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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-07-30
Weekly Artisan; 1910-07-30
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRARY
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GRAND RAPIDS. MICH .• JULY 30. 1910
CONTROLLING INTEREST
The Exclusive Agency for Karpen Guaranteed Upholstered J:{urniture~
Means Controlling the Sale of Upholstered Furniture
in Your City and "icinity.
It is the only line of upholstered furnitur£" people ask
for. tht>y recognize the Karpt>n Trade Mark as a dependable
guaranty.
The successfuJr furniture man caters to puhlic taste; the
demand is for Karpt>ll Furniture; then why not take advanta~e
of ""The Easiest Way" to met>t this demand?
Wrift> today for control of the line in your city···the
greatest business huilding influence possible to ohtain.
See Our Exhibits in the
Karpen Buildings.
All Dealers Cordially Invited.
S. KARPEN & BROS.
CHICAGO.
187.188 Michigan Avenue.
BOSTON.
22 Sudbury Street.
NEW YORK.
155.157 W. 34th Street.
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY III1
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Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING I,
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
...-Cat.a.lo.g.ues to Dealers Only. --_._I~ I • • _ • • •• ••• • ••
Luce-Redmond Chair Co.,Ltd. I
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
1!1
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
BIrd' J EYI Mapll
BIrch
~U4rltrld Oak
and
CtNaJJtan Walnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, [ast Section, MANUfACTUR[RS' BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MIC"IGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES, J. EDGAR FOSTER.
GRAND RAPIDS
PUBLIC LIBRfiRY
30th Year-No. 57 GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., JULY 30,1910 Issued Weekly
UNCLE SAM USES TONS OF TREE SEEDS
How They Are Obtained and Planted to Replenish the National Forests···Birds and
Rodents Destroy TheIn.
·Washington, DC. July 30--Tlhe United States Depart-ment
of AgriiCIulture is using this year on the national forests
oven ten tons of tree seeds Most of this seed has already been
planted or sown. Trhe rest WIllIbe utIlIzed later in the sea-son,
as favoralble condntions are presented It takes a great
many tree seeds to make ten tons, Jack pine. the most import-ant
tree for planting in the Nebraska sand ihills by tlhe forest
service, will average something lIke 125.000 to the pound. Of
western yellorw pine, the tree most extenslively pllanted
throughout the national forests as a whole, 10,000 seed will
make a pound Altogether the ten tons of seed to be used
tfuis year represent perhaps 300 mtllion single seeds.
If every seed could Ibe depended on to produoe a young
tree suitable for planting, the result would be a supply of
nursery stock iSuffioient to plant three hundred thousand acres
of land, but no such result can be looked for because many
seeds do not germinate M03t of the seed will be sown,
either broadcast or in seed spots, or planted with a com-pllanter,
c1Jirectlyin the place where the trees are to stand
Even 'when nursery stock is raised a 1iberal allowance
must ibe made for loss In the first place. a considerable per-centage
of the seeds wiill be fround to be infertile. Of those
~hi{:lh germinate, many will die before they leave Vhe nursery
beds, and many more will be lost in transplantling If from
a pound of western yeHow pine seeds that contalins 10,000
mdlviJual seeds, 4,000 threc-) ear-old transplants are available
for field plantmg, the Department of Agriculture has ob-tamed
satisfactory result,;;
There are nO\l\ twenty-four natIonal forest nurseries WIth
an annual procluctwe capaCIty of ovel eIght million seecllmg<;
Rut there are many m\IIllOns of old burns on the national
forests \vlhich are ~ ait111gto be restocked, and some quicker
and cheaper method than the actual plantll1g of nursery-grown
trees IS urgently needled Therefore the foresters are
makmg expenment<; on a large slcale with clllfferent methods
of direc1t sowing and planting, and most of the seed gathered
last year was obtall1ed for thi3 use
Broadcasting 'has already been found to give good re-sults
in some reglOns It was first tried in the Black HIlls of
South Dakota, WIth an encouraging outoome To broadcast
an acre of land with yellow pine seed a1bout eight pounds of
seed is used One of the most fot'midable draWbacks to this
method is the extent to whidh the seed may be consumed by
birds and rodents. If the season 'happens to 'be one in which
food for these animals is scarce, the loss is very iheavy. The
problem of control of animal pests, such as fidd mice, ground
squirrels. and gophers, whicih eat the tree seeds. and also the
further problem of preventing the depredations of rabbits,
whiclh are altogether too flond of the Little trees themselves,
whether nursery transplants or field grown seedllings is
receiving the attention of the Ibiological survey experts of
the Department of Aigri1culture.
In some localities tlhe department has had to purchase
seed, but most of that used is gathered by forest service men
themselves. The cost of gathering has varied for the differ-ent
reglions from thirty-lfive cents to one dollar a pound. As
a rule the seed is collected in the fall months, when most
conifers ripen their seed Parties of tJhree or four men ordi-narily
work togetlher. Where lumbering ilS in progress the
collectors follow the sawyers and take the cones directly from
the felled trees. In standing timber, the task is much more
arduous. The man must climlb and ,pull the ctines from the
branches as best they can. Where these are on the extremi-ties
and beyond the reaoh of the !hand. pruning shears are
used The cones are dropped to the ground and then gathered
into buckets and transferred to sacks, in whirch they are
cart'ied to a central point for further treatment.
The extraction of the seeds is tedious rather llhan diffi-cult
In some cases the cones are spread out upon slheets in
the sun. when, after a tIme, they open and the seed drop out;
111 other cases it is necessary to resort to aruificial heat. This
is applJed by placing the cones upon trays with screen bot-toms
and ralising the temperalmre of the room to the proper
degree. T,he cones open, the Iwinged seeclrs fall out, and the
seeJ is separated finally from the wings and dirt by a fanning
mIll. A good many seed have been removed from the cone
by hand, but this is a sore trial to the fingers or{ the pickers
and an exceedingly slow process.
To create something, even if it is only a sensation, is the
ambition of designers.
Wlhell a manufactul er plans a line of gJoods he does not
figure on stiokers.
4 T WEEKLY ARTISAN
Will be shown as usual in Chicago only, this coming July,
1319 Michigan Ave., First Floor, opposite elevator.
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Standard
CONSISTING OF
CHINA CLOSETS
BUFFETS and
BOOKCASES
The following well known men in charge,
F P. FISHER, FRED LUGER,
R. G. BINGHAM, P. M SMITH,
N. P. NELSON,
W J. ALEXANDER
Rockford Standard Furniture
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS Co.
An Interesting Game.
The two women were slttlng m the front seat of the open-faced
car The two men were Just back of them They lIstened
to the conversatlon whIch seemed to run mostly to furniture
"My bungalow IS lovely," one was saying 'You kno",
my rich friend let me have It for the summer "h1le she IS
abroad.' It's a pIty, she has so much money she doesn't
know what to do wIth It It IS beautifully furnished.
"No She dIdn't leave it furnished I don't kno" why
Just carelessness She has plenty of furnllture, but I have
furnished It with stuff my friends didn't want to have stored
while they were away
"I have the most beautiful parlor sUIte N ancy Jones let
me have She's in Coloradio, you know; and a full bedroom
suite that belongs to Mrs James, who is wIth her sIster thIS
summer in Pennsylvania"
"That's nice," said her friend. as she paused a moment
"And a kitchen outfit from Mrs Adams, ""ho is 111 the
hospItal and has broken up her flat. and the lovelIest set of
dishes you ever saw that Mary Lawson gave me before she
went to South Amereia to keep, you understand, though they
are funny things for people to let you keep, they break so
easily, e~pecially when you have hired girls. !but then I sup-pose
she didn't know I was going to keep boarders
"It seemed a pity to stay in such a beautifully furl11shed
bungalow all by yourself a whole summer long It was lonely,
too.
"I have such a nice front parlor boarder, but he wants a
piano, I have oceans of chairs and tables and what not, but
no piano I have so much furniture it's a pity I haven't an-other
bungalow to furnish and fill with roomers, but no
piano Do you know orr anybod3' who has a piano she doesn't
want to put in storage for the summer?"
Line
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of AIllerica "
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"Let me ,ee,' mused her friend Then when she had
,een "\ 0, I ,Ion t know a sll1g1e soul who wants her plano
ke])t a female soul or a male ,oul You see, people don't
II ant theIr planos all nlll1ed by the sea aIr I suppose that's
1\ h:,' ~he salel thoughtfully
Her fnend SIghed
"I do need a plano awfully," she said "It is really the
onll thlllg I need I have everyth1l1g else yOU could want
for a bungdlow, enough, as I say, for two Ibungalows. but
no plano"
"Has an) bod) offered you an automobile yeP" asked
her friend
"~o." she answered, "not yet That would be l11ce,
\\ouldn't lt, to haH a large comfortable. roomy, swift auto-
1110bJ1eto take m) boarders out m? It would be a novelty I
must look around ancl see If there Isn't some friend olf mine
\\ ho d rather ha, e me Use his automo:bile than keep it in the
garage
"That s an 1l1terestmg game," remarked one of the men
\\ hen they had watched the tVlO alight and walk off down the
street, "an aY\1fully 1l1tere"t1l1g game Takes her fnend's
bungalow ancl fits It out Iii Ith the furniture of all her other
fnends, then keeps roome1 s and boarders and what not An
1l1terestmg game," he relpeated. "anel va'itly economical, tak-en
all 111 all "
"BuL" objected the other, "the pIty of it is that some
other "ealth, fnend doesn't offe her the loan of another
hunl;alo\\ hI the ~ea that she can fit out WIth her superfluous
furnIture and rent to some other roomers"
Eve!) man may have hIS pnce, but It doesn't always
accord WIth hIS market value
WEEKLY ARTISAN
------_._-_._---------------.-_-..-_.--.-. -.-.---------------.-.-.._.._-----.--- p-- I "THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
I BARTON'S GARNET PAPER II
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Sharp, Very Sharp, Sharper Than Any Other.
SUPERIOR TO SAND PAPER. It costs more, BUT It Lasts Longer; Does Faster Work.
Order a small lot; make tests; you will then know what you are getting. WE GUARANTEE SATISFACTION. Furniture
and Chair Fadories. Sash and Door Mills, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others will consult their own interests by using it. AlIO
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, fumished in rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa .
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For Comfort on the Sea.
Through the use aboard ocean-golnlg vessels of a dining-saloon
chaIr V\ hiCh has been invented by John Jacob Astor,
of ~ ew York, passengers on the "levIathans of the deep"
may 111future be spared the excItement and inconvenience of
be111g battered albout a ship's dining-room in a rough sea
whIle a-ppeas111g the alppetIte Mr Astor has conceived the
idea of a chaIr that is adjustable in every res1pect, and the
movements of whIch may be controlled by the diner as he
proceeds to dIspose of the savory dIshes provided by the
vessel's chef The chalf, which IS herewIth pictured, is set
on the floor at such dIstance from the table as IS convenient
for the d111er Then It accommodates itse1Jf to the lurching
of the ShIp and enables the user to adjust himself to every
condItIOn that may be presented by the boat standing on
beams or dIpplDg her first cabin rail. The arrangement is
founded on a vacuum CUipwhich holds the chair to the floor
and ,from which extends a series of legs that allow the chair
seat a freedJom that could hardly be exceeded were they of an
altogether flexIble character.
The Walters Win Out.
D N & E Walter, lfamous furniture dealers of San Fraln-cisco.
have won out 111their dispute with the customs authori-tIes
over an importation of antique furniture which lfor several
months has been held by the customs department pending
a settlement of the valuation of the lot. The decision of the
Board was a vindicatIOn of the valuation set upon the goods
by the importers.
The furniture came to this country albout six months
ago and was valued at approximately $100,000. It had been
collected in France by the expert from the Walter firm. who
made a specIal tr~p aibroad to obtain authentic antiques suit-able
for Cahforma homes, and as a result brought a large
assortment OIf table,s, chairs, bric-a-brac alnd all kinds of in-terior
furnishings.
The collection was one of the most complete ever brought
to San Francisco, and when it came to placing a value on it
dlfferel11lces of opimon arose between the customs representa-tives
and the Importers. the latter holding that the Iprice paid
for lt by its buyer should be the dutiable value. The case
was heard by three members of the General Board of Ap-praisers.
which has finaLly decided that the value set upon it
by the Walter firm is correct.
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, .COLUMBIA FAULTLESS BEDDING
SAMPLES SHOWN AT
THE BIC BUILDINC, 1319 MICHIGAN AVENUE,8TH FLOOR. CHICACO.
MANUFACTURERS' BUILDING, CARE ORINOCO FURNITURE CO" CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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6 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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New designs In the Louis XVI Style.
No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GraQd Ilapids
GRAND RAPIDS,
Brass <00.
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METAL BEDS IN CENTRAL AMERICA.
Why German Manufacturers Hold the Bulk of
the Trade.
James W. Johnson, American Consul at Carin to, Nicara-glUa,
writes as follows in -regard to the use of metal bed., III
that and other Central AmerIcan countnes
"Amerlican manufacturers of metal bedsteads '\\ ho are
looking for a market in Nicaragua are apprised that bed-steads
are not generally used here The greater portIOn of
the popUlation sleep on "tijeras," folding canvas cots of natIve
manufacture Tlhe legs are of heavy wood and fold togethel
like a pair of scissors; they might be termed extended camp
stools. These cots are in general use not merely on account
of the hi~her cost of imported bedsteads Althougb hard and
uncomfortable, until one is acoustomed to them. thev are
cooler than a bedstead with mattress, and several of them
may be used at night in a room and easily folded and placed
against the wall or taken out entirely in the day, thus allow-ing
the same room to Ibe used both as a sleeping and living
room From this it can be seen that could imported bed-steads
!be o'btained here as cheaply as cots, a large portion
of the population would sti11lprefer the latter
"Most of the well-to-do people use metal bedsteads,
makirng a market for them well worth any effort to secure,
tihough at present it is almost entireLy in the hands of German
manufacturers T'his is not ibecause they can make a better
or oheaper bedstead than American manufacturers, but be-cause
they make them in the style wanted The only kind
that can be sold here is the {our.,poster, which American
manufacturers, seemingily, do not make except in expensive
brass beds.
"AJmerican manufacturers of metal bedsteads should not
MIOH.
lee], hecau"e the bedsteads they make are neater. more at-tl
act! \ e, anll bettel finished than perhaps any others, that no
attentlOn shoruld ibe paid to people who want something
dlfferen t. The preference .for the four,poster style is not due
to a mere fancy, but. belcause to the four <posts may be at-tached
a thIck canopy which protects the bed againts the
dust constantly sifting down from the unceiled, tile-covered
roofs. and agamst pOIsonous insects. which frequently drJp,
\\ hIle around the posts may be easily draped the netting or
other matenal used as a protection against mosquitoes.
"Therefore, American manufacturers, to compete in the
sale of metal bedsteads in NIcaragua, must make a bedstead
\\ Ith four post" of equal helgiht, with connecting rods to be
<lClltbted at the top The finish should be in black japan with
gIlL or other tnmmings, the objection to wlhite enamel being
that It "0 qmckly becomes damaged by flyspecks To the
\\ ealthier c1as" 110\\ ever \\lh1te enamel and even brass bej-
"teads could, I believe, be sold
"It will be more difficult to meet the requirements of the
people wlho use cots, who want economy of space and cheap-ness
of pnce Perhaps a metal foldlllg cot frame. made to be
covered \\ l~h canvas, could be devised, which, on account of
Its convenIence, lIghtness. durabilIty, and moderate cost
mIght be brought to compelte with the native product
"There is here a general aversion to sleeping on the
ordinary mattress; a great many people \\Iho use bedstead"
stretc'h a piece of canvas over the springs or cover them WIth
Chmese mats Instead of using a mattress, but should a cJol,
lIght, firm mattress of 1 to 2 inches in thickness be devised 1t
could be profitably introduced into tropical countries
"What has been said in this report <lipplies more or less to
all of Central America, and to all the northern >countries of
South America"
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Evansville, Ind, July 21-Very satisfactory sales were
made thy the manufacturers of Evansville in Chicago and in
thlis city during the past month The lines exhilbited in Chi-cago
attracted general attention and many new accounts were
opened. The attendance of buyers at the local exhibition was
larger than in past seasons and the enterprise has proven
valualble to the manufacturers supporting the same and to the
city at large Orders taken by travellllg salesmen and by
mall are coming III freely and a sUlccessful faIII season of
trade is assured Retail traJe IS much stronger than is
u;,ual at this season of the year
Three factories contnbute p1eces that make up dmlllg
room suites in Colomal and Mission styles that are greatly
ad1mired
From the very extensive line of furnitiure for the bed-room
brought out by the Karges Furniture company, dealers
in every section of the United States select some of their
best sellers
The Evansvllie Furniture company exhibit their com-plete
lines at their factory warerooms
The Wisconsin Ohair company have moved their manu-facturing
!business to Mound City, III
A new line of dllling room furniture wlll be brought out
by the Crescent Furniture compa1ny.
Benjamin Bosse, manager of the Globe and an official of
several other manufactlunng corporations, is the leader in the
movement to estalbhsh a new furlllture manufacturing in-dustry
III EvansvIlle Tlhe sum of $50,000 wlill be invested
in the plant.
Ladies desks have been added to the line of the Hohen-stein-
Hartmetz company.
Several lines manufactured at Tell City are exhibited at
the EvansvIlle Furniture Exchange. The manUifacturers of
Evansville are closely ident~fied with those of Tell City,
socially and in a busliness way.
Tlhe World Furniture company is enjoying an active
trade in mantel folding beds and dllling room furniture.
No. 694, 48 in. top.
No. 687, 60 in. top.
Others 54 in. top.
8 Foot Duostyles
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
Lentz Table Co.
NASHVILLE, MICHIGAfIt
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Edward Ploeger who manages a desk factory in Hender-son
and a big factory in Evansville, making wardrobes and
kItchen cabinets in many styles, is one of the busiest of the
manufacturers of Evansville.
Minneapolis Threatens Grand Rapids.
Minneapolis, Minn., July 27.-Furniture making and kin-dred
industries furnish employment for more than fifteen hun-dred
Mmneapolis men, the large majority of whom are heads
of families. This industry, which includes a dozen large manu-facturing
cancel ns and two jobbmg houses, is already important
and IS growmg with the development of the northwest.
The Mmneapolis furniture industry represents an annual
volume of business aggregating fully $2,250,000, and working
capital and other investments identified with it the conservatively
estimated at $1,500,000. Opel ating in nearly half the states in
the union and covenng territory as far south as Texas, west to
the coast, eastward into Illinois, and north into Canada, the in-dustry
has practically no limitations and from its present rate of
development and growth, Grand Rapids, Mich., must soon look
to her laurels.
More than a thousand men are employed in the furniture
factories of Minneapolis as cabinet makers, machine hands and
finishers, and they are a well paid, desirable class of citizens.
In addition to these more than five hundred office men and com-mercial
travelers are identified with the industry. The manufac-ture
of iron beds, mattresses, mirror plates and numerous speci-alties,
which is a rapidly growing part of the business, is in-cluded
in the figures given.
Present mdications are that the furniture industry will show
an increase of from 10 to 15 per cent this year, despite the ad-verse
crop reports which have shown some 111 effect upon the
business. The financial flury of 1907 played havoc with the fur-mture
industry all over the country, bringing on a surprising
slump in the volume of trade, but the reaction came quickly and
the last two years have witnessed splendid growth in which the
furniture factories of Minneapolis have kept pace with those in
other parts of the country.
Conditions of the present time are not as encouraging as
manufacturers migh wish but there is reason to believe that the
business will experience a strong revival before the end of the
fall season and that the business of the year will total up bigger
than any in the history of furniture making in Minneapolis.
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8 WEEKLY ARTISAN
THE OAKS MUCH MIXED. _-------.--------_ •••• we _,.
White and Black Are the Only Distinct Species.
Others Are Mongrels.
Washington, D. c., July 28-It wIll surpnse most pel sons
who know somethlllg about oak to be told that the socalled "hlte
oak timber of our market~ IS often a mIxture not only of va-rious
species of the white oak group but also of other specIes such
as the red oak. This generally unkno\'\ n fact IS reported by the
United State Department of Agriculture, whIch, as a part of Ib
forestry work, is frequently called upon to pass Judgment upon
the identity of market woods in dIspute
Foresters dIvide all the oaks 111totwo dlStl11ct groups~the
white oak group and the black oak group One \\ ay of dlStl11
guishing the two is by the fact that the black oaks reql1lre two
years to mature their acorns, while the white oaks take but one
The woods of the two groups of oaks are also structuralh dIft-erent.
The true white oak, known to bota111,ts as quescu, alba,
is merely one of the specIes whIch make up the \\ hlte oak group
Red oak, on the other hand, belong~ to the black oak group
Red oak ha<; a number of other common namb, among them,
mountain oak, black and Spalllsh oak
There is so much confusion in the orchnaf) use of names ot
the oaks that it is almost ImpossIble to keep them :-,tralght \\ Ith-out
resorting to the Latlll names, but the marketIng of wood of
the black oak group as white oak IS hardly faIr to the consume 1
Red oak, for mstance, IS now much more abundant than \\ hlte
oak, grows faster, and is generally regarded as lllfenor. The
two species often grow together and occupy the same general
region.
In the early days of ItS abundance, market \\ hlte oak \\ a"
derived almost entIrely, it IS safe to say. from quescus alba, the
true white oak. This speCIes combllles approxImately the ut-most
strength and toughness of any of the tImber oaks, except-ing
possibly the southern live oak. whIch m the Colomal da}"
was so highly prized for shIp buildlllg that it was protected b}
special laws. The Immense inroads made upon the then appar-ently
inexhaustable white oak forests, which stretched from the
Atlantic seaboard to about Missouri, gradually so reduced the
supply that the use of other speCIes became mevltable.
At the present time It IS almost impossIble to obtalll a con-signment
of white oak that does not contall1 pieces of some other
species. Of the white oak group those most used, in addItion
to the true white oak, are bur oak, chestnut oak, chmquapll1 oak,
post oak, swamp white oak, cow oak, and overcup oak, of the
black oak group, Texas red oak, red oak and spotted or water
oak.
Real white oak timber of number one quahty IS very largely
cut into quarter sawed boards, whIle a comblllatlOn of one or
more white oaks and red oak may constitute other cuts of "whIte
oak." In many markets the term "cablllet white oak" is now
understood to include a mixture of white oak and red oak, but
it often signifies red oak only.
The question, "What is White Oak?" is now coming up
among consumers and manufacturers of commercial oak timber
The above named white oaks are a dlstlllct but closely related
species, whlch together, must be depended upon for the future
supply. For the ordinary purposes for which true whIte oak is
used, practically all the trees of this group yIeld woods that can
be interchanged and will serve equally well.
Allegan's Furniture Factories.
Allegan. July 28 -This, the county seat of Allegan coun-ty,
is a flourishing little city of about 5,000 inhabitants, in
rI
Shultz ~ "irsch
i Company
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HIGH GRADf BfDDING I
fEATHERS, fEATHER PILLOWS, DOWNS, ETC. II
UPHOLSTERED BOX SPRINGS and CURLED I
HAIR MATTRESSES A SPECIALTY I
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1300-1308 fulton St., ElJz~O;:ltrSt.CHICAGO
the mld"t of one of the be:-,t fruit and agrIcultural sections of
\\ e"tern :\Ilchigan It has qUIte a number of factories of
\ anous kmd:-" mcludmg four furmture factories. making dm-mg
room, btchen and parlor furmture ThIS httle CIty also
boasts of one of the finest furnIture stores m the state Oh-ver
& Co, and Baker & Co, are the olde"t of the furl1lture
manufactUrIng compames makIng low and medium pnced
bookca"e~ ladle,,' desks, buffets and chma closets. whIle the
\l1egdn I llrmtlll e company devotes theIr energIes to gett1l1g
out a lme of buffets, chma closets and '>lde tables The latter
company made theIr first exlllblt in Grand RapIds this season
and PreSIdent Nash reports that "the boys" sold so much
goocl '> that It \\ 111take at least ninety days to get them out,
and If they contmue to send m orders the factory WIll have
all It can do for the rest of the year
Bames & MoshIer make a good hne of kitchen cabinets.
and Sweet & BIggS formerly of Grand RapIds make a fine
Ime of upholstered furniture
Furniture Agent in Trouble.
i\e\\ YOlk Sun of July 23~Lol1ls J. Weglel11, an agent for
a furmtnre concel n was 111the Toombs police court yesterday
charged WIth bu)mg confiden!ldl informatlOn from a clerk 111
the traffic department of the ~ ew York Telephone company.
Vvalter J Keat111g, speCIal agent for the telephone company,
saId that 1,\ eglem has been paY1l1g I,A,T alter H O'Rourke. one
of the company's clerks, $2 a week for a year for hsts of the
campan} :-,ne\\ sub:-,crIbers The pohce say that vVeglein called
on the subscnbers to leam whether they were in the market for
furnIture a:-, v\ ell a, telephone, Weglein was held for
speCIal seSSlOns
WEEKLY ARTISAN
~-----------_ ..-..---_._---------------.-.-_...-.-----------------"'""'! ....
T"E COLONIAL BED COMPANY
BEAUTY
STRENGT"
DURABILITY
SANITARY
ALLI:NlOWN, PA.
TWICE TOLD TALES.
What You Read in the Daily Michigan Artisan on
January 22, 1895.
Knauss & Green manufacturers of Chicago, have assigned.
The Saginaw (Mich.) Furniture company succeeds Ring,
Mernll & Tillotson.
Letters patent have been granted to Harry Widdicomb
covering the construction of "curved veneered panels."
Lewis Ginter of Allen & Ginter, Richmond, Va., is pur-chasing
an outfit for the hotel Jefferson, in Grand Rapids.
The Brooklyn (N. Y.) Furniture company offer an oak
chamber suite including a triple mirrored dresser, for $12.50
at retCliiI.
R. J. Horner & Co., have purchased a desirable site and
will commence the erection of a large store building in New
York soon.
John H. Crane, who is spending a few days in- Grand
Rapids is a pioneer in the furniture trade of St. Louis. He
opened his first stock of furniture in that city in 1856.
Buyers arrived: Rdbert Keith, A. Jacoby, Kansas City;
General E. P. Johnson, W. S. Allen, Los Angeles; W. F.
Carrol, Chicago; C. W. Mehornay, J. H. North, Kansas
City; B. Rosenthal, L. L. Clark, Omaha; George P. Staples,
George E. Wood and E. B. Cobb, Boston; W. H. Hall, Grand
Ledge, Mich.: A. B. Hussong, Terre Haute; E. J. Huber,
Columbus, Ind.; F. A. Faller, Wilmerding, Pa., Joseph N.
Harmon, Wilmington, Del.; L. F. Hornaday, Crawfordsville,
Ind.; Henry Feige, Saginaw; George B. Gallup, Jacks::>n,
Mich.
Interview with C. A. Brockway: "I think the reproduc-
Various Styles
in OAK
MAUOGANY
IMll. MAUOGANY
BIRD'S I:YE
MAPll:
CIRCASSIAN
WALNUT
""ead and foot posts are assembled with steel rods to insure
I Durability and Strength."
I. On exhibit In T"f YfAGfR fURNITURf COMPANY SPACf, 4th floor, Leonard furniture fxhlbltlon Building, GRAND RAPIDS, MIC" •
--------_._--------_. -------------------------------_.--.._...-.-..-.......•..
tion of antiques will be a great feature of the trade in the
future. It is done here to quite an extent and outside of their
antiquity there is no questioning the fact that modern antiques
are infinitely superior to the originals. They are better be-cause
of their supenor construction, and but very few
genuine antiques are of value outside of their history. The
uses to which marquetry is put are absurd. It is not applied
with taste or reason. Marquetry is a feature of certain schools
of art. It should never be used outside of those schools. It
can be used properly in Dutch, Italian and French styles.
Marquetry originated in Italy. Its proper uSe was extended
by the Dutch and the French. When a Yankee composite
table or Sideboard is plastered all over with marquetry the re-sult
is disgustmg to refined tastes."
Even the new woman prefers old styles in furniture.
,-
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Detr01t, hi:, home, to spend a week, after which he wIll start
out on hIS fall triP
ElI D l'vI1ller of Eh D MIller & Co, of EvansvIlle, Ind,
1eturned Tuesday lllght to hIS home 111the HoosIer state after
spendmg the July ~eason with the :i\hller exhIbIt 111the Furniture
Exchange.
Lou Kammen, adverhsmg manager fm the Langslow-Fow-ler
company, wdl rettll n Saturday to Rochester, NY, after
"pendmg the Jul} season wIth the Langlow exlub1t m the 1319
bmld111g
President S C LangslQw of the Langslow company left
1hursda} for); ew York CIty on the TwentIeth Century LImited
P 1'-, Ball1es at E T Barnes & Son, left Chicago Tuesday for
the Pacific coast after :,pend111g the season on the fifth floor of
the \1anufacturer~' btllld111g, 1319 ::\I1ch1gan avenue
Henry Swanson, travehng representative for the Skandia
lurlllture CQmpany ll1 all of the large CltIes from PhiladelphIa
to Kamas CIty, left Thursday for h1& fall tnp after spendll1g
J nl) at 1319 l'\I1chlgan avenue ll1 charge of the SkandIa exhIbIt.
Ed ~Iersman of the J\Iersman Brothers and Brandts com-pam,
Cel111a,0 , left Tuesday for h1s home ll1 the Buckeye state
atter spenclmg the July season at 131;) MIchIgan avenue. He
q\ s the season has been very satIdactory. Mr. Mersman will
lea\ e ~ngl1st 10 for Odll1 1I1ch, where he WIll spend a month
\\ Ith hi" fat11lly, resorting
E \ Dalberg, travelll1g 111Indiana, OhlO and l\I1chigan for
the SkandIa Fmllltnre company, left Thur:,day for Frankfort,
::\I1ch , to spend ten days with hiS Llmily, resortll1g. After that
he WIll start out on hIS fall triP
C L Barron, ~ales manager fQr the Oberbeck Brothers Man-u
taLtunng compan}, \\ III leave August 5 for a tnp through the
~out!l\\ est and to the PaCific coast.
R Jo!lffe, tra\elmg the lake shore distnct for Stearns &
J o"ter, left Chicago fm hiS home m DetrOit to spend a week
before "tartmg out on his regular fall tnp
r \\ Creech, travehng m Iowa, M1ssoun, Nebraska and
I"ama:, left Saturday for hiS home 111Kansas CIty, Mo, and
a tter 1emam111~ a \\ eek \\ III start out on hIS fall tnI" Mr
CI eech reporb the July season one of the most satIsfactcry m
the h1stor} of the Stearns & Foster company.
At the Hafner l11flllture company's exhIbIt 111the Furlll-ture
E'-change bmlc!lng, Fourth :,treet and Wabash avenue, re-ports
of a good trade are heard The Hafners have some
unusually gQod deSigns 111 bed davenpOl ts, couches and their
adjustable lounges The:,e they are making 111 larger quant1-
tie" than e\Cr, and as thIS cub a comlderable figure 111 the cost
at manufacttll e, they are qUOt111g attractIve pnces, that are
brlng111g car load 01clers it am some of the c!a:,est buyers in
thh country 1 hey recently ~dded another travehng repre-
10 WEEKLY ARTISAN
ChIcago, July 29 -LOUIS Hahn, designer and detader ot
furnIture, was m ChIcago Thursday on hIS way home to Grand
RapIds, MlCh. Mr. Hahn has been absent from Grand Rap1cb
the past three months.
William P. Keeney, the well known southern tra\ cler tor
a number of the promlllent furlllture manufactUring concerns
\Va" in Chicago several days thIS week, and left today for 1m
home III EvansVIlle, Ind.
~Ianager Senour Qf the ShelbyVIlle Wardrobe company left
Chicago Wednesday to return to hIS home III ShelbYVIlle, Ind,
after ~pending the exhIbItion season at 1319 MIchigan avenue
President Charles J. Kllldel of the Kllldel Bed compan}, said
\ Vedrwsday: "\Ve have had a very sat1sfactor} J nly season Our
three factones are all g01l1g to be rushed thIS fall and deak,-
should, in anticipation of the fall bus1l1ess, send 111theIr order~
cady If they WIsh prompt dehvenes.
Manager Charles IElmenclorf of the :\Ialllstee :-Ianufactur-ing
company IS greatly pleased at the volume of btbllles" done
thIS July and says the season IS theIr best ll1 twO) ears
E. A. Bowman, travellllg representatlVe for the Skandl~
Furmture company 111the mIddle states and the south\\ est, lett
Wednesday night for hIS fall trip. M~. Bowman spent the J ul)
season WIth the SkandIa exhIbIt at the Manufacturers' E"h1b1
tion building.
C. E. Lundberg, IlllllOlS and W 1sconSlll travel111g represen-tative
for the SkandIa 1111e,left \Vednesday for Rockford
Leo Buckner of the Travei"se City ChaIr compan}, spe~lt
Thursday He repcrts a satl:,factory season's bU~1l1ess tor 111-
company in the ChIcago and Grand RapIds markets
C. H Lenhart of the Plymouth Chair compan), left Satur-day
for Plymouth, W1S, afte1 spend111g the eXh1bltlOn season at
the Fourteen Eleven builcllllg.
John A. Flick of the Buckeye ChaIr compan}, Ra\ enna, 0
left ChIcago Saturday after spendlllg the July sea:,on Wlth the
Buckeye exhibIt on the eIghth floor of the }lanufacturers Lx-h1b1tion
bUlldlllg, 1319 MIchigan avenue :-Ir Fhck repO! ts the
July season one of the best the company has ever had
O. P. Schneckenburg, traveling 111the east fOl the Shelb}-
ville lines, left Wednesday for his home 111TIffin, 0, to spend
a week.
"Billy" Hurst, travehng representative on the PaClfic coa"t
for the Wolverine Manufactur111g company, left \ \ eclnesdd) f01
.-.. .-....--..----------------- ._-----_ ...._._._._----------
WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
....~
I Zinc Lined. Porcelain Lined.
White Enamel Lined. Opal-Glass Lined.
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting In a
line of the" Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists. I . II1
I•
THE ALASKA REFRIGERATOR COMPANY, EXcl~s~~eu~~;~~:~:~MorUSKEGON, MICH,
New York Office, 369 Broadway, L E. Moon, Manager
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
No 9-Porch ChaIr
Large Size Oak Seat Green or MISSlOn FJrlISh \IIelght,20 pounds
No lO-Porch Rocker
Large sIze Oak Seat Green or MlsSlOn FInIsh Weight21%pounds
No. ll-Porch Settee
Seat40 lllcheslong 17%lllchesdeep OakSeat Greenor
MIssIOnfilllSh Weight,32pounds
RICHMOND CHAIR,---C--O--M-P--A_N.Y.-,---R-I_CHMONDl INDIANA .._-----------------,
sentat1ve to theIr sales force, C B Reeves of Cleveland, OhIO,
\IIho will represent them in MichIgan, OhlO and Pennsylvama,
startl11g out at the close of the exhIbItion season
On Thursday mght, July 22, a fire broke out 111a shed op-posite
the alley on whIch faces the rear of the Central Manufac-tunng
company's plant at 454 Armour street The flames from
the frame structure were blown acro"s the narrow alley and
It was but a short tIme before three of the floors ot that factory
were ablaze The fire was confined to the rear of the factory
and there was more damage done by \\later than flames. After
a three days' shut-down they have aga111 started manufactur-l11g
and report that all damages have been adjusted and that the
fire has not mterfered WIth the bUSl11ess.
The CommerCIal :G urmture company, ChIcago, has broken
ground for Its addltlOn to the factory The new structure Will
be 121 x 72 feet and when completed WIll make a frontage for
their plant, l11c1udmg the bU1ld111gsnow occupIed, of 325 feet
Mr. Stnnge, who was on the SIck hst for some weeks recently,
and who has been lookmg after the matter of the new bUlld111g,
was obhged to call a halt for a tune but has now entirely re-covered
and IS as active as ever. The new addItion WIll be
ready for occupancy about September 15
Edward Gault, for twenty-five years bookkeeper for the
Schultz & HIrsch company, 1300 Fulton street, recently WIth-drew
from the pOSitIOn he ha" so ably and consclCntlOusly filled
during the quarter century he was WIth that well known house,
and is taking a well earned rest Mr Gault has helped to make
most of the hIstory of thIS house whIch through many VICISSI-tudes,
111ctudmg th1 ee pal11CS, has saIled along safely, ever 1n-creas111g
its bus111ess and en] 0Yl11g added prospenty 111WhICh
he has shared. DUling hIS many years of serVIce Mr Gault
has put away suffiCIent to feel that he can, now take the rest
he needs WIthout finanClal wony He has had hIS day dreams
of a pretty home 111the count1y and a farm where he could be
out 111the open, after the close confinement of years, but as yet
has not defi11ltely settled as to hIS future, being satisfied for the
present, SImply to stay at home and 1est The Artisan, of
whIch he has been a reader for upwards of 20 years, WIshes hIm
many years of happmess wherever he may choose to make his
home
When a boy begins to wash hIS hands and face without
bemg told look for the girl in the case
Cost of Living in Australia.
The mOf11mg Herald of Sydney, New South Wales, Aus-t1aha,
recently pubhshed the results of an 111vesttgation as to
the cost of h 111gat present as compared with 1899, from whIch
It appear's that the advance has been about the same as in the
Ul11ted States of America The Herald's 111ve"t1gators £0:'"--:
that, WIth t1 e exceptlOn of tea, coffee and potatoes, all kinds
of provlslOn have advanced 111pnce, the average being about
30 per cent
Clot1un , beddl11g, etc, have not advanced much, but the
quahty has echned as the home productlOn has been largely
111creased. Prices of imported articles 111these hnes have ad-vanced
about 15 per cent. The Mormng Herald's article con-cludes
as follows:
"It costs more to furnish a house now than it did in 1900.
Curtains, table covers, tapestry pIece goods and art serges have
gone up at least 25 per cent. Carpets have not increased so
much; but then the Brussels or WIlton carpet today IS not ex-actly
the same article as It was in 1900. A Bi'ussels carpet
that cost $110 a yard then costs $1 35 now, not a great increase
It looks the same, but as a matter of fact the world is being
given more and more of shoddy, because the world demands it.
Wl1ton WhlCh cost $1175 1ll 1900, costs $205 now Best inlaid
hnoleum has gone up from $1 20 to $1.35, and printed linoleum
from 73 cents to 85 cents The cheapest hnes in lmoleums
have mcreased in cost.
"The price of local furniture, though it is 15 to 20 pet'
cent cheaper than Imported Amencan furmture today, has 111-
creased by about 20 per cent over the pnce'that used to be paid
for Imported furmture 1111900 ·Vhthm the last few days the
price of pith chairs has ll1creased 25 per cent
"Lastly, the cost of bt1lld111g has increased so that it is
wldely estimated that a cottage which cost $1,500 111 1900 wou.ld
cost nearly $~500 today. Rents are estImated to have mcreased
10 per cent since 1900.
"From these mquiries, summanzed fairly, it IS eVldent that
the cost of hving 111 New South \Vales has very largely increased
dunng the past decade, but It IS the houseWIfe only who will
probably be able to tell the actual story-the best test will be a
companson of the tradesmen's bIlls."
Some people can't even do thelr duty wlthout patting
themselves on the back.
l
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Complete lines of samples are displayed at 1411 Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, and in the Furniture Exhibition Building, Evansville.
THE KARGES FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Chamber Suites, Wardrobes, Chiffoniers, Odd Dressers, Chlfforobes
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of KItchen Cabinets, K D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, in mutatIon
golden oak, plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Foldmg Beds, Buffets, Hall Trees, China Closets,
Combination Book and LIbrary Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plain oak, imitation quartered oak, and solid quartered oak,
Chamber Suites, Odd Dressers, Beds and ChIffoniers in tmltatJon quartered oak, Imitation
mahogany, and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Superior" Line of Parlor, Llbrary, Dmmg and Dressing Tables.
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by The Karges Furniture Co
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cllbs, Wire Springs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association .
.. •
W E J! K L Y ART I SAN 13
Made by Bosse Funnture Company. Made b) World Furniture Comp,n)
._.... .
Made by Bockstege FurnIture Co
-,----------- ---,-- ----------._----------..-..-. -.-~
•
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14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
THE GEO. B. LUPFER CO., 262-94 North Hanover St.,
Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. Lupfer having sold his interests in the firm .n which he was a full partner for
sixteen years, during which time he had full charge of the manufacture of FlOe
bedding, wIshes to announce to the Furmture Trade that he has orgamzed the
Geo. B. Lupfer Company. I
Purchased an up-to-date Factory bUlldlOg. lOstalled the best and most modern I
machinery for manufacturing a superior lme of Mattresses, Box Springs, Woven and Coil Wire Springs, Feathers and Pillows. I
Guaranteed in quality and price. ,I
You are invited to call and examme the ments of our hnes. WIth our New Equipment, long experience and square dealmg, we soliCIta
portion of your business, which Willhave our Im'l1edlate and best attention. I
Samples shown only with F. T. Plimpton & Co., 1319 Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. (4th floor), and at the factory. II
h- •••• •• • - •• ----------.. --- --~
ANNOUNCEMENT.
WORK OF EARLY ENGLISH DESIG~ERS
Historic Styles and Their Influence on ~Iore
Modern Periods.
Vlfglllla RabIe, 111 the tenth of a senes of artlcle'i on
"Hlstonc Styles In Fur111ture," pubhs1hed 111 "The Hou~e
Beautiful," wntes as follows
In our devotlOn to the llate eIghteenth century \\ e are
apt to overlook the nch legalcy bequeathed to us by the early
eighteenth, or to confuse It with other penod" There are
several reasons for our penfect faIth III ever} thlllg marke i
"late e1g'hteenth" In the fir'it place, It \\ a" a time of g-reat
beauty In deSIgn, of U111ty, of resen e, of ehm111atlOn I hI,
has come down to us as a tradItion and would be accepted
wIthout proof even If proof we1e lack111g But we have abun-ant
examples of the actual MCork of the day, countle"'i repro-ductlOns,
and innumera'ble books on the sub] ed
So III one way or another '\'.e are 111no danger of 101-
gett111g what the men of that day did, nor of loslllg SH.;-ht of
their place In the hIstory of desIgn Yet the first half ot thl S
fasclllating century was almost as Important, a penod of
great vanety in desIgn. of many men work111g 111mam ,eln"
of old Ideas slowly glv111g vmv to ne\\ If les" u1l1fied than
the latter half It was full of pIcturesque, Igor and 01 ,tlll ch
sImplIcIty, partly Dutch, and partly a SUI' 1\ al of Jacohean
tradltlOns whIch l111gered 111spIte of changed conclttlOn..,
The perpetuatlOn of Dutch motives-such as the cabl1ole-leg
and the web~foot~cont111ued untIl the fourth decade of
the century The welb-foot or flat-foot \\ e find III mo~t 01
the fur111ture of Queen Anne's time. and a charm111g aJ]unl1
It IS to the desIgn111g of the day ChIppendale prefeJred the
ball-and-claw foot and It IS seen 111most of hIS earlv chaIrs,
also at times 111hIS late1 and elaborate "l1bbon bac1~~ He
\\as one of the first Englt'ih fur111tlll e makel ~ to u-e the
'iquare leg, also one of the first to adopt the cun IniS 1 1 ench
leg ,It the Lotll" XV penod, but he clung to the cabnole or
band, leg 111It-, ,anous forms until about 1740
The trans1tlOn trom one style to another dUring thl'i
century was gladual From the wan111g of the heavy oak
types untIl the late phases of Hepplewh1te and Sheraton,
chang-es "ere entirely logIcal vVe are apt to th111k of defin-
He ~t, Ie", and pLnods as suddenly spnng111g mto eX1stence-c1eal
cut and complete \ve thInk of the long GothIC epoch 111
England ,of the Enghhs Rena1ssacne, of Tudor and Jacdbean
styles, of the bnef penod of WIlham and :V[ary, of the dozen
\ ears of Queen Anne's reIgn and of the long GeorgIan span,
and \\ e pIcture each as qUIte dIstinct VIe have one great
a,h antage 0\ er the people who actually hved dUrIng those
epoch~ \\ e hay e such a bIg perspective that we overlook the
transItIon" Pel haps tIm, IS well A good deal of transItIOnal
tur111ture 111U'ithay e been \e1Y ugly Much of it has perIshed
and \\ e knO\\ It only by descnptlOn, or we 1111ag111eIt to ha'L
been
\Ye cannot tell how it will be wIth our own composIte age,
bu t 111 the past the1 e has been a surVIval of the fittest 111 furnl-tUl
e The tranSItIOnal GothIc and tradItIOnal RenaIssance
pIeces are not nearly so numerous as pure iiipecimens. and so
It IS \\ Ith Ehzabethan fur111ture, with Charles II pIeces, with
Qeen Anne desl~ns, Wl1th examples of ChIppendale and hIS
conte111poranes The experImental pIeces-the faIlures have
a pparenti} dl ~appeared "\fodern fur111ture maker'i ha' e
I en del eel marked assIstance 111 reprodus111g the best, the most
ty plcal "peC1111e11'3 and thus perpetuating the g00d The \ allle
of a correct rep1oductlOn both has an example of a style, and a"
a "ell made pIece of work mU'it be conceded Pers0nally I
do 110t 1m e a modern ChIppendale chaIr as I do an old one,
but I hay e a great lIk111g for It, and a real admlratlOn for the
man who made It
Rep10ductlOn", are u'iually more succe'isful than adapta-tlOn~-
falthful cople,", lather than free tran'ilatlOns Th1" IS
pal tlcnlarl} true of mahoiSany rJe'ilgn'i The oak fU1111ture of
30.000
----_. ---_._--------_._.~
Wood Bar Clamp Fixtures, Per Set SOc. t ...--_._---------------------------
Sheldon
Steel Rack
Vtses
Patent Malleable Clamp Fixture ••
E H SHELDON & CO CllIcaj{o 111
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the 2.5dozen Clamp Fixtures whIch
we bought of you a lIttle over a year agoG are glVlng' excellent se-Vlce \i\ e are
well satIsfied with them and shall be pleased to remember you whene\ er we want
anythmg additional m thiS hne Yours truly
SIOUXCIty, Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO
Sold on appro\ al and an uocon
dltlOoal money back guarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL BAR CLAMPS.
Guaranteed Indestructible.
We C;OllCltprIVIlege of sendmg samples and
our complt'te catalogue
E. H. SHELDON & CO.
~-----_._-~- 328 N. May St •• Chicago. ...I ---- -------------
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
IMMENSE INCREASE
THE PAST
SEASON
has seen a very pleasing and very large increase in the business that has come to
us from all parts of the country.
and our friends tell us that no other manufacturer is so prompt in making ship-ments.
We know how important it is that EVERY ORDER should have quick
attention. It enables dealers to do a big business on a small stock, which means
small expense and big profits. Then, too, no other line is made up of so many
The design, construction and finish, combined, make the NORTHERN line the
mo:,t popular in the country. It is our constant aim to make the kind of furni-ture
that will move quickly, and July, 19 10, is going to surpass all prl!vt'ous efforts.
visiting the furniture market this coming season should make a special effort to
see the many new patterns offered. With our enormous line---the biggest in the
world---you can always save money by making up a car.
GRAND RAPIDS
Leonard Building
NORTHERN FURNITURE COMPANY
SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN
CHICAGO
1300 Michigan Ave.
THERE -~--
MUST BE
A REASON
the seventeenth century can somettmes be more freely in-trepreted,
If there be sklll of hand, and taste and dlscnmma-hon
back of the skill But WIth the furnIture of the succeed-
Illg century, he IS wlse:-,t and most successful who does not
alter a hne but reproduces as truthfully as IS pOSSIble
ChIppendale's name stands first In the furmture makmg
of hIS day-Ill fact It may be claImed that hIS name stll!
100m -. largest III the hst of cablllet makers of the elghteen~h
century-however OUI personal preference" may be for the
work of the later men If we beheve that he was well esta-bhsbed
as early as 1720, we must accod hIm a promment
ptlace m the early GeorgIan penod We know hIm best by
hIS later work-that whIch was produced between 1740 and
1765, hut hIS early manner WIll always charm HIS bandy
leg dnd fiddle hack chaIr" may never bnng what hIS famous
rIbbon back" ,10, yet they have mfimte grace and if measured
by "SImplICIty" are more to be deslfed. The fiddle back, lIke
the bandy leg, IS pure Dutch, for Chlp,pendale m company
WIth other furnIture makers of the Jay made a hberal use of
what the WIllIam and Mary perIod has handed down to the
Queen I\nne and wlhat the Queen ;\nne 111 turn had given to
the GeorgIan Other mfluence-. shaped thl" famous deSIgner's
early work, notalbly the tradItIons of Gnnhng Glblbons. Glb-
QUICK
SELLERS
EVERY
DEALER
FOR DETROIT EXCLUSIVELY
"Wanted Agency for Furniture
to sell to Dealers."
DETROIT MANUFACTURERS' AGENCY,
36 East Larned Street, Detroit, Mich.
NEW YORK
Furniture Exchange
bans and \V ren belong to an earlier day but their influence
wa" very marketl m the first quarter of the eighteenth cen-tury
ChIppendale's carvlllg IS qUIte in the Glblbons manner
and the same may be saId of GIbbs, Ware, Kent, and Swan,
men less known than our cabmet maker of St Martin's Lane,
but all deserving more credIt than has Ibeen doled out to
them TheIr names, however, have not been kept alive by
theIr work.
Ch1ppendale was the fir"t Engiltsh furniture maker to
have hIS name perpetuated by a style Celebrated designers
had preceded hIm but theIr IJentlty IS submerged In that of
theIr sovereIgn Ch~ppendale raised IllS cralft to such a point
of excellence that hIS own name became assoCIated with it.
VVTe seldom find hIS designs called Georgian, nor is that term
often used m connectIon WIth the work of Sheraton or Hep-plewhlte
The mdlvidual had greater nghts In this century.
The men who worked under the Stuarts were not thus hon-ored
The relgmng sovereign had all tlhe glory Charles II
was not a great kIng-yet the beautiful furniture of his time
wIll always bear his name vi\!l1liam and Mary will be
remembered 111hke manner when the political significance of
theIr jomt reign is qtllte forgotten The halif timlbered work
dedIcated to Ehzabeth will keep that great queen's memory
always green, and the rare and unique patterns in furniture
and silver made in the first years of the eighteenth century
WIll gIve lasting fame to Queen Anne So we honor Chip-pendale
for hav111g enough indiVIduality to give h1s own
name to hIS furniture and we are glad that the glory is not
accorded to any of the Georges
vVhat furnitUle of the eighteenth cenutry would have
been if mahogany had been unknown is a difficult question
(Cont111ued on Page 18)
been demonstrated in this city. Here t!here was no difficulty
In finding tenants for such a b'Uildling. There are many men,
firms or corpora1Jions Wiho wish to engage in manufacturing
but lack capitall with Wihich to build factories or buy power
machinery They are glad to find quarters in an "omnibus"
bUlldllOg. with lIgfut, heat and power fig<ured in witlh the rent,
but as a rule they do not stay long in sutch quarters. Some
succeed and are soon able to build for themselves; otthers faliI
and are obliged to move out; thus causing frequent Clhanges
which are expensive to all concerned. The worst dIfficulty
however, is found in Ihigh insurance rates. Tlhe risk in 3.
butlding occulpied by many manufacturers ,in different lines
is much greater tihan lin a building used by a single concern.
The first tenants find the rates quite reasonable, but they
are raised on all for every additional tenant and by the time
the Ibutldlng is all occupied the rates are practically prohibitive
and in order to carry insurance tenants are obliged to find safer
quarters Such, at least. has been the experience with the
"omnibus" factory pllan in Grand Rapids.
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
.U.SCR'IOTION .1..0 IOERYEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES '2.00 IOERYEAR. SINOLE COIOIE. 5 CENTS.
PU.LICATION O.... ICE. 10'-112 NO'UH DIVISION ST, G"ANO RAP"OS, MICH.
A 5. WHIT!!:, MANAOINO EDITOR
Entered ••• econd cia .. matter. July 5, 1999, at the post otlice at Grand Rapid., Mlchl,an
under the act of March 3, 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE.E. LEVY
The expense of packing and moving a lot of household
goods from one oity to anotther is often as great as the' alue
of the same This statement is not true In e, ery Instance
There are in every household articles that are not" orth mov-ing,
at any cost, but to suoh articles there may be attached a
sentimental interest of unmeasurable value to the owners
When C A Adou of Mandel Brothers, ChIcago, several
months ago. determined to move to San Francisco. he called
in the warehouse and moving comiPan~es and received theIr
esttimates of tthe cost of packing and moving his furntture
from his home at Jackson park to a near-by freight depot
The bidis presented were im,possible of consideration. Mr
Adou had <lIbout determined to turn his good.; over to an auc-tioneer
to /be sold, when "Pete" Johnson of the A J Johnson
& Sons Furniture company, volunteered assistance The
goods were packed and shipped from the "\';,arehouse of the
Johnson bctony. A short time ago L J Hill of the Fanner
Manufacturing company, who spends from eiglht to ten week!
in Grand Rapids annually in attendance upon the exposition,
decided that !he would have more time to devote to his family
if he should take Ulp his resoidence in Grand Rapids He called
in the agents of the packing and forwarding company. and
when tiheir estimates of the cost of preparing his household
gOOlc1sfor shipment and delivel1ing the same to a railroad had
been submitted the lowest ibid was found to be $6200. The
railroad charge for a car from Cleveland to Grand Rapid.;
is $4000, and Mr. Hill wac; labout to decide to continue his
residence in Oleve1and when he met an expert packer and
fonwarder in Grand Rapids whom he dlspatohed to Cleveland
to pack and slhlip his goods In most of the larger citiec; this
business in handled by a community of warehousemen, and
stiff prices are malintained Many vi"ible evidences attest
their prosperity and the business is deserving the attention of
jabbers of and retaJilers in householdi furnishings These
merchants are experts in the Ihandling of such goods; in fact
a consideralble number have found it profitable to carryon a
p<licking and forwarding section in tlheir establishments Few
extra men or teams are required and the business legitimate-ly
belongs to men who can best handle it
Those gentlemen of Salt Lake CIty. \\ ho are planning
the erection of the "omnibuc;" factory bUIlding for accommo-dation
of manufacturers with limlted capItal. as mentioned 10
the Weekly Arti"an of last Saturday, WIll probably be dic;-
appointed in the practical appliicabion of their idea It is
plausible in theory Ibut it does not work well III practice, as has
A wnter for one of the local newsPfipers, in discussing
the penod styles, says: While the different periods each
ha' e their own striking characteristics, changes from one to
the other were gradual. The changes from one to the next
are progressive and evolutionary rather than radical. The
designers 0{ those days had no idea probably that they were
creating types and schools. They simply put into their work
the best that was in them, aJ!1dnot until long years after were
their productions collected, classified and labeled. In view
of the past is it not reasonable to believe that long years hence
stuJents of furniture art will be eagerly studying and classi-fying
and picking out the best to use as models of the pro-ductions
of Kendall, Somes. Raab, Ralph Widdicomb, Mar-gantine,
New, Brower. Hompe, Hills and ouhers who have
done so much to make Grand Rapids furniture so well known
to the world? May there not some day be periods named for
the master craftsmen of today just as we name periods for
Sheraton and Chippendale and the rest? It could hardly be
expected that the local writer would name all the local de-
Slgners who have attained distinction in their profession in an
item like the above and the failure to name Holt, Teal, Nash,
Klmerly, Hahn, Hill, Jones, Chatfield, Tillotson and Balbach.
\\ ac; clearly an oversight.
Loc; Angeles is preparing to entertain in its own peculiar
wav many hundreds of thousands of tourists during the
coming winter, by the erection of new hotels and the en-largement
of old ones. as a preliminary. The city has some-thing
to offer the sojourner besides the pestiferous attention
of c;peculators and promoters of various enterprises of ques-tionable
value An attraction of magnificent scenery and the
Moorish suggestion of the region and its antiquities, will
suffice to command the attention of seekers for health and
pleasure for all time.
A manufacturer of furniture in Paris has produced a bed
with a music box attached. Such a bed would not sell in the
United States. What the people of this country need, mJre
than aviators, or a new tariff bill, is a bed that will respond
to the push of a button with "a hair of the dog," or a plenti-ful
supply of ice water, as the case may require the morn-ing
after.
A manufacturer who has soLd his output £or the season
attnbutes his success more to good sale5manship than to lUCk.
WEEKLY AaTISAN l'
DIVERSION FROM "SHOP TALK."
An Interview With a Furniture Man Without
Even Mentioning His Business.
J. A. Conrey of the Conrey-Davis Manufacturing company,
ShelbyvIlle, returned to the market Thursday morning, after
spending a few days at the factory. "It is sticky hot down
home," said he to the Weekly Artisan representative, "and I
just 'received a card from the folks at Walloon lake, where we
spend our summers, saying that it is cool up there, so cool in-deed
that they are sitting by the fire evenings. I expect to go
north in a day or two, but will return to Shelbyville soon
Later in the season when the fishing gets better, I shall spend
considerable time at our northern Michigan home.
"I came north last night with a very CQngenial party of In-diana
people, among them being Charles Major, the well known
author of "\Vhen Knighthood Was in Flower," and other suc,
cessful books and play". He was on his way to Mackinac
island, where he will spend the summer at the Island Hotel
with his wife. I know him very well, in fact we grew up to-gether
from boyhood. He i's about 50 years old and well edu-cated,
but up to 12 years ago, when his masterpiece came out,
he was an unknown lawyer at Shelbyville, somewhat in the po-sition
of Wendell Phillips at an earlier time, 'looking for clients
who never came.' He was always scribbling, but merely as a
pastime, and lacking in self c.onfidence that he would ever win
succe'Ssin the field of letters. '\iVhen Knighthood Was in Flower'
was written in the same manner, at idle moments and with no
thought of fame. He thrust the manuscript of this story away
in a dusty pigeon hole .of his desk, where it lay unmolested and
forgotten for a year or more. One day a mutual friend of ours,
who was in the law office with some idle time on his hands, was
sent back to Major's library den t.o browse for a while and while
there he dug up this neglected story. As he read on hour after
hour in utter neglect of pa"sing time his fa'scination became
complete and on completing hi" reading, he rushed back to
Major, exclaiming: "You have comfort and ease for yourself
during the rest of your days in this wonderful story. Come,
let's go through it and get it ready for the publishers.'"
"Mr. Major told me last evening that fully a million c.opies
of this book have been sold. It has been translated into the Ger-man,
Italian and French languages and while he has no copy-rights
abroad the European publishers have paid him royalties
right along. The bo.ok has made him independent for life as
far as money is concerned. But he is still writing. He is a
delightful companion, well read and full of interesting stories
and information. Like other men of genius he has some peculi-anties,
.one of these being his dreaming, or brown study moods,
when he will pac:;shis wife or nearest friend" sometimes on the
street without seeing them. He rides a bicycle a good deal and
I have seen him e"cape senous injury only narrowly at times dur-ing
these moods of abstraction He is c:;implythinking out his
stories at such times, and concentration of mental power is al-
1110stcomplete."
The Importance of Business Insurance.
O. M. Crosby urges the grDwing importance of business
insurance in an article telling of "its advantages and necessi-ties,"
published in the July issue of The Security Agent, in
which he says:
"N ational bank" and other money lenders are demanding
that they be protected, as no matter how good their customer's
credit may be so .long as he lives, the account would be in bad
shape in case of his death. Whereas only two fire insurance
policie~ in one hundred are ever paid, all life policies will be
... . .. T .F •• a •••• --_ •••••••
Pramke & Sievers
Factory: Lincoln and Hastings Sts., Chicago.
Our new
line of
and
(niffOnlfDS
marks a new
era in our
trade and is
the best
we ever
produced.
Send for
prices, etc.
Samples throughout the year,
ht Floor, 1319 Michigan Ave., CHICAGO.
In charge of the Chicago Distributing Co. .... .._. . --- ..
paid-all must be. A well known firm, moving into a new and
larger st.ore, required $35,000 more credit, but was plainly told
that this could only be secured by the head of the firm having
his life insured for $35,000. '\:Vhy so?' the borrower demanded.
'Simply because its repayment depends entirely upon your abil-ity-
your life. We would be repaid if you live, but how would the
amount be repaid if you die? IEven if your eState were good,
it would take too long to settle after your death.'
"Here is a corporation of say, $100,000 capital, whose suc-cess
depends entirely upon the ability of the manager, president
or treasurer. What would the stock be worth should he die,
(and how great is the danger)? Beside'S, every corporation
sh.ould provide a 'sinking fund', and there is no better way to
invest this than in a life insurance policy. On a 20-year en-dowment
plan-the $100,000 is paid in cash in 20 years or
sooner should the insured die, when a new up-to-date plant
may be needed. BeSIdes in tIme of financial stress, 60 to 80
per cent of the amount thus invested is avaIlable for pay rolls
or f.or meeting bills, as so many discovered in the panic of 1907,
when life insurance proved to be the only asset providing cur-rency
at 5 per cent interest.
"Again, here are two business men-partners in a store-investing
say $5,000 each. How secure would be their financial
future were ~<lchsecured in favor of the firm for $5,000, its cost
of course, charged to the finn, as is the cost of their fire insur-ance.
One of these two men will die first-one chance out of
two will each have to win. In case of the death of either, the
business would go on without a jolt, debts be paid and all be
financially safe.
"One of the first $1,000,000 policies written on a single life
was paid on the death of the insured just after the second pre-mium
was paid. Our greatest merchants, John Wanamaker &
Sons, are today the heaviest insured of all men."
-- ~ - ~~~~,------~~~~~~~~~~--
Factories: Milvtattkee, Wis.: Newark, N. J.
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
II
II
I, _____________________________________________________________________________________ J
Reliable Varnishes of Uniform Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
C. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturmg Trades Dep't.
~-----------
WORK OF EARLY ENGLISH DESIGNERS-
(ContInued from Page 15)
to answer It lS ll11pos,',lble to Imag111e Chlppendale s Je-'H.;n,
111o3Jk-]ust as It IS lmposslble to COnCel\e 01 the hea\ \ funll-hue
of the seventeenth century bemg executed 111 mahogam
There se(nn to have been a specIal fitness, a specIal prO' 1-
dence so to speak wlhlch gave to each pellOd In fur11lttll e
makll1g the nght wood The vvood, ho\\ ever, probabh Je-term1l1ed
the deSIgn, not the deSIgn the wood If Chlppen-
.lale and hIS fellow craftsmen had had only oak to \" ark \\ Ith,
they would ha\ e produced entllely ddterent schemes That
they were tJ emendously ll1delbte.! to the mtroductlOn of ma-hogany
they perhaps dJd not realIze, but we do and rate them
accOl J1I1gly
Oak, long the bone and smew of :EnglJ,',h furI1ltnre had
been ,teadlly lOSIng favor, as the heavy Jacobean tyjWS \\Cle
replaced by more graceful ones To V\hlham and \fary must
be credlte.! the great dec1l11e 111the populanty of oak '1 he
Dutch styles made fashlOna!jle by them could not be ("(e-cuted
in such a sturdy med1l1m ~J arquetry an 1 \ eneer
needed a phant wood, ancl gradually oak, whlch had "en cd
the Enghsh fur11lture maker so faIthfully was set aSIde 111
favor of walnut The new wood \"a, ll1 general use 111 Queen
Anne's tIme and most of the furnIture of her reIgn was made
In It Walnut hel,llts own untJl the use of mahogam became
general, and then for a long span of ) ear" the \\ eq IndIa
\\ amI was far 111 the lead, not the onI) med1l1m, but by far the
most hlghl} pn7ed By and tby walnut came m agall1 (our
"<wn venerateJ walnut penod corrcspondmg to one phase of
Vlctonan) then a mahogany revlval took place, neAt the re-cent
oak Renals"ancc-ll1augurated by ml"S1On an:1 craft st\ Ies
and Just at ,present the vaned ll1terest 111 many \\ooels the
mahogany deslgn'3 return111g to the elgtheenth-century types
and oak style" harkll1g back to the se\ enteenth
\Ye have so much to chlo"e from that \\e do not dh"d\'
choose \""'ely The matter I" not ,,0 SImple a" It \"as 11J the
,<ld days \gam m the tremendous gall1 we have made 111
rertam lIne" \\ e have lost in other, Allowlng a l;ood deal
for the glamour that tl111e glves, It IS doubtful If 111 the t\'\ent}-
secontI century, our own age WIll present that harmony and
grace, that perfectIOn of detal1 whlch \'oe find 111 the eIgh-teenth
century E\ en the costume" of the penod fit I11to the
background and It seems to us hke a glgantJc stage sett1l1S;
111 whlch wh1te paneled wall" and mahogany ftIfl1lture, pow-del
ed halr, brocade", and lace ruffles all make a consIstent
pIcture
It IS thIS harmony of \'oall treatment,
costumes that charm'i us 111 all hIstone 'ityles
teenth century the dark oak panehng seems
fur11lture, and
In the se\en-to
be Just the
needed bdckground f01 cturdy oak fur111ture and for the bnghter,
1110replcture"Ciue costumes ThIS b a more vlgorous penod of
the \\ orld ~ hbtory It lack;;, the repose, the refinement, ;)f
the eIghteenth century, but lt charms U:o \'\ Il1h It'3 own harm-on\
Turnl11g the J ears of the cdlendar back to the slAteenth
century \\e fnd cruder furl1lture, CIuder walls, the furlllture
ma"S1\ c, the \" dlls partIally paneled, anJ finished wllth tapes-tne"-
01 molded plaster-all Ibrave and strong in c'Olor, just
the settl11g we Immedlately see for the heaVIly carved oak
and for the brave apparel of the penoJ \Ve shudder to thll1k
what conflIct would allse If the backgrounds were shIfted, lf
the whIte paneled walls formed the settll1g for the dark oak,
or If the refineJ mahogany ~were placed agamst the paneled
oak Tn the "ame way the transposll1g of the co,tumes would
mar the harm 111\ The gorgeous apparel of Ehzabeth's day
\\ould be out of focus against the background of the Georgian
penorl The dehcatc brocades an.l laces of the latter would
be Ilst \\ Ith a dark oak setbll1g The JacO/bean costumes fit
he"t theIr 0\\ n century, and so 111 each case the nght relatlOn
1" mall1tallled
-'\ga 111 "t the \\hlte palne11l1~ of Chlppendale'" day hIS
fur11lture founel a fitt1l1g place V\'hether of SImple or elabor-ate
pattern hIS chaIrs and settees were seen at their best under
these conelltlOns-a fact that many of us are slow to realize
111 the arrangement of olel mahogany furl11ture 111 our own
houses The plac1l1g of old furl11ture 111 a moJern house IS a
questIon by Itself and one outSIde the boundary hnes of thIS
paper, but a plea mIght Ihe made for a less haphazard scheme
than lS found 111 the average home
'\mong the chaIrs and settees from the Martin Lane
"ork-,hop there \\ ere at least SIX dIfferent styles-the early
Dutch types \"lth ball-and-c1aw feet and pla1l1 splats, the
,ame WIth plerce.! splats These two dlstinct backs were also
comb1l1ed WIth stralhgt leg, and later there wel e other van-atlOn"
The curved leg at the LOlliS XV style was a favonte
\\ Ith Chlppendale, but \\ as usually comlbll1eel w1th an eIab 'r-cIte
back There \\ere -,evelal ch"tmct "n\hbon' styles, a
rd~ther UI1COm1110none hav1l1g an 1I1tncate leaf pattern "carvEd
\"lth the nhbons After 1740 the "GothIC mannel" and the
"ChJne,e taste" fascmated ChIppendale, anJ albou1: 1750 he
hecame eAtremely rococo The Enghsh cIeslgner IS not at hIS
hest 111COpy111g the Frenchman, and Chlppenelale pleases us
lea"t 111 hIS rococo furl11ture, nC'r do we l'lke hIm nearly so
\\ ell 111 hI" eothlc and Ch1l1ese absurelltle'3 as in hIS earller
an r1 "-1mpIer thll115s
Th1s man S \\ ork may be cllVlded mto three pellOds, the
f]1 ~t tram 1715 to 172~ the second or mIddle pefOld, 1725 to
1740, and the thIrd from 1740 to 1765 or thereabouts. at
\\ hlch date the real Thomas Chlppendale IS belleved to have
WEEKLY ARTISAN
ceased wonk Anothel Thoma" ChlppenJale IS supposed to
hay e worked at a later day, Ibut he seems to be a rather
mythIcal person who IS entIrely neglected by most Englhh
wnters on fur111ture makmg
ChIppendale's great pomt of excellence was hIs ablhty to
take the crude desIgns he founJ at hand and so Improve them
that they took on new hfe and meanmg He was a past
master at adaptmg, not so much an ongmator as a free dnd
most successful translator ,of all that came to hIS hand That
he has had more than hIS just reward is perhaps true That
he dId not make or even deSIgn half the fur111ture beanng hIS
name must also be conceded, but that he gave permanent fame
to much that {would have penshed but for hIS mdefatlgable
efforts must always be placed to the credIt of "1' ChIppen-dale
of St Martm's Lane" He also paved the way for
Shcarer, Heppllewlhlte, and Shemton Iwhom we secretly love
much more, and often prefer to set up as our own household
gods But m our veneratlOn for the reserve and dElIcacy of
the cabmet work of the late eIghteenth century we must not
overlook cel tam beauttful detatls whIch belong to the early
part and whIch fur111ture maker-; of today are happIly reV1V-mg
The straIght cor111ce such as IS shown on the ChIppen-dale
ccubmet of our tllustratlOn IS one The broken pedIment
of the desk, abo shown, IS another tylplcal motIf of the period
and far more beautlfull than the scrolled or "swan top" so
popular a few decades later These two specImens are ad-
I111rable of theIr kmcl the cab111et an authentIC ChIppendale,
the desk the work of a contemporary
The chaIrs of our lll1btratlOn"- gl\ e an Idea of the "tyles
m e, eryday use-the \Vmdsor made near the 1730 mark and
the other" showmg Dutch and Spa111"h Influence \Vlth the
exceptIOn of the cane ba111ster back, 111 a pIcture by Itself,
and the \\ 11lJ,,01, the;,e chaIn, ale "tlOngly seventeenth cen-tury
In feehng, and are 11lterest11lg examples of the very com-pO"
lte deslgn11lg that eXIsted between 1700 and 1720 These
old pIeces WIth theIr cunous feet mark the dn Idmg lme be-t\'.
een the heavy oak patterns so long in favor and the very
glaceful one of a later day, when underbraces dIsappeared and
chaIrs stood on four strong but slender legs
If It were pOSSIble to secure pIctures of the transItions
m chaIr" from the tune of Charles II untIl the late ChIppen-dale
penoJ, the number v.ould fill thIS magazIne SometIme,
perhap;, ,;,ome one WIll wnte an Engtlsh chaIr hIstory, be-gm111ng
WIth the seat used by the "Venerable Bede" whIch IS
saId to be the oldest m the kIngdom, and endmg WIth the
best modern deslg'ns The W mdsors would then have a
chapter to them"elves, whIch they nchly deserve If ChIp-pendale
seemed to have the hon's share of the record It WQuld
be because he was m hIS own tIme, and IS still, the most
famous of chaIr makers
A Pro~perous Furniture Dealer.
\!" lchola 0, G Vanderlmde, the Muskegon retall fur111ture
dealer, was m Grand RapIds Tuesday, consulting WIth an
archItect WIth reference to plans for the new store bU1ldmg
wl11ch wII! be erected by hIm In that city Mr Vanderlmde
has sold the store on Vvest Western avenue, whIch he has
<'ccupled for a number of years, and IS to gIve pos<;ession
Fchvary 15 next, and the ne" bU1lding WIll be ready for
occupancy before that tIme It will be a brick and cement
Hock structure, two stones anJ basement, with all the modern
lmplovements ::\1r Vander1l11de wlI! occupy the basement and
ground flo')r WIth hIS furmture s1>ore, and he WIll have plate
gla~s fronts of generous dlmenslOns for wmdow dIsplays on
t\\ () "tt eet"- '1 he upper floGr WIll be fitted up mto eIght
sUItes of llV11lg rooms
19
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~
Each
Net
$2~
Each
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
\Ve manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cone All \Vire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS,
SMITH &, DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
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I
20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
"'" .,.-------------_.._'---------------------
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
P.wer Feed Glue S~r.adin .. Maehine. Sin ..le.
D.ubl. and Co.bi.ation. (P.tenled)
(Size. 12 i•.t. 1I4 i. wide.)
Veneer Preoae •. diHerent kind. and .ize.. (p.te.led)
Veneer Presses
61ue Spreaders
61ue Heaters
Trucks, Etc" Etc.
iI
I,,,
I
Hand Feed Gluein .. Maetili.. (P.teal
penchn•. ) Man)" .t)"I•• and .ize •.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
LET us KNOW
YOUR WANTS
N•. 20 Glu. Heater CHAS. E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Ind. No.6 GI•• H.at.r.
I •
Buildin2s That Will Need Furniture.
ResidLnces-Phi,ladelplhla. Pa -J S Cornel (Tal -ton
street and Mernon road, $10,500 . John] Retlh, 7717 \ \ est-minister
avelllue, $4,500, Vmcent O'Farrell, 1635 X orth Bivad
street, $6.000; WIIlliiam R BrIcker, Landsdo\\ne avenue and
Ftfty-fourth street, $21,000, S H Walsh, 1826 Pme c;treet,
$5,500;; John L Brown, Bnoad ",trett and Champla'it a\ enue,
$4,000; Henry J Blefgen. 2227 X orth Fifty-first 'itreet, $9.-
500; Dr. E L. Van Santo 129 South Thirteenth street, $(j,000
Kansas City, M0 -1\ L Pague, 1 \Vest Concercl 'itreet,
$7,600; T J Dunseth, 3045 East Thirty-second street $3,000,
Thomas Anello, 28 West Qumcy street, $3,500; Edith :VI
Love, 3312 Prospeot avenue, $3,800; J ame'i 0 Connnr, 4307
Tihompson street, $6,000; E A Johnson, 326-8 Drookl) n
street, $8000
St Loui'i, Mo -William Cuha, 2842 1\eosbo street. $9,-
000; Thomas Swantner, 3329 ::vrlchigan avemle, $6,000, \\'
A Meinhart, 3201 North Second street, $7,600; Andre\\ \\'11-
low, 3806 Labadie avenue $6,000. F C Shepard, 601; \Yest-minster
place, $4,000; \Y A Bush, 2907 St LatllS a\ enue,
$6,000; ELizabeth Bueltman, 4847 Branconier place, $4500,
\V,jJJiam Peacock, 5787 ::\/[cPherson street. $7,000
Chicago-F Lane, 246-8 119th street, Pullman. $4,000,
Charles Pocile, 2720 South Forty-firc;t court, $4,000. Joseph
P Ryan, 2130 B'erwin avenue, $15,000, H S Sa"e 3640,
SoutJh Central Park avenue, $12,000. IT Shcrec;e\\ C;K}, 3339
Dougl,as boulevard, $20,000, Henry G Hart, 4(j23 Vmcenne5
avenue, $35,000: Aaron Baldwin, 3142 Frankl111 boule\ al d,
$5,000; BIshop of ChIcago, 5108 \\ a;;/h111~ton1Y1U!c\ ard $12,-
000, D ]\I[ Joslyn, 7121 South Park avenue, $5,000, J J
Hill, 3926 Forty-eighth avenue, $6,000
Illidlanap0llis, Ind -Charlotte Hook, 910 East Ra\ mond
street, $4,000; Thomas E Str111ger, 507 Eg'uene ~treet, $3,000,
J J Schoenholt7, Emer'ion and Univer91t) "tt eets, $4,000;
A A. Bowel s, TWlenty-fourta1 and Pear50n stl eet'i, $5,000,
W. A. Waldorf, Wash111gton and Thlirty-first stleets, $5,300
NTHEEW~n"d'~''1PARLOR. ~"BEDr
Need not be moved
from the wall.
Alway. ready WIt h
bedding in place
So ••mple, so easy. a
child can operate it.
Has roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, we 8< Sedgwiek NEW YORK. Norman 8< Monator
Denver, Col-George OlInger, Boulder and Sixteenth
streets, $12,000, Mrs George H Campbelil, Clarkson and
EIg'hth streets. $18,000, Mrs. H Moore, Alhilon street and
T\\ ent} -fifth avenue, $3,500, J T Tltzell, Ra.ce street and
Twenty-first avenue, $4,500; P E Roberts, Douglas and
ElIot streets, $3,000.
::\1J1"aukee, Wis -George W Chandler, 298 Fifth avenue,
$20,000. E A Bauer, 232 Pros.pect aVel1iue, $10,000; Mrs.
"J\ Sch!11tz, Thlnty-first and Cheuy streets, $4,000; Mrs D.
Doeppe, Robmc;on and Lmcdln streets, $4,600; Carl Weck-mieller,
731 T" ent)-slxth street. $5,000; Abram Gehrmg,
Chestnut and llhlrty-second streets, $3,000
Pltt'ilburg, Pa -Elesio Ceinci, 4692 Laurel avenue, $4,-
000, :'Iark Fosler, 2911 Merwyn avenue. $3,500; Herbert
LO\ e, PaCIfic and Termon avenue, $4,650; Mrs George B.
Hill, Shady a\ enue and Hastings street, $10,500; C A Linn,
1180 \f elbourne sltreet, $4,000.
Columbus, O-J. L Da\ie'3, 1414 Eastwood avenue, $4,-
000. R E Glbc;on, 488 Pennsylvama avenue, $3,500; Wilham
H MIller, 82 Lynn street, $3,000; 1\1 rs C C Clark, 47 Lane
a\ enue. $5,500, C E Farley, 133 Ohlttenden avenue, $5,500.
Cincinnatl, 0 -Charles \Vlllters, Mc~il11ley avenue ani
\\ erkroad, $6,000, Frank Gi'eser, R.iUnnymede avenue and
IToffner street. $4,000, C M \"1estmeyer, 2706 Ravine street,
$3 SOO, CatherIne :'1'e)er, Warsaw avenue and Parkson place,
$;,000, Peter Gobrecht, State avenue and Dutton street, $6,-
000 Harr} :\bbott, 8CJ6Glenview avenue, $4,250
Ablanta, Ga-W C Harper, 52 \Vest Peachtree street,
$8,500. ::\1r'3 1\1 P Fllod1l1g, 250 Myrtle street, $4,500; L F
Chapman, 37-39 Lee sltreet. $5,500; C A She1verton, 505
Ponce de Leon avenue, $6,500, B ]\I[ Grant, 97 vVashmgton
street, $5,000, Mrs S J \\Talker, 198 P1l1e street, $3,000; M
D Ruff, 119 Sioubh VV,hltefoord street, $3,750; R H WIlliam-son,
139 ::\1yrtle '3treet. $4,000
Portland, Ore -P A. Carlander, 1216 Mallory avenue,
$4,500, Thomac; Vigars, Ladd avenue, Central Park, $3,500,
E \ HoIsington, 927 East TWlenty-sevenlth street, $5,000;
Charles Za1l1l1ger, East Thirty-eighth and Tillamook streets,
$3,500; S M DaviS, Halsey and Seveneenth streets, $4,200.
Utlca, ~ Y -W H Pecklham, 63 Hobart street, $4,000;
H emy A Luck, 93 MatJhews avenue, $3,200; \;If Jlli,am Parry,
85 Steuben c;treet. $4,700
Jack sanville, Fla -S H Etter, 347 Third street, $3,000;
C E Hogg, Sixth and Walnut streets, $3,000
Peoria, Il1.-John E. Warner, 800 Butler street, $3,000;
W'EEKLY
W A. Hinkel, 1010 Parksidie drive, $5,000; H. G. Foster, 829
Dechman street, $3,200; H E. Prose, 907 McClure avenue,
$3.500, Bertha D Warren, 147 Ayres avenue, $3,200
Oakland, Cal-Frank Tumon, Virginia street near Euclid
avenue, $10,000; R II. McCarthy, Oxford and EUlllce streets,
$4,000; C W Clark, 2849 Garber street, $4,670.
Salt Lake CJty, Utah-C P. Margetts, 430 South First
\Vest street, $3,000; H A Piper, 981 Brooks avenue ,$3,500;
James Ingebretsen, 39 Wolcott avenue, $7,500.
LOUIsvIlle, Ky -Henry M Johnson, 1617 Windsor place,
$6.000; Mrs Josephine Abraham, 1536 Story avenue, $3,000
Ok!1ahoma CIty, Okla -F. S Keyser, 163 East Park place,
$7,000; Henry Brewer, 2207 West Sixrteenth street, $3,000;
E. D Davis, 1200 West T1hirteenth !Street, $3,000; Dr. J.
Burns, 1012 West EIghteenth street, $3,500.
RIchmond, Ind -Lizzie RJosa, 512 South D street, $4,-
000; H H. Toler, 1415 South B street, $3,000; E. G. Kemper,
301 W est Ma~n street, $3,750.
Schenectadly, N. Y.- Jennie S Shter, 46 Rugby street,
$4,000; Wilham Seipert, 1 WiIllett street, $3,000; Charles
S Doyle, 40 Robinson street, $6,000.
Dallas, Tex -Dr G M. Grigsby, 611 Elm street, $7,500;
S G. Lett, Collett and Reiger avenues, $5,000; L. V. Meyelrs,
Gi.llespie and Oak L'aiwn avenue, $3,800; E G. WIlson, 689
Park avenue, $3,500.
Syracuse, N. Y.-c. W. Andrews, 206Highland avenue,
$14,000; Mary L. J onquin, 214 Furman street, $5,000; George
Farland, 324 Shonnard Sitreet, $5,500; Louis E. Bennett, 129
Pinnacle street, $4,000; M. L. Young, 413 West Lafayette
avenue, $4,000.
Ganton, O.-Wa1lter Andrews, 1133 North Market street,
$3,300; Wilills Grant, 228 Woodland avenue, $3,000; Addie
Wlherry, 627 Belleview avenue, $3,000.
Lincoln, Keb -B. C. Cox, 1901 South Twenty-fift!h street,
$3,000 ; John Erdman, 3078 U sltreet, $3,000; J. W. Barr, 3233
S street, $3,000; F. L. Herrick, 3428 P street, $3,000.
Salina, Kan -Fred Hageman. $5,500; James A. Kimball,
$6,000.
Topeka, Kan -Mrs L. V Boyer, West and Twe1fth
streets, $3,000; J. E K\lrkiplatrick, 1524 Boswell avenue, $3,250.
Omaha, N ebr -C F Peterson, 3025 Cass avenue, $6,000;
A W. MJ1ler, 3322 Larimore street, $3,000; Rosa Nash, 2232
South Thlrty-seCiOnd street, $7,000, Mrs. M. H. McKay, 5134
)Jorth Twenty-t'hlrd street, $3,000.
Miscellaneous Buildings-The Gayety Theatre company
IS buIldmg an addItion to a brkk hotel at 99 Clark street,
ChIcago, to cost $80,000. llhe Mount Rose Baptists of Dal-las,
Tex, are bUlldling a $12,000 dhuroh The Baptists of
Kansas CIty, Mo , are bUlldmg the Kennington avenue church
whioh is to cost $18,000. The Missouri Savmgs Bank of Kan-sas
City, Mo, is erecting an office building at a cost of $22,-
000. 1Ihe Guarantee Trust and Banking company of Atlanta,
Ga., are remodeLing the buildring at a cost of $12,000. J. F.
Rodgers is building a $30,000 theatre on Gay street, Knoxville.
Tenn. Trustees of the First Ohurch of Christ ScientJist, are
building a ohurdh in Indianapolis to cost $45,000. The Ma-sonic
Grand Lodge of Tennessee are remodeling the Ma-sonic
Temple at Nashville at a cost of $35,000. The Imperial
Hotel company ,has taken out a permit to build a hotel at
339 Peaahtree street, Atlanta. Ga., at a cost of $100.000.
He is a mighty mean man who will snore in church,
thereby keeping the rest of us awake.
It is hard to feed a woman's vanity on bread and cheese
and kisses.
ARTISAN 21
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Johnson Chair Co.
4401 to 4531 West North Ave., CHICAGO
in the West.
Makers of the
BEST
MEDIUM
and
HIGH GRADE
line of
CHAIRS
Our new Catalogue Will be mailed to any responsible
furniture dealer on request. It shows the latest patterns
of the most seasonahle goods.
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Mechanics Furniture Co.
Rockford, Illinois
Makers of FINE and MEDIUM
BUFFET No 194
I•
Dining and Library Furniture
SEND FOR NEW CATALOGUE.
Our fullime on exhibit 3d floor. 1319 Michigan Ave., CHICAGO. ..
_________________ 1
a tour ,.,tor} bL111dmg on the corner of Mam and Chlppe\\ a
,treets
1 he :\Ianetta (Oh1O) Chdlr company IS now occupymg ItS
new office bl1lld111g on the corner of Sixth and Putnam streets
It 1~ one of the finest bl1lld111gs 111the DId City, the ground floor
be111g used for office,., and the upper floors for show rooms and
."torage
1he :\dshawaka (Ind) foldmg Carriage company has
been placed 111the hands of Mark C Rasmussen and E ] Fo-gart)
a~ receivers The actlOn was taken on the petitlOn of the
I-{Ill ,Lmuiactur111g company of Anderson, Ind, whDse claims
,1111Ounto $2,302.
rl he Rubel I url1ltUl e company, dealers, who started bus-mes,.,
m Omaha, Ne.br, have already found It necessary to
enlarge their quarter'> They have '>ecured the second floor
of an adl0111l11g bUlLI111g and Will use the space for the dls-pIa}
of staves and ranges.
SIX upholsterers employed by the NaperVille (Ill.) Lounge
LOmpan} II ent on stnke and tned to 1l1duce others to go
(Jut They \\ ere arrested Dn the charge of con3lplring to in-tnmdate
other "orkmen and released on giv1l1g bonds of $1,-
000 each tor their appearance for tnal. The strike has been
"ettleJ
George \\ TraVIS of New York, for twenty-five years a
manufacturel ot baby carnages at East Templeton, Mass,
ha'> sold hiS East Templeton factory to "V A vVheeler and
J H :\IcGowan, who Will run It under the name of V\'heeler
& IIcGo\Van Both of the new propnetors have worked 111
the factory for years
\\ 0 Cot\\ als, who has been manufacturing fihng cases
and other office fixture,., in vVashmgtDn, D. c., has made a deal
\\ hereby he \\ III comohc1ate hiS plant With that of the Greens-boro.
('\ C) Furmurte company, which has been idle for some
time III Gotwals \\ 111 move to Greensboro and add oook ca,.,es
,llld cab1l1ets to hiS Ime of products
The" orthern Casket company of Fond du Lac, Vhs , has
elected the follo\\ mg officers for the ensumg year: Presl-drllt.
\\ tlham IIauthe, v Ice pre-;ndent, J G LlVer' secrel ary
anJ treasurer, H R Potter Dlrectors-WJ1ham Mauthe, j
G- Ln er, H R Potter, Henry Boyle and Charles RueplY'~
'I he company I,., m good condition and IS build1l1g a larf..c ad-dItion
to the plant
P J Donlln, for twenty-three years manager of Henry
r '\ ebon"" furmture store 111 Burlington, Vt, has closed out
the bU-,1l1e-,,, tal the 'Jelson estate and taken the posltlOn of
heM! ~dle-'l11an f01 George A Hall, another furl1lture dealer
if the ~al11e town The Nebon store was the oldest In the
LIt), havmg been estabhsheJ g7 years ago Henry J Nel-son,
a "on of the ong111al propnetor, died early in the spnng
The fUlmture factory owned by the Cabmet Makers'
L mun dt LI ansl 11le, Ind. which went mto the hands of a
I ecen er and has been ldle for about three years, was ordered
t) be sold at auctIOn recently, but no satisfactory blc1s were
I ecelveJ X O\" the court has directed the recelver to sell it
prn atel} and local capltahsts are e2Gpected to buy it and put
It 111to operatlOn
Isaac, Joseph D. and Henry LeWIS, who compose the firm
of Isaac Le\\ls & Sons, formerly manufacturers of mirrors, etc,
at Park avenue and 130th street, New York, have filed a volun-tary
petitIOn m bankruptcy, With habihties scheduled at $189,-
162 and a~sets esilmated at $107,671. Theye were in the mirror
bus111ess from 1885 unhl February, 1909, when they were 'Suc-ceeded
h, a corporatIOn 111which they were the pnnclpal stock-holders
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
P. D. Campbell, undertaker, of Stockton, Cal, has sold out
to Ford & Bridnoh.
Lee & Thlvers, undertakers of Spnngfield, Ill, ha,e ~old
out to George S Bergen.
C Delury, furl1lture Jealer of Danbury, Ct , IS budd1l1g a
large addltlon to hls store
J H. Decker succeeds L Andel "on 111the I etad furmtUl e
bus111ess at Callaway, Nebr.
The Seneca Chair company of Kent, Oh1O, h'ls ll1crea~ed Ih
capltal stock from $300,000 to $600,000
The Standard Furmture company, dealer,., at Denv er Lol
are erect1l1g a warehouse at a cost of $12,300
C. Ludwig Bauman succeed~ Joseph Schreiber & Co. tur-mture
dealers at Broadway and Putnam avenue, BroDkl} n :\ Y
The Cream City Casket company, Mdwaukee, has a pel
mlt to erect a new factory bUlld1l1g at an e,.,tlmated co,.,t ot
$7,800
The Fenma Manufactunng compan}, orgamzed recenth
at Hancock, Milch, Will manufdcture and sell inrmture The
capItal stock of the company IS $50,000
The People's Furll1ture company and PI emlUm compan}
of Tacoma, Wash, owned by \\ J anJ R :\1 'lontgomel\.
has been lllcorporated Capital stock, $9,000
The Allen FurnIture company, dealers, ot Deland. I la ,
IS erect111g a handsome two story bnck bUlldmg on the ,.,Itt. ot
the old store that they have occupied for }ealS
Wesley Rh111ehart, for twenty -five year,., secretary and
treasurer of the Wmdsor Fold111g Bed compam of ChICago
died at his home in Oak Park on July 23, aged fiit, }ear~
The Standard Furmture and Carpet CDmpam of E.a,.,t St
LoUls, Ill, has been ll1corporateJ by J o,.,eph G Danneman,
Mamie Rung and H F Dnemeyel Capital ,.,tock, 812,000
The Crocker Chair company of Sheboygan. \\ b, ha,., pur
chased 2,500 acres of hardwood hmber m HoughtDn count',
Mich. The deeds, as filed, show a total comlderatlOn of $3cl-,-
658.
John H. Grilk has purchased an ll1terc,.,t 111 the b11O>111eo,.t,,,
the Dewend-Kuschman Furmture company, dealel s, of Ilohne,
Ill, and the name has been changed to the Dev, end & Gllik
cDmpany.
The Marietta (OhIO) Chair company has opened salb room~
111Kan"as City, Mo, 111 charge of Leon Kerus, "ho ha,., had
several years expenence m the office and sales departmenb
at the factory.
An addition to the factO! y of the StaffDl d \l.11mfaLinrlllg
company at lama, 1\1Ich , to be el ected soon, ,\ III conlam ~u,OOO
square feet of floor space One hundred men ,\ 111 be added to
the Dperatmg force later 111the year.
George F D Pame, founder of the famous Pame furll1-
ture house of Boston. dehvers illustrated lectures on tral els
m the Onent m a church at Bosca\\en, a '\ew Hamp,.,lllre re-sort,
where he IS spending the summer.
The Bnstol County Fur111ture company, 1113tallment
dealers of Taunton, Mass, have made an assignment Lla-blhtles,
$31,000, assets, conslstlng largely of accounts, $50,-
000 Lack of ready cash IS given as the cau~e of the fadure
D J McDonald, auditor of the Mercantile Club. St Louh,
Mo, wlll re~lgn today and on Monday wIll become secretary of
the W. E. Georgia Furmture company, who have estab1Jshed a
furnIture department for the Barr Dry Good,., company of that
city.
The Frontier Furniture company, e"tablbhed SIX years
ago, at 82 East Genessee street, Buffalo, NY, has secured
larger and better quarter,., The} wdl mOve, 111October, to
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Brisk Demand for Summer Furniture.
l\!(0re and more are the Amencans learmng the health
value of outdoor lIfe The season IS at hand when every Jne
who owns a porch makes It an outdoor lIvmg room, and IS the
better a'i to 'ItalIty and nerves for It, and, mCldentally, as the
hou'iewlfe knows, sa, es the mdoor furlllshmg", much wear
anel tear So that the money spent m furlll"hmg the porch
IS not an unnecessary extravagance, but IS m realIty a good
mvestment
The mcreaslllg demand for summer furmture IS lll",pllmg
the productlOn of artlstJc bnds One of the most charm I'lg
of the new effects thl'> season IS WIcker m a nut-brown filllsh
I t IS a lovely soft yellOWIsh brown and shows to partJcular
aelvantage m thIs delIcate lookmg though durable vvIckel
All the necessary pIeces come WIth It, even the quamte",t
Imaglllable of desks
Another new effect IS the Imported, enameled cane furm-ture
The effect IS that of delIcate on ental colonngs, though
when the deSIgn IS stuched It IS found to be Jeft touches of
red and green m geometncal deSIgns But the effect is nch
though not heavy or oppressIve It furnIshes most artJstlcally
K ew thIS year IS the fiber rush furlllture It is made of
paper, but looks much lIke the cool restful prame grass
furmture so popular III past seasons It IS saId to be dur-able
So vaned and so beautJful are the covenngs thIS sea-son,
that one can secure almost any shade de"'lred Vert
green and many other tones of green, SIlver gray, whIte, red,
nut 'brown, oak m the natural yellow tone and 1ll the deep
nch .:vIb'>lOn brovv n-one has WIde chOlce
As to pIeces, every need seems to have been thought of
There are desks, magazmes and book racks 1ll many fOIms,
the comfortable chaIse lounge, settees, nests of tea tables, tea
vvagons on rub'ber tJred wheels, shIrtwaIst boxes, umbrella
",
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racks, chaIrs, and tables galore Partlcularly notlceable in
all are the good 11l1es, the pleasmg artlstJc effects Every
pIece IS tasteful and wJ11 be a decIded addltlOn to one's furn-l'ihmg",
There seems to be none of the poor deslgnmg and
ta wdrmess '>0 often found III furmture for other palts of the
house
Even the chJ1dren are planned for, and httle settees and
chaIr" come for them f or the lawn are rustlc arbOl s of
cedal, benche", sWlllgS Even Japanese tea houses and rustIc
umbrellas, exact duplIcates, It IS said, of those m the royal
gardens of Japan, are ready for tho:-.e who deSIre such useful
ornaments for theIr lawns
~ othmg, It would seem, that can aJd to outdoor com-fort
and enjoyment, eIther on porch or lawn, has been over-
110ked
Leakages.
The successful bu:-'llless man IS one who IS constantly
l10kmg out for the leakages Many a company faded for the
lack of an expert m lookmg after thlllgS going to waste'
"Charley" Elmendorf, manager of the Malllstee Manufactur-
1l1g company, IS a man who has made it his business to stop
the leaks wherever pOSSIble, and he IS a successful manufac-turer
of furnllture Look over the "ad" of the Grand RapIds
Veneer Works on another page of thIS Issue of the \Veekly
Artl:-.an, and see what he W'ntes to the Mmneapoli" Furni-ture
company, about drymg lumber
Gardner, Mass, wJ11 lose over a hundred workmen, many
of them WIth falmhes, by the movmg of the ChJ1dren's VehIcle
company to Ea ct Templeton, :VIass
23
-------_. ----_. ---_._---_._-----------~----~---~.,. ..,
Efficiency=Simplicity=Low Cost I
I,
The Keynote of Successful Rug Rack Making
EFFICIENCY of serVIce, SIMPLICITY of construction
operation, combined with its extremely LOW COST, makes
a satisfactory investment for all up-to-date Rug Departments. :I
,
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THE IMPROVED
Send for our 16 page Catalog No 2 W.
~UABLE~ ~CK~ Inc.
and
the
•Will Display Your Rugs to Perfection
Constructed on common sense pnnclples No cumbersome framework. Always in plumb.
Shows the whole rug, not a corner.
Shows rugs quickly. Your customers do not have to wait. Salesmen can wait on
more than one customer at a time.
Your entire line of rugs shown In an attractive manner, with one half the labor of the old way,
PRICES
10 Arms, holding 20 Rugs $250 per Arm.
20" " 40 " 2 40 "
40 80 2.30
60 120 215
100 200 .. 2.00
Terms: I per cent 10, net 30 days F. O. B. Factory. Prices are for rack complete.
303 East 47th Street, CHICAGO, ILL.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
Minnesota Retail
Dealers'
Furniture
Association
OFFICERS-PreSIdent,] R Taylor. Lake Benton, Minn. Vice-PresIdent, D. R Thompson, Rockford, Mmn.,
Treasurer, B A Schoeneberger, Perham, Mmn , Secretary, W. L. Grapp, ]anesvlJle, Mmn.
EXECUTIVE COMMIT fEE-Chairman, Geo Klem, Mankato, MinD., 0 SImons. Glencoe, Mlnn; W. L
Harns, Mmneapohs, Mtnn , C. Danielson, Cannon Falls.
BULLETIN No. 158.
SUGGESTIONS TO THE LEGISLATURE
Bills That Will Be Introduced at the Next Session and Supported by the Mercantile
Interests of the State.
An Act to Tax the Occupation of, and to License Haw-kers,
Peddllers and Transient Merchants and Defining said
Occupations.
Section I.-Every person traveling from house to house
for the purpose of offering for sale any article of merchan-dise,
either for immediate or future delivery or according to
sample is hereby declared to be a !hawker and peddler. And
every person. corporation or co-partners'hip, exposing and
offering for sale at retail in any city or village in this state a
stock of goods, wares and merchandise, is hereby declared to
be a transient merchant. unless the carryIng on and maintain-ing
of said business is in pursuance of an intention to main-tain
and carryon the same therein permanently and when-ever
it appears that any such stock of goods, wares and
merchandise has been broug;ht to any such 'city or village by
a person not a resident therein and that it IS claimed that
such stock is to be closed out at reduced pnces, such facts
shall be preSu,mptIve evidence that the person so offering
said goods for sale does not intend to maintain a permanent
location in said CIty or VIllage.
Section 2.-N a person shall engage in or follow the busi-ness
or occupation of a hawker or peddler until he shall have
obtained a license from the state of Minnesota so to do; and
for such license he shall pay mto the treasury of the state of
Minnesota an annual fee and tax as follows: Where he shall
use in such business or occupatIOn a wagon or other vehicle
drawn by two or more horses, or other beasts of burden, or
automobile or other vehicle or conveyance propelled by any
mechanical power, the sum of fifty dollars; where he shall
use in such business or occupation a wagon or other vehicle
drawn by one horse or other beast of burden. the sum of
twenty-five dollars; where he shall use in such business or
occupation a push or hand cart, bicyde or other vehicle not
drawn by horses, or other beast of burden. or propelled by
any mechanical power, the sUm of ten dollars; and where he
shall conduct such business on foot by means of pack, bas-ket
or other means of carrying merohandise on foot, the sum
of ten dollars.
Section 3.-The application for a license as 'hawker and
peddler shall be made in writing to the state auditor on
blanks to be furnished! by him and upon the warrant of the
state auditor shall pay the license fee required to the state
treasurer who shall issue to the applicant his receipt there-for
and upon the filing of such receipt with the secretary of
state, that officer shall issue to the applIcant a license to
engage in such occupation in the manner described in such
receipt for a period of one year from t'he date of such license
Section 4.-N a person. firm or corporation shall engage
in or follow the business of a transient merchant as hereinbe-fore
defined at any place in t!his state witJhout first obtainling
a lIcense from the state of Minnesota. authorizing him so to
do, and paying into the treasury of the state the sum of one
hundred and fifty dollars. ApplIcation for such license Slhall
be made to the state auditor Upon blanks prepared by him,
who shall issue his warrant to the state treasurer authorizing
the payment to him of said sum of one hundred and fifty
dollars, said treasurer shall issue his receipt tiherefor and up-on
the filing of said receipt with the secretary of state said
applicant shall be entitled to such license for the period elaps-ing
from the date of suoh license until the first day of May
next ensuing.
Section S.-Na person, co-partnership firm or corporation
shall carryon the business of transient merdhants in more
than one place in this state at the same time.
Section 6.-Nothing in this act contained shall be con-strued
as prohibiting or in any way limiting or interfeTing
with the right of any city, village or other municipal corpor-ation
or governmental sub-division of the state to regulate or
license tJhe carrying on within such municipality of the busi-ness
of hawker and peddler or transient meflchant in any case
where authority has been or shall hereafter be conferred up-on
it so to do, but the requirements of this act shall be in
addition thereto
Section 7 -Any license issued pursuant to the terms of
this act may be revoked by the secretary of state upon the
conviction of any person to whom the same was issued, of any
false or fraudulent representation or misrepresentation in the
sale of any goods. wares or merchandise Or Uiponconviction
of such person of the sale of any adulterated food. drink or
drug, or the sale of any food deleterious to health; and the
filing with the secretary of state of a certified copy of tihe final
judgment of any court in which any such person may have
been tried showing his conviction of such offense. shall be
sufficient authority for the revocation of such license.
Section B.-Every person and eadh member of any firm
or co-partnership and each officer of any corporation engag-ing
in or following the business of hawker. peddler or tran-sient
merchant in this state without Ihaving first obtained a
licerse as hereinbefore provided shall be deemed guilty of a
misdemeanor.
Section 9.-The proviSiions of this ad shall not apply ,to
persons engaged in interstate or foreign commerce, nor to tihe
sale of articles which at the time of such sale are the sub-jects
of interstate or foreign commerce, nor to the salesmen
of wholesale meflchants or manufacturers in selling to retail
merchants nor to the solicitation by permanent merchants or
their employes of orders from customers resident in the same
or tihe adjoining county as such permanent merohant i nor to
--
WEEKLY ARTISAN
HARDWOOD LUMBER
I,SA~~D} QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS SLICED AND MAHOGANY
I
~ ~ ---------------------------~
any sale made by virtue of any Judgement, order or process
of any court or upon the foreclosure of any mortgage or pur-suant
to any law of this state or of the Umted States or in the
enfor<:ement of any contnad r,ig1ht or lien, nor to the sale
by any individual of any article grown, produced by him
SectlOn 10 -This act shall take effect and be m force
from and after its passage.
Anti-Ff1audulent Check Bill.
A Bill for an Act to Prohiib~t the Drawing of Checks,
Drafts or Orders upon Banks or Bankmg Houses when tlhe
Drawer has not Sufficient Funds Therem to Meet the Same
and Provide Punishment for the VlOlation Thereof
Be It enacted !by the legiislature of the state of Mmne-sota
Any person who shall hereafter draw and utter a check
or draft. or order upon a bank, banking !house. with which
25
or whom he has not, at the time, sufficient funds to meet the
same, and shall thereby obtain from another, money, or other
thtngs of value, or Induce such person to surrender or post-pone
any remedy he may have agamst tfhe drawer. shall be
gul1ty of a misdemeanor, and upon connctlOn shall be pun-
Ished by fine or impnsonment m the discretion of the court;
If the value of the property ob1named be less than twenty dol-lars.
and be pumshed by a fine not exceedlllg one hundred
dollars, or imprisonment not exceedmg tthirty days: Provided
that If sUdh person shall deposit With the drawee of such
paper wlthtn thirty days thereafter, funds suffiCient to meet
the same. with all costs and interest, wihich may accrue, the
prosecutlOn under this act shall be discontinued
Anti-Ff1audulent "Ad" Bill.
A Bill for an Act to Prohibit Fraudulent Advertising
and Provide Punishment for tlhe VIOlation Thereof.
Be It enacted by the legislature of the state of Minnesota:
SectlOn 1-Any person who shall advertise, in his own
name. or m the name of other persons. firm or pretended
firm. assoclatlOn, corporatIOn or pretended corporation in any
newspaper, pamphlet. Circular, bill-boards or souvenirs or
other printed paper which are delivered or distributed and
which shall mislead or deceive the pubhic Iby either descdption
or pictures as to the quahty and worth of the goods, wares
and merchandise or necessaries of life so advertised, shall
upon conViction thereof be punlished tby a fine of not less than
fifty or more than one hundred dollars or by imprisonment
for not less than thirty nor more than nmety days or by both
'Such fine and Impnsonment.
SectlOn 2 -The provislOns of this act shall not apply to
new1spapers, pamphlets. Circulars, or souvemrs which are at
the time subjects of interstate or foreign commerce laws
I•
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in uid and oil.
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
PRODUCTIONS
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place in the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK ....,.. _. __ . .. .Everythlng m Pamt Specialties and Wood Finishing materials. Fillers that £111. Stams that sahs£y.
......-----------------------_._----------------------- -..
Minnesota Retail
\-I-~AK CtliNA CLOSET
'rhiS sohd oak Chi
na closet, has b-..v..
elod pia te ill Irror ,
ornamenPl carv.
IngS, ben t glrlc;~
end"" fOUL ....J,rP}VPb
adJu"jtab1f>-, carv-odcJawfeet
quqr-tered
f r, n t aud
top Ha' a
deep InstIl g firllsh
Space delllE'S u ....to
prebent a fuJl ex·
pldnatlon, so ",e
ba vo g 1 V P n tnH
ill 0 s t pQrtlCular
POUlts ('ome lO and we wIll be ahle 10
tell j ou more" bout It, and then you Will
I-now the leal val"e of thIS p1ec\, He,,,ht
68 lOehes. "ldth dblOches Gannot he
beat. 1'd 2d1
Umt wIth type 40e
Cut without type 25c
Pllce to membO! ~
FOB FactOl,
$FMT
FANCY OAK COMBINATION
BOOKCASE •
ThiS combinatIOn
case ba~ quarter-ed
oag front, fine
golden filllSh , dou-ble
strength bent
Il'l ass door, one
cabInet, one oval
vaneered drawer,
one desk with p,g-eon
·hole. and oak
drawer, bas fancy
carved to I' wIth
French plate bev.
eled mIrror, and
one bra c k e t s
HeIght 73 1 n S •
wIdth 41 lns •• )
complete wIth castors. .lIas four ad.
justable shelves Stuctly hIgh grade
i qualIty; latest out Do not faIl to come
In and see us before yO" buy, High val.
Ue at a low price. F3·3J6
Umt with type 40c
Cut without type 25c
P'llca to members . . ..
FOB Factory
$M1'IP
SOLID OAK SWELL FRONT DRESSER
F lOY.
RIi'3'16- Thl.- d_
1.3 mad" !if ge~ml1B oals;
~ wit h qu....utered oak
font It has two Jarga
drawers and two small
ones, all ill.fl,1.. l\ Ill.! tL.e
MlaJJ<>1aefpentme front
and fitted with ca.'.lt
brags handlf'8 and Ircks
T"u~dle.ill;er b 21 1n
deep and 40 In wide
T\.lp lIlin'or 's vel7
sh1Pely,. alld is 24"20
ins-hea, and 1$ witbout
an equu] at the ptice
81 Pl ..4.. direct fn:.m fae
tory lQ Indlana Ship.
ping weight about 1 SO
pounds Out specIal
~,,~ ~pr tl>is 1'1 •••
Montgomery Ward Puce
FreIght .
Setting up, etc
Price at our store
$1015
185
35
Umt wIth type, 40c
Cut wIthout type, 25c
PrICe to members . ...... . $F.IT
Dealers' Association
BULLETIN No. 157.
RICH LOOKING
OAK CHI~A CLOSET
This 0 a k ChlDa
Closet wIth quar-tpred
"a k front;
carved tOI\!:. with
b e n t glass ends;
straight g 1 ass
door Has carved
cIa W feet All
carvmgs made by
!land and are ra1s,
ed maklDg a hand-some
and rich
100klDg case. Ha"
quartered fro n t
and top FlDlsb-
3d In a deep, rlch
lastmg golden gloss Do not fall to
come and see us, and I anI sure you wlJl
say yourselves that you are gettmg a
most hand~ome and attractive article o for th" pnce Nom lookmg fi(lass plate
lD back of top
ll1lt \\ltll t\pe 40,
Cut \\ Ithout t, pe 25c
PIlLe tv ll1eInbel ~
FOB Factor,
$MTAP
BEI\T GLASS DOOR
COrlBlNATION CASE
<..!uartp.red 0 k
front, deep, nch
golrien fiflbh h ...nt
gld"'~ duOl \\rll-l[
g de~k with cum
partments, 0 n e
..."eH front and
t"o str.,ght drdw
er." carved fep,-,
oruampnted carv·
sd top "ltbFrp.nch
plate bpve'ed mlr-r"
r H€lght '3m,
"ldth 41 Ill' It
IS worth a thlld more than we a.k for
It ) Coma In and look them over and
I'm bnre jOU "Ill not go home Wi hout
one Fd dd5
Lmt With npe 40c
Cut without t:;pe L5c
PI ICe to members
FOB Factol,
$M1' 1'1'
$20.95 for thIS Massive High Grade
:: lllace Sohd Oak
SUITE-$20.95
""ote the heavy Carv-lllg&
and tull serpen-tllle
shaped front
dl eSSel
I
Made
of sol-
14 oak
$20.95
3.68
85
$25.48
Price at factorv
Freight added
Settlllg up etc IPnce onr store,
Umt wIth type 40"
Cut without type, 25c
Price to members. . •.
FOB Factory .
,$MIIP
Advertising Helps.
HIGH GRADE COLONIAL DE-I
SIGNED CI-HNA CLOSET (
1'J ThiS high gradl I
chin 1closet. IS madb
of 1]11,11 tered 0 a k I
H a. q round i posts,
Let! \ eel L 1<1W t f' e t,
bl nt gl,,,, end.
'eat, lovely caned
top ornament Ha~
qUJ,rteled oak cros.,
bJ,ud, no venperlllg
Ha" blX ~belve", cl,nd I" vely well caster-ed
,It bottom ILl' pollbhedgoiden fin"h
"'Iwlves arc J,d]l"table whIch" a very
good ad' antage lor the houwwlfe I" of
the l;.,test deSIgn and ,1 well constructed
pIece of furnltule thtu MId thlu
LIllt WIth type 40e
(ut Without type 25c
Price to members. .
FOB Factory
$MKKT
SPLENDID OAK
COMBINATION CASE
Has double swell
quartered fro.-.t,
bent glass door;
three swell front
drawers, one wnt-mg
desk WIth com-partments;
orna·
mental carved top
wl~h two French
pIa te beveled mIr-rors,
one bracket,
has a deep goldeu
lastmg timsh and
1D all IS a pIece of
furm ture tha t you
may be proud of
10 YOur room. It
IS made of the best grade, and IS very
attractive All car'lmgs are raIsed, and
of hand make wonld make a lovely pres-ent
to your family. It IS an exceedmgly
handsome case at the prlCe we llsk 75
lnS high, Width 39ms F3-329
Unit With type 40e.
Cut WIthout type 25c
Price to members. .. .... • .. $MK M1'
FOB Factory.
QUARTERED OAK SHAPED
FRONT DRESSER
T his
M B 3 3
d~esser
IS made
of oak
10 gold-en
fin-lsh
and
rIchly
orna-mented
WIt h
car v-in
g s
has a
shaped
serp en-tIn
e
qua r-t
e r
sawed
oak
front
1 a l' g e
cia W
f a e t
and double shaped top The
top IS ornamented WIth rICh
carvmgs and fitted WIth a 20
x 24 pattern plata mnror of ex-tra
fine qualIty
Umt wlth type. 40c
Cut Without type, 25e.
Price to members . .•.•. . • .•... $F.IP
Minnesota Retail Furniture Dealer's Association.
BULLETIN No. 159.
Every dealer has the following proposition to contend with. Upon his ability to meet and overcome such competition (and make
a profit at the same time) depends his future success as a merchaut. Did you ever stop and think what a reputation of Iueeting and
beating this catalog competition would mean to you in your community if once firmly established? You can do it easily if you will
adopt our Association policies.
YOUR MONIY WILL BE IMMEDIATELY RETURNED TO YOU FOR ANY GOODS NUT P£RfECTLY SATISFACTORY. 1lSlS
UNEQUALED IN
COMFORT AND
DURABILITY.
KIQH GRADE IN
MAT£R 'Al
WORKMANSK,jI
AND f'NISK.
Every detail In the construction oHbe inside aDdevery
piece ot material Is the best tha~ can be produced In
our Jeat~r rockers There are none better IWld.e and ~::al:e,Il&~a; ~g)~~~~d~~:~~r ~ec"t~e io~'&:,~
the tactory and each one Is ollered at a price !e8Sthan
~~rerd~~S e~~t1~t s:~~rtt:<a~tl JlIer~ti:I&~Y~ retund the purchase price together WIth all freight N~ IL3820 This fIlall.lIflceat Turkish Rocker """,bine. sym- charges IIyou are not p€rtectlysatlBlled.
com~ort. It will m:lc~t?S~I~~~a~gll~,~nG~~I~':,~ ~~ei~t:~aJ:~ BEST QUALITY HI8H 8RADE LEATHER well furnished borne. It Is without doubt or question the most won- ill used In the c01lltrucUon of our leather rocker •• There tg~~J;.~i:.e~'lfJs'h~~~J'1't:Skct:~:eirn .. strictly Fe:t::~%%I~::::~~J~t:da'\;'~u:-Jh~=.1i:!tg:,a::;,\S:
THE FRAME i. made of carefully seiected. we use to be the best and tlnest grade Gt genuine h'\ud
th()f""gbly air seasoned nGrthern hulled No 1 leather Read wllat we say about the gradel
hardwood. lrU&tanteed n<>t to wa.", .hrmk or check. of leather on page 7M.
The joints ate mortised and joln<'d In a pelle<;t m,tnner. FABRtCORD LEATHER = The platform base Is attached to the upper Ira'llP • t 10btbat f"'be~s~ll
bv, rtlargeI heavayls high carbon Be.semer steel COli spring-~ and Imitation leatber on PlIlle 754. a • a r ...O..- f~rt~~Y~'l.l::,c:h"otl~~? permitting an eM}. com- COLOROF LEATHER. ~!~~f:'1:'b~~I~'v~r~~
THE SPRINGS ~~;I~W~I~~t~~:ab~S~uf~~aRt:: ~he:~~aW~:~t~~nc~:;'~ ~e.::g:o~!:r :~ttP"'~~It~ither of
and feited cottGI\. a tlllmg more tl.sllC cleaner and T E fRAMEWORK ed I tb t tieD
~rtJ~~Irngthq~aJrlt::ParehatZus Coobtn,;fl~druteraabillty and selHec:te:fd northern hardwood. It Is tohuorrnolaegab!IlIy~~a.i1rus:;e.assoneids
THE COVERING l~at~h:r ~:stla'::'t.a~~for.f':.~rof:I~~ :;:g ~ib~~;I~ea~~rem:~~iJ~ ~~~\1't~ °ti~lthea~ je":~
lIesc,,"ed G~age 754. a Bp!~ndld substitute for ,renUlne IS used to !Usurc against breakage.
~thnUefatcnturdert,!>nwdeaWrhlnleghqUw'eUtl~sntU1uel1nnrYDe}gosretsUh~e"rravond1;(,1 THE SPRINGS ed' th buUdlft
• ~~ ~ _ • ly d, 1'OU'ckerslDar emade f-romofth0.ltlleI'<ealhh.e-rb
lTahIde da~nd hhealndd Intupttleadce bbaycksteaenld tuafrtminsg arbeut..toanr's,fulclyllnOc'Vlee<rt- nrb<>n steel. temp"red ar, • In GII. """ coated wltb JaPau enamel
on the underside and cannot break loose Note tile th<>rougb.y hardened by baiung tG prevent ruatlng. The bot-
11\.. Iy ved arms. deep ru1ll.ed front, Wide back with tom parts of tile svnngs are ta8ten~d In the tlrmest and atrong-
Idan~U~~;:ti's~~:~.""anJ3e~~~ y;.;'~'J1~e~~ estrtE:sl~~~ ~~n~~t~d~h~':::tf.:iW~~ JJ'.fb:m::dOfJ~6
t, e""",lned It and tested It if yOll are not rnor6 ~e lInest quallty hemp twine. We absolutely guaramee thai
t an S8tlsOed that you have a Turkish rO~ker made of our sprmg work cannot be excelled In soltness. reeIllencyand
better material, better workm,nsiue and more "om- la£tlng qualltles.
~1h*:rb~ee:~~da~r~M'o~':t~~gre ~~~I;il~~:r'iu,td v~~ TH E HANDSOME RUFFLES :~:I.::,~n:nT::'tM~ct:.~:n~;'
may rcturn It to us and we will Immediately return special care being given to tbelr evenness and regularity.
your money together with tbe freight chalg"". h k II t t_A he Itb I d
8wheI,r"oto. d IdWirle)ct utrnodms facPtroicrye near Chicago 5Sb1l3l1.p2m5g No• IL3820 TnnE fRINGE oufs"dIheGnb•t• "t qroucalit"yrs /IIIGus. Irale"a"ther. rew It Isa mexetra"
O R L THER ROCKERS cmnbin" all'be n."",! fwd best Ideas in correct shape and deSIgn wide extends entIrely around the base ot the rocker. and In beauty 0
and they are as good .ns.de a. Ihey Io<>kouts,d" In tne makm~ dPBIgnand perfection of detail and Onlsh ~annot be eXCelled.
of UPhOlstered furniture therp Is a !!reat O('£CEtunlty to sh~b.t and cheapen the p"'ts~t~h~a~t..::lt::::re::..:;c::.ov:;e::.:r:;<'d~u~p::.:. _
HANDSOME IN DESIGNt STRICTLY
FIRST CLASS IN MATERIAL AND
--WORKMANSHIP --
",ou al0 mOl0 fOllunateh sItuated than the aver-
'\Ill enable vou to meet the quotatlOns III the cat-help
you find the way to meet and beat tIns com-
We produce above thE' greater part of a page of Sears Roebuch & Co, s catalog Lnle,,;s
age dealer you know the followmg rockers cannot be bought, m a Iegular way Rt such pnces as
"logs and make a faIr profit Read carefully and note '-' hat our t,SsOClRllOn IS dorng for )OU to
petitlOn Doto yoau fntzhzm1ek. for a moment that beacuse t11e pIlce,,; are low that our goods are plunder? We are all furmture dealers ourselves and know
that anythng WIthout qualIty IS dear at any prlce and therefore, we have exacted qUality up to the very hmlt whIch WIll allow us to bnng these
goods to you at a pnce that WIll enable you to overcome this competltlon. The best way of pro, mg thIS to your satlsfactlOn IS to order a few
after whIch we know you WIll be WIth us m our endeavor to better our condItIons --
The above rocker furmshed to our members P 0 B Chicago
F-17 Boston Leather
M 348 Chase Leather
lIP
MTKT
F17 M348 No 2 Leather
F17 M348 No 1 Leather
MKAP
MOPT
F 171'io.RF142Yo
ThIS large lux-uriOUS
rocker
IS WIthout an V
doubt the big·
gest value that
has been offer-ed.
The seat
IS :l2x22 mches
measuremen t
the extreme
outSIde 1 s 26
Inches; the
heIght of back
from floor IS 42
mehes The
back IS tufted
sea t large and
comforta ble
supporte d by
0,1 tempered sprmg~, nchly ruffled on the
~Ideb and top of back and also the entIre
front ThiS chaIr IS upholsted WIth the
best '!tade of Chase or Boston leather, whICh
lS a splendId substltue for genume leather
and bas excellent wearing qnalItles Th1s
l~ the best Tur1.1sh rocker th'lt can be had
at thIS pnce. weIght about 103lbs Mount-ed
on secunly con,tructed frame castors and
fitted WIth an extr .. heavy 011 tempered rock
er sprlllgs wh1ch gIves It a very comfortilble
rock
P nce at factory
Pnce at store
F17-- No 348--
Leather Turk-
Ish rocker IS
the cltmax of
chaIr comfort I
and the most
depe nd able
over-stuffed
rocker to be
had 42 lOche,
hIgh, 21mches
w1de between
arms 3q lOches
across the RrlU-S,
back 1S 27 m,
In height from
the seat The
spr ngs aTe cov
ereid by best
canvas and fine upholsterwg Best qnallt}
of Cnase or Boston leather, a splpndId snb
stltute for gf'nume leather, and na, wear-ingqualltles
fully guaranteed by the mauu
facturer Arms and back fully tufted
sbapely curved arms. deep ruffled front
'-'1de back With head pIllow and pxtended
"de F1rmly constructed base WIth castors
In front 011 tempered spnng Weight
4J Ibs
F17 No 142 ThIS hIgh grade lrbrary or lrv
mg room rocker ThIS sleepy bollow sbape
W1th ItS soft luxunous tuft offers the most
comfortable and restful seat The frame
work IS either golden oak or mahogauy It
1S upholstered III genume leather or Bo.ton
leather and ha. deep tufts fastened WIth
,teel tuftrug buttons 'Ihe pxtrf'me heIght
of th,s chaIr IS 44 mches Weight 100 lbs
We pnce thIS rocker m both geumne leath.
er and III Boston leather, but would adVIse
~ettmg the genmne when pOSSIble
Pnce at factory
P nce a t store
PrICe at factory
PrlCe a t store
Umt ",th type 40c
Cut WIthout type 25c
Prrce to members fob Chicago
DUlt WIth type 40c
Cut WIthout type 25c
PrlCe to members fob ChIcago
DUlt WIth type 40c
Cut WIthout type 25c
PIlce to our members fob ChIcago
Boston Leather
Chase Leather
No 2 Leather
No 1 Leather
.FAP
FIP
MMPP
MPTT
Boston Leather .
Chase Leathe1
No 2 Leather
No 1 Leather
lIP
MTKT
.. MKAP
MOPT
Boston Leather
Chase Leather
No 2 Leather.
No 1 Leather.
DIP
FFP
MMFP
MPFP
Send all orders to the Secretary. W. L. GRAPP. Janesville. Minn.
28
THE "NEED OF THE HOUR."
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Manufacturers Should Co-operate in the Matter
of Credit and Collections.
EdItor Weekly Artisan-To me, and to man) other"" It
seems that the "need of the hour," among the furmture manu-facturers
of the country, IS practical co-operatlOn through a
central bureau or assocIatlOn Wh1le the Case Goods as-sOClatlOn,
the Table assoclatlOn, and other a",sociatlOns, are
accomplIshmg a lIttle, these movement~ are not broad enough
and farreachmg to meet the demands of the ll1dustr) a" a
whole.
The manufacturing end of the inJustry has reached a
greater stage of perfectlOn than the selhng end. and to the
latter must be attntbuted the great weakness which confront--
the mdustry today Instead of QCCUpyIng the commandlllg
posItion to whIch the manufacturer is entItled, he has per-m1tted
himself to he domInated over by a class of buyers
who are taking every advantage of hI:" weakness. "VhJ1e It'S
true he Issues a regular price hst and pubhshes hIS terms, he
has permItted both to be violated, untIl today a cla"" of
buyers are springing up, who patrol the market and through
the temptmg bait of large orders, buy then entll e need.., Ull-der
the market value of the gooJs
Purchases made at cut pnces permIt the buyer to under-sell,
often to the injury of the dealer who 1S \\ IIlll1g to pay a
faIr price for h1:o g-oods vYhere reg-ular terms are, sa\ SIxh
days, many shrewd buyers are demanJll1g much longer tune
and getting it, hence the manufacturer's cap1tal I'> tIed up
wh11e the other fellow is domg- busll1ess on It
The "need of the hour" demands a central bureau to
care for the credit end of the industry and to conduct an
educational campaign to create a spmt of co-operatlOn that
will stand for a leg1timate profit on goods manufactured
The various dIvI",ions of the fur11lture industry are so closely
interwoven and the mterests of all are so nearly identIcal, It
stands to reason that concerteJ actlOn could accomphsh re-sults,
that no associatlOn of one department of th1:o great
industry conld hope to reach
Take the matter of credits See what could be accom-ph",
hed WIth a central bureau, actl11g as a clearl11g hou"e,
reCeIVll1g and dI~tributll1g reports from ancl to the manufac-turer~,
shOWIng theIr experience 'o'dth accounts Today
several commercial agenCIes are endea\ onng to supply thIS
information, some of them trying to cOver all trades m the
entire counby None of these agenCIes can gl\ e complete and
reItable ll1formation as they have not the means to acqUlre
1t Through th1S system the manufacturers could create
their own commercial reports, taken from actual trade ex-penence,
anJ sUp'pIted to the central cleanng house for the
!benefit of all, thus producIl1g a relIable record of paymg
quahty
Not only could the central bureau supply prompt and
reliable reports, but It could handle all collectlOn" of slow
accounts, and In fact through thIS centrallzed s) "tem bad
accounts could be largely ehmmated.
Let any manufacturer consult hIS books or look up the
commercial reports and see the large number of \ ery "low
accounts throughout the country Chron1c slow accounts
are numerous and growmg more so, owmg to the lack of
decislOn m extendmg cred1t Buyers who do not pay an
account untIl forced to do so, or who pro\ e to be uncollect-able,
live on in business year after year on the losses of the
careless manufacturer
The "need of the hour" demands co-operation through a
.. .ea ••••••••••••••••••••• __ •••• __ 'M._"
Table with top removed so as to
show the Tyden Duo-Style Lock.
Ask for the Tyden Lock
It makes business for you
When you buy pedestal dining tables ask
your manufacturer for the Tyden Duo-Style
Table Lock-there is no extra charge,
Don't run the rIsk of losing sales because the lock is
not on the dining table-you can have a completely
eqUIpped table Just as well as not, and give your
customers the most for their money.
When you place your order for dining tables be sure
it calls for Tyden Duo-Style Lock. ~ ...-. -_._._._~._----------~~.~I---
central bureau, backed by a umted manufacturers' associ-atIOn,
whIch \\ ould weed out such losses and bring the fur111-
ture mdustry, both manufacturing and retaIl, to a h1gher and
better plane
ONE OF THEM
Will Try Small Cities First.
"Yash111gton news reports announce that the government
wIll establIsh postal sav111gs banks 111several cities on Oct 1
The 111dIcatlOns are that the system wIll be tned out in the
beg111nmg at post offices of the second and third class rather
than 111 tho~e of the first class, as origmally planned If the
Iboard of trustees compose(\. of the postmaster-general, the
attorney-general, secretary of the treasury, follows a recom-mendatlOn
that is to be made by the departmental committee,
a postal :"avmg'> bank w111 be estabhshecl in each of the 47
states at the outset.
When the hoard of trustees met soon after Congress ad-
Journed, it was announced that the new banking plan would
not be in~talled untIl some time in the new year It was also
tentatIvely ag-reed at the tIme that not more than a dozen
banks should be put mto commIssion at the beginn111g-, and
that offices of the first class should be tned for expenmental
purposes The committee having the detaIls in hand has
come to the conclusion that, oW111gto the small appropnation
avaIlable, It would be better 1£ banks were introduced into
the smaller offices first The belief is entertained that in the
larger cItles depOSIts would pIle up more rapidly, thus 111-
creasmg the cost of admmistratlOn
There 1S a lIvely interest on the part of postmasters in
the postal savings bank law. More than 300 of them have
asked that theIr offices be deSIgnated to accept postal sa v-
WEEKLY ARTISAN
ings Nearly 644 national banks have requested that they be
desIgnated as depositones of postal funds
It IS the expectatIOn of the postal officIals that at the next
session of Congress an adequate appropnatlon WIll be made
that WIll msure the e'itabhshment of the banks wherever
thel e may be a demand for them
Rich Furnishings of a Doll House.
The mO'it wonderful doll house m the world is on exhI-bItIOn
in London It IS the work of Capt WIlkmson, Ulster
Kmg at Arms, who is an expert m heraldry anJ the fine art'i
The house IS about seven feet square and took about five
years to complete The fUfmshmg is not yet fim"hed As
far as pOSSIble only antique furmture, SIlver anJ chma are
userl, and Capt Wdkm'ion and hIS WIfe, Lady Munel Her-bert,
have collected all the contents.
Everythmg IS Ldhputlan On the hall table hes a
vIsItors' book the sIze of a postage stamp wIth Kmg Erl-ward's
name mscnbed, for he and Queen Alexandna went to
the house m 1908 In the dmmg room IS a Jacobean Ibuffet
eight mches long and an oak table of correspondmg ~limen-
'ilOns
A Georgan 'idver !beaker the 'i17e of a thImble l'i flanked
by (hmmutlve Queen Anne candlestlck'i, and a 'idver gilt
~uremberg tankard, old Dutch cantlIe Sconce'i, Chlddmgfold
and Venetian glasses, a Dresden coffe serVIce, SIlver salvers
and tea and coffee urns are among the matchless cunO'iltles
to be seen in the wee dinmg room
The oak doors which separate the reception rooms were
carved by Capt W Ilkm'3on The grand plano of satmwood
and marquetry, i'3 the work of a Mr Putland It IS a perfe
- Date Created:
- 1910-07-30T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:57
- 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/156