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- Weekly Artisan; 1910-03-26
Weekly Artisan; 1910-03-26
- Notes:
- Issue of a furniture trade magazine published weekly in Grand Rapids, Mich, starting in 1879. and GRAND RAP!I)'")
PUBLle LP ~ ~~Wf
& UJ.lil.1i.c 1
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH., MARCH 26,1910
/ SLIGH FURNITURE CQ,MPANY
The Largest Manufacturersof CHAMBER FURNITURE
EXCLUSIVELY IN THE WORLD
Catalogue to Prospective Customers. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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2 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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LUCE FURNITURE COMPANY I
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GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Manufacturers of COMPLETE lines of MEDIUM PRICED DINING
and CHAMBER FURNITURE.
Catalogues to Dealers Only.
Luce..Redmond Chair Co., Ltd. II
BIG RAPIDS, MICH.
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Our Exhibit you will find on the
fourth Floor, East Section, MANUfACTURERS' BUILDING, North Ionia Street
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
Exhibit in charge of ]. C. HAMILTON, C. E. COHOES, J. EDGAR FOSTER.
.. -- . .
High Grade Office Chairs
Dining Chairs
Odd Rockers and Chairs
Desk and Dresser Chairs
Slipper Rockers
Colonial Parlor Suites
tn
Dark and Tuna Mahogany
BIrd,' s Eve Maple
BIrch
!0fartered Oak
and
ClrcasSlan Walnut
CtlAND RAP}[)S
rt\uhnL1.C.. Lf1 n I~ H)A.~£1._
30th Year-No. 39 GRAND RAPIDS. MICH.• MARCH 26.1910 Issued Weekly
FIRE LOSSES AND FIRE PROTECTION
New York Merchants Urge a Change in the Policy of the City's
Fire Department.
From the :l\Iarch number of the "Proceedings of the Mer-chan
ts' aSSOClatIon" of N ew York.
In the year 1097, the total CO'3tof fil es and fire protection
in the DllIted States amounted to almost one-half the cost of
new buIldll1gs con"tructed that year The cost of fires and
fire protectIOn in the D11lted States 111 1907 amounted to over
$456,485,OOO-a tax on the people exceedll1g the total value of
the gold, "lIver, copper and petroleum produced in the lJntted
States 111 that year The cost of new bmldmgs dunng the
same year IS conservatively estImated at $,000,000,000
The total cost in thIS country is five times as much per
capIta as 111any country in Europe In 1907, the actual fire
los" due to the destructIOn of b11l1dll1gs and their contents
(exc1usn e of the excess of pI emlums paId III addItIon for
insmance) was $2 51 for each mhabltant of the UllIted States
The per capIta loss m the CItIes of the SIX leadll1g European
countnes was but 33 cents, or about one-eIghth of the per
capIta loss in thIS countly
ThIS startlmg cltfference IS due to the fact that 111Europe
the preventIOn of fires IS the object of pnnclpal attention,
whIle in Amenca It is 111large degree Ignored Comparisons
show that If buildings 111the L llIted States were as nearly
fireproof as those 111 Europe, the annual fire cost 111 this
country, including premlllms, would be $90,000,000 instead of
$456,000,000.
Of the Immense annual co'>t entaIled by fires and fire pro-tectIon,
over $215,000,000 I epre"ents complete and irretrievable
waste due to the actual destructIOn of property by fire; and
over $241,000,000 represents excess of 111surance premiums
over 10'3"es paid, expense of waterworks chargeable to fire
serVIce, expense of fire departments, and expense of private
protectIOn
The excessIve extent of the loss and the cost of protec-tIOn
111America, a" compared wIth the European figures, are
due pnmanly to the fact that fire proof construction of
build111gs 111 Europe IS the rule, and in America the ex-ception
Nevertheless the amount of loss in America 13
swelleJ by the general and indefensIble negleot of precau-tIOnary
measures other than the use of fireproof matenals
In the case of New York, whIle there has been constant
Improvement in the way of fireproof constructIOn, and lll-creas111gly
'3tringent proviSIOns for fire protectIOn in the
bUlld111g code, It is nevertheless true that adequate inspec-tlOn
for the purpo"e of reducing fire-risk by enforcing laws
and ord111ances has been almost wholly omitted It is fur-ther
true that no adequate effort has been made to control
fire-ri'3k by compelltng the 111stallation of automatic sprinklers
for ext111gmshing fires in their 111clpiency
In consequence of thIS omISSIOn dangerous risks are per-mitted
needleS'll} and very generally to eXIst, whereas they
might be lessened, and 111many cases aboltshed, by efficient
official 111spectlOn and the compulsory installation of auto-matic
devIces which "'ould hold a fire in check or extinguish
It at the beginning.
At fl equent intervals throughout the business distrcit
are buildll1gs, which, by reason of inflammable materials are
partIcuharly hable to destructlOn by fire In many of these
hazardous occupation'3 are cal ned on Such buildings are a
menace to adjacent prel111ses, and the latter are therefore
compelled to pay insurance rates based upon this external
menace That is to say, occupants of premises which in
themselves contain little ri'3k of fire, pay an additional fire
tax because their neighbors ma111tain dangerous condItions
The point of this article is that those dangerous condi-tions
are to a considerable degree controllable, and are per-mitted
to exist to an extent greater than is "inherently neces-sary,
by reason of the defectIve organization of the New
York Fue Department
That department as it is now ,and has practically always
been, organized, concerns itself almost wholly with extin-guishing
fires, and gives almost no attention to their pre-vention
The relative Importance which the fire authorities
attach to extinguishment and to prevention appears from
the fact that out of a total annual outlay of $7,000,000 to
$8,000,000 for FIre Department purposes, less than $15,000
per year has been recently devoted to prevention, while the
remainder was apphed to extll1gui'3hing fires-and, it may be
added, to destroy111g by water what is saved from fire.
The assocIation committee on insurance has made a care-ful
and expert study of thIS subject and is convinced that
measures for fire protectIOn should be given great prominence
as part of the work of the Fue Department, instead of being
almost wholly neglected, as at present
The measures of preventlOn that are urgently needed
are:
1 Comprehell'3ive, systematic and continuous official in-
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4 WEEKLY ARTISAN
spection of all bu"ine::,::, premIses to 111sure comphance "lth all
laws and ordinances for the pul pose 01 fit e pt e\ entlOn
2 The g-eneral compul "Ol} In stallatlOn ot automa tJ~
sprinklers in non-fireproof prellll"e:o of certaIn classes
Such measUl es, If adequately planned and thoroughh
enforced, would recluce the number of fires, e,t111gutsh many
fites m theIr ll1C1plency and thereby le"sen the lo"s, and reduce
the cost of ll1surance by lessel1lng the risk ThIS reduction
of ll1surance rates would be particularly important to 0\\ nel:o
of premIse" ad]Oll1lng extra-lhazardous nsks, ll1 ca"e automatic
~prinklers were compubonl} ll1"talled ll1 the latter
Expenence has shO\vn that automatlL spnnklel" al e an
extremely efficient means of fit e pI e\ en t10n Recent repO! ts
of the fire department "how that \\ here fires occur ll1 sp11nk-lered
premIses, ll1 a large maJ Ollty of cases the fires are extm-gLllshed
by the spnnkler" befOle the arnval of engllle", that
ll1 other cases a chemIcal hand extll1gmshel suffice" to put out
the remall1ll1g fires, and that ll1 e\ en case the spll1lkler cftec-tlvely
prevented the Spl ead of the fire unttl the fire engmes
arrived ::\foreover, the loss from fire and vvater 111all these
cases was allllo~t nominal
In Vle\\ of thIS gl eat effiue11l \ as a lllean" at hre pre-vention
and of hl111tl11£;fne 10"", It IS hlghh de'llable that
automatic spnnklers be genelall} ll1"talled e~jleclalh In extra-hazardous
nsks whIch 1l1Clea"e the C(I"t (If ll1"mance upon aJ-
]oining premises.
The fire comml"SlOner now has legal autho11tv to compel
::,uch installatIOn, but It IS not effectn el) e"el cIsed hecause
the department lack::, the machll1elY for nece,,~al \ UJllljJJ e-hen"
lve ll1spectton, WIthout \\ hlch he cannot act ll1telhgentl}
and WIthout which enforcement of the pUI po"e h chfficult
Last year, at the request of the vlerchanb' <1""oclatlOn,
hut only after cOllSldelable proddIl1g, the then file Cllllll111"-
"loner Issued an Older requ11ll1g the 0\\ ners ot ten ,pcuhed
extra-hazarJous premIses to equIp the11 pt elllbe" "nh autf)
matlc spnnkIers ThIS was the fil "t occa"lon on \\ hlch am
attempt haJ been made to enforce the commISSIoner's powers
In thl s respect J n t\\ ° cases the order \\ a" enforced th 1ough
the corporation counsel Tn the othel" no senou, attempt
at enforcement vvas made The legal 11ght" 01 the «)mmt"
sioner to ordel and enfOl ce "uch a mrasure 01 fil e pI otel ttf)n
was demonstrated, whICh \\as the end atmed at 11\ the a"llCl
ation
This point hay mg been e"tahlJsheJ the a"OclatlOn hd'
recently taken "tep", throug-h the le£;l'ilattlle, to caU"l the
creatIOn \\lthm the fire depa1tment of a btlleau 01 file pIe
ventlOl1 adequate 111 all re~pects to the comprehelhl\ e ,\ ,-
tematlc and frequent lllSpectlO1l of all premIse", to the en-forcement
of all laws and ordlllallces for fire pI e\ entlon, and
above all to the general compulsory mstallatlOn 111 all (lan~er-ous
premIses of automatic spnnklers
It is propo"ed to conso!Jdate m th1S bureau the pr""ent
fire marshal'" bureau, the bureau of combthtlhle" and the
bureau of VIOlatIOns and auxlhal\ fire app!Jances, to iI ,111"-
fer the ll1spectors of these hureaus to the ne\\ bureau to 111
crease the number of tllspectors as may appear nece"al \ an 1
to place the new bureau m charge of an officel de"H~nate<!
"chIef of the bureau of fire preventIOn," who shall be mde-pendent
of the "chIef of depal tment \ the officer v\ ho no\\
controls the entIre U111formed force) and .,hall I epOl t only
to the commIssioner.
ThIS plan WIll create an effectl\ e I1hpeCtlon force, and
wJ1l utJ117e for fire preventIOn a cons1de1ahle number of
offiCIals and fil emen, now scattered among three pal bally
llleffectn e bureaus and largely employed 111 work ot much
le::,s practIcal Importance The ,bsoclatlOn's plan \\ dS ap
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DO YOU WANT
the PRETTIEST, BEST and MOST POPU-L-
AR LEATHER FOR FURNITURE. ANY COLOR. WILL NOT CRACK.
If so buy our
GOAT and SHEEP
SKINS
Write for sample pads of colors,
OAHM & KIEFER TANNING CO. II
... ......
204 lake Street,
CHICAGO, ILL.
TANNERIES
CRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
CHICACO, ILL.
pro\ ed 1)\ the legIslature',., charter reviSIOn commIttee and
Iecommended to the legt:>lature for adoptIOn.
\ "ub'itantlal reductIOn 111 the fire fisk and in the aggl e-gate
coq of m'iurance 111 this cIty WIll ultimately result fron:
thl" or any "ll11tlar measure for fire prevention, If the offiCIal
machmen for \\ hlch pro,lslon I" made IS uttllzed In good
tclnh ane! tu Ib 1ull pos'ilbJ11t}
The man who 'ieh out 111 !Jfe's race expecting to hay e a
\\ alk-m er I" !Jkel) to be fUn over before he has proceeded
tar npon hIS \Va}
,c.,ome lJt the leal fa1111er" compla1l1 that the average CIty
agncu!tur1st <!oesn t kno\\, a corn on the foot from corn 1fI
the ear
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I HOFFMAN BROTHERS CO. I, : FT. WAYNE, IND.
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HARDWOOD LUMBER
SAWED l QUARTERED OAK { VENEERS , SLiCED fAN D MAHOGANY
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
Lansing, Mich., Sept., 1908·
Grand Rapids Veneer Works,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Gentlemen:
Referring to the kiln we purchased of you nearly a year
ago, wIll say that we have found same very satisfactory to us,
and would not consider going back to the old style kiln.
Weare able to dry stock much faster and to get
better results in the way of having stock flat and
free from checks.
In our business it is absolutely necessary that our material
be bone dry or serious trouble will follow its use, and we are
pleased to say that we have had no trouble whatever since
installing your kiln.
Very truly yours,
THE AUTO BODY CO.
H. E. Bradner.
Steel Office Furniture.
The rapidity with which steel office furlllture has come in-to
favor In the ea"t Indicates that It filled a want that has been
generally felt It IS no longer uncommon to see entIre office
eqUlpments maJe of steel-IncludIng the desks-and Its quali-tIes
of weanng strength and rigidity, coupled With the fact
that it IS fireproof, haye espeCIally recommended It for special
uses, where valuable papers and document" are kept, where
climatic condition<; are unfa yarable to \\ ood, etc
The steel filing cabinets, filllshed in imitatIOn of mahogany
and oak, are remarkably true to the original woods. It is
necessary for manufacturers \\ ho are displayIng wood and
steel cabinets together to label them, for the eye cannot dis-tinguish
between the two, judged only by outward appear-ance
The grain and color of both the oak and the mahogany
are reproduced exactly, and It is thus possible to combine
\\ood with steel eqUIpment In an office or institution without
there being any lack of harmony in the effect The plain,
dal k green finhh, which IS a dht111guishing mark of the
'lteel furniture, IS wlelel} used, and WIll doubtless grow rather
than decrea-.e UI populant}, as the use of the steel equipment
becomes more common
'\ dl~pla} of '3teel ftl1111tllre which attracted conSiderable
attentIOn was "hown recently 111the wmdows of a New York
manufacturer On the one Side were wood cabinets, badly
eaten by mice-large holes showmg in the corners of the
drawers-and, to heighten the effect, very natural-looking
stuffed mice were shown, apparently crawlmg in and out
through the holes On the other hand were the steel cabi-nets,
absolutely mouse proof It was an effectIve means of
emphaSizing one of the advantages of metal over wood in
the manufacture of office filing devices That a number of
the leading manufacturers of wood furnIture have taken up
the makmg of a steel 1111eI" an l11dICatlOn of their appreCI-atIOn
of the fact that there I" a cel tam class of trade to
which the ad\ antages of metal 0\ cr \vood \\ III appeal
New Factories.
CapItalIsts of ]\1t AilY, N. Care establI"h111g a new
furniture factory at Galax a "smart lIttle raIlraod town" in
Old VirgInia
\i\'lllIam, 'vV T, E E, Dora "'IV and Estella Smith, have
incorporated the Smith Mattress company to establIsh a fac-tory
at Marion, OhIO Capital stock, $25,000
Grand Rapids and Chicago furlllture manufacturers have
taken stock in a company capitalIzed at $75,000 which wIll
rebUIld the veneer works at Reed CIty, Mich, that was
burned about two yeals ago
The new factory of the \Yebb-Gordon Furniture com-pany
at Greenfield, Ind, was put Into operatIOn on March 15.
The same company IS remodelUlg the Comstock-McKee plant
in the same town and Will soon have It ready for busines"
Contractor "Gus" Holm is reported as making a recorJ
111 rushing work on the neV'. plant of the Supenor Furmture
company at Rockford, III The plant IS to be completed in
::\1:ay and the managers expect to put It in operatIOn in time
to get out a lIne of goods for the fall season
Furniture Fires.
The Butler Furlllture company of l'\"asl1\ IlIe, Tenn,
lost about $6,000 by fire m their store on March 17. Partially
1l1sured,
Fire start1l1g In the shay 1l1gs box damaged the plant of
the Rathbone Fireplace .l\Ianufactunng company, Grand
Rapids, Mich, to the extent of $3,000 or $4,000 on March 23,
Insured
The Dobbs FurnIture company of Terre Haute, Ind,
lo-.t $25,000 or $30,000 by fire that destro} ed their stock on
March 18 Their bUlld1l1g was also damaged to the extent of
about $20,000.
One of the factones of the E C Paige company, cnbs
and cradles, of Antrim, N H, was destroyed by fire on March
Made by World Furmture Co., EvanSVIlle, Ind.
19 The clothing of a man who was varnishing cradles was
accidentally ignited and the flames spread through the varnish
room With a flash. The man saved his life by Jump1l1g mto
the river.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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NEW YORK CORRESPONDENCE
Notes. News and Personal Mention of Funlitllre
Manufacturers and Dealers.
K ew York, .:\Iarch 24--Bu"111e~" h gOIng ahea I leI \ \\ ell
t'he total of order., taken smce the fir"t ot the;. eal ha, e been
qUlte satlsfactOl) and the return" 1rom the tlal el111g 111cn
contmue to be moderately good The manutactlll er~ ellC
pretty busy and all sectIOns of the Ul\\ntl I al t c,dI111e; tOl
theIr Ime" The whole"alers feel \ el I much cnlOUl "gee! and
have had a very good demand 111 mo"t l111e"
The retall traJe IS plo~Te"~Ulg fineh 111 all 1111eS fJ nn
and bra"s beJs seem to be sellll1g \\ ell and bcdchng IS 111 aetn e
demand A falll) good husme"~ 1'-, looked tOl m all channel.,
of trade dunng the spnng
Fndnel & Eb"te111 ha, e takcn the .,torc thelt II a~ OCCllpH'd
by Sperry & Hutchm-,on In Hallem dnd hale Il(l\\ one of the
largest furmture stores out that v, a)
J & 1\1 Olswang IS a ne" carpet and pIcture 11ame e"-
tabhshment at 1056 Broadv.a;. Brookh n
The JVIaJestlc FurmtUle compan;. ha", been mUJlpOlated
at Mexico, NY, WIth a capItal of :j;40,000 , headed by II
H. Osborn, F \\ Flash of .:\1exlco \f Y. and E P (o.,t!-
gan of Syracuse, ]\ Y 1 hey \\ 111 Ulan ufacture furmtl11 e
Mr Abraham of L\braham & Strau,,~ Brookh n has
bought the Clarendon Hotel there
Some of the 1m) er" who ha, e been m Gland IZaplch
DELAWARE
CHAIR CO.
DELAWARE OHIO.
1 DOUBLE CANE
~ LEATHER
J MISSION
CHAIRS, ROCKERS and SETTEES
LARGEST
llQUAlITY"
LINE
of
CATALOCUE TO THE TRADE ONLY
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II ah111 the pa~t month are Robert Cunnmgham, WIth R H
\1 aCI &. Co R (T \lnander,,, Ith the f'onrteenth street
.,turl Da\)(l I"ahn \\ Ith the Slmp-,on-Crawford, Charles
\\ Itnl \\lth Loe"el ~ 'Ill 'IIl!ler, WIth '\braham & Strass, I\;
-\ \IcLallghm \11th C-Iegel Cooper Co , "J F Lemmon, with
the (JeOJ g c C II111t lompany , John E Stagg, wIth the 0']\ elI-Ae!
am" companl an,l HOllald '\1 Cowpelthwalte
PIOn BlOthers fur111ture clealer" of fiS ayenue 13, have
opened a hcdd111~ qfn e at 83 al eune n BeU]am111 PIOn
lOrl11('111 1 au the bU'-,111C"'-, alone
\!r '-Jlh erhcIg 1'-, I1he manager for thc new retal! furt1l-ture
~t01 e stdl ted b\ LoUl" Dorfman, at 818 \\ estche",ter
a\cnue
George \1 TIo:,,\\orth one of the hest known 1I1tellor
deu)l at III "- 111the cl1\, ha" left here and Jomed WIth T ~I
lohn.,tOJ1l &. (0. or Portlancl, Ore, and wl!l take an actl\ C
p,ll t III the 1l1a11a~e1l1Cnt
Thc L 11Itccl \Iall Ordel Hon~c lS a new firm m Brookl) n
to handle tUrJ1ltnre II Ith a capital of $150,000, headeJ by Max
TahIti H100kh n an d \ \ Ilham -\braham and Margal et Sher-l1Ck
\lan!1dttan
(,ottheb \\ cher Co manufacturers of davenports, couch
trames, etc at:; Lagl ange street, Brooklyn. are working fuTI
tIme and hU"-111e"s1'-,\ ery .,atlsfactory
For the .:.Jew York .:\1etall1c Bedstead Co, Charles P
Rog-el-, ha" charge of the ea'itern terntor) and D R Hencler-
,on h the g-eneral representatIve
Henn Lnttcman, 127 \\T e"t Twenty-fourth street, manu-
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Pitcairn Varnish Company II
Manufacturers of
Reliable Varnishes of UniForm Quality
Our Motto:
"NOT HOW CHEAP-BUT HOW GOOD"
.....
C. B. Quigley, Manager Manufacturing Trades Dep't. Factories: Milwaukee, Wis.; Newark, N. J.
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Don't you want the BEST bench that was
ever offered for the pnce, $12.00 (SubJect to "•
dIscount) This bench 15 34 inches high, 6 feet, :
3 inches lon~-front I5 Inches, made of thoroughly :
klln-dned hard maple stnps glued together, 2% II
inches thick. The balance-J 3 Inches inches, IS
soft wood. Can ship on receipt of order. !
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GLOBE VISE and
TRUCK CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
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opencd a furl11ture store of 111', own at Th1rd street and
Second ayenue
David J\lasch who has been for year'i in the fU1111ture
depal tment of the Slegel-Cooper com pan} has left that firm
and now represents sc\ cral hnes on the road
'Ihe C B French Cahmet company of Brooklyn, has
been incorporated b} i\ P i\lmour. G P l'lench, \Ydham
Kennedy and G T Raymond
I Teltelhaum & Co, who 'itarted a few} ears ago hand
hng second hand furl11ture haye now tv. 0 newly erected
butldlllg" fOJ thell large retad busllle,',s at 446-8 \Vestcheste1
avenue, the TIronx
The Flel111sh i\rt company have bought the 'itock of the
fa1led concern, the Goldc "N" ovclt} company, 50 Frankhn
strect, manufacturer" of bllC a brac, YV ood noveltles ,etc
Henry Batterman has reured from the department store
DU'i111eSSat Broadway, T'lu"hmg and (;Iaham Ave, BlOoklyn,
and \V 111dey ote h1s yvhole tune to the DroadwdY Bank H L
Batte1 man h1S son 1<;now pre::;ldent of the H Batterman com-pany
Greenhut & Co, depa1 tment 'itore at Slxth avenue and
EIghteenth street have enlarged the1r store and now take m
a full block The Slegel-Cooper company control tll1S store
The busmess of N Hatern, furn1ture 'itore, and the BlOnx
Stov e compan}, Thll d ayenue and One H unc1red and Slxty-th1rd
street, are bemg closed out
The Abdale Eqmpment company 1S a new firm at 53
\Yest Twenty-fourth street, handhng fur11lture only for
hotels and steamsh1p lmes
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! "THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST" I
I BARTON'S GARNET PAPER
I•
I
IIII,
factunng parlor furl11ture 1S 'ia1d to bc 'iellmg mahogany furl11-
ture at the same pnces as ml1tat1On good:" and ha'i a ne"
lme of Engh"h chairs, upholstered m leather and fabncs
Then hne'i are meetmg w1th good success
The Pooley Furn1ture company, large ma11ufactu1 er'i of
Ph1lac1elph1a, are m theIr new home he1 e, at \Iachson avenue
al1d Th1rty-first street, wh1ch h a fiye 'itory palace The
exterior 1S all m white, a handsome marble entrancc, hall
decorated m clas"lc 'ityle, m hardwoocl'i beautJful uphol-ster111g
and nch tapestnes and altogether the} have the
mo"t beautlful and artht1c 'iample rooms here The fifth
floor 1s furl11shed as a five room hotbe The firm mo, ed
from 235 \IVest Twenty-thml street awl haye added to then
"ales force Be111g 111onc of the best 10cat1011" here for the
sale of h1gh pnced goods, they expect to do a large bU"111e'iS
Israel Zal11t'iky, who 1S 111partner'ih1p V\ 1th Kahn, ha\-
mg a furl11ture store at 329 Kn1ckerbocker ayenue, Brookl} n,
a'i the Kl11ckerbocker Furl11tm e company ha" obta1l1ed per-m1S'i1On
from the court to change hh name to Sanit
F D G1eenough, manager of the Prame Grass Fml11-
ture company, reports good results from then 'ihow111g at
Grand Rap1ds, of Crex gra'is furl11ture They are advert1smg
a new finish
Charles F. Redly, late WIth the J\ldler Cabmet company
wdl repre'ient the] ame"town (N Y) Lounge company 111
th1s C1ty, Ph1ladelph1a and BaltllTIore.
S Bauman & Co , are in the1r new home at Eighth ave-nue
and Forty-sixth street and have now one of the largest
stores here.
]. E Roantree ha'i retired from the bus111ess of the Cort-land
(N Y) Cab111et company
A Caopleman, late w1th Freec1berger & Kos'ck, has
There a1 e some men ,,0 lazy that they will not even file
thelr hens
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 llnd Door Mills, Railroad Companies, Car Builders and others will consult their own interests by using it. Also
Barton's Emery Cloth, Emery Paper, and Flint Paper, furnished in rolls or reams.
MANUFACTURED BY
---H_..-H-_.._B._A.-.R_-T- ON & SON CO., 109 South Third St., Philadelphia, Pa. .. -
(-Ialf of them are to be fifty feet long and the othel half £01ty
feet
MISCELLANEOUS NOTES AND NEWS
Frank Floerchmger ha'i purcha"ed Tom ~I01 n'ie) '" fm111
ture store at Oxford, Iowa
W A Larwlg "ucceed" Bogel 8..- Lad\\ Ig m the I etaIl
furmture busmess at Newport, "a"h
The Green Castle (Incl ) Cabmet compan) ha\ e mClea"ed
theIr capItal stock from $10,000 to $25000
Kiefer & \;Ylttkopp. succeed KIefer & SIemers In the
retaIl furnIture busine"s at Plymouth \\ I"
S Bent & Bro, furmture dealer, of (Jardnel \Id"" ha\ e
incorporateJ wIth capItal stock fixed at $7=)000
Manor & Rittman, furl1lture dealer" and unclel takel" ( I
Genoa JunctIOn \\ h , are "ucceecled b\ J T \1anol
\;Y B Anderson, furl1lture dealer" of \ngleton. j e\.
has made an a"slgnemnt for the benefit of h1" crel!Jtor,
E D Alexander ha" purchasecl the retaIl fUI mture bu "I
ness of the Walter" Fur11lture company at 'lay ton, Ore
J 0 Beauchamp and C J Cro"hy ha, e purchased the
undertakmg busllless of L J :\1Illel at T\\ m 1 all" 1claho
The ='\orns Safe and Lock com pan) ot Seattle \\ a"h
have solcl theIr furl1lture department to \IIle" P Denson
\;Y A. French & Co meorpm ated ft11l1ltul e clealers 01
St Paul, 1\lmn , have mcrea"ecl then capital "tock to S2;0 000
Challe, '1 \Iaynard, furntlUre clealer ot "WI III Lake
Io\\a, ha" sold his ,tock and busllless to C;chnlldt ~ \\ lllldm'-
The ~Cdell-PloflOck ;\IanufaLtullng compam table". ot
St LOttls, 1\10, ha' e mcrea,ed the1r cap1tal ,;tock trom $20,-
000 to $25.000
Bresee Brothers, undertaker" of Lo" \ngele'-. Lal ha\ e
opened a branch estabbshment at LanLastel, Cal \\ 1th I (,
KIchline as manager
Herbert Schofield, furniture deale1 of "e\\ Canaan.
Conn, has just completed and mO\ ecl 111to the fine"t hllLk
buIlding in the town
The PO'itle Fur11ltul e eompan). deale I '-. ot Lolul11hu'-. ( )
have filed a voluntar; petItIOn m bankruptc) J lablbtH.'''
$9,4425; asset" $11,815
R J Arthur of the :\rthur Plano compan). lolull1bm,
Ga, has purchased the business of the DIXIe Furn1ture com-pany
of the same town
The Hardy Fur11lture compan) of I mcoln "ebr, ha\\::
made arrangements WIth their landlorcl to add two floor, to
their three-story buildl11g
John Samuels has sold hI'; fur11lture ,;tore m Spokane.
Wash., to W G Thompson of Spokane and \delbel t O'
Meara of Missoula, Mont
S C. ,;Ynglht & Son, furnIture dealers of Pt1ca. O. are
to have a new bttllcll11g reach for occupanc, b' c,entembel I
It will be a three story bnck
The Utah County Mattress company \\ho hd\ e Lonductld
a factory at Pro\ 0, "Gtah. ha\ e mcorporatecl Capltal "tock
$25,000, dIvided into shares of $1 each
A petition in bankruptcy has been filed agamst I, \Iohr &
Co., furniture manufacturers of 507 \;Yest ThIrty-second "treet
New York Henry MelvIlle IS the receiter
D G. Peoples, propnetor of the Delta Furnltt11 e com-pany
at Benzona, MIss, ha" filed a ,oluntar} petJtlOn m
bankruptcy. LiabihtJes, $4,628. a""et", $3,547
The Santa Fe RaIlway company has placed an ordel
for 1,000 new furniture cars all to be dehvered before Sept 1
C; Il De1shlme of Hazelton, Pa, IS movl11g his stock
110m the old \[ans1On House block to his new furmture
"tm e south we"t corner of Droad and Laurel streets
S J Barber of Carthage, :\10, "tate" that the company
\\ hlch 0\\ n" the Carthage furmture factory WIll probably be
1 e on;-anl7ed "oon and he put in better shape than ever
G " \\ 11"on John Carlm and Ora \Vabon have pur-cha,;
ed the furl1ltUl e bu"mess of r II Story at Montesano.
\ \ a ,-h . and \\ 111trade under the firm name of \\ 11son, Car-lJ"
le ~ \\ ahon
The bu<;me"" ot Young & :\TcCombs, department store
furllltnre clealer,;, etc, of Rock Island Ill, has been 111corpor-ated
as the Young & 1\lcCombs Co-operatlve Store company
Capltal <.,tock, $200,000
The retad ftulllture firm of Brown 8..- Durham, New
Ha\ en Conn ha" been d1SS0!\ ed The 1m,mess wIll bc
lont1l1Uec\ h\ lreclellck H Blovvn, w1th \lelh111e S Chance,
Lite \\ Ith jrdnk T ellnancl ot Boston. as manager
The d1"cn'-"10n of the methods of clatl11g bIlls ahead oc-cupIed
much oj the t1me of the St LOUlS, :\10, Furlllture
Iloa1d ot [lacle at a lecent meetmg \n add1ess on the sub-ject
,\a'- clell\erecl b, tit D :\Idler of E,anWIIle, Ind
[he Chall tactone,- dt (~arclner, J\la"", are cllscardmg
'-team for electne pln' el-llldl\ Idual motor, fOI each of the
malhllle" The 1-' Derb) lompany put 111elght motors last
,eal and ha\ e 111stalled fifteen more dunng the pa,t "lX
\\ eek,;
The 111SUlance on the plant of the Valley C1ty Desk
compall\. Grand Rapid". vvl11ch ,vas badly damaged by fire
t\, a \\ eeks ago has heen "athfaLionly adjusted. a "upply of
101n drIed IUl11bel ha" been secured and the factor} 1" running
\\Ith a full fmce
\[llIlh ~ J (JOllll". fUln1tule dedler" dt 11(J\\ke1 and Port-
Iclnd "t1 eet Tlo"wn \Id''- ha\ e 1 el110deled theIr ~tore 111order
to ,-entre el Portland "tl eet front The ma111 entrance and
,)ffice are no\\ at 100 Portland "treet, but the old entrance at
43 Dowker Stl eet IS "tlll used
The Klanke Brothers fUflllture factory at New Bremen,
Oh1O, wh1ch has heen shut down S111ce the recent death of
John Klanke IS to resume busl11e<;s under the name of G.
Klanke & Bros. Ge01ge. \Vllitam and Edvvard Klanke ha'l11g
purchased the 111terest held by tlhe estate of theIr deceased
brother
One at the mo"t elegantly fur11lshed bus111ess .,tructures
111 c'an To,-e Cal I" the new home of L Lion & Sons, ",hlch
11d' 1U"\ heen LOl11pleted at the cornel of Second and San
f el nando ,-tl eet" ] he blllldmg h a model of Its kllld, large
ell1d commodlOU s. \, ell lJgh ted a1hl perfect! y a ppoin ted 111
e\ e1\ \\a,
The B II Gal dner furnIture and underta10ng stock of
l.;0m}-; of \1 nrph} "lJoro, Ill, whIch has been 111the bankrupt
lourt ha" been "old Two-rhirds of the stock was covered
b, l11ortl:;al.;e and that part was bid 111by L T HamIlton of
(rl and T(m er 1he other th1rd was sold to the Phillips Farm
Suppl} compan} of Carbondale, Ill, at about 40 cents on the
dollar
E\ en the \\ Ise men are occasIOnally otherWIse
WEEKLY ARTISAN
This is one of our Latest Designs in Drawer Pulls.
,~-------------------------------------- .....
I,IIIIIIf
III
If
II
II
,
I
IIII
I,,••
Waddell
9
·-----------------------------------------------1
Manufacturing
Grand Rapids, Michigan
Co.
Watch Thi~
The largest manufacturers of Furniture Trimmings in Wood
in the world. Write us for Samples and Prices. Made in
Oak, Walnut, Mahogany, Birch and all Furniture Woods.
Space for Others
~-----------------------------------------------~-----------------------------------------------~
STANDARD BILLS OF LADING
Now in Use in Nearly All of the Country and
Will Be Legalized.
~t the begmnmg of 1909 a ul1Jform b1ll of ladmg wa"
adopted by the carners of the so called "offic1a1 cla'i'i1ficatlOn
terntor) ," whIch compnses but a mmor part of the el1lted
State" (Jthe1 forms 'itIll permissable 111 the western and 111
the "ot1thea"tern cla'i~lficatlOn terlltones Dunng the pa"t
week the southern freIght assoc1atlOn has adopted the stand
a1d form and 1t 1'i expecteJ the fa1 western a,,'iOnatlOn and
the Canad1an road'i IV 111 'ioon fall mto lme
It ha" been objected that complete Ul11formlt) th1 Jug-l'~
out the entIre country I'i unde"Irab1e and 1mpract1cab1e, 0,,-
1l1g to d1fference" 111 commercIal customs and the cond1tlOn'i
12,0\Cl nll1g- "lllpment", but thel e IS lIttle If any dIssent from
the propo''lt1011 of u111brnllt) 1n the eS'ientlal" that affect
11c g Jt1ab1h t) anJ a "'i1Ue safety 111 bank1l1g, vvarehOll'oe and
fi'1:111Cla1tm11sactlOl1s upon the secunty of bdl" of ladl11g
InaQmech as the commld1tJes wh1ch undeJ11e 'illch tra11,,-
actIOns are ln large part the 'iubJect of Interstate commerce
1t h oln lOll., that effectn e regu1atlOn a'i to bl11'o of 1ad1l1g can
only be hall bv fedclal legislat1On, VI hlCh has hlthert'J heen
1eCl'mmencled b) the TntelOltate Commerce C01111111SS1011
rIwrefore a h111 to legah7e the "0 ca11eJ st? ndard hIll uf
IddJ11g ha.., been l11trodllced 111 congre'os and 1'0 expected to
j'e pa""ed dunng the current 'ieSS10n It 1'i knO\\n as House
BIll \[0 17267 and p101 lde" for "uch regulatlOn a" vvl11 pro
1110te eS'oentla1 unJformlty of practlce and of legal effect,
IV lth Jut compell111g Ul1lfOlnl1t\ 111m1110r partlclllars d1ctaterl
1)\ lucal cond1tJons
Th1" mea'iure defines an "order bdl of ladl11g' as one b)
whlch the property de'icnbed may be deln erable llpon the
order of any person there1l1 mentJoned, reqmre-. that the
~un ender of the ong1l1al, properly endorsed, shall be re-
CJlll1ed before the delnery of the property, forb1d'i the me of
the words "n;:l11-negotlable" or \\ ords of 'i11111IarImport, and
per1111b the m-.ertlon 111"order bllls of 1admg' of other ter111~
or cond1t1On'i not mCOl1"I~tent WIth the prOVb1Ons of the
\ct OJ othe1 WIse contrary to publlc laVl or polley
\ "stra1ght bIll of lad1l1g" 1'i defined a'i one 111 VI hlch the
plOperty de'icnbed there1n IS stated to be con'i1gned 01 de-
In erab1e to a specJfled per'i'll1. vv1thout any 'otatement that
sllch property lS cons1gned elr Jellverable to the orde1 of an
per..,on Such stralght b111 1111bt ha, e pro111mently "tamped
upon 1tS face the worJs "?\ ot 11egot1ab1e" Other not mcon-sl"
tent prOV1"1Ons are lIkewlse permltted
V1OlatlOns of the prO\ l-'lOn~ as to negot1dblht), and a" to
c1eln er} of property ale made pU11lshable by a fine of not
more than $1,000 01 lmpn sonment 110t more than one year,
or both But notwlthstand111g such 1101at1On, and "order" or
a "straIght" bIll of lad111g ..,hall be wlthll1 the pro\ lSlOn~ of
the I\ct
If earners or theIr agents lssue a b111of la,hng before the
\\ hole of the property has ben rece1ved, or lssue a second
bIll of ladmg WIthout prom111ently markl11g "dupllcate' a-
C10'3" the face, they a1 e "topped from denymg the recelj)t of
the property de~cnbed therel11, and are llable for damage"
d" to an} pel "on who ha~ acqmred such bdl of lading 111 good
falth To knOll mg-h 1s..,ue a bdl of lad1l1g under the cond1-
t10ns next abO\ e utecl. or negotiate sllch a bdl, 1'i pU111'ihable
by a fine not exceedmg $S,OOO, or 1l11pn"011ment not exceecl-lllg
fi\ e year'o, 01 huth
Caf11er" or agents who clehver the plOperty de'icnb.ccl m
an order ])]11 of lad111g w1thout 1equlll11g ~urrender and mak-
111g cance11at1On of such bdl, or 111 case of partJal cleln er)
1l1dOJS1l1g thereon a ~tatel11ent of the pr Jperty dell\ creel, a1 e
e"topped fr0111 assel t111g that the property a, deSCrIbed there-
,n has been dehve1ed 01 pariI§.:.l1y de1n ereJ and are hable tor
<111damag-es 'iustamec1 by any pe10l0n because of reltdme. 111
~ood fa1th upon the b111
FaIlure of the carnel to exact a bond 111double the vallle
of the property 111ea"e of deln el y VI 1thout takll1g up and ca11-
ce11mg the oUhtandl11g bdl of lad111g 1" made a l111sJe111eaner,
pU111'ihable by a fine not exceedlllg $),000, or h) 1l11pn~(Jnment
not exceedmg fi\ e ) ears, or both
Sec 8 plOVldes "That any mdtellal alteratlOn. add1t1cn.
or era~ure ll1 01 to an ordel bdl of ladlllg or a stra1ght b111
of lad1l1g. fraudulent 01 other\\lse, ,hall be \\ ahout efreet,
and 111the hanJs of a bona fide holder fOl value, not d party
t J the alteratlOn thereof, such bdl :oha11 he vahd and 111a) be
enforcecl accOl d1l1g to 1tS onglllal tenor P 0\ 1ded, hoVl-e,
er, that an alterat1On, adehtlOn, or era"llre 111 or to all,
such bill of lad111g with slgnature thereto endorsed the1 eon
by the lS~U1l1g calner, or 111Sofficer, agent Ol senant 111hls
behalf and \\ 1th the consent of the holdel thereof, shall be
I ahd and effectlVe"
Th1s mea"ure 15 adapted not only to aboh"h certall1 If
regulantle" 111the l'iSUanCe of bllb of 1ad111g, of whIch com-plalllt
hd'o been made, but 111 general lS an effectn e qep
toward a "Olunng the safety of financial tJ an'iaet1Ol1'i based
upon b111s of ladmg
The b111 has ben approved by many boards of trade.
:ohippers aSSOelat1Ons and other eommerd1al orga111zat1Ons
and there 1-. httle doubt that lt \\ 111be passed when cOllgre,,"
get'> around to 1t
to WEEKLY ARTISAN
RETAIL FURNITURE ADVERTISING
Conducted by H. H. STALKER.
Dealers Are Urged to Send in Samples of Their Advertisements and to Offer Any SugKestion!IJ
and Helps Which They Believe Will Be of Benefit to Others. This Department
Aims to Be of Practical Set·vice. Help Us to Make It So.
Every fUlll1ture dealel who uses lalge space WIll do II ell
to study thIS e'Ccellent advel tlsement from Km2, s, Toledo It
IS never an easy ta"k to !.SLJUp effectively as many dlffelent
Items as are here lepresented, and the "ad" man lesponslble
tl\e S~leJlII1oledo IsWo.itil\! for
King's Second Anniversary Sale Kmg's Second Anmversary Sale
Don t JWlt gla.nce over tlrls IlAivert sement Read everv 'l'b. II We (If QIl ., W1l'. be 1lo ml.l;tn iU'tlke 101""US li.Ild." L
tenl OIJIDpa.re other prlces WIth our $llJe pnces Note the prove a gold nun ... of ba.:rgaUlll to our patroll.l We Ilre • ad
real actull.l. and extrllOnllna.ry values t!us sale olfers You do of t. We a.re de1J.gb.ted to be ab e to lIlLV... our cwtomeN 'e>
:Ot~V:~~P:~:: ::de;=~ Th.,\~~e~~~: milchmO!l~ on thm1uM!ture a.nt\carpe~p" cbue1: In th
wont of our ca.re ...r :wd t 15 of" equal mterest and lJllpo1't.moe face of al the talk of lugh po es !or commodlt e:s a d we •• >ed
to you T!lJ>:e advll.1ltag'e of 1t Buy for present needs aJ:ld COflt of h"Ulg we know that here rot l'lllSt the neceS! t e. and
5Upply your wante for the Ile'Xt $U mon.hs 01' year to coone l=es ID bort1e furmsbJ.IlglI un be bought &t ower price. tll&n
Itwillbethebgge&tllJld!J.estmWlltmentyoueverJllll.de Never Will' before Yes a.t Mtmilly leu than the actual ~CllI.t of
UllIld the erow<k. We will b&.'<e plell.ty of :I'IJ.~ p~'Dl& to wa. t lIlllll.u.fa.ctunng It IS up to you to take a.dvantage of the op
oIle'veryoneprolllptlya.ndcareful!y rr';1 h.... portuJUtywlllleltlast&
All Goods Marked tn Platn FIgUl'es ~nX SUse Your Credtt--Buy on Crecht-·We'n Ar-
You See What You Save ~., ••• ••••• • range the Terms to Swt Your Convemenee
Our Great Anniversary Sale Starts Monday, March 7th
Exten'lOnTable' 3P"" PorI", SW" Center Table
I ,....--,--, ~ ~alpep for $27 SO
,• .~ ., "$'2"7.50 "~ ,: ... "' ~98c
Go-Carts
" ' • $4.95
$1275 $12.75
$l5lJc:l<sb $150 cash
5<low"," roe w~'I;.
Iy &emg ly S ..
At'tIst1c<l.sn mad.,,! " "'tl~ "'" =,
.0 ~ "ak "ge "" ""- hog w. 'mol (:.~~;. $li:75 ta.1l Bb,()W barpmM
yo< 5 Piece ParlOf Suit
$25 Oak S,d.-
board, $1475
"" ahg :.~: • $42.75
$18.50 Ch",a
Clo .... $1275
~. ',-' ~ 51275
I G () C .CI •• ""
I E F C eC 11 :31::~:Ch::~nn:>
, (J-'bc .. ClO ::
a h "' ... $675
ChIffon I e r$
>I ",ad 0"". IWd
rn I<'>cl ';;:k_hiUI 00 I .~"; • $4.98
l$Z.50lr~8tIls~~ 5(l1
i~:;~~l~~:1'!·!~
$18 Couche.
foY $1050
'\\~ ha e ti.' B
o "-lcP Ra ..... !o. , "
$.j..98
Carpet Sweepers
for thiS layout IS to be congratulated I Vvould advIse you to
cut out thIS advertIsement and refer to It ne'Ct tIme you get
up a large "aJ" You WIll find It helpful
One thing especlally worthy of note IS the uniform good-ness
of the cuts, although of course they form part of a de-sIgn
and were all made at the same time But had one or
hI a of them been black smears, as is so often the case in large
, ads·' the entIre effect would have been spoiled Then the items
al e !SlOuped under strong, easl1) read headmgs, and boxed in "ll a" to be readIly dlstll1gUlshed from the rest The plOpor-tlOnmg
of "lute space abo "hows care The opening para-graph"
at eIther SIde of the cut of store at top are to the
pomt, and vvell calculated to excIte interest in the bargains
1\ hlch follm,
I thmk hem e\ er not wlthstandmg the high chal acter of
thh aeh eltlo,ement, that li could l1al e been considerably
"tl engthened b) one or tv\ 0 changes They are undoubtedly
pomts that occurred to the "ad" man after It wa" too late to
make the changes
'-\ e 11 begm at the begmmng and analyze thll1gs as we
£;0 al mg lust, the headll1g, "The Sale All Toledo IS '-Naltmg
I 01, cloe" not tell as much as It should for a headmg Now
Kmg s as I undel stand 1t, IS a bIg and popular furmture house
Kll1g'" many announcements have lead people to gIve atten-
Ion to IV hat he sa) s, and have bmlt up confidence m hIS
,tore Thelefore, I shoulJ have started this "ad" wIth the
,ub-head appea1ll1g some inches below, makmg It read
'Kmg's Great Anniversary Sale Starts Monday, March 7,"
Here you have, m my Judgement, an attention-compellIng
head, and one full of meanmg K1l1g IS gomg to have a sale
and a leI) Important time of It" commencement IS pro-
(lal111ed L hen, nght underneath, I should have made a sub-lH:
a lot the plesent heac1mg, "1he ~ale All Toledo IS Waltmg
101 I bellCl e that I should also have ehmmated the entire
h'Jrcler The rOI\ of cuts on eIther SIde, together wlth the
'>ollel appearance of the entire "ad" lead" me to believe that
1\ lute "pace mstead of the bordel would have been more
effectll e
The two panels or border of cuts al e about three quarters
of an mch shorter than the four columns of Items including
the name plate at bottom It would have been an easy
matter to ha, e confined these columns to the same length
a, the cub as long as there was such a "light dIfference,
0111, matenall) lmprOl mg the appearance of the whole "ad"
I am mc1med to thmk, too, that the rules around the db play
Item" m the tv\O mner columns would have appeareJ to
hetter acIl antage If set m one point instead of two pomt rule
I wIll mentIOn one other Item, whIch though perhaps not
of 'ltal Importance, would, m m) opinIOn, along wlth the
other suggestIOns, completed a perfectly balanced a~lvertIse-ment
It IS thIS The two outer columns of specIals contain
each eleven Items enclosed m rules But these are not um-form
I should like to haye seen each panel balance WIth the
one correspondmg V\ lth It on the other SIde ThIS would
haye reqtllred some care m confimng each descnption to so
man) V\ orcls, not a dd'ficult task.
I ,10 not doubt for a moment that this "ad" produced ex-cellent
results a" It stanels, for it IS exceedmgly good. My
chIef cntlcbm and what I consIder the most "enous
defect, IS the headmg. for upon the headll1g depends
so much. The other suggestions are merely techni-
WEEKLY ARTISAN 11
•i A SUPERIOR Sand Belt Machine
. ...,
No. 171iPatented Sand Selt Machine.
WYSONG <1l MILES CO.,
~..
cal, and yet, aftel all, would, I believe, add much to the
strength of the "ad"
I have purposely devoted all the space thIS week to thi"
subject, feelIng that it mented it ,Vho can beat this layout?
vVho ha<; a better one? Let's have your samples and ideas
The Age of Financial Delirium.
James J HIll, in the Minnesota conservation conven-tIOn,
held at St Paul last week, advocated the conservatIOn
of capItal, and condemned extravagance as one of the causes
of the lllcrease 111 pnces He "aid' "\lVe are lIv lllg III an
age of world wide finanCIal delinum," and that "next after
the conservation of the land, ItS area, use and fertihty, must
come the con"ervatlOn of natIOnal capital III the form of
cash and credit"
"The immense increase of wealth all over the world has
augmented greatly the supply of capItal, and has stImulated
the splnt of finanCIal adventure and the love of squandenng
The total debt of the states, lllc1udmg all m1110r CIVl1 dIVI-SIOns,
lllcreased between 1890 and 1902 $727,778,393, or 64
per cent, an average of $60,000,000 a year.
"But I know of noth111g beanng more (hrectly or for-
-clbly upon the subject of national waste and the conser-
\-atlOn of natIOnal resources than the profhgacy dIsclosed
by our pubhc expense ledger It is one of the causes of the
mcrease in prices Foodstuff" cost from 10 to 70 per cent
more than 10 years ago Something is due to enormous
currency inflation The total per capIta 111 the United
States in 1896 was $2141 and $3501 in 1909. In these 13
years the per capIta mcrease was more than 60 per cent
"The tariff contnbutes, but it can furnIsh only a partIal
explanatlOn. COmbl11atlOns which are actually in restraint
Flat Surfaces, Irregular Shapes
and Mouldings sanded faster and
better than by any other method.
We guarantee to reduce your
sanding costs.
Ash for Catalog "E."
Cedar St. and G b N C Sou. R. R. reens oro, . · . t .... .. ..
of trade are partly responsible. But perhaps the
greatest factor of all is the wage rate, which has
been rising steadily As cost of production is chiefly
labor cost, the price of the finished article must go
up If the pnce of labor is raised. Still more of the rise
of prices IS due to the ~lecline of agricultural products as
compared WIth the increase of population.
"Stop graftmg, the offspring of public extravagance
and the parent of civic decay. Individual and pubhc econo-my,
a check on mcome wasting, debt creation and credit
inflation-these are the e<;<;entials of the new and better
conserva tron."
"Chautauqua.""
The Jamestown Lounge company have put out a neat
and Jecldedly interestl11g booklet entitled "Chautauqua." By
way of l11troductlOn It tells of the romantic beauty, lovehness
and charm of Lake Chautauqua and then gets down to the
real purpose of teh author in this way Lake Chautauqua IS
at the very gateway of the CIty of Jamestown, and its waters,
coursing through the wl11dl11gChadakoin river, are mtercepted
and made to pay toll by turning the wheels of the great
factory of the Jamestown Lounge company, where the Chau-tauqua
wordrob couch 1<;made. So that more fitting name
could have been chosen for thIS ideal embodIment of beauty,
comfort and convenience."
Then follows 24 pages descnbing the construction, ma-terial,
convenience and utihty of the Chautaqua wardrobe
couch with 21 IllustratIOns Showlllg the different styles and
the "lllwardness" of an artIcle that IS sure to become popular
WIth the people and profitable to furniture dealers.
" ..-
The Best Square Chisel Mortiser
Entirely Automatic. Instantaneous Adjustments.
Makes the STRONGEST, most ECONOMICAL and
most ACCURATE Case Construction possible.
No. 181 Wultlple Mortlser.
WYSONG <1l MILES CO., Cs~:~:R~d Greensboro, N. C.
Ash for Catalog "J"
... .... ....-- a.a .a. aa ••••.•••
12 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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I CHAIR CO. I
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GENUINE
LEATHER
SEAT
Catalogues to the Trade.
RICHMOND
RICHMOND TABLET ARM CHAIR
INDIANA
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DOUBLE CANE LINE
"SLIP SEATS" - the
latest and best method of
double seatmg.
No. 70
Tbe
Best
Value
and
Greatest
Service
for
.he
MOR8'1
HOW TO START AS A DECORATOR
----------------------------------------------------------------------
First Steps in a Vocation or Profession That Is
Well Adapted to Women.
"Home decOlatJOn I~ a vvoman., ~phcle It she 1'" ]ll'lperh
trameJ," saId a v.oman who has made ,1 "'UCle,,, at the \\ork
"She knows better than ,I man \vhat a \\ oman \\ anb, and d
chent feels les" restramt m tdlkmg to hel ahout b1g' and
httle thmg" and glvmt; <;ugge"tn e hmt<; than .,he I\ould \\Ith
the eye of the profe"<;londl man clelorat 11 upon hel "Izmg 1;',)
her knowledge
"There I" a fine field tor women m deloratn e al t, hut
they mu"t be up and dOIng, keep pace vvIth the tImes, ::,tud\
everythmg pertammg to theIr prote""JOn and knmv It thlll-oughly,
01 they WIll be pushed to the wall 111 the<;e da\., 01
keen competitIOn
"A" tastes are \alled. the} mu"t be \\ell mfOlmec1 on all
penod" and st} Ie", and "llOulcl he able to tell at a glance to
wluch pellOd a chall 01 plece of f111111ture 01 .,ample ot clelor-atn
e matellal belong" \11 the~e thlng~ all \ en 11l1JlOl tant
"An addItional advantage 1" to be able to make a ha"t\
penCIl "ketch, whtle gettmg' an Idea from a sugge",tloll made
by a chent The qUIck wltted artist v\ 111.,e1/e and turn "nch
a hmt to acconnt and frequently c1mch an order 11111"hed
water color sketche" are 111\ aluahle aIds to sho\v ho\\ a loon'
WIll look completed
"Women become vel y ea -,tly dlscouragp,] unles, th e\
ha\ e thorough ).,nov\ ledge and If order., do not lull In at
first, but the} must creep before the} can \\ alk It h uphJ1l
work startll1g an,] becomll1g knoVln, hut the\ \\ onld "'tll\
to It If they have natural abl1Jty, plnlk and pel ,e\ erance
Let them do somethIng' worth whIle, then the\ \\ 111 1 ea1Jn
thelr ambItIOns but It lannot be done 111 a \\ eek "month 01
a year
"] t l" not enoug'h to knoVl ho\\ to al ral1>;e a loom ta-,te
full} They must knov. whIch COlO1" to selelt for an expo-sure
faCIng north, .,outh, east or west
"SIde v.alls anJ cellll1g<; too must be attended to WIth
care Woodwork mu<;t be thoroughly c,m"ldered. for "ome
colors enhance, whde other., desha) the tone<; of different
kll1ds of \\ood Be careful of detads, a \\rang note m the
rug, \\ 111rum the whole scheme
ha\ e a leal mter,o<;t 111 her pro-
One ""oman once said to me
floor cm ellng. he It carpet 01
1hen a decorator mu"t
le".,1On It ,he I" to "ucceed
VI 1th d shrug
, ]'11 gne them whatever the}
"'0 l11dn\ cnrtam", portlel es, chal1 s
mean", 0 much money'
. I., that th e way you look at decoratlOn and fur11lshmg?'
I a"ked J" lt onl} the commelC1al SIde that appeaL to
hke, Ifs an order for
tables, sofas, etc, and
)OU'
, \\ ell, partly, yes I clon't bothel \\Ith "entlment It'"
rlollal'" and cent ... only,' ,;he rephed
There ale man) lIke that hut It I'; dIfficult to \\ork
"'ulle",,,fnlh 111that \va}
\ 1\ oman ahout tu take up the profes"lon of decorat-
1l1~ and furl11shmg should learn all "he can ahont It to begll1
1\ lth, then .,he IS not handIcapped at the "tart, but begll1<; her
career \\ lth the feelmg' that she knows "ometh111g about \\ hat
"he undel LIke ... ancl It make" her feel more ass11red
"She \\ Cluld take a qtJ(lto dccordl11g to her mean" In ,I
good locdhty It need not be large at first, that come" a.,
her bu"me"" mcredSfS, but .,he "hould be "ure that It ha'>
g'Clod hght, tor It makes a v a"t dlfference 111shO\\ mg matenal.,
'Ha\ e the \\alls papered With a nch maroon, or waln
011\ e, prefe1 ahl) on the } e11O\\ ca"t, for It lIght,; up better
Don't ha\ e glanng figures, a plam grounJ or <;elf-toned
"l11all pattern I" best for It IS unob"trusn e 1hen a l:;oocl
plam fillmg or carpet to tone WIth the walls 01 rug" strewn
ahout 0\ fl the fil1Jng IS clecoratn e, prm Ided the1 e h nJ
c1d",h \\ 1th the VI alls
'Get some lOll" of papel from twenty cente, up ]]ave
() Ie and a half} ards ,;ample" of plam and decorative matellal",
lInen taffetas and cretonne." as It I" well to havf dIfferent
..?,lades 1he books of plam v clam s, velvet, ar111UJes, etc,
am upholsten hou ,e \\ J11 supply
[f she cannot affor,l to hll} some well madf, pretty and
arthtlc pIeces of furl1lture she can get same, but not antiques,
on memorandum from fur11lture hou::,es Then too "he can
hln odd pIece ... at some of the good auctIOn sales On the
\vall", hang quamt mIrrors old prmt", water color", engrav-mg'-'
and some of hel own sketche<; If she has them, but bv
dll mean,; .,he should make her studIO 'ohm\ the ta",te and
.. 4 _
WEEKLY ARTISAN
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! Lentz Table Co. ,,,
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Lentz Big Six
No. 694, 48 in. lop.
No. 687, 60 III lop.
Others 54 In. lop.
8 Foot Duosty/es
ANY FINISH
CHICAGO DELIVERIES
NASHVILLE. MICHIGAlIt
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meh \ lclualIt} of the owner, for that stnkes the cu"tomer' '"
eve
"\Vhen ready for busmess let her send out cal ds to all
her friend'i announcll1g the fact, and If "he can, ha\ e a ve,y
Il1formal afternoon tea That will bring them to see the
place Then they wIll 'ipeak of It to others--and her first
clIent call"
'\\Tlth the knowledge "he has gamed she l'i able to talk
to her cu~tomer knowmgh, but she must never allow the
latter to thll1k that she knows mOle than the decolator She
I11U"t be COI1\mC1ng 111 all she say" and does
"Often "he cannot have her own way m the loom or
hou"e under dlscu'islOn In that ca'ie she "hould not argue,
but "hould gl\ e m and lIsten to her clIent's ideas, then Wlttl
tact "ork around to her own ",chemes if the} are ~ood
th1 ou~h the sugge'itlOn" gl\ en, and the chance::, are that the
cu"tomer "Ill adopt the decorat01's wa} m the end, whtle
thlllkl11g It hel o"n, but the decorator must use tact, tact,
tact
'The decOlatOl mu"t study rale combmatlon", learn popu-
Idr and effective decorative medlUI11'i and have a strong color
'iense, and she mtbt put earne"t con~lcleratlOn m e\ el} th1l1g
pertall1mg to her order, be It large or small, and alway~ I e-l11ember
that a satIsfied CU'itomer b hel best adverttsement "
13
They Trace Second Closs Motter_
The postoffice authontles of Gla",gow, Scotland, are re-ported
to have adopted a method of tracmg lost second or
third cla"s mall matter that may be of advdntage to tho"e
who mail catalogues, pllce lI'its clrcular'i, etc In thIS coun-try
and mO'it others when a pIece of second class matter
10'ie., ItS wrapper It l'i u'iually thrown away lIttle or no
attempt bemg made to JelIver It at the destmatlOn intended
\t Gla"gow, whenever there IS receIved at the postoffice a
wrapper or envelope WIthout contents It IS stamped "Found
at Gla.,gow \"/Ithout Contents" and delivered to the proper
adelIe'i", together WIth a form which the addressee IS re-quested
to fill up, and gl\ e as nearly as possible the mf01-
matlOn desired and forward It to the "Returned Letter Office,"
whereupon search WIll be made f01 the missing contents
QUIte a large amount of 'iecond-cla'i~ mail matter goes to
Glasgow from Amenca, a'i well as dthel countries, and un-le"
s the wrapper'i or envelopes are of strong durable paper
they are lIkely to be torn or broken open as a result of the
handlmg necessary It would be well If all exporter" send-
IlIg out CIrcular letters, or publI'iher" forwardmg any kmd
If plmted matter m wrappers. vvould "ee to It that such
\\ rappers 01 envelopes are sufficiently hea\ y to re'ilst the
"tram of bell1g han,lled and dlstnbuted many tImes
SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
_ as
14 WEEKLY ARTISAN
SINGLE CONE ALL STEEL SPRINGS
Are very popular with the Furniture Trade.
$2~
E.ach
Net
$2~
E.ach
Net
No. 46, Single Cone, $2 Each, Net.
We manufacture a full line of Single and Double Cane All Wire Springs.
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
SMITH &. DAVIS MFG. CO., St. Louis
ARKANSAS ADVANTAGES
Fort Smith Trying to Become the "Grand Rapids
of the Southwest."
Forth Smith, Ark, :\Iarch 23~Reflectmg the hea,) ele
mand for refrigerators in the western countn the Fort Smith
Refrigerator \1Vorks hay e Just completed and eqUlppeel ad
dltIOnal factory facIlItIes by the erection of an additIOnal two
"tory bUilding 65 x 110 wIth a lean-to 25 x 110 connected with
the main bUlldmg by a covered bridgeway I\lso undel one
of the big bUildings a cellar was excavated and cement floors
laid to further meet the space requirements.
The Fort Smith RefrIgeraJtor \\' orks have been runnmg
full time and withm the past ten days heavy consHsnments
have been made the followmg cItIes Seattle, Spokane. Port
land, San FrancIsco, Memphis, Tenn , Little Rock, I\rk , San
Antonio, Stamford, Dallas, Tyler, Au~tm, Beaumont and other
Texas points, Tulsa, :\;{u"kogee and other Oklahoma pomts
The range shown in this marketing mdlcated the countr)
which IS controlled m Fort Smith traJe terrItOl y
With an authorized capital of $100 000 the T ort Smith
RefrIgerator Works is a concern empLn m£; 75 hands and
• using about 1,000,000 feet of tImber a ) eal It" as located
several years ago by the Fort Smith Commercial League and
began its career as a small mstltutlon Year b) ) ear It has
grown until now It IS the blgge~t plant of It'3 lond m the
west It has, in fact, no competitor
Fort Smith IS now the center of the furmture industry of
the west In fact It may be said to be the extreme \\ e,tertl
point where furniture capital may be succes'ifully emplo) ed
Without assuming undue hazards Close to a large and a, all-able
timber supply, With cheap coal or natural gas for fuel,
sel ved by nme dl'itInct raIlroad" runnmg m all directIOns and
reachmg the prIncipal markets m the southwest and western
empIre, a large and "teady supply of labor which naturally
drIfts to a lalge City, Fort Smith pre'ients unusual induce-ment"
to manufactUrIng capital There have been no com-mel
clal faIlures m Forth Smith anel every mdustry located
here has gro\\ n to assume large proportions in its particular
field
The \\ arcl Furmture :\1anufacturing company is steadily
mcreasing ItS output and extendmg ItS trade territory ThiS
company deals only With jobber-; and ships only in car lots
It is now shlppmg regularly to Denver and Will push steadily
to the \\e~tward, m fact, James A \VarJ, Sr, the preSident
of the company, IS now arrangmg for a trIp to the PaCific
coast cItIes to establIsh trade relatIOns The success of this
com pan) may be best understood when It is stated that the
hmmc:-,s dr)11e In 1909 \\ a'i 30 per cent greater than the pre-
'IOUS ) ear" ))Ll'iInCS'i and It l'i the intentIOn of the Wards to
make thiS ) ear's busmess an equally large mcrease over
la~t Thr:-, company IS Just making its first shipments of
clre'i'iers With the mirror lowerIng attachment, mvented by
Ja'i 1\ \Yard, Jr, secretary and tIeasurer of the company
Thl'-, attachment perrntts the adjustment of the mirror to any
deSIred height and makes It aJaptable for many purposes It
IS bemg attached to all dres'ier'i Without extra cost and as it
ha~ been ,'\ ell ad\ ertI'ied a gooJ demand ha'i already been
\\ ell ach erthed a good demand has already been created
The Standald Excel'iIOr company h 'iteachly Increasing
ItS output h) the InstallatIOn of additional equipment and IS
now makmg an avel age of eight tons of 'ituff daily, havmg
grown from one ton at the tIme of the change m management.
The bU:-'Ine'ic, l'i :-,teadIly gro\\ mg and the trade terrItory is
bemg extended Two additional machmes are Just now being
WEEKLY ARTISAN 15
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IIIII
Zinc-Lined, Porcelain Lined, White Enamel Lined
and OPAL-GLASS Lined.
Write for our beautiful illustrated catalogue and prices.
The Alaska Refrigerator Company
ExclusIve Refrigerator Manufacturers
Muskegon, Michigan
~.N_ew -Yo-rk-O-ffI-ce-, 3-69-B-roa-dw-a-y,_L. .E._Mo-on-, M-a-nage-r ----------
m"talled and four more men wIll be put to work by the first
of Apnl
The MItchell & Mitchell Manufacturing com pan} , mak-ers
of metal bed spnngs exclu"lvely, are enJoymg a steadIly
mcreasmg bu"mess and wIll soon begm to enlarge theIr build-mg
as addltlOnal machines are to be mstalled. The plant is
runnmg to its full capaCIty and readIly dIsposing of Its entIre
output.
New Refrigerator Trap.
There is great need of a better trap for refrigerators than
has heretofore been m eXIstence The obJectlOns to the traps,
placed on the bottom outslJe of the refngerator are many,
\12
First They are supposed to be an extension of the
waste pIpe, but If the VI aste pIpe does not happen to reach
down mto the bowl, there h no sedl anJ consequently no trap,
SectIOnal View. The Trap III Place InSide
the Refrigerator
Second They hold mOlstm e against the bottom of the
refngerator every tIme they clog up, causmg the refngerator
to mould and rot.
ThIrd They were frequently broken m transportation,
Fourth They were hable to get lost off and nobody
knew anythmg about It, VI astmg the ice
FIfth They were mcom e111ent to get dt and conse-quently
hard to clean
All the'3e ohJectlOn" are 0\ ercome m the new one piece
Leonard trap shown abm e, made of sohd cast aiumlllum and
offered as an addltlOnal attractIOn to the purchasers of the
Leonard Cleanahle Porcelam-hned Refrigerators made by the
Grand RapIds Refngerator company, Grand Rapids, 1\11ch
Chicago Factory Additions.
Chicago. March 24-J D Fleese & Sons company, 2509
H orner street, ChIcago, WIll commence the latter part of thIS
month to erect an add1tlOnai two story and hasement hul1d-mg
75 x 124 feet, whIch WIll be bUIlt on the cornel of Homer
street and Campbell a\ enue adJommg the present factOly
They WIll put in a foundatlOn for a four story bmldmg so as
to be prepared for enlargmg theu plant \\ henever It may be
reqUIred The B reeses' are the only manufacturer" m Chi-cago
makmg a low pnced hne of ch1ff0111ers and dressers
H C Klemann & company are now occupymg the two
floors they recently added to theIr mam bmldmg at the
cornel of Rockwell street and Bloommgdale road They re-cently
purchased add1tlOnai ground aJjo1111l1g theIr factory
on WhICh It IS proposed to huIld as soon as they find then
present quarters msufficlent for then 1eqmrements, which
they have reason to beheve VI ill be m the near future.
The Pullman Couch company have almost completed
the add1tlOn to theIr factory on \;\T est Km71e street and Ash-land
avenue, and are now occupymg offices m the new quarter"
The space IS double that of the old bmlding and when com-pleted
\\ 111 greatly fac1htate theIr out.put They are now
mal1mg out a new catalogue
-----------~ r· .•• . •.•. ,III
THE FORD & JOHNSON CO.
CHICAGO
This is one of our
popular Hotel chairs.
Our chairs are found
in all the leading
Hotels in the country.
The line includes a
very complete assort-ment
of chairs, rock-ers
and settees of all
grades; Dining Room
furniture, Reed and
Rat tan furniture,
Special Order furni-ture,
etc.
A complete hne of sam-ple.
are displayed In The
Ford 8 Johnson Bnildml!,
1433-37 Wabash Ave., in-dudml!
a spemal d,splay of
Hotel Furniture.
All furmture dealers are cordtally invited
to visit our building. I,~_. __._._.----- _- _..•......
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WEEKLY ARTISAN
"UBL-ISHED EV~RY SATURDAY BY THE
MICHIGAN ARTISAN COMPANY
SUBSCRII"TION $1 00 I"ER YEAR ANYWHERE IN THE UNITEO STATES
OTHER COUNTRIES $2 00 PER YEAR. SINGLE COPIES SCENTS.
PUBLICATION OFFICE, 108-112 NORTH DIVISION ST, GRAND RAP OS, MICH
A. S WHITE, MANAGING EOITOR
Ffltered as second clalOs maUer, July 5, 1909, at the post office at Grand Rapids Mlchlg..iIl
under the act of March 3 1879
CHICAGO REPRESENTATIVE E LEVY
B) 1eadIng the artIcle heatled "Flfe Los"cs and} Ire Pro-tectIon,'
111thl" numher of the \\ eekh \1 tban many me11
"'111 be surpn~ec1 to learn that 111the mattcl'i of m"pectlOn
and preventlOn, the "J e\\ York hI c deral tment 1'0 much le~"
effiClent than those of mU'it \\ e'otel n c!tle~ 1\ e\\ YOlk l'i
~enerally "upposed to hay c the mo"t effiuent fire depal t
ment In the world, but the artIcle referred to "hems that
",hIle the department may be ven efficIent 111fi~htln~ fil e~
It is 'iurpnsmgly weak 111the matte I of prey entlOn, e\ en m-
"pectlon beIng neglected If the \ anou'i bUI eau'i \\ ere effec-tn
e-If they would do \\ hat the) arc L "pected to do-the
cIty would be \Vell 11Igh fire proof but It appears the mel-chant'>
have dl'icovered they ale 111efficlent If not entlleh
uselcs'i, therefole they urge reorga11l7atlOn and con"ohdatlOn
There IS a lot of common "en'ie a" \\ ell a'i ",me startlmg
o,tatements 111the artIcle and the Iecommendatlon" made b\
the ;\Ierchants' a",'iOClatlOn 'ihould 11e cal efull) con'ilClcre 1
and adopted b) man) Amencan cltle" [he old adage abOll1
an ounce of preventlOn and pound of cure 10, applIcahle to
file a'i \\ell a'i to dlsea"e or dl"astel
The plO'ipects for the ajoptlOn o± the ~enelal mcome taA
dmcndment to the constltutlOn b) thl ee fOUlth'i of the state~
are not "0 hrIght as they \\ ere a few month'o ago c:.e\ el al
state'i mclud111g IllInOIS have adopted It, hut the le~I"lature of
Kentucky, one of the states that ha" been counted a'o 'iUIe of
fay orable actlOn has refu'ied to adopt It-It \\a~ defedted 111
the Kentuck) 'ienate b) a \ ote of 17 to 17 Thc \ ote \\ a" not
"qual el) on the amendment hut on a m ltlOll to take It up
uut of the legular order that lequllecl a ty\O thIrd" \ ote
1 he countl \ l'i not lIkely to 'iuffer from dela, ed actlOn to
the amendment It may be bettel to \valt untIl the cm pm-dtJon
111come ta'C has been trIed out If that \\ 01 k'i ~atl"
factm II; there \\ 111be le,,'i ohJectlOn to thc genel al InUJ111
ta'C pr 0p0'31tlOn
Advlce,; from Plthburg Inchcate that I allroad manage!"
are expectIng a larg e 111Crca'ie 111the present v oll1me of bu ",
nes,; In the nedr future Dunng the past week the Pfnn", r
\ ania l111es ha \ c placed an order wlth the \mcllcan Loco
motn e Co, fOl lllnet) locomotIves to cost $1.800,000 \\ l11lc
the \ e", York Cent! dl has ordered six and the no~ ton 8c
]'lIame ten Announcement al"o H made that th", C'hcsapeake
& Ohio ha'i placed ordel" for 2 000 ~teel cal ~ and that the
mana~er" of the Harnman hne" al e SOhClt111g ploposal" fOl
224 locomotn e'i and 8000 01 10,000 fl eIght cars
~ecldalJ of the \a\), 11eyer. I" 111 P')"ltlOn to ad\I'oe
peopl e ho\\ to a, Old the 111gh cost of In 111~ He Ild" I eporh
on the co,t of 'iuppl)ln~ the nay y \' Ith meat hutter. egg"
eh \\ hlch "ho\v that \\ hen beef co"t'i 14 to IG ccnts a pound
111Brookh n, '\ Y It I" hought at Chet 0, l h1l1a at -'1 c~nh
fhc nay \ pay " 30 to 34 cent'i pel del/en f()] e~g" it \me
can po t" anc! () to 8 cent'> at ChefeJCJ anJ thel e I" a "1l11l1al
JdtJO !'] ]Jlke" ±m o±hel PIO\!"IOn, Hence thJ"e \\110 \\I"h
±o h \ e cheaph ~houlc! cmWI dtt to Ch1l1a
101 the gooc! of the mdnufactunng 111tele"h )f thc c un-tn
It 1'0to be hoped that I're"lclent I aft w1ll he dble to a\ Old
a tanft \\ ar \\ Ith Canada '\n 111Cl ea'oe 'lf 2'i IJel cent In thc
(( ,t of lumber Importee! from the Dom1l11On woule! certa111ly
be had fOI manufactul el 'i of furl11ture and more 'iO fOI tho'ie
111~0l11e otl1"l hne" 1 url11tl11e men Jo not u"e much Cana
chan lumber, hut 1f 1t \\ e1e "hut out pnce'o un the elomestle
PIOe!Uct \\ ould "UIelv he ach anced
FlIlll1tlll e clealel ", no matter \\ here located, who are
bothel ed h) mad ordel com petJtlOn wdl find 'iomething of
1I1tele"t to them 111the IJ111ne"ota department of thl" num
her of the \\ eekh \1 tIsan If they WIll keep a copy on
hane! and 1I1duce those of theIr customers who are
111c1111edto patronl/e mad order hou"e'i to read It, they WIll
ha \ e httle I eason to fear mad order competitlOn
'\ otJh1l1g doe,; more than ad\ eriI~mg to mcrea,e the
\ aille of the good \v 111'111an) bU'i111e,;S Thel efore advertJ'i-
]n~ mu"t he consldereJ an 111ve~tment rather than a mere
ltcm of eApen'ie It is a pnmary element a most Important
clement 111 the make up of neall) all bU'i111eSS 111st1tutions
:t\0\\ that "Cannon and Cannom,;m' ha'i been "do", ned"
It I" to he hoped that LOJ1~re,o, '" III do someth111g and ad-journ
'\n earl) adJ'111n111ent \\ ould be of more benefit to
the bu S111es~mtere')h of the c0l111tn than an) thmg that i'i
hkeh to be done b, the cun ent congre",s
The man \\ ho makes $10 a day and spenJs $950 may not
he -,0 \\I'ie a'i he \\ho make,; $3 and ,;a\ es half of It, but he
enJoy" hfe to a gTeater extent and he lS of much more bene-fit
to the to\\ n 01 commu111ty in whIch he In es
It I" generally conceJed that ~Ia'i" wldO\\ 'i kno\\ enou~h
to 'make hay \\hde the 'iun 'ih111e" , In that re"pect they
ma\ be ,\I')er than "ome hU"111e,," men who ale constantly
neglect111~ golden opportullltle'i
Hecall::,e thel e\ no fool
ICJ\\ that all fool'i are a~ed
\\ 110 dl e Cjlllte \ outhful
I1ke an old fool It ,loe" n ,t fol-
Most of us th111k v\ e know some
It leCjlllre'i httle mOle hla111" to do bus1l1e"s on a large
~cdle than 111a small \va, but It leCjlllres con'lderable more
CnelZ\ and courage
Il C\\ al e of the dch el th111~ managel 01 ag ency that pre-lcnd"
10 hay e a ' pull' on the neW'ipdpelS, magazmes or trade
10111 nal"
rll,lllhlc 111 'imall doses may he a good tomc, but 1t can
not he I ecommended a" a bey era~e
WEEKLY ARTISAN 17
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No. 1711 No. 1705-1705
New designs In the Louis XVI Style.
WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND PRICES.
GRAND RAPIDS BRASS CO. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
or 111eluclIllg the marble mantel dnd look1l1g glas'S, 8,000 francs
It lS shown that the purpose of the ImportatJOn was that these
~everal parts were dehberately purchased abroad by ~he
ultlmate consignee wlth a ,lew to ha\ mg them placed III as
nearly the ong1l1al form and st} Ie as posslble III her own
house 111 the Clt} of ~ew York"
Elsie de Wolfe"s Old Furnitun·.
The board of Ulllted State;;, genelal appralsers at New
YOlk refused to re,er"e Collector Loeb's asses~ment of furn-ish111gs
fCJ! a room modeled after the style of LotHS XVI, lm-ported
b} ~IlSS Elsle ,Ie \\T olfe, the former actres<" who b
cle<'cnbed 111the cLhtom house paper" as an '1l1tenor deco-ratO!"
The furnishlllgs, which Ml:OS de \\ olfe 111formed Col-lector
Loeb and Appraher \N anamaker were mtended fO! her
house at 1\0 1S9 \\T est Eigthy elghth street, '\ e\\ York, III
elude panels, moldlllg", corlllces and wllldo\\" \1l sect1On'S,
marble mantels and mlrrors llltended to be framed bet\\ een
panels The appralser III hls repO! t to Collector Loeb stat od
"that the artlcles are appalently of consldelable a::;e and are
m a more or less dJIapldate,l conchtlOll" The collector cla'3sl-fied
the lmpOl tatJOn as "manufacture of wood," and Imposed
a tax of 3S pel cent \1l'3S de \\T olfe filed a PlOt est \\ lth the
board III WhlCh she tooh eAceptJOn to the collcctOJ \ a~sess-ment,
alleglllg that she was entJtled tu a rate of 20 per c(Cnt
under the tanff ac;; "\\ ood unmanufactured"
~t the heanng befOl e the board, '"e\ era! \\ltnesses \\ ere
heard III behalf of ),11SS de \\ olfe, but thelr testJmon} \\ a"
not convlllclllg to General \ppralser "\fcC!elland who preSided
It was brought out that the value of tht' fU11l1'3h1l1g, f01 the
room were pllrcha~ed m France for $1 ::;44 and wJ11 be set up
111 MISS Je "Volfe's residence In oven u1111g the protest,
Genera! :;\I cClelland sald
"It h chfficult to appreclate upon whdt theol v the elaJ111
\\a~ ba'3ed, fOl there IS not a scmtJ11a of eVIdence to "up port
lt On the contrar}, each ,tatement tends to show that every
piece of the \'Vood had been de"lg nedly manufactured for a
partIcular u"e, all of the pal h togethel ha\ 111\;been fll! md.ny
years in the intellOl of a 100m 111 France after the st\ Ie of
Louis XVI, and pUlchased 111 France at a cost of 7,000 flancs
Office Furniture Wunted in Italy.
'\ report from an Amencan con;;,ul m Italy state, he 1"
1 elJabl} mformec1 tihat the better classes of }.mencan office
furl11ture can be ~o!d 111hI" rllst11ct If the quahty and other
ach zlltages al e brought to the attentJOn of mtend111S; pur-chasel"
To do thIS an office c;;upply house 111that 1 e~1fm
"ho111d he glVen the agenc}. and a hne of samples of "uch
"ufphe" as are m current demand placed \\ lth thLo al?,el1C} to
CAl11blt to tho<,e lntere':>ted \ local firm, dea11l1g lalgely m
office furniture and applJance", states It would he glad to
handle Amencan make" upon thIS baSIS, an,! requests cat<t-logues
pnces, term" and other pert111ent mformatlOn 1 e-gard111::;
thls class of good" It b ImpOltant that pnces
should he quoted c I f certa111 Clt} so as to enable the firm
to make an e"act calculatlOn of the net cost mcludmg duty,
at then place of busme"s, and compare such pnces with those
)f the German and Hallan manufactul ers whose goods they
are at present hanJlmg \mong the numerOLh appliance;;,
de;;'lred bv thls firm IS an !ffice phonograph adapted for record-
1112:lette s the record bel'H? placed u!)('n another mach111e
after\\ard" by the t, pewnter operator and \\!fltten by hllTI
from the same The film statb that It IS 111 a posltlOn to
fllrlll"h the best of refel em es as tJ It;;, 1;::spon"lbihty Parties
wlshmg to mv e~tJgate :ohould addl es~ the Bureau of Manu-factures',
Depaptment of Commerce and LabOl, \Vashing-on,
I efernng to file "\0 4686
18 WEEKLY ARTISAN
TRUCK TALKS
Might not convince you without evidence.
But compare a wagon to our truck,
note the similarity of construction fea-tures--
No box bearings; nothing to easily
break or get ou t of order; extra large
center wheels, revolving on taper turned
axles; wide treads; special first-class cast-ings.
Grand Rapids Trucks are first, last
and all the time the safest in construction,
and positively the best.
No. 15 Catalog Shows Them.
Grand Rapids Hand
61B North Front St.
CHICAGO REMINISCENCES
Recollections of Furniture Men and Factories of
Twenty-Five Years Aao.
It is sometIme" intere..,tmg to the "riter, If not to the
reader, to get mto a remllllscent mood C:\1 II ell remem-bers
when he made hIS first tnp to ChIcago to ,bIt the furlll-ture
manufacturers for the l\I1chlgan ArtIsan, m the fall of
1882 Chicago ",as a new city to him then, for in the mtel"\ al
of fourteen ye3irs since he left there the cIty had bUl ned
dawn and been rebmlt At that tIme the E 11 Hulse com
pany, now of Columbus, Ohio. had a mattress factOly d W,;11
on Twenty-sIxth <;treet and Stc\' art a,enue and the ",outh
CIty hne was at ThlrtY-ll1nth street.
That was before the cable roads were bUllt '\s f01
electnc and elevated road.., they were not dreame,l of E \1
Hulse had a down town office, and F ShIpman had a mattre<;s
factory near by Frank \Venter, once pI eSldent of the Dral11-
age Board, and who came very near bem>:; \fay or of Chlca£;o
had a furll1ture factory on Van Buren ~treet, a short dIstance
ea..,t of the bndge Schultz & HIrsh were on \Vest Van Buren
street between Jefferson and Desplame", ancl If anyone
would ha, e tolJ them that in twenty-five years they would
have been m the mammoth place they are now OCCUpy111g
they would probably have thought him a fit subject for the 111-
::,ane asylum
Canal street wa" the great furnitm e "treet 25 yeal.., a~o
and Frank Seng wa" bookkeeper for the Sug & Blersd Jf com-pany
Frank ?Ieyer, long "ince passed to hIS rest, was one ot
the lead111g manufacturel s of chamber fUl111ture on that
street, and Col "Joe" :\1urray was representmg C SIdney
Screw Co.,
Grand Rapids, M.ich.
'\ on IS, of Dalt11110re dealers 111 furll1ture supplIes Wll1le
the WIIter wa<; walt111g to get a chance to sell Mr. Myer an
ad' 111the ::\Ilchlgan '\rthan, Col "Joe" saileJ m, opened
up IllS samples, t )ok a bIg order and was gone 111Just no
tIme That \\ a~ long before the Colonel thought of making
l0 '\ 01th loma "tl eet, Grand RapIds one of the famous places
t 1 sho\\ furnIture
Stadfelt & \Yo1£ were making d111111gtables on Canal
street and Seng & Shoen ( now the Hafner Furll1ture C;)
anJ S G \Vl1k111S & Co, (afterwards \"hlkim & Esmay)
were on the same street, both in the parlor furniture line
The Cold Bla"t Father company has a small factory on
,,\ ("t Lake <;treet and theIr office" and salesrooms were Itr
the ba"ement of the Farwell bmld111g on Market street-l
thmk that at the tIme the Farrell bUlldmg was the largest
hmlding in the city,
\1 D Talcott \\ a.., runnmg the '\mencan Furlllture Ga-
/ettc and a f111nlture lefelence book Mr De Berard, the
edlt01 of the paper "as a power, none more so even at this
cla, ::\latusky, Cral£; & Co, Olbrcik & Goldbeck, and Obel-heck
Bras, the latter now at Grand RapIds, \Vis, and many
other.., \\ ere on Canal street, wh1le BIlly Glffert and R E
Pohle \\ ere on Clmton stl eet, the next "treet vvest of Canal
"Jm1my" Pugh \\ho WIth "Joe" Myer, and C G \iVhite,
started the fur111tm e e"hlbltlOn bulldlllg at 1319 MIchigan
al enue, 1\ a.., unknown III ChIcago, but a few years later" el1t
there a" a "\all11"h ,',ale~man for a Cinclllnati house, if my
memon sel"\ es me lIght That was before Robert P Lyon
opened up hIS fur111ture agency in Chicago, but I think it
II a s ill e following year he opened up, with offices III the P ort-
Ianc1 hloch un the corner of \Vashlllgton and Dearborn
<;treet He dId not succeed very well until he sent Charles
Sherre from Cmcmnati to take charge, "Charles" was a
WEEKLY ARTISAN 19
big fat, jolly, whole-souled German who made fnends with
e, erybody and soon he was a sharp competItor of 1\1 D Ta1cot,
and they made thmg" lIvely
Watts De Gol} er had a varnish factory at the foot of
IllmOls street, on the north sIde, and De Golyer's rock fimsh
wa" one of the mo')t famou" of the furmture fimshes of that
day Mr De Golyer has a great trade in Grand RapIds at
that time, and owned con"lderable stock m at least one of
the lcadmg furmture compames of that cIty
John E Turne} was then one of the chief c;alesmen, and
many of the reader') of thIs wIll remember hIm He went
up to Sheboygan, VVIS, and made a deal WIth some of the
bIg chaIr factones there that set the whole furnIture vvorId to
talking
Sky scraper" were unknown m ChIcago at that time, and
when the Pullman bUlldmg was erected at the cornel of
Adam" street and l\Ilchlgan avenue, It was looked upon as
a vvonder The wnter dlstmctly remembers meetmg a gentle-man
from New York and takmg him to c;ee the Pullman bUlld-mg
He looked up at It for c;ome tune, and all he saId vvas
that it reminded hIm of the MIll" bUlldmg in N ew York The
Grand PacIfic and the Palmer Hou')e were the tv\ 0 great
hotels at that time, and the old Sherman and the Tremont
V\ el e the next m ImpOl tance Lyon & Healy's musIc ~tOIe
was m the old Crawford House. That was a long time before
the Great .:-\orthern and the Audltorltlm were built.
Twenty-five years ago there were two furniture papers
in the west, the lV11chigan Artisan and the American Furm-ture
Gazette, and two m the east, the Amencan Cabinet
Maker and Uphobterer m Boston and the Trade BUleau m
New York VV E Holbrook, who had his first experience in
journalism on the l\1Jchlgan Artl'ian, went to Cmcmnati and
started the Furniture \Vorker, and later \\ E Osgood, long
a representative of the American Cabmet :\laker, went to
St LoUl') and started the St Louis FurnIture New'i Later
J Kewton ~ind started the MmneajYllIs FurnIture K ews,
and still later there was the Rockford FurnIture Journal
establIshed, both of whIch were merged mto the Furniture
Journal of Chicago
It would be a sad task to recall many of the furnIture men
who have gone over the Great Divide It would make a
long lIst, and would mclude many of the bnghtest and mo"t
enterprismg men m furmture circles m Chicago, Rockford,
Grand Rapids, Cmcmnatl, DetrOIt, Owosso, Toledo and many
other CIties But when one falls out of the ranks another
steps mto hIs place, and so wIll they contmue to do as long
as CIvilIzation lasts and men and women want furmture for
theIr homes C 1\1
Low Priced Cabinet Bench.
The Globe VIse and Truck company, Grand Rapid~, are
placing a low priced cabmet bench on the market that IS
claimed to be the be,:,t ever offered the trade for the money
ThIs bench I" thoroughly made of best matenals has two
VIses, and WIll commend Itself to anyone Wdnt1l1g a low-pnceJ
bench Thl') company IS able to shIp these benches
on receIpt of order They also manufacture a large vanety
of benches and truck:'>, and It WIll pay every manufacturer to
get in touch with them
I t's the way a man "tick" to a thing that marks hun as
a succes~ or a faIlure :\Iany a fellow has won out at the
eleventh hour, just because he wouldn't let go Don't be
a qUItter Keep hItting the hne hard and result" are bound
to come
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"ELI" BEDS ARE BREAD AND
TIlE FOLDING PROfIT WINNERS
No Stock complete wlthout the Elt Beds xn Mantel and Upnght
ELI D. MILLER &, CO.
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EVANSVILLE. INDIANA
Wnte for cuts and pnces I4
ON SALE IN FURNITURE EXCHANCE, EVANSVILLE.
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20 WEEKLY ARTISAN
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Veneer Pre.ses, different kinds and .izes (Patented)
Veneer Presses
Glup Spreaders
Glue Heaters
Trucks, Etc" Etc.
These Specialties are used all
Over the World
Power Feed Glue Spreading Machine, 5mgle.
Double and CombInatlon. (Patented)
(Sizes 12 In to 84 In wIde.)
Buildings That Will Need Furniture.
Residences-I f· '> l1elen Ddl. \coma street and Fltth
a, enue, Dem er Col, $8 000, Caroll11e L Coffee Dunke1d
p1dce ancl Ro,~ court, Dem el, $4,000, F ~f \dam' 612
Rugb) road SchenectdCI}, '\ Y, $12,000 H \ Ifottlel
Cle, eland a, enue and Twenty-fifth 'itreet, Ten e Haute Inc1
$32S0, Frank R Ha}, 92S South rlfth ,>treet Telle Haute.
$3000 Edwl11 R Yeakle, ]20h South I'lfth -,tJeet Telfe
Haute, $4,000, 1\ Llwood Jone'i \I vnnewoocl Phllac1elp111a,
Pa. $16,000, G II Tlgar, 322 South Te10n 'it! eet Collll adu
Spnng'>, Col $3,000. L l' SmIth, Rn el '>hle a\ enuc and
Chern street Jack'>om 111e, ria, $3,000 R \\ Dlcklll'>on
4109 :0TOIth rIft) filst a\Cnue, ChIcago, $9,000 \nna Hen-necke
5624 \Yl11d'i0l avenue ChIcago, $3,000 J o'ieph Habb.
6147 Langley avenue, Chicago $5,900. J 1\ Schlmmen, 1507
Birchwood a\Cnue Chlcago $4,~00 f'd'>on TIll!:;!:;" h,-\'-h
South Carolina a, enue, '>outh,\ e,t 1\ a'i11llH;ton, DC, 88-
000, ]\Iargaret ]\IcGee, 33~2 "e\\ark ,tleet, CleHlancl park
\\ a'ihl11gton, $11,000. Thoma'i \ \Im'itron~, \\ e'ile\ a, e-nue
and Twelfth street, Ocean Clh " T 87.000 \mellcn,
R Underdown, \\ e'iley a, enue and I'ourteenth 'itl eet, Ocean
Grm e, (bungalow) $6,000 \Vllham E IIassey, II e'iln a, e-nue
and Tenth 'itl eet, Ocean GIO\ e, $8,000, :\II'i Ehnbeth
Buckley, vVe'ile} a\ enue and SIxteenth 'itreet, Ocean GI 0\ e,
$7,000, MIS" Mary Shore, Centl al avenue, ,\T esle\ avenue
and rlfteenth "treet, Ocean Grm e, $~,OOO J S II1l1dman
I'ourth a\ enue and Libert} park, Spokane, II a'ih S~ SOO,
Edward J O'Shea, Sharp a, enue and Dakota -,treet Spokane
$3,000, DI J B Long, Vermont and \IT est streets Indlan-apohs,
Ind, $4,000, John K Byran, 2827 ~Ol th Penm} 1-
vallla 'itreet, Indianapohs, $3,500, E l' Duck IIld1l!~an and
RItter 'itreet~, Indlanapoh'i. $4.500, J C IIack'> 218 \\ a'ih
ll1gton street, ~tlanta, Ga, $5,000 H C Hlgbee, 1971 (0\\
den avenue, II emphl'i, Tenn ,$4,000 R H \ ance. neh <.tlere
boulevard and Harbert a\ enue IIemphl'i ~12 000 Ifl.., Ella
N :\Jatthew", 333 Korth \\ 11lett street, IIemphls, $4,400 '-
D Remley, 3117 Central 'itreet, Kan'ia:" CIty, ]\10, $3,OvJ
I' E Reed 3126 Harn'ion 'itreet, Kan'ia'i Clt\ $6,000 \\ 11-
ham f' Bal r \\ oodward a, enue and SmIth 'itl eet, DetroIt,
IItch $4800 Robert G Hlll, Dal7elle and lourteenth 'itrects
DetrOIt, $3,500 l,eorge Condo, GratIOt a, enUe dnd S) Iv ester
street, DetrOIt, $4,000, \V dham lIalcl\\ Doule\ al d and \Iack
'itreet, DetrOIt, $12.000, Han let Kl!1kald, 10200 Gal field d\ e-nue,
Cle, eland () $3, SOO, H J Dlllmghur"t, 8016 :\f edma
a\ enne, Cle\ eland, $3,000, J \ ogel, 10105 Parkgate avenue
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H..nd Feed Gluelng Machine (P..t.nt
pendIn8) Many styles and sizes.
Wood·Working
Machinery
and Supplies
LET US KNOW
YOUR WANTS
No 20 Glue Heater. CHiS, E. FRANCIS COMPANY, Main Office and Works, Rushville, Indl No.6 Glue Heater. -~~-,------~~----~~._._-------~
C Ie \ eland $4,000 ( T Ohl en,>tell1, 198 \ckerman avenue,
'-" la, u-,e," \ , $~ 800 III~ J \\ emhelmer, 348 Oak street,
~, I a, n ~e S3 ~OO l R TIr,)\\ n, 248 Leon street, Syracuse,
So ~Oo Cathellne L Dlack'itone, 607 Orange 'itreet, Syracu'ie,
9),000 llank K11ch, I'ranklm and ThIrteenth street", Dem er,
(01 $18,000, J C \'mel g, Franklll1 a\ enue near FIfth 'itl eel
Dem el, S3 000, ] aLoh :\1 Sche11ner, Alameda and Emer"on
~t!eet'i Demel, $3,~00 \ ~ IIawkm.." EIghth avenue and
] "ent, -tourth ,treet, DIl mll1gham, Ala, $3,000, Harlod Rob-lIhOn,
731'l flr'it a, enue, Dlrml11gham, $3,000,] B Albertson,
)().2~ Troo'>t "treet Kansas CIty, \10, $S,OOO, F E Reeel,
3~26 HaJrI'>on ,tJeet, Kan'ia,> CIty, $6,000, 1\ H MItchell,
Beechmont and Illtchell a\ enue'i, Cmcll1natl, 0, $7,000, U L
IIonce Montieth a, enue and ZeIgler "treet, ClI1cmnati, $7,-
SOO, F '\ \ilT leland, 4224 Ar'ienal :"tI eet, St Loul'i, \10,
$4000, C F Starck 4001 Bota11lcal a\ enue, St LoUl'i. $10,
ROO \ \f n Heal n, 42.21 Carter aHnue, St LoUls, $4,000,
R ( l'ld!:;e l\U1 t "treet and Tv. entv-elghth avenue, Omaha,
"eb $S,OOO. \ E S" amen, 3325 Seward street, Omaha,
S) 200, Ida -\ 1101 n'i, South HIgh and IV elch street'i, Colum-bu'i,
n, $4,400, v\ ~ Lll1coln, Kossuth and ~l11th street'i,
Columblh, $3,000, Rose Rumar, II d'>on "treet near Madl'io 1
a, enue, Columhu'>. $8,000, L P Allbnght, 307 \Vest Srxth
a, enue, Columbu'i, $4, 'l00, Joseph Schhtz, 262 J\Idler avenue,
Colul11bu'i, $3,000, Ro~s Clal ke, 59 Frambe" a\ enue, Colum-bu'i,
$3,000, Florence D Braden, 2003 Pll1kne} street, Omaha,
"eh $4,000. F H Gu1Jck, 2856 Spanldl11g a, enue, Omaha
$3000, J B LouA 1427 South Topeka avenue, \\ Ichlta, Kau .
$3000 Jame'i l' Talt, 2315 RhllSe a\ enue, E\ anston. Ill.
$4200 H S Shedd. 1618 ~\shland avenue, Evanston. $7,00:),
T \\ Fnll1 S30 ]ud"on avenue, LHmton, $3,000,J F Tdl-mdn
1328 ColOlado a\ enue Colorado Spnng", Col, $6,000
If I'> Kathellne Cragm, 171 S \Vood .1, enue, Colorado Spnngs,
$3,000, George L Bm;ardlh, 1188 Batle) street Buffalo '\
\ $3,000. II a, Jane Dye, 1991 Seneca 'itreet, Buffalo. $3,000
1 If Bndge'i, 411 GIant street, i\tlanta, Ga, $4,500, C F
l nhol/, 106 Beard :"treet, Buffalo, X Y, $7,000, \\ S Ber-
!:;en Oak anJ Kl11~ 'it!eeb, Jack'iomllle, }la, $3,800; John J
'--herman C:;lhel and Se, enth 'itreets, ]ack'>onvtlle, $3. SOO n
I L11I~ Tenth and Pendleton 'itreet'i, St ]o'ieph, If a , $3-
800 l' D -\rmbtead ~114 Klmbury place, Spnngfield, ~Io,
$12000 \ Ifdtenbelger, 3842 South Ctah 'itreet, Spnngfield,
$'l,000 C T II ala\, 4847 :\[affJtt avenue, Spnngfield, $4,100,
i\ \ I l'>her. 6121 \\ e'ltml11"ter place, Spll11gfield, $10,000,
H \1' Hal111lton, 4441 De'isle a, enue, Springfield, $5,500'
WEEKLY ARTISAN 21
John 1 Yeagel, 3518 Cnttenden "tl eet, $8,600, "" 111lam A
England, 30') BellefontaIne avenue, Kansas CIty, :\10, $4,000
Elmer Bodlet, 920 ,Vest 1hlrty-fourth street. Kamas CIty,
$4,000, ,Valter P SmIth, Maryland court, LOlllSvdle, Ky,
$3,000, John SchmIdt, Second avenue and Lapham street
l'dllwallkee, V'hs, $5.080, Frank KInes, Pabst avenue and
lorty-elghth street, Mdwaukee, $4,500, J II, L\lford, 3112
\ \ est Twelfth street, LIttle Rock, Ark, $3, SOO, R A PIerce.
Made by Upham Manufacturmg Co • Marshfield, WIS.
Grant and Ninth streets, Denver, Col, $12,000, E J Bo} 1e.
Short and Plum streets, ?\ ew Orlean", La, $3,000, ILlS" Eva
C Emmerson, 3804 Le"ter street, RIchmond, Va, $4,000, B
H Crawford, 208 LOUlsana street, Little Rock, Ark, $12,000,
::VT L Neeley, Franklm and Lakewood avenue, LIma, 0,
$4,500
Miscellaneous Buildings-The 1'111 Delta SOCIety h build-ll1g
a fraterl11ty hou"e at a cost of $22,000 on the Hllhboro
road, Na"hvdle, Tenn H V I'nsble and E B Barstmv wdJ
bUlld a $50,000 hotel In San DIego, Cal The CatholIcs \', III
erect a church to co"t $30,000 at McGdl, Nev, San Jacmto.
Cal IS el ect1l1g a hIgh school bUlld1l1g at a co"t of $40,000
exclu"ive of seatmg and furnIture Los Angeles, Cal, has
voted to I""ue $85000 111 bonds for a polytechl11c bUl1dmg on
Rockford Chair and
Furniture Co.
ROCKFORD, ILLINOIS
Dinina Room Furniture
BUFF£ T::i. CHI \j A CLOSE rs and TABLES
Library Furniture Library De.ks. LIbrary
Tables, LIbrary Bookcasf's. CombInatIOn Book-cases,
Etc
Our entire Ime WIll be on exhIbition in July
on the thIrd flnor of the Blodgett Building,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
the HIgh School campus C E \v hltney and local capltalI,',L:,
al e to budd a theatre at a co"t of $50,000 or $60,000 111 COd~
IPg-'l, Cal Pmgham, Utah, has accepted plan ....for a new hIgh
~d1001 hl1lLl1l1g that \',111 cost $65,000 The Bapt1sts w1ll
bt1lld a $25,000 church at "i[onrov1a, Cal \\' J Godley 1"
bt1lldmg a theatre 111 Parten dIe, Cal , at a co"t of $35,000
Hastt'o
1here 1'0an old sav mg that' ha"tc makes wa"te,' and as
a general pnposltlOn It IS tlue StIll there IS another vvay of
lookmg at It In Ch1l1a they do th111gs a,', they dId foUl
thousand veal., dgO, and ChIna b probably the m'l"t bach--
ward country 111 the world In Englancl the] e are many
melchants that hdve the same ~tore" that the r f;reat grand
father" hacl, and are content to "ell the "ame l111C at goods, and
It they sell as much, they are "absfied In the "l'l1lteJ State"
evelY bU"1I1es" man wants to do marc than hI" fathel
dId and do It better Ha"te 1~ only anothe name for succe""
The man who 1S 111a rut and does not trv to get out, "oon
finds h1111"e1fdIstanced by hIS competltOJ" and v"ll1 soon be
out of bU"111ess altogether 1'hl" naturdll) leads up to the
drY111g of lumber \ fe'A day" ago the wnter \Va" talk111Q
WIth the managel of one of the ledd111g charnbel furmturc
factones of ~fJlhlgan TIe saId that hls (hy111g capacIty "a"
not up to his needs, that he needed the present kIlns fOJ
storage and that he was gomg to buJ!d nevv and ldrger kIln,
He IS a successful bll ..1..11e.,s man, and \\111 not he beh111d h1"
compebtors It IS an 111terestmg fact that the Cl and RaplCj,',
Veneer II ark" new process kIlns are so much supenor to all
other proce"ses than then dry kIln department h ru"hed dll
the tnne 111 gettmg out clehI1ed draw111g" an,l puttlllg up
the kIln" \\ atch theIr ad" from week to "eek 111 the
,\ eckly ArtIsan and see what many of the leadmg manufac-ttHer"
say about theIr porce"s of dry111l?;lumber
Show me a tra v el111g man Who I" a belIever m acl" ertlS-mg
and who keep~ m touch WIth the work of trade papers, and
I WIll ..h..ow yOU a succes"ful ,',ale"man, IS the way a WIde
a \V a~e 'Ae,',tel n man puts 1t 50m e travelers are more pro-
~I esslve than the men who are over them-over them 111 every-thInk
but hrall1s and abl1Jty ~n'l that's no "yndlcate Joke,
eIther
The busll1e"s of a promoter 1" to pert:>uade your money
ll1to hIS pocket
r---- -
22 WEEKLY ARTISAN
.-- .---- _ •• - - -------- ~ 4 _
MUSKEGON, MICH.
MOON DESK
COMPANY
DESKS OF MERIT
--------- .... _.- .--------~
~-----------~~--_. ---_. -----------
FURNITURE AND PAINTINGS
Famous Pieces and Collections in the New Wing
of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
New York, March 22--\t the :\1etlOpolItan I[u~eum at
Art a new W111gdedIcated to the decorat1\ e al t" \\ as openeJ
wIth a receptlOn on March 17 The nevv vv111gh at the north
end of the mu"eum and parallel to the FIfth avenue extensIOn
I t IS of the RenaIssance sty Ie of arc111tectUl e and v\ as de-sIgned
by the firm of 11cKlm, :\1ead & \\ hIte It \\as planned
when It became known that J PeIrpont ,Iorgan vva" to en-rich
the museum wIth the famous Hentschel collectlOn of
French decorati\ e art of the MIddle Ages and the eIghteenth
century The collectlOn has been installed in the new w111g,
whIch 1s devoted exclu ,1\ el} to the decorat1\ e arts
The ma111 or centIal hall of the new \V1l1g h dev oted to
European sculpture f1am the h\ eHth to the seventtenth cen
tury Here 111the maUl gallery al e many I111pO! tant e"a111plc-.,
of French medIaeval sculpture, ItalIan RenaI""ance, Spcwbh
and Netherland and Gelman sculptUl es One of the notable
pieces Ul tIllS hall IS a Spal1l"h altaI pIece oi the fifteenth
century ThIS altar pIece occupies a conspILlOlh place on the
east slJe of the ma111 hall It \Vas pIll chased III Pans, but
formerly was in a cathedl al III the land of Spain
At the n01 th end of the hall an ItalIan tabel nac1e has
been erected ThIS tabernacle of the t\\ elfth century was
originally in a church III Rome I was formedy pIll chased,
some year" ago, by Stanford \VhIte 111 PallS for the Poor
collectIOn, and later 1epUl chased by the mibeum at the Poor
sale Other ob] ects in the ma111 hall 1I1clucle t\\ a cases of
ItalIan Renaissance bronze" of the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries, purchases from the Rogers fund, a GothIC \\ mclO\v
of the fifteenth century, a gIft from Jacques SelIgman, and a
V 11g1l1 and ChIld in terra cotta, by Andna VeIrOCChIO, \\ hIch
IS said to be a rare example
The decoratlOl1S of the halls are in keep1l1g with the
general plan of rearrang ement On the \\ all '-,to the lIght are
hung a senes of FlemIsh tapestnes of the seventeenth cen-tury,
whIle the \\alls on the left side of the hall arc dec01ated
WIth a number of the Barbenl1l tapestnes of the "eventeenth
century.
At the north end of the hall, whIch 111 alrangement re-sembles
the nave of a chul'ch, are hung three French tapestnes
of the fifteenth century, wlllch were purchased by the late
WIllIam M. Laffan for the museum
..
The eleven gaIleIIes on the fir"t floor of the new V\ ing
Inclnde the GotlllC blne room of the iourteenth and fifteenth
centnnes dnd the CothIc room WIth the BIron monument In
the GothIC blue rc 0111 are hung the Burgundian tapestnes
g1\ en by ,Ir :\Iorgan
Then there are rooms devoted to the decoratIve arts
ot the German and French sIxteenth century, the French
RenaIssance of the sIxteenth century, the Baroque penod of
the seveneenth century, WIth examples from Netherland, Ger-man}
and England, the penod of Louis XIV (French) and
the French regency of Lams XV WIth a French salon A
teatme of the 100m devoted to the German, French and
rle111bh al ts of the sIxteenth century (RenaIssance) is the
cIecorat1\ e FlemI"h Mazar1l1 tapestry, a loan from J -------_.---- ------- _.._-----_._----- ---.--P-ier-~ - ...,
Here is
a Rocker
That's
a seller.
Write for
the price.
GBO. SPRATT
8 CO.
SHEBOYGAN. WIS.
~----.-._..-._---.-..No. 592. .I. ..._--_ ...-.-
WEEKLY ARTISAN
pont Morgan and brought over from his London collection
for the museum
At the extreme north end of the nevv wing on the first
floOl IS a SWlS'l loom from Zurich, furnished vvlth a curious
SWlS'l stm e, wood carvmgs and furnIture, mcluJmg chaIrs
and table:::" chesh, spmnmg wheels and e\ en a cradle.
The stalrca..,e leadmg to the 'lecond flo)r IS ornamented
WIth ItalIan furnIture from the se\ enteenth and eIghteenth
centunes The second floor contam'l fourteen gallenes in-cludmg
three rooms of the LOUIS XV penod and two rooms
of the tIme of Louis XVI, one of these conta1l1mg a 111lnIature
theatre, 'laId to ha\ e been buIlt by LoUIS XVI In the south
corndor are se\ eral ca'les WIth vaned collectIOns of fans of
the eIghteenth century.
On the west sIde of the second floor are two rooms con-iammg
examples of Jacobean, Queen Anne and English Chip-pendale
fur111ture of the eIghteenth century and four rooms
23
The Whistlen loaneJ from the Freer collection in \Vash-ington
mclude' "The Golden Screen", the nocturne, "V'tl-paralso;"
the nocturne, "Blue and SIlver ," a portrait sketch
of Whistler, portrait of F R Leyland, "The GIrlS," a whIte
'lymphony, nocturne, "Blue and SlIver, Battersea Beach;"
"~nnabel Lee," "The I'lles of Ve111ce," "Venus Astarte," "A
Study m Bed," "The Open Fan," "The LIttle Pmk Cap," "Le
Raconteur," "LIttle Green Cap" and "The LIttle Faustma,"
all from the ~ atIOnal Gallery
"The LIttle \Vhlte GIrl," lent by Arthur Studd of London,
and 'Gray and SIh er; the Thames," lent by Miss Bernic-
PhIlIps, are two examples sent from England.
In the exhIbItion are also ten pIctures from the collection
of Richard A Canfield, includmg "The Ocean," "Symphony m
Gray and Green" and "Rosa CorJer," arrangement In black
and brown
The Lange Lelzem (purple and rose), IS lent by John
Made by Palmer Manufacturmg Company, Detrolt, MlCh.
with Amencan fur111ture of the se\ enteenth and eight-eenth
centunes, showmg foreIgn mfluences In one
of the rooms devoted to AmerIcan fur11lture 13 a part of the
Bolle'l collectIOn, a gIft to the museum from :\![rs Russell Sage
In the nOl th corn,lor of the wmg on thIS floor are specimens of
TIffany glass and modern examples of nmeteenth century de-coratIve
art.
A loan exhIbItion of fOIty-'llX oIl pam tmgs and pastels by
J ame.., A J\T cN elll \Vhlstler were be opened at the museum
yesterday and wIll contmue there untIl May 31 The exhI-bition
was arrang ed with the co-operatIOn of MISS RosalmJ
BlrnJe-l'hIlIps of London, executrix of Mr \Vhlstler, and
Charles L Freer of DetrOIt, Vi ho has contnbuted a number
of Important \v histlers from the Freer collectIOn in the
l\atlOnal Gallery, \Vashington, D C.
Among the notable V/histlers m the exhIbItIOn are "The
l\Iu"Ic Room," harmony in green and ro"e, lent by Frank J
Hecker of DetrOIt, "The \iVhlte GIrl," a symphony m whIte,
loaned by John H. \A,Thittemore of Naugatuck, Conn, and
"The Fallmg Rocket," lent by Mrs Samuel Untermyer of
New York.
G Johnson of PhIladelphia, and a loan from the Carnegie
InstItute IS the portrait of Senor Pablo Sarasarte
"The LIttle Rose of Lyme RegIS" and "The Master SmIth
of Lyme Regis" are from the BO'lton Museum of Fme Arts
The portraIt of Florence Leyland is lent by the Brooklyn
Instltute of I\rts and SCIences.
Other examples include . "The Blue vYave," lent by
Alfred A Pope of Farmmgton, Conn.; "The Japanese Dre"s,"
lent by Howard Mansfield of N ew York, "L' Andaluslenne,"
lent by John H. \Vhlttemore, and "The Little Blue Bonnet,"
lent by Herbert L Pratt of Brooklyn
The \Vhlstler exhlbltlOn ha" been arranged in the large
galleI) m the new north wmg, where were formerly hung the
more Important Dutch pictures m the Hudson-Fulton Mem-anal
ExhIbItion
A httle vanity keeps a man keyed up to his best, whIle
too much renders him obnoxious to his fellows.
The nIght-key IS not usually the key to success.
24 WEEKLY ARTISAN
FLANDERS
OAK
As Its name denotes, a repro-duction
of the Flanders period,
finished In a deep nut brown
shade, givmg a soft, velvety dull
effect. It IS a wmner with the
women
NOTE: To facilitate prompt reply address Desk No.3.
OUR FUMED OAK
FLANDERS AND
EARLY ENGLISH STAINS
EARLY
ENGLISH
An aCId stam of proved practlcablhty. Gives a correct, uni-form
and permanent color without Ihe use of a fummg chamber.
Should be used whether you have a fummg chamber or not Ap-phed
10 the fumed product .t adds tone and nchness, enhancmg its
beauty as well as Its commercial value. Manufacturers now usmg
It are one vOice m ItS praise
Correct m color, durable, practi-cal.
Has won the approval of
the leadmg furmture men by sheer
merit. A sample panel is yours
for the askmg.
have unmistakably hit the Bull's Eye of public demand. We have proved that our aIm was true.
We have again justified our policy of forever fingering the public pulse.
Mr. Furniture Manufacturer, are YOU taking advantage of this poiicy? You WILL, If you
see sample panels of these beautiful finishes.
FUMED OAK
ACID STAIN
MARIETTA PAINT & COLOR CO., Marietta, Ohio.
National Forest Fire Statistics.
1"11 e pIa} ed le'i'i hay oc Il1 the \\ oodland '0 of the '\ at 1011<11
r 01 est Stateo la'it \ ear than It (hd111 1908 cdthough the llU1ll
hcr of fire" \va'i ..no g-reater The Department of \gnculture
ha'i Just c011lpleted the 'itatlc,tlcs The plOtectl\ e \ alue ut
the work ot the depal tment b "hO\\ n 111that al11llJ~t eu:;ht \
pel cent of the fires \\ ere extll1gulohed before a" much a~ h \ e
au e" had been dama~ ed le'i'i than one and one-halt aCi e, to
the 'iCjuare nllle of '\atlonal 1 ore 'it lanel \\ as burned 0\ er and
the amount 'If damage done to the hurneJ 0\ el area a\ el-dged
but $126 per acre
Durll1g the year 1909 thele \Vere 3,138 files on the foreoh,
1 18fi caused by locomotIVes, 431 by campers, 294 by lJg-htll1g-,
181 by brush burnll1g, 97 by 111cendlanes, 38 by sawmJ1l'i and
donkey eng-ll1es, 153 by miscellaneous and 758 b\ unkno\\ n
agenCie 0 The area burned over \\ as, 111 round fig-tll e'i, 360,
000 acres, of which about 62,000 wel e pnvate lands 111
natIOnal forests, as agall1st some 400,000 aCi es Il1 1908 Some
170,000,000 board feet of Umber II as consumed, ot which
33,000,000 fet \Vas prl\ ately O\vned, as agmn"t 230,000000 111
the prevIOus year The loss 111 \ alue of timber de.,tro} ed II a"
les" than $300,000, of which dose to $50,000 \\ a., prl\ atel}
owned The loss of the year before was about $450,000
Damage done to repnoJucton and forage sho\\.., a remarkable
decrea'ie, less than $160,000 be1l1g the record fOl 190J anc
the great Il1crea"e over 1908 111 that state, namely 573, In . n-over
$700,000 that for 1908
The larg-est numbel of fires occlllred 111 Idaho 991 but
entirely attnbutable to fires 111 the Coeur d \Iene, which v\ ere
ext1l1gtllshed Without matenal damage Locnm tl\ e .,park c,
",ere accountable for 611 of the bla/e'i 111 tIll" fore,t lac,t
year fhe explanatIOn of the 111creac,e 111 the tola] for all
forests IS to be foun,l 111 thiS Coeur d' \Iene 1l1CleaSe
1 he 1epO! t of the fOl seter for 1909 said of the fire record
of F)08 fhat year was one of prolong-ed d1'011ght dunng
the "ummer and fall, and of dl"aotrous forest fires throul:;"hout
the coun tl} fhe natIOnal forests suffered relatively httle
\1J ut 2).2,]9] 000 board feet of timber, or 006 per cent of
the stancl IV as destroyed A total of 2,728 fires was reported
(}t II hlch 2 089 were small fil e'i confined as a rule to an area
of fi\ e acres or less The CO'it of fire fightlllg, exL!u'ilve .)f
the "alane" of forest officers, wa" $7328333 ThiS sum,
clClded to the proportIOn of the total salane'i of J an~erc, and
guards properly chalgedble to patrol and fire fig hUng VI ac,
le'ic, than one-twentieth of one pel cent of the \ alue of the
timber protected, e<.,tlmated at an a\ erag-e 'itumpage value of
~2 pel thou sand"
The Largest Rug.
::,ome tllne ago the firm of R J Smith & Co, furniture
Jealeb of Pre<.,C]ue Isle, 1\1e, were authOrized tel furnish a
big rug for the \Ia somc hall 111their town The order vva,
placed With the Read Carpet company of Bndgeport, Conn
It has been completed and has been shipped to Pre'3Cjue Isle
It" dllnenslOns are 27 x 27 feet, and the COmpdn} states that
It l'i the larg-e'it rug- ever made 111 Bridgeport, be111g too
lar£; e to be packell 111the packing- room of the facto!} It
II ac, rolled around a four 111ch tImber for "hlpp111g The
la l:;"e'it rug-" orc1Jnal1ly made are 14 feet by 15 feet The
\\ eH.;ht of lhl~ rug 10 300 pound'i, it'i cost l'i about $500 In
de.,ll:;"n It h e"acth copied after the on ental Khlva Bokhara
lUg- rL he com pan v ha'i 01 ders for four 'imaller rug-s of the
same pdtteln tor the ,ame room 111wInch the large one WIll
])c u"ed
The cro\\ 'itlcko c,teaclfa"tly to 111., caws
WEEKLY ARTISAN
BAD FIRE IN CHICAGO
Fish Furniture Building Destroyed With Terri-ble
Loss of Life.
The SIX story bmldmg owned by L Fish & Co furniture
dealers, on the corner of Nineteenth "treet and 'lA/abash
avenue, Chicago, was completely destroyed by fire on Friday,
March 25, and no less than tweh e of the employe" penshed
m the flames Among the dea<l are 1\1 H Mitchell, brother-m-
law of 1\1r Fish and l\1} ron Bell, ach ertlsing manager for
the firm The property 10"" IS estimated at $150,000 an<l l'i
supposed to be well coy ered by insurance
L Fish & Co. are one of the olde"t and large"t retail
furniture firms m Chicago The home wa" founded by the
"emor member of the firm more than thlrt} } ear~ a~o and
tlle bU"lne'is ha" grown "teadil} from the start until It
redched enormou" proportiOn,
California's Grent Lumber Port.
San Pedro, a name unknown ea"t of the :\1Is,,\sslpPI. I"
today one of the biggest if not the biggest lumher-recelv111g"
port of the country. accord111g to the figures of her collector
of custom" The gazetteers of eJght years ago assigned less
than four l111es of de..,cnpbon to San Pedro It was descnbed
as "a hay anJ mlet of the PaCific Ocean. in Californlia, 105
1111le" "outhea"t of Santa Barbara, 33 degre,,", 48 m111ute"
north' That was all Today It J'i known as the ocean port
for the Immense horticultm al and commercial actiVity thd<
center" about Los Angeles
San Pedro's cu"tom house figllles "how leceJpb last year
of 0\ er 500 milhon board feet of lumber ThIs" as largely
redwood, Dougla, fir, and} ellow pme, brought 111by coast
\ e""el" from the forests of the northwe'it Accord111g to the
Department of Commerce and Labor, New York's coastwise
receipts of southern pane, for the year end111g December 25,
"ere a little under 490 million feet Chicago recei, cd by
water, for the full calendar year 1909, not qlllte 340 million
feet of all k111ds of lumber exclUSive of logs. North Tona-wanda,
X Y, recen ed over 170 million; Ludi111gton, Mlch,
nearly 80 million, Cleveland, about 72 l111llion, and DetrOit, a
little 0' er 66 million The arrivals of redwood, pine, and fir,
at all the ports of San Francisco bay totaled 900 million feet
The lumber arnval" at San Pedro are sugge"tJive of the
remarkably rapId development not only of southern California
but al'io of the 111land 'iouthwest The fruit grow111g secbon
of southern California consumes much lumber, most of whwh
l'i cut a full thousand mIles to the north, but Washmgton,
Idaho, and Oregon lumber IS also distributed by rail from
southern Cabfornia to many 111land p0111ts Despite the cost
of the long shIp transit added to the rail freight charges, the
competitiOn of lumber shlpper'i who use the all-rail route"
from the northwest coast ~tate", or from the east, can be suc-ce'isfully
met at "everal of those points by the ocean-and-rail
loute ,hlppers
The lumber hus111e"" of the matchless forest'i of the
north"e"t has been fightmg agamst great odds in the l\riSSI"
"Ippl valley an<l eastern mark~ts because of the cost of
tran"portatiOn "In the PaCific coast states, which conta111
"0 large a part of the total stand of natIOnal forest bmber,"
says the forester of the Lmted States Department of Agn-culture.
m hiS annual report for 1909," sales are made only
when a faJr pnce IS offered and only under restrictions which
"afeguard the future welfare of the forest Both these condi-tions
tend to restnct sales 111 a regIOn where bmber is at
present so abundant and so cheap The opening of the Pana-ma
Canal will of citself almost revolutiomze the situation.
2S
Luttmg'i which can not no\\ be made m the best \\ a} fOI the
welfare of the forest, becau~e only the relatn ely high grade"
of timber can be ~old, will then be practicable under much
more favorable conditIOns"
Mr. Dodds Home From the South.
Alexandel Dodds of the Alexander Dodd'i I com pan} ,
Grand Rapids, has returned home from a two month" tnp m
the south He spent most of the bme 111Mobile anJ New
Orleans now claims about 400,000 111babltant'i and IS grow111g
saloons m that city and It IS very rare to "ee an} one mtoxI-cated
The ma111 bus111ess of the city 1~ fOlelgn commerce-
Made by World Furmture Co , EvanSVIlle, Ind.
recelvmg and shlppmg gooch to all parts of the world New
Orlean~ now claims about 400,000 mhabltants and groW111g
very rapidly. The south IS prospenng, he says The weather
has been very backward but IS now well on towards spnng
There are many "aloons 111K ew Orleans but very few
111toxlcated men on the streets, m fact he said that he did
not see 111 all hiS travels as many 111toxlcated men as he
would see 111 Grand Rapids 111 the same length of bme,
although Grand Rapids IS not espeCially known for the
number of Its 111ebriate~
Wedding Bells.
Carl Gusta, Johnson, pre-'ldent and generdl managel of
the Johnson Furniture company of Grand Rapids, ,,,as mal-ned
on l\larch 24 to \1lss Emogene Van \\ Iltenburg, at the
home of the bnde's parent~ on CI escent avenue, 111the pres-ence
of thirty relatives and fnend'i The bndal couple left
for ChIcago for a short tnp and will be at home after Apnl
first at 61 Bnggs Court, Grand Rapids.
The Grand Rapids Blow Pipe and Dlbt Arrester com-pany
are filling a large order m X ashVIlle, Tenn They have
many other orders on their books and are d0111g a large bUSI-ness.
r------~------------------ --
26 WEEKLY ARTISAN
Minnesota Retail Furniture
Dealers' Association
OFFICERS-PreSIdent J R Taylor, Lake Benton MInn VIce President, D R Thompson Rockford, Mllln ,
Treasurer, B A Schoeneberger, Perham, MInn Secretary, W L Grapp, Janesville, Mmn
EXECUTIVE CO\1\lITTEE-Chalrman Geo KleIn, Mankato Minn., 0 SImons, Glencoe, Mllln, W L'
HarrIs l\1mneapohs, Mllln C DanIelson, Cannon Falls
BULLETIN No. 104.
FRAUDULENT MAIL ORDER PICTURES IN THE IRON BED GAME.
In thIs second sene" of ell tlcle, exposln~ the me th()(h u,ul b\
thc maIl order house to tempt thc 11One,t eon'U111cr to P11 t \\ Ith 111'
money we Illustrdte three more I11St Inces \\ hlch sho\\ 1]0\\ dc\ U h
thIS I, done They are shov.n 111 the Llrge 'Ize Jlbt d" tllthtldtul 111
the catalog so as to be sure that the true proportIOn" arc gn en
You wtll notice thdt the half tone Illustlatlon In black I" t Iken lrom
the photo Everyone knows that It IS Impo"slble to mIke '1 c ,m
era he, whtle pen drav.l11£; can be nn111pulated to the \\ III 01 the de
sIgner
Then we show two small Sl7C IllustratIon, ot cuh pI ep Irul t I
our membcls whIch may be used In the11 ach el tlol11g c tl11p11"n t)
plotect theIr I11terests These show the C1\ erdraw111g 111 propOl tlOn
the same as the large cuts ThIS 0\ erdra\\ 111g ot Iron bed, h IS been
practIced so generally thdt \\ e have become used to It The de Ilel S
hd\e qUIetly sat by and a11o\\ed It to go unchecked \t '1n\ 1'1'e
thcy have not e>-po"ed the'e methods as the} dtserve to be e,po,u\
\[0 doubt the reason for thl' he" 111 tne g;re It 011l.';111tl Ul't oj 111
dUClng a selles of these cuts B} the t1111e p11c1to' lIt t ILcn Ind IUt,
made, It eosh consIderable mOI1L\ Yet \\ e behn e th It It h thc
busl11ess of ,\I1y as'wuatlOn to do co operatl\ eI} th,lt \\ hleh l11elJ\ lel
nally \\ould be out of the questIOn TherefOle \\e hdlC jJlcpIlld
thIS second senes
","ote the e"tent of the U\ erdr \\1 111~ of the dle IjJ II 1\ h el
},n t It hanc\"omL? Is It ,my wonder that \\hln d el\thtl111cl Ilho
hd" heen ~tUdY1116 the mat! order LIt tloQ,' Lomc, IlIt< \ IUI -r II
your bec\" appeal to hl111 hke pIpe ,tern aftan s mel hI '1\' I 1 11
get a bn WIth fi11mg; t\\ICL 1S I H~e ,IS that tOI the' Il11l pIlle
L\ true deSCrIptIOn I' gnell bene1th thc hell, but \lhcll t Il IU'
tomer once "ees the 0\ erelra\\ n pIcture, hI JuelQ,c, h\ thl111 tl 11l
ft IS Ilot the lhffcrellcc In pnLe that IS so h,ll d to 0\ el10111l 1l I" the
dIfference between our beds "nd the ones of the mall ordel IWlhc-
,IS l11u"trated m theu catalo6,
The consequence of thIS IS that n1dny I tlmHI customer L0111e.,
mto your st()1 ( alld after look1l1g; 0\ er ) our ,tock sa} s I \ ell 1
\1 III see ,bout It" 1n ,Ibotlt t\\ 0 or three 1\ eek, tl111e \ Oil 110tILL I
bcd dt the depot WIth theIr IMme Oil It The} h,\\ e oent then monl}
e!lc! feel gutlty so they take the hed home all(1 '\\ l10thmg to lilY
one db out It Pel haps the} \\ III nn er order \11} th111g Iga11l but
that sale IS lost to you fore\ cr '] 111~ "ould IlC\ er hay e happl md
If the mall order houses \\ ere nudc to l11u"tl Ite thell ooc!, 111 thcll
true proportlOlls
ThereforL \\ e cav that If ,111} cOllcern the, elouhttul 1111thoel- to
get busl11cSS \\ hlch nghtfu11} belongs to \ ou It hce Imc, \ 1lI11 elun
dnd prntlege to n:pose those method, Ind <,110\\ up thell ,chell](
You all kno\\ that If a man or hrm decen cs \ oU ollce \ oU nev Cl
Cheap Montgomery Ward Bed.
tJ ust hIm agtan Our worthy presIdent sdld sometlung at our last
C011\ entlOn banCjuet when he saId IVe may h,lVe d11 these articles
111 OUl store and be thoroughly prepal ec! to meet cat dog competItIOn
\ et thel e are hundreds of possIble customers who are gettl11g mall
order hterature regularly and who NEVER or very RARELY re
cene anyth111g from YOU'
If you WIll studv the mat! order cat'1log you must reahze the
PO\\ er of sug;gestlOl1 They arc ,1lways h1l1t1l1g that certa111 articles
coulll not be boug;ht ft om the home dealer for the same pnce Just
IS ,O)J1 '1' \\ e can ,set the consumer to be SUSPICIOUS of these meth
od, tIle blttlc IS \\ on fOI If they WIll dehber"tely overdraw pIC-tures
\\ hat eonhdence c 111 anyone have 111 anyth111g they say or do?
1'\ e mastered thL oltU'1tlllll 111 our commu11lty by meetmg the prop
o"ltJOn lalrly and square I} \\Ith the exact goods
The Inlorm ItlOn 1nd help tInt \\ e brIllg to you dre d" vaIueIes'-
md theles, de, \ Q,lgantlC Jocomotl\ e WIthout steam If they are not
used '1, the} should be IIany trdde papers and dealers SdY "We
do n It lIke to -.,1\ e tl1el11 trel ,1c1\ertlsmg" But the day hds come
\1 hen people I Lspect d hg;hter \\ ho IS not afraId to come out squarely
mel boldh 1nd <,'Iv \1h It he me lib L\ repute tlOIl for domg thIS very
th111~ I' the be,t p,ly111g Isset thM \\e h ne Do you reahze wDat It
\\ oulc! be worth to you It every customer m your commu111ty be
hev cd tInt) ou aJ\\ ,IVS fUl11lsh 111m WIth Ju,t ,IS good or better mer
lh l11ch,e th21l thdt tUluI"hed bv the m,lll oldel house and at the <;,lme
pIlle? Ot C0111se It IS no bo} , play to accompltsh thIS but any
'\1111"; 1101 \h \\ htll IlljUUe" \\ ork It ah, ays LIkes strenuous efforts
t Illll0l111 '111 llli Il1llclI I~ powerful el10ugh to thleaten the hfe
j IIUI bU'll1C" e,htellLC \\ e \\ ,mt to say llght here that thIS as
, lllt1<l1l IS 110 phle tOI the r don t CHe c\!ld It Lan't be done'
pe lpk \\ e pIU\lde you I'>lth the weapons to plotect yourself but
II e c'Innot go mto each mc1n IduaJ L0111mu111ty and conduct your
bu,111es' for} ou ThIS as"oeldtlOn WIll only CI} stalhze mto some
thllH.'. useful \\ hen It h utlltzec\ as It can and should be
Brother De,J!er", ev el ywhere wake up to the posslbllttJe, that
he m thh l'i',OCn'lOl1 Put In a stock of a gl\ en number of these
bcds spr'nk Ie the11' ar,mnd 111 the \ dnous LOm111U11ltles hdve a sale
\\ hen It I., tll 0\ el you WIll wonder \\ hy you (hd not thmK of It
long a~o
It h ,11 o"ht je I some of our trade p,lper, to tell us to talk
'Iu \ltt\ use, tlc,m In"lllp elL fhat I" ,tll nght 111 It, place but It
elr es no\ shOll the e,tent of the frwd prolctlced by the 111,\1] order
hmhC ,h thh methoc\ of 0\ erc1rdv. n tlJustratlons does ThIs Cdn
ml) bl IceompIhhed In the \\ay we are c10mg It It gIves leverage
to the t Ilk on qlnhtv etc Remember tl1dt we usually ~et what we
11 e lookmg tor If \\ e are \\ Illmg to pay the pnce
Half-Tone of Same. Advertisnll Cut in Exact Proportion ..
(SIngle column size)
ThIS cut furmshed to our members
for 25('
r-~(,~
~\ I - r]\f\(\ ~~~~J \-1 ~~I~) ~II tf~~l \ I ~"..~
(Slllgle colnmn size)
'I IllS cut furmshed to our members
tor 2')c
rhI~ bed furmshed to our members
for $1 19
S ngle column SILe )
1111<;, Cllt ±Ulll.l<....lHd to OUI membel~
fur _Lll
The Best Mont"OJRery Ward Bed.
Overdrawn.
Halt Tone of Same. Advertising Cut in Its True Proportion.
(Slllgle column size)
ThIS cut furmshed to our members
for 25c
Smgle column sIze)
'1 hIS cut furnIshed to our members
for 20c
(SlllgIe column size)
'lhIS cut furnIshed to our members
for 25c
WEEKLY ARTISAN 27
This cut shows bed as illustrated in
Sears Roebucks Catalog.
This cut shows bed as it really is. You can't IUake the caIUera lie. This bed is
furnished to our IueIUbers for $2.95 without the spring. S. R. special.
This is the advertising cut showing the bed as it really is. COIUpare this with
the upper one and note the extent of the overdrawing.
ADVERTISING HELPS FURNISHED BY THE ASSOCIATION
By gett1l1g these Ul11ts \\ lth the typc attached m} member ( 111
arrange almost an 1l1defi11lte sIze ad 111 a fev. mInutes Ii) ou
adopt thIs U11lt system, all ) au have to do 1" to ~e1ect th e PdltCI n
of bed you \\ Ish to ad, ertl,e, 1l1sertmg the pnce ) au \\ dnt to sell It
for and you are sure that your "ad" IS properly "et up and ul11form
By the use of these cuts yOU wIll save the first ongmal cost m thc
savmg of spdLe usudlly used m these descnptlOns fhese cub ,He
dll morthcd dt the bottom so that pnces Cdn be changed at wIll and
the U11lt 1', always sUItable for all occasIOns If you tned to get
these out yourself for mdn ldual use they would cost you $2 for thc
hand dra\\ mg, 60c for makmg the LUt, 25c for sett1l1g up the type
and sett111g the rule ,Hound dnd 35c for electJotYPlng Thus you
can see that \\ e are fur11l,11111gyou a $320 value for only 40c, to say
nothmg of the tIme and Lue It takes to prepare such U11lts
A Good Cheap Straight Rod Bed
ThIS F 2 No 9-041 straIght rod I
Iron bed IS made m the best whIte
enameled flmsh or m any other plam
color deSIred "e adVIse the whIte
fim sh as It IS the most lastmg ThIS
IS m every way a good 11 on be
and one that anyone could be pr,,"l
of ha vmg m theIr horne at a ,ery
cheap prlce SIzes d 4 or 4% ft
WIdths
PRICE '10 MEl\IBERC;
V\ hlte or anyone (olor
C'ombmatIOn
,erms Maltm
Unlts-,Vlth l'vpe
V\'Ithout '1':, pe
'J'hIS F 2 No 0 392 Iron bed can
be had m erther whIte green or blue
enamel fimsh or m Golden Verms
Martm It has a lIS mch po~t and %
Inch crosq rodb and I'" In ever y r e-spect
a well constructed bed at a
,ery reasonable prlce, can be had m
2 SIzes 3 6 or 4 ft WIde
PRICE TO MEMBIJRS
WhIte or anyone color
CombmatIOn
Verms Martm
Mahogany or Oak
Units-WIth '1') pe
W,thout Type
ThIS F 2 No 9-472 Iron bed, a very
plam Ieflned deSIgn m qUIte a heavy
tubIng Castlngs are extra heavy and
are made m gIlt trlmmmgs We
have had great success WIth thIS
de",gn and nevel had a complamt
regaldmg ItS constructIOn and finIsh
We furnIsh thIS m whIte enamel or
m Golden Verms Martm SIze 4 ft
Wide
PRICE TO MEMBERS
WhIte or anyone color
CombmatIOn
Verms Martm
Mahogany or Oak
Units-WIth Type
WIthout Type
..... 40c
25c
$231
257
284
I
40c
..,5c
$3.68
394
420
4.73
40c
25c
$5.25
551
5.78
6.30
A Pretty 5 FjlJer Bed at a Low Price
I IllS I' 2 ,0 1 112 fly e filler Iron
bed 111ake<., a fine ornament In any
helll GOIn the 11lalll pIllar", at e 1 YR
111(h8<;; In dIdDletel and ('on~tructed
m tl1e best pOSSIble manner It IS
fimshed \\ Ith a rIch enamel or an,
other pI am color WIth hrass top
rod and heans SIze of thIS hed
4 ft 6 In
PR1Cr 10 ,[L;\lB~~R"
\Vll1te Ol dn\ one ( 1101
COmbll1 1.tlon
"ernlb ,rat tln
Unlts- \\ ltll f\ pe
\\lthout T)pe
A Good Camel Back Bed
'llllS F 2 ~o 0 241 Camel Back
hE'd can be harl In "\arIon,;;; COIOl S
Note the 4 hea\ \ flllel s at head and
foot, and the hea. \ v CIO';;;<;;'; bat s on
saIne and ~et "lth good hea\ v CdS
tOI S <:lnd In e\ 81'\ \\ a.... d.. g'ood hIgh
classed hed at a \ el v 10\\ pnce
SIze 4 b 1" 6 2
PRICE TO MIJNIBERS
\Vhlte or anyone color
CombmatlOn
Yerms Martm
UnIts-WIth '1') pe
V\ 1thou t '1'\ pe
----------~------
Thl" r K0 0 035 IS the greatest
hal gaIn P\ 81 offered In a 2 Inch post
11 on bed The maIn pIllars are 2 m
m d,amete, and IS a plam artIstic
deSIgn In <:111"\bedroon1 FInIshed
\\ Ith one co it of anti 1u"t filler and
t"o loats of enamel SIzes 3 01 4 ft
PRICE TO ME\IBER:"
\\ 111te or an:, one color
COmhInatlon
,7 eI nIb ,IartIl1
Mallogan) or Oak
UnIts-WIth Type
W,thout Type
$
278
1 305
331
40c
23c
$3.26
352
378
400
25c
$5.42
567
5.93
6.46
I
40c
25c
A Good Heavy Flush Jointed Iron Bed
ThIS F No 1-282 flush Jomted I
Iron bed IS the most artistIC that
can be had m thIS lIne, made In 8 I
good whIte enameled fimsll and easy
to keep clean WIth a good strong
post and by all means If ) ou want
a good durable bed I \\ ould adVIse
you to order thIS one
PRICE TO MEMBERS
\Yhlte or anyone color
COmhInatIOn
\erms MartIn
Mahogany or Oak
Unlts- "Vlth '1'\ pe
,Vlthout Type
'i'hIS F 2 No 5-092 large Iron bed
hea\lly con'ltructed and made up In
a hIgh class finIsh of eIther whIte or
Golden VernIS MartIn The posts are
1% mche" m dIameter WIth % mch
cross rods, and set WIth heavy cast-ors
trImmed WIth gIlt A hIgh class
bed at a \ ery moderate pnce SIze 4
ft 6 In
PRICE TO MEMBERS
WhIte or anyone color
COmbInatIOn
VernIs MartIn
Mahogany or Oak
Units-WIth Type
WIthout Type
TIllS F 2 No 0 223 hIgh classed
11 on bed mam post and top tubIng
1% inch dIameter other fillIng 1 16
Inch FInIshed In enamel whIte or
cOmbInatIOn colors and IS In every
respect a bed that would make a
pretty decoratIOn In an) bedroom
SIzes 3 or 4 ft WIde
PRICE TO MEMBERS
,Vhlte or anyone color .
CombInation
VernIs MartIn
Mahogany or Oak
Units-WIth Type....... . .. 40c
WIthout Type . " .• 25c
$294
320
347
6.97
40c
25c
$4.73
5.00
5.25
. 5.78
40c
25c
$593
620
646
6.97
To the member who has not had very much expenence m pre-panng
ddverhsmg matter of this kmd, we want to ask you to SIt
down and try to prepare an advertIsement the sIze of thIs sheet, go-mg
mto your ~tock, plckmg out the vanous Itcms you wIsh to ad-verh~
e, wntmg up the descnptlOn~ whIch, of course, must be ac-curate,
arrangmg them and see how long It takes you to get a copy
of nme umts ready Then take your sCIssors and chp out the cost
ThIS F 2 No 6 155 non bed, strong
and made of heavy tubmg i'hze of
postg 2 mches m dIameter heIght of
head 60 lnches and can be had m
31h or 4 ft wIdths Flmshed and
baked m the best whlte enamel or
any plam color desired All chills
are gilded
PRICE TO MEMBERS
1Vlllte or anyone color
CombmatlOn
Verms Martm
Mahogany or Oak
'---------------
Units-WIth Type
Without TYPE>
ADVERTISING UNITS CONTINUED.
$5.93
620
6.46
6.98
of the beds you want to run m an "ad", paste on a sheet of paper
to act as gUIde or dummy for the pnnter, puttmg In the pnce you
want to advertIse them for and you WIll readIly see the great savmg
of tIme and care you get by usmg the assoClatlOn advertIsmg umt
system vVe use these 111ustratlOns to bnng forcIbly to your milld
the fact that we are bnngmg yoU the best possIble help the assocI-atIOn
can by these prepared U111tS
A Beautiful 5 Spindle Decorated
Panel Iron Bed.
. 40c
.25c
This F 2 No 2-051 five spmdle
decorated panel non bed well con-structed
and can be had m white
enamel or anv other one color or m
Golden Verms Martm The posts
are 1'1s mches m dIameter wIth %
inch cross lods which renders the
bed perfectly mdestructlblr< 31.le
4'1" ft Wide
Good Low Priced Bed. A Good Decorated Panel Bed.
This F 2 No 2 121 Iron bed can
be had m White, combmatlon color
or Golden Vernis Martm This bed
IS made m % Illch post and % mch
cross rods and set wIth extra heavy
castors ThIs bed is made ln clean
and smooth Chlll work and III every
way a good substantIal bed Sizes
3-6, 4-6 ft Widths
A Pretty Decorated Panel Bed.
This F 2 No 3-051 Decorated Panel
bed IS made entIrely of lron, with
steel SIde ralls and % Illch pIllars
It lS 52 mches hIgh, and decorated
with pretty fioral deSigns and the
effect IS new and attractIve This
bed lS fimshed m white enamel or
In combmatlOn or Golden Verms
Martm colors SIze 4 ft 6 m
This F 2 No 9-492 Iron bed with
decorated panel and % mch posts
III dIamE>ter,and wIth % mch cross
rods, makes a very neat deSIgn m a
low prIced bed The bed IS 4 ft
WIde, and makes a very fine deco-ratlOn
for any home m either whItE!
enamel, or Golden Verms Martm
I
I---- - ------- -------
'i'hls F 2 No 5 392 beautIful deco-rated
panel bed, IS made up m a
\ ery floral deSign and a very good
constructed bed m every way The
post~ are 1'1s mch m diameter, and
the cros~ rods are of heavy tubme-and
In every respect a bed that
would be apprecIated m every home
This F 2 No 4-492 decorated panel
bed, IS made entnely of Iron wIth
solId steel ralls and heavy set cas-tors
The mam pIllars are 1!jg mch
m diameter with % mch cross rods
ThlS bed can be had m whIte or m
any other plam color, or m Golden
Verms Martm It IS a very artIstic
bed m every respect
ThIs F 2 No 0-051 Iron bed IS
made of the \ ery best material and
IS beautifully decorated with floral
deSigns Note the heavy post~ and
tubmg, and everythmg to make up
a flrst class bed Fmlshed with one
coat of antI-rust and two coats of
enamel, Or In GoldE>nVernIs Martm
Size 4-6 or 3-6
Unlts-Wlth Type
WIthout Type
40c
25c
,-
I
30 WEEKLY ARTISAN
j
I
II
IIt
I
II
,II
-- .---_._----_._.-------------------- .------- - -- -- -- _. . - .- -- ..- - _._-_._---_. ---_._--_.
FOUR NEW
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
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 oil.
in acid and oil.
in acid and oil.
PRODUCTIONS
Send for finished samples, free.
Ad-el-ite Fillers and Stains have long held first place 10 the estimation
of Furniture Manufacturers and Master Painters. In addition to the reg-ular
colors the above shades offer unusually beautiful and novel effects.
Tbe Ad-el-ite People CHICAGO-NEW YORK
Everythmg m Pamt SpeclaltIes and Wood F1U1shmg matenals Flllers that £111. Stams that satIsfy. --~-_._------------_._.--_._-----_. --_.-~ _. - - - ~_. _ •• - __ a'
PHILADELPHIA LETTER
H_ H. Hirsch Trying to Revive the Furniture
Exposition Project.
PhIladelphia, .:\Jatch 22-The U'ie 01 the auto dell' en
wagon'i is becol111l1g more genetal even \car \t the ptee.,-
ent time, most of the large fitnb ha\ e se\ elal large auto-mobtles
wh1ch the) clan11 can do much more than hor'ies and
wagons w1th a less expense on the \\ hole 1hey make de-
Evenes out as fa1 a, fift) 1111lesand can carn an 1111111enSe
load of goods '1 he horse 1., gradualh hemg 1eplaceel but tt
1t doubtful that he w111go out of use altogether
The b1g stnke b sttIl on w1th no real .,ettlement m
'iight The Ul110n labor hands hay e gone out m 1110St all
lmes of trade 0\ er 100,000 hay e been out and hay e done un-told
damage to the bus1l1ess lllterests of the city Some have
returned to work this week
George V.,r Brenn of 1306 ~ orth l\1a1 shaIl street cloe., a
large bus1l1ess in canmg chan" for the trade and se1l1l1g cane
suppl1es through the west and south
Burt Bros, say that furmture should have made more
than a 10 per cent raise m pnces a., plate gla'is, lumber, hard-ware
fitt1l1g:;, cotton and sIlk goods have all made c0ll'31der-ablt~
advances Their furl11tule anJ beddlllg plant 1S busy,
workmg fuIl ttme Order'i are C01l1111gm \ e1y "" eIl and md1-
c,lte a good season
The Canton (Pa) Couch com pan) hay e gl' en up the
couch lme and are maklllg dumb \\ alters .:\11 HaIlet \\ ho
was .,alesman for the Canton Couch compan) ha., tahen up
the l1l1e of the Easteln Lounge com pan) , fot Penns) h al11a
and New Jersey
Thomas P Lawler & BlOS, of 136 North Second street,
___ -4
\\111 plOhably go out of busllless, as the firm is in the hands
of thetr C1 ed1
- Date Created:
- 1910-03-26T00:00:00Z
- Data Provider:
- Grand Rapids Public Library (Grand Rapids, Mich.)
- Collection:
- 30:39
- 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/11