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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-05
Weekly Artisan; 1910-11-05
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAPIDS. MICH••NOVEMBEU 5. 1910
YOU CANNOT WRITE YOUR OWN NAME
without drawing every curve used in the
Louis XV styles of ornament which is
the most curved of all ornament.
(jf I have had my greatest success in
teaching those who admit that they can
not draw a straight line.
(jf I will make a furniture designer of
the dullest furniture worker in the
United States, providing he wants to
be one.
(jf Don't be afraid. (Fear is our low-est
of passions.)1 Come to ~meif you
wish to be a foreman, superintendent,
or designer of furniture.
You can take this course by
mail or attend, local classes.
ARTHUR KIRKPATRICK
INSTRUCTOR AND DESIGNER OF THE ARTHUR KIRKPATRICK
GRAND RAPIDS SCHOOL OF DESIGNING
540 Houseman Bldg., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
"THE PORTER" Jr. 5 INCH JOINTER
IS THE GREATEST LITTLE BIG
l\1ACHINE ON THE MARKET.
It is built with the same
care, accuracy, and feat-ures
that are embodied
in "The Porter" Hand
Join ters which are
known the world over.
The steel lipped
ground tables which
can be withdrawn from
the cylinder; traversing
inclines for guaging the
cut; the tilting guage for
beveling, mitering, etc.;
and the Round Safety
Cylinder are all identical features of the larger machines.
When furnished upon the iron bed (shown in cut), any style
of motor can be attached. The style of current, cycle or
phaze is immaterial. The machine is furnished with or with-out
the countershaft, or stand, just as is desired.
IT IS THE IDEAL MACHINE
for the cabinet room, pattern shop, manual training school
or any place where small or narrow jointing or buzz planing
is done. It requires but little power, small space and runs at
high speed; and say -don't you know that
50% OF YOUR WORK
is within the range of this machine. You ought to be inter-ested
in this machine and our catalog T. will tell you all
about them.
C. O. PORTER MACHINERY CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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No 83.
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GEO. SPRATT & CO.
HERE
IS A
CHAIR
THAT'S
A
SELLER
WRITE
FOR THE
PRICE
SHEBOYGAN, WIS. ----------~ I
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CHAS. BENNETT FURNITURE CO.,
CHARLOTTE. MICH.
For
$9.25
we will
ship this
Dresser
in Satin
Walnut
or
Mahog.
any finish.
Chiffonier
to match.l
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Mail your I
orders !
promptly
to
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"EFF and EFF"
HOLIDAY
NOVELTIES!
the Holidays.
Conceded to be
among the best, if
not the very best
Money Makers
for Furniture
Dealers during
Do not let this
money.making
season pass
without getting
your share of
the business.
The "EFF and
EFF" Line sells
in all localities
to the great
middle class.
.
GET OUR CATALOGUE
and pick out some of the bnght. unique and
popular novelties.
Rockford Frame and Fixture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILL.
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY i
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. :I:I
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Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only.
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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
In
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
Bird' J Eye Maple
Birch
!'<..uarttrtd Oak
and
ClrcassllJn WAlnut
Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS'BUILDING,North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of J. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES,J. EDGAR FOSTER.
31st Year-No. 19 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.. NOVEMBER 5. 1910 Issued Weekly
TRADING STAMPS AND RAILROAD RATES
Court and Commission Rulings on Two Important Matters Reported
From Washington.
Among the decIsions handed down by the SUPI erne court
at \VaShIn£;toll last week \\as one of gleat ImpOltance to mer-chants
The Supreme court I efused to revIew the decI'310n of
the DI"tllct of Columbia COUIt of Appeal'3 In the so-called
trading stamp cases The result of such I efusalls to leave the
deci'3ion of the Court of Appeals In full effect, and, as that de-
CISIOn was adver"e to the lll;ht of the tIadIng stamp com-pa11les
to conduct theIr busmess m the DIstrict of ColumbIa, It
wIll be necessal} to wmd up theIr affaIrs '30 far a" the dlstnct
IS concel ned The case as;amst the compa11le'3 was mstItuted
last Tanuary The first heanng was m the polIce COUIt, where
the tradmg stamp concel ns ,'\ on out In behalf of the dlstI ICt
an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals In an opmlOn
handed down by ChIef JustIce Shephel d, the appellate bl anch
reversed the ruling of the 10\\ el court
ConSIderable comment was caused at the tIme of thIs de-cision,
as both the maJonty and mmonty opmlOns suggested
the advIsabIlIty of the U11lted States Supleme COUlt revlew-mg
the Important legal questIOns plesented by the case ThIs
the Supreme court has now refused to do In arnvmg at its
deCISIOn. the hIghest tllbunal m the land makes no comment
which would mdICate a reason for ItS actIOn
Washmgton retaIl merchants al e rejOlcmg over the out-come
of thIs controversy They declare that the tl admg
, stamp and all othel schemes of the kind are now dead Issues
in \Vashmgton, and that merchants who stIli use them to
attract trade must cease their use and as the I ulmg of the
Supreme court wIll undoubtedly be obsel ved by state courts
the effect of this decision wIll be far-reaching.
However, an officer of one of the pnnclpal tradmg stamp
companies concerned mtimated, shortly after the action of
the Supreme court became known, that it would be only nec-essary
slightly to change his company's plan of business to
continue it within the law, and that thIS change of method
already had been deCIded on Should such actlOn be attempt-ed,
It is stated, the DIstrict of ColumbIa wIll at once institute
restraint proceedings and agam carry the case to the court
of last resort.
Developments m the rallI oad I ate cases during the past
week have also been of mterest and importance to merchants
and shippers. Reports, wIdely dissemmated in financial cir-cles,
apparently WIth a 'Iew of boosting the stock markets,
that the members of the Intel state Commel ce Commission
have reached a tentatli e undel "tandmg that model ate m-creases
in raIlroad Idte" be allcm ed all 0' el the country, have
been emphatICally de11led by Chall man Knapp of the Comnlls-sion.
Heallngs are '3tIlI bun£; held at se\ el al places m the
country, and i would thel efOl e be Impo"'3lble, accordmg to
Mr Knapp, fo the CommiSSIOn to 1each any understandmg
beforehand "here is positively no ba"I'3 of tI uth whatever
m the I eport," IS the definite declaratIOn made by the chall-man
of the Co mIssion.
c\ deCISIOn that would seem to refute thl" Idea ot "(om-proml'
3e" was I eached by the Intel state Commel ce Com mls-
"Ion last Satur ay m what is popularly known as the Reno
late case The CommIssIon announced that ItS Oldel m thIS
case IS to become effectIve on December 1 ThIS decI"lOn
aftecb all class rate'3 on both eastbound and \'\e'3tbound tIaffic
destmed to Nevada common pomt'3 Matenal I eductlOns are
made m all those lates.
Comudentally WIth thIS Reno late annuuncement came
the announcement that the COmmlS'3lOn would make ItS
01 del s, to be Issued a few month'3 hence m the other PaCIfic
Coast case'3. effectli eon l\lay 1 neAt It IS plObable the orders
wIll be promulgated about Malch 1, 1911, so as to afford the
mtelested call1elS and shlppels at least sIxty dav's notIce of
the findms;" and reqUIrement., of the COmml'3SlOn It IS con-fidently
expected that this rulIng wIll make a matellal reduc-tIOn
m rate'3
Want Better State Laws.
UnifOlm State legislatIOn for the regulatIOn of mtra-state
lallroads, and all the problems m connectlOn WIth the states'
control ovel theIr common carnelS, WIll engage the attentIOn
of the ~atlOnal AssocIation of Raili'\ay Comml'3slonels whICh
meets in \Vashmgton on NOvember 1~
PI actIcally every state m the tmlOn wIll be I epl esented
at thIS conventIOn, and ItS progless WIll be calefully followed
More effectn e and comprehen'3lve legl'3latIon affectmg-the
railroads IS the mo.,t ImpOl tant questlOn to come befOl e
the Comnllssionet s An attempt to blmg the ,allOUS state
raIlroad laws more in line i'\lth each othel WIll abo be under-taken
by those present at the comml; meetIng
In addltlOn to legislatIOn, the a"soclatlOn i'\ III conSIder
the questlOn of shlppel s' claims on common carners, sllnphfi-catIon
of raIlway tariffs, rates. and rate-makmg, u11lform
classification, car "ervice and demunage, and the broad que,,-
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Lentz Big Six
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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, MICHIGAlv
t1On" of laI110dd taAe" dnd 1,UlJO,ld \dll1dtwl1 aI11Ll1(1111el1t" t
the act to lee, 111ate commen e
The memhel" ot the T I1tel "tate l om 111Lleel ommh"H 11
are actJ\ ely as'-,oclated \\ lth thc ~tatc oEhu"l-- 111 tl11" I I ~d1l1
/atlOn. and \\ork \\Ith them 111 the dillt to "lel1ll blttll
legulatlOn and contlol of mt1 a-"tdtl ,h \\ dl a" 1I1tLl,tate
carner"
New Furniture Dealen •.
J ( Clone h a ne\\ 1111 111t11e1 de,J!el ,It 1 a \\ tl \ [la
\Y J' Hlamble \\ 111open ,\ nu\ tl11111tll1l "tOIL at 1\1\ al
lup, \\ dsh, on ::-J()\ emhel 14
J C F1lhgan ov\ n" the second ne\\ t1111l1tlll e "tl III l IPCll
ed at A.da, Okla, 111 the past month
H (Ta1he1 I:--.. Co, halt. openld a nl\\ h0l1"e-[tl)111"h11l~
store at 1090 l\1a1l1 "tleet, Ird1tfOld Conn
::\1 B Calhol1n h expected to open ,I nu\ tll11l1tll1l ,111cl
ca1 pet store at Ba1 m\ ell S C 111 Deccmbel
J G Blandon, fmmerlv l [ I o~an"p()lt Ind hd" lIb!
opened a nevI f111111tl11e"tOle dt Ro\"ton (,a
Levv1s Condel, T 1I l\l( hlc\ and T \\ PC1\\ el" h,1\ C ( )-
galllzed a company cap1tdlJ7ed dt SlO 000 to dedI 111 !l11nlttll e
and \ eh1cle" at Ker"I1a\\, S C
1', L Da\ lS, Ii E \\ IllJam" '\ n Dllhe\ ,111d C '\
Hubel, hay e 1I1corpora ted the \nchOl rl11111tll1 c comlJdn \ to
open a new store at P1I1e Bltlff, \1 k Capital "tock S1; 000
County TI eastll cr, 11 T oel Mc:\I l1llen and County Com ,r-.------------------- --------------.---~-
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Don't Burn~Your
- . ---~
Moulding.
Blackened edges so often found
m hard wood 1\1ouldmgs II1dlcate
the use of mfenor tools, which
fnctlOn and burn because of their
faIlure to have proper clearance
The Shimer ReverSIble and 1\on
ReverSIble Cutters are made of the
finest tool steel by expenenced workmen In deSIgn and con
structlOn they are supenor to anythmg on the market They cut
well and retam their shape until worn out Send us drawmgs or
wood samples for estimates on special cutters. Many useful de
Signs, with pnces, are gIven m our catalogue
SAMUEL J. SHIMER & SONS, Milton, Penn.
Manufacturers of the ShImer Cutter Heads for Floonng, Cel1mg,
Sldmg. Door'l, Sa'lh, etc ..---------_._-----
I1lh,,10nel \\ \\ \\ h1telll11"t, ale Olgamzm£; a company to
lll~cl"; e m thc t1.11111tle1l and hou "efl1l mshmg business at Lar-go,
Fla
\ I J l1ldholm and James II Neal, both expenenced m
thc tl1l111tUIe tl dde \\ III enc,a~e m the reta1l busmess at 150
[ llh ~tl eet "'an II anusco, Cal ] hey w1ll d1splay samples
111 the stOl e and fill 01 del" from warehouses of factories.
"BEAVER," "GINDEREllA," "DOCKASH"
STOVE HEADQUARTERS
"THE LINES THAT SELL"
NoleIMPERIAL BEAVER-one of many.
Best, They Stand the Test,
THIS IS the IMPERIAL BEAVER. It IS the finest cooking
range made anywhere In the world
We thmk so, and so WIllyou when you see its advantages:
Study the above picture. The glass oven door is guaranteed
not to break. Na heat lost when you look at your baking. This
range holds Its heat longest, saves 25% m fuel, and has unusual hot
water capacity.
It IS the best lookmg range bUIlt-and wears as well as it looks.
Send for samples and see 1t-but we warn you that no other kind will
ever satlsly you again, If you do I
W. D. SAGER, 330-342 No.Wafer Sf., CHICAGO
WEEKLY ARTISAN 5
Londoners COpy American Methods.
That AmerIcan department "tore "hopping methods will
plevall In London hereafter IS estabh"hed, says a letter from
the ",orld''3 large"t city The most slgmficant ;,utrender to
the onslaught led by Harry Gordon Self! Idge, the Chicagoan
who e'3tabhshed an AmerIcan store there les" than two years
ago, IS that of the fn m of \Vhltely, one of the hest known 1D
London John Lawlle, the managing dll ector of \Vhlteley's
makes no seu et that he 1" takmg ovel the AmellLan depart-ment
store Idea with all Its chalacterI;,t!c featmes
Selfndge has 100f gardens and restamants With musIC;
Lawlle IS to hdve them Selflldge says to the pubhc, "come
in and look a<; much as you hke and go av,ay Without bUying
If you see nothmg you want to buy," Lawlle no", says the
same thmg, althoul!,h befm e this 1ule was applted hy an Amell-can
111 London bU;,1l1es" men thel e "aId It mH~ht ,,01 k well on
the other Side of the Atlanitc, but was Inapphcablc to the
Bllttsh pubhL, as It V\auld hi m~ 111 the 1Iii t dff dnd so keep
the leal plllcha<;el" dv,ay
Lawne, hke Ml Selflldge, 1" to ha, c 1est and '3l1ence
looms, pubhc telephone", an informatlOn hUl eau, a wmnan's
club, a high c1a"s concel t hall, free to customel s, a gl eat cen-tral
dome !Sivm!S a ,lev, of all the flom s, and a Wireless statlOn
by which incoming people may book hotel room;, Attendants
vv111be prov ided who v, 111 accompany foreIgn customers about
London m search of board and 10dg1l1~
Whitely's, by the way, are to have the lalgest store buIld-ing
111 the world It will be knoV\ n as the \T eV\ EmpOllm11
It Will have a flontage of 600 feet, a depth of 3S0 feet, five
"tones and the central dome Will be modeled ltke that of the
Santa :;\Jl:ana della Salute of Venice.
Clark's Veneers.
The \Valter Clal k Veneer company have someth1l1~ to
"ay on another page of thl<; is<;ue of the \\ eekly Arti;,an that
IS well worth lookmg up \\·alter IS all llght on oak. poplar,
llllch and gum, eneerS and a;, for mahogany "ask the man
An Important Insurance Decision.
\ most 1111pOI tdn t deustOn on the in SUlance of mel chdn-dise
was ~l\en b, Tud~e \Valtel '\ PoV\ell m the ClrcUlt
comt dt Kan"ds CltV, ::\To la"t Tuesday CLhe deo'-,lon affects
e, el y mel chant 111 the State o± \I!sSOUll V\ho eanes InSUl ance
on 111"stock The ddu"e that 1"lw)V, In"elted In all Missclt1l1
merchandl"e pohue" deeldl e" that the msurance eompames
at e hable fOI only 011 ee-fou1 tho; of the amount f01 whlCh the
good" ale 111sured Tudc;e 1'm,e11 declaled tllls clause vOld
Hel eaftel all eompd111e" ,\ III be hab! e fel the full amount
of 1l1"l11ancc the case 111 POll1t \\dS In the "l11t of R L
lOlnott a cln ~ood" mellhant at Blaynet, \Io, a!.;alll"t h, c
111S1a1n1ce companle" (01 noti\ stC're b11111ed thc I11c~ht of
TdnUar) 21, 1910 l11s steck was ll1sl11cd at S20000 111 {l\ c
eompame" They 01del cd him settlement at the thl ee-fourths
c1au'oe, 01 $1 :;,000 He 1efused and blought "11lt Judc;e
Powell 01 derecl thc compallles to pa v tb e f1111$20,000
Windfall for Sears-Roebuck Stockholdl"rs.
!\ rIse of nead y tIll ee pam ts 111 Seal ,,-Roebuck stock on
the ChlCa1So exchange thl'o week I" clttnb11ted to the presel1lc
111 that city ot a Ke\\ YOlk partnel of the Ell 111 of Goldman,
~alh~ &.- Co, whllh BOdted the COlpOI atlOn 1'111<;lSentleman
a"smed 111'.,"e"tell1 blend" that the "toLk WIll cia"" 200 "011
ItS mell±;'" 1\1enb 111thiS 1D stanle 8.1 e "uppo:::.cd to mean a
"talk distllh11twn 111 the lled1 futm e ~o notll0 ha" been
IClel\ul h) the dnedOl>" of a "plLld! mLct111!.; \\hleh lS to
<1,,,,1 \\ Jih ,1 \\ 1l1clfaII, !Int the ,h"l1l11ptwn h qj()ll~ that dl1
I ~ $2.00
·1 }tARVE!; ::~::~' o U S ~::=::;:;;~
seat HeIght
of back 24
mches. Width
of seat 18
Inches.
Fm.shed Golden Oak. Shipped K. D.
nested Weurht 19 pounds.
~rJ&j IIalJulaetunlJRCo,
Grand Rapjds.!1ich.
IDEAL STAMPING AND TOOL CO.
SOCKETS. DOWELS,
TOP fASTENERS
and GlJlDES
for Extension 1abies.
Also special stampings
in steel and brass.
Write for
NO.KUM.OUT TABLE SOCKET. Patent allphed lor samples and prices
465 N.Ottawa St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
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LEXINGTON HOTEL
500 Rooms.
Michigan Boulevard and 22d Street.
EVERY MODERN CONVENIENCE.
New Cafes. New Grill Room.
Offices and Rooms Redecorated.
Absolutely Fire Proof.
"YOU WILL LIKE THE LEXINGTON."
HORACE WIGGINS.
JCHEA.RMLEOSNTMROcHSUEGH } Propr>etors ASSIstant Mgr.
Also opetatIng
Hotel Montrose. Cedar Rapids, Ia I Roek Island House, Rock Island, 111 I..--------------
extl d dlstllhl1tlOn V\ 111he made 111rthel more, the company
\\ 1l! "h. 1\V, aCUll elm!.; to dn 111 'older. a pi ofit of 20 pel cent
(Ill the (U1111l1011 "tode HI the l \111 Cllt iI"ul! ) cat
6
SHOPPERS WHO ORDER FOR CASH
WEEKLY ARTISAN
How Wives of Penurious Millionaires Mana2e
to Obtain "Pin Money."
xow that make~ $20 ,\ 01 th of 1:;ood~ doe"n t 1t a "ked
the 11Chlv ~O\\ ned lady to the head ca~h1el at a Idl ~e dOLIn-town
depaltment ~tOle a" she "toad 111[lont of hI" '\111dOl',
penc11 and pad 111 hand
"Yes, madam' 1ephed the la"ll1el
ence sho\\ n onh to the lustomel \\ ho::>e
whose pdY 1S cel tam "I,I, hat else"'
"Let me "ee" mu::>ed the lad, 1eflect1\ ell che\\ 111...t',he
end of her penul '1 \\ ant $2; , put dOlI n f1\ e pall ot those
two-dollal -a-pa1r hose I "a\\ on the countel up on the "elond
floor, that \\ 111make tlm b then \\ on t 1t-
The cash1er nodded assent
"Then that w111 just ahout make t\\ ent, -in l U)mlll~ to
1ne, \\on't it?"
"Tha t ,1111 he ell tll eh "a tJ"tal tOt, to t1"> tha 11k 'au"
ans" e1ed the la"h1el \\ lth a 1e"pel tful n{Jd But" 111t\\ en-ty-
fn e he suffiuent t01 ,OU1 need" ~ lOu kno\\ ,(Ill L"n ha, e
all you wish,"
"\A,Tell ma, he I had bette1 nlctke tl1clt fitt\ P1lk me out
$30 worth of a""01 ted hnge11e and put 1t dcm n
"\Y1th plea~ut e ' 1etul ned the la"h1el III the \\ a\ \\ e
hale just lecei,ed flom Pall" "omc hCdlltJtlll de~l~n, 111th1"
same 1111ge11ethat 1 knOl\ \ on lllt11d not 1e"1">t Pl1J I hd"111~
if you sa\\ 1t \Ytll \ on not 111"ptLt Ot1! "tolk
The lady lame back 111a fell m111ute" it om hel e,anl1-
nation of the 1l11gcl1e 'You Ian ~end np the al tIde" T hd\ e
selected flam that ~tolk It b e'ljlllqte \01\ to ~u balk to
bus111e~s, the1l'~ nl11eb dollal" \\ 01th I hat ...',td dlto~ethel 01
this thirty dollal" \\ 01th 1" to be "ellt home T llSt let me hay e
the fifb on the othe1 Sl, 1., and" e \\ 111be "qual e '
"That 1S COIlect, mddam 1eplted the la"hlCl bOI\ 1n1:;
10\\ \V1th that he lonntcd out 11\ e ten-dollal btll~ and
placed them 111he1 hane! \\ 1th d "h~ht nml ot thank" "he
swept out to he1 antomob11e
"Odd SOlt of d melcantlle tl an"dctlOn 1\ a"n t 1t T1I11111-1,e
~aid the I ash1el to a fl1end \\ ho tlom d pO"lt1On "lth111 the
grating, had me1heald the entlle lOl1\el~atlOn
W\\ ell 1t "me looked "ome odd to me \\ a" Tlmm1e's
lcph "C;eemel hJ,e that \\ omdn "a" buy 111~ a lot ot ,tuft
flom you and then IOU hun around and ...',l\e hel ncatl\ as
much cash as the good" come to fO! bn\ 111~ them \I hat dId
)'OU ~1\ e hel monel fOl \\ hen "he" the one that otH'; h t to be
pay l11g } OU -, \\ he1 e do the c;ood" C;O \\ hel e dOL" the
moncy go \Yhat" the an",\ el to Ihe "hole thm-.,
"It does look peculta1.' laughed the cd"lllel, that 1" un
ull you undel "tand 1t, then It" qultc "lmplt J Telc" the dn-
S\\ e1 as you call 1t
\\ lih that e!etel-b111"
al e 1dl~t ,md
"That 1\ oman 1S the wife of a promment downtown lawy-el
WOI th mal e than a mdllOn He is a model husband in
many respects, perm1ts her to hay e unl11nlted credIt here-
"hlCh she ne\ el falls to take ad\ anta1:;e of-and never scruti
1117e~ the monthh bIll merely gettmg her 0 K to it and
"endmc; Ih a lhelk at onle But he falls down m one 11npol t-ant
pal tllulal of marned life-he ne, el gl\e:o hiS w1fe a cent
of la"h She may come m here and order a thousand-dollar
lot ot Im:;elle and he'd ne, er murmm-but If hel automobJ1e
"hclt11d hI e,Lk dOli n whlle she wa" gomg home 1 doubt If
"he d ha, e ca1 fal e
\" 01, \\ hlle an unhmlted credIt at half a dozen of the
blgge:ot St01 es m town 1<.,a ml1:;hty comfortable thmg, no
amount of It takes the place of a few gI eenbacks tucked away
m a "ate 101 nel of yom clothes agamst acc1dents, The lady
m hel e told me that she couldn't count the number of times
that "he bad been put m the most embanassing positions
mereh t01 \\ ant ot a dollal-OJ maybe only a quarter, and
the ~mallel the sum needed the 1:;leater the mortification,
He" not a "tm:;} man tJllS hu~bano, as you can see, but
\I hen "he a"k" hun fcn a little pocket money he answers as a
pal ent \\ ould an""el a chl1d that a<.,k" fm something not good
tOl 1t that ~he has e\ el vthmg she \\ Ishes and wJ11 just throw
,1\\ a\ the ca"h T doubt If "he has a dollal a week to spend
as "he choo~e" '\lthout h1~ knowll1g where it goes
I he little ~ame she )U"t played thlough my assistance
I" thl" She lome~ dcm n hele when she wants twenty or
th11t\ dollal" dnd bu} s, appal entl), g-oods to the value of
that dmount ph1" "c)me 20 pel lent The goods are chalged on
hel blll She then sIgns a I ecelpt fOI the !Soods and I pay
htl out the monev "he II ants I add, a:o I sav, about 20 pel
lent \\hllh 1" th~ a\elage profit on the goods of the quality
"he hm " -\t the eno of the month hubby gets the bIll, flmgs
It lal e1e""h au (\"S the bl eakfa~t table for hel 0 K, \\hich
"he C;l\ e~ ot caul "e and \\ lite" hel out a check for the
amount p,nable to the company, not to her By thIS means
"he b endh1ed to :;et a lea"onable supply of pocket money
at \I hat appeal" to hel a 1easonable rate of mterest; we are
pCltelth "atJ"heJ \11th the 20 pel cent on the deal and hubby
-\I ell hllbln doe"n t know and so It can't hurt him
It 1~ a \ el) common method of raising cash quickly
,Ullon2, the 111\ e" of \\ ealthy men, who<.,e hubbIes al e hke thiS
one'" and you would be SUlpllsed to know how many Ilch
men al e of this t, pe There are fully fifty ladles whom we
dccommodate and the othel bIg stores have a proportlOnate
numbel I thmk 1t petfecth leg-Itlmate for the WIfe who IS
thu" tleated b\ hel hu"band to le"ort to thIS means How,
umld a "omdn 11\e up to hel $10000 automoJ)lle With onlv
lR ccnh 111 he! pockct"' \Vhat cloe" hubby say "hen he finds
It out - \\ ell 1\ e ne\ el known of a casc yet, but "hen I do
1 11 phone, ou to come 'lound and I'll 2,1\e } ou a couple of
u,]umn" of stl UluOU~ lOP} "'-1\ e,v YOlk TImes
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Patent Malleable Clamp Fixture., IE H SHELDON & CO ChIcago, Ill,
I
Gentlemen -We are pleased to state that the l'l dozen Clamp Fixture. \\ hlCh
we boucht of you a httle over a year ago are glV1n.g'" excellent serVJce \Vr are
well sattsfie:d With them and shall be pleased to remember you whenever we want
\ anything addItional In thIS line Yours truly,
I SIOUXCIty, Iowa CURTIS SASH & DOOR CO A- • • •• ._. ._._._._. __ ._ •••• • , =- ..._ ...... ..
Wood Sar Clamp Flxturea, Per Set SOc. 1III
IIIIfft
I...I
30.000 Sheldon
Steel Rack
Viaea
Sold on approval and an uncon
ctltlOoal money back g-uarantee
SHELDON'S STEEL SAR CLAMPS,
Guaranteed Inde.tructlble.
We SOhClt pnvllege of sending samples and
our complete catalogue
E. H. SHELDON ill CO.
328 N. May St •• Chicago.
i •
WEEKLY ARTISAN 7
,....-... .. ... . ....... ... .....
1 QUALITY MACHINES-ISN'TIT
TOOBAD-People
wonder where their profits are going when the trouble usually lies in poor eqUIp-ment.
A !lule foresight in the begmning would have saved them dollars--a lIule more money m-vested
at the start in "OLIVER" "QUALITY" equipment.
Some manufacturers of wood working tools shght their output by puttIng in poor materials-employmg
poor workmen-slmply to be able to make a little more profit. "Ollver" tools are bUIlt
along machine tool lines-careful-accurate-durable - safe.
Some purchasers fall to Investigate thoroughly before placing their order. Some unscrupulous
salesman tells them to purchase something-they go ahead-find out too late they are wrong-lose
money, whereas a letter addressed to us would have procured our catalogs-set them thmking-saved
them money.
.------
ISN'T THAT TOO BAD.
OURLINE-SURFACE
PLANERS
HAND JOINTERS
SANDERS
WOOD TRIMMERS
CHAIN MORTISERS
LATHES
"OLIVER" No. 60 Saw Bench.
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I 1125 Weot TempI. St., Loo An.eleo, Cal. I
Pacific Bid •. , Seattle. Waoh. I
____"O_L.IV_.ER_" _No. 61 Surfacer . . .. ---l
SAW BENCHES
SWING CUT.OFF SAWS
BAND SA WING MACHINES
BORING MACHINES
SAFETY CYLINDERS
ViSES, CLAMPS, ETC., ETC.
ADDRESS DEPARTMENT "0"
OLIVER MACHINERY CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., U. S. A.
BRANCH OFFICES-lot
National Bank Bldg , Chicago, Ill.
No 50 Church St, N.... Yo,k City.
Sued a Furniture COmpany.
New Y OJ k Hel aId-An 11repres"lble conflIct between
the artI-,tIc temperament of a teacher of French and the
lou\Sh. not to say con ugated tempet ament" of city marshal"
and the11' hel edltal y alhes, fur111tu re 111mel s, was descnbed
111the SUPI eme court ye"terday by lVI1-,,, Helen McGI ath, the
teachel She IS pla111tIff 111a Slllt fm $10,000 damac;e" aga111st
a fUrl11tUle company whICh she says i" responsible for the
\'V I eckmg of her apartment and her peace of mmd
"DI eadful, h0111ble and atloclOUS ml"takes," IS the mIld
est pllla"e she used m her bIll of complamt m alludml; to thE
"ene" of unwelcome VtSltS of cIty marshals and furmtllrt
movels to her apartment "\hout the only P01l1t on ""hlch ShE
and the defendant fmmtme company agrees IS that MIs-, Me
Grath got the fl11l11tl11c ham -:\lalY Foc;alt), that ~lar)
Fo~al ty had got It hom the cumpany and that thel e wa" a
clI-,pllte about the payment"
Then lamc the CIty m<u"hal" J\1I-,-, l1c(Jlath c1c-,Ulhe"
the \ l"lt of one of thc"e 111 the followlllg language
"Coulc1 .)OU hd\ c "een the mal "hal lolhng 111 a lhau Ill-sultlll~
a )ouns \\Oman hoaldel, who. It I" ncedle"" to say,
I'3 as sweet and I efined a .)oung yyoman a" It IS pOSSIble to
find, you, yourself, If you haye a partIcle of manhood in you.
would have felt 1I1clIned to knock hun head 0\ er heels"
1'hl" descllpt10n of the uty mal shal was conta1l1ed III a
lettel 2\;IIS" McGrath saId "he wlOte to the fur111ture company
demand1l1g that It lompen"ate her for the "honol s of the
reple\ III "
"I need a lalge quantity of fUt nitme," she wlote. "and
$2'1,000 worth would be none too much Then I ""Ill not sue
you, ThIS propoSItIon may-nay, will, If accepted-save your
house from an awkwald, pel,hanL<: a dal1gerou", pOSItIOn.
"At first I thought the replevin was a joke. When I
found It was not, I bm "t into a fit of hystencal laughter for
the first t11ne 111 my lIfe and laughed three hours by the
clock"
::,he saId that a-, a I esult of thIS prolonged laughter
""omethllll:; Clacked 111 the top of my head."
The court lefu"ed MISS McGrath damages for the injury
alle~ed to hay e been cau'3ed by her fit of laughter and held
that she mu"t look to Mary Fogarty for damages caused by
the Iemm al of the furl11ture.
The Girl's Smile.
The ,Yaddell Manufactullng company al e havmg a fine
trade III can mgs and wood ornaments All theIr knobs and
wood pull" are fa"tened WIth the no-kum-Ioose fastener-the
k111d, lIke the glll's "mIle, that "won't come off."
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For Many Years Made ExclUSIvely by
C. CHRISTIANSEN, 2219 Grand Ave., CHICAGO
Also manufacturer of the ChIcago Truck for woodworkIng factorIes
Send for Catalogue
'!I _.... 1II W _ ........
a WEEKLY ARTISAN
PARLOR FRAMES
which is larger and more effeclive than
we have yet offered
Now ready for inspection at our factory
T.ke Southport Ave car to Greenwood Terrace, thence west to factory,
or Clybourn Ave car to A.hland Ave, thence north to Greenwood Terrace
Npw Factorips.
Challes Ildel" h,\" e"t,\hlhhUI ,1 "nLlll dldll !,lltllJ \ at
Ellijay, N. C.
Work has been stal tec1 on clealm~ th e ten-au e slte t01
the plant of the Texarkana Seat company at Texalkana fe.>--
Ark
The N e\\ f'ngland Cdhmet ,VOJk" capltal17ed dt S2:; 000
$400 paid 1l1, wlll bulld a plant and manutactl11 e turl1lture and
office fixtures at Portland, :\Ie
Wllham J Huff Toseph C;chanzel and T D Ilekhtel,
have incorporated the C olc)1ado Refn~elatOJ compam capl
tahzed at $20,000. to estabhsh a ne\\ facton 111 Dem el
Citizens of Buchanan. Ga are O1gal1lZ111~a compam to
estabhsh a coffin factOJ} 111thelr town The\ plOpose to fix
the capital stock at $2~,000 of whICh 20 pel cent has heen
subscribed.
The Worthm01 e Dedd1l1~ compan}, capltali7ed at $3000
have established a ne\\ facto! v in CinC1l1natl, 0 :\1 D
Hatch, Loms Phlllips, \1 C Henchell and T L Phllhps al e
the stockholders
\iV. H. Ragan, J H 1hllel, E '\ SnO\\ and T L Kn k-man
have incolpOlated the GIant FUll11tl11C compam to es-tablish
a new plant and manufdctul e "all kmds ot TUlnltl11e
at Hlgh Pomt, N C CapItal stock ~1:;0 000 \\ lth $60,000
subscribed and $30,000 paId up
Jacob and G P Reelman ot Gland Raplds \hch \ L
and J P \\ alCl and B \ Pltlmmel ot Malletta 0, 11<\\e l1l
cO!po! ated the Valley Fm nlture and ::'vIanufal t1111l1~C0111pan}
to manufactl11e chans and fl11nlture nove!tle" at :\fdlletta
They wlll 1emodel an old bmlc!lnl?, that ha" bccn \ aC,ll1t 101
::,C\ el al } eal s Cdpltal stock. ~40 000
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Chica~o' s Best and Most Effective Line
of
Can be seen throughout the year at J. J. Hall & Son, 137 Michigan Ave.,
Peck and Hills Co., Wabash Ave. and 14th St. and in Our Catalogue,
sent to any furmture dealer on request
THE V".1ndtlpARLOJt NEW...I..'" BED
toIeed not be moved
from the wall.
Alway. ready with
bedding in place.
So .impl., 10 easy, a
child can operate it.
Has roomy wardrobe
box.
CHICAGO, Em' & SedgWIck NEW YORK. Norman & Monitor.
~-------------------_._--------_._--------- ..,
A. L. HOLCOMB &. CO. II
I,I
I,,hI 27 N.Market St.. Grand Rapid •• M~ich.
ManUfacturers of HIGH GRADE
OROOVINO SAWS
DADO SAWS
CItizens' Phone 1239
""The Express Strikebreaker.
, rhe e"p1 ess stllkebl eakel that wlll bl eak the mIghty
~ J lp of selh:oh monopoly lS the pal cels post," declal ed Fred-f'llCk
C Beach, edItor of the SClenbfic Amencan and president
of the Postal Progl e~s League, at d meeting of that organiLa-tlOn
111Xe\\ YOlk, last Thursday "It IS a proper function of
the Postoffice Depal tment to carry small packages and the
l?,"0\ e1nment can do lt for one-half the rates of the express
companies sa\ 111gshIppers and the people the great dividends
of those COI poratlOns and at the same time gaining suffic1ent
1 e\ enue to place the Postoffice Department on a paying basis,"
he contmued "An extended parcels post law such as our
lea~ue ad\ ocates WIll glVe the government sufficleent profit to
make the 1 cent letter postage a practical proposItion, and it
\\ III also do away WIth all thlS agItation against publishers'
1 a tes of postage"
Reduced Return Rates Disapproved.
The Intel state Commerce Commission has announced
lh find111gs 1111egal d to 1educed rates on return slllpments
lln all lOad" 111\\ esteln das"lfication territory. The opmlOn
111l?,enclal c!J"appu)\es of the letmned shipment lates, hut
lu..,tlfies redl1led lates fOl the retmn of freight which has
heen 1efu sed by the consIgnee
'Tlan"lt dllangemeents 111 then common f01m," says the
l omml":OlUn, al e susceptible of defcnse only upon the theory
that the 111bound and outbound movcment-, al e part of a
"111c;le tl ansactlOn, but thel e 1S no 1 eal connectIOn betwecn
an outbound :::,lllpment toddy, and a 1etm n shIpment one year
hence"
BEDROOM FURNITURE
ID M.hogany. Walnut. 8m:!'s Eye Maple and Ouarrered Oak
I-I
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HORN BROS. MFG. CO.
1114-1156 W. Superior St., Chicago. ---------~_._---~-_. _. -_._----------------------------
WEEKLY ARTISAN
·'THE PORTER"
Patented Rouad Safety Cylinder.
CONSTRUCTION-These heads are made of high grdde
machmery steel, forged to size and are of one piece Slots are
milled on t\'\ a opposite sides for the knives at such a distance
from the center that the knives will do the best \'\ 01 k
The chip breakers or back k111ves, as they are sometnnes
called are mserted m the head as the cross sectional view
shows, and are made of spnng steel They weal longer and
better than the ordmary soft steel chip breakers and are easl1y
kept shal p or replaced when so necessary
These heads take the same style of k111vesas the ordmary
squire head V\ hlch does away with all bother caused by ha\ mg
to have speClal parts The kniVes are from 14 inch to :Vs inch
m thickness, and on account of this thickness, It IS Impossible
to cloVvd chips m unde1 them, which IS hable \'\lth the tilln
k111ves They are held down hy collar bolt'i V\ 111ch ha\ e a
~reater teml1e strength than the ordmary planel bolt The
k111vescan he set forward by usmg a punch m the httle holes
directly m redl of the back of the knn es
The side or end flange'i are made of steel and are put on
the head as an extra support or precantlOn 111 case of d bolt
breaklllg On aCCOUl1tof these and because the cap mer the
k111vesbe1l1g a part cf the cylmdel which IS sohd, It IS Imp os-
'ilble for the k111feto pull off (If securely bolted) or an)thlll~
to fly out This IS (!lfferent than all other heads The anI)
stram on this cap 1Sthat caused by centnfugal force On the
regular cyhnder for Jointers. V\ e put the cap on the pulley end
only so a" to allow rabbetlllg
Very short stock can be planed on these cv hnders, end'i
of stock can be planed, heavy cuts, and Irregular work such as
champenng, cuttlllg corners, etc, can be done Mouldlllg
knives for speClal work can be used on these round cylinders,
but we do not advise their use, as the cylinder'i are not slotted
for the bolts, as they should be for this work
How to Treat a Mongrel.
Pointing to a sample ladles' desk (a composite of l\IlsslOn,
English, Colomal and Italian Rena1ssance) the supel intendent
of a leading furniture factory asked "\iVhat shall I do w1th
it? It looked very good on paper, but now it is a shocklllg
thing to look at." "Put it under the ten-ton hammer of a pile
driver and let the hammer hit it once," the dealer in furniture
to whom the question quoted was addressed, replied.
...- .. ------ .. .. -_.--------
Quality and Economy
Two excellent reasons for using the
Excelsior or World's
Fair Polish
on high grade furniture. We claim to sell the best and
most economical polishes, and have proved it by their
being the Standard polishes for 25 years of use in the
furniture manufacturing trade.
Get our prices and send for sample before placing
your next order.
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I GEO. W. LIGHT MFG.
COMPANY,
-23-1-2-W--. -V_an Buren St., CHICAGO. .I. .._._.-- _.-----------_ .... r-----·-----· --,---------.-------~
. ShelJoygan Novelty Co.
fJ[ Order your hol-
Iday goods early,
so as not to be dls-appolllted
III dehv-ery.
Our
SHEBOYGAN, WIS.
Lady's Desk No. 305.
---------_.- _._-------_. _. _. ---------~I..
Music Callinets,
Ladies' Desks,
Bookcasee-, etc.,
are Just the thmgs
for holiday gIfts.
WrIte for Catalogue.
fJ[ Lady's Des k
No. 305 IS a good
one, but we have
many more to select
from.
10
\\ ay of tellmi:, the Pope and the people that he was empelol
and" ould make hImself so, all self, all Napoleon. It can be
tluthtull) 'iald 01 'Japoleon a'i it is of Ceasar, that it cost a
11111110Inn es to nuke h1m emper01. This is why so many hi'i-tOllans
in compalmg him with Caesar refer to Napoleon's
study of thl'i great fighter of a fighting age.
Napoleon vvas a man in whom two passions prevailed;
nameh, vIC10usness and greed, but he used the fight within
hIm to satIsfy hIS desIre for power. According to Greek
m) thology, he was ruled by Mercury and Mars. Mercury,
) au ,,111 I emember, was the god of the merchant, banker and
lObbel and }Ial s was the god of war Mercury rules every-thmg
that l'i i:,reedy and graspmg m nature, and Mars rules
Iluou;,ness and fight
Character of the Times.
In a further study of the period from a character stand-pomt,
we find the licentious ideal of the Louis XV period
U1tll eIv \\ Iped out, as Napoleon consIdered women only as
bl eedel" that the; would stock France with larger armIes to
"athh hl'i dmblt10n f01 power. He divorced Josephine f01
the ;,ake at a famIly, and recognized only women who were
apPloach111g motherhood, and even the statutes of the period
II el e modeled to the same effect This shows that the sixth law
ot nature had developed to Its extreme height ,and was
Clushed by the FI ench revolution, and that Napoleon was the
fil'it gl eat leade1 of the bus111ess age, or the age of greed for
po" er and gl eed for gold H1S conception of the power of
mane} was ;,hown when he was asked what was the first
1equll ement of war H1s answer was "money." What the
"ecund, 'mane) " dnd what the third, "money." Thus we see.
"lth the UShe11l1~111of the age of greed, the first gl eat bU;,l-ness
man, v; ho made a business of war for the sake of power,
I ecog1117ed as the essence of all greed and power, the posses-
S10n of money.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
FURNITURE DESIGNS AND HISTORY
Napoleon"s Characteristics Reflected in Decora-tions
of the Period Patterns.
(By Arthur Kilkpatnck)
The Empne style was a del elopment or cont111udt1On of
the same penod of rela'\: as that of LOLll'iXYI but the efleets
"ere concentrated upon the cha1acter of a s111gleman 111place
of the more general chal acte1 of the French noblht" as \vas
the case in the Lotll s XVI pellod These pel lads of 1ela"
have appalently produced r:,-Ieat chalactel 01 hd\e been the
1esult of bringmg to the 110nt i:,1 eat leadeb 01 men fhe
death of Juhu'i Caesa1 "as the chma,- at a pellod ot actl\lt)
and the beginnmg of a penod of I ela '\. I ha \ e shov\ n hm, the
Arthur KIrkpatrIck
Louis XVI sty Ie lS a cop, of the Pompelan 1Ull11tUle, and I
now plOpose to dl aw pal aIle!;, between the characters of
Caesar and Napoleon, and the fUll11tUle at the French em-pIre
and that used In Rome at Caesal'S tIme
Cae;,ar hved 111the age of \ lUOlbness, so much so that he
was mU1dered by V1C1OUSconsplrat01;, m the Roman senate
chamber The gl eat pI eponderance of the decoratlOn on
furnitul e and m archItecture vvas emblematIC of wal and the
vICtone;, of war } \ ery \ Ictor) gamed b) Ceasal was paid
for m blood, and e\ en at pIa} the most refined at Roman
society sought en tel ta111ment b) "a tchmg t\vO gladIators
fight "ith daggers as long a'i they could stand \Vhen one
finally dId fall and pleaded by slQ;ns fm hfe, they often an-swered
by turning down the11 thumbs, slgnifymg, ktll h1m, as
though their \ ICIOUSnatures CIaved even hIS last famt strug-gles
w1th death
Napoleon lned m the eady star:,-e of the plesent age, that
of busmess or !:ileed, and he appal entl) 'iau Ihced all the finel
qualtties of natm e to fatten thl;, one Ideal the gl eeel 101
power. He saw whele he could u"e the V\ arhke attttude of
Caesal to ~I atlfy hi" 'ielfish amblt10n f01 pm\ el ~ ate, too,
the selfish attttude of Napoleon 111111Spul ;,U111gand accept111g
the Impenal clown 1hnce had the crown been offered to
Caesar and thllCe had Caesar refused it. Not so \\ Ith Xdpo-leon.
,V-1th almost fevensh eagerness, he relle\ ed the Pope
of the cro", n and clapped It on hIS own head, and then took It
upon hImself as hIS first offiCIal duty to make hIS \'Ilfe queen
by crownll1g her. However, he cared httle for cro", ns and
costly robes. What he wanted \\ as po" er, and he took this
Furniture of the Times.
-\s tIll" chle1 character was an imitator of Cae"ar in war,
so \\ as the 1m 11ltUIe an inutation of the claSSIC Roman effect
of Caesal's time The business age had dawned but was not
£;enel al enough to be an ideal of the people as a whole. There-f01e,
the effects of a warhke age were forced upon the people
h} the stlong character and wJ11 of Napoleon.
The features of the decoration were emblematic of glory,
pmver and vICtory. The flaring, clean cut, brass mounts which
decorated the SUIface of the sombre shaded mahogany were
the chIef decoratIve embellishments and were composed of
flamll1g torches, the crown, helmets, eagles, garlands, mytho-logIcal
:olgns and wreaths of laurels, centered WIth a large
capItal K ThIS capItal N and the empire star were supposed
to leplesent Napoleon, but it seems to us that a shooting star
would be more fittmg and appropriate. The drapery was of
a heavy matenal producing a rich classic effect. Bees woven
m the cloth was one of the favorite patterns. We suppose
these were to represent Napoleon's active soldiers, and their
."tm£;ers the bullets However, this is but sUpposItion, and it
nM\ be that the bees were to typify the mdustrious people
of France.
The leading designer of the French Empire was Jacques
LOlllS DaVId, 1748-1825, who 1S called the dictator, but in
reahty It was Napoleon who dId the dictating. David was a
pam tel "ho adm11ed the classic Roman art of Caesar's time,
e\ en as Xapoleon adm1red Caesar. He also admired Napo-leon,
101 the anI) pIcture we ever saw of David had his right
hand tucked 111 the front of his coat with much the same effect
as Kapoleon, but pliant in character and imitative in attitude.
The next deslgnel of Importance was Lienard.
. WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
Indlanapoh,>,Ind Nm 3 -The sel vmg of hot dmnel" to
the WOlkmen 111 then emplov was commenced eleven ) edrs
ago by the T n Laycock 1\Ianutactunng company of thIS
Clty The senlCe ha::, plO"en satlsfactOly to the company and
then employes It IS not a money makmg enterpnse, but
takes cal e of Itself finanClally The bene1t denved by the
company IS m the nnplOved efhclency of the WOlkmen vVell
fed men take a keener mtel e"t m theIr dutles than pootly or
underfed, and by ~lvm£; the best serVIce they are able to pel-form,
the employes show theIr appreuatlOn of the meal serVIce
furlllshed by the company. In the fir::,t yeals of the expen-ment
two bnds of meat, vegetables, bl ead and coffee constItu-ted
the menu, but It "as found nece:,sary to add ml1k and
pastl y latel:Many of the young people dId not care for
coffee, and wanted a bIt of cake or a pIece of pIe and mIlk The
adc!ltlOn of the"e artIcle::, 1equired more labol, but the em-ployes
were satl::,fied wIth the food fUllllshed, whIch was the
pmpo::,e the company sought to accomphsh The food IS
dIshed out III hberal quantItIes and the workmen can purchase
a good hot dIllner for tv" eh e or fifteen cents.
Marott's department store III Indlanapohs IS not located
III the "shoppmg dlstnct" In fact It IS qUIte oUblde of that
favored reglOn J\Iarott, however, adopted a sensIble plan to
blmg shoppers to hIS StOle. Purchasmg a numbel of bllS and
handsome automobIles he nOtlfied the ladles of the CIty that
whenever they deemed to shop m 111'>store he would send an
automobIle to theIr homes and bnnf; them to hIS store when-ever
the ladles would request hnn by mall or telephone to do
so. Marott's store IS one of the populal houses of the CIty and
ItS 10catlOn IS no hmdrance to hIS trade
In many factones fUllllture III plocess of constructlOn IS
pushed across the floOl '0 fIom one department to another, as
may be requned Man) of the lIght pIeces so handled are
mounted on runners, but \\ hethel mounted 01 not consIderable
damage IS done before the good:, 1each the packmg room.
Superintendent WIlson of the Udell Works, IndIanapolIs, by
using two wheeled trucks, has practlcally removed the cause
of damage to goods by handlmg m the factory. BeSIdes, the
work is quicker and more easIly accomplished
An Illterestmg and valuable e2--hll)1t of a part of theIr
line was made recently III PIttsburg, by the Thomas B. La)-
cock Manufactunng company. Twelve brass beds with plaIll
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panels wel e shIpped to Kaufman Brothers, who set apart one
of theIr bIg shO\\ wmdows for the purpose of enablIllg an
artlst from the Laycock factmy to decorate the panels wIth
brush and pamt, m the presence of thousands of people. The
:,treets \\ ere so clOwded wIth people that at tlmes the artist
\\as compelled m response to a request of the polIce authon-tles,
to suspend hel work untl1 the crowd dispersed. The plan
\\ as well concel" ed and effectl\ ely car ned out. The exhibition
lasted one week.
J FI ank Lmdley of the T B Laycock Manufacturing
company IS spendmg se\ el al weeks on the Pantic coast and
m the mountam states He expects to arllve home shortly
before Thanksgn mg \\ hen he V\ 111follow the custom that
has been presel ved for many) ears by entertaming the Lindley
Laycock-L)tle famIlIes on that day Mr Lytle ,,111 entertaIn
as usual on Christmas and Mr. Laycock on New Year's day
The WIves of these gentlemen al e SIsters.
The manufacturers of furniture 111 IndIanapolIs took
plOmment pal ts m the mdustnal parade held m that CIty 1e-cently.
Mr La)cock, Mr Cobb, Mr. Emnch and others were
among those who Olgalllzed and carned on the en tel pnse
All the manufactunng 111dustnes partIcIpated and the real
of the plocesslon passed the pomt from whIch the advance
started aftel a mal ch of four hours One hundred and fifty
thousand people \ Ie\\ ed the parade.
On His Own Account.
J G Marshall, formerly a buyer for Hugh McElveen of
PIttsburg, has epgaf;ed 111the sale of office fUllllture 111that
Clty. He WIll handle especlall) the lIne of the Standard Desk
company Mr Lappe IS bUYIllg f01 McElveen .
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FREEDMAN CONVERTIBLE DIVAN BED
A Revolution in Parlor Bed Construction. An Immediate Success.
Full Size Bed in Divan Space.
SIMPLEST IN ACTION.
LEAST SPACE.
STRONGEST BUILT.
Supercedes all otber Interchangeable Parlor Beds.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATIONS AND PRICES.
FREEDMAN BROTHERS & CO.
Manufacturer. of Upbol.tered Furmture
Factory, 717-731 Mather St., CHICAGO.
. ..
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12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
TURPS-NO.
The Only Perfect substitute for Turpentine.
Contains No Gasoline, No Benzine, No Headlight Oil.
For use in reducing Varnish.
For Use in CUTTING DOWN EXPENSES.
TRY IT.
The results speak for themselves. Barrel sent on approval.
THE LAWRENCE·McFADDEN CO.
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
The New Rector's-A Record in Rlipid BuildiIl£.
A new record for speed of constructlOn has been t~tlb-
Iished 111 Kew York m the bU1ldmg ot the ne" Hotel RectUl
now approachmg completlOn On Jannar) 31, 1910, the aIel
Rector'~ was closed awl the new hotel ,,111 be opened betl lIt
January 1, 1911
Charles E Rector, the o"nel, has spaled no e"pen,e to
make hIS cara,ansary complete m e, el) detatl Jt :,tancl~ on
the corner of Broad" ay and Forty-fourth stl eet dnd "Ill be
up-to-date m evelY respect The fir:ot three :otoncs ale ot
Bedford stone", the 12 stolles above of bllck "lth tetra-cotta
trimmmgs and the roof IS a cnl \ ed mansard The mam
dmmg-room on the first floor occuple:o. the "hole Bl oad" a)
frontage and the color scheme uscd IS gold and gra) 1he
LoUls Quator7e style IS followed The drapellcs and nphol
stenng are 111a nch French cdrd111al rO:o.e colol Llble~ al e
of specIal deSIgn In the mam lobh) Itahan \\ alnut and
ItaItan velvet covenngs are employ ed f01 the tUll11tUl e The
bedrooms upstalr~ have been planned to harmol11ze m the11
floor co, ering~, \\ alls, furwtul e and dl apenes Cll caSSlclll
walnut and mahogany are the "oods used The upholstcl v
fabncs were all purchased ot Stern Brothel sand amuunted to
over 12,000 yards The brass bed" to be used dre of ~peual
design and of a style never betore u:o.ed m a hotel and the best
mattresses and box springs ,\ dl be u:o.ed
The cafe IS fimshed m L11CaS"lan walnut The tables
have Clrcasslan "alnut bases and the tops are of black
Austnan glass WIth SIlver mountmgs The chall:, have
upholstered seats and backs The banquet 100m seats 150
people and its color scheme IS gold and gl a) There are
three pnvate dining-rooms, one m red, one m green and one
m brown, with furnishmgs to halmonize. In the ladies' parlor
the I OUh XI I st, Ie I" followed with Clrcassian walnut furlll-tUl
e dnd s;old and pearl color wmdow hangmgs On the
1[' //,l1llne 11001 l11ere 1~ a ladles' parlor decorated in red and
sold ,\ hlch "Ill contam mahogany furniture with covenngs
ul antique, eh et
1he IT otel Relt01 ,,111 be a splendid addItion to New
\ ulk OJ lalge numbel of fine hotels
Cheap Help Not Always Profitable.
Good reItable machmes are not mfrequently condemned
on account of the Ignorance or laz111ess of the men engaged
to opel ate them," remarked a manufacturer of wood-working
machlner) 'Manufacturers of the penny-wlse-and-pound-fooItsh
class um'ls(1) place machmes that cost, in some
111stances, a thousand dollars m the charge of men who are
paId Ham $9 to SlO pel week when competent men could
be employed for ttom $12 to $15 per week The delays and
1epdl! e"penses resultmg from the employment of cheap and
111competcl1L men more than offsets the difference in the wages
"d \ ed '
FURNITURE MANUFACTURERS
ATTENTION!
Send for samples of our
Celebrated Nickel Steel
Sword Tempered
BAND SAW BLADES
Warranted In every partIcular
Best proPosItion on the market.
FRANK W. SWETT & SON
MErs. oE band saw blades and tools
1717·1719 W. Adams St. Chlcag.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 13
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No. 550
Price $8.75
Palmer Manufadurin~
~(ompanJ~
1015 to 1043 Palmer Avenue,
DETROIT, MICH .
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I WA'DDELL--MA~U-F ACTURING"~-o·.l
I Grand Rapid., Michigan I
I All Knobs and Pulls have the
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Zeeland. Mich.• Factory Notes.
Zeeland, Mich., Nov 4 -The Zeeland Furlllture company
are having a good trade, October havlllg brought them a larger
business than any other month in the year
Mr Ray, of the Wolvenne company, 'iays bU'illleS" has
been excellent, so good that he abandoned the idea of gettlllg
out a catalogue this year
Mr Elenbaas of the MIchIgan Star company IS very
busy When seen he Just had time to say, "busmess IS fine"
The Colomal compan) WIll "how on the thIrd floor of
the Furlllture Exchange, Grand RapIds, III January They
wJ11 show 100 patterns of hall clocks and twenty smtes of
lIbrary furniture The caller was permitted to see qmte a
number of these pieces and can testify to the beaut} of the
deSigns and the excellence of construction The hbral} fur11l-ture
IS m mahogany, dnd many of the pieces al e mlald The
bookcases and desks wJ11 command dttentlOn and mVlte the
dosest scrutllly -C ::vf
Holland. Mich.• Factories.
f lolldnd, Mlch, N0\ 4 -The nay V lell rl1l111t\1le (om-
, pany's ne" bmldmg IS completed. all hut the office~. "ll1ch
"Ill be oce upled before the first of the, eal They" III haye
as fine a ..,et of offices as an) In Holland Thell trade III
extension tables is good They will show their line on the
second floor of the Furlllture Exchange, Grand Rapids, with
quite a number of new patterns added to their present excellent
exhibit
The Holland Fur11lture company is having a good trade,
and wtll have a fine lot of new patterns to show in the Manu-facturers'
building, Grand Rapids, in January.
Mr Wlll~ of the Ottawa Furniture company, said busi-ness
was good
Manager Bus'i of the 13m,; Machme Works, said business
"as fair He 1:-. puttmg many of hIS new and Improved
planers III the GI and Rapids factories -C M.
Wellman"s Cat and Life Boat.
'1 he hfe boat and the cat that were saved flam the wreck
of \\ altel "\\ ellman's Ill-fated aIrshIp. "Amenca" were exhi-bIted
m one of the wll1dows of GImbel's great New York
'-tore la'it "eek The lehc'i In the wllldow attracted a crowd
that blockaded the "ileets until the pohce authontles ordeled
them 1emm ed \\ hen a card wa~ placed III the wllldow an-nounun~
that the cat" as holdlllg- a reception III the StOIe
the bll1ldmg VIa..,clOVlded by thol1c,ands, most of whom gave
the s to! e a thO! ong-h III"pectlOn before lea vIllg.
No-fium-Loose Fasteners
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Woed
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
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14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
METAL USED IN SOFA PILLOWS -~---~_.------...--------_._~
Unbending Styles Intended for Ornament Rather
Than Use or Comfort.
It is a long time since so mam stIff dH;mfied unbend-ing
and costly sofa cushions "e1e 111cluc1ec1am\1l1~ the tall
models deSIgned f01 best 100111S dnd c11ess up occaSIons
Fortunatel} "unbend1l1g" does not apph to bed100m cushlOn'o
varieties ""h1ch are as puff, case, and comt01 t,lble a~ ('ne
could wIsh But In the mOl e fm mall oom" the Cu~1110n 1ule
seems to be the costlter the less 'lelc1111~
\iVhethe1 ftom FIance Japan m L\me11ca 1he latbt "ofa
pillow of h1C',h de£;lee e),.p1ec,ses a 2,lade of ma2,mficence c,uffi-cient
to repel 111ttmate ad, ances LIke mOo,t \\ 01ks of a1t It
is meant to be v1e"ed at a 1espectful d1QanCe 10 d1eam )f
tucking a corner of one of the~e a1t oblect" unde1 one s
shoulder blades \\ ould he sau 11e2,e and to attempt tn s11t1s2,le
a cheek aga111st Its impos111£; St11face \\ auld be-\\ ell It \\ auld
not be good f01 the comple'ClOn
A woman who undertook to cop, one at the"e models
to install in he1 dra \\ 1112," 100m succeeded, e1, \\ ell 111all but
one thing The cushIOn In spIte of all she could do ,\ auld
upon p1essure assume a cllOOP "\nd I spent S10 on It \\ 1th
my work thrown 111," she maUl ned
"Never mind," saId a f1iend, "one ltl,e It bOU2,ht m a
store would cost at least $30"
Three out of fOUl cushIOns at thIS 1ank \\ III 2,1\e an aIr
of elegance to a 100m not to be dupltcated at a ltkc cost by
any other article 01 a1ticles, an uphol" tel e1 told a hou;-,e-keeper
who was funllsh111£; an apa1 tment 01 11, 1112,to at a
low cost, and fo11O\\1112,hIS acI'lce she ~elected a pLlll1 mex-penSIve
sofa and a1m chan s and placed UPll2,"ht 111one corner
of the forme1 a splendId sofa p1110\\ T\\ a almost a" "plend1d
p11lows dec01 ated b\ ° of the chan s \\ 1th the 1esul t that
callers went aV\ay \\ 1th an 1mp1 eSSlOn of sumptuousness ('ut
of all propOl tion to the qualtty of the tU1n1ttll e The sofa
pIllow was oblon~, about 27 hy 18 mches [he 0thu ~ \\ e1e
square and about 24 111ches lone; one of them bemg Japanese
in design.
The oblong shape, it IS leal11ed, IS a bIt mOl e st, ltsh than
the squa1 e, some val ieties bem£; about one } d1d Ion£; and
twenty inches WIde, others twenty mches lon~ and t\\ eh e
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UNION FURNITURE COe
ROCKFORD, ILL.
China Closets
Buffets
Bookcases
We lead In Style, ConftrudJon
and Flmsh See our Catalogue.
Our lme on permanent exhibi-tion
3rd Floor, New Manufact-urers
BUlldmg. Grand Rapid •.
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1l1che, Ii Ide Many of the handsomest are oblong, and the
mnst nottl eahle feature of the newest of them is the large
quantIttes of metals used 111conjunction with fabrics through
\\ h1ch 1'111threads of gold or sIlvel.
:\Ietal tapestry of the stand alone qualtty 111floral and
com entlOnal des1£;ns and of seve1 al colors combined; heavy,
fi2,Uled tapestry 1 eproductions of Aubusson and Flemish
pIeces, the fi2,U1es reduced to Immature proportions; four and
f1\ e 111chUletal galoons, the gold and silver in some instances
t111ted and descllb111g a pattern, narrower gold and silver ga-loom.
metal fnnges of many colors, edgmgs patterned like
lace but made partly of metal th1 eads, and of materials equal-h
hea" but a tIIfle mOle plIable, all these are among the
ne\\ pIlIO\\ matenals They a1e combmed m turn with many
kmds of ,cIvet, satm, suede, satm brocade and art woolen
tah11l s Tn some cushIOns the arrangement of materials
~1\ es a patchwork effect.
\bnut 1\\ cI\ e mches of the centIe of an oblong pillow
\\ d s made of hea, II} hrOl aded tapestI y combil1lng SIlk, wool
,md metal th1eads, the p1evaIlIng color of which was sage
~1een (In eIthe1 SIde of thIS vvas eight inches of SImIlar tap-cstn
of \ alle~ated calms, bnght green in the lead, each piece
dl\ 1decI t)(1111the centte hy a three inch wide band of flat ga-l
DOll C10SS111f;tb e pIllow perpendIcularly. The thI ee sectIOns
01 tapeo,t1' and the two bands of galoon were in turn crossed
"bout SIX mches ft am one edge of the p11low by a one and a
half lllch \\ Ide band of gold ~aloon. The entiI e pIllow, which
.. ._--------------- ---- --------_._-_._-----.,
PITTSBURG PLATE GLASS CO.
LARGE:8T ,JOBBERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF
GLASS
in the world, Mirrors, Bent Glass, Leaded Art Glass, Ornamental Figured Glass, Polished and Rough Plate Glass, Window Glass,
WIRE GLASS, Plate Glass for Shelves, Desks and Table Tops, Carrara Glass more beautiful than white marble.
CENERAL DISTRIBUTORS OF PATTON'S SUN PROOF PAINTS AND OF PITCAIRN ACED VARNISHES.
(jf For anythtng tn BUIlders' Glass, or anythtng tn Pamts "armshes, Brushes or Pamters' Sundnes, address any of our branch warehouses, a
list of whIch ISgIven below
JrEW YOaX-Hudson and Vandam St ••
BOS'1'ON--41-49 Sudbury st., 1-9 aowker at.
CKICAG0--442-452 Wabash Ave.
cmCINNA'l':l-Broadway and Court Sb.
ST. LOVIS-Cor. Tenth and Spruce St •.
MDrNEAPOL:rS--500-516 S. Third St.
DETB.OI'l'-53-59 Larned St, E.
GB.A:NDaAPIDS, llItCH-39-41 Jr. Divi.ion St.
p:rTTSBl1aGB-IOI-I03 Wood St.
MILWAl1XEE, WXS.--492-494 JIlarket St.
B.OCBES'l'E.,N.T.-WUder Bldg., Main '" Exchanll'e St •.
BAL'1'D!lO:aE-310-12-14 W. Pratt 8t.
CLEVELA:ND-1430-1434 West Thld .t.
OMABA-ll01-ll07 Boward St.
ST. PAlJ'L--459-461 Jackson St.
ATLANTA, GA.-30-32-34 S. Pryor St.
SAVANNAH, GA.-745-749 Wheaton St.
XANSAS ClTY-Pifth and Wyandotte St ••
BIB.MDrGBAJII, ALA.-2nd Ave. and 29th St.
BtJPFALO, N. "1'.-372-74-76-78 Pearl St.
BB.OOKLYl'l-'1'hird Ave. and Dean St.
PB::rLADELPBIA-Pltcairn Bldg .. Arch and 11th
DAVEl'lPOa'1'--410-416 Scott St.
OKLAKOJIIIA CITY, OKLA., :310-212W. First St. .._......_--------------------------------------------------~ J
WEEKLY ARTISAN
was about 28 by 18 inches, was bordered with a two inch
metal gl een fnnge.
An effectIve square pIllow was covered partly with wood
brown tapestry patterned with miniature knights in armor,
and partly with heavy deep red satin crossed and recrossed
wIth narrow open work gold galloon, wider metal trimming
edging the cushIOn and the tapestry sectIOn and stiff brown
and gold narrow gimp lace edging the pillow.
A third of one pillow, which combined green, gold and
warm red tones charmingly, was made of metal tapestry of
beautiful quahty The mottled green velvet covering the
remaining two-thirds was tnmmed with a lattice of gold and
green metal gimp less than one inch wide which stiffened
the velvet to about the firmness of the metal t.lpestry. The
pillow was bordered with nal row green metal fringe.
Less expensive and very effective examples combine a
small square or oblong of tapestry with satin, velvet or heavy
Ottoman silk, the latter criss-crossed with narrow bands of
metal trimming. The bits of tapestry in this ca se are woven
to show a woodland scene, a group of human figures. mount-ed
horsemen and so on, and these are placed at one SIde of the
cushion, not in the centre. In some of the French cushions
segments of brocaded materials and of wide ribbed SIlk merge
without showing a dividing line, and these too are elaborately
trimmed with applications of gold and of silver and vari-colored
metal bands and bordered with a narrow metal lace
or fringe, shading often to old rose.
In cushions of Japanese designs perhaps two-thirds of
the covering is stiff silk and metal brocade of gorgeous color,
the remaining third of scarlet or of peacock blue satin, being
ornamented with gold galoon. The edging is heavy, stiff
cord. Cushions of allover silk and satin brocade of superb
quality are of course still included in the drawing room
assortments, but these with few exceptions are now touched
up with corners and borders of metal, a two inch wide metal
ribbon in some of the best examples bordering the entire
pillow.
A variety which looks well both in library and drawing
room and which is less costly than some of those described
and could be more easily duplicated by the amateur is made
mostly of suede. One of the most effective examples was
composed of a three inch square of red suede joined with over-hand
stitch of metal thread. Very narroVv gold gimp joined
the diagonal green, suede strips composing the covering of
another cushion, and in both cases the edges of the cushion
were lashed together WIth a stout suede lacing of contrastmg
color. A third example of dark brown suede with a narrow
metal fringe border was slashed every five or 'Six mches to
describe a tuhp, a scarlet lining under the slashes bnnging
out the flower. Suede cushions tnmmed with a three inch
band of plain leather of the same COIOl or a tnfle darker and
edged WIth metal galoon are also easy to copy.
General utIlity cushions for hbraries and In 111g looms
combme heavy woollen art matenals m plam colors, wood
brown, grass green and ecru in the lead, with dIagonal
stnpes of wool tapestry which are outl111ed with stIff cur-tam
glmp which contams gold threads, the same glmp fin-ishing
the edge. Cushions of the plain woollen art goods
embrOIdered m bold conventional desIgns have corner tassels
and an edging of metal gimp.
Printed tapestry squares ranging from 10 to 22 inches m
sIze and copies m some cases of celebrated French tapestnes
when bOl dered WIth a band of metal or part metal trimmmg
and edged '" Ith the new style stIff glmp, which looks hke
dull gray ,ery heav y lace. are good ImItations of some of
the more expenslY e models.
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PALMER'S PATENT GLUING CLAMPS I
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The above cut is taken d1rect from a photograph, and
shows the range of one Slze only, our No.1, 24-inch
Clamp. We make SlXother sizes, tak1ng In stock up to
60 inches wide and 2 1nches thick. Ours is the most
pract,cal method of clamp1ng glued stock in use at the
present time. Hundreds of factories have adopted our
way the past year and hundreds more wl1l in the future.
Let us show you. Let us send you the names of nearly
100 factones (only a fraction of our llst) who have or-dered
and reordered many t1mes. proof pos,t,ve our way
1Sthe best. A post card WIll brmg it, catalog included.
Don't delay, but wr1te today.
A. E. PALMER & SONS, Owosso, MICH.
FOREIGN REPRESENTATIVES: The Projectile Co.,
London, England; Schuchardt & Schutte, Berlm, Ger-many:
Alfred H. Schutte, Cologne, Par1s, Brussels, Liege,
M1lan, 'l'unn, Barcelona and Bl1boa.
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I I THE "ELI" FOLDING BEDS ~~~frl~'~N~I~~ / I ELtO:""Ni'i'LL'E'R'd&:U'co.1
II EVANSVILLE. INDIANA I Wnte for cuts and pnces I
I ON SALE IN FURNITURE EX CHANCE, EVANSVILLE. I
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15
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II hen the manufacturer seeks the traveling salesman a
~ame of checke1 s can be pIa, ed upon the coat talls of the
latter If the formc1 makes the proper demonstratlOn 111hIs
~eek111£;
16 WEEKLY ARTISAN
PUE5LISHED EVERY SATURDAY .Y TH~
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRIPTION $1 00 I"ER YEAR ANYWH!!:RE IN THE UNITED STAT!!:S
OTHER COUNTRIES $2 00 PER YI!:AR. SINGLE COPII!:S 5 CI!:NTS
PUBLICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NOPlTH DIVISION ST, GPlAND RA .. IDS, MICH
A 5 WHITE M ...N..... INQ EDITOFI
I:nterea .. second clalS matter July 5, 1909 at the post office at Grand Rapid. l.hchll'an
under the act of March 3 1879
CHICAGO REPAI!SI!:NTATIV~ E LEVY
Little th111gs count f01 much 111thc (pelatwn ot a tl11111
ture factory. A manufacturel at small C,bC \\ 01k \\ as "ub-jected
to great annoy ance and e"pcn"e b\ tbc sC1atch111g and
brUls111g of fi111shed dOO1s, desk hds and othel stock usually
stored 111racks bef01 c the final assembhn£; of the parts that
make a complete p1ece of fl11111tme II 01 kmen al e carcle,,~
and the cost of productIOn \\as mate11alh lal.:;el on that ac
count. Finally the "upel111tendent dec 1dcd to U1\ el all pal b
of the storage racks \\ 1th \\ hlLh th e hd" ,U1d de"k tcJp" came
into contact in the coursc of hancll111g \\ 1th "ott uphulstel \
matenal, and the1 eb, soh ed the manufaclUl el " problem
By takin£; advanta£;e of \\ eak pmnts 111 the Intet "tate
Commerce la" and rene\\ ine; the t'l[~ht 0\ e1 the "0 called \It,,-
souri river rate cases the 1a1h oad s a1e m g enth 111,1hnS; mOl e
stringent legal reg-ula tlOn of thcn buslll ess boost1l1£; the
cause of socialism and encouraging the people to IllS1"'! on
government control and 0>., nelship of all publtc uhlttle" fhe
mana15els of the lOads aflected b, the \I1SS0l111 Inel deu"HIll
\\ ould ha, e better served not onh the Ultel c"h ot then stock
and bond holders, hut the mtet csts ot all 1allt oad" and the
country as a whole, b, acceptlllg the dec1slOn 111good talth
as a final settlement of the controve1 sv
Amon£; the 1 etatle " complamts IS that ahout thc un-salablc
C'OPClition of e;ood" I ccen cd flom mantlfactul CI" III
OIdel to lu"h O1dc1S It IS ~lanl1cd tl1dt \\olk IS sh~htecl1l1 thc
IIl11shlllg loom These complamts 1ecall to m1nd thc plodmt
of a I11cU1ufactUlel of DetrOIt \\ ho e"pended mOl c monc\ III
thc fil11sh111gthan ln the constructIOn of hIS g-ood" 'If I make
nn work shine hke a plano," hc remarked "I can sell it
castly" It needs no al gument to prO>.e to the e'(penenced
manufactmer the value of a g-ood fil11sh 111the fUlniture trade
Dr Elhot of Han ard' UUl\ el "11\ sa\ s thc 111crca"ed cost
of ltvmg- lS duc to the "comb111atlOn eftected h\ the unlOn" and
jobbers and Ul110ns Clnd employers of labor' The combm-ation,"
he expla111s (the comb1l1e m plumbel" supphes f01
instance) "is able to rob the consumer because lt practlcallv
secures a local monopoh The 1111lOns rob the consumer
because they cause grcat \\ aste of hme" fhe doct01 s
e'(planatlOn IS exphClt and seems to he tlue
1\11 uphohterel clnd 1 C'pcllret of fU1111tUIe 111Indlall Ipoh"
,Hh ("IUse" h1S shop a" ,1 '\urg1(,11 111"tltUtC" I hc ('0111HI lll)l1
het\\cen hIS olcupatlOll and h1s ,l(hutlscment lS haHlh 11\
e\ Idence.
]oh lot 1)11\ ers al e touf1ng the" estern markcts, but the
demclnd t01 !S0ods 011 regular terms IS so good that there IS
hut httlc trade 111"close outs"
1 he dC"loncl \\ho can make hlS emplOyer feel that hc b
kI101\" 1110le about the fUlmtllle bus111ess than the men who
make fllll11t111e IS a s;el11u-,
] he tal1ft hO;l1d has deCIded that planas are not "house-hold
t flee b alld theref01 e al e subject to a duty of 45 per cent
,1 d \ aIm em
II hen the bl1"lness office and the factory office ale out of
h,111110n\ the manufac-tm e of furmtUl e IS a precarious occupa-tlOn
Thel e b the l:;1eatest difference in the world III the goods
\\ c hu\ and the goods \ve think we buy
\ [one\ talk" especlall y \\ hen the manufacturer IS ove1-
stocked
'·Tolu" Ranney Gone Over.
C. T Ranne\, bettel known as "Tom" Ranney, of Green-
\ llle 'fich, died suddenly of heart disease last week Friday
TIe \\ c1Ssl1penntendent of thc \ve11 known Ranney refriger-atol
fH t01"\ the largest mdustn of the Clty, and was so hig-hly
esteemed. that when hlS death was announced the 400 em-
1'10\ e" qlllt \' 01k III a body and insisted that the factory be
shut do\\ n until after the fune1 al. which took place last Sun-da
\ 1111dcI'II a som c auspices
::\11 Ranne\ \\ as 62 yeal" of ag-e and lived in Greenville
tm mam \ ears asslstin£; with his brother in building up the
iaC~OI\ \\ hlCh is one of the mamstays of the city He was of
a ]'111d and s;el11al dlSpo"ltlOn 1m ed b) everyone with whom
he came 111 contact and e\ el ready to hold out a help111g-hand
to thosc 111nced OutSIde of busllless affiairs, he found
time to enter into the puhltc affall s of the community and
\\ as one of the he"~ mayors the city e\ el had. Under his
£;llIdance the refill:; era tor plant g-Iew until it was neccs"ary
to add to 1t and hut a shol t tlmc clgO the capacity was doubled
by the erection of another lar~c buildin~ lIe was considered
one ot tIlE' to\\ n's fO!emost benefa('tol" for by prm ldmg- em-ployment
for an incI easm~ numhel of mcn 111 his factory, he
added to the prosperity of the people clnd bus1l1ess interests in
g-eneral.
Cor Loading Association in St. Louis.
"t LOlll" \To 'JO\ 3-l\s the 1esult of a mecting of the
'=;t LOlliS FllIl11ture Boald of Trade, an org-anization to be
knm\ n a" thc Centlal Car Load1l1~ and Furniture Furnishing
d"SoclatlOn \\ 111be established here This w111 be flllnlture
"hlpp1l1l:; he,ldqual tCI s for the benefit of the dealers who at
pt esent shIp 111 q'lantltles less than cadoads
I\ccorcIl11£; to H C; Tuttle, general manager of the Furni-tlll
e 1\oard of TI ade, the LOst of shlpp1l1g or e'(presslllg furl11-
t111e h hlghel than nead} an} othel commodity, such as dry
[Cood" \\ hen sh1pped by othcr than calload lots, 1t IS VCI}
C,pOl~n e to the dealel M1 Tuttle says that on $2,000
\\ 11] th of fUl111tu1e the ('ost of shlpping i" about 10 to 20 1'("]
( ll'\ 01 Its \ ,lltl,ltlOll
I he l1l \\ 01g:all173tlOll \\ 111be <'ll11llcllto tho5e o[ Evans
\ tlh lnd dnd ChIcago
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
Big Catalogues Free.
Thc Idca that a dealer can sa\ e money by using loose-led!
catalogue" does riot seem to be apprO' ed or practIced by
"ome of the lan:;cst and mo"t successful house" m the coun-l!
y The accompanymg ad \ ertIsement. reproduced flom maga-
WANAMAKER
Catalog
is a Store in Itself
WITH It you" shop at Wanamaker's"
just as though your reSilIence were III
New York SIt III your easy chaIr,
compare the latest Paris and i\ ew York styles
and prices-then send ma trIal order WewlJ]
see that you get exact!y what you want Goods
must be satisfactory, or we want them back
dently thmk that though a person may have in mind only a
"mgle artIcle, he or she IS quite lIkely to find somethmg else,
desnable, by lookmg through the book, or is lIkely to keep It
untIl some other artIcle IS wanted It will be noted that all
the ach el tI"ements emphasIze the fact that the catalogues
/lnes, mellcdte that Macy's of Kcw York, vVanamaker's of
~ e\\ Yark and PhIladelphIa, C:;peal's of PIttsburg and Hart-man's
of ChIcago. do not belIe\ e m the loose leaf theory.
That IS they do not reply to requests or mquiries by sendmg
a leaf ar two, but send theIr catalogues entIre and as will be
seen m the ad\ ertIsements they are enormous books of several
l1l1nelled pa~es filled wIth thousands of I1lmtI atlOns. The size
()f the book" IS mdll dted b\ the cuts m the ad\ el tIscmcnts and
thdt of \\ anci1l1akel's "hows that It IS mtcnded to mclnde the
ent11e stole E\ Identl) the managers of these great houses
beheve It pays to send Qut complete Liltalogues They eVl-
-,
I ~\IDCC;V~FALL CATALOGUE
L/lV\j~_.ai~~_Is Ready lor You
We want to sen I a copy of our new Fall and \Iv nH..r a a ague to e er)
reader of th s publ cat on It s a bIg book Just f 0 n e pT nler s h n Is com
pletely lustrated splendidly p oted and we have t ou!>ands rea Iy to ma 1
FREE AND POSTPAID
The Macy ea a.logue for Fall and
\ u e S by far the best book we have
"ve, ssued It s the most mpo tant
ell. a ogue sen out of New York Our
nes ha e been ex euded You WIll
find greater va e y n a I the goods
shown by us than eve before It g'IVes
you such a age n p ee as 5 su e to
enabe you to bUY111stwhat youwa ta
ap C'evouw Ibewllng o pay The
very newest b ngs the very ate tsyes
as de eloped n pans lle n and New
~~~~5 C;1 ~:a~rou~n ~st~~ p~;esa~a
compete aeuaedeerptons whch
en ble ,>0" 0 ahop noTe sa sfadon)
and more eConon ell. yat Maeya han
vou can shop n yo" own borne town
We gve you a he seasons bell.
IInd newell. th ngs a p cell. below the
pr cea asked by 0 he ~ ores for goods
ofony ordlnary qUd Y and 5 yle
You Will Save at Least One-Fourth at Macy's
est v':Y~:~ ~~fa?nU!bf';~ t : ~e~? -r.ea;t: te~~a a1,;'~Il~ tea :~~I~af s"t. ~'J~~~~eget
OU ~~~BbaU~~ 11.° rfh za 0 0 pur ~~ e~;:'ed~ I~~:no y b~~~ ~a~1t~~~pt~n~sl~~aente~ ~f
s eh olume ne e yl netha we e e epr e ou ne chandae the Vf. y at ate prees
advantages fo p odu e '" <'\ u anufa ure "h ha ""I) pre a an thepromptanda
no enJOjed h tbeord n so he ead I fa j e e e dered I OIl"antgO d
van apc-s we pa~s on to j he to It f of h g 5t qual y de v~ ed ou p On p
~~";:~ol~'te fO~~:~ ~~/~~~1 ~~ta~ ~~~y se :~~: fie ~a~~ tsb" :~~ e (> m u
ke
5:/ 0
and II mil. y nstan ell. eveu greaer savngs!as l' can get esewhe e fOT on" d a 0
eW~hd 0bu ~s:~5m:;~abl 51 cd mote than half ~ta 0: ~ f~rb;"1 1~~3;dnt.:' lle uew Ma y
ThiS New Catalogue Brings ThiS Great Store With
Its $5,000,000 Stodu Right Into Your Own Home
on en:; ed.;> ~dP:;dna~::\_:~~p k,j"'rad
h '1:hYq,nn:ofan,J
~~i:~~1~~l;~w'r~~;:i~':~~~~r;f:~~li:;!¥tii:~!?~rf:~~~R. H. MACY & CO. Br<Je.dway at 6th Ave and .iSth St
New York Cdy
are free for the a"k1l1£; If theil theory IS correct IS should
apply to mdnufactu:ers as well as to dealers.
r--------.------ I
II
III
I..
...,
IMPROVED, EASY AND EL EVATO RS QUICK RAISINC
Belt, ElectrIC and Hand Power.
THF BEST HAND POWER FOR FURNITURI: STORES
Send for Catalogue and PrIces
KIMBALL BROS. CO" 1067 Nlnlh 51, Council Bluffs, la.
Kimball Elevator Co •• 717Commerce Bldg. Kan,as City, ..I Mo I J Peyton Huntel TermInal Bldg. Dallas fexas
Western EngIneenng SpecJaltles Co, Denver, Co10
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
5
COMPLETE
LINES Of
REfRIGERATORS
AT RIG"T PRICES
CHALLENGE REFRIGERATOR CO.
Sf<.ND FuR NEW CATALOGUE
AND LET US NAME YOU PRICE.
GRAND HAVEN, MICH., U. S. A.
Manufacturers Busy at Shelbyville.
ShelbyvIlle. Tnd \0\ 3--The C H Campbell FUl111tUle
company have had a very active season of hade The c,le,tth
enlarlSed faclhtle'i of the company's new factol} al e ha1Clh
sufficient to meet the demands of tl ade PI e'ildent Camp-bell
states that the ne\" 11l1e of desks t01 ladles had greath
pleased the trade In hall furnitUl e -;alee; hay e been hea\ \
The new line wIll be on sale in Gland RapIds and ChIcago
during January, 1911.
Lee DavIs. of the Conrey-DavIs ManufactUlll1£; company,
reports that bus1l1ess had been active since the open1l1l:; of
the season. Heavy shipments were made 111 Septembel fhe
company wIll exhIbIt theIr 11l1e, dUl1l1!.; the exp0'iltlon 'iea
sons in Grand Rapids, exclusively hereafter.
Charles L. DavIs, the presIdent of the Davis-Birely Table
company was out of tOV\n \\ hen the \\ Iltel called Bus1l1es"
~,----------------------------
IIII
II
IIIII
III•IfI ..
RITE TO
CHICA60MIRROR&ART6LASSCO. \
217 N.Clinton streeu. \
Chicago; IIJs.1 U.S.A.
~r~
IV a ~ I epO! ted C, ood fhe company WIll exhIbIt their lines in
Gland RapIds anI} dUllng July and January.
PI eSldent Charles E. Karmire reportes an active demand
101 the desks and office furnIture manufactured by the Shel-
1)\ \ Ille Desk Company.
110'3t of the manufacturel s of ShelbyvIlle are first class
e;,desmen \\ hen ChaI1ey DavIs of Davls-Bnely Table com-pany
~oes to the market fully detelmined to outsell the rep-
I esenta tn es of his company he never falls to do so. He IS a
tireless w01ker and is ever found on hIs job. Jay P. Root IS
a 1 emal kabl} 'iuccessful sale'iman whIle Charles H Campbell,
Lhalle\ C'plec,le, "Tdke" Comey and "Joe" HamIlton are
,UllOllC, the best
~I("rchants Beware.
1 he TOUInal undel '3tands that a concern gomg under the
title of "1 he umted States School of C01 respondence" IS
askll1l?, mel chdnts f01 credIt I atll1g'i of ll1dlvlduals. Then
headqual tel s al e supposed to be 111 ChICago. Vie have it on
\\ 11dt "eem'i to be c,ood duthO!lt} that thIS concern IS con-nected
111 some \\a\ \"Ith the maIl Older concern of Spelgel,
lId} '-,telll &- La \gdll1 let 11':>\Aarn the mPlchant to let
all lOlKeln" \\ ant1l1g rdtmgs absolutely alone -Merchant:,'
J lade J oUlnal
-1
IIf
II•
•III•
I
II
•••
I•
I
I
III
.I.
Problem Promptly Solved.
'The o,t} Ie" of £;oods \"e have 111 stock m lalgest quantity
~dl thc "IO\\c"t lemalked the managel of a factory operated
111 thl manufactul e of fancy fUlmtuJ e 'How do you account
j( 1 thdt")" "B} ,In attack of fredkmess on the bram of the
de"lgneJ 01 hoob\ 01mlt1':> m the make-up of the sc1l1l1g"
dgents,' a ,,} mpathlz111g manufal'tUl CI !ephed .
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
STAINS WORK
Weather Beaten Finished Furniture in Paris.
He IS a pamter who has vIsited Pans more than once and
he was tellmg of haymg hIs memory pleasantly refreshed
there last summer as to the provelllence of some of our antique
furniture.
"I had forgotten the slmphclty and dIrectness of those
dear people, the French," he said "I suppose because I've
necessarily been Immel sed more or less m our methods of
busmess 0'. er here HCI e I'ye known about the fine antiques
that are made m Emvery lofts and sold m the avenue shops
as precIOus finds from the older lands, but the process of
makmg has ahvays been hIdden hel e and a mystery
"So I was a httle surprised, but surprised mto a smJ1e,
when in wandenng back to the nelghb01hood of an old studIO
I used to occupy in the Montparnasse qual ter 1 saw ham;mg
from wmdows and dIsposed about the courtyard of one of
the buildmgs fl eshly made chairs and tables of ancIent pat-tern,
put out theIr to go through lam and shine and become
'antlquc' Nothmg hIdden about it at all. Some of the
pieces hung flom fourth story wmdows. And I found myself
humming Raymond Hitchcock's old song with only a word
changed 'Am't It funny what a difference just a few show-ers
make?' Although I guess they have to watch their
weathering pretty carefully You know I thmk It IS a virtue
of the French, their wJ1lingness to reveal plactices which we
conceal; It seems to me our way is the more gmlty."
Must Fight Again.
The vlct01Y for the shippers m the Mlssotui nver rate
cases, announced last week, IS not to be permanent. On the
contrary it appears that the lower I ates fixed by the Inter-state
Commerce CommIssIOn and approved by thc Supreme
court, ale to lemain m force only 35 days. The Supreme
court's decision put the new rates into effect on October 25.
On Octobel 31 the raIlroad compallles mvolved filed notice
WIth the ~nterstate Commerce CommlslOn that on Decembel
1, they wJ11 raIse the lates agam to the old figUles, clalmmg
that reccnt changes m condItIOns make such action necessary
ThIS means that the Missouri river rate cases whIch wel e
started m October, 1908, and Ieqmred two years to reach a
deCISIOn m the Supreme court, wJ11 haye to be fought over
agam and the chance" are that another period of two yeal s
wJ11 elapse bef01 e another deCISIOn IS reached.
Furniture for Uruguay Schools.
F. ,Y. Godmg, American Consul at Montevideo, Uru-gua},
rep01 ts tha~ the government of Uruguay has accepted
the tendel of Carhsle, ClOcker & Co., for supplymg the furlll-tm
e f01 210 new rural schools in that repubhc. The tel ms
of the speCIfications reqmre that North Amellcan models
shall be followed, and the above-mentIOned firm, I epl esentmg
one of the largest houses in the United States, secmed the
contlact f01 48,894 pcsos ($50,556) ":Many other contlacb
nught be secured by Amencan firms If they" el e propel I}
I epresented here," says Consul Godmg.
A Good Indication.
One of the best mdlcatlOns that the fmlllture bu sme"s
I~ on the gam is the fact that the Grand RapIds Blass com-pany's
busmess £01 the ten months endmg WIth Octobel was
e,e\ e! al thousand dolla! s gl eate! than that f01 the \\ hole
yea! of 1909, theIr bu~mess bemg mostly WIth the £urlllture
manufacttlrers. The great mcrease stuel} shows tlut the
furlllture busmess IS m pretty good shape.
OUR
They don't raIse
the grain. They re-produce
exactly the
finishdesired. They
are the products of
practical men.
Modern facilities
and expert knowl..
edge go hand In
hand here. Above
all our staIns
practical.
are
Put this state ..
ment to the test by
putting our stains to
the test. You'll find
they ALL work
ALWAYS.
Write for sample
panel to desk No.3.
MIIA&RI5Ei~T!T;A~~HPJA~INOITI.
20
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~, - ._--------~--_._---- :I
Grand Rapids Caster Cup Co. I 2 Park wood Ave., Grand Rapids. Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
.,,,
I,
I
I
I,I
iII
By E. Levy, Representative.
ChlCago, ~ 0\ 3--\t the fdc tm \ of the Standal d Pallo!
FUlnitUle company thele have been a numbel at chan~es Ie
cently. R Ddlgatz fmmeI!\ of the Dalgdt7 PdI!OI Framl
company IS no\v m cha1 g e of then 1eclll1ll1g chan depd1 tmen t
Rudolph Strau,;", \\ho \\a,; 1ep1esentll1g them on the lOad
has resigned IllS posItIon dnd l!,one ll1to the 1etal! tml11tme
business at Sr\.tv-thlld a\ enue dnd ha" pmcha~ul all h1o, pal
lor goods flam hiS fUl mel emplu\ el " "" 11hdm C ()n~e1 \\ ho
was a member of the Sch\\ al / ]310S company nO\\ out lIt
busllless, has been engaged 111Ifr StIdUSS' place to 1epresent
the Standard Pad or Fm111tm e company on the road
One of the successful busmesses connected \\ Ith the
furniture industry, that your Call e,;pondent ha~ ~een ~ro\\
from its beginn1l1g, IS that of the Sulll\ an Ya1111~h Company
of 410 Hart Street Mr Sulll\ an was a practIcal \ a1111sh man
who took to selhng \ ar111sh for a larg e Chicago house and
after a number of yea1 s branched out for himself The plant
on Hart Street has grown mamfold from ItS ong1l1al capaClt\
and Mr Sullivan is doing an excellent bus1l1e",s 111high ~radc
varnishes, of which they make a specialty Mr Sulll\ an l~
thoroughly posted on every detail of the bus1l1ess. from the
buying of the raw matenal to the mak1l1g and selhng of the
finished product
Joseph S Meyer, preSident of the ::\1anufacture1 s £\.hl bl-tion
Building Company, 1319 MichIgan !\\ enue 1:0 ea",t on
a business trip Mr Jackson secreta1 y of the company
states that the demand for space has been espeClal!v good
this season and that there wl1l be some new faces on the
floors representing 11l1es that are 111thiS market for the first
tIme, and some that have returned afte1 an absence at a
season or more PractIcally all \\ hose lease" eApned la "t
season have renewed them and some hay e secured more "pace
than before Among the ne\\ exhibitors t01 the com111g
season wl1l be the Tell City Chair Company, the Tell C1t\
Furmture Company, the J 1\1 Deutsch Compan), the Old
Hickory Chair Company, the Mount t\lry Fm mtu1 e Compal1\
the New England Beddlllg Compal1\ and a numbo of othe1 s
A t the factory of the t\nel II ood TIed Company \ am
correspondent found Mr Vall englOssed In the matte1 of
de';lgning and planmng f01 the com111g season ::\i[ r Y dl1 1"
known to the trade from coast to coast as a "bed" man, havlng
We are now puttl1lg out the best Caster Cups WIth cork bases ever
oflerea to the trade These are fimshed In Golden Oak and White Maple
III a lIght fim,h The,e goods are admIrable for polIshed floors and furn
Iture re,ts They will not sweat or mar
PRICES
SIze 2U Inches $4 00 per hundred
SIze 2%'Inches 5 00 per hundred
1'1y a Sample Order FOB &rand Rap,ds
heen \\ th the Simmons Manufactunng Company for manv
\ eal ~ Hb mal1\ ne\\ Ideas 111deSigns for their "Ariel" 1111e
hay e dene much tm\ al ds ItS success "Vve expect to exhibit
111the --ame space as heretofore, 111the sixth floor of 1411
IIlchlgan t\ \ enue, and our hne \\ l!l be larger than ever and
conta111 some speCIal new features," said Mr Vail "I am
no\\ e\ o!v 111g them, and V\ e wl1l be ready 111ample time for
e\.hIl)ltlOn In Jdnua1 \ "
R C Repen11lng of the Metalhc Fold111g Bed Company
ha" retm ned ham a tnp south and southeast, where he has
had a \ e1y satisfact01Y bus111ess and reports the trade out-look
for those sectlOns as excellent The company are manu-taeture1,
at cdl steel mantel and cdb1l1et beds, metalhc day en-ports
or "ota beds and other metdl fur11lture, and their l111e
1" hoth U11lque and e"c1USl\ e Some of the metal cases of theIr
heds ale fimshed 111ImltatlOn of mahogany and quartered oak,
and \\ 1th a plano fi11lsh so that It takes an expert to detect It
trom the ndtural \\ ood
-\t the \lemann Table company's plant they are engaged
!ll pi epal atlOn~ for a handsome ne,\ catalogue which will be
Issued ahout the 1TI1ddle of Decembel They have added a
hne of c1111lngchall s to match man) of their exten"lOn tables
dnd thoc,e \\ III abo be Illustrate'l 111then ne\\ book S111ce
the \ 1e1l1ann" hay e occupied theH factory at Seventy-seventh
~tl eet and Cotta~e Gnp e avenue they IM\ e not only made
l11dn\ 1mp10\ emenh h\ the election of adchtlOnal bmld1l1gs
the la\ IllS; of cement \\ alk", etc, but that entire sectIOlJ ha"
l!,1eady 1mpl0\ ed alJd changed 111 appeal ance Dozens of
house" Ita\ e been hmlt sheets graded and cement Sidewalks
Id1d and the Idte"t Imp10\ ement h t' e pav111g of the a"enne
'" . --_._----_._----_._-------~I
"THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST"
BARTON'S GARNET PAPER 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 Factories, Sash and Door MIlls, Railroad Companies, Car BUIlders and others WIll consult theIr own interests by USIng it. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished In rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED B\
H. H. BARTON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa. II , ---- - ..
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
IT'S A HANDY PLACE TO GET
OAK, POPLAR, BIRCH
and GUM VENEER
VARIOUS THICKNESSES. ALWAYS READY TO SHIP.
PLEASE NOTE OUR NEW ADDRESS:
WALTER CLARK VENEER co.
SOUTH IONIA AND PRESCOTT STREETS.
from Seventy -fil st to EIghty-ninth streets, the portion between
the track::. n01v be1l1g done It IS only to let the grad1l1g settle
and become film when the remainder of the work wIll be
completed Cottage Grove avenue IS one of the widest in the
Clt), and IS dest1l1ed to become one of ItS greatest bus1l1ess
thoroughfares
A new catalogue IS also to be Issued by Olbnch &
Golbeck, when they have gotten out a number of new pat-terns
that wIll be Illustrated m the book and sho,v n m theIr
exhIbIt at 1319 MIchIgan a\ enue the com1l1g season ThIS IS
one of the hnes that IS left mtact at the exhIbition bUlld1l1g, It
bemg m charge of Fred Me Read) between seasons
Although the Pullman Couch company added about 50
per cent to then plant last spnng, they are still somewhat
handicapped fm 100m, and they have taxed theIr resources
and mgemllty to theIr fullest to keep up with their orders
Mr SchnadIg of the company reports theIr trade this season
by far the best they have yet done
The Marshall Vent11ated Mattress company is erecting a
new factory m what is known as the Central Manufactunng
District The building IS 65x175 feet, and three stories high.
It faces on Thirty-seventh street, and is near the corner of
Center avenue. There are now other factories connected with
the furniture trade in that district, among which are the
Kinney-Rome company and the Haggard-Marcuson company.
In the building occupied by the Geo. D. Williams
company, 1300 Michigan avenue, R. Hufford of that company
says they will have a number of lines not shown there before.
Among those are the Illinois Refrigerator company, Kala-mazoo
Sled company, Atwood Furniture company and the
Seeley Mattress company.
A new corporation has been formed in this city for the
manufacture and wholesaling of furniture. J. P. Adair, for
many) ears WIth the Ford & Johnson company, and H. A.
Bender are among the mcorporators and stockholders. They
have secured pI emIses at 1802 vVest Twelfth street and will
have salesrooms m the Kohn Dudding, 1414 Wabash avenue,
where the) WIll show d general hne of chairs and rockers,
shirtwaIst boxes, screens, etc They will have their line ready
for the January market.
Vhlham Horn, son of John Horn of the Horn Bros.
Manufactunng company, has returned from his wedding trip
to the western coast and IS at hIS old post in the office, where
he IS as bus) as ever. They are now getting up their new
patterns for the com1l1g sales season.
Great Demand for Coal Cars.
Traffic officials of ChIcago raIlroads have issued appeals
to shippers to load cars WIthout unnecessary delay, so that as
man} cars as pOSSIble may be available for coal shipments.
Operatmg forces are trymg hard to move coal freely, so that
no famine may occur.
Coal dealers have expresed fears of a famine, and some
have stated they are short as much as fifty cars a day on
orders The raIlroads dIscarded many cars during last winter,
and for various reasons the usual amount of money to replace
these has not been expended On the other hand the Illinois
Central, Its offiCIals say, now has about 750 cars of coal tied
up by a lack of motive power.
r B. WALTER & CO.
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WABASH
INDIANA
WRITE FOR PRICES AND DISCOUNTS
... TABLE SLIDES EXCLUSIVELY .. .
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Frieze for a Southern Dining Room.
An mteresting eAll1!)]t of a selles at pamtmgs 101 a
flleze wele shown recent!) m the R\ ebon Pubhc Llbral \
Grand Rapids The) al e the WOlk 01 G II FOld, vvho o ..e-cuted
them for a house 1ll Chattanooga, Tenn, of whIch he
was the archItect. The owner, Mrs Shaw, at first ordered a
painting for her library and later one for the den of her
beautiful new house She l'ias so well pleased WIth them
that Mr. Ford was commissIOned to palllt the fneze for the
dining room. There ale eight pamtmgs whIch will form a
continuous scene around the room. The largest will fit over
the mantelpiece The subject is an Italian garden The colors
used are soft and mel ge lllto the brm\ ns to match the mahog-any
woodwork, paneling and beamed cellmg The old 10-
mantic Italian houses, CYPIess trees, old bndg e", mountams
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A. PETERSEN &CO., CHiCAGO I
MANUFACTURERS OF THE
BEST MADE and LEADING LINE of OFFICE DESKS
Our attention to every detail from carefully selected and matched lumber
to the fimshed product has given the Petersen Desk its Leadership.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE. FULL LINE. RIGHT PRICES.
IN THE COUNTRY.
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and lakes tell aces stan ways and urns full of flowers give
the plOpel atmosphel e Floods of soft light give the scenes
the tl11tc; 01 -'pnn~ and early summer and the profUSIOn of
llo,\ el 0, ane! sll1ubbery add to the beauty of the whole.
::\11 FOld saId that the southern contractors are so much
easIer to deal WIth than the northern. that he was only obliged
to make t" 0 tnps to inspect the work as it progressed. Un-doubtedh
the fUlD1ture WIll be "Grand Rapids' finest" and
-,c the hou<e \\ III be "a thlllg of beauty and a joy forever."
Slap It On.
Such Ic; the headlllg of the Grand Rapids Veneer Works
ad' thIS ,\ eel-. It refero, to Ebonoid, the coating for dry
kIlns Look up theIr "ad" and read It carefully. It is short
,1l1d lIght to the pomt
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FOUR NEW
•
BARONIAL OAK STAIN
FLANDERS OAK STAIN
S M 0 K ED 0 A K S T A I N
EARLY ENGLISH OAK STAIN
in acid and oil.
in aGid and Dill
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
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 Pamters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
The Ad-el·ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
EverythlUg lU Palnt Speclalhes and Wood FlmshlUg matenals. F111ers that fl11. Stalns that sahsfy
WEEKLY ARTISAN 23
YOU CAN
I MAIL YOUR CATALOG
DECEMBER 1st
If you place the order
with us by November lOth
PRINTING COMPANY
GRANDRAPIDS, MIC".
I PRINTERS FOR THE FURNITURE TRADE. I
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
To Be the Highest in the World.
Mandel Brothers, Chicae;o, dry goods and fUlmture mer-chants,
have made anangements to build a new busmes" home
for themselves and they plOpose to make It the hH;-hest bul1d-ing
in the world devoted to mercantIle busmess
The building will go up on the
present site of the firm's estab-lishment
at the northeast corner
of State and Madison streets, and
everything w111 be in complete
workmg order fm the fall trade
of 1911. Work will be commenced
on the foundation shortly after
the coming holiday season. The
area of the site is 149 feet on
State street and 150 feet on Madi- Leo Mandel
son street. The store will be 247 feet high, with eighteen
stories all told, three bemg belm" the ground level. A lease
for ninety-nine } ears from the Marshall FIeld estate of 53
feet on State street and 150 feet on MadIson street, at an
annual rental of $50,000 completed the acquirement of prop-erty
not already possessed by the firm necessary for the pro-ject.
The front elevatlOn wl1l be of an imposing character,
huge granite pilasters at the base and an arcade of Corinthian
columns just below the skyllght bemg features Representa-tives
of the firm have visited Paris, London and every other
locality in the world where ideas or suggestions might be
Mandel Bras BUlldmg,ChlCago
gleaned for applicatlOn to their new establishment. The
Parisian feature of more tables for dIsplay and less shelving
will be adopted Goods are to be assembled m natural se-quence
so that shoppers will not have a lot of useless ground
to cover.
An innovation will be the mstallment of complete lava-tories
and cloakrooms for employes on evelY fhor, instead of
at one central pomt on one floor, as at present olJtains in most
establishments of the kind. Exceptionally wide aisles will be
the rule, with no blockade because of th estereotyped bargain
counter.
The structure will contain 1,000,000 feet of floor space
and wl1l cost just about a dollar for each foot. Among the
prominent features will be a dining room which will occupy
40,000 feet of floor space which is more than IS devoted to
such a purpose by any hotel in the city, thus showmg that a
restaurant with a large dining room has come to be consid-
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SLAP IT ON I
IT'S CHEAP I,
Ebonoid Kiln Coating protects
headers, pipes, trucks and buildings
from that destructive, acid-laden
vapor which comes from lumber.
All kilns and equipment should
have a coat of Ebonoid once a year.
I t seals the pores, saves heat and
prevents depreciation. Brick and
concrete need it just as badly as
wood and iron.
INQ!IIRE TODAY.
Grand Rapids Veneer Works
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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el ed a most ImpOl tant featul e m a mercantIle establishment.
\\ hlle the nevv bmldme; IS bemg constructed the various
clep,u tmc11h \\ 111 he londensed and crowded mto the smaller
adl 0111me; b11lld111 S v\hel e the enOl mous business of the firm
II III he 1LUh,ll ted d11l1l1e;the c;reatel portIOn of the coming
vedl
Furniture Fires.
\\ IIham Em~te1l1, f11l111t11ledealel of 2\;hlwaukee, WIS,
\\a" lJlllned out ()n October 28 PartIally mS11led.
C H ran and f11l111tUel and hard", are dealer of Dick1l1-
son, 1\ Dak, suffel ed a small loss by fire on October 28.
PIen e 7 Hebert's furmture store, 300 Aiken street,
Lowell, Mass, \\ as sllc;htly damaged by fire on October 29
The Deal 1\JattI ess company of Plymouth, N. H., lost
86000 01 $8,000 by fll e in their factory on October 28 About
half 1l1sured
Fire in the plant of the Dmon Curled Hair company,
H vde Pal k. "las'> caused a loss of $1,500 on October 28.
rulh msured
The plant of the Clescent Fixtures company of Grand-ville
\11ch a suburb of Gl and Rapids, was badly damaged by
ill e last ::\londa} l11ght. The loss, estimated at $20,000 to
325000, IS partIally insured.
Several hundred vvagon loads of furmture and nearly
one h undl ed planas were destroyed in the Coon Storage and
Furmture company's warehouse at Fort \iVorth, Tex., that
was bUl ned on October 27. Loss, $150,000; insurance $90,000.
::\la} , Stern & Co.'s five story warehouse in Pittsburg,
Pa, \\ as badl} damaged by fire that started from an unknown
SOUlLe, on ThUlsday night, November 3. Loss on building
and stock, estImated at $65,000 to $75,000 fully covered by
msurance.
WEEKLY ARTISAN 25
The Marvel Manutactunng company have enjoyed a
tl uly mal velous experrence durmg the11 first year in business
rn Gland Rapld~ It IS not vely often that a new institution
can make such a showrng Most furnIture manufacturers
start a busrnes" WIth the Idea that it wIll take tIme to estab-lI"
h themselves m the estrmatIOn of the furniture dealers
The :YI:arvel com pan} , howey er, showed confidence in theil
abIlIty as producers of chaIrs and rockers by purchasing the
Immense bUIldrng and ground" formedy occupIed by the
Halllson \Yagon \Yorks, hay rng flool "pace of \ el y nearly
1 SO,GOOsquare feet, and completely equIpped It V\ Ith the late ..t..
implmed cha11 mak1l1g device" ThI"" ll11medlately gdve them
an output of flom SOO to 800 (hallS and lockers pel day The
selling problem wa~ dI"po"ed of by hIring filst-class chail
salesmen on salal v A" the indIviduals composinlS the com-pan
yare thaI au ~h lSomg chaIr men and as the dIrector v of
the business is in the ha~ds of Joh'1 Thwaltes, formerly ~ith
the YpSIlanti-Reed company, and the MIchIgan Seating com-pany,
all of the details of the selectIOn and pricing of the
lIne were handled with the skill possessed only by those who
have for years been in close touch with the trade. The
Company's July exhibIt of samples was complete in all that is
considered essentIal and many orders were placed. That the
line has made good is now being proven by the mail orders
which are received daily from dealers who placed their first
order m July It is said that It is unusual ),![onday morn-ing
which does not bring them in maIl ordel s for a thousand
dollal s The company's lIne at the present time consists of
about eighty patterns in dIners and rockers About fifty new
pieces are to be shown to the January tr ade They will ad-here
to the present range of prices During July Manager
Thwaites engaged D C McNamara to direct the company's
sale.... "Dan," as he IS knowu from coast to coast through his
many y eal s of travel for the c;.unn Furnitm e company, is
lSeneI ally recognized as a \ ery fortunate selection Through
his e'(tenSl\ e acquaintance he has been able to materially
strengthen the companv's sellmg force
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1\'"eady all of the GI and RapIds factone ....al e getting out
new sample" for the January sales season Some of them
hay e theIr lmes practICally completed and could easIly make
their dIsplays ready for 111spectlOn on Decembel 1, or next
week, If it were nece"sary to do "0 AJI v\ III be 1eady to en-tertam
hUyeI ~ at the opemng of the season on Monday, Janu-ary
2,1911. So fal as known thele \'TIll be no Ia(hcal changes
from the patterns and desilSns shown 111July, though some of
the old styles" 111 be changed considerably Nearly all the
factorIes WIll show new deSIgns and there \\111 be some
marked changes m fimshes. Very few of the pIeces that" ere
shown In July have been dlopped entrrely, nearly all ha\mlS
met WIth approval from dealers
Twenty-fi\ e or th11ty Grand RapIds manufacturers al e
expected to attend the semI-annual 111eet111gof the NatlOnal
A.~soclatlOn of Furmture Mannfacturels', to be held at the
J effer~on hotel, St Lom s, M0, on 1\'"0\ embel 1; and l6--a
week from next Tue ..d..ay and \Yednesday There Will also be
a number from CadIllac, Mam"tee, l\Iuskegon Holland and
other pomt ....m the we~teln pal t of the state If It appeal s
(hllmg the comIng week thdt thllty Ol more ale sure to ~o a
..p..ee Idl un ma) be ~e(.med fur the t11P to leave thIS (.1ty on
THE WORLD'S BEST SAW BENCH
BUIlt With double arbors, slidmg table and equipped complete with taper pin
guage, carefully graduated. Th:s machme represents the heIght In saw bench con-structlon.
It IS deSIgned and bUIll to reduce the cost of saWIng stock.
Write os for descriptive Information. THE TANNEWITZ WORKS, ~rt~gMPIDS,
Monday, Nm emher 14. As stated last week, no formal pro-pam
WIll be al ranged for the 111eetmg The principal topics
of dlscus..,ion WIll he the 1eports of the committee on cost
schednle and committee on uniform claSSIfication, shipping
rules and freight rates and It IS expected that important action
WIll be taken on all of these matters
* * * *
Roy S Barnhart, treasurer of the.Nelson-Matter Furni-ture
company, will leave the CIty Monday for New York
whence he WIll sdil for Livelpool on Wednesday. He ",ill go
direct to London where he WIll meet Stewart Edward White,
the famous woodsman and st01Y writcr, and jom the party
to ~o to Afnca on a hlg ~ame hunting expedltlOn. Mr.
Darnhal t who ha" had the trip planned for some tlme had
been booked to saIl from N cw Y01k next Saturday, thus
enabl111g hIm to cast hIS \ ote before leav111g, but he received
a "hm ry up" rcque ..t.. from Mr ~ hIte and decided to sail on
\\ edne ..d..ay He IS 111tensely 111terested 111politics, having
been promment m the management 111 the state league of
RepublIcan clubs, and hate ....to lea\ e before election but rather
than delay the plans of the hunters he deCIded to miss voting
for the first time smce he attamed hIS majority.
* * * *
Gland RapId" 1'; to hay e more competItIon m the veneer
dealmg concerns m the CIty, but as In the furmture manu-factunng
busmess, there are men who thmk there is room for
one 1110e1 at lea ..t.. The F S Torrey company capItalIzed at
:t2,;OO, hac, Ju ..t.. been organIzed to do a JobbmlS busmess 111
\ eneers, With headqual ters m thIS CIty F. S. and Gussie
Toney, Horace L loote, Frank \V Hme and the \'"Ichols &
Lox Lumber company dl e the stockholders Mr Torrey will
be the i:;cneral managel and Mr. Hine WIll act as attorney
fOI the company.
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Most Attractive Inducements for Car Load
Are Offered by the
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THE KARGES FURNITURE co.
Manufacturers of Chamber SUItes,Wardrobes, Ch,ffomers. Odd Dressers. Chlfforobes.
THE BOSSE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Kitchen Cabinets, K D. Wardrobes, Cupboards and Safes, m ImItation
golden oak. plain oak and quartered oak.
THE WORLD FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of Mantel and Upright Folding Beds. Buffets, Hall Trees, Chma Closets,
Combination Book and Library Cases.
THE GLOBE FURNITURE co.
Manufacturers of Sideboards in plain oak. imitation quartered oak. and sohd quartered oak.
Chamber Suites. Odd Dressers. Beds and ChIffoniers in unitation quartered oak, lJlutatlOn
mahogany. and imitation golden oak.
THE BOCKSTEGE FURNITURE CO.
Manufacturers of the "Supenor" Lme of Parlor, L,brary. Dmmg and Dressmg Tables
THE METAL FURNITURE CO. Made by fhe Karges Furniture Co
Manufacturers of "Hygiene" Guaranteed Brass and Iron Beds, Cnbs, Wire Spnngs and Cots
Evansville is the great mixed car loading center of the
United States, made so by the Big Six Association.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN 27
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Made by Bosse Furmture Compau) Mdde bv \Vorld ~ Ul tIlture LOI11Pdll) I1
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T T Cro"by IS now sole propnetor of the Crosby Furni-
1m e lompany of FOl th Meade, na. having purchased the
mtel est of J H ''\ToIf who has I etm ned to hIS former home
m '\ e\\ YOlk
leI dmand r LtH?,er foundel of the Luger Furnitm e com-pany,
c1ea1els, of lalgo, N Dak, has been seriously ill for
"e\ el al \\ eeks, and as he is 0\ Cl 80 ) eal s of age there is little
hope tOl hIS I elm el y
C T I enmal k 8-- Co. undel takers and uphobtel el ~ of
I au (Iall e \\ I" ha\ e decIded to dIvIde theIr business by
111mm~ the undel tak111l.?,part of It to the west side of the
11\ el The name of the film ha.., heen changed to Lenmark
K C::on
tIll IluntILl l'ulnl1me lOmpan)'" hLllldmg. 1\1a111and
llnppl \\ a "tl eeh Buffalo. \; Y has heen completely re-mudded
and It h nlJ\\ lon..,ldcl ed one of the most commod-
IOU" and be"t al lan~ed hOlhe-furmshll1£?, e"tahhshments 111
the Clt\
FI ank c:; Cohen '\10111:' Eisenshat and ~braham StolIn
\\ III deal 111 fUI11Itm e manufactm ers' supplIes 111Bndgeport,
( ann under the name of the Boston Furniture Supply com-pam
mcOl pm ated CapItal "tack, $5,000; suhscnbed and
paId m
The Boston ExcelSIOr company's buIlding at Eastman
Fall S IIass. \\ as placed on rollers and mm ed, intact, over a
mIle to a ne\\ sIte the old "Ite ha\lI1£?, been sold to the Boston
K I[ame 1 allIoad company, who WIll use It 111enlarging their
\ ell d faCIlItIes
The L S Donaldson company of 1\1inneapohs, Mmn , have
lea"ed the F H Petel "on propel ty on SIxth street and have
also pm chased the hmld111l.?,\ alated by the F H Peterson
lUlmtllle and Calpet camp an) They ",ill take possesSIOn
T anual \ 1 1911
The Temple Stell art ChaIr company, whose plant at
last Pl1I1ceton, =--Iass , was bmned 111 September, have finally
deuded to mm e to Daldwm\ llle, Mass, where they WIll oc-lUP)
a plant fmmed) used as a tub factmy by the Harns &
]Tolman company
Paul L Hakel has 1 eSl~ned the po"t of general "uperin-tl11dlnt
ot the Glctlld LeacJCl (the SIlL, Hael & Fuller DIy
()()od" company), St Lom". whIch he had held fOl neatly
::;\ lal" to take a "lll1llal pOSltlO11\\ Ith the Da)ton Dry Goods
lUll,pan\ ~I1l1neapolI" 1'1101 to hI" eonnectlOn vvlth the
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
John He1l111gel has pm chased \\ IllIam TustI'" immtme
stm e at Pocahontas, Ill.
J 1\1 Jensen IS successol to L !\ Petel son immture
dealer of RlI1gsted, Iowa
John Petry. fUlllltlll c dealel and undel takcl ot \I£?,oma
Wis., died on October 26
John Hanks has sold hIS undertakll1g busll1ess at ~f ar-shall,
III to Bubeck & Gallagher
Caleb Mahel has purchased the 1etall fU1111ture bU~1I1e""
of p, N Crawford at Delta, Colo
Artz Bros. succeed II R '\ eut 111 the fut1111l1lC and un
dertaking business at Can 011 10\\ a
SmIth Blo", fUI nlture dealel" of ColumbIa c:; C' ha\ c
added an undertak1l1~ depal tment to theiI hU..,ll1e""
The Travelse CIty p.llChJ Chall lompam ale plepal111"
to elect a lalge lement and hI Ill~ dddltlOn to then faLto! \
The wea v1l1g depal tmen t of the TIle;e10\\ Cal pet compam
at ClInton. Mass, ha" been 1unnll1g nIght and da\ SInce the
middle of October
The SpecIalty Case company of Kendalh dIe Ind ha\ e
taken a contract to futl11sh "mall cases amountm£?, to 530 000
to a jobber m ChlcalSo
H. A Taylor, fUll11tm e dealel on uppel Ilam strect 111
ColumbIa, S C', has opened a blanch stOle at 933 Genal"
street in the same city
Carter & Camphell, leed chall and ~o-calt facton at
'iVinchendon, Ma"s, has been 1unn1l1g- thl ee hotll s 0\ eI tlmc
for the past three weeks
The Peerless Furl11tut e compam I ecenth 01 £?,al11zed at
Jamestown, NY, is opel at1l1g the plant ot the defunct Cen-tury
Furniture company
The old Pal k Hotel at Dela\ an 'YIS \\ hlCh ha.., been
\ alant for some tIme wJ!l be lam eI ted 1I1tO a tactol \ by the
Delavan Upholstenng company
The addltlOn to the plant of the \Tortheln Casket com-pany,
Fond du Lac. ,VIS, IS completed. except the 1I1stallatlOn
of the heat1l1g and sprinkl1l1g system
The Dewend & Glllk Furnitul e and Cal pet company of
Davenport, Ia, ha\ e takcn posses"lOn of a nc\\ fOUl stOl \ and
basement btllldll1g, el ccted at a cost of $32,000 on a S0000 "ltC
The film of Musk (~ LII11s. fUIl11tUIC dealels of La\\len(J
2\la"s. has heen dl"soh ed The "enlO1 membel WIll cont1l1ue
the busmess undel the name of the Hem y \ \1 Usk com pam
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dinina Room Furniture
BUFFETS, CHINA CLOSETS and TABLES
Library Furniture-Library Desks, LIbrary
T ables, Library Bookcases, Combination Book-cases,
Etc.
Our entire line will be on exhibition in January
on the thIrd floor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
. .,
Your Continued Success Depends
on the QUALITY of Your Goods-
It's after a bed or chair or table leaves your store that it counts for or against your
future trade. Every Stow & Davis table you sell is a constant advertisement
of your reliability. Our tables resist wear-quality is built in, along with the
style and hand rubbed finish that make our designs so attractive.
Our new catalog, showing some of the handsomest Colonial and Flanders
diners ever bUilt,is in press. You Will Just naturally want these tep-notchers in
your own store, for your best trade. Send in your name for an early copy.
STOW & DAVIS FURNITURE COMPANY,
PERFECTION TABLE TOPS. DINERS.
Grand Rapids, Mich.
OFFICE AND BANK TABLES.
(,I and Leader, MI Dakel was with such promment firms as
Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Reading, Pa. , and Goldsmith Bros.
c;udnlon, Pa He was also associated for a time with the
1\atlJ'1al Cash Register company, Dayton, O.
The Furniture Manufacturer:o' Sample House is the name
of a new mcorporatlOn in San FrancIsco, Cal Capital stock
$10,000 m shares of $1 each all subscribed and $3 in each $10
paid m A. C Chamberlam, R Matheson and R H Barnard
are the mcorporators.
At a special town meetmg next .:vronday the taxpayers of
Brattleboro, Yt, Will vote on a propOSitIOn to exempt the
property of the D. W. Felch Chair company from taxatlOn for
a penod of five years. Pubhc sentiment is reported as strong-ly
m favor of the proposition.
Lauren M. Follansbee for thirty-two years foreman and
supenntendent for the Fletcher Novelty Walks of Peter-boro,
N. H , has I eSlgned to accept the management of the
Phemx Chair company, recently organized to establish a
new factory in the same town.
\iVtlham R Hotchkm, for many years adveltising mana-ger
far the New York store of John \Vanamaker, and for
,,;ome time past sales manager for that establ1shment, has
been appomted advel tlsing manager for the New York store
of Gimbel Blothers, succeedmg George H. Peny
The stnkmg upholsterer:o of San FranCISco, Cal , have re-turned
to '" ark on the same conditions under which they
were working a month ago, With the agl eement that their al-leged
grievances shall be settled by an arbitratIOn committee
of wluch Mayor McCarthy is to be a member.
TI'e Muse, Faris & Walker company, proprietors of the
I'lt'h "treet stOle, Los Angeles, Cal, mamtain a "school of
:oale..,1l1a.nshlp"from which eleven young men and women
\\ ere ~raduated recently, receiving diplomas showing that
they had completed the course which IS arranged by the com-pany.
Irving M. Winslow, preSident of the Winslow Furniture
and Carpet company of St Paul, Mmn, which went into the
hands of a receiver over a year ago, has filed a personal peti-tIOn
in bankruptcy, with a view of avoiding liability on the
company's notes which he endorsed. He schedules his liabili-ties
at $55,000 and assets, all exempt, at $6,500.
George W. Pickering of Wayne, Ill., made a bid of 15
cents at an auction sale on an old couch. His bid was accep-ted
and hiS fnends who had dared him to bid thought he had
been "stung," until he npped the cover off and found $200
m coms and a number of valuable jewels and trinkets, all of
which he returned to the famtly who were "selling out."
~----_.. I•
••
I•
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LOUIS HAHN
154 Llvmgston St.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
DESIGNS
and Details of Furniture
CItIzens Telephone 1702. 1
...._-----------------------------------------------------.,
WE MAKE REFRIGERATORS IN ALL SIZES AND STYLES
Zinc Lined. Porcelain Lined.
White Enamel Lined. Opal-Glass Lined.
You can increase your Refrigerator Sales by putting III a
line of the "Alaskas."
Write for our handsome catalogue and price lists.
THE ALASKA REFRIGERATOR COMPANY, EXCI~S~~:~~;~M~U:S~K:E~GoOrN, MICH.
I New York Office, 369 Broadway, L E. Moon, Manager
Io.
...,.
•
1
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
RICHMOND TABLET CHAIRS
"SLIP SEATS"
MOST SANITARY
RICHMOND CHAIR CO.
No. 100 DOUBLE CANE SEAT No. 100 GENUINE LEATHER SEAT
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-Crl and RapId,: IIICh -S\ bl cmt Po~tma 443
Broadway, $3,000, G II Cdvedy, 148 Cadton a\ enue S2 ~OO
1 II Keeler, 195 South ColleL;e a\ enue 813000, Rohel t f
Scheiren, 497 Rose ,:treet, $2, SOO, Roman 1Iarb)J \\ ,:kl Se\ en-th
and DaVIS sh eets, $4,000
ChIcago, IlI-Kathenne Stockes 621 II e"t 1 hll t\ -fil ~t
sheet, $14,000, ::\Iary I Gav, 2434 Se\ cntlcth a\ cnuc S3 775,
W. M. Dle\\el, 7220 Pnncton avenue, $5,400, I[alle II Creal\
6601 N01th Lmcoln :,h eet, $3,000, Mal} R} ne, 412~ ITan al d
street, $4,300, J. P Andel:oon, 6718 St LOUIS a\ enue, $4,000,
Isabella Duncan, 1028 ::\Ionticello a\ enue, $18,000, ~ndl e\\
Sundene, 3902 Lmvell avenue, $7,000, T C Schaumbul S; 2740
·West Polk street, $4,000,::\1 G Dub]):" 9368 Long\\ood a\e-nue,
$3, SOO, J A Augustme, -1-736II e'3t IIontlcello a\ enue
$7,600; Frank Deck, 2121 Glace sh eet, $4000, Chade" D
Gano, 1408 Shen\ m avenue, $10 000
Atlanta, Ga -C L Bm aId, 147 ChelOkee avenue 84000,
C. A. SmIth, IYIlhams ::\1111load, 88, ~OO ::\11'3 J II' Old-know,
426 Pulham Stl eet, 83,250, C 17 CI usse 286 PI ed-mont
avenue, $2,750
Columbus, 0 -D C Palkhurst, 536 Remhald avenue,
$3,000, E. L McVey, 1638 Parsons avenue, $3,200, A H
Marquart, 67 Twelfth avenue, $3,500; Leonald Duggan, 1611
North Fourth sheet, $3,000, Charles Slatel 27 Ogden a\e-nue,
$3,500; C C. Shepal d, 965 Dryden lOad, $9,000, Elmer
Wilson, 1167 Oregon a\ cnue, $3,000.
Binghamton, N Y --Flank Crossett, 39 East Catherine
"treet, $3,500.
Lincoln, Neb -Charles Stual t, 1830 E ,:treet, $'1,000
Houston, TeA -Joseph GI eenhJ1l, 429 Mason street, $3,-
000; Albert Banng, A\ondale, $4,000, ::VID GeOlge, 284 IIc
Kinney avenue, $2,500
Center, Tex -WIle} Watts, 186 COla sheet, 83000
Cinclllnati, O.-Spencer 1\1. Jones, 2558 Tre\ OJ sU eet,
$2,500; S. M. Cooper, ::VIi Hope road and Dl1'3hnell avenue,
$8,500; Clara Shinkle, 2489 Rmg place, $2,500, LOUlse M
Moser, Suire avenue and Eighth street, $4,000 ; Joseph :vreltus.
Hearne and Burnet avenues, $7,500; Flank GIlplllen, Donald-son
place and Langland avenue, $4,000: Thomas Leicht,
Klotter and Chfton avenue, $4,500.
Kansas City, Mo.-G. C. Anderson, 134 South La\\n
street, $3,000; Ed. Neal, 7114 Lydia street, $3,000; W. H.
AND THE
RICHMOND, IND.
Lampson 5418 Cenhal avenue, $6,000, JO'3eph J. Magill, 340
Gal held ~t1 eet 83,000, S A. PIerce, 17 East Fifty-fourth
':tJ eet S-1- 000, T \ Ta} lor, 2736 MadIson avenue, $3,000; J.
"\1 Iluth. 2649 ] ocktldL;e ':tteet, $7,000
Indlanapoh,:, Ind-E T Santa, New Jersey and Thirty-second
,:Ueet\ S3,087, R D BI ent, Graceland avenue and
11111 1.\ -els;hth 'otleet $3300, J B Gnffen, Broadway and
Thn tv hI st ~Ueet, $3,000, Pall y Brunson, vVashington street
and \llll1L;ton a\ enue, $3,700, VV C Pearce, 3101 North Illi-nOh
'3tleet $3,000, "Jam v SmIth, 3337 West Tenth street,
$2,500
Topeka Kan -C F Rlckenbacher, 1607 Central Park
a\ el1lle £2 SOO 1\11': l1arbal a Hahn, 1413 Boswell avenue,
2 ;00
IIlI1neapo!Js, ::\lmn -I,I IV HIll, 4736 \Ventworth ave-l1lle
82800, Chll':tll1a KlI1Q;,2046 Crystal Lake avenue, $3,-
000 \ l' Petu "on, 2737 Pleasant avenue, $4,200; H. A.
c.;angel 312-1-Gatfleld avenue, $3,000, E EAddy, 2715 West
] akc of the l~le'3 a\ enue, $3.500, .M D. Purdy, 5024 Forty-
"eumd a\ enue 5;1S,OOO, 011\ er R Bryant, 3160 Chicago ave-nue,
$3000
MIl" aukee, \iVI': -Charles F menke, 52 Pabst avenue,
$4,000, Oman Nelson, 489 Thlrty-fil st street, $2,500; Edward
T Sch" ab, 1320 FI edellck place, $2,500; C. J. Austrup,
Clal ke and Thlrt} -fOUlth stt eets, $4,000, Ferdinand J. Hintz
101 tv-eIghth Stl eet and Pabst avenue, $4,500.
Dallas, Tex -]\Ils C. 0 Taylor, 223 Annex avenue, $3,-
000, F. A YeaL;er, 95 Sunset avenue, $2,500; Mrs. J. S. Terry,
219 South H any ood sh eet, $2,500.
DetrCllt, ::\llch - H S Angstman, Jefferson and Ker--
che\ al avenue, $2,850, BaSIl Clenck, Pennsylva11la and Mack
avenue, $2,800, Jacob SeIdel, 1212 Beaubien sheet, $3,000;
\\ Illtam Schwanteck Canton and St Paul streets, $3,450; O.
J. Dartll1g, G! eem\ ood avenue and Stanley street, $2,800; E.
H Roger:" \Yaterloo street and Kercheval avenue, $3,000;
::\1ary F IIelH;h, 248 Lelcestel street, $3,000; E. C. Pokorny,
315 :Me!nck :,treet, $9,000, Cassy J. Boydell, 79 Virginia
stl eet, $11,000; COIa \Y MOll IS, 40 HolblOOk street, $4,100.
New Ha \ U1, Conn - H e11ly Dupee, 438 Winchester ave-nue,
$5,000, Joseph Surpllse, 47 Downmg street, $3,000.
Denver, Col-:Morns Fern~tein, West Colfax and King
streets, $3,000, ::\Irs MIlton E. Bat.es, Manon and Seventh
St1eets, $7,000, S. A. BaIley, Kentucky and Race streets, $3,-
WEEKLY ARTISAN
E.ach
Net
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~ $2~
E.ach
Net
No. 46. Single Cone. $2 Each. Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cone All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
000; Han y Newcomb, CoHaA and York st! eets, $6,000; A. S.
McGIbbon, Josephme and SIxth streets, $4,000, P M. Fel gu-son,
1996 Colorado boule" al d, $8,000
Duluth, Mmn-E DOlmedy, \Vest SIxth street and
Forty--,eventh a\enue, $4,SOO, Yllgl11la Grady, East SIxth
"treet and Twenty-foul th a\ enue, $5,000, E. G Erlanson"
3106 RaleIgh st! eet, $3,000
Salt Lake CIty, Utah -E. L VVIlhamson, 1446 Holly-wood
avenue, $4,000, Ethehn Potter, 1822 South EIghth East
street, $2,500. J G Kel-,on, 965 Ea-,t SIAth South street, $2,-
500, Laura Chft, 736 South ThIrd Ea:ot street, $2,500.
St LOUIS,Mo -M. Cohen, 3928 MIchIgan avenue, $3,915 ;
o P Blllkhardt, 3929 Iowa avenue, $3,500, J F Fram, 4321
\Val11e a\ enue, $3,400, \Vllham Urban, 5783 \Vaterman ave-nue,
$6,000.
LOUISVIlle, Ky -EmIl Peters, 2015 Garland avenue, $4,-
000, MI -, N elhe We17el, 1435 Sixth street, $3,000; A. J. Thom-pkm-"
2700 Twenty-seventh street, $3,000, Fred \Vessmg,
1626 rlfth sheet, $3,200.
Fort Wayne, Ind.-M. D Shoyel, 1026 Ba)er aHnue,
$7,000, L C Delagl ange, 212 vVest Berry st! eet, $4,000.
\VIc1llta, Kan -\V J Flazier, 727 NO!th Emporia ave-nue,
$4,800; 1'Irs Glue, 152 North Topeka avenue, $3,500;
A A DunmIre, 198 Munson avenue, $2,500
Los Angeles, Cal-S E Hopes, 3010 Olive avenue, $3,-
600; J. H. Taylor, 1231 South Forty-fifth street, $3.500;
Charles Benson, 142 South Spring street, $3,000; A. A. Max-well,
4203 Brighton. avenue, $3,400; H. G. Spaulding, 300
North Fremont avenue, $7,500; H. B Ainsworth, 2190 Adams
street, west, $10,000.
Schenectady, N. Y.-Samuel Dlckhoff, 819 State street,
$4,000; J. W. Veeder, 469 State street, $3,500.
Oakland, Cal.-Dr. W. O. Smith, 806 Grand street, $7,-
053; Malwme I3lOtlSOn, Santa Clara avenue and Burt street,
$4,000.
Miscellaneous Buildings-A wealthy Amencan is plan-
11lng the building of a new town m Lower Califor11la, on the
San DIego and Arizona raIlroad near the boundary hne. The
town is to be known as New Tla Juana and the bUlldmg plans
call for a modern hotel, a theatre, pavIlIOns, lecture hall and
two churches Dr. L C. Smith, the multi-11lilltonalre type-writer
manufacturer of Syracuse, N. Y., has asked for a per-mIt
to erect a forty-story store and office buildmg in Seattle,
"Wash., at a cost of $2,000,000. It will be the highest budding
west of New York and second hIghest in the world. John
Barton is buIlding a two-story hotel at English avenue and
Leota street, RIchmond, Ind. Methodists are budding a $10,-
000 church on Bland avenue, EvansvIlle, Ind J L. Hahn is
buIlding a $12.000 theatre on Thirty-fourth street and North
avenue, Milwaukee, WIS. The FaIth Lutheran congl egatlOn
of MIlwaukee, \Vis., has laId the foundation for a $25,000
church at Twenty-first and Mmeral streets. Margaret Meyers
IS buIldmg a $15,000 theatre at 230 Oakland avenue, Detroit,
Mich. The SIsters of Lorretta are building an academy at
Fourteenth and Pennsylvania streets, Denver, Col., at a cost
of $110,000. The GIbson Heights U11lted Presbytenans are
erectmg a $25,000 church at 1017 South Taylor avenue, St.
Louis, Mo. F. E. Goft IS addmg two additional stones to his
hotel at 418 South Fourteenth street, Omaha, Nebr. E. Caste-lano
is buIlding a $15,000 theatre at 515 North Main street,
Los Angeles, Cal. The MethodIsts of Youngstown, 0., are
bUIlding a $25,000 church on Delanson avenue. The SImpson
Methodist church in Fort Wayne, Ind., is bemg rebuilt at a
cost of $5,000.
31
32
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II,
'ikm mal ket thl'i week, but prices are firm on all varieties,
except ::'vIaracalbo'i, whICh ale vveak at 27 @ 28 cents, Mexi-can
fl ontlel s dl e "tIll quoted dt 33 @ 34; Monterey, Tampicos,
etc , 43, San LUlS, Zacatecas, etc, 44; Vera Cruz, 47 @ 48.
Buenos ~} I es 38 @ 39, Paytas, 42 @ 42,0; Haytiens, 45;
Drazlls, 64 @ 67
The demand fOl varnIsh gums IS st1l1 remarkably light,
even mqullles bemg few and far between Pnces have not
changed matenally fOl man} weeks, except Manila, which
ha-, advanced about a cent pel pound on all grades.
'[ he hal d" ood lumber trade IS stIll unsatisfactory from
the sellel'" pomt of vleV\ ~ fev" of the large western and
southel n utIes repOl t a con"ldel able Improvement, but com-plalllts
of dullnes<' and disappomtment ale more numerous
than they wel e a month ago.
WEEKLY ARTISAN
Miscellaneous AdvertiseIllents.
WANTED SUPERINTENDENT
A thoroughly expenenced and reliable man famlllar wIth
modern factory methods and successful m handlmg men
For factory manufacturing school furmture, located In a fine
country town, employmg eIghty men Must have some
knowledge of draught mg. State expenence, salary expected
and references. Address F. S. P, care Artisan, 11-5
POSITION WANTED.
A successful salesman wIth 25 years establIshed trade m
Central Terntory IS open for a pOSItion January 1, 1911, Wlth
a good case goods or chaIr house. Have the very hIghest
recommendatlOns. Will go mto any terntory. Address
W. H. J. care Weekly Artisan. 11 5-12-19.
WANTED.
Salesman for medlUm pnced line of diners and rockers on
salary for South and Southwest and Wisconsm Address
M. C. R care Weekly Arhsan. 11-5 ~~--~-~ ~-~ -~~~
WANTED
Superintendent. One who thoroughly understands bank,
office and store fixtures, and specIal order work. To the nght
man thIS is a rare opportumty. Address, (statmg expenence
and where you have worked), "Superintendent," Care of
Weekly Artisan, Grand Rapids, MIch. tf
"\\A'ITED
Cabinet foreman in chair faLtory, State experIence JIU!!lt gl\e refer-ence.
Address D. A. R" care "\\eekly ArtIsan 10 22-29 11-5
WANTED.
Commercial salesman for Indiana and Illinois to sell Parlor
and Library Tables. State territory covered and lines car-ried.
Address "Map". care Weekly Artisan. 9-3tf
WANTED.
Travelinl{ salesman to carry a lme of Reed Rockers and
Chairs in Indiana and Illinois. State territory covered and
lines carried. Address "Near". care Weekly ArtIsan. 9-3tf
POSITION WANTED.
A salesman of ability furnishing best of references and at
present engaged, desires a change. Thoroughly acquainted
with the trade of New England and New York states and can
~arantee results. Address C. A. R.. Weekly Artisan. 7-23tf
FOR SALE.
A nice clean stock of Crockery in a live West Michigan
town of 10,000 population. Would also rent store if desired.
Address "See" care Weekly Artisan. S-28tf. ..
New York Markets.
New York, Nov 4--The recent demand tOl hght "eIght
burlaps has reduced stocks consIderably, but the} v\III be
repleted by al rn als dunng the commg week The supply
has run so low that large buyers have been unable to secure
car load lots for qUICk shIpment Bag makers are showmg
increased interest m the market For the first tIme m man}
months they are qUIte eager to place orders for tuture dehvery
at current quotatIOns whIch are 3.60 for 7,0-ounce, 3.70 for
8-ounce and 4.70 for lO,0-ounce Calcutta goods.
The turpentme market has been qUIte steady thIS week
prices rangmg from 79 to 81 cents Today's quotations are
80,0 cents here and 76 at Savannah, the margin between the
two points having WIdened again to over four cents. The
volume of business IS not large.
Weakness is noted in the linseed 011 business "Official"
quotations have not been changed, but the demand has de-creased
and several transactIOns, even m small lots are known
to have been made at a cent or mOle below card rates, Raw
oil, both city and western, IS quoted at 97 @ 98 cents; smgle-boiled
98 @ 99 and double-bOIled $100 @ $1.01. Calcutta OIl,
raw, firm at $1.06.
Shellac is firm WIth a tendency to higher pnces. D. C.
is quoted at 27 @ 28 cents; V. S. 0., and Diamond I, 24,0 @
25; fine orange, 23 @ 24; bnght orange, 21 @ 22; T. N. in
cases, 19,0 @ 20. Bleached fresh, 20 @ 21; kiln dried, 25
@ 26.
There has been, apparently; no competition 111 the goat-
Index to Advertisements.
~cLlm, &. Ilt1l11!;Comp'lny
~Llskd Rdllgel ator Company
B,lrne, \\ F & John Company
Barton H H &. Son Company
Bcnnett, Cbdrlc, lurmture Company
BIg SIX Cal Loadl11g \SS0cldtlOn
Bockstege lur11ltl1l to Company
Bosse Fur11lture Comp'lnY
Buss \Iachl11e \;V orks
Cballenge Refngel atol Company
ChIcago Mltrol and '\1 t Glass Company
Chnstlansen, C
Doetsch & Bauer
Fnedman 13lothers Company
Globe Fur11ltul e Company
Grand RapId, Ca,ter Cup Company
Grand RapIds Veneer \,y 01 ks
Hahn LOUb
Holcomb, \ L & Co
Horn Blo, \1 'lnut lduIl11ng Company
Idcal Stampl11g and 1001 Comp,l11y
Kar!SLs Furl11ture Company
KImball Brothel' Company
Kl11de1Parlor Bed Company
Klrkpatllck '\rthLll
L n\ rence \ICldclden Company
LentL Idble Company
Lcxl11gton Hotel, CblCdgO
LIght George \\ \1anuladunng Company
Luce Fur11lture Comp'lny
Luce Redmond Chall Company
\Ianetta Pal11t and Color Company
::'Llf\ el ::'IdnuLldunn-r Company
\Ietal Furnliul e Company
\Idler, ElI D & Sons
"\ orthern F11l11lture Company
OlIver ::'1achl11ery Company
Palmer, A E & Sons
Pdlmer Manufdctunng Company
Peterson, A & Co
PIttsburgh Plate Glass Company
Porter, C 0 Machl11ery Company
RIchmond ChaIr Company
Rockford ChaIr & Fur11lture Company
Rockfol d Fr,lme & FIAture Company
Royal Cbatr Company
Sager, W D
Shebo) ~an N0\ elty Company
Sheldon, E H & Co
ShImer, Samuel J & Sons
SmIth & D,nls Yranufact11ll11g Company
Spratt George & Co
StO\" & Da"b Furl11ture Company
Swett, Frank W & Son
Tannewltz Works
Umon Furl11ture Company (Rockford)
Waddell Manufactunng Company
'Walter, B & Co .
Walter Clark Veneer Company.. . '" " "
World Furniture Company ........•...•.......................
22
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Covet
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18
78
11
26
20
24
29
885
26
17
8
Cover
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4
- Date Created:
- 1910-11-05T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 31:19
- Subject Topic:
- Periodicals and Furniture Industry
- Language:
- English
- Rights:
- © Grand Rapids Public Library. All Rights Reserved.
- URL:
- http://cdm16055.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16055coll20/id/73