
varIety
II
III
J.~-----_._-_..
Send for Catalogue
and Prices to
KAUffMAN
MfG. CO.
ASHLAND. OHIO ------_._._._-------'
WEEKLY ARTISAN
New Furniture Dealers,
J. L Taylor has opened a new furmture store at Rlchards,
Colo.
N K. Larry has opened a furmture store at Kootenai,
Idaho
The Weaver Furnlture Company are new dealers m Lynch-burg,
Va
W. A. Orm has opened a new ~tock of planos, etc, at
Monrovla, CaL
J B Laughhn has estabhsed a new furmture store at Mt
Vernon, Wash
A R Heymg has opened d new furmture store at Fort
Madlson, Iowa
The Whltehurst Furmture Company have opened a new
store at N orfo1k, Va.
John R. Clark lS gomg mto the ftumture and undertakll1g
busmess at Auburn, Ind
Patnck A Cannon has opened a new furnmture store on
Hlgh street, Chnton, -:\laso
lrank Ebel from ranbau1t, Mum, wlll open a new furm-tm
e store at Lldgerwood, N Dak
The Pnnce I, urmture and Carpd Company of Rochester,
wlll open a branch store at Batavla, K Y
Luer Bro" have added a hne of furmture and household
good~ to thelr hardware store m Chewelah, vVash
Krohm & Koepsell, furmture dealers and undertakers of
Theresa, VV1S, wlll open a branch estabhshment at Mayv111e, W1S
New Buildings in the Far West.
Resldences-W F Young, Los Angeles, Cal, $25,000, Mary
E Evarts, Pa:oadena, Cal , $6,500, R L Edwards, Salt Lake Clty,
Utah, bungalow, $6,800, Mrs A E lVIar"h, San Diego, Cal,
$7,COO, Mrs J A Thopmson, Long Beach, Ca1, $6,000, C Q
Stanton, Lo" Angeles, $30,000, \V Whlte, Beaumont, Ca1, $6,-
OCO,J B Chaffey, Whlttler, Ca1, bungalow, $45,000; Mrs J ean-nette
Baruch, Los Angelev, $20,000, Mrs T Fuller, Los Angeles,
$11,000
Pubhc Bm1dmgs-Blds for the constructlOn of the ~Iontana
capltol are to be opened 011 November 10 Holtv1lle, Cal, ha~
voted $65,000 m bonds for a hlgh school bmlchng, Flllmore ,Cal ,
has voted bonds to bUlld the "large~t and most modern hlgh
school bm1dll1g m Yentura erunt} ,. Korn Clty, Ca1, is to
have a new theatre bmlt by Parra & Gregg, at a cost of $35,000
~Iontebello, Cal , has adopted p1<l11sfor a hlgh ~choo1 bm1dmg to
cost $30,000.
Hotels-The dlfectors of the St FranCls Hotel Company of
Lo~ Ange1e", Ca1, have deClded to expend $400,OCO m the erec-hon
of a four story adc!ltlOn to the hotel bm1dll1g Arnold Bros
are bUl1dmg a twenty-reom hotel at V,1ncouver, Wash
New Factories.
All the stock has been subscnbed 111 the company that 15 to
estabhsh a chair factory at Bndgeport, Ala., and orders for
machll1ery will be placed as soon as the promoters can select a
manager from a hst of half a dozen or more apphcants for the
poslhon
The Arkansa" Coffin Company has been mcorporated to es-tabhsh
a factory at Fort Sm1th. Cap1tal stock, $25,000 of whlCh
about $12,000 has been subscnbed
C H Buttenwender, W. H Thompson, R F Reefy, E H.
R1ce and R. H Sprague have 1l1c:orporated the Dodd Manufac-tunng
Company, capltahzed at $300,000, to manufacture carpet
s", eepers at Elyna, OhlO
W J Osborne, W T Buker and other" have mcorporated
the Lester Mattress and Manufactunng Company, cap1tahzed at
$10,000 to estabbh a factory at Lester, V1. Va.
29
Furnitul'e Fires.
Cowan & Steplany, furn1ture dealers at Greenv1lle, Mbs.,
lost the1r entIre stock by fire on Sept. 20 Loss, $2,800, insur-ance,
$2,000.
C L. Ford's mattress factory at Paris, Tex, was destroyed
by fire on Septembe r18, for the thlfd hme 111 ten years. Loss
about, $5,000 Ko msurance.
F1re m the stock house of the Wa1te Cha1r Company at
Baldwmv1lle, near Gardner, Mass, last week, cau"ed a loss of
about $10,000 Fully msurecl.
The plant of the McDougall K1tchen Furmture Company,
I11(hanapoli~, wa~ totally destroyed by fire on Sept 24 Loss,
e"hmated ,1t $123,rOO to $140,000, Insurance, $87,750. Otto
Truhon, a watchman has confesved that he "tarted the blaze m
the drY1ng room He 1~ behevecl to be msane
Detroit Factories Suffer Heavy Losses.
The Palmer and PlOneer manufactunng compames of Detro1t
suffered a heavy los~ by fire last \Vednesday mght The com-pame"
occupy the same bUlldmg, the Palmer company maklllg
table~ and the PlOneer company reed furmture, baby carnages,
etc The Palmer company 1S the heav1est loser, Pres1dent Wd-ham
J Streng eshmatmg the loss at $80,000 to $100,000 mall1ly
0'1 stock and machmery J\Ir Streng 1S sec:retary-treasurer of
the PlOneer company and sald the lo~" to that company would be
$50,000 or $6C,OOO The loss 1S not fully covered by 1l1surance,
but the damaged bmldl11g and the machmery wlll be repa1red or
replaced and the compamb wlll rev.1me b.1smess as soon PO~Sl-ble.
Will Be Opened Today.
The Buetner Furmture and Carpet Company of St Louis,
Mo, have sent out elaborate mVltatlOns for the openmg of
the1r magl11ficent new store whlch takes place today-October 2.
1he souvel11r carnes a half-tone plcture of the1r new eight-stor}
bmldl11g at the corner of Washmgton avenue and Seventh
street, and V1ews from four of the fur11lshed "how room~ m the
"House BeautIfu,l" located on the th1rd floor wh1ch 1" devoted
entIrely to d1splays of furn1ture, rug~, beds. drapeneo, etc. ar-ranged
111 rooms completely fur11lshed.
New York Markets.
New York, Oct I-Turpentll1e 1S up agam, be1l1g quoted
dt Gl,%@62 cents here and 59@59,% at Savannah, w1th slow
trade at both pOlnts
The trade 111 vanmh gLIms lS st111checked by the h1gh price
of turpentme Pnce~ are firm at last week's figures
A stronger demand for 11nseecl 011 1S noted and conceS~lOns
from card pnces are cllfficult to secure except on large orders
Wh1Ch are not numerous QuotatlOns are stIll based on 57 cents
for Western raw v,1th a cent added success1ve1y for Clty raw,
"1l1gle b011ed and double bOlled
There 1S a good demand for shellac m small lots, wIth Mtle
d01l1g 111 round lots or futures. T N m cases 1S quoted at 15@
15,%, bnght orange grades, 18@19 and fine orange at 20@21
cents D1amond I, 25@26. Bleached, f~esh, 17 cents K1ln
dned, 21@22.
Cordage is firm, OW1l1gto al11tc1pated advances 111 Jute and
hemp, but quotatlons have not been changed thb week.
Sheet Z1l1Cis in fal[ demand at 7 50 per 100 pounds f. 0 b
Peru, Ill., with 8 per cent dIscount.
Goat sk1l1s are held firmly at last ,veeks' figures Recelpts
are 11ght, though fully equal to the demand
The demand for the lower grades of hardwood lumber
reported as increasmg at southern and we "tern points, has
caused a shght advance m pnces on all all grades
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
AMERICAN BWWlR COMPANY
"SIROCCO"
ANY EFFICIENT GENERATOR
dIrect connected to an
"A B C" SELF OILING ENGINE
will electric light your plant, run
fans, etc, and if you are now
buying current, will pay you in
savmg
25% PER ANNUM
TRADf MARK
( WrIte for proof of above.) ThIS planl running In IQUITOS, PERU
'ABC" SELF OILING ENGINES
are generating thousands of kilo-watts
all over the world, and
each engine is paying for
itself every year in savings of
fuel and oil.
(Exhaust Steam is Available for Heating
and Drying)
WE DIRECT CONNECT TO ANY GENERATOR
WE WILL GLADLY QUOTE YOU, WITHOUT OBLIGATING YOU TO BUY
GENERAL OFFICES, DETROIT, MICH.
NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA PITTSBURC ATLANTA CHICACO ST. LOUIS SAN FRANCISCO SEATTLE
~_._--~._---_._--------._-_._-----_.~-_--.---------_.-._._._._._----- .._._. -_ .._-- ._----~
I THE LYON FURNITURE AGENCY I I CREDITS AND COLLECTONS New York
I ROBERT P LYON C eneral Manager Grand Rapids
Philadelphia
Iloston
Cincinnati
Chicago
5t Lours
Jamestown
High POint
FURNITURE, CARPET, UPHOLSTERY,
UNDERTAKING, PICTURE FRAME, MIRROR,
VENEER, WOOD, CABINET HARDWARE
AND HOUSE FURNISHINC TRADES.
THE SPECIAL CREDIT BUREAU
OF THE
Capital Credit and Pay Ratings
Cleating House of Trade Experience
The Most Rehable Credit Reports
RAPID COLLECT.IO.N.S.....- .I II IMPROVED METHODS
WE: ALSO RE:PORiTHE PRINCIPAL DAY GOODS
DEPARTMENT AND GENERAL STORES. ~-----------~~~--~----------
~--_.-
II
III
----~-------_ ..----
GRAND RAPIDS OFFICE 412-413 HOUSEMAN BUILDING
C C NEVERS Michigan Manager ----~-----_.-- -- ----------
._---~~----_._---------_._--------_._.-------.,
OFFICES:
CINCINNATI--Second Nallonal Bank Building. NEW YORK--346 Broadway,
BOSTON--18 Tremont St. CHICAGO--14 51. and Wabash Ave.
GRAND RAPIDS--Houseman Bldg. JAMESTOWN. N. Y.--Chadakoln Bldg.
HIGH POINT, N. C.--Stanton·Welch Block.
The most satIsfactory and up-to-date Credit Service covering the
FURNITURE, CARPET, COFFIN and ALLIED LINES.
I
I
--_.-._--_ ...I.
The most accurate and reliable Reference Book Published.
Originators of the "Tracer and Clearing House System'"
CollecizonService Unsurpassed-Send for Book of Red Drafts.
I.-_._---~----------------------~~._------
WEEKLY ARTISAN 31 r-THE""" BIG' 'wl-iITE---sHopUj I I
IIL____ _. ••• _ _ • __ • _ • . •• _.. ••• •• • • .. • _ •• __ • . ....I
I ,
I I
We Furnish Every Article of Printing i
Needed by Business Men.
lI
I i
I I ru" TI-i"E--sIG--"WHITE 'SHOP'--1
II
I..---------------------_._- - _. -- ------. -
108, 110, and 112 North Division Street,
WHITE PRINTING COMPANY
Grand Rapids, Mich.
... . ----...---_. _. -- ..
32 WEEKLY
Three Stores Combined.
A letter to the \Yeekly -\rtlsan from Pueblo, Cola, glve'i
further particulars of the mergIng of proml11ent I11teresb 111that
CIty, heretofore mentIOned \ new orgal11ZatlOn, the Calk! 1S-WhIte
Drothers' FurnIture Company, has taken over the busll1e""
dnd all the merchandIse of the \\ hlte Dros 1< url11ture Comp:ll1\
and the C Vv Dal11els Home Ft1ll11"hll1g Company and the
furnIture and stove "tack of the Cre ws- Begg'i Compan\ Tor
the new company Claren 'e \Vhlte WIll buy the harch\ are \ E
Jcnn111g" WIll have charge of the cat pet and rug depat tment and
N VV Calk111'i wtll look after the fur111ture end at the lms111e"
.. ---
....-------------_.-- --------, I I
Advertisements. III
I
Miscellaneous
WANTED.
Travelirg Sales:nan fer !lImo s ard Middle Western states to
sell Folamg Carnages en c::>rnmlSSlOn. Liberal proposItion
to nght party. Address Rockfo~d FoldIng Carnage Co.,
Rockford, Ill. Oct. 2-9-16-23.
WANTED.
FIrst class spIndle carvmg machme operator on heavy claw
feet and heads. State wages expected. Address 3-B care
Weekly Artisan Sept. 25
WANTED LINES
One who is a thoroughly experienced and practIcal furm-ture
man seeks to represent as salesman on commission a
good furmture and a good chair factory. Prefer central
states. Halle been supenntendent, draftsman, also sales-man
last fifteen years. Best references gIven. For further
mformation address "W" care of Weekly ArtIsan.
Sept. 18-25 Oct. 2
COMPETENT BOSS FINISHER WANTED.
Man who can get out productIon and do It right. Send
references, state experience and lowest salary m first letter
Address "Mlsco," care Weekly Artisan. 9 18-25
FOR SALE.
Up-to~date Chair Factory, cheap; a rare opportunity, 10
acres of valuable land on which plant IS erected. Full
eqUIpment of machmery, 150 horse power Corliss engme,
matenal m process, plant ready for operatIOn. LeXIngton
IS the only town in North Carolma haVIng two trunk lme
railroads. Ed. L. Greene, Receiver, Lexmgton, North Car-olma.
Sept. 11-18-25 Oct. 2.
----------- ---- - -
WANTED-POSITION.
In progressi1le furnture factory, makmg case goods, beds er
tables by a competent superintendent having ten years' ex-penence.
Tl:orougnly familiar With all branches. Address
"W" No.2. care Weekly ArtIEan. 9 4-11-18-25
WANTED.
Comm:sslOn mC'''''fer Mlssoun ard K:ms:ls rep:ese. mg file
furmture factones. Splendid mixed carload llr es. Acdrecs,
Ballman-Cummmgs Furmture Co npany, Fort Srnlth, Arkar-sas.
At:g 7, '09
WANTED-WOOD SEAT CHAIR FACTORY
To locate on our property at Colu'TIbus, MISSISSIPPi,unli'!1lt-ed
supply of red and white oak, red and ~ap gum and beech at
extremely low cost; plenty cheap labcr, fine factory SlIe, un-excelled
shippmg faclhtie::. and low freight ra es to gocd mar-ket.
MIght take some stock m well managed company. Ad-dress
Interstate Lumber Company, Downing Buildmg, Erie,
Pa.
WANTED
A good cabinet maker; one who can detaIl and make c1othl-g
cabInets. Address B. S., care Michigan Artisan 6-10-2t
BARGAIN!
<:0 H. P. direct current motcr, la est make and In first class
running condltIon. Grand Rapids Blow PIpe & Dust Ar-rester
Co., Grand Raplcs, MIch. 8 21tf
~----------------------------------------- .
ARTISAN
jL !
10 SPINDLE MACHINE
ALSO 'lADE WITH 12, 15, 20 AND 25 SPINDLES.
DODDS' NEW GEAR
DOVETAILING MACHINE
ThiS ltttle machwe has done more to perfect the draw~r work of furut
ture manufacturers than au}thmg else ltl the furnIture trade For fifteen
ye-ars It has made perfect fitttng vermm proof dovetailed stock a pOSSI
blhty fhIS has been accompltshed at reduced cost, as the machine cuts
dove-taIls In gangs of from 9 to 24 at one operatIOn It s what others see
about your bUSiness rather than what jOll ~ay about It, that counts III the
cash dra\vet It s the thnll of enthu'ilasm and the true nng of truth )Oll
feel and hear back of the cold t)pethat makes you buy the thmgadvertlsed
ALEXANDER DODDS, GRAND RAPIDS, MICHICAN
Represented by Schucharl & Schuue at Berlm. VIenna. Stockholm and Sl
Pelersburll Repr .. ented by Alfred H Schulte at Colollne, Brussels. Lelle. Pans.
Muan and Buboa Represented 10 Great Bullan and [r.land by the Ohver Maclunery
Co • F S Thompson, Mllr , 201-203 Deansll_te, MancheSter. Eniliand.
INDEX TO ADVEHTISEMENTS.
Adams & Eltmg Company
Albro Veneer Company
Amencan Blower Company
Barlow Bros
Barnes, W. F. & John Co.
Barton, H. K. & Son Company
Bennett, Chas Funllture Company
Boynton & Co
Buss Machine Works
DeBruyn, J. C.
Dcdd3, Alexander
Edge, Frank & Co
Foy Machme Company
FranCIS, Chas. E. Company
Furniture Commercial Agency
Grand Rapids Braas Company
Grard Rapids B'OW Pipe and Dust Art"' tel' Company
Grand Rapids Electrotype Company
Grand Rapids Kand Screw COIUJ;.all:Y
Grand RapIds Wood Fmlshln.:r ~~,)"'11I'~)lY
Kahn, LOUIS
Koffman Bros. CompanY
Kood & Wright
Kolcomb, A L & Co
Kolden Veneer Co
Kotel Lmden
Rotel Pantlind
Kauffman, B. ManUfacturIng CO.. ~.t:ll....J
Lawr3nce-McFadd£'n Company
Luce Furniture Companv
Luce-Redmcnd ChatI' Co
Lyon Furniture Agency .
Manistee Manufacturmg Camp' 'ty
Manetta Pamt & Color Company
Michlgan Engravmg Company
MichIgan Star Furn. Company
Mcrton Kouse
Nelson-Matt ..r Furniture Company
New York Furniture Exchange
OJ Iver Mach,nery Company
Palmer, A E & Sons
Fittsburg-h Flate Gla,s Company
Richmond Chair Company
Rcyal Chair Company
Sa"er, W. D
Sheboygan Chair Co
Sheldon, E. K. & Compa ly
Sligh Furniture Company
Smith & Davls Manufactunng Compan r
Spratt, Geo. & Co
Steph£n£on Manufacturmg Company
Stow & Davls Furniture Ccmpa.lY
Udell, The, Works
UnIOn Furniture Company (Rockfcrd)
Walter, B. & Co
Walter Clark Veneer Company
Ward, O. A
Whlte PrmtIng' Company
MiscellaneC"'-
Wocd, Mc::::'_~ & _0 ~
15
23
30
32
Cover
10
9
20
Cover
9
31
21
21
1
30
19
Cover
9
24
19
1
21
27
28
22
21
20
28
13
44
30
14
1
Cover
7
20
Cover
8
23
24
33
7
27
22
10
22
24
20
3
28
20
1
18
28
31
32
6
j
j
j
---------------_._---_._---_ .._- - .---- -----------------------------...,
THIS IS THE MACHINE That Brimrs Letters Like the FollowinJ!1 'I
II
I
BUSS NEW No.4 CABINET PLANER
BuS8 lM.(lh~ne Wen'ks,
Rolland. Mleh
Ge!ltleman,
We wish to compliment JO" on the worXl:ng or Jour new 14 Planer
Just .1 ultalled for us
This tnaehlne does he ~est. work or any plane" we have ever seeD. /Ul.4
we nre t'rank to sa; so much bett~r t"Wn we expected. th",f" our foreman.
Said he sim.plJ could not. get along without it.and W4Ssure it. woUlo
pay the price of itself \Y1tlu.n a year in /lork "la/ad on maehlnlls follow1tt&_
Wishing IoU dese~ved success with t11.18new pa\,tet'Il. '8 remaJ.n,
You"S vel'; truly.
Robbins Tabl.e Co
The Buss MachIne Works are havll1g marked success WIth this new design of cabinet planer. The new
method of beltIng-feed gears machIne cut-together with the steel sprIng sectional front feed roll and the
late new sectional chipbreaker, make a cabInet planer second to none on the market today. The Buss MachIne
Works are old manufacturers of cabInet planers and other woodworking tools, and keep abreast WIth the
tImes WIth mach1l1es of great effiCIency Woodworkers of all kInds will not make a mistake by wrItmg dIrect
or to theIr nearest sellIng representatIve regarding any point on up-to-date cabinet planers. These are the
days when the lIve woodworker wants to cut the expense of sanding.
HOLLAND, MICH. BUSS MACHINE WORKS GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
~.- - --~------- - - • - • -----.------- --- __ -...1
~--------------------------------------_._.---------------- ------------------
Cabinet Makers
In these days of close competitIOn, need the best
possible eqUipment, and thiS they can have m
BARNES'
HAND AND POOT PO\NER
MACHINERY
Our New Hand and Foot Power Circular Saw No.4.
I re str{)nge~t Il ost powertu] and m every way the best Send for Our New Catalogue.
machl1 e of It-, kIll i c\ er lD'lde for nppmg ClOSScuttmg
bonl g and gtOO\lIlg
w. F. & JOHN BARNES CO.
654 Ruby Street. Rockford, UliMois I----~I I~
"----_._-------~-----_._._._._._._--------_._~_.
. "
:'RAN[\ R~~?ID
'TH Y 1 .n l 'IT , ,f
I '4 ) ~-------------------------------------------._.--._.----------_ _---------- II
---------.,
Qran~Da~i~sDlow Pi~e
an~Dust Arrester (om~anJ
THE LATEST devzce for halldltng
shavwgs and dust from all wood-workmg
machmes Our nzneteen years
expenence m thzs class of work has
brought zt nearer perfection than any
other system on the market today. It
zs no expenment, but a demonstrated
scienttfic fact, as we have several hun-dred
of these systems in use, and not a
poor one among them. Our Automatzc
Furnace Feed System, as shown in thzs
cut, is the most perfect working devzce
of anything in this lzne. Write for our
prices for equipments.
WE J\IAKE PLANS AND DO ALL
DETAIL WORK WITHOUT EX-PENSE
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
EXHAUST FANS AND PRES-SURE
BLOWERS ALWAYS IN
STOCK.
Office and Factory:
208-210 Canal Street
GR.AND R.APIDS, MICH.
CltllreDe PhoDe 1282 8ell. M..ID 1804
OUR AUTOMATIC FURNACE FEED SYSTEM I ----------------------------------~
- Date Created:
- 1909-10-02T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:14
- 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/116