PLEA CES FFF ENS DAVES OS A QUE FL MERC ORF FENG SED — ae Se 9 PPO EE War carCAC Weey os MO ge ers ams arco aE PEOVER SEA SC RAGAKY Nee. EC aC (es ip “ome <4) a NTR SS (. Tp aF 8 AO Oyen RUG kes 20 BY = ay Ew) Fee NE (CIN Re RN ii a a OO es he fp PUBLISHED WEEKLY 9/05 SUG. i8 2 TRADESMAN COMPANY, PUBLISHERS: 3513) 722 2 £5 SOI CS SQW GSCI a ONES Eighteenth Year GRAND RAPIDS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1901. Number O14 =a DS > > > > Oe O O O OH ~A.A.A. A.W. A.@_.@Q.@.@.@.@-@-B-2-BB B22 BD 2P_>PA2P23222322322—> d ~~ ea ~ \ BOE OE OC DT GF MM t-,M iii: iin nei hii nan iininiiaiiaieiaialiialaiaaatialiataiia, ' TIME’S UP! OR NEARLY SO And you will be “counted out” if you don’t get your rubber order in by March 31st. DON’T TAKE ANY CHANCES! Our salesmen are hustling and will try and reach you before the time limit is up, but to make sure you don’t get left write us and we will send samples for you to select from and protect you until our salesmen call. Our goods are the best, our prices are right, we sell direct to the trade and we are not owned by a trust. The Beacon Falls Rubber Shoe Co., 207 and 209 Monroe Street, Chicago, Illinois POI I'D IT &{ .®A A — => SF We have the finest line of Felt Boot and Sock Combinations on the market. Write us for prices and particulars. | Have you seen our Leather Top? It is THE BEST. SSS FFFFFFFFFFFFFSFS FFF nr. '— MO LO. LO. LA. LO. LO - LP - Le DBL -LO-LO- LE. LO - L. LO. L. L. L. L- L 'e — LO. LO. LO. LO - LO. P-L LP. -2-- L M L L L L M M M M . OS : = PSS eA Sones SoS SSy SSRI SATIS IAS SASS} SSeS PS eS CS SESS FE APART ASES SASS eS SS RBSASASASACSSSASASSS KEEP IT UP We wish to extend our sincere thanks to customers and consumers who have assisted us in introducing Royal Tiger 1oc Tigerettes 5c A Smoker’s Smoke And trust that you will keep it up. Respectfully yours, PHELPS, BRACE & CO., Detroit, Mich. The Largest Cigar Dealers in the Middle West. Carolina Brights Cigarettes ‘‘Not Made by a Trust.’’ j F. E. BUSHMAN, Manager Cigar Department. Persea pseasase RE o R DS SBS US SEE ES SESE PSS SEARS AAAS) OROROR OROROROROHOH CHOROROROHOE OCH OCHOHOROROROROHOHOE If you want to secure more than $25 REWARD In Cash Profits in 1901, and in addition give thorough satisfaction to your patrons, the sale of but one dozen per day of FLEISCHMANN & CO.’S YELLOW LABEL COMPRESSED YEAST will secure that result. Grand Rapids Office, 29 Crescent Ave. Detroit Office, 111 W. Larned St. SORONCRORONC HOROCHOROROHOROROROCHOHOHOHOHOROHOEOHOHS yestett : : AXLE GREASE has become known on account of its good qualities. Merchants handle Mica because their customers want the best axle grease they can get for their money. Mica is the best because it is made especially to reduce friction, and friction is the greatest destroyer of axles and axle boxes. It is becoming a common saying that “Only one-half as much Mica is required for satisfactory lubrication as of any other axle grease,” so that Mica is not only the best axle grease on the market but the most eco- nomical as well, Ask your dealer to show you Mica in the new white and blue tin packages. ILLUMINATING AND LUBRICATING OILS PERFECTION OIL IS THE STANDARD THE WORLD OVER HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR EMPTY CARBON AND GASOLINE BARRELS STANDARD OIL Co. Q FSS SSSSSSSSFSSSSSSSSFFSISSFSA BETTER THAN EVER RK, x F * Ay, HEA OF Tt. «he “Me & FEE ET Brug & Shaw See FHF e As Baa EPR E F EG awe EF EE heat EL Rann taae ts % 5C CIGAR SOLD BY ALL JOBBERS eee Ask us for quotations On Street Car Feed, No. 1 Feed, Meal, Corn, Oats, Gluten Feed, Cotton Seed Meal; any quantity, large or small. Prompt shipment. Walsh-DeRoo Milling Co., Holland, Mich. “We are advertised by our loving friends.”’ —With apologies to Mellin’s Food. OUR COMPETITORS Feeling keenly the enormous sale and the popular approval of the merits of Egg Baking Powder have been publishing advertisements in this vicinity at- tacking our product. Tneseadvertisements have appeared in the news columns as pure reading matter to deceive the public and do not mention the name of the advertiser. We are not afraid tosign OUR advertisements and to state that NOT ONE GRAIN OF ALUM enters into the manufacture of Egg Baking Pow- der, which fact is attested by eminent chemists. For terms address our nearest office. Home Office, s0 West street, New York. ' Western Office, 7 523 Williamson Bl’dg, Cleveland. Branch Offices: Indianapolis Detroit, Cineinnati Fort Wayne Grand Rapids Columbus Capital and Brains These attributes are essential to a grocer in transacting business, but to GET ALL YOUR PROFIT and economize your time it is necessary to secure a Stimpson Computing Grocers’ Scale — They are better than an extra clerk and will make you more They absolutely prevent the most minute loss and are superior to all other scales on the market. - It’s to your advantage. THE W. F. STIMPSON CO. DETROIT, MICH. money than most salesmen. Ask for further information. 4 7 ~ => 4 \ « Tea y - Ne wi a . + = ‘~ - ~ amy Bit « ta 7 cf ) oa - b ~~ 4 a » e - v be a a ae ea ~ ] Le / | 4 ols * » ‘ N= , ah _ a y 2 ow _ sd ) ‘~ - ~ = 7 ( —_ = ~ Se eee ena Rater Volume XVIII. GRAND RAPIDS, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1901. Number 914 ASSOCIATE OFFICES IN ALL PRINCIPAL CITIES k of Michigan and Mich- {gan Tradesman, Grand ids. Collector and Commercial Lawyer and Preston National Bank, Detroit. THE MERCANTILE AGENCY Established 1841. R. G. DUN & CO. Widdicomb Bld’g, Grand Rapids, Mich. Books arranged with trade classification of names. Collections made everywhere. Write for particulars. L. P. WITZLEBEN, Manager. FOS 9099990009090 006 000000046 THE 3 $ FIRE3 $ (G INS. 3 77/9 * ra Prompt, Conservative, Safe. ry J.W.CHAMPLIN, Pres. W. FRED McBarn, Sec. 2 oe 2OLOO60O 009000000000 004 Wholesale Ready Made Clothing Nearly all kinds, for all seasons, for Men, Boys and Children. Meet WILLIAM CONNOR who will be at Sweet’s Hotel, Grand Rapids, Mar. 28 to Apr. 2,and you will see a large line of samples to select from. Customers’ expenses allowed. Or if you prefer, write him, care Sweet’s Hotel, and he will call on you. He pays prompt attention to mail orders. 0OOOO9OS 000000000000 00* A. BOMERS, ..Commercial Broker.. And Dealer in Cigars and Tobaccos, 157 E. Fulton St. | GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Knights of the Loyal Guard A Reserve Fund Order A fraternal beneficiary society founded upon a permanent plan. Permanency not cheapness its motto. Reliable dep- uties wanted. Address EDWIN O. WOOD, Flint, Mich. Supreme Commander in Chief. LSALoaabhbdbdbbbhh bbb bobobo bn ty bo tr Perfection Time Book and Pay Roll Takes care of time in usual way, also divides up pay roll into the several amounts need- ed to pay each person. No running around after change. Send for Sample Sheet. Barlow Bros. Grand Rapids, Mich. Tradesman Coupons IMPORTANT FEATURES. Page. 2. Crafty Leadership. 3. Sugar Sacks. 4. Around the State. 5. Grand Rapids Gossip. 6. Getting the People. 7. Cleaning Up Time. 8. Editorial. 9. Editorial. Dry Goods. Clothing. 12. Shoes and Rubbers. Clerk’s Corner. How to Accumulate the Profits. Hardware. Hardware Quotations. Window Dressing. The Meat Market. Woman’s World. Butter and Eggs. The New York Market. 24. Village Improvement. 25. Commercial Travelers. 26. Drugs and Chemicals. 2%. Drug Price Current. 28. Grocery Price Current. 29. Grocery Price Current. 30. Grocery Price Current. 31. Rights of the Retailer. 32. Died a Grocer. 22. THE OTHER PERSON’S PROBLEM. The comedy and pathos of existence tread hard upon each other’s heels and the other day a little scene occurred in a New York police court that was full of both. An able-bodied man applied to the court for protection against his wife, and swore that she was in the habit of daily assaulting him with kitchen utensils or anything that came handy. ‘‘What sort of a man are you?’’ de- manded the judge, ‘‘that you need pro- tection from a woman and are not mas- ter in your own house?’’ ‘‘Judge,’’ re- turned the man with conviction, ©‘ you don’t know my wife or you would never ask a question like that.’’ One can but smile at the guileless candor of the speech, but he is not the only one who might offer such an excuse for his failures and his misfortunes. All of us know the difficulties against which we must daily contend, but we seldom know our neighbor’s problems. We see that he had this and that oppor- tunity, and that in spite of them he fails, and we judge him harshly, not taking account of the secret handicap that weighed him down, and made him a loser in the race he might have won. Nothing is easier than mapping out a happy and_ successful plan of life—for other people—and nothing is harder than to do it for ourselves. The first article in the confession of our faith as regards woman, for instance, is that she should always be charming in looks and manners, a delightful companion to her husband, a good mother and an ad- mirable housekeeper. When she fails in any of these respects we condemn her, and yet how seldom do we con- sider how desperately the circumstances may have been against her. We don’t know, for one thing, what kind of a husband she may have. He may be a man who is pleasant enough to the outside world, who is prosperous enough, but at home he may have been a petty domestic tyrant, who haggles over a dime, who meets his wife’s every remark with a sneer and at whose com- ing conversation in the family circle dies a shivering death. A woman never tells that kind of thing until she tells it in the divorce court, She hides it within her own broken heart, but when we see a wife who is spiritless and dull, who has lost pride in her own looks and interest in her house, we should often reverence her as a martyr, instead of criticising her for a frump, if we knew the proolem with which she has daily to wrestle. It is the same way with children. Every single one of us can lay down the law about how children ought to be raised. It’s as easy as rolling off a log to tell other people how to do it, and we are perfectly amazed when we see Mrs. Jones letting her little Tommy dis- obey her, and we wonder what on earth Mrs. Brown can be thinkng of to per- mit Mamie to have a beaux at her age, and we are horrified to see that Mrs. Smith’s Johnny is smoking cigarettes. What we do not know is what each of these mothers has gone through with before she gave up the inherited tend- encies she has had to fight, the peculiar- ities of disposition she has had to con- tend with, the nervous temperament she has had to consider, and the family in- terference that has balked her at every step. lf we knew the other person’s prob lem we should be slow enough to con- demn. What is done we see, but what the struggle has been we may never know. We marvel at the unloveliness that is shown when a woman is_ hard and bitter, but we may never even guess what was the secret sorrow that robbed her heart of all its sweetness. Many a one whom we stigmatize asa coward for failing in life has made a fight so brave against hopeless odds that we should crown her as a hero if we only knew. There are multitudes who bear the cross without ever wearing the crown of glory. Fifteen hundred and fifty-three Mich- igan merchants who were induced to hand over $3 apiece for the avowed pur- pose of reforming the laws fail to un- derstand why they are receiving Trade, for which many of them have no use, nor are they able to obtain any reason- able explanation from the office of pub- lication. Circulation obtained in this way is of no possible value to the adver- tiser, because in nine-tenths of the cases the paper is never opened, looked at nor referred to; and, in most cases, the subscription will not be renewed—on the combination plan or any other basis. cio a An alliance between an association and a trade paper seldom results satis- factorily to either party to the deal. In the case of the Mercantile Association of Michigan and Detroit Trade, the former appears to have gotten the hot end of the poker, judging by the dis- closure made before the Judiciary Com- mittee of the House of Representatives. Ee During the first ten years of her life a woman teaches herself to be happy; the next ten the world and her mother teach her to be miserable. Frequent references have been made of late by one of the local furniture journals to the ‘‘darkened windows’’ of the Grand Rapids School Furniture Co. since that plant was absorbed by the American School Furniture Co. two years ago. The Tradesman has in its possession figures compiled from the books of the institution showing that the pay rolls of the factory during 1899 and 1900 11% per cent. greater than they were during any year prior thereto, demonstrating conclusively that the statements of the Michigan Artisan are utterly without foundation. Asa matter of fact, the pay roll of the Grand Rapids School Furniture Co. has been larger for the past nine years than that of any other manufacturing establish- ment in the city. were The Emperor of Japan has played a bigger part in the world’s affairs than most people imagine. He has brought a new force into the world. He has saved Japan from the fate of China and created it anew in the image of Europe. He has done more for Japan, it is no exaggeration to say, than any other man who sat on its throne through the twenty centuries over which Japanese rule ex- tends. He has given his people a brand new constitution and a popular govern- ment on Eurapean lines, and has justly earned for Japan the name of the Eng- land of the East. No other country in the world has made such rapid _ strides. In two or three years railway, telegraphs and ironclads were introduced. A Toledo, Ohio, minister announced from his pulpit that he would rather vote for the devil for mayor than vote for Golden Rule Jones. He must be very familiar with one of the gentlemen to cause him to be so emphatic. A law has recently been passed which permits the French government to for- bid the manufacture and sale of absinthe and certain other fabricated articles of drink declared to be dangerous by the Academy of Medicine. ° Kaiser Wilhelm can now add _ the sprinting record to his many other ac- complishments. The only person who was able to keep up with him on his re- cent cross country trip was an expert shorthand writer. A Kalamazoo physician claims to have discovered a remedy for the drink habit that will make liquor utterly distasteful to the most confirmed inebriate. He’d better steer clear of Kentucky. Wu Ting Fang recently said that Chi- cago was the most progressive city in the world. Wu_ has evidently not kept up with the march of progress in Pekin during the last few months. Kind Edward has not lost all of his Prince of Wales tactics since his eleva- tion to the throne. His application for a raise of salary shows that. Now the fiat has gone forth that Ven- ezuela must apologize to us. It isn’t so hard to find a fellow you can lick if you persevere in the search, MICHIGAN TRADESMAN CRAFTY LEADERSHIP. How It Jeopardizes Garnishment Exemp- tion Legislation. Three months prior to the convening of the Legislature of 1899 the editor of the Tradesman sought an interview with Governor Pingree for the purpose of as- certaining what his attitude would be toward an amendment to the law relat- ing to wages exemption in garnishment proceedings. The interview was entire- ly frank on both sides and the statement of the then Governor left no doubt as to what his action would be. He said plainly—and rather more emphatically than was necessary—that he would veto any measure of that description which might be gotten through the Legisla- ture. The Tradesman took him at his word and advised its friends to make no effort to secure remedial legislation along these lines from the Legislature of 1899. Three months later the editor of De- troit Trade inaugurated a movement to secure the relief so long desired. The Tradesman politely declined to co-oper- ate in the movement, for the reason above stated, whereupon Trade uncorked its acid bottle and published repeated attacks on the Tradesman of an untruth- ful, disgraceful and uncalled-for char- acter, insinuating that the Tradesman was not a true friend of the retailer or it would come to the rescue. In the meantime funds were solicited by Trade to assist in the work of securing the leg- islation sought, some of the statements made in the columns of Trade in con- nection with the crusade for funds be- ing as follows: ‘‘It takes boodle to cause laws to be enacted at Lansing.’’ ““Help the cause along by handi ng in your dollar or more, as you decide you can contribute.’’ ‘‘Help get the machinery greased for business. He gives twice who gives quickly.’’ ‘‘The bill to do this will become a law if those whom it will benefit the most will do their share by sending in their money.’’ ‘If the game is worth the candles, do your share,’’ ‘“Money is not coming in too rapidly, but definite promises have been made. It is hoped the ‘push’ will be strong enough to win its passage’' In a report of the money thus secured, made in the columns of Trade eighteen months after the fund was subscribed, Trade claimed that $1,262.39 was con- tributed by the merchants of Michigan for the purpose’ of influencing legisla- tion. How much of this money was used to ‘‘get the machinery greased for business’ and how much was used for other purposes, the Trademan has no means of ascertaining, nor has any one of the Tradesman’s acquaintance ever been able to obtain a list of the donors or a detailed statement of the manner in which the money was expended. It is hardly necessary to remark that the Governor was as good as his word. He vetoed the bill with scant ceremony, thus vindicating the judgment of the Tradesman and plainly demonstrating to the merchants of Michigan that the Tradesman was right and that Trade was wrong in diagnosing the situation. In this connection the Tradesman may be pardoned if it calls attention to the fact that it has never called upon the merchants of Michigan for one cent to assist in obtaining needed legislation. It has always opposed the raising of money for this purpose, because it be- lieves that it is quite as necessary to avoid the appearance of evil as it is to avoid evil itself. The raising of money at such times is quite likely to be mis- construed, especially if the person thus engaged is so indiscreet as to talk about ‘“getting the machinery greased for business.’’ The position of the Trades- man on this subject is graphically stated in the following resolutions prepared by the editor of the Tradesman and unanimously adopted at the last meet- ing of the Michigan Retail Grocers’ Association : Resolved—That we are unqualifiedly in favor of a revision of the present ex- emption laws relating to the exemption of wages in cases of garnishment and execution, but deplore the attempt to change the law at the last regular ses- sion of the Legislature, in the face of Governor Pingree’s positive statement that he would veto any bill which the oe might enact along these ines. Resolved —That we deprecate the rais- ing of funds ostensibly for legislative purposes, because such action gives ground for the statement that legislators are all corrupt, and are influenced only by financial considerations, which we do not believe to be the case. Resolved—That we are heartily in fa- vor of joining hands with any organiza- tion in the effort to secure better laws for the grocer providing the effort is made in the right way and along correct lines, When the matter of securing an amendment to the exemption law at the present session of the Legislature was taken up, the editor of the Tradesman was plainly told to keep his hands off, which he would have done if the cam- 'paign had been conducted ina clean and straightforward manner. On Nov. 7, 1900, Trade thus referred to the expe- dition with which the amendment would be enacted into law: As we go to press this week we do so with the absolute assurance that among the first laws to be enacted by the next Michigan Legislature will be a law to modernize the act providing for the garnishee of moneys due employes, for which this paper, backed by the Busi- ness Men’s Association of Michigan, has been striving continuously since the last Legislature adjourned two years ago. oWe can assure our readers that there will probably not be ten votes against the bill in the House, nor six votes against it in the Senate when it comes up for consideration. We can also assure our readers that it will be signed by the Governor-elect, whether he be Democrat or Republican, On Feb. 14 the editor of the Trades- man was in Detroit and met gentlemen who had just come from an interview with the editor of Trade, during which Cozzens stated that the bill was hung up in the Judiciary Committee; that it would take $1,000 to lubricate the Com- mittee; that he must have $1,000 in grease at once and that an appeal would immediately be made to the merchants of Michigan for the necessary funds. Not believing in the use of money for legislative purposes—and also believing that such action on Cozzens’ part would jeopardize the enactment of the measure —the editor of the Tradesman deemed it his duty to bring the matter to the attention of Representative Burns, local member of the Judiciary Committee of the House, who thereupon stated that Cozzens had already approached Chair- man McCallum and intimated that it would be to his (McCallum’s) interest to report out the bill promptly. The outcome has since become a matter of history. The Judiciary Committee de- manded an explanation. Cozens made a desperate effort to obscure the situa- tion by trying to prove that no one had been appealed to for funds, whereas the exposure of his intention to solicit funds effectually prevented such action on his part and saved the merchants of Michi- gan from being milked, the same as they were milked by him two years ago. Despite the manner in which the measure has been handicapped by short- sighted championship, the Tradesman still believes that the Judiciary Com- mittee will not punish the merchants of Michigan by holding them responsible for the unfortunate antics of Cozzens, but will report the bill out, and that it will pass both the House and the Sen- ate. Determined effort will be made by the labor unions to obtain a veto at the hands of the Governor, but if the business men of the State are prompt in acting in the matter, the amedment will undoubtedly become a law. At the hearing given the bill by the Judiciary Committee last Wednesday evening, the editor of the Tradesman made the following appeal in behalf of an amendment to the present law: Personally, | am in favor of the re- peal of all laws for the collection of debts, because I believe the world would be better and the people would be hap- pier if all commercial transactions were based solely on honor. Since this ideal condition of affairs is not likely to be brought about in my day or generation, I am disposed to take a philosophical view of the situation and to insist that, if we must have laws for the collection of debts and the protection of the creditor class in enforcing its rights, they should be equitable and not alto- gether one-sided. I hardly think any man who is disposed to view the subject fairly will deny the statement that the laws now on our statute books are not adapted to present conditions, which have changed greatly from those of fifty years ago, since which time Michi- gan has changed from a debtor toa creditor State and our inhabitants have changed from the debtor to the creditor class. Fifty years ago, most of the money then in the country was owned by men living in New England and the Eastern States, the pioneer inhabitants of Michigan being mainly people of small and moderate means who had come to the State to improve their for- tunes. If it was the duty of the Legisla- ture in those days to make laws that would protect our people from the grasping exactions of Eastern money loaners, now that we have changed from the debtor to the creditor class and are doing business on our own capital, is it not now equally the duty of the Legisla- ture to amend the laws relating to the collection of debts so that they will be in harmony with the times, instead of permitting such laws to remain on the Statute books in such obsolete form that they are a menace to the commercial interests of the country and a constant ——er source of annoyance and oss! This is not the first time that amend- ments to the exemption law have been before the Legislature and, if adequate relief is not accorded the business pub- lic at the present session, it will prob- ably not be the last time the subject will be agitated. During the past eighteen years, I have seen this agitation take on several different forms, and I note that the effort made at each subsequent session of the Legislature possesses an educational value, even although no tangible results are accomplished. Judg- ing by the experience of the past, I ex- pect to see this sentiment increase in momentum and strength until it will sweep everything before it. I am not here to plead for any spe- cial form of relief or the enactment of any particular bill. In common with many merchants of Michigan, with whom my relations have been very close for nearly twenty years, I am here sim- ply to ask for relief from the present unjust law. Speaking for myself and for all fair-minded merchants of the State as a class, I am frank to admit that the particular form of the relief is not necessarily material.: I am_ not tenacious regarding any of the several bills which I understand are before your Committee, because I realize that no one man is endowed with sufficient wis- dom to draft an absolutely perfect meas- ure; nor am I here to ask you to enact any law or to recommend to your parent body any measure which does not ap- peal to your good judgment as fair- minded and _ honorable gentlemen. There have been times in the past when we could have secured snap _ legislation and obtained amendments to the law which would have afforded immediate relief, but such an advantage was not taken by us, because we believe that victories achieved at the expense of justice and fairness are not victories in the best sense of the word and that they are not likely to be lasting ; that statutes which are one-sided and so constructed that they work a hardship to any con- siderable class can not, in the very na- ture of things, remain long intact. The present exemption law affords such an excellent example of an unfair and one- sided law that I believe it can not much longer withstand the agitation and de- termined effort of the business public, because it is based on conditions which no longer exist and is used now simply as a shield by the shyster and dead- beat. If suggestions are in order, permit me to say that I am fully convinced that, with the light you have on this subject and the study you must have given it during the past few weeks, you are certainly ina position to frame a measure which shall embody all the good features of all the bills now in your hands and eliminate from the draft any provision which would work a hard- ship to any honest man. I am willing to entrust this duty to this Committee because I believe you have the best in- terests of the State at heart and, such being the case, 1 am willing to stake my reputation on the statement that you realize how necessary it is that the busi- ness man should be given a fair show in dealing with the dishonest delinquent. ——_»>2#*>—____ Easier than Getting a Job. Employer—I'd_ engage you for the place at once, only I must have a mar- ried man. Applicant—Keep the place open for an hour, sir; I'll fix that. It’s easier to get married than to get a job. — oo A doctors’ cooking school has been established in Berlin, and branches are to be opened in other European cities, The one in Berlin is well attended, not only by German physicians, but by those of other countries, The idea is that the physician should be able to apply the principles of wholesome cooking in the preparation of delicacies for the sick room, and if he knows how to cook he can make the kitchen serve as a valuable adjunct to his equipment. ————_»s0>___ A marble bust of a former pastor of a church in St. Paul, Minn., was inad- vertently -sent by the sexton to a rum- mage sale the other day and was sold for IS cents. The popes yielded to the importunities of the ladies of the church when the mistake was discovered, and returned the bust to the church. ——_2s>0>___ A tree planting association in New Jersey, after an experience of several years, reports that ‘‘the results in im- proved appearance, general attractive- ness and comfort during the summer season are most favorable and out of all proportion to the comparatively small cost.’ —— ee ll ct The Co-operative Association of Basel, Switzerland, contains 19, O11 members, who bought nearly $2,000,000 worth of provisions, etc., last year, and got back 9 per cent. of their expendi- tures. This has led to the formation of an Opposition association of smali deal- ers, oe Sharp criticism is like onions. It brings tears to the eyes, is unpleasant to many, but is healthful, cheap and stimulating. + 7 ‘ a | e « ~ a a - » - -_ &Q 4 { 2 ¢ { ¢ 5 | 7 a m8 oe _ ae : I 4 > =. Lo + 7 4 a j e @ ~, Po a - & - - & 3 { VT > oe wa fe + { r s | OL eal fe 4 i y Hes 0 TANI pect itel & et oe > ‘ f r f elie lee y ‘ y ap ’ e ‘ .- , MICHIGAN T RADESMAN 3 SUGAR SACKS. How One Grocer Disposes of Them at a Profit. You are in business, not for your health or for the pleasure or comfort you derive from being in business, but sim- ply from the fact that you want to make as much as you can. Your profits are of good proportions, but are you making as much as you should? Are you laying up anything for the rainy day or for the time when business will be dull and customers will be poor pay? In other words, do you get all there is to be gotten out of your business? A source of profit to the retailer exists in saving every penny that can be saved. By this is not meant that the re- tailer should be miserly or stingy, but he should husband each and every re- source that will return cash to him. come in sacks? If it does, did you ever think of saving those sacks until you have 40 or 50 or a hundred and selling them to some farmer? Many retailers do this, They save every sugar sack, every coffee sack and every other package that comes to them. If they are not in a city where they can sell them back to the jobber they sell them to the farmers or tothe feed mzn or to some person who can make use of them. There is one grocer in Minneapolis who saves every sack that comes into his store and he sells these to feed men and the returns from this source alone are $8 to $Joa month—all clear profit. If you never have any demand for sacks, create a demand for them. The money saved will buy a good many things of adorn- ment for the house, or of personal wear for the family, or will increase the bank Make it part of your business policy to charge for every box that goes out of your store. If one of your customers wants to buy several cracker boxes and you are not in a position to return these to the factory where you will get more for them, do not give them away, but sell them. It will mean $5 or $6a month if you are doing any kind of a business and sooner or later you will have a good opportunity to get rid of them, no mat- ter if they do accumulate for a time. Do not let the clerks waste the paper bags you purchase. Some clerks are very careless in this matter. They will attempt to put a peck of potatoes ina No. 12 sack and will slit it so that it is of no account. Then they will try a No. 14 sack and a No. 16 sack with the same result and finally they will use a No. 20 sack. Request the clerks to be care- in wasting three or four sacks to put up a peck of potatoes on which your profits are only a few cents and which this senseless waste will still further reduce. Do not let the ball of twine get down on the floor and be trampled over and un- wound until it is wasted. Make the clerks be careful in their attention to these matters. A few cents wasted here and a few cents wasted in another di- rection, throughout the day and the week and the year, means a Serious cur- tailment of your profits. Take care of the little things in business and see if your profits do not increase, even if the volume of your business remains the same.—Commercial Bulletin. —__-—~> 2. ___ To be friendly with a bad man dam- ages a woman’s reputation; to count a bad woman among her acquaintances ruins it. How do you buy your sugar? Does it | account. ful in using sacks. There is no sense AUTOMOBILES | To most people the modern Automobile has no history. It is a thing of the past few months and sprang into existence fully developed. The veteran, how- ever, knows differently, and that the modern automobile was born ten years ago. At the world’s fair in 1893 only one automobile was shown. Within the past few weeks the automobile exhibition in New York brings forth fifty or more manu- facturers, with several hundred machines of all classes. We have been carefully watching the development of the automobile for the past two years or more, and we feel that some of the vehicles now offered have passed the experimental stage and may be purchased with entire confidence that they will do all the manufac- turers claim for them. We have decided to add a department of automobiles and motor cycles to our line, and we take pleasure in announcing that we have secured the territorial agency for Western Michigan for three different and distinct lines of horseless vehicles, as follows: STEAM CARRIAGES built by the ‘‘Mobile’’ Company, which have enjoyed wonderful suc- Wisc | lm cess for the past 18 \a tp months. We consider that the steam automo- bile is a practical suc- cess, and this is proven by the large number now in actual use. It is esti- mated that there are over = 2,500 steam carriages in - operation in the United States. This figure is probably low, and when = we consider that less than two years ago not over 100 steam carriages were in use, the success of the vehicle is all the more striking. The ‘‘Mobile’’ line now comprises vehicles for two, four, six and nine pas- sengers, also two styles delivery wagons. While there are several steam vehicles in the field, the number of those which have a record of accomplishment behind them is extremely few. Several ‘‘Mobiles’’ were sold in Grand Rapids last fall by Mr. L. C. Howard. He is now connected with us in our sales department for our full line of vehicles here mentioned. Mr. Howard recently sold a new ‘‘Mobile’’ delivery wagon to the G. J. Johnson Cigar Company of thiscity. This steam delivery wagon we beiieve is the first one to make its appearance in Mich- igan. Others are sure to follow, however. GASOLINE VEHICLES The ‘‘Oldsmobile’’ gasoline carriage at $600 is a very neat, handsome and practi- cal machine. It is built by the Olds Mo- tor Works, of Detroit and Lansing, who have had 15 years’ experience in build- ing gasoline engines. In offering the “*Olds- mobile’’ to the public confidence that it is a perfectly practical and durable machine, and the price will probably suit many people better than $750 or $800 for a steam carriage. MOTOR CYCLES Ten years ago the bicycle emerged from its state of crudity and assumed a practical form, and it has become the delight, comfort and necessity of millions. From another direction far removed the same process of evolution was occurring in gas engines. From an engine of great weight and large consumption of gas with small equivalent of power we now have engines of light weight, small con- sumption of gas with a larger equivalent of power, and thousands are in success- ful operation the world over, and do not require an engineer to operate them. The E. R. Thomas Motor Co. is the only one in America to-day actually constructing light motor bicycles on a large scale, having at the present time facil- ities for turning out about 6,000 per annum. The Thomas Auto-Bi here shownisan ordinary bicycle in every particular ex- cept that it is made much heavier and stronger. It weighs only 80 lIbs., fully equipped with motor, coaster brake‘ tanks and battery. As a matter of fact the Auto-Bi has many great and practical advantages over other styles of automobiles. Its retail price is only $200 and its cost of oper- ation is about 15c per 100 miles. Hav- ing only two wheels, a common wagon track or bicycle path can be always found. It is the only automobile that a busi- ness man can take to his office for the day without the expense and bother of sending it to the stable. Unlike the bicycle propelled by muscular effort, the Auto-Bi will be the most popular when the heat is greatest, for its speed will generate a cooling breeze without the heat of muscular effort. In addition to the two-wheeler, which is fitted with 114 H. P. engine, we also have the Thomas Tricycle, fitted with 3 H. P. engine, which is very strong- ly and substantially built and retails for $350. We believe 50 or more persons are interested in automobiles this year where one thought about them last year, and the intending purchaser who waits until May before placing his order is likely to have to wait until July or August for delivery. We now have samples of the Auto-Bi and the Auto-Tri (the three-wheeler) on exhibition. Our new igor ‘‘Mobile’’ steam carriage will be here within a week, and our ‘‘Oldsmobile’’ gasoline vehicle about April 10. We show these machines to all prospective buyers. We also invite correspondence from dealers in Western and Northern Michi- gan who are interested in horseless vehicles. WA WE ADAMS & HART 12 WEST BRIDGE STREET GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. we do so with every MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Around the State Mevements of Merchants. Newaygo—Chas. M. Gibson opened a furniture store. Ithaca—E. J. Smith has sold his meat market to G. W. Winget. Constantine—Wm. Benjamin has em- barked in the meat business. Flint—William G. Graham succeeds H. D. Parker in the grocery business. Belding—Ray E. Edwards has pur- chased the boot and shoe stock of Eddy & Co. Elmer—P. S. Armstrong has _pur- chased the general stock of H. Sheldon & Son. Detroit—The Epicure Baking Co. has been organized with a capital stock of $10, 000, Clarksville—N. K. Jepson is consid- ering the removal of his grocery stock to Saranac. ue Fairgrove—O. T. Johnson & Co. suc- ceed O. T. Johnson in the hardware business. Alma—The Union Telephone Co. has increased its capital stock from $100, 000 has to $150, 000, Charlotte—W. B. Harmon, the North Sheldon street grocer, has added a meat market. Erie—G. H. Drewior succeeds Noah Drewior & Son in the general merchan- dise business. Royal Oak—Smith & Hough succeed Louis Storz in general trade and the drug business. Flint—Miller & Boughton, dealers in groceries, have sold their stock to Wat- kins & Walsh. Cadillac—The meat market firm of Anderson & Swedlund is succeeded by John Swedlund. Columbia—Stone & Thompson, gen- eral dealers, have sold their stock to Russell & Russell. Detroit—Herman Barris has purchased the grocery stock and meat market of Robt. J. Morrison. Grayling—Hyman Joseph succeeds Miss Rachel Joseph in the clothing and dry goods business. Cassopolis—C. B. Thomas has re- moved to Sunfield, where he will engage in the drug business, Franklin—Herbert J. Broughton is succeeded by Adna Dunbar in the gro- cery and meat business. Detroit—Geo. H. Harris succeeds Harris & McWhirter in the baking pow- der and starch business. Locke—C. H. Chandler has engaged in general trade, having purchased the stock of Fred R. Dakin. Detroit—Wm. G. Scholes continues the boot and shoe business of R. G. Scholes & Son in his own name. Jackson—The Dearing-Scott Manufac- turing Co. has filed articles of incorpo- ation. The capital stock is $10,000. New Lothrop—Walton L. Colby has purchased the inerest of his partner in the hardware firm of Judd & Colby. Manton—B. Danziger has leased a store building at Frankfort and will re- move his general stock to that place. South Haven—Carpenter & Spencer continue the department store business formerly owned by James W. Kenney. Marion—Wm. Cole and John Kilmer have purchased the Arndt & Slough stock and also the meat market of E. May. Detroit—The N. Hardoin Co. has been merged into a corporation under the style of the Hardoin Brass Works. The corporation is capitalized at $20,- 000, of which $8,000 is paid in. Galesburg—Steuard & Allen isthe style of the firm which succeeds John L. Al- len in the agricultural implement busi- ness, Mt. Pleasant—Natzie Seitner, dealer in dry goods, shoes and men’s furnish- ing goods, has removed to Toledo, Ohio. Owosso—J. W. Upham has sold his branch shoe store in Chesaning to F. H. Foster, who formerly conducted same. Clare—D. Ward has purchased the hardware stock of J. R. Goodman and will continue the business at the old stand. Mayville—Weinberg Bros., who con- duct general stores here and at Clio, have discontinued business at_ this place. Lake Linden—F. A. Wieder, of Cal- umet, has purchased the harness and vehicle stock of his brother, H. M. Wieder. Belding—R. R. Edwards has pur- chased the Eddy & Co. shoe stock and will continue the business at the same location. Montague—Kison Bros. have engaged in the grocery business, They will-also handle carpets, wall paper and uphol- stered goods. Reed City—Fred C. Bollacker, boot and shoe dealer, has formed a copartner- ship under the style of F. C. Bollacker & Co. to continue the business. Cadillac—Frank Johnson, formerly clerk in the grocery store of Robert Johnson, will engage in the grocery business here about April 15. Otsego—The Conrad Bros. drug stock was sold at chattel mortgage sale to G. A. Sherwood, the consideration being $800. The stock invoiced $1,136. Portland—Geo. W. Allen has pur- chased the interest of M. A. Gamble in the clothing business of Allen & Gam- ble and will continue the business, Isadore—Jacob Rosinski & Son, deal- ers in general merchandise, have dis- solved partnership. The business wil] be continued by Jacob Rosinski, Sr. Hastings—E. Y. Hogle, dealer in dry goods, clothing, boots and shoes and groceries, has purchased a stock of goods at Crystal and will place his son, Ster- ling, in charge. Shelby—J. H. Chapman has purchased the interest of his partner, F. W. Van Wickle, in the drug firm of Van Wickle & Chapman, and will continue the business in his own name, Petoskey—W. S., Kenyon, formerly engaged in general trade at 210 West Bridge street, Grand Rapids, has leased a store building and will put in a stock of general merchandise here. Muskegon—Wm. D, Hardy, proprie- tor of the largest department store in Muskegon, was married Monday to Miss Minnie McIntosh. Mr, Hardy has been in business here for twenty years. The couple have gone to Chicago and East- ern cities on a wedding trip. Calumet—Louis Labby, Jr., has pur- chased the meat market of L. Hennes & Co., which they have conducted in connection with their general merchan- dise business for several years. Mr. Labby has acted as Manager of the mar- ket department for some time past. Cedar Springs—Ed. M. Smith, gro- cer and produce dealer, lost his beauti- ful residence by fire on March 21. The fire broke out early in the morning and the family barely escaped with their lives. House and contents were a com- plete loss, only partially covered by in- surance, Bangor—Silas DeLong has sold his general. stock to Geo. H. Nelson, for- merly engaged in general trade at Whitehall. Mr. DeLong has conducted a general store here for the past twenty- eight years and retires to enjoy a_well- earned competence accumulated during his long business career. Hudson—A. J. Colvin and D. C. Buck have purchased the Palace meat market from the Steger Brothers, who will continue the business at the same location. The Palace market has been conducted by the Stegers for the past fifty. years, an uncle of George, Adam and Charles having established the busi- ness here in 1850. Alma—The Union Telephone Co., which recently purchased the plant of the National Telephone Co. for $26, 000 —$20,000 in cash and $6,000 in stock— has increased its capital stock from $100,000 to $150,000. Only one-half of the increase will be offered for sale now and this was subscribed within two days after it was placed on the market. Monroe—Alex. Duval is suing the Germania Insurance Co. for $2, 500 in- surance on his warehouse at Toledo, which he claims was covered by a pol- icy in the defendant company. The de- fendant’s attorneys claim that owing to a wrong description of property the policy does not cover the property de- stroyed, part of which consisted of fish twine to the value of $2, 400. Lansing—Fred M. Alsdorf has sold his Michigan avenue drug stock to H. N. and James H. Robinson, who will continue the business at the same _loca- tion under the style of the Robinson Drug Co. H. N. Robinson was for sev- eral year as member of the firm of Robin- son & Watson, druggists at Ithaca. Mr. Alsdorf will continue to conduct his Store at the corner of Washington avenue and Kalamazoo street. Manufacturing Matters. Saginaw—The Saginaw Plate Glass Co. has let contracts for the equipment of the casting hall, furnaces, pot arches and gas producer plant, at a total cost of about $100, 000. Mt. Clemens—The Lonsby Lumber & Coal Co., Limited, is the style of the firm which has been organized to suc- ceed Lonsby & Son in the lumber and planing mill business. Detroit—The Angora Knitting Co. has been incorporated with a capitaliza- tion of $50,000, of which $12,500 is paid up. The business of the organization will be the manufacture of cotton and wool knit goods. Lansing—Morris W. Montgomery, son of Chief Justice Montgomery of the Supreme Court, has purchased the busi- ness of the Voorhees Manufacturing Co., manufacturer of overalls, and will con- tinue the business. Menominee—The directors of the Menominee & Marquette Paper Co, have accepted plans for a new sulphite mill to be built here this spring. It will cost about $90,000. Contracts for the three buildings will be let next Sat- urday. Grass Lake—It is claimed that the new factory of the Zenith Portland Cement Co. will be the finest plant of its kind in the country. The machinery alone under contract, and largely paid for, will aggregate nearly $100,000, to Say nothing about the buildings. Grass Lake marl-is of high grade and unlim- ited quantity. Chelsea—The Glazier Stove Co. has been merged into a stock company with a Capital stock of $300,000, all of which has been paid in. The names of the stockholders and the number of shares held by each are as follows: Frank P. Glazier, Chelsea, 21,300; Caspar E, DePuy, Stockbridge, 3,000; Mrs. Emily P. Glazier, 1,000; Mrs. Almira A. Hill, 600; C. LeRay Hill, 600; Egbert G. Hoag, 500; W. J. Knapp, 500; Fred Wedemeyer, 500, all of Chelsea: Will- iam W. Wedemeyer, Ann Arbor, 500; Safe C. Stimson, 500; William P, Schenk, 500; Henry I. Stimson, 500, all of Chelsea. ——_>2>___ The Grain Market. Wheat has remained steady during the week—it is hard to get it out of its old rut. Exports have been about three and one-half million bushels. Receipts in the- Northwest have been a trifle more than they were at the corresponding time last year, while in the winter wheat states the receipts were somewhat small- er. The visible made a decrease of 410,000 bushels, leaving the amount in sight about 54,000,000 bushels, or not much of a change from last year. It is unaccountable where the receipts in the Northwest come from, as the report was a very small crop. Somebody must have stretched the truth very much. It is true that the country elevators are being emptied, which, according to some writers, will make a shortage in the near future. As the roads are bad and spring work will have to be attended to, receipts from first hands will fall off very materially. It certainly will have an effect on the amount in sight, also the price, especially as the Argentine shipments are about half of what they were a year ago. Our exports of wheat and flour show about 2,000,000 bushels more than at the same time a year ago, and, with Argentine not being able to ship the same amount as heretofore, this country will be called upon to fill the deficiency. We certainly have not as much to spare as we had last year, but then, time will tell. Corn has been strong and fully 1c has been added to the price. Receipts have been somewhat below expectations. This soft weather also had a strengthen- ing effect on price, while some predict 50c corn in the near future. It hardly seems possible that it will reach that point. Oats, also, are strong, while the situ- ation favors lower prices. For the pres- ent they are held in strong hands. Rye, contrary to expectations, made an advance of fully 1c per bushel, Flour remains very steady and some- what stronger, as the demand is better, both locally and domestic. Mill feed is still a scarce article, mills not being able to supply the demand. Receipts of grain have been nominal, as follows: 43 cars of wheat, 5 cars of corn, 6 cars of oats, 1 car of rye, 6 cars of flour, 3 cars of hay, I car of straw, 9 cars of potatoes. Mills are paying 75c for wheat. C. G. A. Voigt. J. Michmershuizen has opened a gen- eral store at Hamilton. P. Steketee & Sons furnished the dry goods and the Ball-Barnhart-Putman Co. sold the gro- ceries, >» >__ Matt Cunningham has embarked in the grocery business at Boyne City, purchasing his stock of the Worden Grocer Co. oe ee B. Gelders has engaged in the grocery business at 281 Alpine avenue. The stock was purchased of the Worden Gro- cer Co, » . 0 { ' MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Grand Rapids Gossip The Produce Market. Apples—Apples are steady at previous prices. Trade for fancy stock is fairly active. Under grades require some urg- ing. Russets, Baldwins and Ben Davis command $3.50@4 per bbl. Bananas—Prices range from $1.25@ 1.75 per bunch, according to size. Beans—Trade in all quarters is re- ported unusually dull. Although prices on nearly all grades have been shaded, buyers have not been disposed to oper- ate beyond actual necessities. It is thought that the heavy supply of im- ported beans, which are offered at lower prices than domestic, has retarded the movement in home products. Beets--$1 per bbl. Butter—Creamery is in moderate de- mand at 21c. Dairy grades are weaker, ranging from 13@15c for choice roll down to 11@12c for packing _ stock. There is no accuumlation of stock. Cabbage—Home grown has advanced to $1.90@z2 per 3 bu. bbl. Carrots—$1@1I.25 per bbl. Celery—California white plume has declined to 65@75c per doz. bunches. Cranberries—Jerseys are steady at $2.75 per bu. box and $8 per bbl. Eggs—The market is a little stronger than a week ago and local dealers find no difficulty in obtaining 12%c_ for choice stock. Receipt are cleaned up as fast as they arrive, there being no ac- cumulation whatever. A meeting of the wholesale butter and egg dealers was held at Des Moines, Iowa, on March 21, which was attended by most of the car- lot men in the West. It developed there that most of the packers throughout the country were anxious to sell their stock at the prices now offered. They were not storing any, but were trying to get rid of all they could. From all reports, the hen supply in Iowa will be largely increased this year over last. Packers and dealers have been largely influ- enced by quotations sent out on cards from commission houses in Chicago and the high prices made on the Chicago Butter and Egg Board for storage stock. Green Onions-—I5c per doz. Honey—Fancy_ white is practically out of market. Choice white is in large supply at 14@15c. Amber goes at 13@ 14c and dark buckwheat is slow sale at 10@i2c. Lemons—Messina command $3.50 for all sizes. California fetch $3.25 for 300s and $3 for 360s. Lettuce—Hothouse stock is in good demand, commanding 13c per Ib. for leaf. Onions—The market is weaker, al- though the price still remains at $1.50 per bu. for home grown. Bermudas command $3.25 per crate. Oranges—In California oranges the improved tendency continues, except that poor stock doesn’t sell for anything like satisfactory prices. Reports from the coast are that the immediate danger from allowing oranges to remain on the trees is passed and that there will be less urging forward of poor fruit from now on. If this istrue profitable prices will rule again. On account of fruit now being shipped in refrigerator cars, the price has advanced to $2@2.25 for the larger sizes and to $2.60@2.75 for the smaller sizes. Parsley—4oc per doz. Parsnips—$1.25 per bbl. Pieplant—gc per Ib. Potatoes—The market is far from sat- isfactory. Michigan shippers are pay- ing 25c for choice stock, but are not overly anxious to obtain supplies. Mil- ler & Teasdale thus describe the situa- tion at St. Louis: There was an im- mense crop of potatoes last fall, a much — crop than was generally supposed, and larger than usual. Prices were so low that to sell last fall meant almost nothing to the grower, and many stored and held their potatoes, not from choice generally, but from necessity; and many, too, in the hope that at some time during the season prices would do bet- ter. Many of these stored potatoes are still on hand, and markets to-day over the country at large are as low on old winter potatoes as they have been any time during the season. They are quoted everywhere as dull and easy, supplies plentiful and dealers finding it hard to move what they have on hand. Then, too, the quality of potatoes every- where this year was poor; they cook black and strong; they are ill-shaped and look unsightly; this has interfered with the sale and given dealers much trouble. Really about the only fine cooking and well appearing potatoes came from Colorado, around Greeley, and on the bluffs east of St. Louis, above and east of the American Bot- toms; also in a few other favored local- ities. Really fine potatoes are scarce and are not easily obtained; such find ready sale at more than market quota- tions of to-day, which are based on such as are now being offered. There isa wide range of prices on account of qual- ity. There are still in farmers’ hands large stocks of potatoes yet to be sold. Seed potatoes have not met with as good a demand as usual; it would seem that not as many as usual were being planted this spring, and yet we are told from all Southern districts that the planting is as heavy as usual, the acreage fully as large and the crop earlier and very promising. Potatoes, too, were raised so generally everywhere in the country last year, there being no shortage any- where, that more of what was needed for consumption during the winter has been furnished by the local territory surrounding the larger markets, doing away with, to a great extent, the neces- sity of shipping in from the northern districts 10 supply their local needs; this was especially true of St. Louis and surrounding territory. Then, too, it appears that, on account of the open and mild winter, which made green gar- den truck so plentiful and _ cheap, this has supplied, to a great*extent, the demand which, with severe winters, is supplied by old stored produce and vegetables. The seasons for old and new produce and fruits will overlap, to a greater extent than usual, this year. This is very noticeable just at the pres- ent time everywhere, and much anxiety is shown on the part of the trade to move what old produce they have be- fore new ‘‘stuff’’ makes its appearance. At Mobile and New Orleans, we are told that early garden truck is now ready to ship in carlots, but on account of the abundance of old truck there is not the demand there ought to be. New potatoes will be ready for market by April 5 at Mobile and in Southern Louisiana. Poultry—Receipts are small and prices are strong. Local dealers pay as follows for dressed: Spring turkeys, 11@12c; old, 8@o9c; spring chickens, 10%@11%c; fowls, t1o@lic; spring ducks, 11%4@12c—old not wanted at any price; spring geese, 9@1oc—old not wanted. For live poultry local dealers pay as follows: Chickens, 8@gc; me- dium and small hens, 7@8c; large hens, 6%@7c; young turkeys, 9@Ioc; old tur- keys, 8@oc; young ducks, 9%@1o%c. Radishes—3oc per doz. bunches for hothouse stock. Seeds—Blue grass, $1.25@1.50; or- chard grass, $1.40@1.60; red top, 75c@ $1.50; timothy, $2.25; medium clover, $6@6.50; mammoth, $6.25@6.50; al- syke, $7@7.50. Sweet Potatoes—Kiln dried Jerseys command $3.25. Squash—zc per Ib. for Hubbard. Strawberries—35@4oc per quart. Turnips—$1 per bbl. Vegetable Oysters—z2oc per doz. —__»-20-2—___—_ The Vinkemulder Co. has leased the vacant store adjoining its present loca- tion at the corner of Ottawa and Ferry streets and will occupy it on and after April 1. The office of the company has been embellished by the addition of mahogany furniture, oil paintings and easy chairs, and cut flowers and colored servants are expected to be on tap from now on. J. Twomley & Co, have engaged in the grocery business at Traverse City. The Ball-Barnhart-Putman Co. furnished the stock. The Grocery Market. Sugars—The raw sugar market is firmer and prices have advanced 1-16c, making quotations for 96 deg. test cen- trifugals now 4 1-16c. Refiners show more disposition to operate, but offer- ings are comparatively-small,as import- ers prefer to await developments, look- ing for still higher prices. There has been a very good demand for refined, which was stimulated by reports that an advance of Io points would be estab- lished on last Monday. This, however, did not take place and, while many think the next change in price will be an advance, it is not looked for until there is a further advance in raws. Canned Goods—There is practically no change to report in the canned goods line. Trade is quiet and easy for most lines. A_ slightly more hopeful feeling is in evidence in some quarters as tothe tomato situation, but trade is still of very moderate proportions, being most- ly for small lots for immediate require- ments. Most dealers feel confident that tomatoes have touched bottom and it is hoped conditions will soon begin to show some _ material improvement. There is a good demand for corn at full prices; in fact, this article is doing better now than for some time past. Spot stocks are moderate. There is but little interest taken in futures, however. Peas are in quite active demand at un- changed prices. The lower grades are in particular request. Most of the packers have now named prices on fu- ture goods and the majority of the trade have contracted for their supply of this article. The Baltimore pea pack- ers are renovating their canneries and getting things into shape for the pack- ing of peas, which will follow pineap- ples. It has been many years since the string bean market has been so de- pressed as it has been since last fall and there seems to be no prospect of any immediate improvement. Prices are very low, but there is absolutely no de- mand for them at any price. Peaches are in fair demand at previous prices. The packing season of Igor: will be opened when the new crop of pineap- ples arrives. The first consignment is due soon after April 25. The indica- tions are that the prices of new pineap- ples will be very near what they were for the new pack of Igoo, That they will go into consumption rapidly goes without saying. There is a good de- mand for cove oysters and prices have advanced 2%c per dozen. The salmon market is quiet and the demand is very light. Prices remain unchanged. Dried Fruits—The dried fruit market is quiet, with nothing of particular in- terest in any line. Prunes continue to sell quite freely, although some dealers report slightly less demand. Sizes 50-60s, 60-70s and g0-100s are in good demand, but are rather scarce. Prices for all sizes are firmly held and the mar- ket on the coast is said to be firming up considerably. The California raisin situation is weak and unchanged. There is but little demand for two and three crown raisins and the trade is entirely of a hand-to-mouth character. There is nothing encouraging in the outlook, except that stocks on the spot are not very heavy. Quotations are merely nominal. In apricots the demand is moderate, with prices unchanged, but a shade firmer on fancy stocks. Peaches are selling a little more freely at low prices. Dates are in good demand and are slightly higher. Figs are steady and in fairly good request. Currants are quiet and unchanged. The demand is light. There is a little enquiry for evap- orated apples, but buyers are not will- ing to pay the prices asked by holders, so there is practically no business trans- acted, Rice—An improved demand is noted in the rice market, buyers exhibiting more of a disposition to operate, the beginning of the spring demand having put in an appearance. The statistical position is very strong and prices are fully maintained. Foreign grades are selling fairly well. Newcrop Japans are offered sparingly, owing to supplies be- ing limited, and prices are held rather higher. Teas—The tea market is practically unchanged. The demand is principally for small lots for immediate wants and at unchanged prices. Despite the large supplies on the spot,there is no decided pressure to sell, dealers confidently ex- pecting better prices soon. Molasses and Syrups—The molasses market is firm, with fair sales and at full prices. An increased demand is expected shortly and, with the statistical position decidedly strong, it is believed that higher prices will prevail soon. It is reported that there will be a shortage of 30,000 to 50,000 barrels of common grades of molasses. The yield has been poor and estimates of the crop are 250, - ooo barrels, against 500,000 barrels last season. There is quite a good demand for corn syrup, with the market very strong and with the probability of an advance in the near future. Fish—The demand for salt fish is rather light for this season of the year, the trade buying chiefly for immediate requirements. Nuts—The demand for nuts is fair for this season of the year. Stocks of most grades are light and prices are firmly held. Almonds are in good demand, with the market firm, and the demand for ‘walnuts of all kinds improving. Peanuts are in greater demand than any- thing else in this line and Jull prices are obtained. Rolled Oats—The rolled oats market is very strong and prices show an ad- vance of ten cents per barrel and five cents per case, with demand heavy at the advance. Pickles—Pickles are unchanged in price and are meeting with a good de- mand. Hides. Pelts, Furs, Tallow and Wool. The situation of the hide market does not change materially. The stocks now offering are the poorest of the year and prices are the lowest—even lower than last week—with a demand fully up to all supplies offering. There is no ac- cumulation. Pelts are in an unsatisfactory posi- tion. Pullers hesitate to operate only as goods are forced upon them at ex- tremely low prices. Furs are gradually dropping out, prices being low. The catch is small and poor in quality. Tallow is slow of sale and weak at low values. Only a prime article seems to be desired. There is no accumula- tion. Wools are selling more freely at the concession in price. The anxiety to sell has been stopped and bottom prices have apparently been struck. Another concession of %c in value has been re- fused. Holders have faith that the fu- ture has something better in store for them and hang on. The opening of the coming clip will be far below last year’s prices. Wm. T. Hess. a For Gillies’ N. Y. tea, all kinds, grades and prices. Visner, both phones, Getting the People The Use of Signs and Emblems. The department of Getting the Peo- ple is most usually confined to methods of appealing directly to public notice. rather than to the planning and main- taining the more permanent devices for gaining attention more commonly classed as fixtures and apparatus. All the work of the merchant is di- rected to gain and hold the patronage of the people. To this end he strives to buy the best goods at the lowest cost, to secure the most reliable and courteous assistance,to make his place of business clean, cheerful and attractive, to make himself genial and _ sociable—all his effort is to gain and hold the people. Bu: for me to include all the manage- ment of business under the topic on that account would be to give it a breadth of application which it does not contem- plate as defining this department. But it may be appropriate for me to say a word about such signs and fixtures as are intended to attract and direct the people. The character of a sign as to its de- sign and mechanical execution is not always an indication as to the character of the business represented. It too fre- quently happens that the merchant, in his desire to patronize home industries, depends on a sign artist (?) whose lim- itations of attainment and experience produce results which exert an uncon- ciously depressing effect on the business and its management fora long time to come. When it comes to the matter of signs and permanent fixtures the interests are too lasting to be entrusted to incompetent hands however strong the local spirit. Unless the merchant knows himself to be competent to determine whether the local ability is sufficient for his needs he should give himself the benefit of the doubt and secure the aid that will give him that most suitable for the purpose. The most suitable sign for the average country, or for that matter town, store is not necessarily costly or elaborate. The mistake is more often made of striving after too much elaboration and producing a result incongruous to its surroundings. The most appropriate sign is generally the plainest one, the least pretentious in design and decora- tion. But of all things a sign must be cor- rect in design to properly represent any business. In the plainest, neatest and most unpretentious work from the hands of the unskilled sign writer are apt to appear crudities and incongruities so slight as often to escape the average eye and yet of a character to shock every artistic sense. I say it escapes the av- erage eye, but it exerts an unconscious influence which lowers the tone or be- comes repellent. Such crudities are met on every hand, not only in the country but in towns of every size. The edu- cated sense is unable to point out the defect, but for all that is affected by it. For this reason I recommend that, however simple and plain a sign may be made, the work should be entrusted to the most unquestionably competent hands available. The best sign is plain and simple in design. A plain, correctly drawn Gothic letter, black on white ground, correctly proportioned to the space it is to fill and the distance from which it is to be seen, is always good. When the surroundings will warrant more rich- ness let it be in the materials employed, wu IFT ST STT PTT STY FINAN o~ a bright and new. spective lines. can always get his money back. been d healthy and steady one and principles are appreciated. fair dealing. are confident of the result. ‘trading at our store. At the opening of this Spring season we wish to cx- tend an invitation to our friends, customers and the public in gencral tu call on us and see the finest dis- play of spring clothing, furnishings, hats and ticck- ties we have ever had the pleasyre of showing. store is full of spring novelties and everythin is We handle only standard made goods and these are the newest and best in their re- s. We give our customers the honest yy value of their money in reliable goods and if, for any reasou, a Customer 1s dissatisfied with his purchase he Our growth has we feel that our efforts to conduct our business on Strictly business \ We attribute our success —and rightly too—to our established reputation for Our “. If you are already a patron of ours we feel confident a. of retaining you, but if you are not one of our cus- tomers let us extend to you an earnest invitation to come in and get acquainted with us—see our goods—: learn our principles and way of doing business. We ; We feel sure that you will become convinced that it will pay you todo your Very truly yours, and lace inserting trimmed, made of good muslin. Carson City Mercantile Co. - —=_ = => o 23322335 3525533522235252325 NUVINSINETVESTSTSIDESTNTND ITNT eNey ry Fivennrrnereens rere sneer ery SATURDAY SALE OF SAMPLES ALL DAY SATURDAY. : Ladies’ Ribbed Vests for spring and summer w will sell ladies’ muslin nightrobes, 56 inches long,82 inches wide,with yoke, tucked For today only 44c. J.R. JONES’ SONS & CO. SUASSAASAAAAAAAUAALA ‘44 6845885444444 Os UU e ear at wholesale prices. = a 3323 . . We HAUTE ne 090000000000 010 ; $ 7 7 $ 7 $ ; ; ® ® ; ° o¢ THOSE WHO} KNOW US can tell you of the liberal manner in which we serve our customers; the efforts made to make our store a pleasant place for you to trade at; that ooly FRESH AND FIRST- CLASS GROCERIES are sold to our patrons. To tltose who don’t know us, come in and get acquainted. Nearly every week we have a special deal in some line of Groceries, .and a carefal perusal of our adv. will save you something every week. Last week we were selling a Two Pound Package of Rolled Oats for 5 cents and we still have a few packages left at that price, but this week we're selling Corn and offer the following; A good Canned Corn for 7c a Can; 3 Cans for 20c This is not old stuff that has been carried over, but this year’s goods)s EVERY CAN GUARANTEED. If not right we make it right, Besides this we bave a com- plete assortment of Canned Goods at Lowest Prices Note the Following: Canned Sbrimp.........25c Canned Soups .. ...... 10c Canned Lobsters........ 30c Cape Shore Cod........ 10¢ Broiled Mackerel .. ...25c Vienna Sausage....... 10c Corned Beef......... ..25¢ Potted Ham.......... 10c Ham, Beef or Veal Loaf 2c Cove Oysters....... <. or Canned Pompkin....... 10c Good Salmen .......... 10c Canned Tomatoes .. ... 10c eMie es oc Cauned Hominy....... 10c (The above are only a few. We would be pleased to show you our line. Fresh Oranges, Fresh Lettuce, Parsnips, Vegetable Ovsters, Squash, Bananas, etc. Give us a trial order. DERBY & ROBINSON. "Phone 23. We'll plesse yon. We deliver our goods on time to any part of the City. 090000 00000/060000000 96 Seecoooee 99000000 0000000000000000000000000000000000006 Cupical Spring Weather=> This month has created an enormous demand for all kinds of rubber footwear, and we have been supplying it in a most satisfactory way with the best quality goods at standard pric- es. We can fit any size foot or shoe. Get the baby a pair of those little Rubber Boots. “Little Red Front Shoe Store." Woolley ..& Bronson. SPRING DRESS -CGOODS.. dust Received VENETIANS, BROADUCLOTHS, MOHAIRS, , PRUNELLAS, POP S LINS, GRANITES, VIGEROUX. A full line of now and Stylish trim- mings to match. Silk Flannel and Persian Silk Waist Patterns, --NO TWO ALIKE... We Sponge Dress Goods by Steam. J. S. Goodyear & Prone 266 D070. = If the letters be gold let them be kept of the simplest form to give them a permanently attractive character. + + * I can imagine the discouragement of the printer as_ he tried to decide what he could do with the quantity of matter handed him by the writer of the adver- tisement of the Carson City Mercantile Co. He did the best he could in panel- ing it off in a solid paragraph. His space is well proportioned and the re- sult is as good, perhaps, as could be obtained from the superabundance of material. A few readers will doubt- lessly labor through the lumbering para- graph. There is material for two or three advertisements of the size, but much of the matter is too commonplace for advertising value. Formal, stilted, wordy address is not attractive to cus- tom. J. R. Jones’ Sons & Co. write an effective announcement of a single day sale, but the printer does his work on too large a scale for the space. There is a dazzling effect in the full size orig- inal, which is not retained in our re- duction, that brings a blur which almost prevents its reading. The border is too dizzy for the space and the type is all too large. This is a striking illustration of the danger of so proportioning type space and border as to produce an effect on the eye which will not permit it to be looked at steadily. It isa relief to turn from this to a space which can be read without giddi- ness. The writer for Derby & Robin- son makes the mistake of saying too much, but much that he says is to the point and makes a good advertisement in spite of the rest. The price feature is good, the reference to rolled oats well brought in. The printer has done his part with exceptionally good judgment. The advertisement is a good one, but a little too much of it. Woolley & Bronson have written an exceptionally good and seasonable_ rub- ber advertisement and the general plan of the printer is not bad. The Bradley ornament in the first display is rather distracting and he ‘‘falls down’’ on the signature. Most any other arrangement would be an improvement on this, J. S. Goodyear & Son are even less fortunate in their space. The upper half of the display is all too near the Same size and the lower goes to the other extreme. The writing is simple and to the point, but to have justice needs to be composed anew. —__2se >__ A queer instance of improper influ- ence said to have been exerted upon jurymen comes from New Haven. The jury in a certain civil case went to Fair- haven to visit the house of the defend- ants. There, according to the counsel for the plaintiff, one of the parties to the suit gave one of the jurors a piece of pie. This piece of pie is the ground upon which a motion to set aside the verdict is founded. —_—_—_>2.__ The Post Office Department is exper- imenting with an electrical device for keeping tabs on carriers in the matter of letter collections. Citizens complain that the carriers have not collected the mail regularly from boxes on their routes. By the new device every box is to be connected by wire with the central office, and every time one is opened a signal will be sent to headquarters. —_2»eoa_____ If one’s thoughts were written on one’s face, many would need masks. —__>-2>___ A fool bolts his pleasure and then complains of moral indigestion, \.. - W 4 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN ee ee en eee ener Me sae CLEANING UP TIME. Some Homely Details Which Are Easily Overlooked. Winter business is practically over. Spring business has not yet fairly com- menced. Customers are not numerous. You have a good deal of time on your hands. You have had your sales and now you are at the fag end of things. Perhaps you are beginning to find it hard to keep your clerks busy. Did it ever occur to you that now is the time for you to pay a little extra attention to some of the humble details of store- keeping that your time is too valuable to permit you to consider fully at other times of the year? For example, what kind of a storekeeper, using the word in its literal sense, are you? Here is your establishment open three hundred days of the year, occupied by a number of men and women who spend all their active hours in it,subject to all the wear and tear consequent upon human occu- pancy. Goods are coming inand going out of it, people are continually arriv- ing and departing. Did it ever occur to you that your store is a kind of com- bination of a dwelling house, hotel, freight depot and passenger station? Did it ever occur to you that possibly it is not as well cared for as even a poor hotel, dwelling house or freight depot? This is not a question of fixtures, of electric lights, hard-wood flooring, and all the latest modern up-to-date features of a metropolitan establishment. It is a question of soap and water, scrubbing brushes, fresh paint, brooms and house- keeping. How long is it since your store has had a good thorough house cleaning? A woman would beashamed of herself if she did not give -her dwell- ing a thorough overhauling at least once a year, and you know how much dirt can be extracted from a clean house by a good house cleaning. Do you realize that a store is infinitely dirtier than a house ever is? Do you realize that be- cause of greater wear and tear and greater openness to the dust of the street it can easily become more unhealthy than any fairly decent house ever is? Do you realize that it does not pay you to be sick or to have your clerks un- healthy? Let us look your establishment over superficially. Here is your back yard: Full of broken boxes, bits of paper flying about, musty straw and half dried excelsior. When you go into it on a dark night you have to take a_lantern with you to keep from breaking your neck on the old boxes lying about. Things are in such a careful, well or- dered state that some careless boy has only to drop a lighted cigarette stub over your fence to start a fire that will sweep your business into the middle of next year. Of course, when the inspector of the fire insurance company calls and as a result you have to pay a higher rate for future insurance and have end- less difficulty in collecting the amount of your policy, you will be justified in telling your friends that monopolies and trusts are running the country. Take a look at the back of your store. Un- doubtedly you keep that broken pane of glass in your cellar window for the ac- commodation of stray cats who want to fight in your cellar. Or is it for the ac- commodation of some honest man who has only to slip his hand through, raise the catch, or break the ancient lock, and walk off with enough to make him a leader of fashion for the rest of his life? How long is it since your cellar was cleaned up thoroughly? Your porter —good, diligent, servant—undoubtedly leaves these rusty nails about so that when the rats step on them they will get lockjaw. And these broken boxes and tumbled up piles of goods are of course very handy when something has to be done up in a hurry. You can al- ways tell where everything is, having it around handy in such a comfortable, un- embarrassed fashion, can’t you? Then those old csaes over in the corner. Yes, you bought those goods the year that Tilden was elected and you are saving them until they come in style again. You have an affection forthem. You hate to part with them. They cost money. And so you won't give them away, and you can't sell them, and you are like the monkey with the hot chest- nut. You know that you ought to let go and you can’t bear to. And so you keep on paying storage out of your own pocket. Let’s go upstairs. How long is it since this floor was thoroughly washed—in the corners and under the shelving, mind you? How long since it was oiled? Did it ever occur to you that a well matched, smooth floor sells goods better than a floor full of dirt and slivers, that is principally valuable for performing surgical operations on your customers’ shoes? Look under your counters. Because boxes are out of sight their condition is improved. ‘*Not well arranged because the goods are rarely called for.’’ Still they are well adapted for rats’ nests, and if you are too poor to do much for local chari- ties it is a pleasure to know that you have a foundling asylum for young rats on the premises. Look at the shelving. Good shelving. Rather brown and grimy, to be sure, but then what a beau- tiful collection of thumb marks! How clear and distinct and legible they are! Paint costs money,and everybody knows that an ecru color is more esthetic than white. Look at the boxes on the shelves. Yes, the ends are torn off and some of them look as if they had been there for years; but then, that’s a guarantee that they are old friends, tried and true. Their ragged edges give a quality of Bohemian picturesqueness and individ- uality that is sadly needed in a commer- cial age like ours. And, by the way, those cobwebs in the dark corners of the ceiling are of course kept there as beau- tiful emblems of your interest in your customers. The smoke stains on the ceiling, too, help to inipress your cus- tomers with the fact that you always keep the light of your intelligence burn- ing and that you are a shining beacon of progress in your chosen field. Yes, the hinges of the show cases are broken and some of them squeak dolefully whenever goods are removed. Naturally, that is because they are mournful at seeing goods go at ‘‘such tremendous reductions.’’ It isn’t because a good oiling is needed. No, it’s because every- thing in your establishment is so har- moniously adjusted to your business methods. How beautifully your goods are ar- ranged on the shelves! Little boxes and big, all shapes and sizes and all colors of the rainbow mixed together like the members of the happy family in the menagerie. The veteran of ten years’ service and the new box that came in yesterday side by side. Of course, wben people see hoary age renewing its youth in youthful society they buy from that particular box. And then your cases and the metal work of your signs outside. That film of dush helps people to realize that glass is transparent and that dimness on your signs is a beautiful scientific demon- stration of the action of the atmosphere on metals. Some people might say that it was a beautiful demonstration of shiftlessness, but, as your advertise- ments say, ‘‘We scorn the aspersions of embittered rivals.’’ We have just taken a superficial glance at your store. We have just looked it over casually like an occa- sional woman purchaser of orderly habits, or the representative of a fire insurance company. And—we haven’t bought any- thing. —___> 0»—___ The people of Sweden are dissatisfied with their national anthem, which is antiquated and does not appeal to the emotions of modern Scandinavians. Consequently an organization formed for the purpose has issued invitations to a select number of song writers to compose new anthems, to be sung at concerts, which will be held in all the principal- towns on a fixed day. The song which shall be received with the greatest approbation at these concerts is to be adopted as the new national an- them. —_—__»2+___ Daniel was the only man we ever heard of who wasn’t spoiled by being lionized. —___@6<——__ Femininity never grows tired of try- ing to divine intentions from attentions. He: Wanted Her Pulled Through. The glib falsifier of a northern Mis- souri paper pretends to have heard of the following call for professional serv- ices sent by a local resident to a doctor in a neighboring town: ‘‘Dear Doctor—My wife’s mother is at death’s door. Please come at once and see if you can’t pull her through.’’ +> A. D. Williams, charged with obtain- ing money under false pretenses from clothing manufacturers, in _ selling spool silk short of proper weight, was found guilty at Birmingham, Alabama, and fined $300, which was later reduced to $125. The prisoner contended that it was customary among the trade to sell spool silk short weight as he had done. He produced two spools purchased at a large store which when measured con- tained only 500 yards, instead of the proper 1,300 yards, but a case was made out against him nevertheless. we Wo a ee. a . a ; Wall Paper, | ° § Paints, § f : ( ‘ Oils. Our stock consists of the best goods pro- duced, and is sold at money saving prices. BY EXPERTS. We frame pictures to order and carry a large line of unframed pictures. ( C. L. Harvey & Co., j 59 Monroe Street. Exclusively Retail. PAPER HANGING AND PAINTING f LBD Pw ii TY Toy Va aora CO HOUSEHOLD COUNTER MARKET CANDY. & POSTAL SCALES ARE YOU LOOKING for a safe and practical system of book-keeping that will not require any copying of bills or trouble with pass books? If so, you will be interested in The Groceryman’s Envelope Account System Write us forcireular. Our duplicating salesbooks without carbon paper are very popular. F. E. BARR & CO., Battle Creek, Mich. EAVE TROUGHING State Agents Established 1868. Tarred Felt, Asphalt Paints, Roofing Pitch, Coal Tar, 2 and 3 ply and Torpedo Gravel Ready Roofing, Galvanized Iron Cornice, Conductor Pipe, Sky Lights, Sheet Metal Workers and Con- tracting Roofers. Ruberoid Roofing, Building, Sheathing and Insulating Papers and Paints. H. M. REYNOLDS & SON, Grand Rapids, Mich. Your stock is ‘aco Saver. CTT Tr Peer FE territory. Patented August 15, 1899 not complete without you have the Star Cream Separators Best advertisement you can use. one sold makes you a friend. Great labor Complete separation of cream from milk. Write to-day for prices and Each Lawrence Manufacturing Co. TOLEDO, OHIO Pure Lard Our ‘‘Home Made’’ Brand of Lard is not packer’s lard, but kettle rendered, under a patented process of slow cooling and guaranteed absolutely pure. a tub in your next order. Include WoRDEN GROCER COMPANY Sole Agents Grand Rapids, Michigan ; ay manne cena fonerhant-nrheine nna “ MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Devoted to the Best Interests of Business Men Published at the New Blodgett Building, Grand Rapids, by the TRADESMAN COMPANY One Dollar a Year, Payable in Advance. Advertising Rates on Application. Communicatiéns invited from practical business men. ee must give their full names and addresses, not necessarily for pub- lication, but as a guarantee of good faith. Subscribers may have the se address of their papers changed as often as desired. No paper discontinued, except at the option of the = until all arrearages are paid. Sample cqpies sent free to any address. Entered at the Grand Rapids Post Office as Second Class mall matter. When writing to any vf our Advertisers, Please say that yot saw the advertise- ment in the Michigan Tradesman. E. A. STOWE, EpITor. WEDNESDAY, - - MARCH 27, 1901. STATE OF MICHIGAN = County of Kent ; John DeBoer, being duly sworn, de- poses and says as follows: am pressman in the office of the Tradesman Company and have charge of the presses and folding machine in that establishment. I printed and folded 7,000 copies of the issue of March 13, I901, and saw the edition mailed in the usual manner. And further deponent saith not. John DeBoer. Sworn and subscribed before me, a notary public in and for said county, this sixteenth day of March, Igo. Henry B. Fairchild, Notary Public in and for Kent County, Mich. WHERE THE SECRET LIES. For a number of years the Old World has been. afflicted with a new disease. Experts, after due deliberation, have diagnosed the disorder and pronounced it Americanophobia—fear of America. It attacks all classes and, like all dis- eases, has no respect for political lines. Manufacture has so far developed the severest cases, with trade close upon its heels. All attempts to discover a germ have so far failed and theory has finally concluded that the complaint is due toa complication of conditions not yet thor- oughly understood in this branch of dis- ease. Fora time those who studied the symptoms believed that the old prin- ciple, similia similibus—like with like—had only to be vigorously followed to overcome the distemper, but that was soon seen to be a fallacy—the chief trouble here being that there was.no “‘like’’ in the afflicted country. Worse than all, the contagion spread with a rapidity that was positively alarming. Reports from every quarter of the globe came swarming into the home country. The tenor of all was the same: ‘‘The goods are better and the prices are lower. We can not compete with them. Their agents are everywhere, with an ag- gressiveness and persistence that noth- ing can overcome. What shall be done about it?’’ The question stands unanswered. The one fact tacitly admitted is that there is time enough to give the matter due de- liberation—for, undoubtedly, it has come to stay! Every phase of the development is carefully considered and commented upon. France finds her deftness and delicacy of touch equalled if not sur- passed and attributes to carelessness the success of the American. Germany knows where the trouble lies and appeals to legislation for a corrective, while England, hurt and scared, is honest and honestly affirms that American prosper- ity is due to the push and the alertness} of the American character. There is nothing like it or equal to it in England or on the continent. Tied to old meth- ods and older ideas, they simply do not know how. They can not ‘‘catch on.’’ There limits mean something and bar- riers are pronounced unsurmountable ; but the American drummer never sees any limit and a trade barrier he looks upon as a ‘‘stump,’’ which from princi- ple he always ‘‘takes.’’ Daily life is full of illustrations and here is one of many instance: An Amer- ican traveling man started out after a certain country order. Arriving at the village on the day of a festival, he found to his chagrin that the store of his cus- tomer was closed and learned that the man had gone to a celebration a mile out of town. Starting at once for the spot he arrived in time to see the storekeeper climb into a balloon procured for spe- cial ascensions. Not to be thwarted by a thing like that, the drummer stepped forward, paid his fare and climbed into the car. The balloon was hardly above the treetops when the commercial trav- eler turned to the astonished tradesman and asked persuasively and triumphant- ly: ‘‘Well, sir, what can I do for you in ginghams?’’ ‘*The deponent saith not’’ whether the drummer was rewarded hy an order, but the circumstance, found in an English paper, discloses the fact that the Anglo- Saxon in England has found out where the secret lies in the prosperous trade conditions of the United States. He be- lieves the push of the commercial trav- eler is only a part of the stupendous whole of the American system. The home office is full charged with com- mercial force and the man on the road, a power in himself so impelied, stops at nothing this side of success. Making his wit available, he sees that one man does easily the work of two and finally displaces the man for better purposes with a machine. He cuts off all waste; he fills up all the empty corners of time; thought is turned to the minutest detail of the business and then, with a watch- fulness that has no end and knows no rest, the entire system, a harmonious whole, thrilling with the spirit of enter- prise, carries out the general design with a determination that nothing can resist. The Old World is just begin- ning to understand this and England is the first to acknowledge it. It remains to be seen what is to come of it. As the matter now stands, it looks a little as if the English manufacturer would be will- ing to pay the balloon charges, if he can only find the English drummer who" is willing to go up. The Detroit Trade claims a circula- tion of 4,250. Assuming this claim to be true—which is a dangerous thing to. do, considering the unreliable character of the publisher—the figure includes 1,553 names which were obtained by the thrifty solicitor of the so-called Mer- cantile Association of Michigan by the employment of questionable methods. A large number of these papers are never opened by those to whom they are sent, so that the actual circulation of the paper is only about 2,700 copies. Compare this with the bona fide circula- tion of the Michigan Tradesman—7,000 copies—certified to by affidavit each and every week. Is it any wonder that one paper is paying advertisers, while the other proves to be a grievous disap- pointment? nae Ee Success never honors any overdrafts. We draw out only as we put in. THE NIGGER IN THE WOODPILE. It is not often that the Tradesman deems it either wise or expedient to ex- plain its attitude on any subject, be- lieving that its course is generally so well defined and so thoroughly under- stood by its readers that explanation is unnecessary. For reasons which will appear later, it has preserved a reticence in relation to recent efforts to secure commercial legislation in this State un- til a review of the situation would seem to be necessary. It would take too long to make a de- tailed statement of the activities of the Tradesman in the direction of reform in the State laws governing trade relations during the eighteen years of its exist- ence. It humbly trusts that it has borne some part in that work as well as in other lines of development which make so great a contrast between the mercan- tile community and methods of business of to-day and those of nearly a score of years ago. It may be that length of years and long experience have had the effect of making the Tradesman somewhat con- servative, so that it hesitates to endorse all the methods which have been em- ployed by self-constituted leaders in commercial reform in this State for two or three years past. It has never be- lieved in the need of appeal -for funds to secure legislation. It believes that the raising of large sums of money isa reflection upon our State Legislature which it does not deserve. Even if no worse use is made of such funds than the maintenance Of a paid lobby, this use is pernicious and unnecessary. Such means is not essential to secure the proper work of our legislators. The prompting that may be required to secure a recognition of the wants of the mercantile class in legislative action does not require the accumulation and disbursement of money. Thus while the Tradesman has a record extending fifteen years prior to the establishment of any other trade journal now in existence in Michigan, it could not consistently join the cru- sade which was conducted two years ago, and again this year, because it could not stultify its past record by allying itself with any one whose methods were tainted with talk of boodle. Up toa short time ago the merchants in certain portions of Michigan have been called upon by a man named F. B. Downs, whose shifty eyes and contra- dictory statements enabled those who are fairly good judges of human nature to correctly classify him at the first inter- view. This man presented credentials showing that he was in the employ of the so-called Mercantile Association of Michigan, and his duty was to induce the merchants on whom he called to contribute $3 apiece for the alleged pur- pose of joining an association pledged to secure the enactment of seven pro- posed laws, some of which were so ridiculous as to bring a_ smile to the faces of those who had had any experi- ence in obtaining legislation of a remedial character. This man claimed to be in the employ of the Mercantile Association ona salary basis, but sub- sequent events proved this statement to be untrue, as was also the case with other statements made by him during his interviews with his victims. During a hearing given the proposed amend- ments to the garnishment law before the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives at Lansing last Wed- nesday evening, the president of the loca] branch of the organization ‘‘let the cat out of the bag’’ by the following disclosure, as reported by the Grand Rapids Evening Press: President Chaffee of the Grand Rap- ids Association said there are about nineteen hundred members of the asso- ciation in the State, of whom 125 are in Grand Rapids. The initiation fee was $3, of which $1.50 went to the organizer, a Mr. Downs, $1 to the Trade, which is the official organ of the association, its editor being the secretary of the asso- ciation, Mr. Cozzens. The other 50 cents went into the treasury of the State association. The statement was, in other words, that out of $3 collected from each mer- chant, who supposed he was _ contribut- ing that amount to secure better laws, only 50 cents was placed in a fund tobe so applied—16%4 per cent. As Mr. Cozzens, the editor of Trade and secretary of the organization re- ferred to, was within a few feet of Mr. Chaffee during the time this disclosure was made and offered no explanation or amendment thereto, it is not unreason- able to conclude that the allegations made by Mr. Chaffee were true. It may bestated, in this connection, that on Aug. 22, 1900, Mr. Cozzens as- serted that the division was equal—that $1 went to Downs, $1 to Cozzens for a year’s subscription to Trade and $1 to Secretary Cozzens for the use of the as- sociation. If the latter statement is true, and $1,943 was raised from the 1,943 members secured by , the man Downs, how is it*that the treasurer of the organ- ization has only about $300 on hand, as was stated by Cozzens at the hearing of March 20? What has become of the money? How much of it has been ex- pended for the benefit of the organiza- tion and how much has been absorbed by Cozzens under the guise of office rent, postage, telegraph and telephone bills, office help, traveling expenses, printing and ‘‘incidentals?’” The scheme to raise money in this way was a success except for its astute projector. In his lack of experience he apparently acted on the assumption that all that was needed to make his journal a success was increase of circulation. There is no question but that this was needed badly enough, but longer ex- perience will demonstrate that other ele- ments are essential. As the publication began to make its unexpected appear- ance it was often scarcely noticed among the mass of free circulars and other literature constantly pressing for attention. Then, during this time, in- stead of devoting every energy to the creation of a paper which should gain its way by merit, its columns have been largely taken up by silly and waspish criticisms of the publishers of other trade journals, by the doings of the so-called national association and the jangles be- tween the promoters of that organization —matters of no earthly interest to its readers. The Tradesman has been criticised by some that it has not sooner called atten- tion to the working of this scheme and some others may have wondered that it failed to lend a more hearty support to the efforts of the Detroit lobbyist in se- curing the enactment of certain bills. Its repugnance to the system of lobby- ing, as already stated, sufficiently ex- plains its hesitation in the latter regard. As to the first, it is not long since the full working of the scheme became known and the Tradesman has hesitated to offer a criticism affecting a competi- tor so long as_ such a course could be consistently avoided. By his conduct every man in the world fixes his own value, MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 9 LOSING SOUTH AMERICAN TRADE. Recent statistics issued by the Bureau of Foreign Commerce under the direc- tion of the State Department at Wash- ington reveal the startling fact that Great Britain, Germany and France are rapidly seizing on the trade of the countries next door to us, while we are prowling around the Asiatic continent and archipelagoes seeking for business. Exports from this country to all South America, which were valued, according to the compilations of the Bureau of Foreign Commerce, at $34,700,000 in 1890, amounted to only $37,400,000 in 1899 and only $38,000,000 during the last calendar year. Great Britain ex- ported to Chili alone during 1900 over $40,000,000 worth of merchandise. While an increase in trade is revealed between this country. and certain South American republics, including Argen- tina, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela, there is a distinct decrease in trade with other republics, while there are numer- ous instances of a wholesale diversion of trade during the last few years from this country toward Germany, Great Britain or France. This is especially evident in the Ar- gentine Republic. In 1899 the imports from this country increased $4,000, 000, and the United States ranked second among nations exporting to that repub- lic, while three years before it ranked fourth. During 1900 a change took place, and there was a large decrease in imports from the United States, owing to the lack of direct steamship facilities, while Germany and Italy outstripped this country in capturing markets. The lat- est available statistics of Argentine trade show that while the United States imported $15, 466,800 worth of material, against $7,667,500 exports, the United Kingdom imports aggregated nearly three times as much, or $43,671,000, and the exports were correspondingly large, while German imports were over $12,000,000 and exports to that country amounted to $29, 433,000. While the United States buys more of Brazil’s staples, such as coffee and rub- ber, than all Europe combined, this country is, nevertheless, sixth in the rank of importers into Brazil. Great Britain found markets for goods to the value of $26,000,000 in 1899, against only $11,000,000 from the United States, while France unloaded $20,000,000 worth of merchandise and Germany $11, 363, 000. Much the same state of facts is seen in the commercial statistics of the other South American countries. In addition to the virtual monopolizing of the South American markets, there is a great em- igration from several European coun- tries into South America, most notice- able of which is that from Germany to Brazil, and from Italy to Argentina, so that European interests in South Amer- ica are coming to be very great. The Washington correspondent of Chicago Evening Post writes upon momentousness of the situation and trouble it promises in the future. In- ternational interests can not subsist up- on mere sentimental friendship. There must be important mutual benefits to bring nations together, and intimate commercial relations are the ground- work upon which close national friend- ships are built. The object of the Monroe doctrine is to keep out of the clutches of European nations the countries of the New World, but with what face can the American people claim supremacy in their own the the the hemisphere, while they are permitting their real interests to be undermined by the vast extension of European com- mercial power at their very doors and under their noses? TO COLLECT BAD DEBTS. There are many uses to which the navy has been put over and above its legitimate and proper one of fighting the country’s battles and protecting its citizens abroad, such as representing the’ Government at great international celebrations, participating in important public functions at our home ports and displaying the national flag in foreign waters, where American trade interests might need protection. It is now pro- posed to use a ship of the navy for the purpose of enforcing the payment of a bad debt or rather of a series of bad debts. Warships have been used for a simi- lar purpose before, but in most other cases the debt claimed and collected has had something of a political character. In the present case the debts which are due by Morocco are mainly claims of private individuals for injuries sus- tained. The armored cruiser New York, flagship of Rear Admiral Rogers, who is now on his way to the China station to relieve Admiral Remey, has been or- dered to proceed to a port in Morocco nearest the capital of that country and to render to our resident Consul Gen- eral such moral and material support as may be necessary to force the Sultan of Morocco to pay the claims American citizens have filed against him. There is no danger that anything like a serious difficulty will arise from this visit of the New York to the shores of Morocco. The general expectation is that as soon as the Sultan realizes that force is at hand to compel the payment of the debts, he will promptly settle, with apologies for having overlooked the little matter so long. After the claims against poor little Morocco are collected it might not be amiss for the Government to endeavor to collect from Turkey the claims held against that country. It would require, no doubt, a more formidable force to awe the Ottoman government, but as Turkey has no navy which can safely leave port, it ought not to take very much of a fleet to bring the Turks to terms. LT German postmasters have been so an- noyed by eccentricities in the shapes and sizes of the envelopes enclosing mail matter that a bill is to be intro- duced in the Reichstag prescribing the size and shape of envelopes. Post- masters in this country are watching the bill with interest, and hoping for a sim- ilar one. The chief annoyance is the delay in stamping the ietters with post- mark and canceling stamps, for these odd shaped and odd sized missives will not pass through the stamping machine in-such a way as to receive the stamp properly, and have to be gone over again by hand. The cattlemen of the Northwest have been complaining for many years about the growth of poisonous weeds .upon their ranges, and last summer the Sec- retary of Agriculture sent out a couple of botanists to make an investigation. They found six plants of a poisonous nature growing wild in different parts of the territory, all fatal to cattle. An- tidotes were discovered for three of them, but the other three thus far have no cure. ‘ A SAFE CONCLUSION. Next to the fact that the best place to have a boil is on another man’s arm Lis the unquestioned right of telling him how to take care of it. ‘‘If 1 had that boil 1 should—’’ and the treatment varies with the individual, each gener- ously giving the only remedy that ever healed that disorder and each insisting that his prescription shall be at once used and followed. Everybody knows that something is wrong with the blood. The system is out of order and at this season of the year the system needs looking after. What is recommended has been tried time and again with the most gratifying results, and it is com- mended free of charge for the sufferer’s distinguished consideration. It hap- pens, however, that the man with the boil has a remedy of his own. Unluck- ily it is on his arm instead of being on the ideal place fora boil. He is en- during, as philosophically as he can, the pain that is increasing day by day and in time he becomes impatient at the insistence of his friends and in the matter of boils prays to be delivered from them. He longs to tell them be- tween pain-twinges that, while it is nothing to be proud of, it is his boil and he proposes to take care of it as he pleases. He listens respectfully to what they have to say and finally tells them that the family physician is look- ing after the thing. Then the atmos- phere is blue with ‘‘If I had that boil’’ followed with the exact details. They are honest in their declarations—-these friends—but it is safe to conclude that each would resort to his own remedy and faithfully follow it. The public is indulging in much con- cern in regard to the disposition of the Carnegie millions. It being altogether evident that the man is determined to carry out his threat of dying poor, it is much to be doubted that he will be al- lowed the blissful privilege of choosing without challenge the method of getting rid of his money. For certain reasons, which he has already stated, he has de- cided to dot the country with libraries as so many testimonials of his gratitude for favors received in his early days when poverty blessed him and promised him what he has since so astonishingly realized. It seems, however, that the library form of gratitude has gone far enough. There is no doubi about its being a good thing, but there is a limit to everything and it is time that the tide of millions should set in another direction. Why would it not be well for the millionaire to provide ‘‘a home for the aged?’’ Why not ‘‘establish a brass band of seventy men and give two free concerts every day in the year in some part of the country?’’ ‘“‘If I had Car- negie’s money I would not give any of it to public libraries because the chil- dren usually read fiction which does them harm and because, as a rule, a man does not make good use of books until he is thirty and a woman does not make good use of them until she is forty.’’ In other words, ‘‘ Whatever you do with that millionaire boil of yours, Mr. Carnegie, do not trust any longer to the library poultice if you would effect a cure,”’ Two facts are in the philanthropist’s favor; he is Scotch by birth and has lived long enough in the United States to have made it an important part of his belief that he is and by right ought to be free and independent. The fortune that he is giving away he has earned honestly and industriously. From his own experience he has learned the: in- fluence of books and he has decided that that influence through his encourage- ment shall strengthen and spread. Other men may seek such channels for their benevolence as seem best to them— homes for the aged and brass bands. To him the library is the mausoleum to which he will entrust the keeping in re- membrance of his name. Forty years ago the public library opened its doors to him, placed him at her table and gave to him of her best. To-day that boy, mindful of that kindness, is de- termined to repay it more than a thous- and fold. Ina single week he gave of his bounty over thirty-five millions ; and the end is not yet. This Scotch laddie is not the only one whom the public library has blessed and if the gratitude is at all commensurate with the bene- fits received it is safe to con- clude that the establishing and endow- ing of libraries is one of the surest means of blessing humanity which benevolence has so ts hit upon. CHANCES IN AMERICA. It is a common saying among dema- gogues that present conditions in this country are unfavorable to the rapid and permanent rise of young men. The saying is frequently reiterated that in these days the rich are growing richer and the poor poorer. One of the charges brought against the trusts is that their tendency is along these lines and in this direction. The real truth about it is that never before in the his- tory of the United States were there such splendid opportunities for young men of ability as there are to-day. The great majority of the wealthiest began as poor boys and owe their riches to their own efforts. Speaking of trusts suggests that statements are going the rounds of the newspapers to the effect that Charles M. Schwab, recently chosen president of the great steel trust, is the highest salaried person in the world, with the possible exception of a few European rulers. His salary is esti- mated at all the way from $50,000 to $1,000,000 a year. Mr. Schwab, who is 39 years of age, when a young man was a clerk in a country store, where his businesslike deportment commended him to the favorable attention of the superintendent of a steel plant, who gave him employment and Mr. Schwab did the rest. He is at the head of that industry in the United States to-day, his services being in the greatest de- mand and commanding a fabulous price. Another instance suggested by refer- ence to steel is that of Charles T. Schoen, the head of the Pressed Steel Car Company, whose capital is $25,000, - ooo, which employs 10,000 men and which will build $12,000,000 worth of cars this year. When this young man was 14 years of age he was working with his father in a cooper shop and at- tending night school. When he was 20, the total of his capital was $500. He opened a cooper shop of his own and failed and then for a few years worked at $12 a week as the manager of a plant making springs. One day, being ina railroad yard, he thought to examine the freight cars, and the idea of making them of steel occurred to him and he worked along on it until he perfected his plans,and before either shop or tools were ready for their manufacture several hundred of them had been ordered.by the Carnegie Company. So successful was his invention and so wise his man-~ agement of the concern that it developed speedily into an immense enterprise, whose money is counted in millions and whose output is limited only by the amount of raw material available for for manufacture. His rise from the shop and the night school has been rapid and that he is to-day counted among the millionaires is not the result of luck, but of his own brightness, in- dustry and ability. . What Mr. Schwab and Mr. Schoen have accomplished every other American boy can duplicate under like conditions. No other coun- try in the world, perhaps, offers just such opportunities, but they are here and are the best answer to those falla- cious arguments which seek to create class prejudices and make men dissatis- fied with their beginnings because they are small, ra Oamrnre® oOo = o& bo o 9 is di Sl ki to he NNN ERI PORCINE RIAL IIIT NE A at aeeeiepeininicenlettmnnateinenieraaninse 10 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN : Dry Goods Weekly Market Review of the Principal Staples. Staple Cottons——Bleached shirtings show a small business, although buyers are evidently preparing to do better. The market is steady for everything ex- cept the low grades, and in these there is some irregularity reported. Cotton blankets are being purchased in quite good quantities at prices that are steady. Coarse colored cottons of all descriptions are quiet, and sellers are able to meet the demand easily at cur- rent prices. Prints and Ginghams—The market for prints this week has shown no change whatever from last week. The demand is moderate, but buyers are hammering prices for all they are worth. Fancy calicoes, while showing no very big business, are peculiarly situated. It is very evident that stocks in the jobbers’ hands are low. When- ever an order is placed, it is, as one agent expressed it, ‘‘ wanted yesterday.’’ Jobbers are in a hurry whenever they place an order and can not wait for its delivery. They are furthermore go- ing it very cautiously. In all the bet- ter grades, prices are steady, but in lower lines there is quite a bit of ir- regularity. Fine printed fabrics are firm everywhere. The market for printed goods, however, is in very good condition, there being very few goods on hand, and most sellers behind in their orders. In domets, the agents say that things are looking brighter. They have been dull for a long time, and prices very irregular, but now it looks as though the nature of the trad- ing was going to change. Some of the lines have been purchased more freely of late. In some places there have been advances made of a quarter of a cent for solid colors. The better lines of ging- hams are moving along steadily, and some lines are reported as already well sold ahead. Low grades, however, show some weakness. Dress Goods—The heavyweight dress goods market continues to develop as the days succeed one another, the num- ber of lines on the market showing a steady accession. In addition to the plain goods lines which have been open for some time a large number of fancy goods lines have also made their ap- pearance, so that it is not stretching the point to say that the market is now quite fairly open. While the business done to date is not altogether satisfac- tory from the manufacturer’s point of view, the results obtained have been fairly good. The business has come in spots, and a spotted market is not alto- gether satisfactory. The manufacturer who hits the market just right can view the situation with complacency, but he who fails to do so is naturally inclined to take a different view of the situation. It depends entirely from what angle one’s vision is directed, whether the im- pression is favorable or not. The hands of the buyer are tied by an existing un- certainty as regards just what fabrics are good, and therefore their opera- tions are somewhat restricted. Until this uncertainty is dissipated, the oper- ations of buyers may be expected to be carried on with due regard to conserva- tism. In spots a good business has been done, certain manufacturers of plain goods, it is reported, being in a well fortified position as regards orders, but ir no direction does the buyer show a disposition to buy with unwarranted liberality. Underwear—The cotton heavyweight underwear season is still in an_ unsatis- factery condition. Prices, on the whole, are firmer. They could not very well be any _lower. As it is, some agents say that they are losing money on every dozen turned out, but that they prefer to stand some loss rather than let their plants lie idle. The duplicate spring season is running along in more satis- fying channels, a number of supple- mentary orders being received for bal- briggans. Hosiery—The hosiery end of the knit goods business shows a decided differ- ence, as compared with the underwear end. Business has progressed in a most satisfactory manner, and very few dissatisfied agents are to be found. In all parts of the country the retailers have been showing their spring lines and a considerable reorder business has been coming to hand during the last week or two. All sorts of patterns have been sold in the fancies, and to the sur- prise of many some brilliant effects have been good sellers. A number of mills have already purchased fall samples, and some of the largest dealers have already looked at them. There has been little encouragement, however, for these early birds, and their reception has been a cool one. Carpets—On ingrains the market re- mains about the same and buyers are satisfied that there can be no lower prices than those already given. If buy- ers need goods, they will have to take them at prices now ruling. Many or- ders have not been filted which should have been some time ago in order that the buyers might be in readiness for the spring trade. ——__ 0. ___ After Due Consideration. From the Philadelphia Record. A young man took his gold watch to a Monroe street jewelry establishment the other day to have the photograph of a young woman placed in the case. He just wanted it pasted in. ‘“‘Why don’t you have it photo- graphed directly on the inside of the case?’’ asked the salesman. ‘‘We can have it done for you for $5, and it is so much more artistic.’’ No; the young man didn’t want that. He thought it would be well enough to have it pasted in. ‘‘ You see, you can’t always tell about these things,’’ he finally said in a burst of confidence. ‘You can’t always tell how they are go- ing to turn out or how long they are go- ing to last. A friend of mine had _ his girl’s picture photographed on _ his watch and then, after a while, the whole thing was declared off. It put him toa lot of trouble, embarrassment and ex- pense. When it’s just pasted in, if anything happens all you have to do is just to scrape it off. I guess I’ll have this pasted in."’ —_> 2. —___ Death of Park Mathewson. From the Detroit Free Press. Park Mathewson, Sr., died at his res- idence, 42 East Canfield avenue, yes- terday at the age of 73. He was born at Athens, Pa., and had lived in De- troit about eighteen years. He was formerly engaged in the wholesale dry goods business in New York and subse- quently established and conducted de- partment stores in other cities. He came to Detroit as Michigan manager of the business of B. T. Babbitt, the widely known soap manufacturer, and in connection with this position became widely known in the city and through- out the State. He was a trustee of the Church of Our Father and a member of the Michigan Club. A peculiarly sad fact in connection with Mr. Mathewson’s death is that Mrs. Mathewson is dan- gerously ill, so that it was deemed in- advisable to make her loss known to her. -———_s0>__ The best furniture for a house is the face of a sweet woman, Hats Hats Hats Our line of Straw Hats, Tam O’Shanters, Wool Hats, Felt Hats is now complete at 45c to $18 per doz. Come in and inspect our line of Hats. P. STEKETEE & SONS Wholesale Dry Goods Grand Rapids, Michigan ! FUP GU GG GOFF FFG FFE GF OG IE EFFING FFI Umbrellas and Parasols Our Ask our salesmen all about the It is something extra good for little money. Voigt, Herpolsheimer & Co. Wholesale Dry Goods, Grand Rapids, Mich. We are ready to show you through this department. Spring line is complete. «*Ami’’ Silk. Be Bb bp bn tp On Li i ba Lp a fe, in i i i i hn i i i i i in ip i Dn Gold Shell Warranted Rings Reproduced from Solid Gold Patterns Each ring guaranteed to give entire satisfaction or a new ring given in its place. A writ- ten warrant given with every ring by the manufacturer. a Retail 25c each. Retail 50¢ each. Retail $1.00 each. Large. assortment of gentlemen’s and ladies’ set rings in stock to select from. Write for samples and prices. AMERICAN JEWELRY Co., JEWELRY JOBBERS GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY We are selling very fine Semi Porcelain 100 piece Dinner Sets for $4.80 Remember TOWER BLOCK. for a few days only. Four different decora- tions, one of each in package, $19.20. DEYOUNG & SCHAAFSMA Importers and Manufacturers’ Agents for Crockery, Glassware and Lamps 112 Monroe Street, Grand Rapids, Mich. i & 3 i aa ligan Be Bb bp bn tp On Li i ba Lp a fe, in i i i i hn i i i i i in ip i Dn FUP GU GG GOFF FFG FFE GF OG IE EFFING FFI ; for a few lecora- ich 20. in ee cut. gue. i acc Mind ee MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 11 Clothing How to Make It Easy to Sell Good Goods. Not long ago an Eastern house held a special sale (which was widely adver- tised) of ‘‘all wool’’ suits, which were sold at about four dollars apiece. Nat- urally sales were heavy and the busi- ness of nearby merchants was greatly affected. What were they to do under such circumstances? This is a question that confronts many a man who has been building up a trade and is sudden- ly called upon to confront a condition such as the above. About the only thing for that mer- chant to do was to decide whether his own trade was of such a character that he could afford to ignore absolutely the methods of his rivals. If he could do so, he should. On the other hand, if he found them drawing business away from him his only course was to put in a line of the same goods, telling the public in his advertisements that he had them and that he would sell them to anybody wanting them, and stating ex- actly at the same time his own opinion of them. He should let the public un- derstand that he is always prepared to sell what people want, but that if his advice is asked regarding such goods, or that if his judgment is to be consid- ered in any way by his patrons, all his influence is exerted against the sale of such fabrics and garments. Most men who put in a line of such goods’are afraid to speak their mind to the utter- most, and the result is that the tone of their business is lowered because they do not resist strongly enough those of their patrons who demand such goods. The practical and proper course un- der such circumstances is to bend to the course of events just in so far as the merchant is compelled to, but no farther. But the situation in which this clothier found himself suggests a matter that merchants do not sufficiently con- sider, and that is how to make the sale of cheap goods difficult, if not impos- sible. Why is it that people buy cheap goods? There are two reasons: First, because they are unable to buy better, and, second, because they are ignorant of the qualities of the goods that they are buying. And this ignorance is the thing that the merchant trying to ele- vate the tone of his business must com- bat. There is only one thing to do, and that is to educate the public. The merchant must carry on continually a campaign of education. In his adver- tisements, his circulars, his booklets, and in every way he must impart as much information as possible regarding the desirable and undesirable qualities of clothing. He must take the public into his confidence. He must make them intelligent on the subject of his wares, and in this way he will gain their confidence and prepare them to re- sist the temptations held out to them to buy cheap and inferior goods. This is exactly what many clothiers are afraid to do. In an age when everything is public, when everything comes before the public eye, when nothing can be done without its being commented on, they want to hide as much as _ possible. They are afraid to take the public into their confidence. They are afraid to tell their patrons the facts about the goods they handle. They are arfaid of a public knowing so much that it will embarrass them later. And the result is that they find their trade drifting away from them at the first plausible offer that is made. A man when he writes his advertise- ments should always endeavor to tell something about the peculiar advan- tages of the goods he is advertising. If they contain cotton, say so, and tell why for the money cotton must be put in them. Point out the advantages of cotton in fabrics and state the case im- partially for and against its use. Adver- tise the composition of the goods. State something of the peculiar advantages of each fabric that you handle. Put into each advertisement some short, terse statement about the method of making some one fabric and tell the: public all that you know about its advantages. Such advertisements will be appreciated because they will contain valuable in- formation. They will impress people with the fact that you are not afraid to let them know the facts about your busi- ness. They will impress them with the fact that you do not have to resort to ly- ing and fraud either because of their or your own ignorance. In the long run this is the surest way to gain the confi- dence of your trade, and it is the surest way to protect yourself against that shifty, tricky way of doing things that is always a_ temptation when there is dense ignorance on one side and knowl- edge on the other. One method of educating the public is this: You have a public school in your town, which is attended by boys and girls who have active, intelligent minds and who are keenly interested in anything that is worth knowing. You know that anything they are interested in their parents will hear about sooner or later. Now, the commercial processes of making and marketing woolen and cotton goods are among the most inter- esting and important in the history of the human race. They have exerted a tremendous influence on the develop- ment of civilization. A person who is ignorant of them is ignorant of matters that should be known in part by every well-informed person. So you will be justified in calling the attention of the principal of the school to these facts. Make an offer to the pupils of the school in a comumnication sent to them on the following lines: You will exhibit in your window a suit made of a particular kind of goods. You want an account of the way in which the fabric of that suit was made, or an account of the advan- tages of that particular fabric for wear- ing purposes, or you want some infor- mation about the history of the manu- facture of that kind of stuff—anything which will result in information of value regarding the article you are selling. You will offer certain valuable prizes for the best or the two or three best ar- ticles of a specified length that are writ- ten on the sujbect. You want them for publication in the papers of the town and you are ready to pay well fora good article by home talent. If you set about it right you should be able to interest a large number of the pupils and parents of the pupils, and you will succeed in spreading an amount of information about goods that you could not spread in any other way. -Don’t go into the matter as a cheap advertising scheme. Make your prizes of such value that they are not beneath the dignity of any young man or wom- an. Make it clear that your primary object is to educate the public and not to boom our own shop, and when peo- ple find out that you look at the matter in that light they can be depended upon to interest themselves ina scheme which will indirectly be the best kind of an advertisement for you. The education of the public is the only protection of the merchant against degrading tendencies in business. Any method which will accomplish that end is worthy of attention and thought.— Apparel Gazette. > 2. Gilman’s Deal in Coffins. From the New York Sun. When George F. Gilman, the tea store man, whose millions are in dispute, be- came old enough to go into business his father arranged a partnership for him with a Mr. Miles, who had been a suc- cessful leather merchant in the Swamp. Young Gilman did not care for the leather business, but he obeyed his father’s wishes. Mr. Miles, his partner, was a much older man, and, as Gilman soon discov- ered, he was inclined to devote most of his time to outside interests, among them being a new cemetery. One day secs Miles came down to the office and said: ‘*Mr. Gilman, I did a good stroke of business to-day. I bought ten cemetery lots and then sold nine of them for what the ten cost me. That leaves me one lot for clear profit.’’ Gilman didn’t see that this meant any profit for the firm of Miles & Gilman, and on the following morning when he reached the office he said to Mr. Miles: ‘*T did a good stroke of business my- self this morning. I stopped at a Broad- way undertaker’s and bought ten coffins. I sold nine of them for what I paid for the ten, leaving one coffin clear profit. I have saved this coffin for you, Mr. Miles, thinking that you might use it in your cemetery lot.’’ Mr. Miles glared at the young man and then retired to his own office. When he reappeared several hours later it was to announce tbat the co-partnership was dissolved. This left Gilman free to carry out his tea store idea and by it he made millions. “Correct Clothes”’ We've still all sizes in Men’s Clothes and Overcoats for spring which we will ship immediately on order. No matter how good your line may be, ours will give ad- ditional attractiveness. lh leavenrich Bros. NO MORE DUST! H-COs= HATTIE NY No more wet sawdust or sprinkling. Clean, Quick, Easy Sweeping. WIENS SANITARY AND DUSTLESS FLOOR BRUSH, WIENS BRUSH CO., MILWAUKEE, WIS, Aluminum Money Will Increase Your Business. ESZOn £23 Cheap and Bftective. Send for samples and prices. C. H. HANSON, 44 S. Clark St., Chicago, Iil. This space belongs to G. H. GATES & CO, Up-to-date Wholesale Hatters, Detroit, Mich. Neceeecececeecceccecececeecceece \\ pe eh actor —| Lt ‘i We will send to Merchants = on | L /| application only our Complete Spring | a and Summer Sample Book, Instructions and-Advertising Matter. We furnish | this FREE OF ALL EXPENSE, and | prepay the express charges. If you | wish to do a profitable, successful Clothing business you should have | our book. We want but ONE AGENT | IN A TOWN to take orders for our | READY-TO-WEAR CLOTHING, so | | write at once. ‘David Adler & Sons Clothing Co. MILWAUKEE, WIS. 4 Pe epiniinennete ss 12 Saati teresa nnn oneness alae sine amt MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Shoes and Rubbers The Care of a Shoe Store. The necessity of keeping the store or department in perfect order does not seem to be appreciated by most buyers and managers. What is the advantage of dressing windows, putting them in first-class condition, making them pleas- ing to the eye and attracting trade to the store, if, on entering, the customer finds that the interior is a libel on the exterior? The most necessary feature in reference to a store or department is a system. waliave a place for everything, with everything in its place. If the show tables are badly arranged, having two or three pairs of every style in the store, you niay not realize it, but to the cas- ual observer it betokens little taste. Don’t crowd your shoe tables and cases. If you have no room in stock for your goods it is time for you to stop buying and start a bargain sale. Crowded shoe cases and tables look cheap, are cheap, and speak louder than words of your early training in the shoe business. No first-class dealer ever makes a loud display. Simplicity, neatness and a desire to keep away from auction sale methods are charac- teristics of the best retailers. No customer will appreciate the real merit of your shoes when your tables are kept in this condition, and no style is thus shown to advantage. Better, by far, would it be for you to show but two or there shoes of your various styles, neatly lasted, buttoned, laced and kept in perfect order, placed upon nickel stands or other shoe fixtures you may have. This principle also holds with refer- ence to your show cases. Do not crowd your show cases to their utmost. Rather have two or three novelties that are bound to attract the attention of the cus- tomers passing. Have your settees uni- form, also your hassocks or footstools that you use in your store or depart- ment. Have a uniform style of box and label. Do not mar the surface with a lot of writing, such as the description and style of goods. Rather give each shoe in stock a style number. Have it written or stenciled in the center of the label, also size and price. This is much neater. Buy cheap boxes for your goods to be wrapped in. Nothing is more displeasing to a customer than the appearance of holes on your shelves. They give the customer an idea that you are working on limited capital. When a cierk sells a pair of shoes do not let him wrap them up in the stock box. You can buy cheap cartons for this purpose. Have the ,box reversed in stock, showing the plain end, labeled like the reverse end, only not written on. Do not turn it upside down, which will give your stock a bad appearance. This will save you considerable, as a good carton, fit for a stock-box, costs 2% cents, whereas the other shoe-box used for wrapping purposes costs 1% cents. Keep all cartons, boxes, polish, shoe- powder, etc., off the ledge. Under no consideration allow it to become lit- tered during the working hours of the day. In many stores ledges are done away with entirely in the interest of neatness. The clerks have no place to throw shoes, findings, etc., “*tempora- rily’’—to stay there a day, a week, or until the untidy character of the place arouses the ire of the proprietor or man- ager. In these cases clerks are in- structed to invariably return a pair of shoes to their proper place before tak- ing another. A store where this policy is practiced and one where the ‘‘ledge nuisance’’ prevails adjoin each other in the metropolis. One store is a mar- vel of neatness. The other is as near a hog-pen as a shoe store can well be. When shoes are received for stock they should be listed and put away immedi- ately. When a clerk shows a shoe do not per- mit him to carry the carton with him. Have the cover put on the bottom of the box and have the box put in its proper place on the shelves. It saves the store from being littered and at the same time allows the other shoes to be used if necessary. Mr. Manager, be neat yourself, and by your own example you will put in practice among your clerks a system which will make the interior of your store just what a first-class establishment ought to be.—Shoe Retailer. ——_>2.___ Benefit of Specialties to Dealers. The advantages that have been de- rived from retailers handling specialty shoes have been incalculable. The spe- cialty shoe has been the means of stimu- lating a demand for higher grade shoes with the result that dealers as well as manufacturers have been benefited. It is believed that there are very few up- to-date retail stores that have not a spe- cialty shoe to offer to their customers— either one named by the manufacturer or by the retailer. In fact, the retail establishment that has not a specialty shoe in stock is looked upon as being behind the times. The average woman or man, after purchasing a specialty shoe and finding that it gives satisfac- tion, is practically wedded to that par- ticular line and, asa result, the dealer from whom he purchased can always reckon upon that customer’s trade so long as the goods give satisfaction. With a specialty line in stock which gives satisfaction, it is not policy to change over to some other specialty. Stick to the line that has proven satis- factory and by so doing the foundation for a trade is built which probably would not be secured in any other way. sa ____ A jolly New York jobber says that nothing keeps him in good humor like having dealers come back with worn shoes that have been burned, either by being placed near a radiator or from perspiring feet. One of our representa- tives witnessed a case of the kind the other day. The dealer tried in every way to get a new pair of shoes in place of the old ones he had brought with him, but his arguments were all very poor. Every one he advanced was met by the jobber, who beat his visitor in his own argument. The dealer claimed that the shoe which was broken had a good vamp, but the mate, which was of poor stuff, did not have any break. The jobber wanted to know why the poor one did not break instead of the good one, but the dealer became mixed up in his story and finally succumbed, had the shoes wrapped up, put them under his arm and went away satisfied. ‘‘It is not so bad when they bring them back themselves,’’ said the jobber. ‘‘Then we can show them the true reason for the damage, -but when they send the shoes in by express we have no chance to state our side of the case.’’ ——_»se>____ If a man has more of reason than any other animal, it is because he has great- er wants and faculties, A Whirlwind of a shoe Our Men’s Vici Shoes made in our own ‘fac- tory will blow a gale of business your Way. Try them. Price $1.60. Herold-Bertsch Shoe @o., Makers of Shoes, Grand Rapids, Mich. The Illustrated Boot and Shoe Price List of the Grand Rapids Felt Boot Co., will be out in 10 days and our price list on Knit, Felt Boot and Sock Combinations is now ready and our discount on Candee, first quality, is 35 and Io per cent.; second quality, 10 per cent. better; the Grand oe Felt Boot Co.'s first quality is 40 and 5 per cent. and their sec- ond quality 10 per cent. better. et your orders in now and write for price lists, etc., if you are interested. STUDLEY & BARCLAY, 4 MONROE STREET, GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Wholesale Dealers in Rubber Boots and Shoes—Socks, Gloves and Mit- tens are among our specialties. SIRS SSS SS No Mlatter What Cotor 00 Long as It's Red! Red seems to be popular for the children. Start the trade in your town. Ze CGeAweSesanes No. 3286—Childs Red Vici. Scroll Vesting Insertion Polish. 4to8. $1.00. Same in no heel, 2 to 5, 80 cents. Order to-day. EDWARDS-STANWOOD SHOE CO. Monroe and Franklin Streets, Chicago, Ill. > + > * + * * ~ * > + + + *~ * + * > *~ ~ *- > + > bs 9 > ae Lycoming Double Wear Goods and that Lycomings contain more pure gum than any rubber on the market. Ask our travelers about combinations Duck and Waterproof Leggins, Lumbermen’s Socks, Leather tops, all heights, etc., etc. Send for our Shoe Catalogue for spring. GEO. H. REEDER & CO., 28 & 30 So. Ionia St. Grand Rapids, Mich. SESE SE SESE EET EET TT EET TY bh hhh hh hh hp ehep } >> hhh hh heheh hh oh ohhh ¢ al - | ~ Ss ee ee @ « » ~~ i 2 a 2 ot oe > | a od ee @ « >» ~~ i 4 a@ ~«»2 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN See eee een The Necessity for a Chief Assistant. In any up-to-date shoe store or de- partment the necessity of a head clerk is more apparent day by day. In your se- lection of aman for this position, it is not well to be guided by the fact of his association with you, or his connection with any of your friends, but rather look around and secure a man of decided ability, a man in whom, on all occa- sions, you can place the strictest confi- dence. A head clerk, of necessity, must be a man of executive ability, one capable of controlling all the details ‘in reference to your store or department. Through the course of the day many vexatious questions arise which require the most serious consideration. On the shoulders of the head clerk should rest all the responsibility of administering the details of a store or department, es- pecialiy in your absence. Figure on the possibilities of life. Suppose you were suddenly taken ill or called out of town? Does not your business require the same amount of attention that you are capable of giving it yourself? If so, the presence of a head clerk is in- dispensable. No up-to-date shoe man can attend to the various details of a shoe store or department, manage the buying, control the advertising, look after stock and all other necessary de- tails. Who attends to your sizing-up, cleaning stock, taking orders, taking measurements, seeing that the stock is kept in good condition, changing car- tons, repairing and all of the other minor details which we find to-day in the retail shoe store if you have no head clerk? It is not well to place too much con- fidence in the individual clerks, nor is it well to hold each clerk responsible to you alone for his actions during busi- ness hours, but rather have them report to one head on whose shoulders all the responsibility rests. This man, of ne- cessity, must bea bright, active, prac- tical shoe man, one capable of judging the conditions of stock, knowing how a line is selling or when a line is stand- ing still; knowing what shoes are giv- ing satisfaction to the .customer, and what shoes are not. In short, you want a practical, up-to-date fellow who will take the same interest in your business as you would yourself. Of necessity, he must be a hustler, as no one ever appointed to a position of head of stock and not a possessor of this sterling qual- ity has ever met with the necessary suc- cess to hold it for any length of time. Vest him with the same authority you have yourself. Do not belittle him in the eyes of the clerks. Even although he be at fault, it is not well to allow the clerks to understand that you have not full confidence in his ability. When you find you have not implicit con- fidence in him it is time for you to look around and secure one whom you can trust and whom you believe to be almost your equal. The modern shoe dealer, buyer or manager is too valuable a man to attend to the minor details of the floor. His position demands his presence in the markets, looking over new styles and designs, finding out what his competi- tors are doing and creating new ideas of benefit. The present-day buyer can not even afford to consider his goods after he has bought them. It is neces- sary for him to figure at once on the selling, as the orders are placed so close together and the competition is so keen that after goods are in the manufactur- ers’ hands he has no time to weigh the advisability of canceling his orders or going elsewhere for more _ seasonable stuff. All this entails brain work. Any man can buy goods, but it takes more than an ordinarily intelligent man to sell them, in face of the keen rivalry which is going on in this particular line of merchandise in the United States. Assistant buyers must also be above the average in intelligence. When you find a man of this character with sufficient ability to control your help and manage the store, hire him. Place the full re- sponsibility of the floor upon him and hold him personally responsible for everything that goes on.—Shoe Retailer. —_—___o-« . Proverbs of the Chinese. The barest sketch of Chinese litera- ture would hardly be complete without some allusion to the proverbs and maxims, says Dr. Giles in his ‘‘ History of Chinese Literature,’’ published by the Appletons. Chinese children are made to learn these by heart, and ordinary grown up Chinamen may be said almost to think in proverbs. There can be no doubt that to the foreigner a large store of proverbs, committed to memory and judiciously introduced, are a great aid to successful conversation. These are a few taken from inexhaustible supply, omitting to a great extent such as find a ready equivalent in English: Deal! with the faults of others as gently as with your own. By many words wit is exhausted. If you bow at all, bow low. If you take an ox, you must give a horse. A man thinks he knows, but a woman knows better. Words whispered on earth sound like thunder in heaven. If fortune smiles—who doesn’t? If for- tune doesn’t—who does? Moneyed men are always listened to. Nature is better than a middling doc- tor. Stay at home and reverence your parents; why travel afar to woship the gods? A bottle-nosed man may be a tee- totaler, but no one will think so. It is easier to catch a tiger than to ask a favor. With money you can move the gods; without it you can’t move a man. Bend your head if the eaves are low. Oblige and you will be obliged. oo The Successful Man. He believes that strict integrity is the foundation of all legitimate business success. He places no limit to his ambition, since the field is free to all, and work the price of progress. He pushes for more business in busy seasons, and if customers are scarce, still pursues. He depends on his own exertions and abilities, and they reward his’ confi- dence. He practices strict business economy and does not condescend to penurious- ness. He is not utterly defeated by defeat, nor careless from success. He is honest, not only from policy, but from principle; he considers suc- cess, lacking self-approbation, as fail- ure in disguise. He pays promptly, and collects as he pays; rather than pays as he collects. He is courteous in manner, and ap- preciates the commercial value of cor- diality. He thinks first, and deeply; and speaks last, and concisely. He possesses executive ability toa degree which renders him appreciative of the valuable points in employes. He is careful in details, knowing that they are the mortar which binds his op- erations. He realizes that the prime object of business is to make money, and he therefore refrains from extreme compe- tition in prices. 8 Two people may be said to be half witted when they have an understanding between them. Goodyear Glove Rubbers FOR SPRING WEAR SPORTING BOOTS, HEAVY BOOTS, LIGHT BOOTS FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN. Bring on, old weather prophet, Your March snow, rain and thaw, Have For I can wade the deepest slush You Or mud you ever saw. In Goodyear glove boots you just bet Seen I won’t get wet or grippy. Our Say, if my ma would let me go Motorman? I’d wade the Mississippi. Hirth, Krause & Co., Grann Rapids, Mich. Rubbers Boston and Bay State Wait and see our agents before placing your order for fall. They will call on you in time for you to take advantage of the lowest price. Ask them about new things for fall. RINDGE, KALMBACH, LOGIE & CO. Grand Rapids, Mich. 10-22 N. Ionita St. ALL ag Mail Orders orders. ceived. bers. Use our catalogue in sending mail Orders for staple boots and shoes filled the same day as re- Full stock on hand of Goodyear Glove and Federal Rub- Send us your orders. Bradley & Metcalf Co., Milwaukee, Wis. A. H. KRUM & CO. Princess American Rubbers These cuts show two of the most popular styles of the tamous American rubbers— highest in quality, most elegant in style and fitting perfectly. We deal exclusively in rubber footwear; seven different brands: CANDEES, FEDERALS Write for prices Detroit, Mich. AMERICANS, PARAS, WOONSOCKETS, RHODE ISLANDS, COLONIALS, Sensible Over 14 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN . Clerks’ Corner. Timely Suggestions for the Consideration of Clerks. Our latest philosophic friend, Eben Holden, says that ‘‘the minnit a man stops lookin’ for trouble, happiness "1! look fer him.’" And I think he is more than half right. Be that as it may, the happiness that Easter brings with it is largely in the spirit of the thing. I venture to say that next Sunday 995 out of every I,000 persons you know will tell you, if you ask them, that nineteen- twentieths of their pleasure came before the 7th of April this year—came in al- most discarding self, and thus forgetting to “‘look fer trouble.’’ So busy were those people in buying—and probably in coloring and scratching—FEaster eggs and in a laudable effort to make chil- dren and others happy they were alto- gether engrossed in the spiritual ele- ment of the occasion. Well, your store is ready for the Easter rush. That there will be a rush I do not doubt. For everybody wears something new on Easter, and it is usually a pair of shoes —ora hat. You do not make any more money at Eastertide than you make at other joyous seasons of the year. But you give some measure of your appre- ciation of folks coming to your store to buy shoes all the year around by—how? Why, by making your windows in Easter week extra attractive and your Store extra beautiful. That is the way you welcome and delight the little folks and the grown folks. And if you put the right spirit into the thing you can not, I am sure, make the windows and the store more impressive to your cus- tomers than your welcome. * oe x A genius for statistics, who lives in Harrisburg, asked me two weeks ago, while I was in Harrisburg, if I ever stopped to enquire how many hours I slept in ten years. I told him no. He went on to say that, supposing I were an average traveler, who spends an hour or two, or three, on the railroad train every twenty-four hours, how would my record of doings stand at the end of three score and ten? I told him I had neither time nor inclination to figure it out. Life is too short for that. But he assured me that when I reach 70 I will find the largest time to be for sleep, which will be twenty-five years wasted, or a little over one-third of the Biblical span of longevity. Next, he said, would be my writing days, which will count twenty-one years, and, said he, in the course of time you will read ten years. The next time will be that of pleasure, which will consume nine years, and walking will consume six and a half years more. Then your eat- ing accounts will show that you have sat at the table or stood at lunch counters five years. You will also have a dress- ing account of three and a half years, which have been devoted to buttoning and unbuttoning shoes and vests, etc. ce) > A philosophic retailer was discoursing to me in Easton the other day on.a sub- ject of family ethics, which, I believe, might apply to the ethical relations be- tween the retailer and his help. The quasi-philosopher went on to say that intimacy between father and son isa school of tact in which teacher and child benefit equally. A father said to him in despair: ‘‘I can’t ‘get at’ my boy; somehow we don’t understand each other at all.’’ That man would resent it if told that he did not possess suffi- cient tact to ‘‘get at’’ some set of men with whom he wished to do business. The boy is a little man—in many ways not so much smaller than ourselves as we may think. Let the father make the first advances, he said, toward a com- munity of interests, and the way in which the boy responds will surprise and delight him. The benefit will be mutual. The father often gets more out of it than the boys. It keeps the father young, gives him a_ new view of life, keeps him in touch with childhood hopes and fears, and in sympathy with the enthusiasm and aspirations of youth, The bigger a man’s character the more he will profit by such associations; the smaller the father’s nature the more he needs it. And I should say the big- ger the retailer’s character the more he will profit by association with his clerks. = =: = Placing a man near the window, so he can work in view of the public, is an excellent form of advertising. I do not know of anything that catches the attention of the passer-by more quickly than the sight of a window trimmer sit- ting close to the window and placing shoes and cheese paper and_ nickel plated fixtures for dear life. Retailers of all kinds of goods have adopted this plan. Waistmakers put their most skilled workers on exhibition to show how the finest garments are cut and sewed. Cigar manufacturers take the public into their confidence and let them see the process of rolling as per- formed by the cleverest hands. Men who deal in mechanical contrivances have found that it pays to have at least one machine set up near a window so the crowd outside may observe the in- tricacy of its parts and the rapidity of its action. Jewelers have stationed their most expert lapidists within view of the Street, that possible customers may see how precious stones are cut and pol- ished and set. Yet, it is not everybody who can work in public. It takes a person with good strong nerves and concentration of thought to do difficult work in a show window. I have seen men, excellent workers, but who get flustered when subjected to unusual sur- veillance and ruin everything they put their hands to. I have seen some of them as window trimmers, but they can not get used to it. * * x* That philosopher, Adam Bede, has said a word in favor of subordinates doing their full work systematically for employers which I think it well to chronicle here for the infromation of re- tailers. ‘‘A fuoreman,’’ says Ada Bede, “‘if he’s got a conscience and delights in his work, will do his business as well as if he was a partner. I wouldn't give a penny for a man as ’ud drive a nail in slack because he didn’t get extra pay for it. A man must have courage to look at his life and think what’ll come of it after he’s dead and gone. A good solid bit o’ work lasts; if it’s only lay- ing a floor down, somebody’s the better ‘for it being done well besides the man as does it.’’ And if it’s only putting on a pair of shoes, the retailer is the better for its being done well and po- litely, besides the clerk that does it.— Shoe and Leather Facts. So ee ae Had Good Backing. ‘‘I,’’ said the gentleman who had fairly prospered, ‘‘am humbly proud of the fact that I took ‘Get thee behind me, Satan,’ as my motto when I began business life.’’ ‘‘There is rere said the second gentleman, who had measured business wits with the first gentleman, *‘like having good backing. "’ THE ALABASTINE Com- PANY, in addition to their world-renowned wall coat- ing, ALABASTINE through their Plaster Sales Department, now manufac- ture and sell at lowest prices in paper or wood, in carlots or less, the following prod- ucts: Plasticon The long established wall plaster formerly manufac- tured and marketed by the American Mortar Company (Sold with or without sand.) N. P. Brand of Stucco The brand specified after competitive tests and used by the Commissioners for all the World’s Fair statuary. Bug Finish The effective Potato Bug Exterminator. Land Plaster Finely ground and of supe- rior quality. For lowest prices address Alabastine Company, Plaster Sales Department Grand Rapids, Mich. mZ—4A0>0br- William Reid Importer and Jobber of Polished Plate, Window and Ornamental Glass Paint, Oil, White Lead, Var- nishes and Brushes GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. W. FRENCH, Resident Manager. GAS READING LAMPS No wick, no oil, no trouble—always reacy. A Gas Reading Lamp is the most satisfactory kind to use. A complete lamp including tubing and genuine Welsbach Mantles and Wels- bach lamps as low as $3. Suitable for offices and stores as well. GRAND RAPIDS GAS LIGHT Cco., Pear! and Ottawa Sts. > MODERN WONDER Approved by the National Board of Fire Underwriters; can therefore be used in any insured building without additional cost for insurance. The finest artificial light in the worl One lamp lights ordinary store; smoke, no odor; Absolutely non-explosive. of 5 cents for 10 hours. d. Hang or stand them anywhere. twoample for room 25x100 feet. very simple to operate. No Burns ordinary gasoline. Eight hundred candle-power light at a cost Brass Manufacturing & Supply Co. Ask for Catalogue. 192-194 Michigan Street, Chicago, Ill. A 4 a ura r ah = = § eo ~- 9 > - vv <« >» « ~” a ~ a yy, ote bro a 4 m2 rr i a ae » ae -—- «| ee | » - ae > - wv <« >» ~ a 4. > a « = ~ -- , — 5 ee a - --* . Cie. 2 rome t ~ t Or) co po oS . a ” a w > yy, ote bro MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 15 How to Accumulate the Profits in Busi- ness, The accumulation of the profits in business is a serious problem to many retailers, especially among those who are just entering business with little or no previous experience. Few merchants give this proposition the’ attention it deserves and if more attention were given to it undoubtedly there would be fewer failures among the retailers and wholesalers of the country. If ‘you are doing business on a gross profit of 20 to 25 per cent. it is a good plan to set aside each day a certain per- centage of the gross receipts. This can be divided among the various partners in the business at the end of each month ; or, it may be used as a sinking fund and divided among those inter- ested in the business at the end of every quarter or half year, or if there is sufficient capital in the business it may be saved until the end of the year and divided then. The plan followed by Smith & Brown grocers in this city, in accumulating the profits, is one that is to be com- mended and one that will prove fruitful of good results. At the commencement of business by this firm it was decided to put aside each day a certain per cent. of the gross income, to be banked ina savings bank, not subject to check, and to be used asa sinking or emergency fund. After mature consideration and a careful study of the profits it was de- cided that the amount put aside should be 5 per cent. of the gross cash receipts each day. This was at first deposited in the firm name in the Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Bank of this city, and was allowed to accumulate for several months. In the meantime if the firm found that they needed money badly in the conduct of their business they used their pass book in the savings bank as collateral security on which they bor- rowed money from other banks for emer- gencies. The accumulation in the sav- ings bank was not touched, except in one or two instances to meet such emer- gencies, It was continued at interest until divided as earned profits. The members of the firm took their groceries from the store which they owned, and of course charged them up, and in addition they drew $6 a week in cash for necessary outside expenses. The 5 per cent. of the gross receipts represented their profits and amounted to anywhere from $80 to $125 a month, and this was divided between the two members of the firm at the end of six months or a year and was usually re- deposited in the name of the individual member of the firm. However, after it was divided it was owned by the _ indi- vidual and represented his profits or earnings from the business. This sinking fund proved of great benefit to the firm in the trying year of 1893, when so many bank failures oc- curred in this city. Their money re- quired for the payment of current obli- gations was deposited in one of the banks which failed—this did not in- clude the accumulated profits—and one morning the members of the firm woke up to find that all their surplus cash had been wiped out and they had no avail- able assets other than the stock on hand and the emergency fund in the savings institution. They had a large cash de- posit in the latter, however, and as a number of obligations were pressing at the time, they deposited their pass book and secured a loan which enabled them to weather the financial storm without difficulty. They paid their outstand- ing obligations promptly and continued business without interrupton. Had this sinking fund not been available, after the severe loss through the failure of their bank, they would have been hard pressed and an assignment might have been the only way out of the difficulty. As it was, their standing with the job- bers with whom they did business was strengthened to a degree that helped them immensely in their future business existence. These facts are stated to give the principles on which the business was conducted. Every retailer should make an endeavor to establish a sinking fund which can be drawn upon in an _ emer- gency. If the limited capital on which the business is being conducted will not warrant the depositing of 5 per cent. of the gross receipts each day in a savings institution, I, or 2, or 3 per cent. should be deposited. If the business will stand a deposit of Io per cent. of the gross re- ceipts, this should be deposited, and a division of the cash profits may he made oftener than every quarter or half year. It may be made every month. The idea of a sinking fund is one on which all large corporations, municipal- ities and other financial institutions of importance operate. It can be applied to the retail business of small propor- tions as well as to the big business in- stitutions. The benefits are to be found in the fact that it gives a reserve fund of cash capital which can be drawn upon in an emergency and also in the fact that at least a portion of the profits are kept intact. If they are kept in a sav- ings institution there is less likelihood that they will be wasted, the business will be done more conservatively for the purpose of keeping up these profits, and the benefits to the man or men en- gaged in business will be apparent every day and profits are more regular and far more satisfactory. If you have never thought of this scheme, give it a little thought now and begin with the first of April to make daily a deposit of such a sum as your business will stand, to be used if an emergency requires it, but if not to go into your own pocket as the profits and earnings from your business and as representing some re- turn for what you have invested and for your hard work. It~ is only justice to yourself that you should do this.—Com- mercial Bulletin. —~_ -. > --— Right to Will Your Body for Dissection. From the New York Medical Journal. The Supreme Court of California, in the case of Enos vs. Snyder, has de- cided, in a contest between next of kin, on the one hand, and claimants under a will on the other hand, for the pos- session of a corpse, that a man can not by will dispose of that which, after his death, will be his corpse. The custody of the corpse and the right of burial be- long to the next of kin in preference to the administrator. This view is based on the fact that the general English and American legal authorities establish the rule that, in the absence of statutory provisions, there is no property ina dead body. If this ruling is correct, the sooner statutory provisions are obtained enabling a man who feels that a great benefit to humanity will accrue through increase of medical knowledge, by the continuance post mortem of an _ investi- gation into his case, or that new light may be shed upon anthropological, psy- chological or other scientific problems, to authorize by will such use of his corpse, the better. We commend this subject to the consideration of the Medico-legal Society. He is a poor sort of a fellow who can’t stand being lied about. He is a good ed of whom the whole truth may be to (MERRIER EERE : Olney & Sudson Grocer Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan + We bore with a big auger and do + it easily. ea evaded aah viele Walaa Wivuidutvalae valav’a Wala veal Walaa - TRADE MARS THE PUTNAM CANDY @CoO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Ye Olde Fashioned Horehound Drops The best of all. A A on every piece. Call and inspect our line and establishment when in the city. B. W. PUTNAM, President R. R. BEAN, Secretary \AAAAAAAR AAA, SRV APATHY AANA NIPTPTPHESETI ENED rrr rr The Guarantee of Purity and Quality @e— in Baked Goods. Found on every pack- @e— age of our goods. @-_ Good goods create a demand for them- selves. It is not so much what you make on one pound. It’s what you make in the year. oe National Biscuit Co. Grand Rapids, Mich. Tabb ibdbisdsdbisddibas nn " OU abba db abd ababad 16 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Hardware Managing the Credit Department of a Re- tail Store. How important a part of a business the credit department is can be seen when one enters a jobbing house to ask for credit. For are you not first taken to the credit man, who wishes to know all of your past and present standing? Before you can get credit you must sat- isfy this department of your being worthy of it, and upon the credit man being satisfied of your worth, a limited credit is given. If you can not satisfy the credit man of your worth, credit is refused, for the jobber of to-day is not sO anxious to sell goods that he will send them out when he feels that credit given will not be appreciated and _ bills paid. In order to meet your obligations you must also have a credit department. This department must consist solely of yourself. You, too, must look up the reputation of each one who asks for credit. Too careful you can not be in this matter. Don't be so anxious to sell your goods on time that you will take every man’s word as to his standing. The successful merchant of to-day must be more than a mere fellow in the community. We have all noticed ina score of cases the difference in character and general make-up between the suc- cessful and unsuccessful merchant. The successful one is over-alert in all his doings, setting the type by which his business will be run in the future as to credit. In this State, where chattel mortgages are so common, he is always looking up the records, which are gen- erally kept at the banks. If he finds a customer all tied up, with two or three mortgages on everything on the place, credit is refused, while the unsuccessful merchant never takes time to look up one who asks for credit, and when a poor one is given, takes the fatalist’s view of it. We are all optimists -to an extent, and in case of a bad credit being given, try to make the best of it, and hope for better deals in the future. But to do as the fatalist, sit down and say it was meant to be so, is far from the success- ful path of a merchant’s life. So often we find merchants too anxious to sell goods and see them go out through the front door. You will find them ever watching their competitor, and if he sells one or two more stoves, a_ resolve is made to catch up in number of sales. Then it is that the first man who comes in to buy a stove is sold one, regardless of cost price and his standing. Often this man is anything but a de- sirable customer. Being behind in sales, the merchant resolves to catch up in number of sales, and makes the sale, taking, perhaps, second or third mort- gage on a cow as security. When pay- ment time comes, he finds the money is not forthcoming. He then goes to col- lect on security given, and finds that no good, which he could have found out when he made the sale, but the resolve to catch up in number of sales and do business was so great that the standing of the customer was forgotten. At collection time he finds that selling goods so as to get paid for them is doing business and making money. Then, again, you can go out most any day and find merchants who are not satisfied without selling every man who comes in to buy, and at collection time they run bump up against a stump, and dis- cover that to sell every one who comes in to buy on credit is a fatal business policy, When a customer comes in to buy, and the sale depends on a long credit and not on price given, such sales are not profitable ones to make, because to do so will be injuring your business and putting you to a disadvantage. For will you not have to go back and also ask for more credit of your jobber? Every merchant should see that, when he extends a line of credit, who ever gets it will be in a position to ful- fill his promise to pay, or get good se- curity, so that you, Mr. Merchant, can fulfill your promise to pay Mr. Jobber. Don’t get a lot of long price notes, with a long extension of time for pay- ment, in your safe upon which nothing can be realized. If more merchants knew what an error it is to try and do all the business of their respective towns fewer old notes and accounts would grease their assets. All merchants should look upon their business with as much pride as they do upon their own family, whose reputa- tion they wish to remain a standard. But, gentlemen, this can not be done by selling to any and every one who asks credit. Learn to say No to a credit seeker, the same as you would to your child, when he asks to associate with one who you know will hurt your child’s future reputation and life. The success of a business depends largely upon your ability to say No, and placing your goods in the hands of people that you know will pay for what they get. The greatest success is business suc- cess, and to succeed one must not abuse credits given by allowing the goods so gotten to go out without having the standing of a customer. The all-impor- tant factor in successful business is to know to whom to extend credit, and this depends upon the many sales, which keeps turning the stock, with customers who have the ability and honesty to pay for what is sold them. The trouble with most merchants who fail lies in their inability to distinguish between the wisdom of making sure of the payment of an account and the folly of the hope of obtaining abnormally large profits on a long time sale. The thing to have in a business is some- thing like what English bankers term ‘liquid assets,’’ which, although bear- ing small profits and short time sales, insure the payment of the account with the profit as well. When I first thought of engaging in business I was told of the many failures which occur in the ranks of the retail trade. I took pains to see what caused the failures, and to my _ satisfaction found it was not from the lack of busi- ness, but from doing too much. I therefore resolved to do little busi- ness and be sure of pay. On the first day of my business a farmer walked in- to the store and asked fora pump. I had a pump fitted ap and loaded in the wagon for the farmer before payment was mentioned. The farmer walked into the store in a hurry and said, ‘‘ You will have to charge this pump to me until I thresh.’’ ‘‘Is that so,’’ I said. ‘‘Well I guess that is all- right if you can satisfy me you will pay for it then.’ “*Sure I will pay forthe pump. I al- ways pay,’’ was the prompt repiy of the farmer. ‘‘Perhaps you do pay your accounts, but I don’t know so. Therefore 1 wish your promise put in writing and security to show your good faith.”’ Whereat the farmer got angry and let on that his feelings were more than hurt. Well, here I was, one of our first cus- |. tomers angry and we having trouble on the payment of a pump. I resolved, however, to carry my point, and went after the farmer something like this: ‘‘See here, I don’t know as you pay your accounts and you want me to trust you, which I am _ willing to do if you can satisfy me that you will pay the account when you thresh.’’ I had him at once. To satisfy me he must make a showing of his worth or good intention to pay. His worth he could not show, so his good intention to pay was all that was left to get the pump on. I got out a note, filled it out, an extra mortgage blank and took security on the pump and asked what security he was willin to give so as to satisfy me he would ay his note when due. At first the armer thought the pump enough, but I showed him the pump was mine until paid for, and to take the pump was only to furnish my own security. Then I got a cow as security, which I took care to see was clear, and it was this cow that enabled me to get payment. 5 Don’t be afraid to question a doubt- ful creditor; if he refuses tc give you your asked-for information kindly re- fuse him credit. So often in the spring of the year customers come in to arrange for a credit through the summer, then, Mr, Merchant, is your time to act. You can dictate terms upon which credit shall be given, and if you fail to get good ones the fault is all yourown. The credit given should carry with it no ob- ligation of renewal at maturity, as too frequently these obligations are looked to by the customer. It is this important element in the merchant’s resources in times of demand upon him that well- selected and carefully inspected notes and accounts occupy a most important and responsible field. A danger arises when paper is floated too easily and profits are made abnormally high so as to invite overselling and trading on the part of the merchant. But the dangers even here which intertwine are not be- yond those which are liable to overtake a merchant in direct dealing with any customer who plans to practice dishon- esty. It is in connection with all these that it is best when a credit is given that it be arranged at first so it must be paid without extension. Don’t be afraid to tell a customer that he can have a credit to the amount of so many dollars and no more. Give him to understand that when his limit is used up he can have no more credit, and - I assure you your troubles at collection time will be limited toa gg eins . G. Evenson. —> 0. _______ There is nothing that goes out of rec- ollection so soon as a favor that has been received. When the Busy Season Comes And the customer to whom “you have sold paint for his house finds that you have not quite enough to finish the job it will be a nice thing to be able to say “go right along, I will have it for you in a day or two;” and you can say it if you carry our line, for we are quick shippers. Better write to us about it; we save you time and money. ala ata Callaghan & Richardson, Manufacturers’ Agents, Reed City, Mich. = RARAARARAARAARARARARAAAAARAAARAR DOOOUGHGOGHGHOHHHHHHHOHGHHGOH eR Ta eae LT ee rrnrersrerrrary od en SSHSSSSSSSESSSSESOEEES ware, etc., etc. 31, 33, 35» 37, 39 Louis St. 8 Quick MEAL “ace Sporting Goods, Ammunition, Stoves, Window Glass, Bar Iron, Shelf Hard- Foster, Stevens & Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. GOGOOOOGOOGDPHPHGOHGHHGHGOHGOG At One=-Half Cost Two Morley Shelf Ladders, seventy-four feet Track, eighteen Brackets—good as new. Enquire of D. E. Vanderveen, State Agent Quick Meal Stoves, 525 Michigan Trust Building, Grand Rapids, Mich. 10 & 12 Monroe St. SOSESSOSOSESEHOSEOSSEEESESSeeees i ; eo are manufactured by us and all sold on the same basis, irrespective of size, shape or denomination. samples on application. Free h. wy 4 +a - & a . ~~» > 2 + < > — sm wy - ¥ +c. - ~\ “ . ~sm D > 2 + < oe s~ M1 CHIGAN TRADESMAN 17 Necessity of Originality in the Hardware Business. Originality in business, to my mind, to be true originality must be a part of the conception of business. And the proper conception of business involves the application of thought to business. The thinking business man of to-day is the man with originality of ideas; he is the man who is not content to tread the same old beaten path of business meth- ods, but is the one who evolves new ideas and new methods to meet the changing conditions which beset him in his business life. He originates new ideas and new methods and applies them to the conditions which exist in his community with profit to himself and with credit to that community. The foundation for original methods must exist in the activity of the brain of the man who evolves them. Then it fol- lows that if you want to do business along original lines,if you want to com- bat the catalogue house and the supply store on their own ground, you must first be a thinking business man. You must study the questions involved in the transaction of business. You must un- derstand first of all the characteristics of those who compose the community in which you reside. You must understand your customers and be original in your dealings with them,and if you do this it all involves thought, and when you find a man who is beginning to think, you find one who is on the road to becom- ing an original business man and who appreciates the force of originality in his business methods—a man who is the creator of something for the community, instead of one who accepts the standards and methods of the others. The subject of thought in business is one of great importance and comprises a topic by itself. There is the right application of thinking to business as there is the right kind of originality, and to get the right kind of originality we must first get the right kind of think- ing. If a catalogue house offers to sell one of your customers a base burner coal stove with nickel trimmings for $9.68, I do not call it the right kind of think- ing if you offer a higher priced stove at the same figure in an effort to get busi- ness away from the catalogue house; I do not call it the right kind of thinking if you patronize the manufacturer who makes the stove and permits it to be sold at cut prices willfully and with a full: knowledge that this will be one of the consequences of its sale to the cata- logue house. But you want to sell a stove to the man who wants to buy a stove. You want to keep that money in the com- munity and you want to keep your cus- tomers. How are you going to do it? Think over the proposition, be original in your consideration of the subject, hit upon a plan that will accomplish this. Do not imitate anyone else. The trouble with too many of our business men is that they prefer imitation to thinking, and in adopting imitation methods they do not make them fit their business. I believe the all-wise Creator endowed the retail hardware man with just as much brain power and just as much business judgment and just as much business shrewdness as He ever gave to the man who runs the catalogue house or the supply store. I believe the men before me here to-day have more brain power and more business judgment com- bined than all the catalogue house men in the country ever had, or ever will have, and that if you use that brain power and business judgment in the ‘chases the chea years to come we will hear very little from the man with the catalogue house. Possibly you are already saying to yourself that it is all right to deal in glittering generalities; it is easy enough to say that the hardware men have more brains and as good judgment as the cat- alogue house man, but coming down to the hard pan of hard facts, how would you get around the $9.68 stove proposi- tion without cutting into your legiti- mate profits? Environment and com- munity, location and local conditions may enter into the proposition, and so it is impossible to lay down an iron- clad rule that will always work and that will always bring results. The very thought that I have mentioned must first enter into the consideration of the prob- lem—individual thought and original business methods. If you are to be original you can not begin now by ask- ing some one else to think for you. But | 200 in a general way a rule might be laid down that would apply in this particu- lar case. In the first place always take it for granted that you can compete with any man on an equal basis on any line of goods that is to be sold to the public, unless you are confronted by unnatural conditions in the purchase of those goods. If the catalogue house man is advertising a base burner heater at a ridiculously low figure you know, and I know, and everyone else who knows anything knows that it is an inferior article of commerce; that it is some- thing which the average person would not have in his house; that it is ex- pensive as a_ luxury and of no use for practical purposes ; that it will leak gas and consume coal beyond any other coal stove that was ever built. Get one of those $9.68 coal stoves to be used as a horrible example if you can; if you can not obtain one precisely like it, get one that can be sold cheaper, and one that shows its inferiority, and keep it in your store for educational purposes. Now, mind this point, do not ever pros- titute your business to the point where you will sell the stove, unless you sell it to the worst enemy you have in the world as a means of getting revenge up- on him. Keep the stove as the horrible example, and, to coin a new word, oc- casionaily when the catalogue house fiend visits you, conduct a class in stoveology. When your customer comes in and tells you he can buy a certain stove, which certainly must be a bargain, from ‘*Lord Bobs’’ for a certain figure, show him the sample of the stove you have, and when you show it to him be careful to explain all the bad points in detail and dwell upon the good points in your better lines. Be honest in this, but nevertheless be emphatic and persuasive in it. Tell him the truth, that you could handle that class of goods if you desired to work a confidence game on your customers, but that you do not. Make him believe in you implicitly, in your honesty, your integrity and your ability to sell as cheap as anyone else. Make him believe the truth, and do not be over modest about it either. And in the end, if it is necessary and the customer wants to purchase the higher- priced stove, grant him a little time, covering the difference in price. In other words, be thinking man enough and have originality enough to make uality count against quantity and win the fight on this battle ground. To me the assuming of this position seems a duty on the part of every merchant. You know that the customer who pur- article from the cata- logue house will never get as much re- turns as he would had he bought the ar- ticle of better quality. As the main- spring of the community then it is your duty to prevent the gullible and the weak pe the inexperienced from get- ting fleeced, and if in doing your duty you bring to yourself business which you would not otherwise have obtained, that, too, is to your credit, and no hon- est man will say nay in the transaction. . C. Pratt, Hardware Price Current Ammunition = G. D., full count, per m. 40 Hicks" Waterproof, per m.. poe 50 MRHSREG POP MN 75 Ely’s Waterproof, per m. jeueee 60 Cartridges | No. 22 short, per m eee 2 50 No. 22 long, perm........... 3 00 No. 32 short, per m.. Sse ae 4 95 No. 32 long, DOF Mi. -. 8s. 5 80 Primers No. 2 U. M. C., boxes 250, per m...... 1 20 No. 2 Winchester, boxes 250, per m.. 1 20 Gun Wads Black edge, Nos. 11 and 12 U. M. C.. 60 Black edge, Nos. 9 and 10, per m...... 70 Black edge, No.7, perm.............. 80 Loaded Shells New Rival—For Shotguns Drs. of oz.of Size Per No. Powder Shot Shot Gauge 100 120 4 1% 10 10 $2 90 129 4 1% 9 10 2 90 128 4 1% 8 10 2 90 126 4 1% 6 10 2 90 135 414 1% 5 10 2 95 154 4% 1% 4 10 3 00 3 10 12 2 50 208 3 1 8 12 2 50 236 3% 1% 6 12 2 65 265 3% 14g 5 12 270 264 3% 148 4 12 270 Discount 40 per cent. Paper Shells—Not Loaded No. 10, pasteboard boxes 100, per 100. . 72 No. 12, pasteboard boxes 100, per 100.. 64 : gaia Kegs, 25 lbs., per keg. oe 4 00 % Kegs, 12% ibs., oa X ‘keg... Se oe cae 2 2 \ kegs, 6% Ibs., ‘per ag keg .-........ 1 25 Shot In sacks containing 25 Ibs. Drop, all sizes smaller than B........ 1 40 Augurs and Bits Oe a 60 Jennings genuine..................... 25 Jennings’ mitation...............2.... 50 Axes First Quality, S. B. Bronze.. 6 50 First Quality os Bronze. . 10 00 First ality” S. B.S. Steel.. 7 00 First Quality, D. B. Steel. . 11 50 Barrows EE 15 00 ee nes «© «abled Bolts ee 60 Carriags, Bow ee 65&10 Slee eae es waauee 50 “Buckets WGN PAI $4 00 Butts, Cast Cast Loose Pin, eet Bee eeee et ewes 65 Wrought Narrow .. cote Geeta al aicia a 60 ‘Chain. Yin. 6-16 in. 3 in. % in. Co: 1¢... @€ @... & @ :.. 446 Be... 84 - Te ... Ce . 6 BBB 8% . = - 6% 6% Crowbars Gast Steel, per Ib........ 2.2... 6 Chisels ee oe 65 ee se 65 GE ec 65 Pe ce 65 Elbows Com. 4 piece, 6 _ + Per -_ .-net 65 ———_ — pons 1 25 Adjus : ---.dis 40&10 ‘Rapeneivo Bits Clark’s small, $18; large, $26 .......... 40 Ives’ 1, $18; 2, $24; ty 25 Files—New List New American .............. 708&10 Nicholson’s. 70 Heller’s Horse Rasps... 70 Chibenndend eu Nos. 16 to 20; 22 and 24; 25 and 26; 27, 28 List 12 13 14 15 16. 17 Discount, 65 Gauges Stanley Rule and Level Co.’s.......... 60810 Glass Single Strength, by box............... dis 85& Double Strength, by box.............. dis 85& By the Eigse dis 80&20 Hammers Maydole & Co.’s, new _- Se e.g 33% Yerkes & Plumb’s. ee -dis 40810 Mason’s Solid Cast Steel......... .30¢e list 70 —— Gate, Clark’s 1, 2,3 ..- dis 60810 Hollow ‘Ware La Se Sass 50&10 Do ES Se Be a eran an oe 50&10 Ce 50&10 Horse Nails Au Sable . -dis 40&10 House ‘Furnishing | Goods Stamped Tinware, new list............ 70 Japanned Tinware................0.... 20810 Iron be BRON oe 2 25 c rates Right Bape. es 3 c rates Knobs—New List Door, mineral, jap. trimmings........ 75 Door, porcelain, jap. trimmings....... 85 Tubular, aaa Regular 0 pecee es roc eue 5 00 Warren, Galvanized Lo ee 00 Levels Stanley Rule and Level Co.’s.......... dis 70 Mattocks Adze Eye...................---$17 00..dis 70—10 Metals—Zinc ao... eis seciclate sia oa aisles 7% Per pound.. eae oes SS 8 ‘iia Bird Cages . ee ceee ae 40 Pumps, Cistern.............2..s. seco 75&10 Screws, New List ..................... 85 Casters, Bed and Plate.. 50810810 Dampers, AMOFICAR.... .. 1... «5 ase 50 Molasses Gates Stebbing’ Pattern... .:..........: Saco 60&10 Enterprise, self-measuring............ 30 Pans Fry, Acm poe cee cas aca 60810810 Comin, aaa Me oe ele ey ae 7085 Patent Planished Iron “A” Wood’s patent planished, Nos. 24 to 27 10 75 “B”’ Wood’s patent planished, Nos. 25 to27 9 75 Broken packages ec per pound extra. Planes Ohio Tool Co.’s, fancy. . 50 Sciota Bench 60 Sandusky Tool Co. ig, fancy. 50 Bench, first quality... icici ca edlae a "0 Nails Advance over base, on both Steel and Wire. SUOCL NAS, DABO. o.oo e ose ceases 2 65 Weise airs, ee a. 2 65 20 to 60 advance........-......--...e. Base BO Oe IG SGVENCS..... 0... ones ose 5 Saeueee 10 Gi@vamee. | | ok... 20 4 advance 30 3 advance . 45 2advance..... ‘ 70 Fine 3 advance 50 Casing 10 advance 15 Casing 8 advance........ 25 Casing 6 advance.......... : 36 Finish 10 advance ..................00. 25 Finish 8 advance... Sees cee cces os 35 Finish 6 advance .......-........ 20... 45 Batrel % advanee... .... .. 2... 85 Rivets Hron and Timied...................... 50 Copper Rivets and Burs.............. 45 Roofing Plates 14x20 IC, Charcoal, Dean.............. 6 50 14x20 IX, Charcoal, Dean.. 7 5O 20x28 IC, Charcoal, Dean soe 13 00 14x20 IC, Charcoal, Allaway Grade... 5 50 14x20 Ix’, Charcoal, Allaway Grade... 6 50 20x28 IC, Charcoal, Allaway a. ee 11 00 20x28 Ix, Charcoal, Allaway G 13 00 = Sisal, ia inch and larger.. 8% MeO 12 Sand — List acct. 19, ’86.. t+. GIR 50 Sash Weights Solid Eyes, por tonm.................... 25 00 Sheet eee com. smooth. com. Mes. 20toM ........ $3 20 a 3 20 Woe: Stem. 3 30 De ee 3 40 ae agpa eleet baka ape 3 70 73 3 80 Now i Sheets No. 18 and see. over 30 inch wide, not less than 2-10 extra. Shovels and entiin First Grade, Doz.......... Second Grade, Doz..... Solder OEE a 21 The prices of the many other qualities of solder in the market indicated by private brands vary according to composition. ® a Squares Secen SHG TOM oe 70 Tin—Melyn Grade 16x14 IC, Charcoal. ............... ...- $ 8 50 14x20 Ic, a sa cdl lal lao 8 50 20x14 Ix’, Cmorecer................ 9 75 Each Sdditional X on this grade, $1.25. Tin—Allaway Grade 10n04 10, Charcoal. .... .... oon. esos 7 00 14x20 IC, pce en 7 00 10x14 Ix’ ee 8 50 14x20 Ix’ Cha: 8 50 Each idditioual X on this grade, $1.50 Boiler Size Tin Plate 14x56 IX, for No.8 Boilers, 14x56 IX, for No.9 Boilers, ; per pound.. 10 Traps Steel, Game. a 75 Oneida Community ; “Newhouse’s. 40810 Oneida Community. Hawley & Nor- es a 65 Mouse, choker per Ct ae 15 Mouse, delusion, pe.v doz.....-.. ..... 1 25 Wire pono Market..... 60 led Market 60 50&10 Cenmamed teen seed a 0 r’ Barbed ene, alvanized 3 30 Barbed Fence, Pemmiee........ 1.1.2... 3 00 Wire Goods Bright...... 80 Screw Eyes 80 ON ico sn 80 Gate Hooks and Eyes............... 80 Wueiiies Baxter’s Adjustable, Nickeled... 30 Ge 2 Ee ie 30 Coe’s Patent Agricultural, /Wrought..70&10 18 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Window Dressing Window Design of an Elaborate Char- acter. It is fitting and proper that the Easter windows should be of a much more elaborate character than you usually permit yourself to indulge in, for the spring festival has more significance than the one which it commonly has for all of us. The renewal of nature’s ac- tivities should be an occasion for a pe- culiarly fine display of those garments which you have prepared for your fel- lows who, like the trees and the earth, are about to throw aside the sober gar- ments of the winter season and show that renewed freshness in apparel which the season demands. Usually it is not well to dress windows in such a manner that they can not be disturbed for the accommodation of customers, but the Easter window may be made an exception. It might be well to put a card in the window saying that no goods will be sold from it until a certain date. Such a course might be an addi- tional incentive to purchasing those goods when removed. * * * We suggest a window design of a rather elaborate nature. The idea is to show a garden wall with a fountain set in it, which is covered by an arch sup- ported by pillars. A perfectly plain backing is put in the window and _ cov- ered smoothly with plain white cloth. On this backing, at either side of the arch, gilt molding is tacked to form panels and the center of the panels is covered with onyx paper to give the effect of an onyx slab. Against the middle of each panel there is attached a semi-circular receptacle for flowers, which is covered with onyx paper. This can be shaped from wire and covered with paper or it can be made by sawing a small cask into quarters and using one-quarter, which is covered with the paper in a neat manner. These wall pockets are filled with moss, vines, natural or artificial, and flowers, prefer- able lilies growing on the long stalks. The vines hang over the edge of the pot and run down to the floor. Under the archway and against the wall is fixed a lion’s head with open jaws—such a one as is now commonly sold in plaster by all image makers. This head is set in the center of an onyx covered panel bordered by gilt molding. A hole is pierced in the lion’s head and in the backing and through this hole is run a rubber tube, which is connected with a water pipe in the store, so that a small Stream of water runs from the lion’s mouth into the basin below, which is filled with ferns and flowering plants. This basin may be made in two parts, one an outer onyx covered semi-circu- lar basin, and the inner a metal basin for the reception of the water. A hole is bored through the backing to permit the egress of the water by means of an- other rubber tube. In front of the back- ing is built a low raised platform, which is covered with white cloth stretched smooth. The arch consists of a frame work covered with white cloth and onyx paper and two onyx covered pillars. The pillars are made as follows: Cut out of a board two circular pieces of wood of the diameter of the pillars re- quired, and at their centers nail them to the ends of a stoutstick about 2x2 inches in size. Nail four lighter sticks flush with the edge of the circular pieces of board and cover the whole with heavy pasteboard so that you will have a firm cylinder on which to paste the onyx paper. The capitals and bases of the columns can be cut from wood of any desired shape, or they can be cov- ered with white cloth neatly puffed. If wood is used it should be gilded. The framework for the top is made ofa skeleton frame of wood strips one and seven-eighths by three-quarters of an inch in size, nailed together with small wire nails. The arch is made by cut- ting a section of a child’s hoop, which gives the arch shape. The whole top is then covered with white cloth stretched smoothly. A strip of molding is used to finish off the upper and lower edges and onyx paper is pasted on the front and sides so as to give the panel effect. By covering the wooden frame with pasteboard before stretching the cloth a firmer surface and a securer backing for the onyx paper is obtained. In case it is not convenient to build a raised plat- form in the window, a piece of white cloth can be stretched on the floor. Other flowers in pots can be set along the base of the wall and a very pretty effect secured. * ok x Too little attention is paid by the av- erage merchant to the best use of his ledges. In nine out of ten small furnish- ing goods stores the ledges are crowded with reserve stock piled up in the orig- inal packages without any beauty or at- tractivess, unless the dirt which is plainly visible be an attraction. Just at this season of the year, when nature is taking a new start, suppose you take a new start as well. Consider for a mo- ment how much that ledge space can be made to do for the advertising of your goods, and then ask yourself whether it is a sensible thing for you to use such valuable space in a way which renders your store positively unattractive. Do you ever notice how prominent the ledges in your store are and how much they determine the impression that is made upon the person taking a glance at your store interior? If you have not done so before walk into your store and try to see it as it would be seen by a person entering it for the first time. Then ask yourself whether you can afford to waste such prominent space on goods which should be stored elsewhere. Put up displays of goods on those ledges, Get out handsome articles that will at- tract and please the eye. Arrange them tastefully, well spaced and without any carelessness or crowding. If it is nec- essary to find a place for surplus stock, hire a place elsewhere. Make your ledges do their fair share toward paying your store rent. It is as foolish to aban- don them to reserve stock as it is to pile them with unsightly boxes. And this leads us to speak of the habit that many dealers have of crowding lines above the showcases with goods in such a way that it is impossible for the customer to see the shelves. Get good modern metal fixtures which are attached to and ex- tend from the ledges over the showcases. Don’t load them with goods, but trim them lightly and attractively with goods which are frequently changed. In this way goods are not spoiled and . the ap- pearance of the store is improved. In short, look at every visible inch of the store as so much advertising space, and be as chary of wasting any of it as of wasting any space in your allotted col- umn in the paper in which you adver- tise.—Apparel Gazette. ——— se oa__ Give thanks when a friend arrives at your table who makes your boy’s face shine with a new thought; invite sucha friend and give him a place at your fire- side. Make a Butter - Market | If business is dull create a want—make a ‘‘fancy’’ butter market by teaching your dairy customers the value of PURE The question of making better but- ter is simply one of using the best salt—‘‘The Salt that’s All Salt,” salt in buttermaking. Diamond Crystal Dairy Salt It imparts the flavor of ‘‘fancy’’ brands and keeps it It is the only salt above 99 per cent. PURE; the only salt that immediately dissolves and leaves the butter You will sell more butter and most salt if you are stocked with Diamond Crystal Salt. there. free of grit and spots. send you our Salt Booklet. Diamond Crystal Salt Co., St. Clair, Mich. Awnings, Tents, Flags os : vas. The M. I. Wilcox Company 210 to 216 Water St., Toledo, Ohio Order your Awnings be- fore it gets hot. Tents to Rent Stack binder and thresh- er covers, wagon covers. We make = everything made of c Wal Hidaaa ame nee ys? <4 :~ a MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 19 The Meat Market Lean Hams the Butcher’s Delight. We are living in a progressive age— this statement applies to the breeding, feeding and marketing of live stock. The feeder who markets his hogs in De- troit will testify that, one year with an- other, he finds that fat hogs sell the best and, for this reason, it is perhaps safe for him to continue to breed and _ raise hogs that are predisposed to take on fat. Blocky, wheezy, ‘‘fatbacks,’’ weighing from 175 to 275 pounds, are well liked by local packers, and it is a fact that they will not increase the price, when a load of extra bacon hogs are offered. This, however, is not true of all markets and may not always be true of this market. It is a fact that there is more demand to-day, the world over, for the modern butchers’ type than for any other. The butcher prefers a carcass of good length in proportion to its weight. Deep vertically but not wide in the sense of having a fat back and the hams and shoulders rounded out with fat. 2 > Saved Her Neck by Influencing Her Neigh- bors. From the Rochester Post Express. ‘*IT don’t care notkin’ ’bout a hen’s morals s’long she’s a good layer,’’ re- marked a beetle-browed man to a fel- low vegetable vender as they were about to enter a restaurant on State street the other day. ‘‘No, siree! An’ if she can’t lay I git rid of her mighty suddingly. Yes, sir. **But I had a hen las’ fall what was a caution, Lay? She couldn’t lay down. She wa’n’t no earthly good as a layer, an’ yet she was th’ most lik’ly hen I had. She was a gay deceiver; an’ say, she netted me more egg money than all the rest o’ th’ flock put together. I had noticed fer some time that she was a dead loss in the yard, an’ one day I said ter my woman that I guessed th’ next time we had company we’d better let her figger in th’ dinner. She was a-eatin’ corn right at my feet at th’ time an’ when I went on ter state ter th’ woman that there was no use in keepin’ a hen what didn’t lay none, she perked up her head an‘ looked at me long an’ earnestly. Says my woman, ‘I'll bet that hen knows what you are sayin,’ Daniel.’ Says I, ‘I hope to gum she does, fer I mean business. No aigs, no fodder in my yard.’ ‘‘That hen stood as if she was turned ter stun fer "bout a minnit an’ then scuttled off. Th’ next mornin’ when | went out she come up a-cluckin’ an’ actin’ queer. At last I made out that she wanted me ter foller her. She led th’ way ter a ol’ tool house an’ if there wan't closeter a dozen of fresh-laid aigs. ‘Course I was surprised. I knowed she hadn’t laid no aigs fer several weeks. Well, I took ’em in an’ on th’ next mornin’ I fond th’ same thing. Then I begin ter feel interesed, more so ‘cause George Perry told me at th’ store that afternoon that his hens wan't layin’ none. He’s my neighbor, ye know. That night I watched. Purty soon I see’d my non-payin’ hen a-leadin’ a hull colony of Perry’s hens across lots ter th’ tool house. “‘Then I understood. She couldn’t lay no aigs herself, but she was tryin’ ter save her neck by infuencin” her neighbors. An’ do ye know she kept that up till snow come. An’ I’m savin’ her fer spring, ‘cause she knows on what conditions she keeps out of th’ stew. Yes, sir, she’s a shrewd hen, an’ if she was a man she’d lift my mortgage inside of a year.’’ ———_>0»—___ Eggs Not Laid by Hens. Science, prompted and urged by the commercial instinct, has demonstrated that casein from ordinary cows’ milk is a as good for baking as hen eggs, and a company with $6,500,000 capital has been formed to manufacture out of it a substitute for the ‘‘fresh’’ and “strictly fresh’’ product of the poultry yard. One pound of casein is said to be equal to six dozen eggs. The hen’s advantage, however, lies in the un- hatchableness of the rival product and its incasement in a box instead of a shell. She alone can be the mother of broods and flocks of chickens. Casein can not deprive her of that cherished privilege. The artificial egg has arrived, but not the artificial broiler, fowl, capon and rooster, ——_-2se>___ Poultry Dealers Aroused. The poultry dealers of Indianapolis have organized to fight House bill No. 199, which has passed the House and is now before the Senate. The bill pro- vides a penalty for persons or corpora- tions killing poultry in the city of In- dianapolis. The poultry men say that there are over twenty firms engaged in the poultry business there; that over a million dollars in capital is invested ; that the cold storage facilities have en- couraged the business ; that killing in the country and subsequent shipping there is impracticable, and that the passage of the bill would do great harm to the interests of Indianapolis and would put them out of the business. It is believed the bill will not pass. se .>____ Usual Effect of It. “I wish you wouldn’t try to stgp smoking, ’’ remarked his business asso- ciate. ““Why?’’ demanded the man who was reforming. ‘‘Because when you undertake to stop you are afraid to buy any cigars your- self for fear you will smoke too many, and so you simply help yourself to mine. ’’ ———_>-0<__ A married couple needn't go to a crockery store to get_a family jar. = > 99OOOOOS ¢ 0 0000000000 Novel Use for Prunes. There has just been organizeed in San Jose, Cal., a wealthy corporation which proposes to utilize a large proportion of the prune crop in the manufacture of an article known as prune coffee. This article is designed asa table beverage to take the place of tea and coffee. It is composed of 70 per cent. of prunes and the remainder is made up of cereals. It is absolutely free from coffee, chicory, extracts or chemicals. It is being put up in pound and a half packages, there being one pound of the pure fruit in each package. In appearance and taste the new heverage, it is said, is hard to distinguish from the best coffees on the market. —_».>4+.>—____ Has Eaten 200,000 Hot Biscuits. Emporia, Kansas, is proud of one of its citizens, Jesse Powell, because he worked on the farm owned by President McKinley’s father and labored many days with the President cutting weeds, pitching hay, ploughing corn and chopping wood. Mr. Powel! is 70 and is in the best of health. He attributes this to hot biscuits, which he has eaten once a day all his life. He sat in a grocery store in Emporia the other day and fig- ured out that he had devouted 200,000} hot biscuits in his life. He insists that doctors who inveigh against hot biscuits don’t know what they are talking about. ——_~—>_2<.___ Calling Down the Butcher. *‘Now, Mr. Beefy,’’ coldly said the handsome young’ widow, steadfastly watching the butcher as he weighed the sirloin just selected, ‘‘while I am_ fully conscious of the honor you wish to con- fer upon me, | must tell you that I have no present intention of marrying again, and ‘am, therefore, compelled to refuse the offer of your hand.’’ ‘‘Bu-bu-but, mum,’’ stammered the astonished butcher, ‘‘I’ve never offered you my hand, and—er—’’ : ‘‘Then why are you trying to weigh it on the scales with the meat, sir?’’ —___._2.__ To be original is to invite attack. Ballou Baskets Are Best Is conceded. Uncle Sam knows it and uses them by the thousand. We make all kinds. Market Baskets, Bushel Baskets, Bamboo De- livery Baskets, Splint Delivery Baskets, Clothes Baskets, Potato Baskets, Coal Baskets, Lunch Baskets, Display Baskets, Waste Baskets, Meat Baskets, Laundry Baskets, Baker Baskets, Truck Baskets. Send for catalogue. BALLOU BASKET WORKS, Belding, Mich. Don’t buy an Awning until you get our prices. Send distance 1 to 2 or height, 2 to 3 or projection. 3 to 4 or width. (SEB CUT) and we will send samples and bottom prices. CHAS. A. COYE 1 Pearl Street Grand Rapids, .Mich. SOOOEOOS 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000 THE IMPROVED WELSBACH HYDRO-CARBON (GASOLENE) LAMPS Light. No odor, no dirt, no smoke, no wicks. Times Cheaper than Kerosene and to give 3 Times More Made in 6 different designs, suitable for home, store, hall and church. money refunded. AGENTS—There is positively nothing that commands the ready sale of these lamps. sold by dealers throughout the United States. Write for Illustrated Catalogue and Special Prices to 233-235 Griswold St., Detroit, [lich. (Conducting Michigan Supply Depot for Welsbach Company.) 00000000 Guaranteed to be 5 Our guarantee means satisfaction or Enormous quantities are being A. T. KNOWLSON OOOO9OOS 0 00000000000000000 our leaders. Shipped knocked down. First class freight. No. 52. Discription: Oak, finished in light antique, rubbed and polished. Made any length, 28 inches wide, 44 inches high. Write for illustrated catalogue and prices. We are now located two blocks south of Union Depot. Cor.cBartlett and South-lIonia Streets, Grand Rapids, Mich. 20 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Woman’s World Talk to Girls Who Work for a Living. The other day a working girl asked me why I did not talk some through this column to working girls and I answered her truly enough that it was because I had so much to say to them I should never know when to leave off, if I once began. For in all the world there is nothing else closer to my heart than these brave little recruits in the great army of bread-winners, and | never watch them on their way to their office or store without feeling like tak- ing off my hat and saluting, for I know that courage and valor and honor are marching by. I think that the first thing I always want to say to working girls is a word of cheer. Don’t think it an unparalleled misfortune that you have to work while other girls of your age are going to dances and parties. Of course, if we could all of us would keep girls safe and warm and sheltered in the home nest, and we would lavish upon them all the luxuries and gayeties girls love and crave. This would be kind, but it might be well if there was some way in which we could guarantee the future for them and be sure that they never would have anything to do but Sit on a silk cushion and sew up a seam, And feed upon strawberries, sugar and cream. Unfortunately, this is impossible. American life is full of hazards and the petted belle of to-day may be facing starvation to-morrow. All of us have known dozens of cases in which a man reported to be a millionaire has sud- denly lost his fortune or, dying, has left his family absolutely penniless and thrown them destitute upon the world. Under heaven, there is nothing else so pitiful and so helpless as these women who are trained to nothing but extrava- gance and self-indulgence and who are ignorant of every profitable thing on earth, but who must work or starve. Believe me, little sister, when I tell you that the girl who has solved the bread and butter problem for herself and who has a trade or profession that makes her independent has not the worst of it in life. She has a capital in her own clever brains and hands that absconding cashiers and failing hus- bands and fathers can not rob her of, and she will never be broken on the wheel of fate as many a poor butterfly of fashion is. There is also a joy that passes understanding in the money you have made yourself, that you don’t have to wheedle nor beg nor cajole nor weep any man into giving you and that you can spend absolutely as you please. The woman who has never known the delights of an independent pocketbook has missed half the pleasure in life, and that is something many a rich woman never experiences. She is a beggar from the cradle to the grave, and asking alms is a_ humiliation whether you rattle a tin cup on the street corner or ask for checks across the breakfast table. Don’t forget your pocketbook when you count up your blessings. It may be light, but it is your own. I would also urge you, as a matter of sense and happiness, to adopt what Stevenson called ‘‘that brave attitude towards life.’’ Be cheerful. All}the world loves a bright face and a genial smile. The silliest thing a woman ever does is to cultivate a martyr pose. Sup- pose you do belong to an aristocratic old family and never expected to have Plain to work. Nobody on earth cares one rap about that or wants to hear about your ancestors and the quicker you for- get about them yourself the better. It isn’t sympathetic and it may not be right, but everybody has a horror of people who have tales of woe to tell. Don’t join their number. Keep a bright face and it.will pay just in a business way. All of us turn to cheerful people just as naturally as we turn to the sun- shine, and we flee from dull people and complaining people as we do the plague. If I could tell what I believe to be the secret of success in any line, I should say it consisted in cheerfulness and interest in your work. There is something in it that is infectious and that makes everybody want to turn in and give you a helping hand. Not long ago a newspaper woman who was sent to a distant city to do an important piece of work received great and unex- pected assistance from a man who was a perfect stranger, and in thanking him for his kindness she was moved to ask him why he had put himself to so much trouble on her account. ‘‘Oh,’’ he answered, with a laugh, ‘‘you are so enthusiastic over your work and seem to be enjoying it so much, anybody would be bound to help you out.’’ Don’t take your stand with the lackadaisical sisters whose tears are always on tap and who look chronically bored with their oc- cupation, if you want to ever get your salary advanced. That kind of woman is never worth anybody’s good money and she never gets much of it. Be feminine. I think the most fatal mistake any woman ever makes is when she tries to make an imitation man of herself. Imitations are never any good and the working woman who wears man- nish clothes and short hair and swag- gers and tries to talk iike a man is the worst of the lot. The very thing in woman’s work that ‘ought to make it valuable,and that will when women have sense enough to quit trying to do things like men and do them like women, is its feminine quality. The time will come when her intuitions, her tact and her adaptability will count in business life just as they do now in social, and when she loses these by coarsening her- self because she thinks it mannish, she is simply lessening her commercial value. I would also call your attention, little sister, to the fact that it is along the eternally feminine Jines that women make the greatest success. There is al- ways going to be a demand for good housekeeping, for well-kept boarding houses and hotels and for good dress- making and millinery. I am not dis- couraging any girl from studying law or medicine or anything else she wants to, but I do say that if she would put the same amount of study, training and in- telligence into keeping a good boarding house or establishing a first-class dress- making establishment, the rewards would be ten times greater. The women in every city who make money are the ones who have followed those lines. Be polite. It pays. You haven’t any idea of the wild gratitude that surges up in the breast of a mere customer when we find a shopgirl who takes any interest in us and tries to find us what we want. Of course, we are aggra- vating. I realize that, but, you see, we don’t know what you have in stock, nor just what we- want ourselves half the time. We are bound to iook about a bit and it is heartbreaking to a timid woman to know she is being considered a nuisance and a bore. Don’t be super- cilious. Everybody can not wear silk stockings and $30 petticoats and em- broidered satin corsets, yet when a woman gees into a store and asks for one of these articles the clerk invariably takes down something whose price is enough to give one heart failure. ‘‘I want something cheaper,’’ the poor, humble creature before the counter murmurs, and the way the haughty di- vinity behind the counter shoves the cheaper article at the buyer is the most eloquent expression of disgust and con- tempt that the human mind is capable of conceiving. Don’t do that. We would all be millionaires if we could, but we cannot. Bear with our misfor- tune. Don’t know too much. This isa _ fa- vorite fault of typewriters and stenog- raphers. Let your employer know some- thing and let him manage his business his own way. I knew a clever and com- petent woman who lost her good place because she persisted in spelling **cinch’’ “‘cinque.’’ She said that was the right way, because it was derived from the French numeral, and_ she *|brought down a lot of dictionaries to You ought to sell LILY WHITE “The flour the best cooks use” VALLEY CITY MILLING CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. “(jood as Gold” Flour Sifter and Sack Supporter Sells like wildfire. for descriptive circu- lar and prices. Retail merchants y make 100 per cent. O profit. 2 a8} Every customer wants 3 one. Write to-day tye F “? The Goff Manufacturing Portland, Mich. GOLD MEDAL, PARIS, 1900 Walter Baker & Go, 1 PURE, HIGH-GRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES Their preparations are put up in conformity to the Pure-Food Laws of all the States. Under the decisions of the U. S. Courts no other chocolate or cocoa is entitled to be labelled or sold as ‘‘ Baker’s Chocolate” or ‘‘ Baker’s Cocoa.” Grocers will find them in the long run the most profit- able to handle, as they are absolutely pure and of uni- form quality. TRADE-MARK. In writing your order specify Walter Baker & Co.’s goods. If other goods, are substituted please let us know. WALTER BAKER & CO. Limited, DORCHESTER, MASS, Established 1780. wee PPP HNNYY TYTN TNYN NNN =liitt - CD ta =. s << you that they are only new article. : : 3: Who urges you to | ud a” wy “It's as good as Sapolio,” when they try to sell you their experiments. Your own good sense will tell trying to get you to aid their keep Sapolio? Is it not the public? The manufacturers, by constant and judi- ciousadvertising, bring customers to your stores whose very presence creates a demand for other articles. Fe DD DL LL LL Pevevrevavervvreveeverveneenenveneeneenennennenveniiz ea IITTUTUTTTTTEC TT PPeee yy . “re 9 <3 2 = ‘ > “< ce mY x Boe 7 ¥ its il « ‘ \ Lie 4>____ The Tyrant on the Hearthstone. It couldn’t have happened in Grand Rapids, of course! Here the women are all meek and mild, but in another city a marriage which was to take place between two prominent young people was recently broken off.at the last min- ute by the woman on the ground that the prospective bridegroom was ‘‘too bossy.’’ It is not known in what way he ex- hibited his fell determination to domi- neer. He may have been rash enough to break through all the time-honored traditions of the occasion and assume that he had a right to help decide when and how and where he was to be mar- ried, when, as everybody knows, a man is nothing but a figure-head at his own wedding. He may, heaven help him, have interfered with the young woman’s privilege of flirting with other men all the way up to the altar. He may even have been foolhardy enough to try to dictate to her about her trousseau. The main point is that he showed his hand too soon and, while it was still time, the girl withdrew from a contract that was going to give her a tyrannical mas- ter instead of a sympathetic companion. “It is extremely doubtful if a marriage was ever broken off on better grounds or a woman ever showed more level-headed good judgment. The happiness of life is not made up of the one or two su- preme joys that come to us in the course of a lifetime, nor do the big tragedies make its greatest misery. The things that turn existence to wormwood and gall are the little daily nagging trifles, the pin that pricks us at every turn, the burden that we may never lay down for an instant’s respite. Chief among its minor tribulations are the people of our own household that are ‘‘too bossy,’’ who always interfere with our arrangements and who are _in- sistent in trying to force their own]{ opinions and tastes upon us. None of us entirely escape the affliction, but no other boss is quite such an aggravated nuisance as the man who attempts to manage the women of his family. There you get petty tyranny in its most offensive guise—the man who is always poking his nose into the meal barrel, who keeps tab on soap ends and who arrogates to himself the right to super- vise his wife’s visiting list, decide on what clubs she shall join, select her clothes, and form her opinions. Such a man may be a paragon of all the vir- tues, but he is less desirable as a hus-*| band than the broad-minded fellow who may fail in a hundred ways to be all that he ought, but who is too generous to even want to boss his wife. Say what one will, the dearest passion of the human heart is the love of liberty. For that wars have been fought, and heroes have given up their lives, and thousands have braved the perils of un- known countries. We realize that ab- stractly, and yet we are so dull that we can not bring it down to our dealings with those of our own households. The despotism of the home is just as grind- ing as the despotism of any monarchy the world has ever known. We hate the tyrant on the hearthstone just as surely as we hate the tyrant on the throne. Everybody’s own experience,bears that out, yet we spend our lives trying to coerce our families into doing our way instead of giving them liberty to do their own, and when they flee from us we wonder why. ‘*Give me liberty,or give me death, ”’ is the cry of love, as well as patriotism, and when we learn to heed it we shall have solved half thé domestic troubles of the world. Cora Stowell. ——__> 2» —___ Observant Little Charles. Charles is a very observing boy. Re- cently one of mamma’s friends came to the house to call. Mamma was out_and Charles opened the door. ‘““Mamma is not home,’’ he said. ‘*Will you please give her my card when she comes?’’ enquired the caller. ‘*Yeth, ma’am,’’ said Charles. The caller opened her card case, and as she withdrew the engraved paste- board a bit of tissue paper fluttered down on to the steps. Very grandly Charles picked it up and handed it to her, saying: ‘You dropped one of your cigarette papers.”’ —_+> 2. ______ Baron Wilhelm von Rothschild, who recently died at Frankfort, was one of the very few rich men who make it a strict rule of their lives always to give away one-tenth of their income in char- ity. Baron Wilhelm’s regular gifts to religious and charitable objects must have amounted to a prodigious sum, as he had an immense fortune. Baron Wilhelm was not only a rigorous ob- server in all respects of the ancient Mo- saic law, but he wasa profound Tal- mudic scholar, having devoted a great part of his time to careful and system- atic studies of the Talmud. 2» It is said that the Emperor of Ger- many has about $4,000,000 invested in American railroad bonds, and that the Empress has invested $500,000 in gilt- edged American securities. The Czar of Russia has, it is said, $6,000,000 in- vested in American railroads. The late Queen of England held nearly $1, 000, 000 worth of.sugar stock, and her son, the King, has invested largely in the best American railroad bonds. King Oscar, of Sweden, is said to have made money out of American breweries, and King George, of Greece, has been a very suc- cessful grain operator. Oe The difference between a drunkard (r 40ND TAATAAAATAT OUT UUT HEU GEEUEEGE ELUTE Business Grow NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY TUATHA TUE ETT Gi and make more profit than those who buy it roasted. That’s one reason why you should own a Perfection Coffee Roaster Will you let us tell you some more good reasons? A postal card will bring them. Milwaukee Gas Stove and Roaster Co. Milwaukee, Wis. and a dipsomaniac is merely a question of depth of purse. USE me CELEBRATED Sweet Loma ‘or TOBACCO. CUT (Against the Trust.) CIGAR NEW SCOTTEN TOBACCO CO. OT a ete A) aes 22 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Butter and Eggs Observations by a Gotham Egg Man. Receipts of eggs at seaboard markets have not increased quite so fast as some of the trade anticipated, but they have been ample to supply consumptive de- mand on the increased scale encouraged by the lower prices ruling. Up to this writing—March 23—there does not ap- pear to be any material surplus beyond actual requirements although there are growing indications that production will be sufficient before the end of the month to give a surplus for cold storage. As soon as this occurs values will be determined by the willingness to put goods in the refrigerators and much interest is manifested in what this point is to be. ee We hear many rumors of what our Western friends are likely to do. There has been a report that a certain packer had contracted April stock at 13c on track at shipping station, but it is not very well authenticated and even if true would only indicate that the fools were not all dead yet among egg speculators. On the whole we think the sentiment among egg buyers for storage, as to what they are willing to do on April deliveries, has softened a little of late. Certainly in this part of the country it would be very hard to find customers above 13!c delivered in Eastern houses and it is doubtful that any large amount of future contracts could be made on that basis. There is no general dispo- sition to make many future contracts, most of the trade preferring to await developments and go in or hold off ac- cording to the prices ruling when the goods are in sight and the extent of production is more clearly indicated. * * * There has been a steady increase in the cold storage facilities of the county and it looks now as if New York would, before long, be amply supplied with cold room to carry about all the goods necessary for local distribution. It is a material advantage to owners of stored eggs to have them held within immedi - ate reach of the dealers who are to dis- tribute them. Of course, this considera- tion can never be wholly secured, but it can be secured more nearly than it has been in the past. New York has al- ways, since cold storage warehouses were first built, been lacking in suffi- cient cold storage room to carry the amount of dairy products and eggs needed by her local trade and the ad- vantage of having guods held here has led to a very prompt absorption of all the desirable egg room available. This fact has put the cold storage business of New York in fine shape and led to gradual enlargements, but it is only re- cently that plans have been put on foot to make a very large extension. Now two big warehouses are under way just across the river,in Jersey City and we shall soon be in shape to carry near at hand a much larger proportion of the goods required for local consumption. The prospects of filling these increased facilities for holding are pretty good, owing to the advantages of having stock right at hand, but it remains to be con- sidered whether the increase of cold storage room in the country at large will not very soon give a surplus béyond what can be profitably utilized. The advantages of having eggs stored close to the place of their ultimate con- sumption are several: First,it is almost always possible to move stock profit- ably before the weather becomes settled cool in the fall. Quite frequently there is a chance to move spring eggs in the summer and quite usually during Sep- tember when the weather is apt to be muggy and unfavorable. At such times dealers want the stock where they can take out just such quantities as they can dry off and put into consumption immediately, and they can thus use goods near at hand to much better ad- vantage than stock arriving on the docks from outside points. Such goods, ar- riving here during the unsettled weather of the fall, often have to be stored again to preserve them from deterioration and there is an actual difference in sell- ing value, during the fall, between goods in local storage and those to be brought in from outside points. This difference averages about %c per dozen on sales to New York dealers and is sufficient to give a material advantage in storing here-such goods as are need- ed for New York trade so long as the quantity held here remains below or equal to local requirements.—N. Y. Produce Review. —_>_0—___ Ohio Maple Sugar Producers to Advance the Price. The maple sugar industry has been declining in importance for some twenty years: The main reason for this is that the sugar maple thrives best in a rich soil and farmers have been discoverin that they could put these naturally ad lands to more profitable use than by raising sugar. They have therefore cut down a great deal of the sugar maple all the way from Vermont to Ohio, and have put a very large acreage which yielded nothing but maple sugar into other crops. Ohio is now the largest center of sugar maple growing. On the whole, the crop has declined about one-half until the industry is not now very im- portant, except in Ohio. The sugarmakers there, in view of the lessening supply of the commodity, have decided that it will be safe to merge their interests, fix a price upon their product and derive much more profit from the industry than heretofore. At a recent meeting held in Ashtabula an agreement was drawn up binding the farmers to send all their sap to Middle- field, Ohio, to be boiled. Heretofore each farmer has boiled his own sap. Middlefield has been selected as the place for manufacturing syrup and sugar because it is the largest center of the industry, being situated in close prox- imity to over 300,000 maple trees. The trust will manufacture all the syrup and sugar and attend to the sales of the product, the profits heing divided among the members of the combination in proportion to the amount of raw ma- terial they supply. Most of the manu- factured product Is now sold in the form of syrup instead of sugar,and the recent meeting voted to advance the price of Syrup to $1 a gallon, which is 25 cents more than the usual price. It remains to be seen whether this combination will prove a success. —>2>__ Winding Up of Pettis & Co. All that was mortal of the Charles L. Pettis & Co. swindle, of New York, was sold at auction a few days ago. The office effects brought $47.50. About $1,000 worth of frozen poultry was sold by Jelliffe Wright & Co. for the re- ceivers. Claims came in thick and fast. At the last report advertising bills received footed up $15,000, and_ several publishers are to be heard from. Chas. L. Pettis has been put under a $5,000 bond in the United States Court. Harry T. Hunter, brother of Irving T. Hunter, and the alleged partner in Pettis & Co., has also been placed under a $5,000 bond. Franklin J. Minck, noto- rious for crooked commission deals, bas qualified as their bondsman by showing he is worth $70,000, Walter P. Long is receiver for the firm. The shipments of goods now com- ing to Pettis & Co, are being turned over to other houses for sale. BB BB BB LE GE GE GE GE SE GE BR we wR Geo. N. Huff & Co., WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Butter, Eggs, Poultry, Game, Dressed Meats, Etc. f COOLERS AND COLD STORAGE ATTACHED. Consignments Solicited. 74 East Congress St., Detroit, Mich. SB NB BB BBE SB SR Rw De ORANGES LEMONS Direct from CALIFORNIA in car lots. Apples, Onions, Cabbage, Parsnips, Celery, Honey, Beans. market price. E. E. HEWITT, Successor to C. N. Rapp & Co. 9 North Ionia Street, Grand Rapids, Mich. ALL GROCERS Who desire to give their customers the best vinegar on the market will give them RED STAR BRAND Cider Vinegar. These goods stand for PURITY and are the best on the market. We give a Guarantee Bond to every customer. Your order solicited. THE LEROUX CIDER & VINEGAR CO., TOLEDO, OHIO. Alfred J. Brown Seed Co. Seed Growers and Merchants We are always in the market to buy or sell Clover, Timothy, Alsyke, Beans, Popcorn Buckwheat, Etc. GARDEN SEEDS IN BULK Our stocks are complete and we are prepared to quote prices as low as Good Seeds can be afforded. ALFRED J. BROWN SEED CO., Grand Rapids, Michigan POTATOES State quantity, variety and quality. If have car on track, give initial and number of car—station loaded or to be loaded. H. ELMER MOSELEY & CO., GRAND RapPIDS. CLARK BUILDING, OPPOSITE UNION STATION. MILLER & TEASDALE CO. Receivers—Carlots—Distributors POTATOES We handle from all sections and sell everywhere. ST. LOUIS, MO. Leading Distributing Center in the United States. GRASS AND CLOVER SEEDS Send us your orders. MOSELEY BROS. Jobbers of Fruits, Seeds, Beans anda Potatoes 26, 28, 30, 32 Ottawa Street Grand Rapids, Michigan ee OR eR TE Will bill at lowest 9OOO0O00 09000000 00000000000000000000000000000000 The Vinkemulder Company Offers especially attractive prices on Navel Oranges Particularly the larger sizes. Headquarters for : Apples, Onions, Cabbage 14 Ottawa St., Grand Rapids. Write for prices. OOOO 3OSO0000000 0002000-1000000000000000000000000 oH y.. «os —_ 4,72 oH y.. eS «os —_ 4,72 r iN > rs We > d MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 23 The New York Market Special Features of the Grocery and Prod- uce Trades. Special Correspondence. New York, March 23—The coffee market has become chronically dull and almost every week and every day sees it grow more ‘‘wobbly.’’ This is the sit- uation as it has existed for a week or so and there seems no immediate prospect for any other condition. Cable advices from Europe and large arrivals at pri- mary points have both tended to depress the market and, while prices have de- clined, the demand has not been espe- cially active and buyers, both local and out-of-town, are taking only sufficient to keep assortments unbroken. At the close No. 7 Rio is quotable at 7@7'4._____ Novel Egg-Preserving Machine. An egg-preserving machine has been called to the attention of the English public. By the use of this apparatus it is claimed by the inventor that eggs may be kept in excellent condition for twelve months, or even longer, without the use of any other means of preserva- tion. The machine consists of a rack on the shelves of which the eggs are stored. By means of a lever it is a sim- ple matter to give all the eggs a partial movement, which has the effect of keep- ing the yolk in motion so that it rests against no one portion of the shell for any length of time. The inventor says that incubation or deterioration can not take place as long as the air is kept from the vital germ which is in the nail and which always rises to the top. ———s0>—___ Be sure you are right—then pause a moment for reflection. Highest Market Prices Paid. 98 South Division Street, Regular Shipments Solicited. Grand Rapids, Mich. L. J. SMITH & CO. MANUFACTURERS OF Egg Cases and Fillers, Cold Storage Cases, Shipping Cases, Hinge Locking Fillers, Excelsior Nails, etc. We keep a large stock on hand and manufacture all kinds of cases known to the trade. wood Veneer cases. We would be pleased to quote you prices on our Special Bass- They are tough, bright and sweet. We manufacture our own timber, taken from the stump, and can please you. L. J. SMITH & CO., Eaton Rapids, Mich. We can use your SMALL SHIP- MENTS as well as the larger ones. L.O. SNEDECOR We want Fresh EGGS. We are Egg Receiver 36 Harrison Street, New York * REFERENCE:—NEW YORK NATIONAL EXCHANGE BANK, NEW YORK candling for our retail trade all the time. 24 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Village Improvement A Little Reflected Light of the Village Improvement Society. Those readers who were interested in following the results of the farm life after it had become a part of the Vil- lage Improvement Society will not be Surprised to learn that the good influ- ence did not stop at the one farm house. That the farm should be a satellite of the village is a natural outcome, but it did occasion a little surprise when the farmer’s wife was called upon one day by the wife of a neighboring farmer’s hired man, who earnestly asked if it couldn’t be managed in some way so that her boy Jack could get a book oc- casionally from the village library. Somehow he didn’t seem to be like the rest of the children. He didn’t like to be out. He didn’t seem to want to do anything but get a book and slip into some quiet corner where he could de- vour it. They hadn’t any books to speak of. They didn’t and couldn't afford to take a paper and all Jack could depend on to keep him in reading mat- ter was what chance threw in his way. That: was next to nothing and she wished there was some way to get the boy some- thing that was worth reading and she hoped it could be so arranged that she could meet the library charges, little by little, and give Jack one good chance if he never had another. It was an appeal straight from heart to heart and brought tears to both wom- en’s eyes. The one who had so recent- ly been so desolate, lonely and despair- ing met her needy sister more than halfway. What if it were ironing day and she and the house were at sixes and sevens? There were at times more important things than a big basket of unironed clothes and a table of un- washed dishes. Mind was greater than matter and the housekeeper ‘‘slipped on a clean apron,’’ let the ironing go and sat down close to her neighbor to hear and to help. It was the old story that the farmer’s wife knew only too well: The long, lonely, tiresome days, cloudy or sunshiny, down there at the edge of the woods where nobody ever passed unless chance or misfortune drove them into the dreary country by- way. She had hoped, at first, that times would grow better; but they never had and so, with only enough to keep soul and hody together, they had been there for fourteen years. Now there was not any chance for anything any better, so far as she could see. She had long ago ‘*made up her mind to it,’’ but it was different now that Jack and his sister were getting old enough to feel the loneliness and to rebel against it. Susie was a girl and younger; but 12 year old Jack was his grandfather—her father— right over again and there was going to be trouble unless he could be controlled. He liked to read—her stronghold just now. The boys of the neighborhood were simply dreadful ; so there she was, with absolutely no resources over there by the woods, and feeling as if she couldn’t stand it another day! Never did trouble-tossed soul have a more sympathizing listener. Hér looks showed her earnestness and she did not once interrupt. When the story was done and the teller ended with, ‘‘ Now I want to know if anything can be done about it?’’ the question was instantly answered with the heartiest, ‘‘ Yes, there is everything to be done about it. You just make up your mind to lay off your things and stay to dinner—you won't mind if I go on with my ironing —and we'll talk the whole thing over. There are a number of places where matters can be lightened. I know that the book question can be easily settled and when you go back I will send Jack a pile of papers that will make his heart glad. What I would like to know is whether you wouldn't like to become a member, you and your husband, of the Improvement Society. Money is not the first essential and I know the more members the Society has and the better and the more scattered they are the greater the chance of widening the Society's influence. We usually go over to the village on Saturday and why couldn’t you two go with us? It is only a matter of putting the back seat into the wagon. With the improved roads we have now, three times the weight wouldn’t make any difference, and we shall be glad to have you go along. “If you feel any as I did about going at first, you’ll say what I did—that you haven’t anything to wear to such a place as that; but it isn’t a place where clothes are talked of or thought of. Everybody is after keeping things picked up, out of doors and in, and what can be done with the least trouble that will add to the beauty of the sur- roundings. You'll see that your opin- ion is worth as much as anybody's. Your husband knows, too, what vines and trees and neat, well-made fences will do to improve the looks of things and if he is willing to give a lift now and then to any scheme that needs a good word, with the occasional back- up of a little muscle, you'll see that you are just the members that any earnest society wants and needs. There isa membership fee, but it isn’t large and it doesn’t have to be paid at once on joining ; so I don’t see what there is to hinder your going over next Saturday and joining. Is there any reason you can't?’’ There was no immediate reply, but a look of joy crept into a face that had long been joyless. Mechanically the woman removed her hat and coat, look- ing at her thin, hard brown hands as, resuming her chair, she clasped and un- clasped them. The future had opened suddenly and unexpectedly to her—and Jack—and_ she slowly and gratefully seemed to be taking in tke situation. The whole had been so unexpectedly easy. She had looked for the reverse from the start. She was hardly recon- ciled to the fact that this woman should open her arms to her and take her right in and, above all things, offer to drive over for them and take them to the vil- lage. She began to feel as if the one red-letter day in her life had come and found her wholly unprepared. Finally, as if her vessel. of speech had been slowiy but surely making fast to the quay of sound, she said, ‘‘1 shall not try to tell you how glad [ am I came here to-day. I haven’t been away from home so far as this for more than a year and just dreaded to come. I haven’t seen anybody except my own folks for so long that I was afraid I couldn’t talk so as to make you understand.’’ ‘“There wasn’t any need of it—I un- derstood without your telling me. Your loneliness has been worse even than mine. The rest is all of the same piece and the minute you began I knew the rest. Say you'll go Saturday, won’t you?’’ She went. The inmates of the shanty were -ready when the farm wagon stopped for them and before noon that day the Village Improvement Society had increased its enrollment by two and set up a new influence in the lonely wilderness as a result of the Society’s good work. The boy Jack had the use of the circulating library. He caught sight of the school house and ‘‘kept at it’’ until he was enrolled there asa pupil. The women who had been thus unexpectedly brought together became friends. This led to a better acquaint- ance on the part of their husbands and ended in the ‘‘hiring out’’ of the one to the other and in bringing the two fam- ilies within hailing distance. It would be easy to add what the pros- pects are to-day in these two homes that the Society can claim as members. That, however, is not the purpose of this article. The idea of betterment in every sense of the term is what the So- ciety is after and, having found it, it} bl has simply to record it. These are but two instances, but, when it is remem- bered how many times this may have been repeated the country over, it will be easily understood what was meant in a recent paper by’ the statement that these single societies, located all over the country and working towards each other, will, in time, by the intersection of their widening circles, include the whole public domain. ——_>02—___ Had to Battle With Waves to Get a Check. Nelson Morris & Co. will receive at their Chicago office a check that has the appearance of having been in soak for some time. There is an exciting piece of history connected with that check. W. T. ‘Werntz, manager of the com- pany’s branch at Norristown, Pa., was crossing a ——— the other day, exam- ining the check, which was for $2, 500, wken suddenly a strong gust of wind struck him and carried the check from his grasp, wafting it over the bridge and into the creek below. The water in the creek was much higher than usual and running swiftly, but fortu- nately the piece of paper lodged in a clump of briers or bushes in midstream. Soon a crowd of urchins gathered, and an offer of $1 to any one who secured the check was hailed with delight, and the youngsters lost no time in their efforts to secure the coveted prize of $1. Some waded out in the creek to their waist, but the current caused by the high water soon made it apparent that they could not get the paper by wad- ing. One youngster stripped off his clothing and boldly faced the cold water in his eagerness to secure what to him was a fortune, but he had scarcely en- tered the water before he found that he could not cope against the swiftly mov- ing water and had to give up after he was almost exhausted by his efforts. Jacob Springer, who lives near the place, reached the spot, being attracted by the commotion, and he set to work to secure the check. He waded into the cold stream, but soon discerned that even a man could not battle successfully with the elements by wading, for al- though the water reached up to his neck, and he was unable to reach the check, he experienced great difficulty in retaining his equilibrium and keep from being carried down the stream. He then left the water, discarded his wet clothing for dry apparel, and then secured a boat. After considerable difficulty he succeeded in landing the prize with the use of the boat and re- turned it to Mr. Werntz, who rewarded him for his trouble and difficulty. The moral of this true tale is: The proper place to examine a check is in the place where the check is received, and not on a_ bridge, especially when the wind is blowing. oe What you give away is all you will take with you when you cross the river. se 2s___—_ Black looks are apt to make one feel ue. \ eS y} ul SC y) AR We ‘0 i J) ANY BO) nd rq di y is AUAUA A ZS SISSIES SIA MASS SS SSK TTEN-DILLON COMPA FINE CUT UNCLE DANIEL. CS TOBACCO MANUFACTURERS INDEPENDENT FACTORY OUR LEADING BRANDS. SMOKING HAND PRESSED. Flake Cut. DETROIT, MICHIGAN KEEP THEM IN MIND. : PLUG CREME DE MENTHE. Y OJIBWA. DOUBLE CROSS. Long Cut. STRONG HOLD. FOREST GIANT. SWEET CORE. Plug Cut. FLAT IRON. SWEET SPRAY. FLAT CAR. Granulated. SO-LO. The above brands are manufactured from the finest selected Leaf Tobacco that money can buy. See quotations in price current. “W722 ad ao MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 25 Commercial Travelers Michigan Knights of the - President, GEo. F. OWEN, Grand Rapids; Sec- retary, A. W. Srirr, Jackson; Treasurer, JOHN W. SCHRAM, Detroit. Michigan Commercial Travelers’ Association President, A. MARYMONT, Detroit; Secretary and Treasurer, GEo. W. HILL, Detroit. United Commercial Travelers of Michigan Grand Counselor, J. Moor, Jackson; Grand Secretary, A. KENDALL, Hillsdale; Grand Treasurer, W. S. MEstT, Jackson. Grand Rapids Council No. 131, U. C. T. Senior Counselor, W R. Compron; Secretary- Treasurer, L. F. Baker. Michigan Commercial Travelers’ Mutual Accident Association President, J. BoyD PANTLIND, Grand Rapids; Secretary and Treasurer, Gko. F. OWEN, Grand Rapids. Gripsack Brigade. James B. McInnes writes the Trades- man that the friends of Frank R. Streat, of Clasen, Streat & Co., are pushing him forward as a candidate for Mayor of Flint. Mrs. Emma L. Alien, formerly Mich- igan representative for E. W. Gillett, but for the past ten months Western Michigan representative for the Egg Baking Powder Co., has engaged to cover Western Michigan for the Rum- ford Chemical Works. A. W. Peck (Hazeltine & Perkins Drug Co.) has perfected plans by means of which he expects to take rank among the millionaires. Whether he will ex- pend the surplus in endowing libraries or subsidizing base ball contests is a matter which the future must determine. Commends the Suggestion of Traveler’s Wife. Written for the Tradesman. That is an excellent idea of Travel- er’s Wife in last week’s Tradesman and it is surprising the poor misguided mas- culine- chumps—especially commercial travelers—had not long ago conceived the plan of spending their evenings and runs between towns sewing sleeves in shirt waists or working buttonholes in Mother Hubbards; but now that the edict is heralded forth, let all masculines who have time hanging heavy on their hands tumble, and let the following iilustration be a fair example for all to follow: A commercial traveler returns home for a rest of two or three days. Being de- sirous of having something to do to help pass away the time on his next trip, he requests his wifey dear to skirmish around and get the material ready for a morning wrapper, cut it and fit it so he can ‘‘sew it up’’ evenings and other odd times. Wifey can get the ruffles and binding, and rick rack, etc., all ready and pack the whole business in a half grown telescope, which hubby can sling over his shoulder, as he will have a sample grip in each hand. It won’t matter if the ‘‘scope’’ does go bumping up and down his spine as he walks from store to store—he will be so happy in the thought that he will have something to do to pass away the time that a few blisters on his back will be of no consequence. When hubby returns from his trip with the garment all finished, wifey mustn’t complain if the ruffles are bunched here or crooked there, resem- bling a cross between a rail fence and a brush heap—one sleeve set in wrong side up or one buttonhole iarge enough to pass a base ball through and the next one difficult to find—but must console herself with the thought that he will do better on the next garment. And, come to think of it, shirt waists and morning wrappers are not the only articles of woman’s apparel, so as soon as hubby graduates in the dress line, put him on other garments until he can successfully finish up a complete ward- robe. What a cheerful sight it would be to see a drummer, after supper, instead of joining his fellow travelers in a- yarn spinning bout and enjoying a_ good cigar, take his chair off to a corner of the reading room and, unstrapping the little telescope, draw forth something that closely resembled a double barreled pillow case and go to sewing lace on the bottom ! By all means, gentlemen, epecially you of the grip, learn to sew and knit— especially to sew. —__ 2. _ Cold Storage Legislation. A bombshell has been thrown into the cold storage men in Chicago. A bill has been introduced at Springfield which applies to all cold storage houses in IIli- nois located in counties having over 100,000 population. Jt came as a sur- prise. It is said the banking and insur- ance interests are behind the bill, and some claim Swift & Armour are inter- ested in having it passed, and others that the commission merchants generally on South Water street would like to see the cold storage houses restricted as they are taking away much trade. The feaures of the bill that bear hard- est on the storage houses are those _per- taining to their loaning money on goods in store or dealing in the class of goods stored. They are also prohibited from doing insurance business. They have been in the habit of taking a blanket mortgage and then issuing small policies to the different holders. Some of the cold storage men say they might as well be legislated out of the business at once, as this will prevent them from doing business profitably. The bill also provides that they shall make out and keep posted every Tuesday morning in a conspicuous place in their warehouse a statement of the goods in storage at the close of business on the previous Saturday, also’ make such a statement under oath to the inspector. A fine of from $500 to $5,000 is pre- scribed for failure to fulfill any of the provisions of the act. Before transact- ing business a license must be taken out and a bond executed in the penal sum of $10, 000. cae sa The Boys Behind the Counter. Kalamazoo—Ed. Vanderberg, who was for many years connected with E. A. Carder, has taken a position in the fur- niture store of John A. Lamb. Whitehall—L. G. Sweningston, for the past thirteen years junior member of the firm of Mears & Sweningston, gen- eral dealers at this place, has taken a clerkship in the general store of Mitchell Bros., at Jennings. Bangor—Walter Nelson has_ been placed in charge of the general store of Geo. H. Nelson. Kalamazoo—Fred Stohrer ‘has taken a pesition with J. Lehman in the new shoe store to be opened up at 110 South Burdick street. Kalamazoo—Ross Evers, formerly of Kalamazoo, and well known here, has taken a position with Charles Friedman in the furnishings department. Mr. Evers has been in the employ of Riley Darnell, the Chicago haherdasher, for several years. >. It is estimated that Munich restaur- ants cheat the public annually out of $200,000 by selling foam in place of beer. The fine for not filling a glass to the limit is $125 plus two weeks’ im- prisonment, but complaint is seldom made. —__-~>-2 > Most of us would rather profit by the mistakes of. others. eee We only learn to understand weather by degrees. 0 Salt spilt is never all gathered. the NEW OCCUPATION FOR WOMEN. Women who can adapt themselves readily to most any position in life are now the ones who are earning the most money and find the least difficulty in finding good positions. Indeed, there are not nearly enough of them to supply the increasing demand for their serv- ices. With the amassed wealth of this country and the numerous outside duties which necessarily devolve upon the woman head of a large establishment, there has seemed to come, among other things, an opening for a second self—a working mistress, so to speak—in the home. To fill such a position high class women of considerable education and refinement are desired; for they must, when madam is unable to do so, take up the reins of the household at any point. They must interview special visitors, go on confidential missions, also errands of mercy, and put forth an exemplary moral tone before the young people. In fact, this position requires a woman endowed with tact, one of heaven’s greatest blessings, and a gen- eral amount of savoir faire. She should never be at a loss for a word or allow any emergency to find her unprepared. Not only is she the power behind the throne, but even must she at times look after that structure’s steadiness. Again, she must have notalent for what Ruskin regards as so great a crime—idleness. There are flowers to be arranged in the drawing-room, a thing never wisely in- trusted to unskilled fingers; there are cards to be written to place in front of each guest’s place at dinner, something which servants know absolutely nothing whatever about; and, besides, this dex- terous individual must even, perhaps, spend some hours in studying a mono- logue or poem to declaim after the re- past is over. She must be able to amuse as well as serve. In no way does such a position as this conflict with that of a housekeeper; often the same establishment will shel- ter them both. ‘The one backs up and attends to practical arrangements, the other is alert for the social order of things. But a word to the wise is enough—the woman who feels herself capable of filling such a position can secure no doubt a luxurious home and have placed in her hand anywhere from $50 to $100 a month. The combination of a trained nurse and a nursery governess has recently suggested itself to clever minds, so that now it is not unusual to find in the home one individual possessed of these diverse attainments. There are, as is well known, a number of women who go +through a certain amount of hospital training and yet find, after they have completed their course, that they prefer not to pursue it as a steady profession. But if they happily have some other la- tent talent, such as that of being a gov- erness, or a companion to young girls, this very knowledge of nursing will greatly aid them to place themselves with a much larger salary than they could otherwise command. In these days it has been found to be almost es- sential for a large family to house some such individual. A professional nurse can not always be secured at a moment’s notice ; even a doctor must necessarily take’ his time in reaching the scene of action. To have, therefore, on the spot someone with a knowledge of disease and the strength to get to work with it at once is of inestimable value. Not only is the patient thereby made more com- fortable, but the nervous tension on other members of the family is relieved. And when the occasion ceases for the one to act as nurse, she should turn readily to her other work, whatever that may be, instructing the children, help- ing the mother, or even taking the dogs out to walk. Satan’s proverbial mis- chief is kept well away from sucha one, for her hands are always busy. ———_~> 0. ___ Reflections of a Bachelor. Every great man was once a solitary child. At a certain age a man is so much the better for being bad. A woman trusts all the men she loves; a man loves all the women he trusts. Lot’s wife probably turned around to gurgle at the sinful baby that lived next door. If a lizard were a secret, by the time three women had passed it along it would be an alligator. A woman never feels perfectly sure of going to heaven until she has once had all her hair drop out. From the descriptions in the papers of a church wedding, you might think the bridegroom wore nothing at all. A woman’s idea of being nice to an- other woman is to kiss her and say, ‘‘Oh, how lovely that new hat is!’’ when she knows she has had it a year. Never invest where the element of chance or luck governs the returns. ——>- 4 e.-—— The fellow who always tells the truth loses iots of friends. he OO Is carried by the merchant when he undertakes to handle the credit trans- actions of his establishment by means of pass books or other equally anti- = methods. The strain is imme- jately lessened, however, when he adopts the Coupon Book System and places his credit transactions on a cash basis. We make four kinds of Coupon Books and cheerfully send samples free on application. TRADESMAN COMPANY, 5 GRAND RAPIDS. anitariam Morphine & Liquor Habits A Specialty. Morphine habit cured without sick- ness or suffering. Liquor habit cured with only one week detention from business; mild cases none. Booklet free, giving particulars. Citizens Phone 1291, C. E. PATTERSON, M. D., Mgr., Grand Rapids, Mich ow no) ae Oe She oye desman company =Suinlaxs ILLUSTRATIONS OF ALL KINDS STATIONERY & CATALOGUE PRINTING GRAND RAPIDS MICHIGAN. 26 I MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Drugs--Chemicals Michigan State Board of Pharmacy Term expires Dec. 31, 1901 L. E. REYNOLDs, St. Joseph - HENRY HErIm, Ww Dec. 31, 1902 WIRT P. Dory, Detroit - - - Dec. 31, 1903 A.C. SCHUMACHER, Ann Arbor - Dec. 31, 1904 JOHN D. Murr, Grand Rapids Dec. 31, 1905 President, A. C. SCHUMACHER, Ann Arbor. Secretary, HENRY HEIM, Saginaw. Treasurer, W. P. Doty, Detroit. Examination Sessions. Star Island, June 17 and 18. Sault Ste. Marie, August 28 and 29. Lansing, Nov. 5 and 6. Mich. State Pharmaceutical Association. President—CHas. F. MANN, Detroit. Secretary—J. W. SEELEY, Detroit Treasurer—W. K. SCHMIDT, Grand Rapids. Blindness From Jamaica Ginger. A decided sensation was promised in Baltimore about the middle of last month, but we have heard nothing of it very recently. Dr. Herbert Harlan, in a paper read before the local medical society, declared that a number of per- sons in Maryland and neighboring states had either become blind or had died through the use of Jamaica ginger es- sence made with methyl or ‘‘wood’’ alcohol ; and he proved his declaration by submitting clinical records. He went on to state that the use of methyl alcohol as a substitute for ‘‘grain’’ or ethyl! alcohol in manufacturing had in- creased enormously within the last two or three years—a fact which he regarded as one of grave importance. It seems that as far as the ginger essence is con- cerned, this is used in certain local op- tion towns in Maryland, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania by topers who are un- able to buy whisky or alcohol. Only recently, in fact, two members of a party of miners in an Ohio town died from drinking the stuff, and the remaining two members were saved only by the active efforts of physicians. Dr. Har- lan’s paper led to an investigation, and it was reported that evidence had been piled up against two Baltimore jobbers with respect to the use of methyl alco- hol in the manufacture of ginger. This led to the announcement that proceed- ings would be begun against them, but at this writing such a step has not been taken. ——_> 22> ___ As to a Certain Side Line. In discussing the rather familiar topic of ‘‘Side Lines’’ before the Maine Pharmaceutical Association S. R. Crab- tree remarked that photographic sup- plies are undoubtedly becoming the most popular side line of the day. The camera fiend is everywhere present, and must needs indulge in all the fads _per- taining to the business; and to whom shall he turn for supplies but to the ever accommodating knight of the pes- tle and postage stamp? The chemicals required in making the various baths and solutions are a part of the legitimate stock anyway, and the mechanical sup- plies can be readily classed with sta- tionery and like goods, and, besides, druggists often belong to this class of ‘‘fiends,’’ and hence are ina position to give valuable advice to the uniniti- ated, those usually referred to as ama- teurs. It is not an infrequent occurrence to see dark rooms in connection with the -store where developing may be done, either by the proprietor for profit, or it may be maintained for the conven- ience of patrons, as a feeder for busi- ness. The idea is worth considering anyway. —__> 9 .___ An Easter Window. W. J. Kirkland, of Verona, N. j., gives an interesting description of an Easter window. It was so successful, he said, that he intended utilizing the same idea again this year. At the bot- tom of the window was sprinkled cork dust enough to cover it, and in the cen- ter was placed an American eagle, mounted. Behind it was draped the Stars and Stripes. Arranged in a semi- circle around the rear of the window were Easter lilies in pots, the largest in the center and running down to the smallest at ends. Several nests of ex- celsior were made and colored eggs placed in them. Under the eagle was put an egg-shaped show bottle painted red, white and blue. There were also plenty of signs advertising egg dyes. The lilies were sold, so the display cost nothing, excepting for the eggs, which were afterwards given to the children. ——__2.___ Fixing Labels Permanently. It is often required to paste labels on glass so that they will not wash off when | the bottle is soaked in water. The fol- lowing method will serve: Make first a solution of gelatin by heating Ioo parts of gelatin with 300 parts of acetic acid until dissolved. To this solution add to parts of glycerin. The mixture will set when cold, but liquefies on warming, and if kept for a few weeks it liquefies in the cold. The second solution consists of 20 parts of potassium bichromate, dissolved in 200 parts of water. When used, two parts by weight of the gelatin solution is mixed with one of bichromate solu- tion, and the paste applied in the usual manner. When once dried neither hot nor cold water nor alcohol nor ether will] redissolve it. Any of this mixture that remains over should be thrown away and the vessel and brush cleansed im- mediately, otherwise it will set to an intractable mass. The paste is yellow, but a white paste may be obtained by adding a little formalin to the gelatin solution at the time of use. —> 0 =. ___ Sachet Perfumes. Violet. Orris powder, 500 parts. Rice flour, 250 parts. Essence of bouquet extract, Io parts. Spring-flowers extract, Io parts. Violet extract, 20 parts. Oil of bergamot, 4 parts. Rose oil, 2 parts. Musk tincture, 50 parts. Dreamland. Caraway, 125 parts. Mint, 125 parts. Thyme, 125 parts. Lavender, 125 parts. Rose petals, 500 parts. Cloves, 70 parts. Musk tincture, 50 parts. Vanilla. Styarx, 675 parts. Siam bezone, 675 parts. Rosewood, 675 parts. Cloves, 160 parts. Vanilla, 160 parts, Tonquin musk, Io parts. fb The popular granular sachet powders are made by substituting bran powder for orris. ——_~»0t>_ Display of the Druggist’s Own Saraparilla. At this season of the year when the druggist’s own sarsaparilla compound is selling, a window display would be in order. George W. Hague tells how he made a display recently. One window was filled up with his own extract of sarsaparilla compound, bearing this sign: ‘‘Hague’s Compound Extract of Sarsaparilla for the Blood, 75c.’’ The other window showed how the _prepara- tion was manufactured. Seven percola- tors were so placed that the percolate dropped into a barrel. Each drug was percolated separately, and this sign was used: ‘‘This shows how we make Hague’s Compound Extract of Sarsa- parilla.’’ Mr. Hague reports that this window caused much curiosity, The Drug Market. Opium—Is firm, and it is believed that the bottom has been reached. The tendency is upward. Mcrphine—Is unchanged. Quinine—lIs firm at unchanged prices. Manufacturers and dealers are awaiting the result of the bark sale at Amsterdam on Thursday. It is expected that bark will sell higher and quinine advance. Carbolic Acid—Is very firm abroad but unchanged in this market. Cod Liver Oil—Reports from primary markets state the results of the fishing are poor, and prices have advanced. Cubeb Berries—Stocks are concen- trated and prices have advanced. Much higher prices are looked for. Oil Cubeb—Has advanced in sympathy with the berry. Oil Cloves—Is very firm and has ad- vanced. Oil Wormwood—Stocks are small and prices firm. Buchu Leaves—Have advanced, and they are tending higher. Colchicum Seed—Has again advanced. It is very scarce and strong. Linseed Oil—Is firm at the last de- cline. —>4>__ Profit in Business. Profit in business does not consist solely in buying goods at a reasonable price and selling them at an advance. A man may do a large business and yet not make a cent of profit, although he sells nothing below the invoice price and loses nothing by bad debts or by poor-paying customers. In figuring out the profits of his business a man must take into consideration all the expenses of the business—the freight, the cartage, store rent, clerk hire, heat, light, power and other expenses connected with his business. He must take into consider- ation his own time and the labor per- formed by the other members of his family. In all branches of trade this holds good. In reaching out for more business and trying to increase the vol- ume of trade he must take into consid- eration what it costs to advertise, to de- liver his goods and the increase of his salary list. All these things have to be figured out when the question of profit is taken into consideration. One had better do a reasonably smail business, where expense can be reduced to a min- imum than to attempt to do a large business with small capital at a great additional expense.—Grocery News. ——__+> 0 2>__ Desiccated Milk. A patent has been issued for making ““desiccated milk,’’ as it is called. The method by which this product is ob- tained is described somewhat in detail in the patents that have been issued, but generally is simply the evaporation of milk by heating it at a temperature be- low which the albumen does not coagu- late, assisting the evaporation by means of a blast of atmospheric air being forced through the milk in the evaporat- ing pan, continuing the evaporation until the product is of a pasty constit- uency, when the material is taken out and broken up and dried ina hot dry- ing room. The substance is then ground, and it is claimed that simply by the addition of water, practically normal milk can be had. Should this process prove a practical and commercial success, it will open up an avenue for the use of milk which will require a very large amount. There are many openings for a trade in milk that will keep absolutely in any climate and under all circum- stances, that can not now be filled by any of the ordinary preparations of the condensed or the plain. It will therefore be seen that the good old cow has a great deal of work before her, notwith- standing the counterfeits, substitutes and imitations of her product that have been brought forward. ——___> «+. ___ Glycerin and Rose Water Lotion. I. Tincture benzoin, 1 dr. Glycerin, 2 drs. White soap, 15 grs. Rose water, to I oz. 2. White glycerin soap, % oz. Powdered borax, 2 drs. Cucumber ointment, 2 ozs. Glycerin, 1 oz. Distilled water, 32 ozs. Essence rose, % 02. Cut the soap small and dissolve in 3 ounces boiling water. Place in a mortar with the ointment, mix thoroughly, and add the borax dissolved in 2 ounces of water. Mix the glycerin and perfume with the rest of the water and add the mixture, an ounce at a time, to the emulsion. Mucilage quince seed, 6 ozs. Glycerin, 1 oz. Rose water, I oz. —-> 02> ___ White Cosmetique. Essence musk, 5 dps. Oil bitter almonds, 5 dps. Oil lemon, Io dps. Oil bergamot, 10 dps. Balsam Peru, 44 grs. Suet, 1% ozs. Benzoated wax, 4 ozs. The benzoated wax lows: Siam benzoin, 1 oz. Cacao butter, 4 ozs. White wax, 20 ozs. The wax and cacao butter are melted ina porcelain dish, and the benzoin is added and allowed to digest, with oc- casional stirring, for 20 minutes. Then 5 drachms of absolute alcohol are added and allowed to evaporate, the fluid mix- ture being then filtered through a warm water funnel. ——__>2.__ Representative Brick, of Indiana, has a constituent who thinks he should have a pension because he sent a substitute to the civil war. ‘‘I am old and feeble,’’ he wrote to Mr. Brick, ‘‘and I don’t suppose I shall live a great while, but I need money while I do live. 1 think the Government owes me some- thing. 1 paid a man $300 to take my place in the war when I was drafted, and he was killed in action. Now, I think I am entitled to a pension or should get the $300 back. Will you please see that I do?’’ is made as fol- Wall Paper Samples Free How’s your stock? Need brightening up? We have on hand a very fine assortment and can make im- mediate delivery—prices will interest you. Write us. HEYSTEK & CANFIELD Co. Grand Rapids, Mich. The Michigan Wall Paper Jobbers. FISHING TACKLE We carry avery complete stock and make the right prices. Wait for travelers or write FRED BRUNDAGE, MUSKEGON, MICH Wholesale Drugs and Stationery o' . — @ v Dry \ = y- he Lad < > +r Y tp «a . » ice Nt es a Aa <« > sa ia a 4, oe ® > ce Nt MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 27 WHOLESALE DRUG PRICE CURRENT Advanced—Buchu Leaves, Cubebs, Oil Cubebs. Declined— Acidum —_ Mea... = 60 ors OOo ooo . 50 a 6@$ 8) Copaiba..... -- 1 15@ 1 25} Tolutan...... a 50 eee German. 70@ 75|Cubebe..... . 1 40@ 1 50| Prunus virg......... @ 50 Boragie.. ........... @ iW — . : = : S Tinctures Carbolicum .......... 30@ 42 G re ES fa Aconitum Napellis R 60 OFICUID,.... .. cee sess 48@ 50 yaultheria .......... 1 85@ 1 90 Aconitum Napellis F 50 Hydrochlor.......... 3@ 5 po sg Sem. gai an a 6 Lan 10 xOssipp em gal. 60 piphaheeacaa ah Nitrocam ..... oe ae 1 | Hedeoma’.. 1 40@ 1 50 Aloes and Myrrh.... oo} F Phosphorium, dil.. @ 16 oe - 150@ 2 00 Macareiaa 8! 50 Salicylicum .......-. 50@ 55 Lavendula «. Ht - _ 9@ 2 00 ‘Atrope Belladonna... 60 a -- ee 1%@_~—sB | Limonis..... 1 60@ 1 70 | Auranti Cortex 50 Tannicum . - 1 10@ 1 20| Mentha Piper. . 140@ 2 00 es lament 60 Tartaricum ......... 38@ 40 or ova higeney i Oo 50 Ammonia ’ orrhuz, ‘gal -110@1 2 Barosma 50 a . . 400@ 4 50 fe 7 Aqua, 16 deg........- 4@ 6] Olive........ . 75@ 3 00 — _ Cee 5 Aqua, 20 deg... Se 6@ 8 Piels Liquida.. -— 6 50 Carbonas.........--. 183@ 15| Picis Liquida, ‘gal. @ 35 a wacee cece ce % Chioridum........... w@ 14| Ricina : 1 00@ 1 08 — amon Co........ 75 Aniline Rosmarini.. @ 1 00 phevoeed overseer eeee es 1 00 Rosz, ounce......... 6 00@ 6 50 | Vatecnu.............. 50 Biack |. -....-:.- 2 00@ 2 25) giccini 40@ 45 Cinchona ... 50 essere 80@ 100) Sabina 22202200001 ga@ 1 00 | Ginchona Co 60 Santali 2 75@ 7 09 | Columba . 50 Sassafras. . 48@ 53 oo) 3 — ess., ‘ounce. @ 65 50 ater 0,25 22@ 24 1 BO@ 1 60 Saniperais ee oe ie 8 Thyme See ea sae 40@ 50 = Xanthoxyium ... . 1 25@ 1 30 Le ODE So 1 60 = iedionaenin Peta ae @ B0 i. 60 pelea 55@ a Bi-Carb.. i 16@ 18 = o - 2 canada. 60 chromate . 13@ 15| Guiaca ammon...... a —. = ce 50 | Bromide .... 52@ 57 | Hyoscyamus......... 50 ae Sea Carb . YQ 15; ledine ............. 75 Cortex Chlorate... “po. 17@19 16@ 18 | Iodine, colorless..... 75 Abies, Canadian..... 18 | Cyanide............. Bigs 38 | Hime |... 50 Cacain.:.......-.--+4 #2 | Fodide.... ks. 2 60@ 2 65 | Lobelia .............. 50 Cinchona Flava. .... 18 | Potassa, Bitart, pure 28@ 30| Myrrh............... 50 Euonymus atropurp. 30 | Potassa, Bitart, com. @ 15 Ont Vomica.. 50 Myrica Cerifera, po. 20 | Potass Nitras, opt... I@ i Opi...) ......... 75 Prunus Virgini...... 12| Potass N itras. 6@ 8 Opil, comphorated.. 50 Quillaia, gr’d........ 12 | Prussiate.. seeee 23@ 26 | Opii, deodorized..... 1 50 Sassafras...... po. 20 15 | Sulphate po......... 16K@ 18/| Quassia ............. 50 Ulmus...po. 15, gr’d 15 Radix oO = Extractum Aconitum........ 20@ 25 San: inaria_ re Glycyrrhiza a 24@ =| Althe............... 30@ 33 San ps Glycyrrhiza, po..... 28@ 30) Anchusa............ 10@ 12] Stromonium......... 60 Hematox, 15 D. box U@ 12) Arum po.. @ 25) Tolutan ............. 69 Heematox, 1S......-- 13@ 14/ Calamus.. 20@ 40] Valerian ............ 50 Hematox, 4s........ 144@ 15| Gentiana....).po.i5 12@ 15| Veratrum Veride... 5o Heematox, 4S.....-- 16@ 17) Glychrrhiza...pv.15 16@ 18] Zingiber............. 20 Ferru ree Ganaden. $ = Miscellaneous Jarbonate Preci 2 = Hemebore. Alba, po. 1 15 Atther, Spts. Nit.? F 30@ 35 Citrate and Quinia.. Inula, po.. 1 20 | Hther, Spts. Nit.4F 34@ 38 Citrate — Le an 75 Ipecac, po: 60@ 3 75 Ganen 24@ 3 Ferrocyant dum Sol.. 40 | Tris plox.. 35@ 40|Alumen, gro’d..po.7 3@ 4 Solut. Chloride. ..... 15] y alapa, a 25@ 30| Annatto.............. 40@ 50 Sulphate, com’. .... 2! Maranta, \s.. a @ 35| Antimoni, 4@ 5 Sulphate, com’l, by Podophyilum, pO... 22@ 25| Antimonie Potass T 40@ 50 bbl, per cwt....... es 75@ 1 00 | Antipyrin ........... G@ B Sulphate, pure...... 1 ih on... @ 1 25 | Antifebrin .......... @ 2 Flora hei -- eee coe cece 75@ 1 35 — Nitras, 02... ; a t 15 18 | Spigel 35@ 38/|Arsenicum.......... ponte - cae : — 25 as. ‘po. "45 @ 18| Balm Gilead —_, 38@ 40 Matricaria ‘i) 30@ 35 | Serpentaria ......... 40@ 45| Bismuth S.N... 90@ 2 00 eto ss Senega 60@ 65 | Calcium Chior., 1s.. @ 9 — Smilax, officinalis H. @ 40| Calcium Chior. 4s.. @ 10 See 38@ 40} Smilax, M @ 25 | Calcium Chior., %48.. @ 12 Cassia Acutifol, Tin- Scille . 10@ 12/| Cantharides, Rus. @ 80 elly 20@ 25 Symplocarpus, RO. 36 Capsici Fructus, af. @ 15 Cassia, eutifor, ‘Alx. 2@ 30| ‘dus, po............ @ 25 | Capsici Fructus, po. @ Salvia officinalis, +4s Vaterioan ,Eng. po. 30 @ % CapsiciFructusB,po @ 15 and 14S .....-----+- 12@ 20] Valeriana, German. 15@ 20| Caryophyllus..po.15 12@_ 14 Uva Orsi. .2.- 2... 8@ 10] Zingibera........... 14@ 16 | Carmine, No. 40..... @ 3 00 Zingiber j............ 2 97 | Cera Alba.......... 50@ 55 Gummi et 5@ 77 | Gera Flava 40@ 42 Acacia, 1st picked... @ 65 a Coceus . ct @ 40 Acacia, 2d picked @ 45} Anisum . po. @ 12| Cassia Fructus...... @ 35 Acacia, 3d picked.. @ 35/ Apium (eraveieons). 13@ 15| Centraria. sh @ 10 Acacia, sifted sorts. @ 28 | Bird, 1s.. 4@ 6 | Cetaceum.. @ 4 Acacia, po. pe 65 | Carul...2 2222. PO. ‘18 12@ 13] Chloroform =... 55@ 60 Aloe, Barb. ‘po. 18@20 12 14| Cardamon...... 1 26@ 1 75 | Chloroform, squibbs @110 Aloe, Cape....po. 15. 12 | Coriandrum.. 8@ 10| Chioral Hyd Crst.... 1 40@ 1 65 Aloe, § Socotri..po. 40 30 | Cannabis Sativa. ..:. 4%@ 5 | Chondrus............ 200@ 25 Ammoniac........--- 55 60 | eet 75@ 1 00! Cinchonidine,P.& W 38@ 48 cates. — 45 45@ 50/ Chenopodium . 10@ 12) Cinchonidine,Germ. 38@ 48 Benzoinum .. .... 60@ 55! Dinterix Odorate.... 1 00@ 1 10| Cocaine . 5 55G@ 5 75 Catechu, 1S.........- g 13 | Foeniculum.......... @ 10} Corks, list, ‘dis. pr. et. 70 Catechu, %4S.....-.-- 14 ee pe... ... 7™@ 9 Creosotum, a @ 35 Catechu, 44S.. “: a 16 | Lini . : 4@ 5/Creta. .- bbl. 75 @ 2 Campnore .. 6 73 | Lini, gerd. ae -bbl.4° 4%@_~—«45 | Creta, prep...... 2... @ 5 Euphorbium.. “po. 35 @ 40} Lobelia .............. 35@ 40] Creta, oe Le cae. @ ti11 Galbanum..........- @ 1 00| Pharlaris Canarian... 4%@ 65/ Creta, Rubra........ a 8 Gamboge ......... po 65@ 70 pS ...........,.... 440 6] Crocus - Jil oo «SC Guaiacum...... po. 25 @ 30} Sinapis Alba........ 9@ 10| Cudbear............. @ 2 Kino........p0. $0.75 @ 75) Sinapis Nigra....... 11@ 12] Cupri Sulph......... 644Q@ 8 — ee e e Spiritus aay ile es: a = ceoserooe er SU Opit.. «po. 6:05.30 8 50a 3 60 Frumenti, W. D. = 2 00@ 2 50| Emery, all numbexs. @ 8 os 35 ee D.F.R 32. 2 = Emery, po @ 6 ts oo : 5@ 1 OO. 8. snellae, baachioa. 90 | Juniperis Go.0.F... 1 65@ 2 00| Fiske” White. —— 120 15 Juniperis Co........ or 75@ 3 50 ta oe @ 23 Herba i ee ceee Saacharum N.E.... 1 9@ 2 10 Gambier . 8@ 9 Absinthium..oz. pkg 25 | Spt. Vini Galli. -. 1 75@ 6 5O Gelatin, Cooper. . Le @ 60 Eupatorium..oz. pkg 20 ni Oporto......... 1 25@ 2 00! Gelatin, French. .... 35@ 60 Lobelia ......0z. pkg 25 Vind Alba............ 1 256@ 2 00 Glassware flint box 75 & 5 sale om 7 — Lea = Sponges Less than box..... 70 Mentha Vir..oz. pkg 96 | Florida sheeps’ wool a — Rue.........- oz. pkg 39 | _ carriage...... gies 2 50@ 2 75 Gly aa 1%@ Ww Tanacetum V oz. pkg = Grana Paradis... = @ 25 Thymus, V...0z. pkg 25 | _Carriage............ 2 50@ 2 75 atuoe nN 25@ 5B ’ Velvet aan sheeps’ umulu Magnesia wool, carriage. .... @ 1 50 | Hye rare’ Chior Mite @1 00 Calcined, Pat........ 55@ 60 | Extra yellow sheeps’ Hydrarg ChlorCor.. @ 90 Carbonate, Pat...... 18@ 20| wool, carriage. .... @ 1 25 | Hydrarg Ox Rub’m aa @110 Carbonate, K.&M.. 18@ 20] Grass sheeps’ wool, Hydrarg Ammoniat @1 2 ‘arbonate, Jennings 18@ 20| carriage. @100 a o . Oleum Hard, for sia ts @ 75) Ty tnyobolla, Aim:!. @5@ | 70 Absinthium......... 6 50@ 7 00! “ gjate use. @ 1 49 | Indigo.. e+. _ 7@ 1 00 Amygdalz, Dulc.. ea Oe Iodine, Resubi...... 3 40@ 3 60 Amygdale, Amare. 8 00@ 8 25 Syrups Todoform............ 3 85@ 4 00 Adee os 2 10@ 2 20| Acacia .............. @ 50/Lupulin.. 2 6G BO Auranti Cortex...... 2 30@ 2 35 rome ene ccs @ 50 oa maa ae. Clee 68h Bergamii ............ 3 OM@ 3 10} Zingiber............. @ 50 65@ 75 Cajiputi . 80@ 85 | Ipecac. @ 60 —— Arsen et Hy- fr gt pe ces ace 80@ 85 loa Tod. @ wl wor ates @ 2 eoseceee 65@ 90} Rhei Arom.......... @ 50! Liquor otassArsinit 10@ 12 Chenopaai ee . @ 2 75 ciitae Omeinalis 50@ 60| Magnesia, Sulph.. 2@ = 3 Cinnamonii ......... 1 30@ 1 40 | Senega..... woeae tes @ 50 | Magnesia, Sulph, bbl @ 1% Citronella ...05222252 88@ 40! Sella... 3.022 60|Mannia,8. F........ 50@ 60 Menthol............. @5 Morphia, S., P.& W. 2 35@ 2 60 — S.,N.¥. Q. Moschus Canton... Myristica, No. 1..... Nux Vomica...po. 15 Os Sepia.. Pepsin 1 Saae, H. &P. —_ a N.N.% aa Picis Liq., , quarts... Picis Liq., pints..... Pil Hydrarg. . -po. 80 — ag . po. 22 er Al _— 35 BE x Burgun.. Plumbi Acet......... Seaeeese ® ‘edo ee Pulvis — et oi 1 mo 1 Sn OXeS & P. D. Co., doz Pyrethrum, py... .. CRIARSES Quinia, S. P. & W.. Quinia, S. German.. Quinia, N. Y Rubia Tinctorum.... Saccharum Lactis PY Salacin . Sanguis Draconis. — WwW de 25 7S 40 80 10 37 00 00 00 85 Seidlitz ee: ee 20@ 22) Linseed, pure raw... 61 64 Sinapis . @ 18} Linseed, boiled...... 62 65 Sina oF s ‘opt.. eee case @ 30) Neatsfoot, winter str 54 60 — Maccaboy, De ~ « Spirits Turpentine.. 46 25 Snuff, naa, De Vo’s @ 41 Paints BBL. LB. Soda, OESS.......... @ Soda, Boras, po..... 9@ 11| Red Venetian....... 1% 2 @8 Soda et Potass Tart. 23@ 25} Ochre, yellow Mars. 1% 2 @ Soda, Carb.......... 1%4@ 2) Ochre, yellow Ber... 1% 2 @3 Soda, Bi-Carb.. 3@ 5 | Putty, commercial.. 2% 2%@3 Soda, Ash.. . 8%4@ 4| Putty, strictly pure. 2% 2%@3 Soda, Sulphas. . @ 2; Vermilion, Prime Spts. Cologne... @ 260; American. 13@ 15 Spts. Ether Co... 50@ 55| Vermilion, English. . 7@ 75 Spts. Myrcia Dom... @ 2 00| Green, Paris........ 144@ «18 Spts. Vini Rect. bbl. @ Green, Peninsular... 13@ 16 Spts. Vini Rect. %bbl @ eam rea... 64G@G 6% Spts. Vini Rect. 10gal @ Lead Witte. ........ 64@Q 6% Spts. Vini Rect.5 - @ Whiting, white Span @ 8 Strychnia, Crystal... 80@ 1 05 | Whiting, gilders’.... @ 9 Sulphur, Subl. 2%4@ 4) White, Paris, Amer. @ 1 25 Sulphur, Roll.. 24@ 3%/| Whiting, Paris, Eng. Tamarinds. 8@ 10 Ce @140 Terebenth Venice.. 23@ . Universal Prepared. 1 10@ 1 20 Theobrome.......... 60@ _ Wanita 9 00@16 00 Varnishes Zinci Sulph.. - 7@ &§ aa No.1 a Coach... 1 10@ 1 20 Byira Torp.......... 1 60@ 1 70 BBL. GAL. | Coach Body......... 2 75@ 3 00 Whale, winter....... 70 70 | No. 1 Turp Furn..... 1 00@ 1 10 Lard, extra.......... 60 70 | Extra Turk Damar.. 1 55@ 1 60 Lard, Ne. t.......... 45 50 | Jap.Dryer,No.1Turp 70@ 76 ta Wwe Ww—Ww—~ Ww Ww WA - {Drugs} BB BB RE GE SE a HR wR eo TR RRM OE ae j fi = We are Importers and Jobbers of We are dealers in Paints, Oils and We have a full line of Staple Drug- We =e the sole proprietors of Weath- We always have in stock a full line of Whiskies, Brandies, Gins, Wines and Rums for medicinal purposes only. We give our personal attention to All orders shipped and invoiced the Drugs, Chemicals and Patent Medicines. Varnishes. BALES gists’ Sundries. erly’s Michigan Catarrh Remedy. BAH BAH mail orders and guarantee satisfaction. BAZ same day received. Send a trial order. SE SE OR. OR OR oa OR. eR. WR OE OR OE HP ee OP ee. RP ee a Se WO OE OE OH a a. a ae ee > es ee ee we, ar a, a, a, ar, a, a a A Hazeltine & Perkins Drug Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan wh Ww w— WW aA MICHIGAN TRADESMAN GROCERY PRICE CURRENT These quotations are carefully corrected weekly, within six hours of mailing, and are intended to be correct at time of going to press. ble to change at any time, and country merchants will have their orders filled at market prices at date of purchase. Prices, however, are lia- ADVANCED Hand Picked Beans Galvanized Iron Pails Rolled Oats Willow Clothes Baskets Brooms DECLINED Index to Markets By Columns Col. A Akron a beech euceee 15 Alabastine . coe e Ammonia.. eee OE Pxio'Grease. 000 1 B Baking Powder............... 1 a ee 1 ee 1 oo eee oe cere eee ee 1 ees cs 2 roe ag Color Se he cee ee 2 Cc ae. 14 ee 2 Canned Goods...... bee 2 ae 3 Carbon Oils ...... a ae 3 ee Ss Chewing Gam................ 3 eee 3 are 2 — om ene 3 en 3 a fae 3 _ Eee ei a 3 ann —— 4 ‘Coupen Books................ 4 Ee a 4 woe Varear... 5 D eee Sraiise F Farinaceous Goods.......... 5 Fish and Oysters....... .c Flavoring Extracts 6 roe 6 Prean meetes......:-:. 2... ..-. 6 ee 14 G Grains and Flour ............ 6 H ae 7 Hides and Pelts.............. 13 I a. 7 J et 7 L iamp Burners............-... 15 Lamp Chimneys.............. 15 aes 15 Lantern Globes.............. 15 LO 7 ee 7 M aor... 7 Meat Extracts................ 7 Meetes. 7 ere 7 N ee 14 oO ees 15 aes. q peek Pete oo z P rae Bes 8 Rare Groped eee. et 7 ae 7 cee 8| BB Prowemene....--. 8 ! R : eee 8 a eee oe eee 8 — ee Salt’ ac in vs pean a pees eae ee ce 9 Bee ee les ee 9 shoe ene eee 9 9 co ee ee 9 Soda....... 10 a 10 oe 10 peewee ROOM 10 ee 10 SS ll = —_ OMG 11 ee ee il miinos LS pew cee bee cue 11 MO ee 12 Vv ieee 12 Ww Washing Powder............. 12 ee 12 Woodenware................. 12 Wrapping Paper............. 13 ¥ Weset CARP... 6. 13 ALABASTINE White in drums............. Colors in drums............. White in packages. . eee oe 10 Colors in packages.......... Less 40 per cent discount. AMMONIA Per Doz. Arctic 12 oz. ovals........... 85 Arctic pints. round.......... 1 20 AXLE GREASE gross Aurora . 6 00 Castor Oii.! 7 co —* 425 ae ee oun Soe 9 00 IXL og tin boxes 75 9 00 Mica, tin boxes.......75 9 00 Paragon .. ae --55 600 BAKING POWDER Acme ¥4 Ib. cans 3 doz............ 45 44 Ib. cans 3 doz............ 3% 1 ib. canst doz... 1 00 ae 10 Arctic 6 oz. Eng. Tumblers 90 Egg 4% 1b. cans, 4 doz. case...... 3 75 ¥% lb. cans, 2 doz. case...... 3 75 1lb. cans, 1 doz. case...... 3 75 5 Ib. cans, % doz. case...... 8 00 4% Ib. cans, 4 doz. case...... 45 % Ib. cans, 4 doz. case...... 85 1 Ib. cans, 2 doz. case...... 1 60 Queen Flake 3 0Z., 6 doz. Case.............2 70 6 02., 4 doz. case.............3 20 9 02Z., 4 doz. case.............4 80 11b., 2 doz. case.............4 00 bip., 1 Mev. case. 9 00 Royal 10¢ size.... 90 44 Ib. cans 1 35 6 0z. cans. 1 90 \% Ib. cans 2 50 % Ib. cans 3 75 i 1tb. cans. 4 80 = 31b. cans.13 00 7 51b. cans.21 50 BATH BRICK American... ee ee 70 Small 3 doz.................. 40 Large, 2 doz... eet ee 75 Arctic, 4 oz, per ‘gross. pie ih 00 Arctic, 8 oz, per gross...... 6 00 Arctic, pints, per gross.... 9 00 BROOMS -2 50 -2 15 -1 85 -1 60 ..2 40 -. 85 110 >.3 25 Sisal Clothes Lines BRUSHES Serub ‘ Solid Back, 8in............. 45 Solid Back, llin.. 95 ; Pointed Ends.. 85 Shoe Mes... 1 00 MOO 1 30 Nee 1 70 Mes 190 Stove Oe 7 Mee 110 Oe 1 7 BUTTER COLOR W., R. & Co.’s, 15¢ size.... 1 25 vw. see 25e size.. 2 00 ANDLES Electric Light, 8s.. a Electric Light, 16s... bees eck 12% Paraffine, 6s.. oe Paraffine 12s. ee Wicking . apn oo aeons Apples 3 lb. Standards ee 80 Gallons, standards. . 2 30 Blackberries Standards .......... . 75 Beans aw. 1 00@1 30 Red Kidney eee 75@ 85 ee 80 Wa 85 Blueberries Standard .:.... 85 Brook Trout 2 Ib. cans, Spiced.......... 190 Clams. Little Neck, 1 Ib..... 1 00 Little Neck. 2 Ib..... 1 50 Clam Bouillon Burnham’s, % pint........ 1 92 Burnham’s, pints.......... 3 60 Burnham’s, quarts........ 7 20 Cherries Red Standards........ 85 Wate 115 Corn a OD eee 85 Pay. 95 French Peas Sur Extra Fine............ 22 Eutra Mine. .--. 2... 19 Pee 15 Mowe. 11 Gooseberries Standard ............ 90 Hominy Standard............. 85 Lobster Star, 36 1D. ..1... 1 8 marth 3 40 Pienic —_ ee 2 35 ackerel_ Mustard, ii ees 1 75 Mustard, 220. 2 80 Soused, 1lb......... . 1 75 Soused, 2 Ib........ : 2 80 Tomato, 11b......... 175 Tomato, 21b......... 2 80 Hotein ushrooms pee ‘ 18@20 SUGSONS. c.. 22@25 Oysters one, 216. 95@1 00 Cove, 218.3... os. 1 80 Cove, 1lb Oval...... 110 Peaches Boe WAnOW, os 1 65@1 85 Pe Standard ............ 70 ee ; 80 Peas Marrowfat .......... 1 00 Early June.......... 1 00 Early June Sifted.. 1 60 Pineapple Crees 2. 1 25@2 75 PO So es 1 35@2 55 Pumpkin ee 70 O08 se 75 POM 85 Raspberries Standard........... os 90 Russian Cavier 14 1D. CAMB. 3 75 % Ib, CORB occ cet eecese 9 OD SCM 12 00 » 3 5 Salmon Columbia = . Alaska. . Pink Alaska..... Shrimps Standard............ —— Domestic, \s.. Domestic, %s ....... Domestic, Mustard. California, %s....... French, 4s.......... French, 48.......... 28 Strawberries Standard............ 85 Pee 1 25 Succotash 2 90 On. 1 00 Wee 2 1 20 Tomatoes ae 90 a 95 aw... 115 en 2 50 CATSUP Columbia, pints. . conc ecd OO Columbia, % pints... eeepc. 1 25 CARBON OILS Barrels Meoveme @11 Poroetien 8. @10 a — ence @ 9 S. Gasoline......... @l1 Deotorized 8 Naphtha.. @10 Cylinde -29 @ a. Black, winte ee EE SRC Am Rizic...... Emblem m.. Gold Med: Ideal . Jersey Riversid Brick Edam... Leiden . oe ae @i7 Limburger... Boe ee 13@14 Pineapple . . 50@75 Sap Sc 19@20 CHEWIN G GUM 2 00@2 15 140) F American Flag Spruce.. 50 Beeman’s Pepsin .......... 60 Bisek Saek. 50 Largest Gum Made....... 55 OOM 55 Sen on Breath Perfume.. 1 00 Sard ee 5 OBA 55 CHICORY a ee Se 4 Bracks 6% Benen ee 6 CHOCOLATE Ambrosia Ambrosia Sweet............. 21 Household Sweet............ 19 Ambrosia Premium. . . a Yankee Premium 31 Walter Baker & Co.'s s. German Sweet. 22 Premium .. 34 Breakfast Cocoa..... 45 Vienna Sweet ...... 21 es 28 Premium.. 31 CLOTHES a Cotton, 40 ft. per doz...... .1 00 Cotton, 50 ft. per doz...... 2.11 20 Cotton, 60 ft. per doz........1 40 Cotton, 70 ft. per doz........1 60 Cotton, 80 ft. per doz... -1 80 Jute, 60 ft. per doz.......... 80 Jute, 72 ft. per doz.......... 95 COCOA Ambrosia, % Ib. tin cans.. 42 Ambrosia, a Ib. - cans.. 44 aewetan eS ae Colonial, us. hietiecusee moss 35 Colonial, Ms.. ae 33 Epps eee ee 42 ie 45 Van Houten, %s............. 12 Van Houten, \s....... . oo Van Houten, %s............. 38 Van Houten, Is...... aoe ae Wee 30 Mb, 368. oe 41 PRB, SEB ce 42 “ Bags nn a 20 Ib. Soe Ye Less quanti sede ce 3 Poun: packages . eee eels 4 COFFEE Roasted ep 1 HIGH GRADE ene Combination. . --15 rench Breakfast. . So eee Lenox, Mocha & Java........ 21 Old Gov’t Java and Mocha..24 Private Estate, Java & Moc 26 Supreme, Java and Mocha .27 Rio Common................ Walt... Choice....... NIOT ceo 25g be oo scien ih Guatemala OMONER eo cco ee 16 Java RUOOOM: ccs oe ck 12% Fancy "African eee cae 17 Be ceca cee eck ee 25 Me ees es 29 Mocha Apa. 21 Package McLaughlin’ 5 XXXxX McLaughlin’s XXXX sold to ee ae only. Mail all orders direct to W. F. McLaughlin & Co., — Extract bas City % gross.. Felix % gross.. as Hummel’s foil % gross... tials 85 Hummel’s tin % gross ...... 1 43 Substitutes Crushed Cereal Coffee —_ 12 packages, % case......... 1 75 24 packages, 1 case .. ..3 50 rs MILK in case. Gall Borden ‘agie. ee eoe {<6 20 Crown... coun ee GS a 5 75 CRANIIOR co 4 50 MEAN 4 25 Challenge . 3 75 Pee ee ee Deeeee 3 80 COUPON BOOKS 50 books, any denom... 1 50 100 books, any denom... 2 50 500 books, any denom... 11 50 1,000 books, any denom... 20 00 Above quotations are for either Tradesman, Superior, Economic Universal grades. ere 1,000 books are ordered at a time customer receives specially printed cover without extra charge. Coupon Pass Books Can be made to represent any — —_ 10 — 50 books... ---- #2 BO 100 books.........-...... 2 50 soe books...) .... us 1,000 books... eee ie eis cela elo 20 00 Credit Checks 500, any one denom...... 2 00 1,000, any one denom.. 3 00 2 000, any one denom...... 5 00 Steei punch.. 75 CRACKERS The National Biscuit Co. quotes as follows: Butter Seymour.... 6 New York 6 Family .. 6 Salted... 6 Wolverine. bee 6% oda Soda — See 6% Sods, Clty... 8 Long Island ee ee 12 Zephyrette.... ... oo Oyster | OR ee 7% ORG Extra Farina.............. 6% Saltine Oyster............. 6 en Goods—Boxes Ama Se 10 Assorted Rs 10 pease. -2 0... 8 Bent’s Wier es. 16 Cinnamon Bar............. 9 Coffee Cake, Iced......... 10 Coffee Cake, Java......... 10 Cocoanut Macaroons...... 18 Cocoanut Taffy............ 10 Crackmolig. ..-.: ic... 16 Creams, Iced.............. 8 Cream Crisp............... 10 MUON co 11% Currant Fruit............. 12 Frosted Honey.. con ae Frosted Cream............ 9 Ginger Gems,l’rgeorsm’ll 8 —— Snaps, -oc... 8 See ec has 10 Gemmaenk eS ie 9 Graham Crackers......... 8 Graham Wafers........... 12 Grand Rapids Tea........ 16 Honey Fingers............ 12 Iced Honey Crumpets..... 10 Imperials........... Le J ae Honey: 12 Lady Fingers.. 12 Lemon Snaps... 12 Lemon Wafers..... 16 Marshmallow....... 16 Marshmallow Creams..... 16 Marshmallow Walnuts. .. 16 MANY AAD. yo. pcs sees onee 8 Mixed MOEN sss ces no o' ms Ree ee 12 Oatmeal Crackers......... 8 Oatmeal Wafers........... 12 Orange Crisp.............. 9 Orange Gomi.......:....... 8 Penny Cake..... ... — 3 Pilot Bread, XXX......... ™% Pretzelettes, hand made.. 8 Pretzels, hand made...... 8 Seotch Cookies............ pears [tmOm.. 2.5... Sugar CMO... ec... Sugar Cream, XXX....... Sugar Squares............. Sultanas... Tutti Frutti.. Vanilla Wafe Vienna Crimp. . CREAM TARTAR 5 and 10 Ib. wooden — esses 30 Bulk in sacks.. 20 DRIED FRUITS % 9 Z 8 8 8 13 16 16 8 Apples Sundried . @4i% Evaporated, ‘50 Ib. ‘boxes. @5% California Fruits Aprieoin ...-:. ... J... 10 Blackberries ..... es = Nectarines..... — cages 8 @ll Pitted — Thy Prunnelles . oo. Raspberries . Sassen on California Prunes 100-120 25 Ib. boxes ...... @ 33 90-100 25 Ib. boxes ...... @4 80 - 90 25 Ib. boxes ...... @ 4% 70 - 80 25 Ib. boxes ...... @ 5% 60 - 70 25 Ib. boxes ...... @ 5% 50 - 60 25 Ib. boxes ...... 6% 40 - 50 25 Ib. boxes ...... @ 7% 30 - 40 25 Ib. boxes ...... 8% ¥% cent less in 50 lb. cases Citron Deenorm oo. a Corsican Sees 42 Currants California, 1 Ib. package....11% Imported, 1 lb package...... 12 Imported, bul os Be le 11% Peel Citron American 19 Ib. bx...13 Lemon American 10 Ib. bx..10% Orange American 10 1b. bx..10% Raisins London Layers 2 Crown. London Layers 3 Crown. 21d Cluster 4 Crown......... Loose Muscatels 2 Crown 6% Loose Muscatels 3 Crown 7% Loose Muscatels 4 Crown 8 L. M., Seeded, 1 Ib...... 9% L. M., Seeded. % Ib.... 8 @ Sultanas, bulk .............. 10% Sultanas, package .......... 12 FARINACEOUS GOODS ns Dried Lima......../.....00 5. 7 Medium Hand Picked 1 90 Brown Holland........... Cereals Cream of Cereal............. 90 Grain-O, small .............. 1 35 Grain-O, large............... 2 25 Grape Nuts 1 35 Postum Cereal, ‘smail 1211 35 Postum Cereal. large...... 2 25 a 24 1 1b. pac sient ask OO Bulk, per 100 bs cis beans 3 00 Haskell’s Wheat — 36 2 Ib. packages... .... ...3 00 Hominy Flake, 50 Ib. sack..... ..... 80 Pearl, 200 lb. bbl............ 2 40 Pearl, 100 tb. snek..:.-.....: 117 Maccaroni and Vermicelli Domestic, 10 Ib. box......... 60 Tmported, 25 Ib. box. .... ... 2 50 Pearl Barley CORIO ooo oo: 2 40 Ce ec 2 90 00 00 70 90 Peas Green, Wisconsin, = ..1 30 a Scotch, bu... 1251 40 Split, Ib.. jc caee Bollea ‘Oats Rolled Avena, bbl.. ...4 00 Steel Cut, 100 Ib. sacks... 210 Monarch, bbl................ 3 70 Monarch, \% bbl.. ..2 00 Monarch, 90 Ib. sacks.. -.) 80 Quaker, cases.. DIIT3 20 ine East India... 2.2.0. . 5 0.5 25.5 2% German, sacks.............. 3% German, broken package.. 4 Tapioca Flake, 110 Ib. sacks......... 44 Pearl, 130 Ib. sacks.......... 3% Pearl, 241 1b. packages..... 6 Ye 2-26) ~. Pr a -< pi’ < : MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 29 6 7 9 10 Wheat Cracked, bulk.. 242 bb. packages .. FLAVORING EXTRACTS FOOTE & JENKS’ JAXON Highest Grade Extracts Vanilla Lemon 1ozfullm.1 20 1ozfullm. 80 20zfullm.2 10 20z full m.1 25 No.3 fan’y.3 alt No. punt: 1 75 eS. Vanilla Lemon 20z panel..1 20 20z panel. 75 3 oz taper..2 00 40z taper..1 50 Jennings’ Arctic 2 oz. full meas. pure Lemon. 75 2 oz. full meas. pure Vanilla.1 20 Big Value 2 0z. oval Vanilla Tonka.... 2 oz. oval Pure Lemon...... 75 75 covet , aeY FLAVORING EXTRA Reg. 2 0z. D. C. Lemon...... 75 No. 4 Taper D. C. Lemon ...1 52 Reg. 2 0z. D. C. Vanilla...... 1 24 No. 3 Taper D. C. Vanilla. ..2 08 Standard 20z. Vanilla Tonka.......... 70 2 oz. flat Pure Lemon........ 70 Northrop Brand m. Van. 2 oz. — Panel.. om © 2ez. Oval... 5. ss: 7% 120 3 0z. a Panel....1 35 200 40z. Taper Panel....160 2 25 Perrigo’s Van. Lem. doz. doz. XXX, 2 0z. obert....1 25 75 XXX, 402. taper.... 1 25 2 25 XX, 2 0z. obert...... 1 00 No. 2,2 0z. obert.... 75 XXX D D ptehr, 6 0z 2 XXX D D ptehr, 40z 1 K. P. pitcher, 6 oz... 2 FLY PAPER Tanglefoot, per doz.......... 35 Tanglefoot, per case........ 3 20 FRESH MEATS Beef Carcass... —. 6 @& Forequarters . - 54@6 Hindquarters ....... 7 @9 Loms No: 3.......... 9 @14 ee 9 @il2 Bounds... :..:..<....5 64@ 7 CRuoks............:. B4@6 Passes 3... 2S eS Pork —— ou @7 ee i ai @l1 aan Butts ........ @9 Shoulders . Sees @ &% Leaf Lard........... @8 Mutton Oareams ............. 7%@ 8 Spring Lambs....... 9 @10 Veal CSreass 8 @9 GRAINS AND FLOUR Wheat Went... 75 Winter Wheat Flour Local Brands Patents. woe ae Second Patent............. 3 85 SORE ccs oe oe 3 65 Clee ea eo. 3 25 Graham . 3 26 Buckwheat .. : = ye a to usual cash ‘ais. unt. flour in bbls., 25¢e per bbl. ad- Ball-Barnhart-Putman’s = Diamond s............... Diamond 44S............... 5 i Diamond s. 75 Worden Grocer Co.'s Brand CuaRer see. oo oo 3 90 Quaker \s.. 3 90 Quaker s... 3 90 Spring Wheat Flour Clark- Pyewoll-Wells as - - Pillsbury’s Best %s.. Pillsbury’s Best \s.. Pillsbury’s Best \s.. Pillsbury’s Best %s paper. Pillsbury’s Best 4s paper. 440 2 a ph be 553s es 's — Duluth Imperial Xs... 440 Duluth Imperial \s... 4 30 Duluth Imperial \s....... 4 20 Lemon & Wheeler Co.’s Brand Wingold S8.............. 4 50 veo 4s scales siete 440 be ~~ oe EES ERT HIE, 4 30 wd & — s a Ceresota %s.. 4 65 Ceresota \s.. 455 Ceresota \s.. 4 45 Worden Grocer Co.'s Brand Laurel %s. < 4 60 pared Ms. . Reo omees oc cc apie 450 4 ecdcces ee ea gs and is paper.. 4 40 i. Washburn-Crosby Co.’s Brand. Prices always right. Write or wire Mussel- man Grocer Co. for special quotations. Meal Pe ee ne 2 00 Granulated 2 10 Feed and Millstuffs = Car Feed, screened.... 17 00 No.1 Corn and Oats...... 16 50 Unbolted Corn Meal...... 13 00 Winter Wheat Bran....... 17 00 Winter Wheat Middiings. 17 50 SCTOGHHIGS 3... c. 16 00 Corn Corn, car lots............. 43% Oats Car Jote.s 30 Car lots, eens. ce cie siete 32% Less than car lots......... ay No. 1 Timothy car lots.... 11 00 12 00 No. 1 Timothy ton lots.... HERBS Sage. Hops... Laurel Leaves. . i Senna mae Roe cus ome 25 NDIGO Madras, 5 Ib. Dexes....... 55 S. F., 2,3 and 5 lb. boxes...... 50 JELLY 5 lb. pails.per doz........ 1 85 16 1D. pais: =. 2 5... 35 SG%p: pas... -. 62 LICORICE LYE Condensed, 2 doz............ Condensed, 4 doz............ MATCHES \ TAA ERE CURE! No. 200 Lookout, 144 bx.....1 25 No. 500 Select Society, 144...4 00 No. 200 Williams Perfect, 144.1 35 No. 2 Lily, 144 boxes....... 1 15 No. 100 Park, 432 boxes...... 2 85 No. 80 Poetry, 720 boxes... .4 00 Diamond Match Co.’s brands. No, Samper... 1 65 Anchor Farior .............- 1 50 No. 2 Home. ee denicececas ee Export Parlor. 400 Wolverine... .1 50 MEAT EXTRACTS Armour & Co.’s, 4 0z. 45 Eiepig’s, 2 O72... .. -..- .... 75 MOLASSES New Orleans Fancy Ses ee 40 Choice... (ous 35 ee ee 26 Ee 22 Half-barrels 2c extra MUSTARD Horse Radish, 1 doz......... 1 75 Horse Radish, 2 doz......... 3 50 Bayle’s Celery, 1 doz........ 1 75 OLIVES Bulk, 1 gal. kegs........... 1 25 Bulk, 8 gal. kegs........... 110 Bulk, 5 gal. kegs........... 1 00 Manzanilla, 7 0z........--. 80 Queen, pints............... 2 35 Gueon, 19 oz .............. 4 50 Gaoen, 28 OZ............... 7 00 Stuffed, 5 0z............... 90 Seumea, 8 OF. 7-.. 2... 8. 1 45 Staffed. 10 oz... . -.......... 2 30 OYSTER PAILS Wictor, pints. .....:...-.... 10 00 Victor, quarts.............. 15 00 Victor, 2 ——- Se ol 20 00 ER BAGS Custiincatas Paper Bag Co. Ask your Jobber for them. Glory Mayflower Satchel & Pacific Bottom Square RO pa 28 50 Mees. cane 34 60 eee 44 80 nl RE ea a 54 1 00 Bie cae se 66 1 25 Dee eee, 76 1 45 ... 90 170 Be ee eed 1 06 2 00 ee ee 1 28 2 40 es eka 1 38 2 60 3 1 3 15 De cee cecc ee 2 24 415 OB G. cen ce cue 2 34 4 50 Rs sis Sosie as gs 2 52 5 00 7: a EL EL 5 50 Sugar See eietaigeece aeaigee a ecg aes 4% I ogee d chug mere sce | a PARIS GREEN Ba ce Packages, % Ib., each....... 18 Packages, % lb., each....... 17 Packages, 11b., each....... 16 PICKLES Medium Barrels, 1,200 count ......... 4 50 Half bbls, 600 count......... 275 Small Barrels, 2,400 count ......... 5 50 Half bbls, 1,200 count .......3 30 co Oinay, No. 216 1 70 Clay, T. >, Gail count....... 65 Cob, No. 85 * ia ee 48 cans in case. Bape oc. oe 4 00 Penna Salt Co.’s............. 3 00 PROVISIONS Barreled Pork TC @16 50 Back . Sic cee @15 50 Clear back. eee we bone @15 50 Short cut.. es @15 60 ee ce @19 00 oe @12 25 Family PeOCHS. @14 50 Rump Butts Beef. . @11 50 — Salt Meats Bellies. . 8% Briskets .. eae oe 84 Extra shorts......... 7% Smoked Meats Hams, 121b. average. @ 10% Hams, 141b. average. @ 10% Hams, 161b. average. @ 10% Hams teu average. @ 9% Ham dried beef..... @ 11% Shoulders (N. Y. cut) @ 7% Bacon, clear......... 10 @ 10% California a: oa @ 7% Boneless hams.. @ ll Boiled Hams. . @ 15 Picnic Boiled Hams @ ll Berlin Hams....... 8% Mince Hams....... g 9 Lards—In Tierces Compound........... 5% Meteo. 87s Vegetole ........... 6%4 60 lb. Tubs..advance ve 80 lb. Tubs..advance % 50 lb. Tins. ..advance % 20 Ib. Pails. .advance % 10 Ib. Pails..advance % 5 1b. Pails..advance 1 3 lb. Pails..advance 1 Sausages Bologna ..... 0... 5% Aver .... 6 Frankfort 7% Fork .... 7% OO 6% 2 9 Headcheese.......... 6 Beef Extra * Sees coes 10 75 —— os 11 50 Rump .. 11 50 wns? 2 Feet ¥% bbls., 40 lbs.. 1 50 % bbls., 80 Ibs.. 3 50 Tripe | ilés, 15 }be.......... 70 44 bbis., 40 Ibs....... 1 25 % bbls., 80 lbs.. 2 25 Casings ork . Coe. 21 beet rounds. ........ 3 Beef middles........ 10 SOO sc 60 Butterine Solid, dairy.......... 11 @13 Rolls, dairy.......... ee Rolls, creamery..... Solid, creamery..... Canned Meats Corned beef, 2 Ib.. 2 75 Corned beef, 141b... 17 50 Roast beef, 2 Ib...... 2 75 Potted ham, \s..... 50 Potted ham, s..... 90 Deviled ham, \s.. 50 Deviled ham, s.. 90 Potted tongue, s.. 50 Potted tongue, ifs. 90 RICE Domestic Carolina head................ 7 Carolina No. 1 ee Carolina No.2. - 4% Broken . . 4% Imported.” Japan, No. 1.. -- 54@6 Japan, No. 2.. -44@5 Java, fancy head. LS @5% Java, No. 1.... @ Table.. @ ‘SALERATUS — Packed 60 Ibs. in box. Church’s Arm and Hammer.3 15 3 00 3 15 Emblem 2 10 ee 3 00 Sato 3 00 ———. 100 oe. Seo 3 00 cuniton bbls i 80 Granulated, 100 Ib. cases. 90 Lump, bbls. coe. e Lump, 145 Ib. Kegs..........- 80 SALT ‘Buckeye 100 31). Paes .....-..-.....: 3 00 SO Gite bate ....... 2... :._: 3 00 ——————————OOO 275 In 5 bbl. lots 5 per cent. dis- —_ and one case 24 3 Ib. boxes ree. Diamond Crystal Table, cases, 24 3 lb. boxes..1 40 Table, barrels, 1003 Ib. bags. 3 00 Table, barrels, 407 Ib. be $.2 75 Butter, barrels, 280 Ib. bulk.2 65 Butter, barrels, 20 141b.bags.2 Butter, sac ae... .... Butter, sacks, 56 Ibs... é7 Common Grades 100 3 lb. sacks.. eee 20 60 5 Ib. sacks.. 2 © 28 10 Ib. sacks. 2 05 SG I SHONS cL. 40 38 Ib. sacks................ 22 Warsaw 56 lb. dairy in drill bees ocas 30 28 Ib. dairy in drill bags. .... 15 Ashton 56 lb. dairy = linen sacks... 60 56 Ib. dairy in os sacks... 60 olar Rock OG ID. seks. 7... t 8 .. 30 Common Granulated Fine.. «sk 20 Medium Fine.. ces caso 2 SALT ‘FISH Cod Georges cured......... @é6 Georges genuine...... @ 6% —— es selected...... @7 Bae... .......; @5 Strips or bricks. . -6 @9Y Poneek... 2. ks... @ 3% Halibut. a Sse gite s ceca seca ce tae Chunks. : 12 rrin Holland white hoops, bbl. 11 25 Holland white hoops%bbl. 6 00 Holland white hoop, keg.. 82 Holland white a mehs. 87 Norwegian ................ Round 100 Ibs.............. 3 00 Round 40 Ibs.. ce Jo CM 19 Bloaters.......... 1 60 M Moss 100 Ibe. ...... ....:... Mess 40 lbs. ........:..... & 20 oes Iie, Messe SIPe. 62 ae No. 1 100 Ibs. . 10 50 No.1 40 Ibs. . 4 50 No.1 10 Ibs. . 1 20 Nok Sipe. 1... lS. 1 00 No. 2t00 ibe... 8 25 No. 2 20s. .............. 3 60 No.2 10 lbs. . 98 NaS Sis. .............. 81 Trout No. 100 Ihe. 8... 5 75 No.1 40 Ibs. 2 60 Ne. f wie... 8... 75 Ne.ft Ssits......_. 61 Whitefish No.1 No.2 Fam £00 Ta... .... 700 300 40 Yps........ 310 150 10 Ibs... ; 85 45 & ibe... .... 71 39 SEEDS Anis ee y- Cardamon, Malabar Celery.. “ 2 Hem ; Russian |. - 4% Mix rd.. - 4% Mustard, white. 9 Poppy... 10 ee 4% Cuttle Bone.. -..15 SHOE BLACKING Handy Box, ions ee 2 50 Handy Box, small......... 1 25 Bixby 's Royal E Posh: ..... 85 Miller’s Crown Polish..... 8&5 SNUFF Scotch, in bladders.. 37 Maceaboy, in jars.. ous oO French Rappee, in ‘jars... 43 SOAP Single box.. : 5 box lots, delivered ........ 2 95 10 box lots, delivered ........ 2 90 Bell & Bogart brands— Coal Oil Johnny ......... 3 90 ES 4 00 Lautz Bros. brands— meee... 4 00 Acme 5c.. Marseilles. La 3 eee & Gamble brands— ORO oe 3 00 Ivory, —.. oe -- 400 Ivory, 10 0 6 75 N. K. [ae — Santa Claus. . - $25 — Hol ae .. 240 Mee ee - 400 Detroit Soap Co. brands— Queen Anne..... ........ 3 15 Big Bargain.. aoc © ao Umpire... .... -- ao. 2 om German Family.......... 2 45 A. B. Wrisley brands— Good Cneer .......... ...- 3 80 Old Country .............. 3 20 pst 5 & Sons brands— Cae ee. 3 25 Oak Leat, bigS........... 400 Beaver Soap Co. brands— Grandpa Wonder, large. Grandpa Wonder, small. Grandpa Wonder, small, Johnson Soap Co. brands— Silver King. . oo Calumet F amily .. Seas acl Cia... amiiy..... ...... Ricker’ Ss on ada. 3 25 3 85 3 2 70 2 50 1 95 3 oo —— Co. brand— _ Schulte & ‘Co. brand— Dee | co mculnn 3 00 B. T. Babbit brand— Babbit’'s Best............. 4 00 Fels brand— Nagtaa 4 00 Scourin Sapolio, kitchen, 3 doz...... 2 40 Sapolio, hand, 3 doz......... 2 40 SODA ee ee Megs, English............... 4% STOVE POLISH No. 4, 3 doz in case, gross. . No. 6, 3 doz in case. gross . STARCH = nigh 40 1-lb. packages... oe 20 1-Ib. packages...... eco 6 lb. packages........... Corn Kingsford’s Silver Gloss 7 40 1-Ib. aoerere. bee ce cuee 6 Ib. boxes.. oes a Gidea ‘Game 20 1-Ib. packages.......... 40 1-Ib. packages.......... Common Gloss 1-Ib. packages............. 3-lb. packages... . _~ al ort bo eee 50-Ib boxes.. ee ec ere oe Si aen 7% 4% 4% 4% 4% 5 334 3% SYRUPS Corn EEO iam Wee. 20 1 doz. 1 gallon cans.......... 3 00 1 doz. % gallon cans......... 1 70 2 doz. 4 gallon cans......... 90 SPICES Whole Spices Aveee 2 12 Cassia, China in mats.. A2 Cassia, Batavia, in bund 28 Cassia, Saigon, broken. 38 Cassia, Saigon, in rolls. 55 Cloves, Amboyna..... 17 Cloves, Zanzibar. . 14 mace... 8... 55 Nutmegs, 75-80. 50 Nutmegs, 105-10 40 Nutmegs, 115-20........ / 35 Pepper, Singapore, black. 18 Pepper, Singapore, white. 28 Tepper, seee.............. 2 Pure Ground in Bulk Allspice... 16 Cassia, Batavia... eoaes 28 Casein, Soteom..... 2.04 48 Cloves, Zanzibar........... 17 Ginger, Aftican........... 15 Ginger, Cochim............ 18 Ginger, Sweet Core... ee Sunlient, a rr o-++-1 00 ao. ee oe ag R r, medium.... ee 40 |¥ 256 GOs... 4. 1 gal. nat or rd. bot i eis one a egular, choice ............. - ie : i eae ot,, each......... E¢ al = Great Navy ooo Yeast Foam, 3 dog. 22222001 00 Fine Glazed © as 5s nn 27 east Foam.1% doz_....... ; = \% gal flat filkpans mw & —— 29 FRESH FISH i gal. flat or a 2s TXL, 6Ib....-.... Ca 27 | White fish. .. Per Ib. CAC... eee eee as LX L, 0 Ib-......-- Te = TrOUE. -eeoe ee cess 2 : x Stewpans 7 Sn 32 ec ce covces " i a Gol ; Y Dew... oe ooee eae 37 Halibut «- TE ORE "8 12 = oe — per = La s Is npowde ae 7 Gadeniae eae 15 per doz......... uperior : Moy une, medium . =, aoe oc ee 40 | Bluefis ig —- @ 4 Jo '? “A Doth cont oo = Moyune, — ET 35 Duk os ay 23 Boll Lobster. il 3 10 | % gal. per doz _ lighting. century revelation in the art of ' —-.. e’s so ences oiled Lob ee 20 4g Se a A Th ¢ Pingsuey — 50 | Duk a 40 ster. a : a. 60 ey darkness i , medium. ... ; e’s Cameo.. .40. | Cod.. + @ 2 to 5 Pesce An nto dayligh Pingsuey, choice............ 2 as gate ey 40 | Haddoe weeoseee @ UM 5 gal., per gal...... dich y eee eR 45 | No smoke wae a of money burn” er ——_--— Myrtle Navy vaocccs..0 00 3% | No.1 P Pia we $3 ceiling ex 7% | They are portable, hang or stad them any where “ sz : j BE == ae e al ? e a a Hy: s * ie a a la Sa ee 5 Ibs. in package, per Ib........ Somes bees Clee Lamps, Wall _ Pee ie Corn Cake oo CHORES Smoke Wile. a sais daipinmieee 2 Lamps, ete. |The best kG ae _ ee Form olong orn Cake, 11b.............. 25 | Col River Salmon. ---. @ iu IN Te sell at sigh apor Gas Lamps ee Ruy etion — = Plow Bos, is Does coe Mackere rer Salmon. = @ 2 No. 1 Sume..00. so ccc % aoa a re} moy, cholee- +1... Peerless. 354 02. 37 | HIDES AND PELTS ee ae eee 65 CHICAGO SOLAR LI English Break Peerless, 134 02... --84 | Co., 100 ns pon & Bertsch Leathe The ee 119 | 8! L. Fifth GHT CO Mediu akfast : » 195 OZ.. a ‘anal Stree Pi Nutuee Sees is Ave. a 4 ee s (oe Tee 36 | follows: rw Beeeec veseeeeeeneeeereeeeeeieey * Chicago, Ill Se a ane or, pice ou o i eat 50 ’ . FANG a — Choice, a -+++++--31 | Green No.1 LAMP CHIMNEYS—Seconds : ae i ase 21 | Green No. 2. @6 | No.oSun...... Per box of 6 da a. antes CO 32 | Cotton, 3 EWINE - — No. 1 .? ag feo een 56 i a EY 42 | Cotton, 2 BBY oes coon oon BD Seb eas @ iM ae 178 TOBACCO ee 20 Calfskins, oe 1 os" nee sete eeees 2 48 Adena te aie an ne: salma see —— a brand. Wool, i ee Calfskins,cured No.2 a : 1 Sun, * crimp oe , ueeee - lab. 2 00 1 HP, Drug Gas brands. | Mal Mimi cc R [Ply eather, 6001 10] 2 Sun, erimp top, wrapped & lab: 318 rtune Telle s t Whi : hae EE xx Our Manager. aT 35 00 | Malt White —— 40 grain.. 8 ———- No.1S x Flint Quintette.- : oo | Fure Cider Wine, 80 grain..11 | NO-fes------ - 6.15: — ae 6 (8 G. J. e Cider, R . 0. 2.. cm 44 | No.2S p, Wrapped & la) _ Johnson Cigar Co’s brand, | Pure Cider, Saver 2 n | Washed, fi a Oe in; hinge, wrapped &iab...--- 400 Wasnixe a Seca oe p os wince 1 Ar. Pearl To ess wD Washed, . 8@20 | No.15 P C aa ER | Unwashed, edium... 2224 | No.2 — oo 4.00" SS Pearline. by BGs neon eee vee { 6) | Unwashed, medium. ge 2 hinge, ot. 5 00 ch ag ae alae 2 90 N Yo. 2 Sun, ‘* E AADOIOG.. - - nme a 3 50 Stick wi —— ee The thi fe es 2 thin No : yt — . ee en it Oe No. La Bastie * our aa — overlooked when s.c.W No. ?, Sau. nec Standard HH. @ 7% No. ; oe plain bulb, per doz.... ordered f Sr Cigar .. 35 09 | No. 3. ber gros seeeee e385 | Cut st... @s8s |No plain bulb, per doz.....-.. ‘= rom us b gar Clippings, per Ib..1.. 26 lca ee ea a. Zo ime 0.1 Crimp, a 1 25 egraph or | y telephone, tel- _ubetsky Bros.’ Brands. ODEN Wait Jumbo, 32 1b..... @ 9 _| No. 2.Crimp, per doz......-.......-.. 1 60 ay ca a 00 i ee a Heese es @ 74 | No.1 Li anemone o> shipped Bushels. wide band...) 1 19 | Boston Cream.. @10% 1 Lime (65¢ doz fir : on the a Brace & Co.’s oo ened wide — ae 1 29 | Beet Root.. Ee @10 _ (ae a st train, al Tigers.. . oo ae 0. 2 Flint tepetese es seeees : WwW i Ro .2 2. 5B@ Splint, 1a oece | Oe Mix @8 80¢ doz).--: i 400 eae Bose ET He ica | gp iia g Bl Gm Be L. So a os ee seek, Ges et tet ge 77" 35 00 aa No. ‘ ctric : methin : Night flank, conch i Wilow Clothes arg B 2, | Nocd Min (We dog co | toe a os i 9 CONCIIG...... oO seeeeee ,, | No. 2 Flint (80¢ doz). o.oo coco. Vinsease a hatte se 35 09 | Willow Clothes. a . ea 7 Therefore, prompt shi a Bros. goa = > 00 | No.1 Pr sy od Plates g . 1 gal. tin cans with sca ek a eee son Go. 00 | No. , 250 in crate.. 1 gal. galv. iro er doz. T. J, Dunn & Co..... --$5@110 00 | No: 3 Oval, 260 in crate.” “go | Enelish oo @ | 2 Sal gal. tron ae oereeas. 1 58 BROWN & SEHLER. MeCoy & Co, --.---.-. 35@ 70 00 | No. 5 Oval, oe BB Kindergarten a @9 |5gal. oan. = with spout, per doz.. 2 78 Grand Rapid cn ieee. gar -~ 10@ 35 00 aaa 65 ae Ton Cream... @9 |3 gal. galv. — with spout, per doz... 375 Mich pids, Bernard Stahi ‘-15@ 70 09 | Humpty Dumpty ...... _ | French Cream....... O° lac cat wee oun tok oe — 4's —_— Banner Cigar a neue 08 i No. 2 complet seems Hand a i @i0 — Tilting a » er doz. 495 fe ee ean ee a 251 crystal Grea i a econo: Se ee 9 00 Pee See, Sheps Are eliard Co gag 9 | Howid head: ettong' > 2] Bp mafaney te atk O'S | Eu Hate steady stam Havana Cigar G pote "135g 70 00 | Trojan ae” Sticks os cS Lozenges, pain - Bie @i2 | 3eal. — = ae C. Costello & (C0..--.-18@ 35 00 Kelipse patent — 8 Le, print — @ 9% = Home Rule... ee c ao~ egies 35@ 7 ee eee —---- Choe. Drops... .... oe ; -geee ee e ZS " [akc 35@ 70 00 No. 2 oaieak ate ooh elon oo 75 pse Chocolates a 9 50 | en sh h Choe. eee @i3 L Hote ee = aap 00| Pa heads. 8 aie gis | Noo ppaey self... imple . ee 4 um . Hi peneacs Goa, e 8 | sha Sanaa 1g |e = 2 1% - . 20, .-35@ 70 00 | Shoop Standard............. m: es 9 ie » GASD.... 2. ee ee ee eee Maurice Sanborn 0.55@ 70 00 | 2-wire, Tre 2221 60 | tm 1on SOUFS. «...... S.0% | No. 12 toe glass fouitalit. oie a | M Co.. a a 00 3-wire, Cable.. ---1 56 | Cream Opera... 190 | No. 3 Street lam MP.....---.-+--- 13 50 ccoun anuel Garcia. ae 80@37: Cedar, all red, ‘br -1 70 ital Cream pera 12 p, cach... 1 e ( Neuva Mundo......... 85 75 00| Paper, Eureka... rass bound. 125 Bonbons arene anid we 3 60 Henry Clay... “72 /39500 00 |S Pre a Molasies Chia, is @iz_ | Xe. 0 Tub., cases 1 doz. each > te ee - eocee ’ ANO. ub., cas : » DOX, I ° ° a eG. 70 op | Bardw soroothpicks: Pine ia oe No. 0 Tub., bis 5 doz. each, | ae Fe Simplest and Star — oe s Brand. Softwood - peu ne ies we. 12% | No.0 Tub., Bull’s eye, cases 1 er bbl.. 2 00 od ee 2 78) Golden Waties’ il came Most Economi rr ne eke I) eghang ae 8 i. Boney onomical mee Tubs He Pe a" O}DWa ove eres 3g | 20-In ppermint @55 G : Sweet Spray. 5.. sc 3 | Teineh, Standard, No: 2....-5 00 HM Che ——. @60 AS AND GASOLINE Method of Keeping r ore eee a zineh, Standard, No. 323 00 | MS M: Choe, Li Tira Ges _ 1 i A N 1 LES Petit Accounts | Golden Pope... 0101. ieimeh, Cable, No. 2..--::°-6 00 | Figoriea Bro Qi 0 , Satisfaction, and Perfection|@ File and 1,000 pri ~é Telegram. wesssseeeeee58 | NO. 1 Fibre ao deuamesersen 5 00 | Lozenge TODS... or GLOVER’S WHOLESALE bill he: printed blank 7 Pay Car Me vesseseeeeeeetecees 28 No. 2 Fibre... ee 9 45 Loma, Prin or Manufacturers, Importers, and — CO., ¥a ill heads. .... $2 ay Cat oes see coe 0. 3 Fib if , pr re : Jobbe ; ne sineee ew Prairie Rose..0.00.00..00 0... a - LIT 20 @60 and Gasoline Sundries, € and 1,000 specially - Sweet puriey vie teeeeees 38 Bronze Wes eaten ai 5 + os GRAND RAPIDS, MICH printed bill heads { WO le rene ted ; - ; : Pri oe Se 00 be Sweet Loma. .000 000.000... = Dewey .-...... sesesrsrseess2 80 | Molasses B @o5 rinted blank bill heads, 3 “aw aaa. %° | Double Poor ee ene 232i iad c = E : per thousand : Creme de Menthe... 27 : and Wink. ......... onwareé Meat T chnetinen "Seek gle Peer a steeee ll y print Strongh a soe --60 Northern Que wee 2 BO Wintererest Se = 15, 20, 25, 30 gal ies a ed bill heads, we Double Dupl as Berries @e0 , 25, 30 gal. All sizes in stoc’ ousand..... > @ Sweet Chunk... 20.022 ..000: 35 | Good Lu Duplex.............-3 00) No 1 wrapped, 5 ib. promptly. Prices are right ~ We can ship treeee 1 50 | cele cele ceee seen ee cece ce eeene- a 3 Ib. . nd us TORIW ORI ois woes oe ss 3 3 —— -: > W. S & J E G your order. 3 Tradesman Com y nar see eeees ° ‘é anny Goods e800 5. & J. E. Graham eaeies pany, S ‘ae Ips, MICH. ds. b> = 990000000000 a « = pr MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 31 RIGHTS OF THE RETAILER. How They Are Infringed by New Con- ditions. The spirit of domination appears to be ever-present in the make-up of mankind and is laudable or to be deplored ac- cording to its development and direc- tion. The pages of the past contain one long, and almost uninterrupted, story of the wrongs against the many by this misguided motive of the few. Some cul- tivate the passion for glory and renown; others for wealth and its consequent power. One modern example of that motive nobly directed—our Revolution- ary fathers, who builded not for them- selves, but for the people. This inher- ent passion seems to break out at va- rious times and sundry places, much in the manner of the many ills that flesh is heir to, and is at times more or less virulent and contagious. Well directed combination in mer- chandising means the loss of business independence for many who are now fighting their battles alone. Ought we not, then, look to our rights, and see that they are known and respected? The manufacturer ought not to think, because he produces articles of real merit and general utility, and_her- alds the same through the press to the public, that that alone has made their reputation and his success in his line of products. There is an army of retailers between him and the consumer, who must not be overlooked. They know a good thing when they see it, and they willingly, although selfishly, assist in building up that reputation, by praising and posting their trade on the various points of merit of the merchandise they handle; by warranting and standing between the customer and any possible loss, in every honorable way striving to get them into general use and thereby smoothing the way for future sales. Surely we have done more to add to that reputation and create a demand far in excess of any that could be obtained by the most lavish use of the printers’ press. This is not on account of any love on our part for the manufacturer or pride in his plant, but for the margin of profit that is in it for us. Our interests have been mutual and we have stood fairly together in the past; but ‘‘evolution’’ seems to be a domi- nant theory, if not an accepted fact, in commercial affairs as well as in nature, and it may be a case of the ‘‘survival of the fittest’’ among the merchants of the future. There are many- merchants who have noted the various phases that merchandising has passed through with- in their time: The omnipresent pack- peddler; the general or mixed store; the well assorted stocks in each particu- lar line; the department store and the catalogue house, and now ‘‘trusts’’ and syndicates. These latter bid fair to control the distribution of the products of the factory in the near future. The tocsin of alarm is being sounded along the line and trusts and combinations of capital, these aggregations of greed, are growing into disrepute. Already trade assemblies and organizations and state legislatures are seeking methods to mas- ter and keep within metes and bounds such associations of money for commer- cial control and dictation. If we wish to persevere in the old and established methods, and are not will- ing to be guided by the signs of the times, and accept and attempt some of the radical changes now in the air, then we, too, should take action. The time has come when those whose interests are mutual, whose commercial success de- pends on harmony of action, who are makers and distributors—the manu- facturers and jobbers—and retailers of every line of commodity—the many against the few—-should formulate a plan of action to more closely conserve our common interests, lest our present free- dom of action and individuality be smothered and lost in the arms of some financial octopus—some new billion dol- lar trust. We have a right—that of self-preser- vation, as well as mutual dependence— and should demand that just as low prices be given the retailer who carries a stock in any particular line as are given by the same manufacturer or job- ber to any house handling that same line and selling directly to the consum- er, and with the very smallest differ- ence, if any, as to quantity. Is it right? Is it fair, that after con- tributing so long and so largely to the reputation of any line of goods, the maker thereof should place in the hands of a department store or catalogue house, or any house that sells broadcast to the consumer, those same goods at prices below those that we have to pay? We ask, at least, for even justice —that we be placed on a fair footing with all. We are entitled to this and it should be insisted upon. If the jobber and manufacturer were a little more considerate, they would not allow a too common evil to occur-— that of mapping out the states and towns for special and particular prices, or al- lowing their agents to sell, at the same time, but at different prices, to com- peting parties in the same or neighbor- ing places. This may be occasioned by the salesman’s eagerness for orders; or the so-called ‘‘shrewd buyer’’ may have beguiled him, by means best known to himself, into making concessions. Such methods are obviously unfair and should not be tolerated because of their injustice. No fair minded competitor should expect, or would ask, to be fa- vored in that way. We havea right to a fair and uniform price according to the fluctuations of the uncertain and manipulated markets. Perhaps most of you have observed since ‘‘prosperity’’ was ‘‘unbottled’’ a few years ago, that there has been, at times, much vexatious delay in the fill- ing of orders and frequent notices with the legend ‘‘out of the following ;’’ ‘*please include in your next order,’’ or ‘*will forward on arrival,’’ and the em- barrassing interviews such conditions cause with your customers. After a man has decided to buy, he wants it at once; so you order from some other house that has it, and before you can send your countermand you have a double dose of it, possibly unsalable odds and ends. Most houses cancel orders for goods they are out of at time of shipment; this is the most satisfactory way, but the buyer should have his order filled at prices given if he so wishes and renews his order on notice of omissions. The lack of cars in sufficient number to move the vast amount of merchandise now in demand is the cause 6f much of the delay in the receipt of our purchases, and the customary ‘‘Ten days for two off’’ have passed before you have had chance to check them off or see that they are as ordered, and sometimes even before they arrive at your station. It should not be held that we have sinned away our days of grace on that account. We ought to be granted a little more liberality as to time for discounting. In some lines thirty days are given, and the discounts are much larger. Fifteen days would give, in nearly all cases, ample time for the retailer to check his goods and his money. To equalize matters and get business nearer a cash basis, the credit limit might be short- ened to thirty days. We have a right to be favored a little as to lists and trade discounts. We are not all blessed witha marvelous memory; nor are most of us adepts in discounts. The lists, for instance, on steel goods, seem to have been gotten up by the de- signers with the special view to distract us, and they have succeeded admirably in my case; but the discounts on same, to use a vulgarism, ‘‘take the bakery.’’ After a short wrestle with them one would forget whether he was a-foot or a-horseback. We should be given a list that is uniform; that is, manufacturers making goods of like style, sizes, etc., use one list and but one discount for each list of any line; the discount chang- ing with the market; the lists to be changed only at iong intervals when the cost of materials or making, of part of their products, would be relatively out of proportion. This need not occur often, as the manufacturers could safely be trusted to put their lists so high and their dis- counts so low, the former would seldom need revision. Haven’t we a right to ask, especially when this would cause no additional outlay of skill or money, that the labels on the boxes containing the hardware we put on our shelves be gotten up, par- tially, at least, for our convenience? While we do not want the designers to neglect the artistic features and harmony of type and color and their general at- tractiveness, yet the letters ought to be sufficiently large to enable many of the dealers who have grown old and spec- tacled in the business to spell them out without much effort; and while they are filling the label with facts and ng- ures in regard to the articles within, leave us a space that we may complete the design with a few original hiero- glyphics—our cost and selling price. Let us ask, then, that the powers that be—those most interested along similar lines—act together, less selfishly, and pave the way for fairer and easier busi- ness methods; that they stand within supporting distance, and, when the threatened commercial war is on, our flag of individuality will not go down to defeat. B. W. Ricketts. on 8 It takes a philosopher to be silent anent philosophy. ps 2 co AMONTH is all it costs for the GAS LIGHT equal to 10 or 12 coal oil lamps anywhere if you will get the jeriteatonce Brilliant Gas Lamp. for Agency. Brilliant Gas Lamp Co., 42 State, Chicago ELLIOT 0. GROSVENOR Late State Food Commissioner Advisory Counsel to manufacturers and jobbers whose interests are affected by the Food Laws of any state. Corres- pondence invited. 1232 Majestic Building, Detroit, Mich. 2 75 sent with order will buy o | one of these harp shaped Imperial Gas Lamps. It will be shipped f. o. b. Chicago, completely trimmed, carefully packed so that weight of package is less than ten pounds, hence charges by express would not be high. Lamp burns gas- oline and gives a beautiful white light and is fully guaranteed. Write. The Imperial Gas Lamp Co. 132 and 134 East Lake St., Chicago TO THE TRADE: We are the only manufacturers of Dynamite in Lower Michigan suitable for general Rock work and Stump Blasting; also Caps, Safety Fuse, Electric Fuse, Batteries, Dirt Augers, ete. Our — are strictly high grade and reliable, twenty- ve yearsin the business. Prices and goods right. Shipments made promptly on same day order is received. Try us by inquiry. AJAX DYNAMITE WORKS, Bay City, Mich. We want you to write us for any kind of boxes you need. Kalamazoo Paper Box Co., Kalamazoo, Mich. Headquarters for Merchants HOTEL GRACE European. In the heart of the city. Location opposite Post Office and Board of Trade in exact center of business district. Two hundred rooms at $1 per day and up- ward. Every room has hot and cold water and is heated by steam. C. C. COLLINS, Proprietor, Jackson Boulevard and Clark St. CHICAGO. CHOCOLATE AND COCOA Guaranteed Absolutely Pure. Direct from Manufacturer to Retailers. In localities where jobbers do not handle our line, we will sell direct to retailers in order to introduce our goods more thoroughly. Will you write today for descriptive circulars and special prices for trial orders? AMBROSIA CHOCOLATE CO., Milwaukee,’ Wis. wo, WH. Wa. a. a. wR, WH. Crushed Cereal Coffee Cake. Better than coffee. Cheaper than coffee. | More healthful than coffee. Costs the consumer less. Affords the retailer larger profit. Send for sample case. See quotations in price current. Crushed Cereal Coffee Cake Co. Marshall, Mich. f EO EO a we SE OE Oo OE No Long Story Here. Steel Mills, Steel Towers, Steel Tanks, Wood Tanks, Galvanized Pipe and Tubular Well Supplies. Write for Prices. 32 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN DIED A GROCER. Among the curious epitaphs which the old English graveyards furnish is found the following: ‘*Here lies John Blank; he was born a man and died a grocer.”’ After the laugh that is sure to follow the reading there are two thoughts, hos- tile to each other, that promptly present themselves: The man devcted himself to his business—which is a cardinal vir- tue in the trading world—but in his de- votion to trade he sacrificed his man- hood—which is not a cardinal virtue in any calling. The life is more than meat and when the order is reversed and liv- ing is ‘‘only that and nothing more,’’ the object for which that life was created has shrunken into selfishness and the world at large is benefited only by a degrading example. The fact is devotion has gone beyond its prescribed limits, greed has taken its place and manhood has been dethroned by the basest trait that enters into its being. There is no finer sight—and certainly there is nothing more to be commended in old or young—than a ‘‘ buckling down to business’’ and a determined keeping at it. There, if anywhere, is to be no halfway work. From early until late mind, heart and strength must work with untiring zeal for the accomplish- ment of the purpose inhand. In season and out of season eye, hand and tongue are on the alert and, as certain almost as the sunshine, the hard-won reward is secured. It is the same old story, pleasant to tell and pleasanter to ex- perience, and with it comes the inevit- able moral: Be contented with well done and let well enough alone. It is true that business does not consist of a single venture, but it is just as true thata project requiring years for its accom- plishment can not without detriment exact without let-up the work, the thought, the care of- these same years. One of two things is sure: the man must rise superior to his calling or die a-gro- cer! It hardly need be said that ‘‘grocer' stands fora type. ‘‘The man with the hoe’’ and professional life with pill or brief or sermon have need to look to themselves to avert the same evil. The artist and the poet have illustrated with brush and pen the fact that years of ser- vile toil have transformed manhood into a brute. The physician,true to his call- ing, of necessity can call no hour his own in the most exacting and respon- sible of professions; but his study and his experience tell him, in tones that can not be mistaken, that the staunchest bow must occasionally unbend; and they tel] him, too, that unless his man- hood is allowed at times to assert itself in other than professional lines, physi- cian though he be, he will die a grocer. One can hardly fail at a glance to call this man a lawyer, that one a minister, if either be worthy of his profession, so intent are they in doing the work their hands have found; but even here are instances where each has shown his brotherhood with the man with the hoe by sacrificing in his profession the man- hood that was intended to adorn it. It is easier to fix the limit than it is to observe it when fixed. Not one man in a hundred looks upon his business other than as a means of getting his liv- ing. It is merely a question of bread and butter. At first the bread is dry and crusty and the butter, not often of the best quality, is thinly spread. Suc- cess comes and the bread and the butter improve, but the question remains the same. There is a new house, some new furniture, including a new dining table ’ with handsome and costly appointnients, and the food now is of the best. The man and the family that sit down and partake of it are handsomely clad; but the daily life, the daily thought, that controls it is of the earth earthy. It is the old question of getting a living. Manhood and womanhood and, most pitiful of all, childhood are sacrificed and a grocer’s grave yawns forthem. All the humanity, all the intelligence, all the refinement of Christian culture have been absorbed in the momentous ques- tion of getting a living and the result is pure animalism. They neither read nor think. The graces of speech and action are nothing to them. They are absorbed in the one idea of getting a living! They stand in the furrows of their own field. They lean on their own costly hoe. They look into the sky and see only the arching blue and the shin- ing sun and at nightfall they go home with the other animals to eat and to go to bed. There is but one conclusion: The man must be greater than his calling. The nobler nature must hold in subjec- tion the base; and this can be done only when manhood asserts itself and refuses to ‘‘die a grocer.’’ —— GENERAL TRADE REVIEW. A curious feature of the trade situa- tion is the fact that during, and pend- ing, the transfer of immense quantities of the stocks coming into the combina- tions the tide of activity is without the least abatement. While there have been slight reactions in a few properties,as a whole the movement is advancing, with constantly increasing activity. Under ordinary conditions there might be some anxiety as to the effect on the money sit- uation of the enormous transfers of hold- ings on account of the consolidations, but so much of this is simply a transfer of certificates and the financial situation is so strong that there is not the least cause for uneasiness. According to the statement of bank resources of February 12 the total assets of all National banks in the country are larger than ever be- fore recorded in the history of the coun- try, amounting to $5, 435,906,257, a net increase of $293,816,565 since Decem- ber 12, 1900, and a gain for the year to February 12 of $760,995,544. Individual deposits are enormous. The entire amount of lawful money, including specie and legal tenders, controlled by the banks was on February 12 $552, 342, - 475, aS against $462,034,317 a year ago. Loans and discounts amount to $2,814, - 388, 346, an increase of $332,808,401 for the year. In addition to the vast amount of money in circulation in the country, the United States Treasury holdings are heavier than ever before, with the largest gold holdings of all the countries in the world. The course of the railway securities market is still on the advance, owing to the tremendous earnings. Sixty of the leading stocks show an unprecedented average of $93.13 per share, a gain of $1.76 for the week—the only hesitation was shown by coal roads on account of the threatened strike. Consummation of the steel deal was chiefly responsible for a gain of $2.27 in the average price of the ten leading industrial shares. Vigorous operations at steel mills and iron furnaces continue uninterrupted, and, while there is every reason to be- lieve that the present rate of production is in excess of normal demand, orders can not be filled with even approxi- mate promptness. Quotations move steadily upward and the average is now at the highest point since the middle of last year. Despite the remarkable rise of about $4 a ton for Bessemer pig iron since the year opened, there is no sign of decreased enquiry and throughout the list considerable premiums are secured for early delivery. Reports indicate that spring openings have been well attended in all parts of the country and in many cases jobbers are receiving duplicate orders. In a few sections storms have interrupted some- what seriously, but such areas are lim- ited. Little support is given the raw mate- rial in the textile trades by news from manufacturing centers. Southern mills have curtailed production, particularly as to varns, and now New England spinners are reducing their output about one-half. Purchasers show no alarm at the prospect of smaller supplies of goods and as yet there is no improve- ment in demand, while prices remain unchanged at the lowest point of the season. Slightly better reports come from the other leading textile industry, although manufacturers as a rule are slow to make goods in excess of orders. At all markets for wool, however, there is evidence that the fall in quotations has received a check. A pound of pluck is worth a ton of luck. —--—» 9-08 --— Tell the truth about your goods. Merit wins generally; truth always. Advertisements will be inserted under this head for two cents a word the first insertion and one cent a word for each subsequent insertion. No advertisements taken for less than 25 cents. Advance payments. BUSINESS CHANCES. = WANTS SITUATION IN GENERAL store. Good druggist (not registered) and experienced soda dispenser (faney drinks). References furnished. Address Box 129, Na- poleon, Mich. 77. oe SALE—A FIRST-CLASS DRY GOODS stock in one of the best towns of 3,000 pop- ulation in Southern Michigan; stock invoices between $7,000 and $8,000; doing a business of $20,000 a year; can reduce stock to about $6,000 if necessary; good reasons for selling. Address No. 775, care Michigan Tradesman. 775 RUG STOCK AND FIXTURES FOR SALE; good business in city of 5,000. Address W. H. Thorp, Dowagiae, Mich. 776 | gem SALE—A GOOD CLEAN STOCK OF groceries, crockery, glassware, lamps and china, inventorying about $3,300. Will accept $3,000 cash if taken soon; location, the best and central in a hustling business town of 1,500 popu- lation, fifty miles from Grand Rapids; this is a bargain for some one; best of reasons for selling. Address B, care Michigan Tradesman Tae WILL SELL HALF INTEREST IN MY furniture business. The goods are all new and up-to-date; located in a town of 7,000; has been a furniture store for thirty years; only two furniture stores in the town. Address all cor- respondence to No. 773, care Michigan Trades- man. 773 YOR RENT, CHEAP—BRICK STORE; GOOD business opening; best town in the State. Address A. J. Prindle, Howell, Mich, 772 ps SALE OR TO RENT—TWO BRICK store rooms, 22x80 each, with archway be- tween, suitable for good large general store, for which there is a good demand at this place. Write P. O. Box 556, Mendon, Mich. 77 TORE FOR RENT—BEST STAND FOR dry goods in town of 8,000 people; always a successful store. Address No. 767, care Michi- gan Tradesman. 767 POR SALE—A FINE CHANCE TO GO _ IN- to a well-established business if taken at once Stock consists of dry goods, shoes, cloth- ing, furnishing goods and groceries; located in good mill and factory town of 1,200 population; stock invoices $6,000; sales last year, $22,000; must sell on account of health. Enquire of No. 766, care Michigan Tradesman. 766 ve SALE—THE BUSINESS OF THE ANN Arbor Manufacturing Co., Ann Arbor, Mich., with machinery; also rent or sale of building. A rare chance to secure a live business which =, will stand investigation. 760 rRWO CHOICE EMMET COUNTY FARMS, 40 and 80 acres, to exchange for merchandise. Lock Box 280, Cedar Springs, Mich. 761 F YOU HAVE $5,000 YOU CAN BUY THE best paying manufacturing business in Grand Rapids, capital invested considered. If you have more capital to use in the business, so much the betler. It is a business with great possibilities. Better look this up at once. The successful man grasps an opportunity when it is resented. Address No. 743, care Michigan tradesman. 74: M Y STOCK OF BOOTS AND SHOES IN THE aVi village of Lowell for sale; first-class stock; good location. For terms apply to J. E. Lee, Lowell, Mich. 745 NOR SALE—STOCK DRY «OODS, GROCE- ries, shoes, hardware, furniture, hay, feed, ete.; invoices $5,500; doing a cash business of $26,000 annually; making a net profit of 10 per cent. above expenses; good school and churches, tumbering and farming country. For further particulars address M. X., care Michigan Tradesman. 763 = AND FARM LANDS—HEMLOCK, hardwood and cedar timber for sale in large or small tracts, cheap farm lands, hardwood and pine stump lands. Don’t ask what I have, but tell me what you want. E. T. Merrill, Reed City. 695 T= ROMEYN PARSONS CO. PAYS CASH for stocks of merchandise, Grand Ledge, Mich. 735 POR SALE—A 20 LIGHT KENNEDY AUTO- matic Acetylene Gas machine in good condi- tion. C. L. Dolph, Temple, Mich. 733 : By STORES TO RENT—ONE IN CENTER of business, No 116 North Mitchell street, the other No. 312 North Mitchell street, Cadillac. Address Dr. John Leeson. * is F GOING OUT OF BUSINESS OR IF YOU have a bankrupt stock of clothing, dry goods, or shoes, communicate with The New York Store, Traverse City, Mich. 728 ARTIES HAVING STOCKS OF GOODS OF any kind, farm or city property or manu- facturing plants that they wish to sell or ex- change correspond with the Derby & Choate Real Estate Co., Flint, Mich. 709 p< FACTORY FOR SALE. AD- dress Grand Ledge Canning Co., Grand Ledge, Mich. 716 VOR SALE—STOCK OF GENERAL MER- chandise, invoicing about $3,000, at a fine trading point; one of the best managed stores in Northern Indiana. Reason for selling, sickness. Address No. 714, care Michigan Tradesman. 714 rt SALE CHEAP — $2,000 GENERAL stock and building. Address No. 240, care Michigan Tradesman. 240 ANTED— MERCHANTS TO CORRE- spond with us who wish to sell their entire stocks for spot cash. a Purchasing Co., 153 Market St., Chieago, Ill. 585 OR SALE — GENERAL MERCHANDISE stock, invoicing about $7,000; stock in Al shape; selling about $25,000 a year, with good nee ts; trade established over twenty years; a ortune here for a hustler; terms, one-half cash down, balance one and two years, well secured by real estate mortgage; also store buildin and fixtures for sale or exchange for good Gran Rapids residence property on East Side; must be free from debt and title perfect. Address No. 520, care Michigan Tradesman. 520 YOR SALE—DRUG STOCK INVOICING $2,000, in good corner store in the best town in Western ee The best of reasons for selling. Address No. 583, care Michigan Trades- man. 583 MISCELLANEOUS Wy Ante 4 HUSTLING EXPERIENCED salesman; mill and engineers’ — salary. Good place for right man. ddress No. 778, care Michigan Tradesman. 778 ANTED—A SALESMAN WHO HAS AN acquaintance with the grocery trade in Michigan. Address C. F. Ware Coffee Co., Day- ton, Ohio. 768 Ts SALE OR RENT—TWO-STORY FRAME store building, with living rooms attached, in the village of Harrietta; possession given May 1. For { “PERFECTION” } a - ; We are doing a splendid business in our Perfection Brand § v f Spices because the merchants who handle them find they are § a £ as represented—pure and unadulterated. If you are not handl- $ ’ ie £ ing them you should for they are quick sellers and profit earners. $ £ Manufactured and sold only by us. $ ~~ £ NORTHROP, ROBERTSON & CARRIER, $ + ~ee f LANSING, MICHIGAN x @ iii ca ica bs e : . Simple Account File A quick and easy method of Es- pecially handy for keeping ac- keeping your accounts. count of goods let out on ap- proval, and fcr petty accounts with which one does not like to encumber the regular ledger. By using this file or ledger for charging accounts, it will save ah one-half the time and cost of keeping a set of books. = i Charge goods, when = op purchased, _ directly , wf on file, then your cus- { tomer’s bill is always ih ready for him, and can be found quickly, the This saves you looking over several leaves of a day book if not posted, on account of special index. when a customer comes in to pay an account and you are busy wait- ing on a prospective buyer. TRADESMAN COMPANY, Grand Rapids MERCANTILE ASSOCIATIONS Michigan Retail Grocers’ Association President, C. E. WALKER, Bay City; Vice-Pres- ident, J. H. HorKINs, Ypsilanti; Secretary, E. A. STOWE, Grand Rapids; Treasurer, J. F. . TATMAN, Clare. Graud Rapids Retail Grocers’ Association President, FRANK J. DyK; Secretary, HOMER CLAP; Treasurer, J. GEORGE LEHMAN Detroit Retail Grocers’ Protective Association President, E. MARKS; Secretaries, N. L. KOENIG and F. H. CozzENns; Treasurer, C. H. FRINK. Kalamazoo Retail Grocers’ Association President, E. L. HARRIS; Secretary, HYMAN. CHAS. Bay Cities Retail Grocers’ Association President, C. E. WALKER; Secretary, E. C LITTLE. a Muskegon Retail Grocers’ Association President, H. B. SMITH; Secretary, D. A. BOELKINS; Treasurer, J. W. CASKADON. Jackson Retail Grocers’ Association President, J. FRANK HELMER; Secretary, W H. PoRTER; Treasurer, L. PELTON. Adrian Retail Grocers’ Association President, A. C. CLARK; Secretary, E. F. CLEVELAND; Treasurer, WM. C. KOEHN Saginaw Retail Merchants’ Association President, M. W. TANNER; Secretary, E. H. Mc- PHERSON; Treasurer, R. A. HORR. Traverse City Business Men’s Association President, 1HOS T. BATES; Secretary, M. B. Houuy; Treasurer, C. A. HAMMOND. Owosso Business Men’s Association President, A. D.. WHIPPLE; Secretary, G. T. CAMPBELL; Treasurer, W. E. COLLINS. Pt. Hurvons Merchants’ and Manufacturers’ Association President, CHAS. WELLMAN; Secretary, J. T. PERCIVAL. Alpena Business Men’s Association President, F. W. GILCHRIST; Secretary, C. L. PARTRIDGE. Calumet Business Men’s Association President, J. D. Cupp1iHy; Secretary W. H. HOSKING. St. Johns Business Men’s Association President, THOS. BROMLEY; Secretary, FRANK A. PERCY; Treasurer, CLARK A. PUTT. Perry Business Men’s Association President, H. W. WALLACE; Secretary, T. E. HEDDLE. Grand Haven Retail Merchants’ Association President, F. D. Vos; Secretary, J. W VER- HOEKS. Yale Business Men’s Association President, CHAS. RoUNDs; Secretary, FRANK PUTNEY. Grand Rapids Retail Meat Dealers’ Association President, JOHN G. EBLE; Secretary, L. J. Katz; Treasurer, S. J. HUFFORD. \ oun tigate cve NAN: ANAITE A ROSTAL CARD Tata ETS Sa Lt g AF Xou BRE A 20% CENTURY, RETAIL A. LRCHANT, THIS WILL INTEREST YOU, ITS ASO% PROFIT GETTER AND A TRADE WIMRER COMBINED —a & Geo, A CortRern Yiawuractuners er, \\ uoson. Mickican — 2 ZR IP »——> QOQOQOOOQOOQOOOQOODQOOQOOQODOQOOQOOEO Michigan Fire and Marine Insurance Co. Organized 1881. Detroit, Michigan. Cash Capital, $400,000. Net Surplus, $200,000. Cash Assets, $800,000. D. WHITNEY, JR., Pres. D. M. FERRY, Vice Pres. F. H. WHITNEY, Secretary. M. W. O’BRIEN, Treas. E. J. Boorn, Asst. Sec’y. DIRECTORS, D. Whitney, Jr., D. M. Ferry, F. J. Hecker, M. W. O’Brien, Hoyt Post, Christian Mack, Allan Sheldon, Simon J. Murphy, Wm. L. Smith, A. H. Wilkinson, James Edgar, H. Kirke White, H. P. Baldwin, Hugo Scherer, F. A. Schulte, Wm. V. Brace, James McMillan, F. E. Driggs, Henry Hayden, Collins B. Hubbard, James D. Standish, Theodore D. Buhl, M. B. Mills, Alex. Chapoton, Jr., Geo. H. Barbour, S. G. Gaskey, Chas. Stinchfield, Francis F. Palms, Wm. C. Yawkey, David C. Whit- ney, Dr. J. B. Book, Eugene Harbeck, Chas. F. Peltier, Richard P. Joy, Chas. C. Jenks. CODOOQOQOOO® DOOODODOOOQQQOOQOOQOOOO® © PDOQDODOQOO© @OQDOODO®DOD®DOOOQO©OOO® ODOQOQOOOEO QOOOQDOOO® Travelers’ Time Tables. PERE MARQUETTE Railroad and Steamship Lines. Fast trains are operated from Grand Rapids to Chicago, Detroit, Toledo, Saginaw, Bay City, Petoskey, Ludington, Manistee, Muskegon, Tray- erse City, Alma, Lansing, Belding, Benton Har- bor, St Joseph, and intermediate points, making close connections at Chicago with trains for the south and west, at Detroit and Toledo with trains east and southbound. Try the ‘‘Mid-Day Flyers,” leaving Grand Rapids 12:05 noon, each week day, arriving at Detroit 4:05 p. m. and Chicago 5:00 p. m. H. F. Moniume, G. FP. A., W. EB. WOLPENDEN, D. FP. A. Rapids & Indiana Railway March 10, 1901. GRAN Going North. daily daily exSu exSu Ly Gd Rapids...... 745a 210p 1045p 520p Ar. Cadtiiae.......... 1120a 540p 210a 900p Ay. Traverse City.... 1230p 700p 4108 ..... Ar. Petoskey. - 250p 9915p 65 35a Ar. Mackinaw City... 415p 1035p 6588 ..... Trains arrive from the north at 6:00 a m, 11:30 am, 5:15 pm and 10:15 p m. Going South. ex Su ex Su Daily Ly. G’d Rapids. 710a 150p 650p Ar. Kalamazoo. 8 50a 322p 8 35p Ar. Ft. Wayne..1210p 650p 11 45p Ar. Cincinnati. 6 25p 7 15a Trains arrive from the south at 6:45am and 9:10am daily, 2:00pm, 9:45pm and 10:15pm except Sunday. ex Su Daily 12 30p 11 30p 145p 100a To Chicago ' . Except Except Except MUSKEGON Sunday Sunday Sunday Ly. Grand Rapids.... 7 35am 2 05pm 5 40pm Ar. Muskegon........ 900am 3 20pm 7 00pm Sunday train leave Grand Rapids at 9:15am, Trains arrive from Muskegon at 9:30am, 1:30pm and 5:20pm except Sunday and 6:50pm Sunday only. CHICAGO TRAINS G. R. & I and Michigan Central. Except " To CHICAGO Sunday Daily Ly. G’d Rapids (Union depot) 1230pm 11 30pm Ar. Chicago (12th St. Station) 525pm 6 55am 12:30pm train runs solid to Chicago with Pull- man buffet parlor car attached. 11:30pm train has through coach and sleeping car. Pullman _ . Except FROM CHICAGO Sunday Ly. Chicago (12th St. Station) 5 15pm 11 30pm Ar. G’d Rapids (Union depot) 10 15pm_—s«6:«555am 5:15pm train runs solid to Grand Rapids with Pullman buffet parlor car attached. 11:30pm train has through coach and sleeping ~ Take G. R. I. TO Chicago Daily Bryan Show Cases Always please. Write for handsome new catalogue. Bryan Show Case Works, Bryan, Ohio. Cold Fa fhe y oe Vp ers CAR Se << . WY S&S a eo i K /Adwertisin: Projilable Tradesman Company GRAND RAPIDS, MICH Daudt Glass & Crockery Co. WHOLESALE Earthenware, China & Glassware TOLEDO, OHIO Kinney & Levan Importers and Jobbers of Crockery, Glass, Lamps, House Furnishing Goods CLEVELAND, OHIO WORLD’S BEST S.C:.¥ a 5C. CIGAR. ALL JOBBERS AND G.J.JOHNSON CIGARCO. GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Your Last Opportunity r 18 cents per dozen as prices will be advanced by April rst. A barrel contains 21 dozen tumblers equally divided in three assorted styles. They are made of good, heavy, pressed glass, all with neat pressed bands. Remember we ship from Grand Rapids and make NO CHARGE FOR BARREL. If you did not receive our bargain sheet for March please let us know and we will mail one at once. H. LEONARD & SONS, Grand Rapids, Michigan SEALED TANGLE stat FLY PAPER CATCHES THE GERM AS WELL AS THE FLY. Sanitary. Used the world over. Good profit to sellers. Order from Jobbers. Buckeye Paint & Varnish Co. Paint, Color and Varnish Makers. Mixed Paint, White Lead, Shingle Stains, Wood Fillers. Sole Manufacturers CRYSTAL ROCK FINISH for Interior and Exterior Use. Corner 15th and Lucas Streets, Toledo, Ohio. ords Hemlock Bark Wanted We pay cash. Write us for quotations. Michigan Bark & Lumber Co. 527 and 528 Widdicomb Bld., Grand Rapids, Mich. Cc. U. CLARK, President. W. D. WADE, Vice-President. F. N. CLARK, Sec’y & Treas. The First EARTH: Please put me in communication Scale Company. Have just heard of the Must adopt it here. © © © SSSSSSSSOSSSSSSSSSSSESESESEEES business house selling goods by weight, for from Mars To NicoLca Tessa, via WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY ROUTE: with The Computing Moneyweight System. There is no place in the universe that our system of handling @@ merchandise would not be acceptable if it were only known. = the 95,000 scales that we now have on the market it looks, however, ®*°== = =s as if some one besides Mars had heard of them. They should be in every well-managed, up-to-date it is the only System by which you can sell one dollar’s worth of goods and realize one hundred cents in return. THE COMPUTING SCALE CO., Dayton, Ohio, U.S. A. 98OG9G9GGFH8H5HHHGGFHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHGOOOHOUS S & S & S S S & S S S S & S S & & & S S S S S & & S S S e S S 3 e & S S S S & S © S S & S S S S & S S & ” Messag MARS. With Sold on easy monthly payments. SOSSSSSHSSSSSSSSSECSESeeoeceeeeeaee