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Ss PU BLISHED WEEKLY ©
Sy HDI Sr ~ N= real
REN SS
in TRADESMAN COMPANY, PUBLISHERS: St SS
POOR RAR
GRAND RAPIDS, SEPTEMBER 5, 1894.
EDWARD A MOSELEY,
TIMOTHY F. MOSELEY.
MOSELEY BROS.
SEEDS BEANS, PEAS, POTATOKS, ORANGES and LEMONS.
Egg Cases and Fillers a Specialty.
26, 28, 30 and 32 Ottawa St.,.GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
To the Retail Shoe Dealers-=--
Our line is complete in Boots, Shoes, Rubbers,
Felt Boots,
Socks, Ete., for your fall and winter trade. Place your orders with us
now and get the best to save money. Our Celebrated Black Bottoms
in Men’s Oil Grain and Satin Calf, tap sole in Congress and Balmorals,
are the leaders and unsurpassed.
Our Wales-Goodyear Rubbers are great trade winners.
Mail orders given pror ~ ttention.
HEROLD-BERTSCH SHOE CO.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
ABSOLUTE TEA.
The Acknowledged Leader.
SOLD ONLY BY
Teen: SPICE CO,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
TE MEN
ee WhISS Sip © now - 2
—— saa CTORICOMER'S: DETRO1LN Ch ame
See TT
ATKINS PANU
GRAND RAPIDS
__BRUS COMPY,
GRAND RAPIDS,
a
=e BRU SHES
JOBBERS OF
Groceries and Provisions,
Fall ’94
Underwear, Overshirts, Hosiery, Socks, Kersey and Cotton.
ade Pants, Caps, Outing Shirts, Yarns, Flannels, Cotton
Flannels, Skirts, Cotton and Woolen Dress Goods,
Ginghams, Seersuckers, Satines, in black and fig-
ured, Batts, Comforts, Blankets.
We have received over 100 cases new fall prints in all the
newest styles and colorings, prices from 3} to 54. Give usa
call. Prices always the lowest.
P. Steketee & Sons,
Grand Rapids, [lich.
for Summer Resort Trade,
Nice Line of Package Goods. Our 1ocent package of Fine Chocolates is a
Hummer. Send for sample order.
. BE. BROOKS & Co,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
lo They Raise Poultry in
Your Neck of the Woods ?
Buy all the first-class Poultry you can get and ship tome. I want it and will
pay highest market price.
F. J. DETTENTHALER, 117 and 119 Monroe St.
PERKINS & HESS,
DEALERS IN
Hides, Furs, Wool & Tallow,
Nos. 122 and 124 Louis Street, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Our Specialty
FINE GOODS
Our Goods are sold by all Michigan Jobbing houses,
WE CARRY A STOCK OF CAKE TALLOW FOR MILL USE.
,
VOIGT, HERPOLSHEIMER & C0,
WHOLESALE
Dry Goods, Carpets and Gloaks
We Make a Specialty of Blankets, Quilts and Live
Geese Feathers.
Mackinaw Shirts and Lumbermen’s Socks
OVERALLS OF OUR OWN MANUFACTURE.
Voigt, Herpolsheimer & C0, “°: Grana Rapias
Grand Rapids
LEMON & WHERLER COMPANY.
Importers and
Wholesale Grocers
Grand Rapids.
Spring & Company,
Dress Goods, Shawls, Cloaks,
Notions, Ribbons, Hosiery,
Gloves, Underwear, Woolens,
Flannels, Blankets, Ginghams,
Prints and Domestic Cottons,
We invite the attention of the trade to our complete and well
assorted stock at lowest market prices.
Spring & Company.
Duck |. Kersey
Coats Pants
We manufacture the best made goods in these lines of
any factory in the country, guaranteeing every garment to
give entire satisfaction, both in fit and wearing qualities. We
are also headquarters for Pants, Overalls and Jackets and
solicit correspondence with dealers in towns where goods of
our manufacture are not regularly handled.
d
Lansing Pants & Overall Co.,
LANSING, [1ICH.
The. Sali
thals at salh
is fast being recognized by everybody as the best salt for every pur-
pose. It’s madefrom the best brine by the best process with the
best grain. You keep the best of other things, why not keep the
| best of Salt. Your customers will appreciate it as they appreciate
| pure sugar, pure coffee, and tea.
Diamond Crystal Salt
Being free from all chlorides of calcium and magnesia, will not get damp and
soggy on yourhands. Put up in an attractive and salablemanner. When
your stock of salt is low, try a small supply of “‘¢he salt that’s ail salt.” Can be
obtain. _ from jobbers and dealers. For prices, see price current on other page.
| For other information, address
| DIAMOND CRYSTAL SALT Co.,
ST. CLAIR, MICH.
HEYMAN COMPANY,
Manufacturers of Show Gases of Kuery Description.
FIRST-CLASS WORK ONLY.
883 and 68 Canal St., Grand Rapids, Mien,
WRITE FOR PRICES.
STANDARD OIL CO.
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN.
DEALERS IN
[lluminating and Lubricating
-OITLS-—
NAPTHA AND GASOLINES.
iffice, Hawkius Block. Works, Butterworth Ave
‘ BULK WORKS AT
#RAND RATT MUSKEGON MAWISTEE, CADILLAC,
31G RAPIDs. GRAND HAVEN LUDINGTON.
ALLEGAN, HOWARD CITY, PETOSKEY,
HIGHEST PRICE PAID FOR
AMPYY GARBON & GASOLIN’ BARRELS
en - 6
as
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VOL. XI.
’ ‘ x
COMMERCIAL CREDIT CO.
65 MONROE ST.,
Have on file all reports kept by Cooper’s Com-
mercial Agency and Union Credit Co. and are
constantly revising and adding to them. Also
handle collections of all kinds for members.
Telephone 166 and 1080 for particulars.
L. J. STEVENSON. C. E. BLOCK.
W. HP. ROOTS.
MICHIGAN
Fire & Marine Insurance 60
Organized 1881,
DETROIT, MICHIGAN.
5 AND7 PEARL STREET.
ESTABLISHED 1841.
THE MERCANTILE AGENCY
m.G. Dun & Go.
Reference Books issued quarterly. Collections
attended to throughout United States
and Canada
Your Bank Account Solicited.
Kent County Savings Bank,
GRAND RAPIDS ,MICH.
Jno. A, CovopeE, Pres.
Henry Ipema, Vice-Pres,
J. A. S. VERDIER, Cashier,
K. Van Hor, Ass’t C’s’r,
Transacts a General Banking Business.
Interest Allowed on Time and Sayings
Deposits,
DIRECTORS:
Jno. A. Covode, D. A. Blodgett, E. Crofton Fox,
T. J.O’Brien, .A. J. Bowne, Henry Idema,
Jno.W.Blodgett,J. A. McKee J. A. S. Verdier.
Deposits Exceed One Million Dollars,
ig
FIRE
INS.
if. 7? co.
PROMPT, CONSERVATIVE, SAFE.
J. W. CHAMPLIN, Pres.
W. FRED McBAIN, Sec.
The Bradstreet Mercantile Agency.
The Bradstreet Company, Props.
Executive Offices, 279, 281, 283 Broadway, N.Y.
CHARLES F, CLARK, Pres,
Offices in the principal cities of the United
oStates, Canada, the European continent,
oAustralia, and in London, England.
firand Rapids Office, Room 4, Widdicomb Bldg,
HENRY ROYCE, Supt.
CLARKSON’S PERIL.
Gold! Gold!! Gold!!! The region of
gold—the city of gold! Gold in the
earth beneath; golden-silvery stars shin-
ing inthesky above. But, alas! no gold
in the pocket of the young man who,
with drooping head and deepening mis-
ery stamped upon his face, walks with
weary step the dark streets of Johannes-
burg. Where were the bright hopes
with which he had set out from his Eng-
lish home only one short year before ?
Where was the fortune he had confi-
dently come to win? Could it be only a
year ago? It seemed to him asif a
whole lifetime had passed since then.
For the first few months everything
had prospered with him. He was be-
trothed to Minnie Colbeck, one of the
loveliest and sweetest girls in South Af-
rica, and his, prospects were of the
brightest. But suddenly all was changed.
Shares in which he had invested came
down with a rapid run. Claims on
which he had long been working and
which he believed to contain rich reefs,
proved worthless. Everything he tried
failed, and Thomas Clarkson found, like
thousands of others, how success and
failure have in common the same propen-
sity of accumulation.
Mr. Colbeck did not believe in unsuc-
cessful men, and regarded failure asa
crime. He closed his doors upon Clark-
son, and told him that he must consider
his engagement with Minnie at an end.
Clarkson had tried to obtain employment,
but business of all sorts being at a stand-
still, he had failed to-obtain an appoint-
ment. This night, almost worn out with
his fruitless efforts and struggles, he
walks aimlessly along the streets in that
condition which borders upon hopeless
despair. He would give up the struggle
—he would strive no longer.
Hope had nearly fled. Money was all
gone, except one solitary shilling which
stood between him and starvation. What
should he do? Hedecided to go to the
nearest bar and spend that shilling in
something that would deaden the intol-
erable pain burning in his brain and
heart. He walked up the steps of a
lighted building bearing the extraordi-
nary name of ‘‘Beauty’s Bar.” Johannes-
burg is, however, remarkable for the
names borne by its numerous drinking
saloons and boozing dens.
Within all was activity, merriment and
brilliantly-lighted scenes. Clarkson stood
for a moment dazzled. Then throwing
down his solitary coin he ordered
brandy. His strange manner, haggard
face and wild-looking eyes attracted at-
tention even there, where strange men
and strange events were common. Many
curious glances were cast in his direc-
tion. Someone spoke to Clarkson, but
he turned away without answering. Sud-
denly from one of the rooms came the
strains of music, and a voice commenced,
with cruel mockery in such a place,
“Home, Sweet, Home.” It was rendered,
too, with such wonderful power and
plaintive sweetness that the oaths, the
coarse jokes and the loud, senseless
GRAND RAPIDS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1894,
laughter were for a moment suspended
and hushed into silence.
Clarkson hurried from the place, leay-
ing his brandy untouched.
Once more he was out in the streets,
alone with the stars and a great sorrow.
Then followed a collapse of the physical
powers, and a great languor and weari-
ness, partly of weakness—he had eaten
nothing since early morning of the day
before—fell upon him, and, turning into
a then deserted street, he lay down un-
der the shelter of a galvanized iron stoop
and fell into a deep sleep, or more prop-
erly a stupor of exhaustion.
= 2 @
It was early morning when he awoke,
but still dark. He was stiff and cold,
and at first bewildered at finding him-
self inthe street. Giddily he rose to his
feet and made his way to the house
where he lodged. No one was astir but
the landlady, who viewed him curiously
and by no means approvingly when she
opened the door. But Clarkson offered
no explanations. He went to his bed-
room, threw himself down on the bed
and ouce more fell into a heavy sleep.
It was past noon when he was awak-
ened by a loud knocking at the door.
Two men in the uniform of the Johannes-
burg police stood outside. As soon as
he opened the door they entered the
room.
‘“‘Are you Mr. Clarkson?” one of the
men asked.
“i am.
me ?”
“My business,’’ replied the man, firmly
and deliberately, ‘‘is to arrest you.”
“To arrest me ?”’ repeated Tom, stag-
gered, ‘*To arrest me for what ?”’
‘‘For the murder of Mr. Diblin,” was
the reply.
“The murder of Mr.
been murdered ?’’
“Yes, murdered last night or early
this morning. He was found dead, shot
through the heart.”
Thomas was horrified beyond measure.
He had often in his more prosperous
days had business dealings with Mr. Dib-
lin and he knew him well by report.
Diblin was a hard, selfish, money-loving,
close-fisted man, singularly disobliging
and harsh and just the sort of person to
have many enemies. ‘Twice lately Clark-
son had gone to him requesting employ-
ment in one of his places of business and
on both occasions had he been coldly and
curtly refused.
‘‘Are you ready to come with me
now ?”? the policeman asked, after a
time, during which Thomas had stood
still, looking at him.
“To go with you where ?”’
“*To the police station. Don’t you un-
derstand? Itis my duty to arrest you
for the murder.”
‘To arrest me for the murder ?”’
gasped Clarkson in consternation, and
apparently dazed at first.
‘*Yes, Mr. Clarkson. _On the ground
that Mr. Diblin didn’t deal squarely with
you in the matter of those claims of
yours, and that it’s well known you’ve
What is your business with
Diblin—has he
NO. 572
got agrudge against him and that your
revolver was picked up only a few yards
from where the body was found.’’
‘My revolver,” interrupted Clarkson,
“has not been in my _ possession for
weeks. It was stolen from my room.”
‘**That will be all right, then,” said the
police. ‘Lf daresay the people in the
house will beable to swear that it was
stolen ?”’
“I don’t know,’? answered Thomas;
‘**1 don’t think I mentioned the loss.”’
“Its a pity you didn’t,” replied the
officer curtly ‘‘are you ready ?”’
At the police station, a wretched little
tin tenement just off President street, he
was searched, and, judge of the poor fel-
low’s horror and amazement when, in the
pockets which had not for weeks con-
tained a single thing of value, there
were found bank notes of the value of
£50, besides a watch attached to a very
curious, antique gold chain, which sev-
eral persons identified as having be-
longed to the murdered man. ‘The re-
volver, also, was produced. Clarkson
acknowledged it was his, but repeated
what he had already told the policeman,
viz., that it had been stolen from him
several weeks previous. He did not
know, he said, how the bank notes and
Diblin’s watch had come into his posses-
sion, for it was days since he had ex-
changed a word with or even seen the
gentleman. He then related simply and
clearly how he had spent the previous
night. That availed him nothing, but
rather told against his case, and he was
sent up to the jail, there to await the pre-
liminary examination on the charge of
murder.
This was much of a formal affair, and
Clarkson was duly committed for trial
before the criminal court.
* * *
The courthouse, facing the Market
square, was crowded to suffocatisn, as
the popular phrase runs, on the day ap-
pointed for the trial.
Very calm, but deadly pale, appeared
the accused, as succeeding witnesses ad-
duced fresh incriminating evidence.
The counsel allotted Clarkson strove
manfully, but his cross-examination did
not shake the testimony on the primary
points. The case went against the ac-
cused from the beginning. The evidence
was clear and strong. The notes and
the watch of the murdered man had been
found in the possession of the prisoner,
whose revolver had been picked up a few
yards from where the body had been dis-
covered. Several witnesses testified to
his having rushed into Beauty’s Bar late
on the evening of the murder, looking
wild, haggard and excited, like a man
who had committed, or proposed com-
mitting, some crime.
The landlady swore to his having re-
turned to the house at half past three the
morning looking very white and strange,
as if he had recently gone through some
very exciting scene. More than one per-
son knew that Clarkson had owed the
rich, unscrupulous merchant a grudge.
Closer and closer the chain was tighten-
‘3
ing about his neck, and as proof upon
procf of his guilt was adduced a peculiar
and ominous silence settled upon the
crowd of listeners and spectators. After
atime Tom had ceased to listen to the
evidence, ceased even to feel that the
gaze of so many eager and curious eyes
was upon him. His thoughts had wan-
dered sadly to his old home, his mother,
his sister and the old days long ago—
long ago, when his heart was young and
the love of gold had not tempted him to
leave the abode of his youth. Then he
thought of Minnie. Was she here listen-
ing while they swore away his life? This
thought brought him with a bitter pang
back to the agonizing present, and again
he heard the questions and answers, each
one of which now seemed to close the
door of hope more firmly upon him.
Again he felt that hundreds of eyes were
gazing at him. Was there,
Yes, he could feel that she was near,
though he could not see her. This
cumstance was perfectly explicable.
The proceedings were necessarily
partly in the official language the
country, but many of the jury were well
conversant with English, and every op-
portunity was permitted the accused to
rebut the damaging evidence. He was
asked if he had anything to say, and
Clarkson repeated his story,
truthfully as before.
eonceal, though the truth could belp him
little. He well the
against him, circumstantial
might be, was too strong.
and iisteners ali appeared
vineed of his guilt. Very
with an unconscious pathos,
story of his futile efforts
ployment, his hopeless misery, his reck-
too ?
al-
she
cir-
of
simply and
He had nothing to
evidence
though it
Judge, jury
kuew
quite Cuobh-
calmly, aud
he tuld the
to obtain eim-
less resulve tu spend his iast shilling and
purchase that which shuuld him
He
and
render
oblivious of his suffering tur a Lime.
tuid how he had gone into
the bar,
how the music had created calmer and
better thoughts, and saved him;
had the
hunger
how he
gone forth into
worn out by
streels again,
and taligue,
slept until morning.
The notes and the watch must, he said,
have been put into his pockets while he
lay
asseried, and in the presence of God
could only repeat it.
and,
had lain down and
on the stoup. He was innocent, he
he
‘The court and the crowd were skepti-
cal, and few of the latter appeared to
sympathize with the accused in the
slightest,
‘The jury retired and a painful silence
fell upon the court. In
and their
could, in a sense, be felt betore it was
given. Very slowly and deliberately it
came: ‘We find the prisoner guilty.”’
No and
tainly not the pale young prisoner him-
Ininutes
verdict
a few
the jurymen returned,
one seemed surprised, cer-
self. Not surprised, but oh, how bit-
terly fell upon his ears and heart the
words that consigned him to a doom of
sudden and shameful death.
in a low, calm tone the judge pronoun-
ced the awful sentence, and the pris-
oner was about to be led away when it
that was struggling
the crowd toward It
proved to be a young girl, with wild-
looking eyes and a face the picture of
despair. It was Minnie Colbeck, and ina
moment she was beside her lover. The
policemen offered obstacle: indeed,
they appeared to fall back involuntarily.
She looked pale, so fair and so unearthly
that she might have been a spirit from
Was seen
through
someone
him.
no
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
the other world confronting them.
Clarkson gazed upon her, but his white
lips remained unmoved and he uttered
not a word.
‘‘Tom,”’ said the girl in a voice so low
that he only heard it, ‘‘you will yet be
saved. They cannot take your life; you
shall not die for another’s sin. Heaven
will not permit such cruel injustice.”
Minnie spoke as all inexperienced people
speak on such matters, women espec-
ially. Clarkson did not speak. He
knew that with the first word he uttered
all his self command would desert him.
He took her little cold hands in his and
held them for a moment, as we _ hold
hands that we never expect to clasp
again in this world. And with one look
into her sorrowing eyes—a look that
seemed to bid her an earthly farewell—
he was led away.
eee next week. ]
— _~e]2-
Effect of the New Tariff on Importa-
tions of Canadian Produce.
Just what effect the new tariff law will
have on the importation of produce is,
as yet, a matter of conjecture. If, as is
claimed by one political party, the im-
porter pays the duty, then, undoubtedly,
the change will stimulate importation,
as in almost every case the duty has been
reduced; but if, as claimed by another
political party, the duty is paid by the
foreigners, there will be no increase in
importations. The fact appears to be,
however, that buying in foreign coun-
tries is done merely to supply deficiency
inthe home market, and the price paid
has been the ruling price in the market
where the purchasing is done. Produce
has been bought abroad only in Canada,
except ina few unimportant instances.
Beans may be cited as an illustration.
The price of beans per bushel in Canada
is 31 for country picked, while here it is
00. Under the McKinley tariff the
duty was about 41 per cent. ad valorem,
which would be equalto 41 cents a
bushel, which, plus the freight charges,
would make the beans worth about what
dealers pay for them on this side of the
line. Under the new tariff law the duty
is 20 per cent., which reduces the duty
one-half. Of course, the reduction of
the duty may result in the Canadians
growing more beans for export, but, as
the quality of Canadian grown produce
is not considered equal to that grown in
this country, importations are not likely
In the present coadition of
business the duty is still high enough in
any event to prevent foreign growers
shipping into this country in quantities
sufficient to appreciably affect the mar-
ket. The decrease of the duty on pota-
toes amounts to 40 per cent., the tariff
under the new law being a trifle over 31
per cent. ad valorem. As the crop in
Canada promises to bea good one while
here we are threatened with a consider-
able shortage, perhaps the reduction in
the duty may affect the market. It will
depend to some extent on whether the
Canadian ships his potatoes to this coun
try or our dealers go after them. In the
one case the price asked will be some
thing than the price paid here,
while the dealer who buys in Canada
will sell for the ruling price in the home
market. The reduction of the duty on
wheat is so small that it will make no
difference either way and, then, too,
wheat is higher in Canada than it is
here. What bas been said of wheat ap-
plies equally to corn. Eggs could be
$l
to inerease.
less
| Voigt.
present low price prevailing in Canada,
but the new duty would make the price
received about what it is here, so that
there is no inducement for the Canadian
to invade this market. This is true of
nearly all of the products of the dairy
and farm. It may be said, therefore,
that. unless Canada has a mutch larger
surplus of these products than she has
had in past years, the change in the du-
ties will have little or no effect upon the
produce market in this country. “he
same may not be said of manufactured
articles. The Canadian manufacturer is
as farsighted, as enterprising, as his
American cousin, though not nearly so
numerous. So far as his facilities will
allow, he will take advantage of every
concession offered him in order to extend
the market for his wares. If the change
in duties give him no better prices than
he is receiving at home, they will, at
least, be as good and he will do his ut-
most to extend his market. At home he
has less than six millions of people,
while here he would have over ten times
as many, with five times the consump-
tive capacity of an equal number of any
other nationality. It is different with
the farmer. His production is limited
by the size of his farm, which can hardly
be increased, by the degree of fertility of
the soil, and largely by his skill asa
farmer. So long as he can dispose of the
products of his farm he is content; he
seldom thinks of increasing his output,
or of reaching out into other markets,
he knows little and cares less, for any-
one beYond the buyer in his own locality.
Along the border there will probably be
increased selling, because the border
American towns are better markets than
their neighbors across the line, and as
accessible. It may be concluded, from
the above considerations, that the change
in tariff duties will not materially atfect
the prodnce market, while it more
than likely to affect the market for man-
ufactured goods; but the change is so
sma.l that, as has been said, what the re-
sult will be is a mere matter of conjec-
is
ture. DANIEL ABBOTT.
—_—-—> -
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BENEFICIAL RESULTS.
Achieved Through the Medium of the
Retail Grocers’ Association.
GRAND Rapips, Aug. 30—I want to
ask Tur TRADESMAN a question. | have
repeatedly been asked to join the Grand
Rapids Retail Grocers’ Association, but,
so far, have been unable to see how
membership in that organization will be
of any benefit tome. 1 think I can see
how the down-town grocer will be bene-
fitted by the work of the Association,
but I am away out in the suburbs. How
am I affected by what the Association is
endeavoring to do ? SUBURBAN.
This is one of several questions which
have reached this journal within a fort-
night, and, as it is a matter of interest to
the grocery trade generally, and not only
of this city, the answer is given with the
greater pleasure.
First, to the negative side of the ques-
tion. ‘Suburban’ is wrong in suppos-
ing that the chief benefit from the work
of the Association is received by the
down-town grocer. His prices are
usually higher than those of the dealer
in the suburbs; his customers do not
want cheap goods, they do not care for
the price; and it is unnecessary for the
down-town grocer to cut prices or go into
“‘schemes’’ to draw trade. Few of the
evils which afflict the trade, and which
the Association is working to destroy,
have any effect upon the down-town
dealer, or, if he is affected by them, the
extent of his business makes him indif-
ferent to them. He, of all grocers, is
the one least benefitted by the work of
the Association. Now to the positive
side. ‘‘Suburban” is benefitted directly
by the work the Association has done
and is doing in connection with the ped-
dling nuisance. . Every time the number
of peddlers is reduced it throws so much
business into the hands of legitimate
dealers. It is not true, as claimed by
some, that to reduce the number of ped-
dlers is simply to give that much more
business to those who remain. Each
peddler has his ‘‘route,’”? which it takes
him a certain time to cover; he cannot
take new territory without abandoning
the old. ‘Two years ago there were over
200 peddlers of fruit and vegetables in
the city; now there are less than 100—a
reduction of over one-half. This isa re-
markable showing, and if the Associa-
tion had done nothing else there is a suf-
ficient return for all that it has cost the
trade of the city. But the work is by
no meaus finished, and the Association is
prepared for vigorous campaigning until
legitimate trade has recovered the
ground which it has lost. To stop now
with the goal in sight is worse than folly.
Does ‘‘Suburban’’ think that so much
would have been accomplished without
organization ? Who would have directed
the work, who have been responsible for
it? This much is certain—nothing was
done before organization, and very much
has been done since, which is, at least,
circumstantial evidence ia favor of the
existence of the Association, and a good
reason why ‘‘Suburban’’ should be a
member. The effort of the Association
to maintain a level price on sugar has
been productive of good, and here, too,
dealers in the outlying districts have re-
ceived the greater benefit.
it makes little difference to the down-
town grocer what the cutter may do with
the price of sugar. His eustomers are
not attracted by the inducements offered
by the department store and other
pirates, but have an eye solely to the
quality of the goods. It is different with
the suburban dealer. His customers are,
as arule, people of small means, to whom
the saving of a few cents is an important
matter. They are not to be blamed for
this, but, because it is true, they are al-|
ways on the lookout for bargains, and an
extra pound or so of sugar for a dollar is
an attraction which few of them can re-
sist. Suppose, for a moment, there was
no Grocers’ Association, no one would
feel under obligation to maintain the
price which legitimate business naturally
demands, and all would be free to
sell at whatever price they listed.
But there is an Association, and the
members are bound by the = action
of the Association in fixing the price of
sugar at a living figure, and the con-
sequence is there is not to-day one cutter
where, witheut such organization and
such action, there would be fifty. How
does this effect ‘‘Suburban?’’ In this
way: Not every one can get down town
to take advantage of the so-called bar-
gains, and so are compelled to do their
trading near home. Perhaps ‘‘Suburban’s”
nearest neighbor would be a cutter were
it not for his obligation to the Associa-
tion, in which event the bargain-hunter
would be under no necessity to go down
town to hunt for bargains. But ‘Sub-
urban” may say that he could cut as well
and as deeply as his neighbor. True;
but would that be a desirable condition
of things? Is it not much better that
neither should cut, as they would be un-
likely to do if they were members of the
Association? Just to the extent that
membership in the Association has
limited cutting (and it is easily suscept-
ible of proofs that it has limited it) just
to that extent has legitimate trade
throughout the’city been benefitted, and
by as much as membership in the As-
sociation increases by so much will the
benefits increase.
These are some of the direct benefits
which accrue to grocers because of the
existence of the Association but
dependent upon membership.
not
How
much the Association has done for the)
members through the discussion of the
various which have arisen
there is no means of computing; but it
has resulted in educating the members,
in giving them a better understanding of
their needs and a clearer sense of the
most available remedy. A better spirit
prevails to-day among the retail grocery
trade than could possibly have been the
ease without organization. Personal
contact in the meetings, the free inter-
change of ideas and free expression of
opinions have done much to soften the
acerbities and remove the prejudices
which have existed too long among
retail grocers. Much yet remains to
be done, and how much = easier
the doing would be if grocers
would give, not only their sympathy,
but a portion of their time to the work
of the Association is easily seen. ‘Sub-
urban,”’ and all others who may be in the
same perplexity, are asked to give the
foregoing careful attention.
Another question has been received
which will receive attention next week.
DANIEL ABBOTT.
-
Purely Personal.
B. 8S. Runnels, general dealer at Big
Prairie, was ip town Monday and Tues-
day.
Mrs. John Ferguson, the South Div-
ision street grocer, has returned from
Albany, N. Y., inspecting her real estate
interests.
Frank D. Forbush, formerly Secretary
and Treasurer of the Stow & Davis
Furniture Co., has taken the position at
the Grand Rapids Packing & Provision
Co. rendered vacant by the retirement of
W. P. Granger.
Will Martin, of the Cycloid Wheel
Works, will handle the Putnam Candy
Co’s oyster wagon the coming season.
Mr. Martin is well known to the trade
through his former connections with F.
J. Dettenthaler and L. F. Swift & Co.
‘LHEH MICHIGAN
L. J. Ford, senior member of the firm
of Ford & Kirby, crockery and wall
paper dealers at Mason, was in town a
couple of days last week.
Isaac Van Westenbrugge, grocer at 60
Center street, has the sympathy of the
trade in the death of his daughter,
Martha, a bright child of 11 months,
who expired Saturday evening. The
funeral will be held at 2 o’elock this
afternoon at the Berean Baptist Church.
Geo. H. Maul, formerly engaged in
the grocery business here under the style
of Maul Bros., now proprietor of a
saloon at 936 Grand River avenue,
Detroit, shot a man Aug. 27, and the
wound is expected to prove fatal. Maul
became involved in arow with a quarrel-
some customer, who viciously attacked
Maul, and who was fired at by the latter,
with the result that an innocent by-
stander, Warren F. Charter, received
the ballin his breast. Maul gave him-
self up to the police.
Fred Clark and Frank Jewell and a
large and varigated party of friends have
been spending several days at Chippewa
Lake on an alleged duck shooting expe-
dition. It is not the first time Frank
Jewell has gone duck shooting, by a large
majority. Just about a year ago now he
and a friend went up the River beyond
Cascade and attempted to shoot some
ducks. They took opposite sides of the
River, and, as no game appeared on the
side of the River Frank’s friend was on,
Frank was soon left some distance be-
hind. Hearing a couple of shots fired,
the friend turned back, thinking that,
perhaps, there was game in Frank’s di-
rection. He had not gone far when he
saw something moving in the water.
Cautiously making his way toward the
object he took careful aim and was about
fire when it turned around and he was
surprised to see the triumphant face of
his friend Jewell. It was Frank, sure
enongh, clad in a straw hat and making
his way towards the middle of the
Stream. ‘Il hit him,” he shouted; ‘the
fell around here somewhere. He’s a
beaut, too. Here he is,’ and, reaching
out, he took hold of his prize and held it
up. ‘‘O, Lord, it’s a helldiver.’? he
groaned. So it was and not much larger
than a robin. But he took that hell-
diver home and put in his spare time
studying the difference between it and a
duck. Now he may shcot a helldiver
but he’Il keep his clothes on.
_ 2 -a-
The Grocery Market.
Sugar—There has been ro change in
price during the past week, although the
market is strong and consumption enor-
mous. Every indication points to higher
prices and further advances are expected
daily.
Coffee—Mild grales continue to show
signs of weakness, due to the large
amount of stock afloat and in the hands
of importers. Package manufacturers
have reduced their quotations 1¢e per th.
Pork—There has been a heavy advance
in barreled, owing to the scarcity of
hogs and, consequently, low stocks.
Mess has advanced 75e: short eut, $1.25;
extra clear, short cut and clear, $1;
Boston clear, $1; clear back, $1; stan-
dard clear, $1. :
Lard—All brands have advanced from
4@ ke.
Dry Salt Meats—There is an all around
advance of 4c per th.
Pigs Feet—Half barrels
vanced 50c.
have ad-
TRADESMAN.
Smoked Meats—Hams are down 4c
per th. and shoulders, (ce. The rise in
barreled pork will probably make a run
on smoked, in which event prices will
advance.
Brooms—Maonufacturers that
the advance in broomecorn from $20 to
$30 per ton—an advance of 50 per cent.—
will result in very much higher prices
in brooms in the near future.
Vinegar—The recent advances in grain
have caused an advanced in the price of
vinegar and the prospective advances in
grain are likely to canse still higher
price, in this staple.
>_> & — “ee
The Drug Market.
Gum opium is dull and lower.
Morphia is unchanged.
assert
An advance on quinine is expected
daily.
Sulphurie ethers have all been ad-
vanced and are tending higher, on ac-
count of the high price of alcohol.
The following articles have declined
on account of lower tariff: Boracie acid:
citric acid; oil croton; castor oil.
Linseed oil has declined.
Turpentine is lower.
Duffy’s) malt whisky has advanced.
The price is now as follows: One dozen,
$9.50; less than one dozen, $9.75; special
prices on three dozen lots and over.
The United States claying Card Com-
pany has advanced its prices on cards
the amount of the stamp tax and has
taken advantage of the situation to
largely advance all its cheaper grades,
which it claims have been sold at cost
and less. The list is now as follows:
No. 999 or Steamboats. ... ....... #1 00
No. 101 “* Tigers / 1
No. 34 “ Cadets 1 00
Roa fh © Tomcm........ .... |... 1 3
mG ae Ulevelen wl. 2 00
No. 808 ‘‘ Bicycles, extra .. 2 50
ho. te Capita. eae
No Wi * Cabmets ....... ce _<. eo0
imo. 2 * Soortsman.... ..... 3 50
No. 606 ‘* Extra Congress. . . _o
no Gi. Leno... - 400
_— «oe =>
Gripsack Brigade.
Three Grand Rapids men now travel
for the National Wall Paper Co.—John
Fr. Heystek, -F. BE. Kreps and B. DB.
Meeker.
A. S. Doak is spending three weeks at
his old home at Coaticook, Quebee. His
trade is being covered in the meantime
by L. S. Freeman and Randall Hawkins.
Ben VanLeuven hung his vest in his
room in a Baldwin hotel while he went
in search of brook trout. When he re-
turned the vest was untouched, to all
outward appearances, but his gold watch
had mysteriously disappeared.
—— oo 0
Seven out of Ten.
Ovvosso, Sept. 1—At the examination
session of the State Board of Pharmacy,
held at Houghton, Aug. 29 and 30, ten
candidates for registration presented
themselves, of which seven passed, as
follows:
R. J. Burrows, St. Ignace.
Henry B. Cate, Menominee.
Samuel Cudlip, Iron Mountain.
J. A. Gutzin, Negaunee.
W. B. Minthorn, Oscoda.
D. W. Mitchell, Harrisville.
Arthur Uddenburg, Iron Mountain.
S. E. PARKILL, See’y.
a et
From Out of Town.
Calls have been received at THE
TRADESMAN Oflice during the past week
from the following gentleman in trade:
A. J. Hughes, Mecosta.
Geo. E. Starr, Plainwell.
J. Vinkewulder, Grandville.
Thos. Heffernan, Baldwin.
Ford & Kirby, Mason.
Henry Schafer, Big Rapids.
B. S. Runnels, Big Prairie.
P. H. Sissions, Central Lake.
FOR SALE, WANTED, ETC.
RELIABLE DRY GOODS AND SHOE
salesman desires position. Is capable of
taking full charge of stocks or occupying posi
tion of general manager. Address F. A. M., care
Michigan Tradesman. 600
Fee SALE—SECOND HAND TINNERS’
: tools, oD. Sander’s Sons IXL pipe cut
ting and ¢ > machine, hand and power
combined Heat Evaporator Co., Char
lotte, M : 598
W's
dress H
. PAY A REASONABLE PRICE, CASH,
ady s wl good condition Ad
100 other business chaz
tures only. usin nau
Mutual Business Exe
stamp for list.
City.
(ueice FARM OF 160 ACRES. DE
living water, in Dickinson county,
exchanve for stock of goods or other
Give full tion—quality, quantity and
value—in first letter. O. P Conklin, 26 Madison
Ave., Grand Rapids, Mic! 597
Iowa, to
property
y *
deseri
1 a9
A FINE DEPARTMENT STORE FOR SALE
Good town, good store. good trade. C. C
Sweet, Benton Harbor, Mic h
FOR SALE—ON ACCOUNT oF
trating my business to one p
entire stock of dry goods. boots —
Address Lock b
it write unless vou mes
farm in part paymen
Springport, Mich.
business.
NG DRUG STORE IN
i re: an fruit belt Average
daily sales,
l TOUU, part cash. Good
reasons for selling. Address Druggists Box 11
Baroda, Berrein Co., Mich, 590”
V JANTED FOR CASH—STOCK OF GOODS.
Must be cheap. Also store building in
Northern Michigan. W. H. Pardee. Freeport
Mich. 584°
I RUGGIST—GRADUATE, OF TEN YEARS
experience in city and country—wishes sit
uation to take full Charge if de
sired. z No. 1 references. Ad
dress N an Tradesman. 591
WA§AnSTED-A SITUATION BY A PHARMA
cist of 15 years’ ex perience. Best of ref
erences. Address Pharmacist, eare Michigan
Tradesman, 593
“ypRUG STORE FOR
part cash and _ b;
party. Location first-
ing for a physician: try to employ 100
hands now buildi near by. Fred Brundage
Muskegon, Mich. Boa
sALE—ABOUT 81,500,
ce on time to sood
]
OW: food open
\ YANTED—POSITION AS MANAGER OR
clerk in dry goods or general store. Good
window dresser. Box AA, New
Haven, Mich. 587
4VOR SALE—CHEAP FOR CASH. SHINGLE.
mill in first-class repair, 40,000 capacity,
Holmes & DeGott, Tustin. Mich, 588"
\ ANTED—POSITION AS CLERK OR
book keeper In a general store. Good
references furnished. Address A. D. Diehm.
Remus, Mich. 589
V JANTED—FURNITURE AND FIX TURES
for a drug store. Price must be right.
Address C vy. Vining, Lakeview, Mich. 586
WY ANTED—ADEALERIN EVERY COUN ry
References.
¢ to handle the Peerless typewriter. Send
for circular. Barker & Saunders, State Agents,
19 and 21 Fountain St.,Grand Rapids ~ 583
| ee SALE—TWO PRESCRIPTION CASES,
one pair druggist’s prescription scales.
four section druggist’s drawers (only one year
old), six four foot show cases, very Cheap. 'Ad-
dress °C. G. Pitkin, Whitehall, Mich. 581
A PHARMACIST, REGISTERED, WITH
thirty-four years’ practical experience in
all kinds of pharmaceutical and mercantile
works, wishes a situation of responsibility as
clerk or manager. Has been in business for
vears for himself. Address “Pharmacist,” care
Michigan Tradesman. 566
EARLY NEW BAR-LOCK TYPEWRITER
for sale at a great reduction from cost-
Reason for selling, we desire another pattern of
same make of machine, which we consider the
best on the market. Tradesman Company, 100
Louis St., Grand Rapids. 564
(XREAT OFFER—FINE STOCK OF WALL
paints, varnishes, picture frames
XM paper,
and room mouldings for sale. Reason for sell.
ing, death of proprietor. Good paying business
in a very desirable location. All new stock, in-
voicing from $2,500 to %3,000. Address Mrs
Theresa Schwind, Grand Rapids. £61
BUSINESS CHANCE—FOR SALE OR EX”
change for farm or city property in or near
Grand Rapids, the Harris mill property situated
in Paris, Mecosta, Co., Michigan, on the G. R. &
I. Railroad, consisting of saw and planing mills,
store and 39 acres of land, a good water power,
22 foot fall, side track into mill, plenty of hard-
wood timber. This is a good chance ta anyone
wishing to engage in any kind of mill business,
For further particulars address B. W. Barnard
35 Allen street, Grand Rapids, Mich. 559 |
ANNING FACTORY WANTED—A PARTY
with some capital and who understands the
business, to build and operate a canning factory
at Grant, Newaygo Co., Mich. For particulars
write to H. C. Hemingsen, Village Clerk, Grant,
Mich. 553
| ae MILL—WE OFFER FOR SALE
the North Side Planing Mill, which is first-
classin every respect, or will receive propost-
tions to locate the business in some other thrivy-
ingtown. Correspondence and inspection solic-
ited. Sheridan, Boyce & Co., Manistee, Mich. 613
OR SALE—LARGE STORE, WAREHOUSE,
barn, etc., with one-half interest in stock
of general merchandise in the village of McBain,
Missaukee county, Mich. For terms write to Gil.
lis McBain, McBain, Mich. 578
THE MICHIGAN 'TRADEHSMAN.
CURRENT CRITICISMS.
The St. Louis Retail Grocers’ Asso-
ciation cleared $1,200 on its picnic this
year. They did not anything
like the crowd the Grand Rapids Asso-
ciation did, either. How
pose they did it?
have
do you sup-
The old man on the corner of Mon-
roe and Ottawa streets has taken out a
license. After living for years on the
people and lying to the police all these
years, it’s pretty hard, that’s a fact.
Mooney, you are a hard-hearted wretch.
* * *
sign
so it must go out into the
Its own father
President Cleveland refused to
the tariff bill.
cold world uusponsored.
long ago disowned it.
. 4 8
Now the members of Congress can put
in their spare moments trying to con-
vince their constituents that they didn’t
do it.
= % *%
Don’t be alarmed if about
man you meet on the street
and shakes with you
about your wife and the baby, and how’s
business, and a lot of other foolish ques-
tions. They are not
confidence men, or anything of that sort,
every third
stops
hands and
buneco steerers or
you |
asks |
Dry Goods Price Current.
Adriatic ..
UNBLEACHED COTTONS.
“
Arrow Brand 4%
7
Oe. ones os | 5% “« World Wiese.
Ate AA......... 6 ao | ee 4%
Atlantic A.......... 6%|Full Yard Wide..... 6%
_ ee G4iGeorgia A.......... 6
. r. . S&S |Honest Width...... 6
' i cieek ee © eeree se. .....25.. 5
ge 4%/|Indian Head........ 8%
eT eS ea 6%
Archery Bunting...4 (KingEC. .......... 5
Beaver Dam AA.. 4%|Lawrence LL...... 4%
Blackstone O, 32.... 5 |Madras cheese cloth =
Bisck Crow......... & | Newmarket i senen 5X
Bieck Bock ........ OX) a 5
i : - o....., 6%
Capital A... ...... 5%| as DD.... 5%
Cavanat V.... 5) “ cE 6%
Chapman cheese cl. ST 5
Ciiften CR... . 54¢/Our Level Best..... 6
ee ... 64/Oxford R.. wis 2
Dwight ae 6% Pequot eo aes 7
Ciiftea CCC.... I eon ohooh ces 6
|
|Top of the Heap.... 7
BLEACHED COTTONS.
oe een nose OO, eee... ©
Amazon. ee,
Amsburg.... oe EE eo |
Art Comerte........ 10 iGreen Ticket....... 84
Blackstone AA..... 7%/|Great Falis.......... 6%
Beats All.... es hee ence 7%
Boston . 2 West Out..... 4%@ 5
ees... 4 «> GX iking Phillip........ 7%
Cabot, & - ‘ - 6% ee
Cc harter Oak. . 5%|Lonsdale Cambric..10
Conway W...... ... TiiLonedals...... - @8
Cleveland ...... ..- 6 |Middlesex.... .. @5
Dwight Anchor.. I ios ices eh 7%
‘ghorts 8 |Oak — ees sen ee 6
Edwards. . _. o...........- 5%
eee 7 Pride of the West. ..12
| Farwell... « CHOI. 000 eo weses 7%
| Fruit of the Loom. 8 i icine ces ns 4%
Pmenviite ..... --- : Uees Wiee.....-... 8%
though many of them look it. They are_
candidates.
* *
The papers say the President took a}
dignified interest in the procession of the |
K. of P. at Washington the other day.
President Cleveland is not built right to
take any other kind of an interest in
anything.
The tariff question is settled;
has adjourned; the fight
Congress
Now if it would only rain!
_> *®
Cooking by Electricity.
Cooking by electricity is still finding
favor among an increased number of peo-
ple, and has no drawback except that it
is comparatively expensive. This has
been all along the chief drawback to the
electric light, and for the length of time
it has been known,
beyond that in public places. Cooking
by electricity has hardly reached that
point of being in common use in public
places, but it bids fair to do so in the
near future. The heat in the range in
which coal is usedis not sointense as the
appliance through which the electric cur-
rent passes and the latter is also more
readily controlled. Then there is no rak-
ing of ashes, no soiling of the hands with
ecoaldust, and no hot stove lids to lift,
and burn the fingers. Then the inten-
sity of the heat is regulated for the dif-
ferent viands at pleasure. The popular-
ity of cooking in this manner will aftera
while appeal to those who live in small
flats, where, in the summer time the kit-
chen and the dining-room may be with
comfort one and the same room.
> 6
Fire from Incandescent Lamps.
It has long been beld that incandes-
cent electric lamps were perfectly safe,
and insurance companies have not been
accustomed to increase their rates on ac-
count of the use of such; but recent tests
go to show that the idea is erroneous,
and that while not neariy dan-
gerous as arc lights, fires may be started
py the incandescent current. During
the test an incandescent lamp was placed
on the ground, covered with powder,
the globe broken. No harm
A lamp was then dropped into a recep-
tacle full of powder, and the globe
smashed. The result was not what the
experimenters looked for. The powder
went off with an explosion which
wrecked the room and seriously burned
the over-confident experimenters.
a 0
Business men of New York city, who
employ 20,000 boys, have determined to
give preference to boys who do not
smoke cigarettes.
posponed.
sO
between Cor- |
bett and Jackson has been indefinitely
its use has gone little |
and
resulted. |
Peek Crees... .-++-- 6
' Nonpareil ..10
Fruit of the Loom %. 7% eo 8%
Peres. .... ...+- 4%4|Waite Horse........ 6
Fall Value.......... — " =... 8%
HALF BLEACHED COTTONS.
Coe... ........--. Sas ee...» 8
———
CANTON FLANNEL.
Unbleached. Bleached.
Housewife A........ 514|Housewife Q.... -.. 6%
. — ' TE oshoies 7
' “ use 7
‘ “ T nen 8%
. Pr +
_ " Wiese io”
‘ = v.... 2x
Y " ) eS 11%
. HG 2 oe
‘ “ A 13%
CARPET WARP.
Peerless, white......17 |Integrity colored. ..18
colored... -—— (weeeoreet.......... 17
Integrity .. a“ "18% | Y *“ colored .19
DRESS GOODS.
Geese =......--.-. : {Nameless.. uae
Meee ee 25
ML pieeoee 103 ' _. + ose
GG Cashmere...... 20 04 —- ee
Nameoiess ..........- 16 ' ---d2%
a me) 4 1135
CORSETS.
CN nce nen $9 50/;Wonderful. .. ...84 50
Schilling’s.. ...... 9 00|/Brighton.. 475
Davis Waists..... 9 00|/Bortree’s .......... 9 00
Grand Rapids..... 4 50|A buomina! .. - 15 00
CORSET JEANS.
Armory . a oe enna... 7%
Androscoggin. aes i 7 Rockport. ... - 6%
Biddeford ........-. 6 Coneiean eke tee 7%
Brunswick . a Walworth ...... . 6%
RINTS.
Allen a reds.. Berwick fancies.... 5%
34
\Clyde Robes........
" pink & ‘purple 534 \Charter Oak fancies 4
- ouffs ........ 5%/DelMarine cashm’ ‘Ss. 5%
” pink checks. 54) C mourn’g 5%
es staples ...... 5 Eddystone fancy... 5%
. shirtings ... 3%) chocolat 5%
American fancy .... i o rober.... 5%
Americanindigo ie ' sateens.. 5%
American cbartings- 34 Hamilton des . 5%
Argentine Grays.. staple ou. oe
Anchor -- a | Manchester ancy.. 5%
| Arnold . ruse © ' new era. 5%
Arnold Merino..... 6 |Merrimack D fancy. 5%
- long cloth . a Merrim’ ckshirtings. 4
” 7 ppfurn. 8%
“ sd century coh 7 Pacific fancy epaens 5%
“« gold seal....-. »
as
rf ee
i.
{
dae | >>
wer
wAY
a
“4: >
ae
)
«a,
-<
dem Sos
me “ef
« >
SIX LETTERS TO A CLERK.--I.
First Touches on the Dangers of Leav-
ing Home.
An Old Merchant in Hardware.
Those of us who have passed the mile-
stones that mark the early roads of busi-
ness, my dear Tom, often fancy that a
bit of our experience might be of some
value to those who are just starting out
on that thoroughfare. And while we do
not believe that we can lay down a chart
which will invariably lead to success,
we do think that our own mistakes,
and the mistakes we have seen others
make, ought to be of benefit to those who
are treading in our steps.
I chose a business career because it
was the best offered me. Had I the
power to choose among the professions,
I might have taken one of them for my
choice, but I was where most young men
of to-day are—very ambitious and very
poor. Iwas like the young man who
told his father-in-law that he had no
money ‘‘but was chock full of days’
work;’”’? I was full of the energy that
seemed to tell me if 1 had but half a
chance | would not ask for help—I would
make my own way in the world.
I was not ambitious of becoming a
Vanderbilt in wealth or a Stewart in
business. My ambition was bounded by
very moderate limits, and I am afraid
such success as I have had would strike
most men, not as success, but only as
the beginning of victory. And if any-
thing I can say will help you to this
beginning I shall be amply satisfied.
The first thought that enters a boy’s
head is a wish; he wishes he was like
some man or older boy, who has what he
has not. It is this wish and desire that
spurs him on the road of life. I like it
to be so; but, oh! be careful that you are
aiming after a noble end. Constant
effort will enable the most ordinary
capacity to imitate the object aimed at.
lf your model is a young man who
*‘travels on his shape,” I can encourage
you by saying there is no reason why
you should not equal, if not excel, him.
If your society is among the fast young
men, who pride themselves on their reck-
lessness, you may reasonably hope to
compete with the leader of your set. We
are most of us just what we strive to be;
perhaps not to the extent we desire, but
oftentimes we excel our own ideals.
The difference between a man and a
boy is, that one has memories—the other
has none. Memory is a ghost that clings
to us through life, after we have reached
the age of manhood, and blessed is he
who can turn to it with content and
satisfaction. The sigh of every man is,
that he might be allowed to live his life
over again; that he might so live that the
blots, here and there, would never have
been. Probably there is little use in
moralizing over this point, because our
children are going to see for themselves
just what we saw for ourselves, and they
will no more heed our warning than we
heeded the warning of our elders.
But for all of this I cannot help writ-
ing of the importance it is to every
young man to choose his society care-
fully. You are going out into the world
with a mother’s prayer over you, her
hopes around you. You have a vague
feeling of what your mother’s love is,
but itis only a very indistinct concep-
tion of her heart. She has taught you
the pure truths of righteousness till it
may be they are a little tiresome to you,
and all her care you have taken as a
matter of course. I love to turn in the
Bible to that part where the Son of God
turned to his disciples and commended
His mother to their care, and when I see
the army of boys who every year turn
from their homes to fight the battle of
life, I think of the patient, praying
mothers who are left at home and who
can only patiently wait and pray. God
pity them all, for some of them wait,
and wait, and wait, and get back only
curses and neglect when they gave their
best love.
Wherever you go, whatever you do,
cling to the home that nurtured you;
keep closely in communion with those at
home, and whether business is brisk, or
society demanding much from you, do
not forget the letters that bring the
light to your mother’s eyes, and that
send another “God bless him’? to the
throne of God.
It is the habit of age to say the world
| is getting worse, and that ‘we didn’t do
so and so,” but that is merely a habit;
there are no more dangers in the steps
of our young men to-day than ever
there were, and I think an independent
manliness goes farther in winning res-
pect than everit did. There is every
reason to say that it is easier to do right
now than ever it was, and the men who
are your judges are better educated, I
think, that any other generation of
merchants; just as I am confident the
succeeding generation will be in advance
of us.
So my first letter to you as you go out
into the world is, to hold fast to your
home ties; come what will, do not let
them loosen; teach yourself to be proud
of them, and on no account allow your-
self to neglect those to whom you owe so
much. The day may come when you
will be glad to turn back to that home in
sickness, there to be tenderly cared for:
the time may be when your love of home
may be the influence in the scale that
will keep you on the right side, when
otherwise you would have been lost; but
you may be sure that no man cherished
such ties without being the better man.
I
Sundry Sarcasms.
St. Peter: ‘Minister, were you? I
don’t see many souls to your credit.”
New Arrival: ‘‘Didn’t have time to
save souls, St. Peter. I was too busy
raising mortgages.”’
* * 2
Sunday morning. Wife: ‘‘Come,
John, why don’t you get up? Your
breakfast was ready an hour ago, and
it’s spoiled by this time.”
Husband: “Is it? Very well; then I
don’t want it. Call me in season for
dinner.”
* *& *
“I think I shall eall a meeting of my
creditors and try to make an arrange-
ment with them.’’
‘*You will have to see the mayor first.”
“Why?”
‘To get a permit to hold a mass meet-
ing.”’
Teacher: ‘‘What is the meaning of
the word excavate?”’
Scholar: ‘To hollow out.”
“Give me a sentence in
word is properly used.”’
‘The small boy exeavates when his
papa licks him.
which the
* # %
Exasperated Young Mistress (after a
wordy argument with the cook): “Why,
Bridget, it’s perfectly absurd! Either
you or I must be crazy.”
Bridget (proudly): ‘Sure and I
wouldn’t be so bold as to think ye had
no more sinse than to keep a crazy cook.”
* * *
‘‘To whom are we indebted for this
call?’ smiled Mrs. Waitabit as she
greeted a goodlooking man at the front
door.
“he butcher, ma’am,” was the reply.
‘It’s $9.86. There’s the bill.’
——-—--+9-
Use Tradesman Coupon Books.
Hardware Price Current.
These prices are for cash buyers, who
pay promptly and buy in full packages.
AUGURS AND BITS. dis.
a 60&10
Cook's ...... a 40
eCuninen GOMUING | 235
oemeitien, Mietetion 50&10
AXES.
First Quality, 8. B. Bronze.. .. a
' @ Bee 1x 00
' a 7 50
' 2 oes 13 50
BARROWS, dis.
Berend $1200 1400
ee ek Oa ao
BOLTS dis.
are 8. el eee 50&10
Cemmeronow te 75&10
EE 40&10
ee 70
BUCKETS,
Se $350
Bee Ns 400
BUTTS, CAST, diz.
Cast Loose Pin, figured 70&10
Wrought Narrow, bright 5ast joint 40... | /6ea&10
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
Wrought Loose Pin............. eee sees . a |
Wrogaes Table... . =
Wrought Inside Blind.....,. 4)
Wrought Brass % |
Bind Gike .70&10
Blind, Parker's........ tees T0G10
sariaames decussate ae 70 |
BLOCKS.
Ordinary Tackle, list April 1892..... .....60&10
ORADLES,
hima Ee ee 49&10
CROW BARS,
bitin, per® 5
CAPS.
thee perm 65
opal al . 60
ee - 35
. 60
CARTRIDGES,
Ne 50
Central Fire....... ae 25
CHISELS. dis.
Siatiemind ee | 75&10
SE 75&10
RGCHCNCMMG oe 75&10
CE 75&10
Butchers’ Tanged Firmer................... 40
COMBS, dis,
rs sc tittmie, A 40
CN 25
CHALE.
White Crayons, per gross.......... 12@12% dis. 10
COPPER,
Planished, 14 oz cut tosize... .. per pound 28
Y Sate, ane fee) 26
Cold Rolled, 14x56 and 14x60.... ........."" 23
eee ee 2
EN 22
DRILL8. dis,
eee Ee 50
Taper and straight Shank.. os 50
Morse’s Taper Shank 50
DRIPPING PANS,
Small sises, ser pound ........ Se, 8%
ome beeen 06
ELBOWS.
om See 6. dos. net 7
ee dis 40
caiman sa dis. 40410
EXPANSIVE BITs, dis.
Clark’s, small, 818; large, 826........ ' 30
Vee Leo 2 see . 25
FILES—New List. dis.
time. 60&10-10
New American...... - 60&10-10
Nicholson’s .... 60&10- 0
imo Oe 50
Meters Morse Mase 50
GALVANIZED IRON.
Nos. 16 to 20; 22 and 24; 25 ana = a 6S
ist 2 13 14 15 16 by
Discount, 60 -10
GAUGES. dis
Stanley Rule and Level Co.’s..... —
KNOBs—New List. dis.
Door, mineral, jap. trimmings .... __. 55
Door, porcelain, jap. trimmings.... ...... 55
Door, porcelain, plated trimmings ... ‘ 55
Door, porcelvin, trimmings................. 55
Drawer and Shutter, porcelain........._... 7
LOCKS—DOOR. dis.
Russell & Irwin Mfg. Co.’s new list ....... 55
Mallory, Wheeler & Co.’s 55
peemrorae..............
Norwalk’s...... 55
MATTOCKS,
ee 816.00, dis. 60-10
ee ee $15.00, dis. 60-10
oer. 818.50, dis. 20410.
MAULB. din,
Sperry & Co.'s, Post, handled............... 50
MILLS. dis.
Comee, Farmers Cae... 40
* P. 8. & W. Mfg. Co.’s Malleables.... 40
* denders, Vorry & Clerk's............ 40
re 30
MOLASSES GATES, dis.
coacopuperallet ena 60&10
eee ee 60410
Enterprise, self-measuring............
Advance over base, on both Steel and Wire.
Steel nails, base... 40
Wire nails, base.
60. eo
ae 90
Saree... 7
PLANES. dis.
ome coer Cee fics. @
eee eee B50
Sandusky Tool Co.'s, fancy................. e440
Sea metas.
Stanley Rule and Level Co.’s wood. . ....50&10
PANs.
me Aone dis.60—10
Camo polled dis. 70
RIVETS, dis.
STOR SI TE ee
Copper Rivets and Burs.................... 50—10
PATENT FLANISHED IRON.
‘A’ Wood's patent planished, Nos. 24 to 27 10 20
‘*B’? Wood’s pat. ed, Nos. 25 to 27... 9 20
| Gate, Clark’s, 1, 2,3
State
anishi
Broken #4 per pound extra,
7
HAMMERS.
maveate &Ca.y............ eas secs. 2°
en. ‘ ass se 2
Yerkes & Plumb’s... oe dis. 40&10
Mason’s Solid Cast Steel...... «oe Oe lee 60
Blacksmith’solid Cast Steel Hand....30¢ 40&10
HINGES,
bey ey dis.60&10
+++e++..,POr doz, net, 2 50
Screw Hook and Strap, to 12 in. 4% 14 and
se. 3%
mcrow Hook and Eye %...............__ net 10
“ “ “ 5¢ a net 8%
. be “ % net 7%
c c rT % net 7%
StrapandT .. a dis. F
HANGERS. dis,
Barn Door Kidder Mfg. Co., Wood track.. 5O&10
Champion, anti-friction... 60&10
Medeor WoeG teen 40
HOLLOW WARE.
Re a nc a
--.-60&10
a. (ten neeeee cea Cie
Cayenne... i. .. 40810
HOUSE FURNISHING goons.
feempea Tin Ware..............
/ -. .hew list 73
Jepeunea Tia Ware. 25
Granite Tron Ware ............_.. new lis 2t
WIRE G00D8, 8,
etl ape TT 70&10&10
en Se - 70810810
a... -70&10810
Gate Hooks and Eyes.... 70&10&10
LEVELS. dis.7
Stanley Rule and Level Co.’s...............
ROPES,
Sisal, % inch and larger ................ 4
mane... see ew. ae
SQUARES, dis.
Steel and Iron....
Try and Bevels.......
oon dt G10
. 60
Mitre ....
SHEET IRON.
Com. Smooth. Com.
Nos. 10 to 14.... oueeeea OO 8 50
noe tei ............ a 2 60
4 05 27
ee ae 2 80
wee ee <> 2 90
No. 27... 3 0
a aie te 00
All sheets No. 18 and lighter, over 30 inches
wide not less than 2-10 extra
SAND PAPER,
ee ee dis. 50
SASH CORD,
mevcrione WHO A list 50
' eee " 55
. wane fo. bees . 50
" ree ' 55
hite C “ 20
SASH WEIGHTS,
couc ives... ooee+ees ss DOF ton S25
SAWS. dis.
eT 20
Silver Steel Dia. X Cuts, per foot..... 70
‘* Special Steel Dex X Cuts, perfoot.... 50
** Special Steel Dia. X Cuts, perfoot....
‘Champion and Electric Tooth X
Ce er ee oe 30
TRAPS. dis.
oe ee .---60&10
Oneida Community, Newhouse’s......... |. 35
Oneida Community, Hawley & Norton’s.... 70
meee CnOkee 18¢ per dos
Mouse, delusion wtteseeees ses. 81.50 per dos
WIRE, dis.
EE 70
eC OEM 7TU—10
Ceeree ene 60—10
ADO ORE OG 52h
Copperea Spring Steel. 50
Barbed Fence, galvanised................ _ oo
” eee 2 30
HORSE NAILS.
ae eee. dis. 40&10
Me dis. 05
Memmwee dis. 10&10
WRENCHES, dis.
Baxter’s Adjustable, nickeled.............. 30
ee COR 50
Coe’s Patent Agricultural, Wreugns........ 75
Coce’s Patent, malidabie,......0 0 -- - T5&16
MISCELLANEOUS. dis.
Pree Bee ee 50
Pore Cee 75&10
Horows, Newite................. --- 70810 &10
Castors, Bed a 4 Piate............... 50&10&10
Pampers, Ameren.
Forks, hoes, rakes and al! steel goods...... 65410
METALS,
PIé TIN,
ee 260
mains... .... . 28
ZINO.
Duty: Sheet, 2%c per pound,
Oe ocane CMe 6%
Pe q
SOLDER.
ee 16
Daly oe i 1
5
The prices of the many other qualities of
solder in the market Indicated by private brands
vary according to composition,
ANTIMONY
See. per pound
Heweae........ - 13
TIN—MELYX GRADS.
eee Charon $750
14x20 IC, ee 7 50
10x14 IX, se, 9 26
14x20 IX, ee 9 2
Each additional X on this grade, $1.75.
TIN—ALLAWAY GRADE,
weeetc, Cuareoee 75
14x20 IC, ee 75
10x14 TX, EC 8 25
14x20 IX, [ teed ade eee cs, | a
Each additional X on this grade 81.50.
ROOFING PLATES
14x20 IC, cc Weta 6 Su
14x20 IX, . oe 8 50
; . _ Cee a ae
14x20 IC, * Allaway Grade........... 6 00
14x20 IX, c . eae, 7 50
20x28 IC, " _ ee 12 50
20x28 IX, ” . OF ede owen cane 15 50
BOILER SIZE TIN PLATE.
Se $14 00
ee ee 15 00
10 GO
ma... | per pound...
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
8
MICHIGAN TRADESMAN
A WEEELY JOURNAL DEVOTED TO THE
Best Interests of Business Men.
Published at
100 Louis St., Grand Rapids,
TRADESMAN COMPANY.
One Dollar a Year, Payabie in Advance.
ADVERTISING RATES ON APPLICATION,
Communications invited from practical busi-
ness men.
Correspondents must give their full name and
address, not necessarily for publication, but as
a guarantee of good faith.
Subscribers may have the mailing address of
their papers changed as often as desired.
Sample copies sent free to any address,
Entered at Grand Rapids post-office as second-
‘lass matter.
ve" When writing to any of our advertisers,
please say that you saw their advertisement in
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
E. A. STOWE, Editor.
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 5.
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOLS.
The great importance of technical
schools in which young persons of both
sexes can secure a practical knowledge of
mechanical trades and practical science
cannot be too highly placed.
The value of such institutions is em-
phasized in the fact that every industrial
calling is controlled by trades unions,
which either exclude apprentices or limit
the number so strictly as that it is next
to impossible for boys to learn a trade.
It is not desired here to discuss the rea-
son of this regulation on the part of the
trades unions. Its object is to limit as
much as possible the number of skilled
workmen, so as to prevent the over-
crowding of thetrades. However advan-
tageous this may be to the adult work-
man, it imposes a hardship on the boys
by shutting them out from trades.
In the United States there are practi-
eal schools for teaching book-keeping,
telegraphy, electricity and mechanical
engineering and chemistry. Generally
speaking, the United States is poorly
provided with schools for industrial
training. Several reports on the indus-
trial schools of Germany recently made
to the Treasury Department, by the Uni-
ted States Consuls in that country, give
much information of extreme interest in
this connection.
in Germany there are tanning schools,
masons and builders’ schools, weaving
schools, plumbers’ schools, clock schools,
and, of course, any number for giving in-
struction in engineering, chemistry, com-
mercial matters and the like. To find
and keep employment in any of the in-
dustries in the densely settled countries
of Europe is really a fight for life. The
wages of skilled labor are, of course, the
highest, and to be skilled is everything.
The young men and women study at
these schools in order to perfect them-
selves in the callings they adc pt.
The operations of some of these schools
are worth special mention. There is the
weaving school at Chemnitz. It isa weav-
ing college. Instead of merely learning
a particular routine, such as would be
got from working in a cotton or woolen
factory, the science as well as the prac-
tice of weaving is taught. Consul Mon-
‘ aghan gives some interesting informa-
tion. These weaving schools are sup-
ported by the Government. Germany
must compete with England and France
in commerce, and commeree is the sale of
the industrial products of the people.
Here are taught all sorts of weaving in
cotton, wool and silk. Along with the
weaving, the care of machinery and
other kindred matters, is taught the
science and practice of dyeing. The cost
of tuition is $65 a year. The German
weaving schools send out thousands of
graduates who go to all countries as mas-
ter weavers. Says the Consul: ‘‘Nine-
teen hundred ‘captains’ of weaving have
gone out of the Mulheim school into all
parts of Germany, France, England, Rus-
sia, Austria, Hungary, Bohemia, Italy,
Switzerland, Sweeden, Denmark, North
America, Japan, ete. It is no longer
necessary to wonder why it is that New
England’s boss weavers, dyers, bleachers,
designers, ete., come from Europe, as
many of them do to this day. Like the
Chemnitz school for weaving, the one at
Mulheim trains boys and men to be di-
rectors, master workmen, designers, fix-
ers, etc. Italso gives young men who
wish to travel as buyers or sellers such
exact knowledge of wares as will make
them experts.”’
An interesting school is the clock
school of Furtwangen, in the Black For-
est. For centuries clocks were made
there by hand labor. Black Forest clocks
claimed and held sure sales at high
prices. Down to the late sixties and
early seventies nothing interfered with
their success. About that time machin-
ery began to be employed in the manu-
facture of clocks. Against Waltham,
Furtwangen and the Black Forest were
powerless, and trade fell quickly away.
The Duke of Baden began to look about
for something to save the drooping indus-
try. He found what was required in the
wood carvings of the Austrian Tyrol and
in a school system calculated to lift
clock-making from a trade to a science.
In 1877 the school was opened, wood-
carving introduced, and clock-making in
the quaint, queer, out-of-the-way places
in the Black Forest took a new lease of
life. The purpose of the school is to ad-
vanee the interests of the Black Forest
clock industry, and to give technical ed-
ucation in the mechanical branches of
clock-making. It is supplied with all
modern machinery and is a great success.
It is plain enough how the siilled
labor of Europe can come over here and
drive out the home workers. The for-
eigners are more thoroughly trained, and
they are willing to work cheaper. Our
people only complain and ask Congress
to shut out the foreigners. We have not
yet waked up to the fact that the strug-
gle for life is daily growing more des-
perate. But it is.
JEALOUSY OF WEALTH.
A magazine writer, who writes upon
“The Prevailing Jealousy of Wealth,”
undertakes to show that the possession
of wealth is satisfactory evidence that
its possessor has earned it, or has created
values far in exess of what he has him-
self retained, an argument which, itis
needless to say, would hardly avail a
pickpocket in a police court. The writer
in question declares that Jay Gould was
a benefactor, and created far more wealth
than he amassed for himself, which will
be news to most of those who have
studied the career of the greatest rail-|
him as chiefly a wrecker and manipula-
tor, and not at all asa creator of any-
thing except barely legal devices by
which a few were enabled to rob the
many. Jay Gould did not create the
Erie Railroad, but stole it from those
who did create it, and it is to-day strug-
gling almost hopelessly under a burden
of obligations, which, of course, have a
value for those who hold them, but are
not wealth any more than the power of
the ancient Rhine robbers to tax the
traffic of the river was wealth.
The fact is that there is no ‘‘prevailing
jealousy of wealth’’ that is worth talking
about. There is, however, a very con-
siderable and a growing disposition to
criticise the acquisition of great wealth
by dishonorable means—means_ which
barely keep their users out of prison,
and which everybody knows should send
them there. This antipathy to dishonest-
ly gained wealth is wholesome, and we
sincerely hope it will increase until it
will become impossible for men to carry
on such operations as were carried on by
Gould, and are being carried on to-day by
huudreds of other men who justify
themselves in any rascality by which
they can manage to amass wealth, so
long as skillful lawyers can steer them
clear of prisons.
Any one who thinks of the matter at
all can recall the names of dozens of
wealthy men whom practically no one
thinks of condemning for being wealthy
—simply because they get wealth honest-
ly, and are good and useful citizens.
There is no ‘“‘prevailing jealousy’’ of
such men, and they are really injured
and insulted by being classed with manip~™
ulators, schemers, purchasers of legis-
lation, etc., and by an attempted defense
of them on that basis. Honestly gained
and honestly used weatlh is respected
and is secure; its greatest menace, per-
haps, being such indiscriminating and
short-sighted defenders, who would
place such a man as Marshall Field in
the same class with a Gould, or a Wall
street gambler. There is a defense
which is nothing but an unjust accusa-
tion.
EMIGRATION AND IMMIGRATION.
The exodus of workmen of foreign
birth from this country appears to be un-
abated, in fact, to increase in volume.
In the early days of THE TRADESMAN it
ventured the opinion that the matter of
inducing immigration to this country
had already been quite overdone, but
enthusiasts told the people, who readily
believed them, that every emigrant who
could be induced to come here repre-
sented, in his person, a good round
eash value, and so it came about that
corporations and great companies im-
ported the very lowest classes from
Europe, native born workmen and those
that had come here for citizenship
standing but a sorry chance of making
an honest and respectable living in
competition with those who were con-
tent to live off the contents of ash bar-
rels and lodge like beasts. The coun-
try could, to its advantage, spare a good
many thousand such workmen, but the
trouble is that unfair competition is
driving back a good many honest in-
telligent men whose presence is in
every way desirable. If it were only
those of the imported type who were
going back it would be a matter for con-
gratulation. They would be well got-
Of course, one of the principal rea-
sons for the present exodus is the scar-
city of work here and the high cost of
living. It is not a desirable place in
which te be idle. In one instance, with
which we are acquaiated, there is a fam-
ily of four, the husband being a carpen-
ter. Searcely expecting to find work
this fall and winter he estimates that it
will be a saving in money for them all
to return to Sweden and remain until
spring, even though he gets no work
there; then, if there are fair prospects of
work here, coming back again. That is,
that the cost of the passage both ways
will be more than balanced by the
cheaper cost of living there.
But putting aside the question of dull
times, which is substantially universal
throughout the world, in the best of
times it has been evident for some years
that there were more men here than there
was work for. The great army of
tramps has been steadily increasing, and
not all of them, by any means, began
their tramping from choice. Necessity
has had a good deal to do with it. This
condition of affairs has been, to a great
extent, brought about, not by the natural
law of emigration, but by the importa-
tion of the worst part of European labor,
for purely selfish motives. It has been
carried to such an extent as to be abso-
lutely a menace to the country.
FROM THE LAKES TO THE SBA.
While there is a little prospect for the
construction of the Nicaragua _ inter-
oceanic canal, other canal projects for in-
terior navigation are being agitated with
great activity.
A canal isin actual progress of being
excavated to connect Lake Michigan at
Chicago with the Mississippi River, above
St. Louis. The leading object in view in
this work is to open a channel by which
the waters of the lake will flow through
the excavated channel and the Illinois
River into the Mississippi, so as to carry
with it the sewage of the city. But it is
intended to make the canal so large as
that it will float considerable steamboats
and barges, and se furnish an important
waterway for transportation purposes.
Another scheme which is being actively
brought into prominence is a project to
connect the Ohio River by a large canal
with the waters of Lake Erie. There are
already small canals connecting those
waterways. One is from Erie, Pa., to
Pittsburgh. Another is from Cleveland,
Ohio, to Marietta, in the same State, on
the Ohio River. The third route is from
Toledo to Cincinnati, on the river. The
existence of these small canals proves
the practicability of the project for the
construction of waterways capable of
floating vessels which can navigate the
lakes.
The principal demand for such a water
route is made by Pittsburgh. That great
center of iron manufacture is dependent
on Michigan for its best supplies of ore.
This ore, if brought by water, has to be
trans-shipped from the lake vessels to
boats which can get through the small
canals. This rehandling is expensive
and hurts Pittsburgh in competition with
the cheap ores of Alabama. It is pro-
posed to make a canal which will permit
ships which bring iron ore through the
Great Lakes to float through the country
to the great iron mills of Pittsburgh. It
would be a great consummation for
Pittsburgh, and it would do no harm to
road wrecker of history, and who regard ten rid of by paying their passages home | Michigan.
Sore
——
-~¢3
sr
+P
mn
=a Fr
THH MICHIGAN
TRADESMAN. v
THE GENIUS OF INVENTION.
The magicians of the present age are
the engineers, the chemists and elec-
tricians. They are the men whocan call
up and control powerful and mysterious
forces, transform apparently worthless
substances into articles of value, and an-
nihilate space by transmitting intelli-
gence from the most distant places in a
moment of time.
The enormous practical value of the
discoveries in the sciences of engineer-
ing, chemistry and electricity have at-
tracted many persons to the study of
those subjects, and the fear has been ex-
pressed that those departments of eco-
nomic science will soon be overcrowded.
In this connection some interesting in-
formation was recently given by Prof.
De Volson, of the Society for the Promo-
tion of Scientific Education at Chicago.
Speaking of the increasing interest man-
ifested in scientific studies, it appears
that in less than forty years about 100
professional engineering schools, includ-
ing special courses in universities, have
eome into existence in this country,
graduating 1,200 persons annually. Be-
sides these, many of the other schools
include some instruction in the mechan-
ieal arts and engineering subjects.
The Professor thinks that there is not
a demand in the country for 1,000 or
more new professional engineers an-
nually, but the fact that that number
find useful employment, and that these
sehools are more and more crowded with
applicants, shows that this kind of edu-
eation is growing in popularity. But
all graduates do not follow the profes-
sion of their school for life’s work.
These schools have opened new lines of
work and raised the standing of others,
as well as enlarged the field of engineer-
ing. Graduates are found in many, if
not all, of the other learned professions
and in many departments of business.
Thus it is coming about that a scien-
tific education is being made a prepara-
tion for practical life, just as a college
eourse in Greek, Latin and menta! and
moral philosophy is considered a neces-
sary preparation for any professional
eareer. There is, in all probability, no
actual demand for all the engineers,
ehemists and electricians who are grad-
uated out of the scientific schools, but
the education they receive is valuable all
the same.
In the meantime, the practical appli-
eations of science are constantly opening
new fields of industry. Fifty years ago
economical electricity was unknown.
To-day its various departments furnish
employment to hundreds and thousands
efmen. Fifty years and more ago the
engine, lathe and drill were about the
enly special mechanisms in use in ma-
ehine shops. Nearly all the balance of
the machinists’ work was done by hand.
Now all -is accomplished by ingenious
machinery, and the hand-worker has lit-
tle to do save to adjust the raw mate:ial
into the machine, and finally to put to-
gether the completed parts as they are
turned out from the lathes, planers,
punches, drills, slotters and screw cut-
ters. Itis much the samein a newspa-
per office. The intelligence is trans-
mitted from the most distant places by
electricity. The narratives and state-
ments are prepared on typewriting ma-
shines. The writing is transmuted into
metal plates of types by machinery.
The metallic plates are fixed on a rotary
printing machine, which turns out the
completed newspapers with their numer-
ous pages bound together, leaves cut for
the convenience of readers, and the
whole folded ready for the mails.
These are only instances of the cerca-
tion of new industries through the ap-
plication of science, whose wonderful in-
fluence is felt in every department of
life.
The genius of the inventor and the
skill of the mechanician and chemist,
when assisted by capital, are capable
of revoluticnizing human society. Al-
ready, in the building and operating of
canals and railways, in the extracting
of metals, in the use of steam and
electricity in agricultural and all labor-
saving machinery, in sanitary improve-
ments, in the construction of ships for
both war and peace, in the improve-
ment of weapons and military muni-
tions, and in a thousand other discov-
eries and changes in economical methods,
the modern scientists are changing; the
customs and habits of society in a most
remarkable manner.
The labor-saving machine is also labor-
making. It not only opens new lines of
manufacture, but furnishes new fields
of labor for those displaced. It forces a
redistribution of labor. It may increase
the number of mechanics, shippers,
salesmen, clerks, officials and promoters
of new enterprises, or it may increase
some of those and diminish others; but
there is always’ progress, always
growth. The vista never closes; but
new scenes are constantly opening, and
always man’s dominion over the forces |.
of nature increases and strengthens.
Man is given this power for good, and,
if he shall use it for evil ends, he com-
mits a crime, he can only blame himself.
Spontaneous Combustion of Colored
Paper.
A correspondent of the London Times
says: ‘One of my children complained
that a smell of burnt paper was percep-
tible in the house. This smell had been
noticed some hours previously, but was
not then traced to its source. A careful
search led to the discovery that a paper
lamp shade in one of the rooms had been
entirely consumed by fire. For two days
prior to the accident the lamp, a duplex,
had not been lighted, and there had been
no fire in the room. Since the morning
of that day, when the room was dusted
and the shade apparently in its usual
condition, no one had entered the room.
The shade was made about a year ago
from so-called crinkled tissue paper, one
white and one yellow sheet, gathered to-
gether on the upper part where it was
fixed to the wire frame, where it formed
a considerable bunch, and spreading
thence over the frame below. On exam-
ination, the yellow paper was found to
be colored by chromate of lead, and this
no doubt was the cause of the accident.
There can, | think, be no doubt that this
was a genuine case of spontaneous igni-
tion, though I have not as yet been able
experimentally to reproduce the neces-
sary conditions leading to such a result.
Fortunately there were no readily im-!
flammable articles near, or a serious fire
might have resulted, the origin of which
would probably never even have been
suspected. The dangerous paper is read-
ily recognized by setting fire to a piece of
it and blowing out the flame. In the case
of ordinary paper it will be found that
the glow along the burnt edge is very
soon extinguished, whereas in the case
of these chromate papers it continues un-
til the whole is consumed, as is the case
with ordinary touch paper. I find that
besides the yellow paper, pale green
paper also contains chromate of lead,
and would no doubt be equally danger-
ous, and possibly there are papers of
other colors containing the same mater-
ial. It would be interesting to learn
whether any similar case has been ob-
served before.’’ |
WING Co,
Proprietors of ihe
“CRESCENT,”’’ “WHITE ROSB,”’
“ROYAL.”
. These brands are Standard and have a National reputation.
Correspondence solicited.
VOIGT MILLING 6O., Grand Rapids, Mish.
QUALITY - UNIFORMITY - PRIGK
SEARS
- CRACKERS
and
CAKES
Currant Drop Cakes.
Imperials,
Cream Jumbles,
Cream Drops,
Cornhills,
Nonpareil Jumbles.
Have you tried our new goods?
Add a box or barrel
to your next order.
They are splendid
sellers and sure to
please.
New York Biscui tCoa.
S. A. SEARS, Manager,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
10
‘on j Hh;
MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
AN EXASPERATING EXPERIENCE.
A friend of mine—a clerk in a grocery
—came to me the other day with the re-
quest that I take his place behind the
counter, as he wanted to get off for the
day. I willingly consented, of course,
more especially as I did not expect to
have much to do, and anyway all this
talk about the hard times clerks have
Was moonshine. At 6 o’clock the next
morning 1 was on hand ready for work.
My friend had given me an idea of what
was to be done first, so I went to work.
I carried out about half a ton of flour,
several bushels of potatoesand fruit, and
other articles ‘‘too numerous to men-
tion,” and then proceeded to sweep the
floor. By this time the boss had arrived,
and after watching for some time he said
“Don’t you think you had better move
some of those boxes and barrels and
Sweep behind them?’’ Of course Il
thought so when he suggested it, and
every box and barrel in that store was
moved and. removed. That fioor had
never had such a sweeping as it got that
morning. Then the boss went to break-
fast, and I was left monarch of all I sur-
veyed.
The customers, women, came in just
here, and the first wanted a loaf of bread.
“Is itfresh? I don’t want it if it isn’t
fresh.” Of course it was fresh. We kept
nothing but fresh bread. ‘*Well, it don’t
feel fresh, and I don’t believe it is. How
much is it?” Seven cents was the reply.
‘‘Why that is the price uf fresh bread. I
never paid that much for stale bread;’’
and she turned and went out the door
with the air of an offended queen. The
next customer wanted a dozen eggs, and
she too had alot of fresh questions to
ask. { examined every individual egg
with the tester, and finally satisfied her
that the eggs were fresh, and turned to
the next. She wanted a quarter’s worth
of sugar. ‘‘How much do you give for a
quarter?’ Itold her. ‘‘Why, they give
20 pounds for a dollar over to S’s—!”” I
asked her why she did not go there, and
she picked up her quarter and left. I
had been three-quarters of an hour sell-
ing one dozen of eggs for 13 cents and of-
fending two customers. The next to en-
ter the store was a farmer’s wife. 1 went
out to the wagon and brought in several
crocks of butter and some crates of eggs,
weighed the butter and counted the eggs,
and put up what goods she wanted, giv-
ing her the balance in cash. No trouble
then.
business with after all;
finding.
take it without questioning, and the
pleasure of waiting on these ‘‘country
cousins,” almost destroyed the bad taste
left in my mouth by my previous exper-
iences. [I had told several customers
that we had no butter, and regretted to
see them go elsewhere to get what they
wanted. Now we had four large crocks
of *‘best dairy;’’ I could tell from the ap-
pearance of the farmer’s wife from whom
I bought it that it was of the best qual-
ity, and I waited in pleasant anticipation
for another call for butter. It was not
long until a lady came who wanted some,
‘“*the very best, mind; if it isn’t good I
don’t want it.’’ Lassured her I had some
fresh, just brought in, which I would
warrant to be the best in the market. I
took off the cover of one of the crocks,
and discovered about an inch and a half
of salt asa starter. I scraped this off
and finally reached the butter. If that
2utter was not old enough to vote it had
j
i
The farmers are the people to do
no fuss, no fault-
They know what they want and |
developed a remarkable
strength in its youth. It was the strong-
est butter lever saw. And the amount
of bric-a-brac, that that butter had col-
lected was astonishing. There was a
clothespin, several hair pins, the top of
a pepper castor, some thread, a clipping
from a newspaper, etc., ete. That was
not ordinary butter; it would not do to
let it go at the regular price, or to an or-
dinary individual who would not appre-
ciate its peculiar talent. So I set it
aside and tried another crock—with sim-
ilar result, only more so. It was the
same with every crock. I called the
boss’ attention to the matter and, when
he understood how matters stood, he
looked at me in a peculiar manner, and
asked me if 1 did not think there was an-
other sphere in life which I was better
fitted to adorn than a grocery store. His
manner was very insinuating. So much
so that 1 put on my coat and hat and de-
parted. I am still of the opinion that
the amount of ability necessary to make
a good grocery clerk has been overesti-
mated, and that there are many things
which make a grocery clerk’s existence
peculiarly agreeable. RapIx.
— 2
Get onto the Loaded Wagon.
I find the business world divided into
two great classes—the men who get onto
the loaded wagon, and the men who
walk behind. The former are writing
the history of their successful business
attainments for publication in the maga-
zines. The latter are reading the hints
as to how toclimb on. Meanwhile the
driver is lashing the horses into a brisk
trot and the dust is getting thick around
the hind wheels; while not infrequently
the occupants of the wagon are calling
to the driver to ‘‘ecut behind.” Under
these circumstances itis more pleasant
to write magazine articles on the front
seat than to hang on to the tail board.
From extensive and impartial observa-
tion 1 have found that there are several
and divers ways to mount the loaded
wagon. One way—and a fine old-fash-
ioned way it was too, back in the days of
our parents when the land was broad and
degree of
new—one way was to pile in boys while |
the wagon was empty and standing still!
Ah, but those were famous old times!
Rich lands and running water all about |
you ‘‘fur’s you could look ’er listen,’ |
and all to be had for the taking. No
cordon of United States cavalry then to |
surround our forefathers and _fore-
mothers;
zle of a carbine till the signal gun on the
appointed day should let them loose in a
wild rush for a little strip of dried-up
land that wouldn’t furnish summer pas-
ture for a brace of jack rabbits. Not by
a large per cent.! Our forefathers waded
into the fat of the land up to their boot
tops and taking out their carving knives
carved out a fortune as far as they could
reach this way and that. Then the world
was so wide that nobody said ‘‘why do
ye rob,” for his neighbor was equally
busy with his own carving. This load-
ing up was done while the cargo was
standing still and ‘*‘Uncle Sam was rich
enough to give us all a farm.’’
Another way of getting on the wagon—
a way that extensively obtained between
the years of 1860 and 1880, was to have
the vehicle stop and back up to your
front door while a printed invitation was
sent up to you and your friends to oc-
cupy upholstered seats in the wagon. I
might not have been that you were thus
co
to hold them back at the muz- |
r. & Be
O-y-s-t-e-r-s
The Banner brand of Michigan—regular season opens Sep-
tember 4th.
Your orders will receive prompt attention.
THE PUTNAM CANDY CO.
n returning thanks for the large increase in trade for the fall and winter of
I 1894-5, it affords us much pleasure to acknowledge receipt of many letters
from leading merchants expressing their pleasure on finding that we have in-
troduced so many Impoved Styles in Overcoats and Ulsters. The Paddock Over-
coat is a surprise and leading feature, is dressy and shows the figure to perfecti on
Our Clay and Fancy Worsted suits are in great demand, and our large line of.
Double and Single-Breasted Suits in Unfinished Worsteds, Chevoits, Cassimeres,
Etc., sold at popular prices, have afforded our customers the pleasure to meet all
competition.
Write our Michigan Representative, WILLIASI CONNOR, Marshall, Mich.,
Box 346 (his permanent address), who will be pleased tu call upon you, and you
will see and learn something to your advantage.
All mail orders promptly attended to.
MICHAEL KOLB & SON,
Wholesale Clothiers,
ROCHESTER, = = - = - N. ¥.
William Connor will be at Sweet’s Hotel, Grand Rapids, Mich., on Monday and
Tuesday, Sept. 10 and 11 and on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Sept. 26, 27
and 28, Fair week.
BUY
ORANGES
LEMONS and
BANANAS of
THE PUTNAM CANDY CO,
Let them come.
BAKING POWDER
S.NO SUPERIOR = BUT FEW EQU
ONLY lak GRADE BAKING “POWDER
D.AT THIS PRICE
507.CAN “10 2 ILB.CAN 25S
MANUFACTURED BY
NORTHROP, ROBERTSON,& CARRIER
__ LANSING #1/ CH. LOUISVILLE Rit
PEANUTS.
A Leading feature with us—no matter whether you want
a sack or a carload—we are the people
to draw a supply from.
The PUTNAM CANDY Co.
COUPON BOOKS
IF YOU BUY OF HEADQUARTERS, YOU
ARE CUSTOMERS OF THE
TRADESMAN COMPANY,
Rise
~
Vv
: =
«
mi ow
‘THH MICHIGAN
PHAVWES MANN.
11
honored but some railroad corporations |
were thus taken in and given estates
larger than great kings have taxed their
kingdoms for, and for which they have
butchered their friends and their foes by
tens of thousands through years of war-
ring.
Yet another method of getting on the
front seat of the wagon is to slug a score
or so of your compeers and use them for
@ mounting block. This is a popular
way and now muchinvogue. Jay Gould
reached the driver’s box in this fashion
and his brethern of the Standard Oil
Company got close ap behind the horses
by similar means. Sometimes, when the
seats are full, comfortable seats may be
had by pitching your seatmate over the
wheel. The big officials in the Northern
Pacific, the Wisconsin Central, the Union
Pacific, and heaven only knows how many
other combines, got soft seats by this
means.
Then there is the desperate and bril-
liant method of going gunning for a seat
and holding up the wagon. It takes
nerve to get aboard by getting the drop
on the whole load, but by standing in
with the driver (as note the Sugar Trust
and the Coal Trust) it can be done
smoothly and with large success.
But what shall that great swarm of
weary trampers do who run behind and
eat the dust kicked up by the wheels or
drag along yet farther back with fading
hopeless poor, far out of sight or hearing
of the wagon, who plod the road, or sit
by the wayside and beg? The anarchists
among them say: ‘Blow up the wagon,
and let us make a rush for the pieces.”
The communists want wagons for all or
foot passage for all. The Coxeyites mod-
estly ask to build the road for the wagon.
The populists would have the govern-
ment issue wagon tickets for everybody.
But all these are outvoted by those who,
dazzled by the hope of some day riding
on the front seat, are willing to run in
the dust till the day of doom for the one
chance in ten thousand of climbing over
the dashbvard. THE DEACON.
i
A Cincinnati man describes a novel
sight he saw recentiy at a mill devoted
to making paper of pine tree pulp. ‘I
was invited to select a tree, which I did,
and it was cut down for me in the morn-
ing. I watched it during the day under-
going the various processes of paper-
making, and at 6 o’clock that evening
the tree was paper. At midnight a por-
tion of it was sufficiently dry to be taken
to a printing office, and a few of the
copies of the next morning’s paper were
printed on this product. From a tree to
a printed newspaper in twenty-four
hours is probably the best time on
record.”’
THE DANGER OF OVERSTOCKING.
Practical Discussion of an Important
Subject.
R. W. Humes in Hardware.
The numerous failures in mereantile
houses, especially in the smaller towns
and cities, during such times particularly
as the present, lead me to make a few re-
marks on one of the principal causes
leading thereto: The evils of buying from
too many houses and overstocking is prob-
ably the most fruitful cause of disaster.
Under the present ‘‘drummer system”’
of selling goods, hardly a day passes but
that the merchant is called upon by one
or more representatives of the different
lines of business in which he is engaged,
and from far-distant cities. As the
drummer’s living depends upon selling
goods, he naturally uses every means at
his hand to induce the merchant to give
him an order. With eloquent tongue, he
preaches the excellence of his wares, and
the superior advantages he can offer. If
from a near city, it is the advantage of
getting goods quickly, and the saving of
freights. If from adistant market, the
advantages of buying at headquarters far
outweigh the difference in freight, ete.
All kinds of inducements in the way of
large discounts and long dating of bills,
are offered. The result is that, although
the merchant is fully convinced in his
own mind that his stock is as heavy as it
should be, he allows himself to be per-
suaded into placing an order, and be-
fore he is aware of it, he has more goods
on his shelves than his trade requires.
His sales not keeping pace with his in-
creased purchases, he finds when state-
ments begin to pour in on him, that he is
without funds to meet the demands, and
he must humiliate himself by asking fav-
ors from parties with whom he is barely
acquainted. These parties, having no
interest in him further than to collect
| the amount due them, will be very apt to
|turn a deaf ear to his entreaties, and
adopt such a course in collecting the
debt as their self-interest dictates. The
report that a merchant is hard pressed is
quickly started, and before long, all who
have claims begin to clamor for settle-
meat. Unless his pusiness rests upon an
exceptionally strong foundation, it goes
under in the storm.
The question naturally presents itself:
What is the proper safeguard against the
evils pictured? We would suggest this:
Let every merchant make a careful esti-
mate of what he needs in each line. Let
him establssh his business relations with
a few good houses in these lines, and
stick to them so long as they treat him
right. By following this plan, he makes
friends who are well acquainted with his
affairs, and who know all about him per-
sonally. In case he needs favors, he can
get them without trouble. He is looked
upon as a valuable customer, and be may
rest assured that he will get every advan-
tage that can be afforded.
The drummers from other houses will,
of course, do their best to convince him
that he is paying too much for his goods,
and that he would fare better if he trans-
ferred his patronage to them, but in that
matter he must stand firmly on his own
judgment.
What has been said of making friends
of good houses is equally true, and per-
haps more so, of their representatives,
the traveling salesmen. First-class
houses are usually represented by first-
class, capable men. The salesman re-
gards you as his customer. He knows
that you appreciate his worth, and has
no special anxiety lest others may lure
you away from him. He ealls on you
with his samples, knowing that you await
his coming, and will have an order for
him. He also knows that strenuous ef-
forts are being constantly made to cap-
ture your trade, and consequently he
makes it his business to watch your in-
terest inevery possible manner. He gets
his house to provide such lines of goods
as are specially wanted in your section,
aud gets permission to shade prices
down to the lowest notch. In short, he
appreciates your patronage, and does
what he can to deserve it.
There are times, such as the present,
when the best and strongest merchants
are closely pressed. It may be that they
have sold too many goods on long pay-
ments; failure of crops or many other
causes might be assigned. Aithough
their resources are ample, they are not in
available shape to meet present liabil-
ities. At such times the value of friends
is put to the test. There are many cases
known to the writer, where merchants
were saved from impending ruin by the
efforts of their drummer friends, who, be-
ing well acquainted with all the facts,
worked in behalf of their customers with
a good will, and got from the creditors
such extensions as would carry them
safely over the difficulty.
The value of friendship in business,
whether with the firms of their represen-
tatives, the travelers, cannot be overes-
timated, and such friendship is not es-
tablished by buying a bill here and there
from fifty different parties, but by iden-
tifying your interests with afew good
houses and sticking to them.
The best manner of keeping a stock in
good condition must be learned from ex-
perience. As arule. it is best not to buy
too heavy at a time, but to assort up
gradually as the demand for certain
kinds of goods calls for it. The great
point is to reduce the stock down to its
lowest level at the end of seasons, so that
the shelves are not encumbered with a
lot of goods which by the following sea-
son may be ruined or out of style.
a ep
The Baby’s Medicine.
The mistress of the house had been to
a concert, and when she returned she
was met by the servant with:
‘Baby has been very ill while you
were out, mum.”
“Oh, dear,’? said Mrs. Youngwife, ‘‘is
he better?”
“Ob, yes, mum, he’s all right now, but
he was bad at first. I found his medicine
in the cupboard.”
“Good gracious!
the child? There’s no medicine
cupboard.’’
“Oh, yes, mum, there is; it?s written
on it.”
And then the girl triumphantly pro-
duced a bottle duly labeled ‘Kid Re-
| Viver.”
What have you given
in the
History of the First Mammoth Cheese.
A recent United States Consul in
Switzerland devoted a good deal of his
time to the collection of facts about
cheeses, beginning with some that are
alleged to be more than 200 years old,
which facts he intends to work into a
book. There does not seem to be any-
Uning that saves credulity in the state-
ment of the age of foreign cheeses.
Judging from the obtrusive odor of some
of these cheeses, the afflicted smeller is
ready to believe they are not less old
than the pyramids.
Speaking of cheeses, the patriotie
American may find something of which
to boast in the dairy records of his own
land. Notas to age, but as to bigness
in cheeses. For example, the great polit-
ical Cheshire cheese, made in honor of
Thomas Jefferson, which weighea 1,600
pounds and was too large to be carried
on an ordinary wagon.
The history of that cheese would be
interesting to the smallest details, but
only the larger facts are known. When
Jetferson was first candidate for the
Presideney he was an object of particular
dislike and fear to the New England
theologians. He had spent much time
in France and was known to be an ad-
mirer of Voltaire, as any man with a
Keen sense of literary excellence must
be. Voltaire, at that time, was supposed
to be Satan’s chief agent on earth. Al-
though he would pass for a tame and
amiable infidel in these days of positiv-
ism, at that time he was thought to have
horns, and to have a good deal of tail
concealed about his cadaverous person.
So Jefferson was easily eharged with
infidelity, and New England was warned
that the anger of Heaven would be
called down if he should be made
President.
Elder John Leland, of Cheshire, in
Massachusetts, being a man of calmer
mind and with a sense of justice, raised
his sonorous voice against the campaign
of intolerance and slander, and he suc-
ceeded in bringing his entire congrega-
tion over to his view of Jefferson. When
the latter was elected, Elder Leland, in
order to show that Cheshire was glad of
it, asked every cow owner in the town
and environments to send in at least a
quart of milk on acertain day, or else
the amount of curd a quart would make,
for the construction of a mammoth
cheese. It was done. Captain John
Brown, the man who first discovered the
treason of Benedict Arnold, had a huge
cider mill, and on the appointed day
every man, woman, boy and girl in the
town marched in gaudy attire, carrying
milk to that mill. A great hoop was
made and into it the curd was poured,
and in due time the largest cheese in the
world was produced. I[t was drawn on
a specially constructed wagon to Wash-
ington and presented to the great man.
Beside the 22,000 pound Canadian
cheese exhibited at the Columbian Ex-
positiun, the 1,600 pound Jefferson cheese
would cut but a small figure: but the
incident tends to show the significance
of such a cheese as a gift, embodying, as
it does, the contributions of hundreds of
donors.
met by
reliable one to sell.
Prepared and guaranteed by the New York Condensed Milk Co.
and it highly indorses same.
. ee
+A COOKING SCHOOL
now exists which, recognizing the importance of having plenty of pure
Borden’s Peerless Brand
Evaporated Cream,
Merchants interested in supplying their
milk on hand for cooking purposes, has found its requirements fully
aie. sie. ails.
customers with satisfactory goods, at a reasonable profit to themselves,
will find that the Peerless Brand is a good article to purchase and a
E2™ For Quotations SEE Price CoLUMNS.
1:2
CHEH. MICHIGAN TRADESMAL
WHAT THE SLATE DID. |
Wm. H. Maher in Hardware.
My companion is aow the honored and |
trusted president of a prominent bank,
but for more than forty years previous |
he had been connected with the retail |
trade, and his name to-day is at the head |
of a large and prosperous incorporated |
eompany in the wholesale trade and well- |
known in three states.
We had been discussing some details of
bank mavagement when he asked: **Did
I ever tell you about my lucky slate?”
l answered that he never had, but I
was quite ready, then and there, to be
told about it.
He sat back in his chair, and his face
took on a look of enjoyment, as if the
recollections and associations were pleas-
ant to recall.
‘«sWhen I went into business,’’ he said,
“J had but very little money. Just as
we had got fairly started, the panic of
*57 struck us. I literally did net close
my eyes for two suecessive nights, while
1 worried over the situation. We had
bought goods too freely; many bills were
now due, and though we had enough
eoming to us to make us easy, if col-
lected, there wasevery reason to suppose
that our customers would plead the panic
as a good excuse for their inability to
pay. I had a partner who was of no use
whatever to mein this crisis. He wasa
fellow who was expert in scattering, but
a failure in drawing loose ends together.
1 blamed myself for having ordered
goods so blindly and so recklessly. I de-
termined that if 1 pulled through I would
make a change in methods or go out of
business.
“J went to the bank and said to the
cashier: ‘1 am in trouble—great trouble.
If 1 can’t get scme help I shall be forced
to the wall.’ ‘What’s the matter,’ he
asked; ‘trusted out too much, like every
young fellow who starts business?’
eres.” .
““*Yes.”’ said he, ‘1 know just how it
goes; you are acquainted with everybody
and everybody is acquainted with you.
Anything they want in your line they
have only to ask for; payment can take
eare of itself. 1 suppose about every
farmer in the county owes you, but tells
you that he can’t pay?’
<> ves.”
‘“**Just so; it’s the same story every-
where.
money?’
+All lean give youis my own note.
I shall not ask anyone to endorse for me,
for 1 will not endorse for any man. If>
you can lend me some money on my note,
I will go through all right, and I have
learned a lesson.’
***How much did I want?’
**] told him.
‘**All right; make out your note.’
“On my way back | went to a book |
store and bought a double slate and a}
pencil, which I tied to the frame. I)
called my partner and our one clerk to;
look at this slate. ‘This is to be at the |
eash drawer, and from this moment I}
want every sale we make entered on this |
left side, and every payment, no matter
how small, minuted on the other side.’
My partner poohpoohed the notion. ‘You
can’t keep it up three days,’ said he.
‘No one can stop toenter a sale when an-
other customer is waiting for his atten-
tion.’ 1 told him it could be done and
must be done. If he couldn’t do it with
his sales, I would doit for him. I! told
him it was absurd to say that we two and
our clerk could not do business with
some system. That the cash must be
made up every night, and if out of the
way, we must have our business so well
in mind that we could recall every trans-
action of the day and correct any errors.
‘Then,’ said I, ‘1 shall enter these daily
sales in a book, and my purchases next
month will not be one dollar more than
our sales foot up for this present month.
I am not going to lie awake again over
bills that I can see no way to pay. As
our sales increase, if they do increase, I
shall also add to my purchases; but un-
til that time my limit for any month
shall be the amount of the previous
month’s cash sales.’
‘“‘My partner still felt disposed to rid-
icule the slates, but he saw that I was
mightily in earnest. We began the new
Well, what have you to offer for }-
Every night for five years I made up the
cash myself. and if it was out cf order, |
kept at work among all of us until we
finally recalled the missing transaction
that was necessary to make a balance. |
paid off my note in the bank when it fell
due, but 1 gauged my purchases by our
sales so that 1 was not cramped again.
“One day the banker came into the
store smiling, as if he had a joke on me,
saying: ‘Lon, what is this Carter tells
me about some slate you have? What is
it? I'd like to see it.’
“I pointed to the slate lying on the
ledge near the cash drawer: There it is.’
‘“**But what is it? I didn’t catch Car-
ter’s point, but 1 was interested enough
to come over here to see it.’
‘J told him to go behind the counter
and look at it. He did this, and then
looked for an explanation. I gave it,
telling him it was started the day that |
made the loan at his bank; that it gave
me a picture each day of my business,
and educated us all as to the value of a
little item, if that item happened to
prevent our cash from balancing, and
also that by the lessons it taught me one
month I gauged my purchases the next.
‘“‘He looked at the slate in an amused
way, laid it down and started for the
door, but before he reached that he turned
around and said, in a voice intended for
my own ears: ‘Lon, whenever you want
to borrow any more money, come to me
and you can have it.’
“But my slate took me out of the ranks
of the borrowers, very soon, placing me
where I could pay cash for goods, and
even discount my bills. We have been
through some severe panics since that of
57, but | was able to sleep at nights, so
far as worry about business was con-
cerned. Thatis the story of my slate;
but now to get back to our business
here.’’
But it seems to me that the story is
worth telling to a larger audience.
—>>- -> <<
Use Tradesman Coupon Books.
The President
of the Mnit
GREETING :
Ne.s Jersey,
it has lately exhibited its said Bill of Complaint
of New Jersey,
complained of, and that the said
To
HENRY KOCH,
ed States of America,
your Clerks, attorneys, ager .,
salesmen and workmen, and all claiming or
holding through or under you,
Whereas, it has been represented to us in our Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
in the Third Circuit, on the part of the ENOCH MORGAN’S SONS COMPANY, Complainant, that
in our said Circuit Court of the United States for the District
against you, the said HENRY KOCH, Defendant, to be relieved touching the matters therein
ENOCH MORGAN'S SONS COMPANY,
Complainant, is entitled to the exclusive use of the designation ‘‘SAPOLIO” as a trade-mark for scouring soap.
Mow, Cherefore, we do strictly command and perpetually enjoin you, the said HENRY
KOCH, your clerks, attorneys, agents, salesmen and workmen, and all claiming or holding through or under you
.ader the pains and penalties which may fall upon you and each of you in case of disobedience, that you do
absolutely desist and refrain from in any manner unlawfully using the word ‘‘SAPOLIO,” or any word or words
substantially similar thereto in sound or appearance, in connection with the manufacture or sale of any scouring
soap not made or produced by or for the Complainant, and from directly, or indirectly,
that
false or misleading manner.
atituess,
which is not Complainant’s s
[SEA
ROWLAND COX,
system that very hour, and we kept it up. |
Complainant
A1¢
1 manufacture, and from in any way
valicttor
By word of mouth or otherwise, selling or delivering as
“SAPOLIO.” or when “SAPOLIO” is asked for,
using the word ‘‘SAPOLIO” in any
The honorable MeLvitLeE W. FuLver, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the
United States of America, at the City of Trenton, in said District of New
Jersey, this 1th day of December, in the year of our Lord, one thousand,
eight hundrci and ninety-two.
[SIGNED]
Ss D, OLIPHANT,
Clerlt
a (uate
»
t: Dr.l ROL,
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN .
MEN OF MARK.
Daniel Lynch, Manufacturer of Ex-
tracts and Baking Powder.
Daniel Lynch was born in 1852, at
Newport, R. L., but a year later his
father came to Grand Rapids. Here
Daniel was sent to school until he was
16 years old, when he was apprenticed
to Arthur Wood at blacksmithing. He
remained with Mr. Wood four years, and
then, at 20 years of age, he went to
Painesville, Ohio, where he worked at
his trade; he remained there one year.
At 21 he returned to Grand Rapids and
bougbt an interest in the earriagemak-
ing and blacksmithing business of Chas.
E. Bisnette, corner of Mt. Vernon and
West Bridge streets. The great fire of
1875, which devastated the entire busi-
ness portion of the West Side, swept
away the business of Bisnette & Lynch,
and Mr. Lynch was forced to turn his at-
tention to something else. He finally
bought a lot on the corner of Grandville
and First avenues, erected a building and
started a grocery. This he conducted
for two years when he sold out and
moved to Blanchard, Mich., and engaged
in general trade. Six years after locat-
ing in Blanchard, he was again visited
by the fire fiend and building and stock
were almost a total Mr. Lynch
once more returned to Grand Rapids and
this time bought an interest in the lum-
bering firm of Wood, Beeson & Co. Nine
years ago he sold out and bought Chas.
S. Yale’s interest (which amounted to
two-thirds of the whole) in the business
in which he is at present engaged, the
firm name being F. D. Yale & Co.
Eighteen months later he bought out his
partner and assumed entire control of
loss.
the business. When Mr. Lynch first
went into the business it was located at
40 and 42 South Division street, but five
years ago it was moved to its present lo-
cation on South Ionia street. These
premises have long been inadequate to
the requirements of the business, and
Mr. Lynch decided to build. He finally
chose as a building site the northeast
corner of Ellsworth avenue and Island
street, and the commodious and conven-
ient five-story building is now nearly
A cut of the new
connection
ready for eccupation.
building is shown in with
this sketch. The new building is nearly,
if not quite, twice as large as the present
premises, and will give ample acecommo-
dation to the business for years to come.
Mr. Lynch manufactures baking powder,
flavoring extracts and perfumes and has
a heavy trade in grocers’ and saloon-
keepers’ sundries. Itis the only estab-
lishment of the kind in Western Michi-
gan. Mr. Lynch is one of the most
modest and unassuming men in the
world, attends strictly to business, is
economical and practical, and, hence,
is successful. He is a member of the
K. of P. and also of the A. O. H. He
has just settled in his new home, at 146
South Lafayette street, where, with his
wife and four charming daughters, it is
hoped he may live long and happily.
A countryman was so impressed with
a gas stove on exhibition in a city store
that he invested in one, altogether ignor-
ing the fact that there was no gas in the
small village in which he lived. The
joke was that he did not know why the
thing would not work, until he had made
a second trip to the city with his com-
plaint.
—————— -- >
A good demand for machinery could
be built up in China, but it would be for
the cheapest sorts. The masses in that
country are very poor, the fishermen on
the sea coast being unable to buy com-
mon twine.
— _— oP =.
Use Tradesman Coupon Books.
Seely’s Flavoring Extracts
Every dealer should sell them.
Extra Fine quality.
Lemon, Vanilla, Assorted Flavors.
Yearly sales increased by their use.
Send trial order.
Seelys Lemon.
rapped)
loz. Pe she
Zon, 130 18 60
40x. 200 22 80
60z. 300 33 00
Seely's Vanilla
(Wrapped)
1 oz. $ 136 16 20
20z 200 21 60
40z. 3 75 4080
60z. 540 57 60
of 2,000 pounds of sulphate of ammonia
may be produced at an approximate ex-
+
pense of $21.11. - This field is said to be
four times as great as that of illuminat-
ing gas field. Here we are carried into
all the great and smal! industrial con-
Plain N.S. with
corkscrew at same
price if preferred,
Correspondence
Solicited
This A Good Thing ?
$15 for $4
You Want It!
You Have Yo Have It |
The haw Says You Shall Have It!
2,800 Labels
All in convenient form for immediate use as illustrated below, with in-
structions for using.
NO LABEL CASE NECESSARY.
THEY NEVER CURL.
THEY NEVER GET PIXtD UP.
Is
TRADESMAN (© COMPANY'S
CLASSIFIED UST OF
—=|POISONOUS DRUGS —-
ARRANGED IN FOURTEEN GROUPS WITH AN ANTIDOTE FOR EACH GROUP.
HOW G0 USG THGM 2:22 SSc re aerate aE ae ele ac eer
\
CAUTION —Use nd ones systeia of Poison Labels with this list
There are 113 poisonous drugs sold, which must all be labeled as such, with the
proper antidote attached. Any label house will charge you but 14 cents fer 250
labels, the smallest amount sold. Cheap enough, at aglance, but did you ever fig-
ure it out—113 kinds at 14 cents ?—$15.82. With our system you get the sa:ne re-
sults with less detail, for less than one-third the money.
Sent prepaid to any address, when cash accompanies order, for $4.
Tradesman Company,
Grand{j}Rapids, Mich.
SEELY MFG. CO.,} Detroit,joMich
-
wou ee
aQrire
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN
Wholesale Price Current.
Advanced— Declined—Borrac Acid, Citric Acid, Gum Opium, Castor Oil, Linseed Oil, Croton
Oil, Turpentine.
ACIDUM. ae edie waaues . 2 00 TINCTURES.
Aceticum . 8@ S mOChthiios.......... < S6@l 60
Benzoicum German.. 65@ 75 | Erigeron .... 1 50@1 60 Aconitum oe R..... =
ee “haa i ; Sonate eunce. “-— * Aloes epee
Carbolicum . a : a 49 i“ -
Quuioum ............. 42@ 45 | Gossipl!, Sem. gal... 0@ 75 ate? ® myrrh.
Bydroenior ........_. a 6S poner rete teen cee 1 25@1 40 eae “O
Nitrocum a ae pene ote settee eee e eens 50@2 00 Atrope Belladonna. a
a ee 10@ 12 —— Hila ie 90@2 00 S— =
Phosphorium dil...... 20 ese sents seeeee cons wee a coe
Salicylicum ...........1 25@1 60 | Mentha Piper..........2 25@3 00 eeeeheaaen ; mee sate =
Sulphuricum.... 1%@ 5 —— Vorig... See ee ge tennessee =
Tannicum ...... -+ 1 40@B1 60 | sroremaee, gal......... in... s
Tartaricum........... 30@ 33 a. iia 90 3. See
AMMONIA. 3 Liquida, (gal. 35) 10@ 12] C# a weet tee eee =
awe. 06 és a 6 %@1 04 | recereee ses eeeee
a 30 deg. 6@ _8| Rosmarini ee 8
Carnie oc. 12@ 14 Rosse, ounce. [oli ake as 50
Chioridum ............ 12@ 14 | QUAM. ---+- seeeeeeee one = rf f 60
ANILINE. Sental sprite cere 50@7 00 ee: =
ae 2 00@2 25 | Sassafras... S0@ 55] 6 tee a -
cea 80@1 00 a ess, ounce. = Digitalis - 50
ee 45. 50 ma wri ben eee oo. a Ergot........ 50
Se coy 2 50@3 00 | Thym oe 3 ao | Gentian ” 50
BACCAE. ‘heobromas........... 15@ 20 a . S
ubeae (po 25)...... 20@ 2 POTASSIUM. a gan 22 6
Juniperus .......-..... a rae... ae ae. le
Xanthoxylum.. .... 2 30] Bichromate ........... iam 14) Hyoseyamas....... ........ 50
BALSAMUM. — ee 2 . Todi ag ae lS
Pia ah ab li a A a fT 7
Copaiba . 45@_ 50 | Chlorate (po 23@25).. 2 26 | Ferri Chloridum.......1/)1) 35
Peru vices | OS Sl wenide os. ET 50
Terabin. Canada ae |. eo engiene Some Oo LObeM 50
Tolutan . ----- 35@ 50] Potassa, Bitart, pure.. 23@ 25|Myrrh....................... 50
CORTEX. Potasse, Bitart, : & ™ on os... =
~ | Pota ao... Se wee §
Abies, Canadian.... ......- 18] Potass Sen. ae ™]@ 9 R cane eee 50
Coasiae aa a Prusetate .. ea ee er ee
‘inchona Flava .....--- .-- erpeete ye........... 1 18
Euonymus atropurp........ 30 * orn = Auranti Cortex. tite ee sees =
Myrica Cerifera, po........-. 20 . atau Pica end recap aac... =
Prunus — ae eas = So So , 20 = Vo vrer ccc e erences ore -
ctu etme se MPO IMM ech at coun ey 2 P| gai lot al hd alt
Sassafras ¥e a srgaars = — ee = 3s Cassia en. west ereee one -
‘o (Ground 15)...... Pare ee, | ee ee
rs ee. 20@ 40 Serpentarta .. soteereeee 50
EXTRACTUM. Gentiana (po. 12)..... 8@ 10 Stromontum.... a 60
Glycyrrhiza Glabra... U@ 2% Glychrrhiza, (py. 15).. 16@ 18 i 60
po. 33@ 35 —_ conten, Ve. os an waa v+++. 50
Haematox, iS Ib. ‘pox.. 11@ 12 Go. 3 @ 30 Cretrum Voride............ 60
TB coos ces 13@ 14} He tebore, Ala, po.... 15@ 20 MISCELLANEOUS.
‘“ Oe sees: 14@ 15] Inula, =. aS ee 15@ 2
“ Beye san 16@ 17 Ipecac, p Le, 1 40@) 50} ther, Spts Nit,3 F.. 2@ 30
FERRU Iris eine a. 35@38).. 35@ 40 ' " 47.. oo M
ene, 0 ............ 40@ 45 24@ 3
Carbonate Precip...... @ 15] Maranta, ¥s......... @ 35
Citrate and Quinia.... @3 50 Podophyllum po. 15@ 18 3@ 4
Citrate Soluble......-.. @ 80! Rhei..._.. 75@1 00 |. soa oo
Ferrocyanidum Sol. @B Oa oe @1 75 a... .. I1@ 5
Solut Chloride.. : = 5 py Aen .. T5Q@1 35 et Potass T. 55@ 60
Sulphate, com’l....... 9% 7 a Se Sl Avtipyrm............. @1 40
" pure... «... @ Sanguinarfa, (po 25).. @ 20] Antifebrin............. @ 2
— Seta el 30@ 35} Argenti Nitras, ounce @ 5)
—_- on | Sen Snap GO| Arecnicum. =... |. | 5@ 7
Avaiee ...)..-5.... 4... See Simflax, Officinalis. H g 40 | Balm Gilead Bud.. 38@ 40
Anthemis ........-.--- 30@ 35 M 25 | Bismuth 8S. N.. -1 60@1 70
Matricaria—_—ié‘éi ees 50@ 65 | Sotilae, (po. 85)........ 10@ 12] Calcium Chior, ‘ts, ‘(Ks
FOUIA ee, Fosti- aes MR, 14)... 11
18@ 50] dus, po......... .... @ 3 | Cantharides Russian,
Cassin, Acuiitol, Tin. _ valeriana, Eng. (p0.30) @ 25) PO-..----..--..-..--. @1 00
nivelly ..-.-- --..-+- @ 28! ioiera et BS 3 | Capac Fructus, af... @ 2%
s Alx. 353@ 50 cuentas 3 rete seee eens 18 20 i : @ 28
Salvia officinalis, 148 eiper 7.-......... a si . @ 20
and i68.............- 15Q@ 25 SEMEN. cnet aS a ) 108 :
Cate ..........-- 8@ 10] anisum, (po. 20). @ si Athen . 73 oe a 8
OUMMI. aye (graveleons) .. - 18g 73 | Cera Flava...........) 38@ 40
tk phoked.... GS Cle ae >| Coccus .... i 40
—— 2d oe i @ 40 peat La IBY. ea A = Cassia Fructus. S $ 25
ee oo. tos j2 | Centraria........... @ 10
‘gifted sorts.. G wl as Ga. COOnGeeS ....,......., @ 40
Wi Me cand 80@ 80 — ail so Chloroform . 80@ 63
Aloe, Barb, (po. 60)... 50@ 60) Cydoniam, ........ TL 0 « aquibbs. 1.5
Cape, (po. 20)... @ I”) Dinterix Odorate..... 2 40@2 60 | Chloral Hyd rst. 251 50
i @ ©! Foeniculum........ @ 15 wate : a po =
—— 1s 8 nchonidine,
—_—. af i, ag eee a German 8%@ 12
ammmsaiae | + 8 : rd. (bbl. = 4 orke, liat, dis. per tl
Assafcstida, (po. 35).. 40@ = = ilheaetanell if Se at ee. 75
Bensoinum.......----- 2 8 | paar iarinCanartan | 4@ 5{Creasotum .......... @ 3
Camphors......------: 48@ 52 a 6@ 7 i (Dbl 7%)... a =
Euphorbium po ...... >@, 10) sinapis Albu......... = s,s = 2
Galbanum.........---- _ 50 } igra - 1@ 12 ; Sede ees 9@ 11
Gamboge, po. | an nc ubra...... @ 8
Guaiacum, (po 35). @ 30 SPIRITUS. Crocua .... 35@ 40
Kino, (po 1 = we teeee @) 4 Frumenti, ee os ~ 2 00@z 50 | Cudbear... S@ 2a
Mastio ... .....------ @ pod F. R.....1 7%5@2 00 | Cupri Sulph.... 5@ 6
Myrrh, (po. 45) wi @ 4 ea eee a 1 25@1 50} Dextrine...... ..... 10@ 12
Opii (po 3 003 G0)..2 20@2 25 | Juntperia Co. 0. T..111 65@2 00 | Bther Sal ph a 00@ %
Shellac ........2+-+++: . 35@ Z “6 ae 75@3 50 Emery, all numbers. @
mf “ pieached..... 33@_ 9% | Saacharum N. E...... 1 73@2 00 @ 6
Tragacanth ........--- 40@1 00 Spt. Viet Gell.......- 1 T5@6 50 | Ergota APO.) 7 70@ 75
HERBA—In ounce packages. a — ee beccete : 25Q2 00] 5 Fiake a 12@ 15
5 MEN EER ce cvs sno +k MM OO 8 CREED a ons ten ncsen
soe er ea a Geum. Ea 7 $ -
Kupatorium ......----------- * SPONGES. Gelatin Cooper oe @ 60
—- Ss ee = Florida sheeps’ wool can rua 30@ 50
Majorum .-...----- co oan Cae o0 00 .. 2 50Q@2 7 Genin flint, by box 80.
Mentha 18 Piperiia..- ‘"7"'"" Os | Nassau sheep’ woo! Less than box 75.
easton ae walele Geass: sau 20 Glue, Brown.......... 9@ 15
Tanacetum, i EU EE 22 | "woo! carriage....... 1 10 ae 183@ 25
Thymus, V......---------- > a yellow shee CrpOertie 00.6)... 14@ 2
Extra y a Grana Paradisi @ 2
—— RENE - «0 + ao <= & Hone 253@ 55
Calcined, Pat.....--.-- = — er es | Hydraag Chior Mite.. @ 75
Sit. wsitncwiin S| . _- S&S
ai ‘ x Rubrum
Gaenaie. Jennings. 35@ 36] Yellow Reef, for slate ca a aso @ %
cide ee a toon wa =
bsinthium. .........2 50@3 00 SYRUPS. Grareyrum ......... @ 6
Amygaalae, Duic... “: oa = Acousta ne zie ishthyabotia, Ae = =
Amarae.. ! NS
Aniel oops ime... 60 aes Resubi........ 3 503 90
Auranti Cortex....... t Oe OO) Perret tod... ............ SOT tetorerm......:....... @4 70
Bergamii ........-..-- 3 00@3 20| Auranti Cortes.............. eT 25
Cajiputi ...........--- 60@ 65] Rhei Arom......... 50 | L copodium . ee 20@ 5
Caryophylli . 75@ 80} Similax Officinalis.. aimee... at 0@ 75
Cedar oe = - » os “ “ 3 = Li eae et Hy- en
heno ae. ie eri Somers ...................... Ot eee noe. ..........
Seunecnenti ew leese -1 2031 95 | Heltiae.........<.. 50 a 10@ 12
Citronella ..........- - 2 & - Oe. a —. ulph (bb i 2
Conium Mac.......... es 465) Toaten ..................5.- 50} 1%). sees SHO
MI ec iscs er sy os S60 0! Prunes ¢irg.............. - Mannis, OW ussias 63
_— S. P. &W. 205@2 30] Seidlitzs Mixture.. @ 20} Linseed, boiled.. .... 53 56
_u. 7G & —. @ 18|Neat’s Foot, winter
C. OT @ SM mtaine........... 70
Moschis Canton. _ = 40 — I Ca De SpiritsTurpentine.. 35 40
yristica, No 1 .. 6 mr vow... ...... @ 35
Nux Vomica, (po 20).. @ 10 snuff. “Scotch, De. Voes @ 35 cslzmioininiine — Poe
Os. Sepia.. 18 | Soda Boras, (po. 11). 10@ 11] Red Venetian..........
Pope Saac, H. & P. D. Soda et Potass Tart... 24@ 25 Ochre, yellow ee ie 204
Co @e @ i Soda Carb............ pe fti....lUd ee... 1% 2@3
Picis Liq, NG. % gal Soda, BiCarh......... @ 5/| Putty, a, - 234 2%@3
ec a ea gi @2 00/ Soda, Ash.............34@ 4] strictly pure..... 2% 2%@3
Picts Lig., quarts ..... @1 00 | Soda, Sulphas.. i @ 2/{| Vermilion Prime a
ee 85 | Spts. Ether Co ........ 50@ 55] __ican. 13@16
Pil Hydrarg, (po. 80) . @ 50] ‘ Myrcia Dom..... @2 25 | Vermilion, English. 65@7
Piper Nigra, (po. 22 @ 1 ‘© Myrcia Imp... .. @3 00 | Green, aaa 2, 70@T
Piper Alba, (po $5) .. @ 3 * Vini Rect. bbl. Lead, red.
% 1D Cans...... o)
r 1 lb cans 1 53O
BATH BRICK
2 dozen in case.
ire .....-........ =
ee 80
Dae ....__.-..- i... =
BLUING. Gross
Arctic, : - ovals eae 3 60
ee » 6%
. pints, soaed........ 9a
- mee sifting box. 2%
- mee . £@
“ Ko. 5, ' se
1 ox ball a
Mexican Liquid, 4 0z 3 60
fx....... 6 ae
BROOMS,
Ao. 2 Hurl eu . 150
No.1 o a
No. 2 Carpet. ee 2 00
No. 1 Senet ee ee
Pitertieme 2 50
Common Whisk............ 80
Fanc ' a. 100
Warehouse.. 27
BRUSHES,
Stove, No. 4 eee ee ce 13
eee ee 1 50
e _ 15 eee 1%
Rice Root Scrub, 2 row.... 85
Rice Root Scrub, 3row.... 1 25
Palmetto, poose............ 1 50
CANDLES.
Hotel, 40 Ib. boxes.. —.
Star, 40 — 2
Paraffine cues foes 10
ee
OANNED GOODS,
Fish.
Clama.
Little Neck, >... 1 20
' 2... 1 90
Clam Chowder.
Standard, 3 Ib.. 2 25
Cove Oysters,
Standard, 11b =
2ib. : 13
Lobsters.
Star, : ~~ oa
2 Ib td oo
Picnic, ; Ib... 290
Pee i 2 90
Mackerel.
Standard, _ ee 110
ee 2 10
Mustard, 3 ib” be ence 2B
Tomato Sauce rn........ 22
Soused, 2 rs ee a
Columbia River, . 2.
1 65
: ae EST: 13
Scene oe 110
Siuineahs ee 1 95
Sardines.
American ee 440 5
Bee on oe
Imported ee Sw
DE eas ocr ue. —_—
a ee
oo 21
‘Trout.
aroek 6, ........- -2 50
Fruits.
Applies.
3 Ib. standard......... 1 20
York State, gallons 4 00
Hamburgh,
———
oe eek....... : 1 40
amen Cee........ ... 1 40
i. ..............- 1 50
Overland... a 1 #0
Blackberries.
oe 90
' Cherries.
ae. 1 10@i 2
Pitted ee '
ae... as 1 50
Erie 125
Damsons, ‘Eee Plums and Green
Gages.
S.C 1 20
California. .... 1 40
Gooseberries.
Common 13
Peaches.
Pie . ce 1 10
Maxwell . a es i 50
peor... 150
Cito, 160@1 75
Monitor
Oxtord....
Domestic .. 13
ek eee ee 1%
Pineapples.
CO 1 00@1 30
Johnson’s sliced...... 2 50
[ grated... 2%
Booth’s sliced. @2 5)
grated .. @2 %
Quinces.
eee 1 10
Raspberries,
eee Ez
Black Hamburg Lec. 1 46
Erie, biack .. 123
Strawberries.
Lawrence . 13
— a Oo
Erie.. \ 1 20
Terrapin - ee 16
Whortleberries,
Bineberries ........ i 85
Meats.
Corned beef. Laney. ....... 22
Roast beef Armour’s....... 1 80
Potted ham, a_i... ask
a... 70
tongue, ..-.....- 1 3
a
Chicken, % Ib....... 9%
Vegetables.
Beans.
Hamburgh stringicss....... 1%
French style..... 2 00
oe... 1 35
teed rere ce 13
. » cee paella 70
Lewis Boston Baked........ 13
Bay State Baked............ 1 35
World’s Fair Baked....... 13
Picnic Baked.. a
Corn.
Hamburgh ~ a oe
Livingston Eden . ee 1 2
a na
— See 140
Morn ng Glory..
eee 7
Peas,
Hamburgh mearrorest........5
early June . -..1 50
Cc hampion Eng..i 40
— ooe....... -< 40
ancy sifted....1 90
Soaked ee ee 65
Harris standard... a. a
VanCamp’s marrofat....... 1 10
- early June..... 1 30
Archer’s Early Blossom....1 25
Preeee.........- a
~ . Mushrooms.
RE ieee tiene oe 1921
Pumpkin.
ON otc ec 7
Squash,
es... 16
Sneccotash.
eee 1 40
Tomatoes.
a .................
eee a
eee
CHOCOLATE,
_ Baker’s,
Gormen Sweet... .........- 23
eee... ok oe 37
Breakfast Cocoa.......... 43
CHEESE,
eee i 11
es cc 11
eee... 1
Riverside . (oe 11
Gold Medal. hee ae ee 10%
Ski 8@a
15
1 00
Pes A 21
Limburger ee @15
Pineappie ...... @25
Hoauele ese @35
bse ee ores 22
Schwettrer, imported. @24
’ domestic S14
CATSUP.
Blue Label Brand.
Half pint, 25 bottles 2%
Pint " 4 50
Quart 1 doz bottles 3 50
Triumph Brand.
Eeit pint, per Gos........ 35
—E_L o_o 4 50
ert per Gok ..... ...... Bae
CLOTHES PINS.
5 gross boxes...... a 40@45
COCOA SHELLS.
et @3
Less — ok @3%
Pound packages... 6X%@7
COFFEE
Green.
Rio.
_—.......,...............
oe
raee............ cic.
ee
Santos.
—.............. ....
—-...............
Peeee......... 1... 22
Peaberry ... .23
Mexican and Guat famala.
Fair. os |
Good. ae
Fancy .. Lee ee a
Maracaibo.
ee
——............. ... a
Java,
ere. hone
Private Growth. . 1
Mandehling . oe
Mocha,
Imitation . / a
Arabian..... | oe
ecdted.
To ascertain cost of roasted
coffee, add \c. per !b. for roast-
ing and 15 per cent. for shrink-
age.
Package.
McLaughlin’s XXXX.. 22 36
Bunola 21 76
Lion, 60 or 100 1b. case ... 22 30
Extract.
— City « BTOSB........ 75
Fel 115
Hummel 8, foil, gross... oe 1 65
tin see 2 OO
CHICORY.
a 5
CLOTHES LINES,
Cotton, 40 ft.......per dos. 1 2
_ eee... : 1 40
" oere....... _ 1 66
r oe... ' 1 %5
. —....- wa 1 90
Jute oc..... " 85
72 ft 1 00
CONPENSED MILE,
4 dos. in case.
N.Y.Cond’ns’d Milk Co’s brands
Gail Borden Eagle..... ... 7 40
Re cl Seno 6 25
oe, fe Ee 5 75
eee...
ere... lL. 2
ne ...... “: 3 35
Peerless evaporated cream. 5 75
CREDIT CHECKS,
500, any one denom’ ~.... 83
1000,
“ e ‘“ 2
00
5 00
2000, 00
Steel Sees... 2...
COUPON BOOKS,
“Tradesman. '
8 1 books, per hundred.... 2 00
e 2 “ “a “ ae 2 50
g 3 “ “e “a 2 00
& 5 “s “ cry 3 oC
eee 4 00
sa + ek Las, (> OO
“Superior.”
% 1 books, per hundred ... 2 50
$2 - - e oe
83 ' o . 3 50
85 , ' - 4 00
#10 ' c C 5 00
#20 oe “ “ 6 00
Universal.”
% 1 books, per hundred... #3 00
$2 - _ oc eo
83 - ss .. -_o
$5 wes - .. 500
$10 . - . 6 00
$20 a 7 00
Above sited on coupon books
are subject to the following
quantity discounts:
200 books or over.. 5 per cent
500 te “ = “
1000 a “ oe “i
COUPON PASS BOOKS,
{Can be made to represent any
denomination from $10 down. |
7 ook... ............. 8 2 oe
— Ca . 2a
— * 3 00
a lO + eo
oo * . 108
ee” eet ee 17 30
CRACKERS.
Butter.
oe gt ET 5
Seymour XXX, cartoon..... 5
Malte See 5
Family XXX, ‘cartoon oe. 5%
Salted EXX....... es
Salted SSX, cartoon ...... 5%
Kenosha. neeees Te
Mk cc eee 7
ar Se... ..., ©
Soda.
eee, Bee... .....,.
Soda, City. Leena. ra
Soda, Macken... 8%
Cayeu Weeer.............. ‘10%
Long Island Wafers ....... 11
—
8. Oyster XXX. 5%
City Oyster. XXX. —
Farina Oyster.. ie ©
CREAM wipeieiinen
Strictly pure. Lee
Telfer’s Saesieae.. 30
ee 15@25
FLY PAPER.
Thum’s Tanglefoot,
pees Ghee............ 3 60
Rive come ioe... ...........3 oe
oi... 3 40
Less than one case, 40¢ “yg box
DRIED FRUIT
Domestic,
Apples
Sundried, sliced in bbls
. quertered ‘*
Evaporated, 50 Ib. boxes
Apricots.
California in bags . 10
Evaporated in boxes
Blackberries.
In boxes..
Nectarines
ore weee................
me te. WORN... ..........
Peaches.
Peeled, in boxes........
en
o in bags......
Pears.
California in bags..
Pitted Cherries.
ele iol ce
dl caval ina OC ne
=~ eee ete pe
Prunelies,
__
Raspberries.
re wee...
50 Ib, boxes..
Ib.
Raisins.
Loose Muscatels in Boxes,
UN ae
3 ee
4 ee ee ae 5
Loose meres in _——.
2 crown ae . 4%
3 ance oo» 6
Foreign.
Currants.
en - Saree. ........ 2%
bbls. . 2%
' = lees quantity .. 3
cleaned, buik...... 4%
5
cleaned, package..
Peel.
Citron, Leghorn, bt boxes 13
Lemon 8
Orange - 25 - - 10
Raisins,
Ondura, 29 lb. boxes @
Sultana, 20 o @8
Valencia, a
Prunes.
California, _t.........
90x100 25 Ib, bxs. 5%
. 80x90 [ . 6%
. 70x80 . 6%
a. 60x70 "
eee... ck. ne
eee
ENVELOPES.
XX rag, white,
No. 1, 6% .. $1 75
Wo. 2, 6%... 1 60
mee e.. 1 65
a 6... 5 1 50
xx wood, white.
wa. e....... 1 35
No. 2, 6% a. 1 3
Manilla, white.
Re eee pedes 4 oe 1 06
Coin
Mill No. 4 1 00
FARINACEOUS GOODS,
Farina,
om. beee...........;. 3%
Hominy.
MI eee ce eens. 3 00
oe a 3%
Lima Beans.
eee @4%
Maccaroni ~_ Veriateelit.
Domestic, 12 1b. b
Pepeeted..............- ioyeu”
Pearl ny
ei cee lata os 2 60
Peas.
roe, Oe os... 135
Spee Peres 3
Rolled Oats.
Schumacher, bbl......... $5 50
ae \% bbl 300
Poe I C.......... 4 90
Monarch, % bbl... .... .. 266
Quaker, cases... 3 20
Sago.
oreen ....... 0. i 4%
Bast India..... TT 5
Wheat.
OOM ce 3%
FISH --Salt.
Bloaters.
ere.
Cod.
Georges cured............ 4%
Georges genuine......... 6
Ceorges selected......... 6%
Boneless, bricks.. ...... 6%
Boneless, ee ou 6%
Halibut.
ee... 8,
Herring. e
Holland, white hoops as 70
YY _ 8S
eeetaita eu e.
Round, *% bb] 100 Ibs...... 2 50
_ me eo enaee 1 30
iia a, 19
Mackerel.
No.3 10 Me ott. e
Family, 90 dag oe
pho: eT
Sardines,
Reon, Roe... 55
Trou
No.1, % =, Toots caine 4 75
No. 1 4 b 40 } bs.. a OC
‘Ro. 2, tite ‘sme “- 63
mo 1.01) se. ..........; 53
Whitefish,
No. 1 family
% bbls, 300 Ibs... ae ing) 8 252%
1% ves. 280 120
10 Ib. kite idelelen ee os 8B
ee oo
MATCHES.
Globe{Match Co.’s Brands,
Columbia Parlor........... “ 25
ae Oe 1 00
Diamond Match Co.’ 8 Brands.
me. © Cee... .. ...,,.., 1 65
Jao ea is 170
Mes oie ci ccs. 110
ade cies, 400
FLAVORING EXTRACTS.
Souders’.
Oval Bottle, with corkscrew.
Best in the world for the money.
Regular
Grade
Lemon.
20a ....8
8 6.
Regular
Vanilla,
Jennings.
Lemon. =
2 . regular ee. 75
40 1 50 ; 00
60 . 2 00 3 00
No 3 reer... ua 35 2 00
No. 4 taper........ 1 50 2 50
Northrop’s
Lemon. Vanilla.
202 oval taper %5 1 10
3 0z i nz
2 oz regular ‘‘ 85 1 20
OZ . ° te 2 2
GUNPOWDER.
Rifle—Dupont’s.
oa... Le. 3 3
Half oe. 1 90
Quarter kegg........-...... 110
1 come. .......°....... 30
eee 18
oo ey sn
Half ce oe ce 112 40
Quarter a Lo eee ed to
11b cans. _o-
Eagle Duck—Dupont’s,
8 oo ‘11 00
Halt eee fe 5 %
ee 3 00
Oe oe. 60
ERBS,
Sage.. a
Hops... ae 15
INDIGO.
Madras, S ib. boxes. ...... 55
S. F., 2, 3 and 5 lb. boxes... 50
JELLY.
15 Ib. pails iene leds u @ 53
a. hl, @ 57
~~” le. @ W
aaa LICORICE.
Calabria ee 25
a
i. tones 10
LYE.
Condensed, : —- ia
es 2 2%
nine MEAT.
Mince meat, 3 doz. in case. 2 5
Pie preparation, 3 doz. in
one. a «(OC
MEASURES,
Tin, re dozen.
i eelion....... _<- | =
eee ee... Sc... 1 4
MN oe eda cecal 20
oe cae ne oi ee 45
oe Oe... ee.
40
Wooden, for vinegar, per doz.
1 gallon 7 00
Half gallon |
Ce
rm. “a
MOLASSES.
Blackstrap.
a i4
Cuba Baking
Cacieery .......:....-- 16
Porto Rico.
NN ee ces 20
row .....- a 30
New Orleans.
18
2
27
32
40
v
Half barrels 3c.extra
~—fes
~~ oe
~& je
I
~—fes
me ne
~s Ibo
f
TT?
<-o
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
17
PICKLES,
Medium.
Barrels, 1,200 count..
Half bbis, 600 count.. @:
Small.
@5 50
3 25
Barrels, 2,400 count. 6 00
Half bbis, 1,200 count 3 50
PIPES.
Clay, Re A6........:... 1 70
~ 2. 2. oe couss......:.
eee 8... Lo 1 20
POTASH,
48 cans in case,
eee 4 00
renna Galt Coe.......... 3 00
RICE,
Domestic.
Carolina ae fhe 6
me 8... ae
” ee ae 5
RS co 4
Imported.
Japan, _ 4 eaee eae eee es clue 5%
Se ace ae ees 5
wee ecccccecccce 5
PO deraad 4%
SPICES,
Whole Sifted,
Bee. 9%
Cassia, China in mats...... 8
. Batavia in bund....15
' Saigon fn rolls...... 2
Cloves, Amboyna...... i.
e oe 11%
mace Eeterm....... ..-.... 80
Nutmegs, _ cea eee %5
Die uaes 70
. No. ie oe nese cea 50
Pepper, Singapore; —-- .10
120
" one... .. -16
Pure Sean in Bulk.
eee... ess... 15
Cassia, Batavia... ee
and Saigon.25
° a 35
Cloves, Amboyns...........22
. ne 18
Ginger, African Dace cea 16
Po... .....- 20
. 5 amaica . 22
meeoe Meters. .............. 65
Mustard, ‘teste and Trieste. .22
eee ees ue 25
Mutmees, No.2 ............. vs)
Pepper, Ricans black....16
: - white. ....24
c Cayenne...... 20
............
“Absolute” In Packages,
4s Ys
Bemeere.-...-.. .cc.., 1 55
ere. ............ oF 1
A sk, 84 1 55
Ginger, Jamaica ..... 8 155
" Brrreen........ 413%
eee 4 156
Poeeet ................ 84 155
cc rns wae 84
SAL SODA.
Granulated, We a 114
7G1D cases...... 1%
Lump, a |... 1 15
16> Kees........._- 1%
SEEDS.
OO os. a... @i5
Canary, Smyrna....... 4
Cee ok es. 8
Cardamon, Malabar.. 90
Hemp. Russian... 4
Mixed Bird........... 5@6
Mustard, white....... 10
ee 9
Meee LL... 5
Cree bone........... 30
STARCH,
Corn.
ere Sonor... 5X
oo ee eee Oe
Gloss.
1-lb ae. veces _o
3-ib bee erie aes 5
6-1 ee so
and SD ib. boxeés........-. 35g
Barrels.. ee,
“SN U FF
Scotch, in bladders, . na
Maccaboy, in jars.. oo
french Rappee, in Jars..... 43
SODA,
i a es cane ne Shy
Kens. Sgngiish oss be ews a 4%
SAL’
Diamond Gr ry stal,
Cases, 243 lb. boxes......8 1 60
Barrels, —————eeee 2 50
115 2% Ib — 4 00
, C65 Ib ss
. a0 i> “ » ooo
Butter, 66 > baee......... 65
- 50 Co ee 3 50
- SOD ORs ........ 2
ee 22
Worcester.
115 2%-lb sacks | 84 (0
ee 3%
aa i. 3 50
ore 3 40
en 2 60
7 o... ........... 32%
linen mie 60
* Common Grades.
100 3- -. sacks ee ...82 10
ee el 2 00
28 10- 1b. — Gee a wc ie 1 85
56 lb. dairy In drill. bags. . 2
238 lb. “ “ “ 16
Ashton.
56 lb. dairy in linensacks.. 75
iggins.
656 1b, dairy in linen sacks. 75
Soiar Rock.
7s, GOORE....... . ...... 22
Common Fine.
on cic aac. go
CN ik coos cya ces. 80
SALERATUS,
> Packed 60 lbs. in box.
Church’s o.oo
DeLand’s ee
Dwight’s i... 2S
Taylor’s 3 00
SEELY’S EXTRACTS.
Lemon.
oz. F - . 90 doz. $10 20 gro
" x 20 ne ~
. y M. 14 40
: a **
Vanilla,
108. 7.0.1 50don. i¢ gro
a ey 21 60
s* Feeow ao
Roecoco—Second Grade.
Lemon.
2 0z. ott Ge... so “
Vanilla.
2Goe...... 1@0Goes8.....0 co ‘
SOAP.
Laundry.
Allen B. Wrisley’s Brands,
Old Country, 90 1-Ib........% 3 A
a -
Good Cheer, 601 Ib.. ;
-.3 65
White Borax, 100 %- Ib..
Proctor & Gamble,
Comoderd........ a Ce
Ivory, - oz. ee case 6 75
ee 4 00
cae eae weno eels cs 3 65
Mottled German........... 3 15
Town Tee................. 20
Dingman Remade.
emer Be. 1... 3 %5
5 box lots, delivered....... 3
10 box lots, delivered...... 3 7
Jas. S. Kirk & Co.’s Brands.
American Family, — "d..83 33
. plain... 2 27
N. K. Fairbank & Co.’s Brands.
elite (late............... 4 oe
Brown, 60 bars.. ie
- a 3 25
Lautz Bros. & Co.’s Brands.
ome... 3%
Cotton Oil... .. 6 00
Peemertee. 4 00
oe, 4 00
Thompson & Chute Co.’s Brands
i 3 65
Sone. 3 30
Savon Improved...... i. oe OO
SuBnower 2 80
Cote. 3 25
Eeonomical ......... 2 2
Passolt’s Atlas Brand,
Minme BON, 3 65
SOOk To 3 60
10 box lots. t deeeee a 2 oe
25 box lowiaen 3 40
Scouring.
Sapolio, kitchen, 3 doz... 2 40
hand, 3doz....... 2 40
SUGAR.
Below are given New York
prices on sugars, to which the
wholesale dealer adds the lo-
cal freight from New York to
your shipping point, giving
you credit on the invoice for
the amount'fof freight buyer
Ewe from the market in which
2€ purchases to his shipping
point, including 20 ‘pounds. for
the weight of the ba rrel.
Pomme...
Cut Loaf.
Cubes .
Powdered a
XXXX Powdered...
Granulated .
Extra Fine Granulated
Boa n
Diamond ( ‘onfee, A...
Confec. Standard A
1
SYRUPS,
—_
Barrels.. a
Heese 26
Pure Cane.
TA BLE SAUCES
Lea & Perrin’ S, are ...... 4%
Omall..... 2%
Halford, a 3 75
Pe _22
Salad Dressing, laree ..... 465
Meh... . 4 2 65
TEAS.
JAPAN—Regular. |
Pee i @l7 |
ME oc ceric se @20
Cneice....... iodo or |
Cuceeess.....,.... ....08 Ge |
Dust Lele owe --10 @12
SUN CURED.
i @l7
moan. ....... coma. Bw
Caeenee. 2... 24 @2e
CxrCeee......-...-....28 Ge
ee eee -_ .... Bie
BASKET FIRED.
at. .... «16 Gm
Choice. . oe B25
Choicest. @35
Extra choice, ‘wire lear
GUNPOWDER.
Common to faiz.......2% @35
Extra fine to finest... .50
Choicest fancy....... 15 @85
OOLONG,
Common to fair... ...23
IMPERIAL.
Common to fair..
Superior tofine.....
YOUNG HYSON.
Commor to fair.......18 26)
Superior to fine....... 30 @40
ENGLISH euunaruic’ we
ae... ......, ....... 22
Choice. . 24 @28
Ome... ....-...- 40 @5O
TOBACCOS,
Fine Cut,
P. Lorillard & Co.’s Brands.
Sweet Russet..........30 @32
(Winer... 30 1
D. Scotten & Co’s Brands.
Hiawatha. . 60
ee 32
Rocret.....- ... 30
Spaulding & Merrick’ s Brauds.
a 30
Private Brands.
Bazoo. ‘ @30
Can C an. od ee ewees se @27
Nellie ee -
Teacher—Now, Johnnie, we’ve beep
hearing of the changing seasons; how
can we tell when fall is here?
Johnnie—’Cause everybody’s
smell of camphor balls.
There are 68,000 post offices in the
United States. About 67,000 of them
do not pay their running expenses. The
profit of the New York city post office is
$4,000,000 a year.
Oid maids are not so particular as
might be supposed, judging from some
of the specimens of men they accept in
the course of time.
clothes
SPM ELE 0
And Jobbers of
ALL KINDS OF FUEL,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
WORLD'S FAIR SOUVENIR TIGKETS
ONLY A FEW LEFT.
Original set of four - : -—)- 25¢
Complete set often - - - am a4 50c
Order quick or lose the opportunity of
a lifetime to secure these souvenirs ata
nominal figure. They will be worth ten
times present cost within five years.
Tradesman Company,
Crystal Springs Woler & Fuel Go.
Jobbers of
COAL, COKE and WOOD,
65 Monroe St.,
GRAND RAPIDS, MICH.
Correspondence solicited with outside
dealers.
Have you seen our ‘‘Sunbeam’’ line
Children’s and
Patent
Sewed
Shoes ?
of Machine
Misses’ Dongola
Tip, Heel or Spring. 6 to 8 @ 65e—8%
to 1146 @ T5e—12 to 2 @ 900.
HIRTH, KRAUSE & CO.
coer BIOS. SMOG G0,
STATE AGENTS FOR
The Lycoming Rubber Company,
keep constantly on hand a
full and complete line of
these goods made from the
purest rubber. They are
good style, good fitters and
give the best satisfaction
of any rubber in the mar-
ket. Our lite of Leather
Loots and Shoes is com-
plete in every particular,
also Felt Boots, Sox, ete.
Thanking you for past favors we now
await your further orders. Hoping you
wiil give our line a careful inspection
when our representative calls on you,
weare REEDER BROS’. SHOE CO.
WE WANT TO BUY
1,000 to 2,000 Cords Dry, 16 in. Beech and Maple.
Office
Y. M. C. A. Building,
Grand Rapids.
C. & W. M. delivery preferred.
GRANT FURL X IGK 6O.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Anthracite and Bituminous Coal.
Correspondence Solicited.
1
4
«
Cm
~—
j
« s
~ yr
Vu >
ao ie
= .
{
«.
Deacon Hess’ Impressions of Toronto.
Wm. T. Hess has been to Toronto. He
wanted to let the readers of THE TRADES-
MAN know what he thinks of the Queen
City of the Dominion, so he wrote a let-
ter, of which the following is a copy ver-
batim et literatim:
Toronto, Aug. 27—Il presume you
know befor: this that I have skipped.
That pill which Grover had to prepare
himself to swallow was so large, and he
had to expand himself to such an extent,
that I feared he might engulf me, so, like
a number of financiers we know, I took
refuge with Queen Vic. [THe TRADEs-
MAN announced tho fact of Mr. Hess’
disappearance last week, but was misin-
formed as to the cause: But if the Presi-
dent must swallow either Hess or the
tariff bill, he is advised to take the tariff
bill.] Some years ago I wrote you about
her frog pond, meaning that portion of
Ontario comprised in the counties of Es-
sex, Kent and Elgin. There is no frog
pond there now. - Instead I found myself
being whirled through as pleasant and
well-cultivated a section of country as
one could wish to see. This is a great
country to live in—plenty of water to
wash and fish in, and good whisky to
drink, good company enough to keep one
from being miserable and enough to see
to fill in the time. [Given these condi-
tions the Deacon’s friends will see no
reason why he should not be perfectly
happy.| We put up at the Queén’s Hotel.
In 1860 the Prince of Wales stopped here
and I thought what was good enough for
him was good enough for a Michigander.
The people of this city date everything
from the time of the Prince’s visit, but I
suppose all that will bechanged now and
history will date from the time I affixed
my million dollar signature to the,
Queen’s Hotel register. Why not?
{Canadian air has not decreased the size
of the Deacon’s head any, evidently. |
Toronto is a handsome city, whose
churches, Government and other public
buildings and business blocks are the
pride of every citizen. But more to me
are the well-built private homes and ten-
ements, with their well-kept grounds and
beds of flowers. Flowers everywhere—
on private and public grounds; around
the engine house and switchman’s shanty;
about the guard’s cabocse at the railraad
crossing, and on the peanut stand on the
street corner—flowers until you can’t
rest. The parks are aglow with flowers
which are now in full bloom and at their
best. They say that is the English way,
and it is a good enough way for me. It
adds greatly to the attractiveness and
beauty of the city. The streets of this
city are kept marvelously clean. They
are swept every night—not scraped with
a shovel.
Manager Johnson could come here and
get some good ideas on street car service.
We make the claim that our system is as
good as any in the country, and, indeed,
few are better; but this city has a street
car service that has no superior on the
continent. The roadbed is smooth and
solid, and there is no jolting or jarring.
The various lines diverge from the cen-
tral part of the city towards all points of
the compass, and running far out into the
suburbs. A belt line connects all the
outlying districts with each other and
with the heart of the city. The fare is 5
eents, with transfers which are good
from main lines to belt line and vice
versa. Tickets can be bought from the
conductor at six for 25¢e or 25 for $1.
From 6 to 7 a. m., from 12m. tol p. m.
and from 6 to 7 p. m. the fare is still less,
giving the laborer cheap transportation
to and from his work. Cars run from 6a.
m. until midnight every 15 minutes on
all lines; after midnight one car per hour
until morning. No Sunday cars. They
run at about the same speed that cars do
at home, but with very little noise. All
the lines are owned by the city, which
leases them to acompany at a fair rental.
It is all so ‘‘Hinglish, you know,”’ but if
some of our American cities were not so
free in donating valuable franchises to
private parties they would save a good
many dollars. We can safely pattern
after this fair city in many things with
good results.
Preparations are nearly completed for
holding the Toronto Industrial Exposi-
tion, which opens Sept. 3, which, it is
claimed, will be the best ever held. 1
have nearly reached the end of my rope,
but may find something more to say be-
fore | return. I must not forget to men-
tion their natural parks; there are sev-
eral of them and they are the largest and
finest | have ever seen. What a magnifi-
cent field they would make for some of our
boodle aldermen to get in their work!
Just appoint a commission, make an ap-
propriation—and the thingis done. Just
one thing more. [ have not seen one
sign reading ‘‘Keep off the Grass.” One
and all run over and picnic on the grass
and no one dares to molest them or make
them afraid. Does it hurt the grass?
Not a bit. It looks better than with us
in spite of all our exasperating signs. A
good place for Coxey. Wma. T. HEss.
THE TRADESMAN has a great and very
kindly interest in Deacon Hess, but it
does not think he will remain long in
Toronto. If he should stop long his
friends would not recognize him on his
return—or Toronto would lose its repu-
tation.
The Demand for
Smaller Packages.
There is a subjeet which should en-
gage the serious attention of the Grand
Rapids Fruit Growers’ Association with-
out delay, and that is the size of the
baskets in which fruit, especially
peaches, is brought to market. There is
no objection to the bushel baskets for
delivery to this market, or for home con-
sumption, but the fruit will not carry
any considerable distance in large pack-
ages. The air cannot circulate through
the fruit and, if itis more than twenty-
four hours in transit, the fruit in the
bottom of the basket becomes soft and
unfit for use. Michigan peaches are
conceded to be the finest in the world;
the climate appears to be just right for
their proper and perfect development,
and it is a pity that they should be
spoiled in shipment. California peaches
are sent out in small packages holding
about one-fifth of a bushel, and, as a re-
sult, they stand the journey across the
continent without appreciable deteriora-
tion. Their appearance sells them, and
sells them for fully twice as much as
Michigan peaches bring. This is not the
ease in the early part of the season only,
but it is true at present, and will con-
tinue to be true until Michigan peach
growers awake to a realization of the
fact that their package is a failure. If
a smaller package were put up, say one
holding one-third of a bushel, the fruit
could be shipped to any part of the
country without damage. Says the
Minneapolis Commercial Bulletin:
“The Michigan peach has never had a
fair show in this market, and it is not
at all probable that any reform will be
worked in this line this season, The
more showy California peach—that large,
fair and leathery fruit, with staying and
showing qualities—has taken the popu-
ular eye, and, for this reason, has hin-
dered the Michigan fruit from proving
its excellence to the popular palate.’’
This preference for California fruit
cannot be overcome without an effort,
nor without the expenditure of time and
money, but the result is worth working
for. If Michigan peaches are given a
fair show it will need no prophet to predict
the end. A reduction in the size of the
package to, at least one-third the pres-
ent size, and careful handling, coupled
with the vigorous work the Association
is now doing in other directions, will
soon accomplish the desired result. Per-
haps it may be too late to do much this
season, but itis not too early to begin
the work of reform for next year.
Established 1868.
H. M. Reynolds & Son.
Building Papers,
Carpet Linings,
Asbestos Sheathing.
Asphalt Ready Roofing,
Asphalt Roof Paints,
Resin, Coal Tar.
Roofing and Paving Pitch,
Tarred Felt, Mineral Wool,
Elastic Roofing Cemcnt
Car, Bridge and Roof Paints, Oils.
Practical Roofers
In Felt, Composition and Gravel.
Cor. Louis and Campau Sts., Grand Rapids
PECK’S
Pay the best profit.
HEADACHE
POWDERS
Order from your jobber
~~ ih WW.
The Leading
Nickle Cigar
Made inthis Market.
The Only Brand in the State (outside of Detroit)
Made by Improved Machinery.
This Cigar is made with Long Mixed
Filler, Single Connecticut Binder
and Sumatra Wrapper.
Sold at $385 per 1,000
By the Manufacturer,
G. J. Johnson,
Telephone 1205.
[
Collar and Hoide
Holds any pipe.
Fits any flue. Ab
solutely soot and
spark proof. Im
possible for pipe
to work loose.
is neat, durable,
inexpensive
Patented.
Liberal discount
to the trade
347 South Division St"
Grand Rapids,
Mich.
One dealer in
towns of 1,000 or
less.
Write for prices
to L. D. Sanborn,
Grand Rapids,
Mich., ..&
et
Sole Agent for this State.
J.jK. Randles, Manufacturer, Quincy, ill
NO CURE, NO MUSTACHE.
NO PAY. NO PAY.
DANDRUFF CURED.
3 will take Contracts to grow hair on the head
or face with those who can call at my office or
at the office of my agents, provided the head is
not glossy, or the pores of the scalp not closed.
Where the head is shiny or the pores closed,
there is nocure. Call and be examined free of
charge. If you cannot call, write to me. State
tho exact condition of the scalp and your occu-
prtion. PROF. G. BIRKHOLZ,
Re-=m 191i Mascnic Temple. Cuicao*
MICHIGAN CENTRAL
“‘ The Niagara Falls Route.”
(Taking effect Sunday, May 27, 1894.)
Sleeping cars run on Atlantie and Pacifie ex
press trains to aud from Detroit.
Parlor cars leave for Detroit at 7:00 am, re
turning, leave Detroit 4:35 pm, arriving at Grand
Rapids 10:20 p m. : :
Direct communication made at Detroit with
all through trains eest over the Michigan Cen
tral Railroad (Canada Southern Division.)
| A. ALMquisT, Ticket Agent,
| Union PassengerStation.
|
|
|
|
\
) Ar. Chicago
Lv. Chicago.... 8:15am
Ar. @’d Rapids..... 3:05pm_ 10
| CHICAGO VIA ST OE
| Lv. Grand Rapids "
Arrive. Depart
1 Dyem.....-... Detroit Express ..7 0am
5 30am.....*Atlantic and Pacific.....11 20pm
150pm..,... New York Express...... 6 00 pm |
*Daily. All others daily, except Sunday.
19
L, 1804.
CHICAGO Sul
AND WEsIr MICHIGAN R’Y.
GOING TO CHICAGO.
Ly. G’d Rapids 7
»e
2 1:25pm *11:30pm
‘0pm *6:45am
beaae 1 1
RETURNING FROM CHIé AGO.
Ar. Chit .
Lv. Chicago 9:3 .
TO AND FROM
Ly. Grand Rapids
Ar. Grand R.
MT
6:00am, 11:50
Parlor cars le
pm. For north
Chicago 3+
LANSING & NORTHERN R, BR.
GOING TO DETROIT.
Ly. Grand Rapids 7:00am ypm
Ar. Detroit .... 11:40am m 10:40pm
RETURNING FROM DETROIT.
Ly. Detroit 7:40am i:lupm 6:00pm
Ar. Grand Rapids 12:40pm 5:15pm 10:45pm
TO AND FROM SAGINAW, ALMA AND ST, LOUIS,
Lv. GR 7:00am {:45pm Ar. GR.11:40am 10:45pm
TO LOWELL VIA LOWELL & HASTINGS R. Nh.
Ly. Grand Rapids.... 7:00am mn 5:55pm
Ar. from Lowell 12 f Oe uaa
THROUGH CAR RVICE.
Parlor Carson all trains n Grand Rap
ids and Detroit. Parlor car to Saginaw on morn
ing train.
Trains week days only.
GEO. DEHAVEN, Gen
as ois
Pass’r Ag’t,
ETROIUT, GRAND HAVEN &
WAUKEE Railway.
MIL-
EASTWARD.
rrains Leave tNo
Gd Rapids, Ly
Tonia ... 3
OE,
Owos
E. Sa
it oe
Pt. Huron
Pontiac
Detroit.
WESTWAR
,Y
For Grand Haven and Intermediate
Points i ic a. ¥
For Grand Haven and Muskegon +1:60 p. m
“ “6 “ ‘ +455 p. 1
kee, Wis '
For Grand Haven
For Grand Haven (Su
tDaily except Sunday.
Trains arrive from ¢
p.m., 4:35 p, m. and 10:00 p. m.
Trains arrive from the west, 6:40 a. m., 10:10
a,m., 3:15 p.m. and 10:50 p. m. Sunday, only,
8:00 a, m,
Eastward—No. 14 has Wagner Parlcr Buifet
car. No.18Parlor Car. No. 82 Wa r Sleeper
Westward — No. 11 Parlor Car. No. 15 W
No. 81 Wa
City Teket Agent
rner Sle
Parlor Buffet car.
Tas CAMPBELI
Grand apids & indiana
TRAINS GOING NORTH
,4eave goin
North
For Cat naw wee
For M ocean ..-.8:00 a. m
For Tra ity and Saginaw ..4:45 p. m
For Mack -.10:35 p m.
TRAINS GOING SOUTH
For Oincinnati... euuees
For Kalamazoo and Chicago
For Fort Wayne and the East
For Cincinnati ‘
For Kalamazoo and Chisaeo.................0-00 oo
Chicago via G. R. & 1. RB. R.
Lv Grand Rapids........7:00am 2:30pr *11:40 p m
Ave Chicage............. S00 pu 2 7:10am
2:30p m train bas through Wagner Batfet Parlor
Car and coach.
11:40 p mtrain daily, through Wagner sleeping Car
and Coach
Lv Chicago 6:50 am 3:34
Arr Grand Rapids 2:00 p m
3:30 p m has through Wagner B l
11:30 p m train daily, through Wagner Sleeping Car.
Muskegon, Grand Rapids & Indiana.
11:30 p m
6:55 a m
For Muskegon—Leave From Muskegon—Arrive
7:15am 8:25 a m
1:00 p m 1:15pm
&:40 pm 8:45 p m
Co. L. LOCKWOOD‘
General Passengerand Ticket Agent.
PHOTO
woop
Buildings, Portraits, Cards and Stationery
Headings, Maps, Plans and Patented
Articles.
TRADESMAN CQ.,
Grand Rapids, Mich,
20
GOTHAM GOSSIP.
News from the Metropolis---Index of
the Markets.
Special Correspondence
New York, Sept. 1—There has been
the greatest transformation scene in this
city during the past six days ever ex-
perienced, and it would not seem possible
unless one was an actual witness of the
change. A week agothe acme of dull-
ness seemed to have been reached in the
dry goods district, while now the side-
walks are crowded to the eurbs with
boxes and bundles. Truckmen who
found time to have a good long nap at
noon in their wagons a week ago are
now swearing as only truckman can
swear, and rushing hither and thither
hardly having time to eat. The hotels
are almost swamped, the heaviest con-
tingent of buyers being from the South,
although every section of the country ia
well represented. It seems as though a
wand of magic had struck us, and for
the present, at least, New York is hump-
ing. The theaters, of course, are
crowded, and everything is lovely.
While the grocery jobbing houses do
not show such a sharp contrast as do the
dry goods districts in comparison with a
week ago, the influence is, nevertheless,
felt, and a more cheereful feeling is ex-
perienced than for many months. It may
not last long, but the probabilities are
that we are *‘on the way up.” Yes, trade
is good.
The rush of brokers at the custom
house for two or three days was fright-
ful. They tumbled over each other and
even waited all night in order to ‘be
there early.”’ The warehouses have
litterally been packed with goods, and
now we begin to see ‘‘Immense Reduc-
tions on account of Lower Tariff. These
trousers reduced from $14 to 1.75,” and
other equally important reductions—all
made by Sol. Isaacs and Abe Cohen.
Several loads of English sugar have
been sold this week in New York. Is this
a straw?
We read with interest of big floods in
Texas.
Brazil coffee remains weak at 16c, and
the visible supply is sufficiently large to
justify the assertion that we will not
soon see higher figures. The amount
afloat is 475,000 bags, against 320,791
last year. Mild sorts are unsteady, good
Cucuta bringing 183/c.
Spices generally are a trifie firmer and
reports are firmer abroad.
Granulated sugar is held at 4 13-16@5e.
The market is quiet. The first sales of
Taw under the new tariff were made to
‘independent refiners,” whatever that
may mean.
The California people are getting in
some very contradictory reports as to
the future of the fruit prospects there.
One party knows everything will be
high, while the opposite side says the
outlook is for exceptionally low rates.
Here canned goods are moving in a
everyday sort of way, and while prices
are not any higher than they were, they
are firmer than ten days ago, and holders
feel encouraged.
Butter is dull and holders anticipate
no advance for a fortnight, 24¢c being
paid for best stock.
Eggs which ought to have been sold a
month ago are coming, and altogether re-
ceipt are hardly as good as during the
extremely hot period. Best Michigan
are worth li7c.
The market is glutted with fruits and
nothing is bringing more than nominal
quotations. Lemons are lower. Oranges
are selling slowly, and bananas are down
to $1 per bunch for firsts.
To people outside of insurance com-
panies the report of the New Jersey
Insurance Commissioner is full of amaz-
ing statements and, although not exactly
in the line of this correspondence, it may
not be uninteresting to show your readers
a few figures regarding policies which
“cease to be in force.” The United
States Industrial Company reports that
during 1893, 83,427 policies ceased to be
in force, 1,584 of them by deaths, and
81,843 by lapses— sixty lapses to one
death! That is on business throughout
the country. In New Jersey 34.614
policies ceased to be in turce during the
year. They represented $3,582,556. If
the above proportion holds good, over
34,000 of the polices represented lapses.
Other companies show about the same
proportion. JAY.
ne — A
The Hardware Market.
General Trade — Continues good.
Agents are bringing in fairly good or-
ders and the mail order business indi-
cates that buying has commenced. As
the fall of the year approaches, we al-
ways look for and have a much greater
demand for goods than during the sum-
mer months, and, with legislation out of
the way, affairs ought to resume their
normal condition. We can note but lit-
tle change in prices, as the increased
trade has not reached such a volume as
to produce any marked advances. In
the majority of lines we do not look for
any higher prices, but in some cases,
where goods have been sold so very low,
it is to be hoped the manufacturers will
be enabled to get proper returns for
their investment.
Barbed Wire—The demand is very ac-
tive, which we presume is accounted for
by the burning down of many fences,
which are replaced by wire. The price
remains firm as quoted last week—$2.10
for painted and $2.50 for galvanized.
Wire Nails—Are in good demand and
prices are stationery, although many fac-
tories are now getting into working or-
der, which will prevent any advance and
may have a tendency to weaken prices.
Sheet Iron—In good request. The
price is firm at $3 for No. 27 common
iron,
Window Glass—Good sizes are getting
searce, but the price is not firmly held,
ae the new tariff rate will have a ten-
dency to make the price lower.
Sheet Tin and Tinware—On this line
of goods no change has yet been made,
but we may with reason look for lower
prices later in the year, as the duty on
tin has been nearly cut in two and on
pig tin removed entirely.
—_——2
The Wheat Market.
There is no change to note in the
wheat market. Prices have remained
the same. There was no foreign demand
and very little speculative buying for
the week, and about the only feature to
note is the continued reports of the fay-
orable outturn of the spring wheat har-
vest, together with a considerable in-
crease of receipts at spring wheat mar-
kets, although there has been a falling
off in the receipts of winter wheat. In
this immediate vicinity the receipts from
farmers amount to almost nothing.
Some mills meet great difficulty in get-
ting enough to supply their manufactur-
ing wants. This being the case, and
coarse grain being relatively higher than
wheat, we cannot expect much of a
movement until these markets adjust
themselves. This will only be a ques-
tion of time. The drought still con-
tinues, and wheat is being fed to stock
as freely as other grains. The actual
increase for the week was 870,000
bushels, which is small and jess that an-
ticipated.
Bradstreet reports exports of wheat,
flour included, from this country and
Canada, as 3,520,000 bushels during the
past week; same week last year, 5,592,-
000; two years ago, 3,241,000, and 5,441,-
000 three years ago.
The guesses on the visible increase
are 1,750,000 for the coming week, of
which 1,250,000 is expected to be the in-
crease in the Cnicago market.
F. A. Vorer.
THE MICHIGAN TRADESMAN.
QUARTERLY MEETING
Of the Directors of the Michigan
Knights of the Grip.
GRAND Rapips, Sept. 1—The regular
quarterly meeting of the Boara of Direc-
tors, Michigan Knights of the Grip, was
held at Lansing to-day, President
Waldron in the chair.
The committee to whom was referred
the claim of Mrs. J. V. Sine reported
that they had been unable to obtain any
additional evidence regarding the
matter, aside from the facts reported by
Secretary Mills at the last board meeting,
and did not feel justified in making any
recommendation to the board. Report
accepted and committee discharged.
lt was moved, supported and carried
that this matter be referred to the
annual convention in December, for final
disposition by the members, and that the
Secretary write Mrs. Sine to that effect.
The Secretary was granted permission
to enclose a circular or application for
membership of the Commercial Travel-
ers’ Home Association in the next notice
mailed to our members.
The Secretary was instructed to re-
quest the Railroad Committee to confer
with the General Passenger Agents’ As-
sociation regarding rates to our conven-
tion in Grand Rapids in December: also
to mail notice of annual dues of 1895 of
$1, payable on or before Jan. 1, to each
member under date of Dec. 1.
A communication from Senator Patton,
regarding the Raynor Bill, was read and
placed on file.
The report of the Secretary was then
presentad, as follows:
Regardless of the fact that the present
year has been one of unusual commercial
depression, which has in no small degree
affected the salaries of our members, I
am pleased to report that our member-
ship has steadily increased, and also that
the loss of members by delinquences has
been very small. As a rule, the
responses to assessments have been
prompt.
As per your instructions I mailed a
notice of Death Assessment No. 3 to
every member, under date of July 20,
and also placed in same enclosure, to all
who were delinquent for former assess-
ments or dues, a circular letter, stating
the amount of their indebtedness and
urging them to continue their member-
ship. The result has been the reinstate-
ment of very many of them.
There are ninety-five members who
have failed to pay the annual dues for
1894, and forty-six are delinquent for
Death Assessment No. 1, and 118 for No.
2, but a number are remitting each
week for the latter.
My financial report will show that our
membership has been increased the past
quarter by forty-nine new members, five
honorary members and thirty-eight old
members reinstated—a total of ninety-
two, making our total membership to
date 1,636. My financial report is as
follows:
DEATH FUND.
Balance on hand June 1..................8 539 25
Received from death assessments.....__ 1,309 00
Total receipts ...... .81,848 25
Our disbursements bave been $1,500—
$500 each to the beneficiaries of the late
R. J. Coppes, W. C. Lynes and S. MeM
Toal—leaving a balance on hand of
$348.25.
GENERAL FUND.
Balance on hand June 1.......... oso 00e.8a04 22
Application fees and dues................. 92 00
Total receipts........ $396 22
Our disbursements during this time
were $338.63, leaving a balance on hand
of $57.59.
The following accounts were audited
and orders ordered drawn on the treasury
for the amounts:
E. P. Waldron, traveling expenses.........848
R. W. Jacklin, . i 5 85
F. R Streat, S i Ee 3 60
L. M. Mills, a . - «1. ooo
Postage and office expenses.............° 1” 77 68
L. M. Mills, salary Smmonths............._ 88 45
Tradesman Company, Stationery and p’tg.. 31 55
The meeting then adjourned to Dec.
26, when the meeting will be held in
Grand Rapids, just prior to annual con-
vention. L. M. MIL1s, See’y.
enn nnn,
Use Tradesman Coupoir Books.
Lakeview Business Men Imitating the
Phenix.
LAKEVIEW, Sept. 3 —The popular dis-
trict fair, heretofore held here each year,
will be omitted this season, owing to
the burning down of this village.
Lars P. Sorenson, Lakeview’s popular
dry goods merehant for the last twenty
years, has bought some of the fixtures of
the old Mather bank and will engage in
the banking business.
More than a dozen new brick build-
ings are now being erected here. The
South side of Main street will be built
up solid this fall and about one-half of
the opposite side of the street. A. M.
Decker is rebuilding his hotel, 36x90 and
two stories high and of brick. No people
could be more resolute than are ours in
rebuilding a burned town.
The mason-work on our new town hall
is about finished.
C. F. Braden has ecncluded not to re-
sume the drug business, but will remove
to Lake Odessa and embark in the
lumber business with his brother. His
departure will be sincerely regretted by
our people.
Dr. John W. Kirtland will shortly re-
open a drug store here.
CC A te -
The new bank, to take the place of
the Commercial & Savings Bank of Lud-
ing, which recently closed its doors, and
and is now in process of liquidation under
Receiver Frank Filer, has secured all the
subscriptions for stock necessary for or-
ganization, and will commence business
in a few days. The stockholders are al-
most all interested in the First National
Bank and the new bank will be operated
in conjunction with the First National
Bank, although located in the old quar-
ters of the defunct Commercial Bank.
The capital stock is $50,000.
>> ++
Tallman—The Danaher & Melendy Co.
has removed its lumbering headquarters
from this place to Brookings, where a
post office will probably be re-established
under another name, as the corporation
has enough timber in that locality to
keep its mills going four or five years,
POULTRY,
Local dealers pay as follows:
LIVE.
re ee
. ee
ee, Nee
" Booelers.. .
ES EON a Nasi:
Spring chickens..... rote tevesae o en
re OO 7
DRAWN.
lenin
eee tty
ON ec
CO
Oysters.
The season commences Sept. 5.
Note the following low prices fora
starter:
Solid Brand, Extra Selects, percan$ 30
@8
Solid Brand, Selects, per can....... 28
Solid Brand, E. F., per can........ a5
Solid Brand, Standards, pert can.... 20
Daisy Brand, Selects, per can... .-. 26
Daisy Brand, Standards, per can... 20
Daisy Brand, Favorites, per can.... 18
Mrs. Withey’s Home Made Jelly,
made with green apples, very fine
tig a 1 00
ee 65
Mrs. Withey’s Condensed Mince
Meat, the best made. 85 cents
per doz. 3 doz. in case. Will
quote bulk mince meat later.
Pure Cider Vinegar, per gallon.... 10
Pure Sweet Cider, Der walion...... 12
Fine Dairy Butter, per pound. ..... 19
Fancy 300 Lemons, Der Sen... 5 00
Choice 300 Lemons, per box....... 4 50
Choice 360 Lemons, per box....... 4 00
EDWIN FALLAS,
Oyster Packer and Manufacturer.
VALLEY CITY COLD STORAGE,
215 and 217 Livingston St.,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
4
‘ v
i‘ ae
e..
‘ 4
hi A
~
%
f
ey
IF NOT, WHY NOT?
Clark,
~ y Grocery
Ae— C0.
Muskegon Bakery Grackers
(United States Baking Co.)
Are Perfect Health Food.
There are a great many Butter Crackres on the Market—only
one can be best—-that is the original
Muskegon
Bakery
Butter
Cracker.
Pure, Crisp, Tender, Nothing Like it for Flavor. Daintiest,
Most Beneficial Cracker you can get for constant table use.
Muskegon Toast, ALWAYS
Nine Royal Fruit Biscuit, ASK
Muskegon Frosted Honey, YOUR
Other Iced Cocoa Honey Jumbles, GROCER
Great Jelly Turnovers, FOR
Specialties Ginger Snaps, MUSKEGON
Are Home-Made Snaps, BAKERY’S
Muskegon Branch, CAKES and
Mlik Lunch CRACKERS
United States Baking Co.
LAWRENCE DEPEW, Acting Manager,
{| Are You Selling FISHING TACKLE! —
| i OUR
STOCK
or
IS
COMPLETE.
We have them from 12
to 20 feet long.
Our line of Fishing tackle
is equal to any one’s.
Send for Catalogue.
frost TEVENS
&EN vive
12, 14 & 16 Pearl &
ST.
RINDGE, KALMBAGH %& GO "fi," fe
HEALTH SHOES.
ASK TO SEE THES,
——" = They are the coolest shoe in summer,
The warmest shoe in winter. and
The easiest shoe ever made.
Combining ease, comfort and good looks
in one pair of shoes,
In addition to the above, our factory.
and jobbing lines are complete. Styles
attractive. Prices at the bottom.
We carry all the leading lines of
. Socks and Wool Boots; also Bos-
Muskegon, ” Mich. |
Pton Rubher Shoe Co.’s goods.
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MASON FRUIT JARS — HRD RH
No: Charge for Cartage on H ‘ LEO NARD & SONS a No Charge for Boxes on ig
Fruit Jars.
Fruit Jars.
% Frat J Corks and Sealing Wax. Crimp Top Sun ¢ himney. Lan ern Globes.
Mason’s rhe — : . J or d ets Common grade. Sold by the case only. Per Doz
From now on is the season to push the sale of Corks for % gal Tomato Jugs _ doz . ar Case} Bo. 6 Tabiies sees mock ea 8 45 :
these goods. The most profitatle line you can a ae ee , ° ce 0244 | No. 0 Sun, 6 doz in case beccceecesesees st ¢ [By the barrel, 5 doz (barrel 35) ccc ae J
ee ee eeeee Per Gro : = : he, | Sa 6 Genin eabe........-... : i pe No. O Pabaha. Bull's Eye Globe. ...°:.... 1 25
i No. 2 Sun, 6 doz in ease. 23 - e
uarts, 8 doz in box ea - ou Flask and Jug Corks. . loth:s Lines
Balt gallons. 6 doz in box...... i: . oo : Per Gro WH L&S Flint (Chimney. Cloth.
Pints, 1 doz in case : i -- 4@) Flask and Bottle Corgs, assorted sizes, No. Jute 30 foot line, per doz......... a oa ae ‘i
Half gallous, 1 doz in case ‘ 5 6- 0, 5gro in bag . i. 2 Selected firsts. Each wrapped and labeled. Jute, 66 foot line, per doz... ee le
Extra covers for pint, quart and half gal: on = 25] Jug ¢ ‘orks assorted clues. Nos. 11-26. 73 gro Case of 6 Open, Per | Jute, 120 foot line, per doz. eae 60
Rubber rings for Masun’ . ee... oo ne ....- ee ee ee ‘ Doz. Doz. Cotton. 0 foot line, per ee a ae 1 28 &
No. 0 Sun Crimp Top.......82 10 $ 4 _
Fiint Glass Mason Friit Jars. an Jars, No. 1 sun ¢ imp Top . 2 2% . Writing Pa: er.
: : i doz in case. No charge for case. No, 2 Sun Crimp Top ++. BS 7 Per Ream.
Clear fine glass. oo Open Stock Per | No. 2 Sun Hinge..... —-+---. 360 £ | Com’! Note. $16 Mecciaier:. .. 2 24
Quarts, % groin ae per gro sree e eo ED bi per doz. Case | No. 2 Electric a" sr crecce = - tie Cous'l Note, 5 ib Excelsior... 0 2.226. 2. 49
Half Gal Hons, gro i a ee Gal Tall ese i ueds ioate 2 Oe 1 5" | ped and labeled. Will not crack from heat. Ne
ts Pints, 6 doz in box (box 0 ) per box -.- = 64 Git Weel. 3 50 3 00° Case of 6 Open, Per | Size Per 1.000
4% Pints, 21 doz ia bbl, ‘bol 35) rer — 1 = RING JARS— GLASS COVERS : ee Doz. Doz. X5 White..... dee CWC ane aY $ 5 a
% Pints, 6 doz in box. (box!) per box..... an | 6 Gal Senator Tall... c:.,)..... 2 50 oi). ‘i Oh is to a gs X6 White... oe cau : 85
% Pints, 18 doz in bbl (bbl 35¢) per doz * | 4 Gal Squat or Tall...2. 02000022 3 5s 30: mo. @ San Crimp... - —— Tee ee WM coses cs ocask ve uae cig 85
1 Gal Squat or Tall....... 5 0 4 50 No. 2 Sun Crimp... ner ae is | NO MEO isha ceguaiye stu ee ‘
Common Tumblers. am am JaRe—GL GLASS COVERS on sil MeteG eael bat ke Chole suet |
% Pint, plain, 6 doz in box, (box ™) per box 81 £0 | 7 Soe "Saunt oo ee + 00 | ment Showing chimney for every burner. Sent | Oil Cans.
4g Pinte. plain, 29dozin bbl. (bbl35¢) perdoz 2% | Maal en . 500 4 20 | by mail on receipt of postal. | ‘ Po
| % Gal Tin, with Spout, per des. 2... ee Go
Engraved Tumblers. Flasks. Tubular Lanterns. | 1'Gal Tin, with spout, per doz... ae .
7 Pant : Ny dd 1d n crate 20)
Orient Assortment, 3styles, nicely engr: ne Pic-Nic or Shoo Fly Shape Per Gro |, OMY the latest patterns of the heaviest ma- i Oe ee ae ae die mite ae
thin blown glass, per box of 6 doz, a 00 : : . $ 2 40 terial. Every lantern warranted. No charge |’ 2 Gal Galy Iron, ofl or gasoline Te 3 75 a
a a ee ee c-ecceese Oo ‘ na > we lh . j
oe ees ae : a ie as ae pote : TI22. 8 gg | for case. 'doz incase. Price per doz. | 3 Gal Galv Iron, oil or gasoline............ 5 06 4
Cc s Quart, 4 gro in re SH es a: oo spring lift, inside attethisse best " 5 Gal Galv Iron, with faucet............. . a 00 a
OoOmmon Stoneware. »% oe ios... $3 50 | 5 Gl Galz Iron tilting a (0
2 * v v- 2s 3 3 I p “> i oe {
Sates eee se. TaD ame ane: | Ro Toor coger =~ 48 Bal Gly on. Home Rate “Pamgr.
Stone Butter Jars. 1 to ry . te g PENS Sole Agents for extra toughened a LaBastie” | 0) 15 Jap'd Tubu ar, dashboard and reflec. 8 Gal Galv fron “Good Enough”.......... 13 50 i
Se ne go | French glass chimney. Positively the strongest tor r attachment, bulls eye globe % doz in 5 Gal Galv Iron, “Good enough”..... ..... 12 00 7
Pi “+. a ae gees i gas ‘per “ | and most durable lamp chimney made. 5 Ov
Stone Preserve Jars :n -0V : zal, ° a . : =
i eee r ‘2 a mg te a 3% _ 'B Tablas Side spring lift takes 1 tin 550| See our catalogue for full line grocers’
Tomato or Fruit Jngs % gal. pe- doz ee ee ae oo I aa nes ene " : : i '
Tomato or Frnit Jugs,1zal per doz..... 99] No, 2sun Bulb, per doz__...... - 150 a oa ie oe ote os sundries as Pails, Tubs, Fibre Ware, ¥
Stone Milk Pans, % gal, per doz.... et = No 2 Electric, 4-3 doz soe enieeart : = ub g g se 7 7a es au as sia
stone Milk Fans,1 gal. each . weet ce eee. 16) No. 1 Sun Crimp Top. per doz............... < ash Boards, Tin and Iron Pails, Lamps.
Ston No. 2 Sun Crimp Top, perdoz. . ......... 1 60 Store Lamps. as a eon a ye 28 ’ 4
Fine Glazed Stoneware Pearl Top ¢ homneys. 400 candle power. Slates, Papeterie, Toilet Soaps, ation-
. . 0 The well-known, easy selling, popular ‘Pearl 2n flector. ‘ seas
1 Gal, Fine all lack Mil Pans, per gal.” 03% | Tops.”" Nostore can get slong without them, | Rochester. complete, in reflector... . | ery. Shaving Soaps, Blank Books, Pen
r 5 hant wishes to tices guar- -
1, Fine all Black Milk Pans. perdoz 65. | and no good gh : : Banner, complete, 20 in reflector............ cee i ne :
Gal, Fine all Black Butter Jars, pergal 07 | anteed. o dozincase. No charge for case Incandescent, complete, 20 in reflector. Holders, Slate Pencils, Toilet Paper and »
1 Gal, Fine all White Butter Jars per pal 08 No. 1 Sun Pearl Top, per CABE........ ee 7 Send for catalogue showing all. Step Lad ers. ‘)
% Gai, Fine all White putter Jars, per doz 75 Mo. 2 San Pesrl Top. yer case... .........,.. 4B : .
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THE ONLY SCALE ON EARTH for the Retail \
‘
Dealer. <"|
m | cA
i a: Trane Ea An Investment (|
. ae = They Are The , Thousands of the qi
: Paying from ‘
EIGHTH WONDER BEST MERCHANTS ae
10 to 100 Per Cent. : ig
of the World. are Using Them. :
Per Annum. ~
i
eel
If Your Competitor Says They are a Good Thing }
for Him, WHY NOT EQUALLY
SO FOR YOU ? 4
See What Users Say: ‘
TRAVERSE City, Mich., Sept. 21, 18¢2.
The Computing Seale Co.. Dayton, Ohio. ; 6
GENTLEMEN:—Since the adoption of i ~
your Computing Seales I have made more }
money in my business than ever before. u
The Howe Scale | had, while new, had
such a radical variation that I lost
money every time | weighed upon it. I
would retire from business before return-
ing to the use of regular weighing *
scales. Yours truly,
FRANK DANIELS.
“
a
For further particulars drop a Postal Card to
HOYT & CoO,, General Selling husans ‘
Dayton, Ohio. \|
ail
HHT ARE
. apa i
Mo