WIE (A DSW PINNN AS 4 g , Nos q eee FOS 231 NER i ON es eS ee aN a | ) eo am a a : ™ ' Q a a )) XG Dy CoN ep % oak Pal PVA FYE CVLAN |! 7, tes G o Ate S j x in)’ ; gay) SRR OZ : dl eA ay j A ci NET NE LO a7 6 EN A Ne ie Is Ee, py Y oS. EDs Ly: TOMS B Y we cy =A me Sb ie Sn RSG Fee Ee wee eee es ee F< CEE Ze or wegbtiiey eS La! $ ©S PUBLISHED WEEKLY UG ee SsTRADESMAN COMPANY, PUBLISHERS#< 5 ey AG 1 PER YEAR ' xs SOIR SSR SO ESS FERS CG pS EY URE NG LP SR RONDA NA Thirty-Third Year GRAND RAPIDS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916 Number 1689 Mr. Michigan Dealer! Probably you have noticed what a large number of women use Lily White Flour. Anyway it’s a fact that more women are using and demanding Lily White to-day than ever before. Some reasons why— They secure more than just plain flour when buying Lily White. Purity, delicious flavor, excellent color, full weight, wholesomeness, health- fulness and complete satisfaction are incorporated in every sack. Lily White is made especially for domestic use and meets every require- ment of home baking in the most satisfactory manner. Women have discovered that our definite guarantee to the effect they will like Lily White as well or better than any flour they ever used is based on fact, not fancy. They have put Lily White to the test and have proven to their own satis- faction that it is all we claim, and does make better bread and better pastries. The above reasons are sound arguments in favor of your making a LEADER of ILY WHITE ‘‘The Flour the Best Cooks Use’’ Furthermore, you need have no hesitation in offering Lily White to your most particular cus- tomers. They will appreciate your recommending a high grade article. Lily White Flour is live merchandise. It sells continuously, and all waste or dead stock, slow sale and unsatisfactory results are eliminated. More than a million consumers are regularly reached by our continuous advertising in Michigan papers. The demand for Lily White Flour is daily increasing. Everybody knows it is a good flour and your recommendation, coupled with their knowledge of the goods, is practically certain to make the sale. You can turn your money rapidly and secure a good margin of profit from every sale as it is pot necessary to cut the price of Lily White to secure the order. And we prepay all freight and pay you a commission for selling Lily White. Write us for an explanation of our co-operate sales plan. Valley City Milling Company Grand Rapids, Michigan “A Smile Follows the Spoon When It’s Piper’s”’ Piper’s Pure Ice Cream is in demand every where Piper Ice Cream Co. Write, phone or wire your orders Kalamazoo, Michigan FLOUR “Makes Bread White and Faces Bright” VOIGT MILLING CO., GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. A ‘Mothers Delight” Fleischmann’s Yeast Eat Plenty of Bread for You The Best Bread is made with yar es “‘The End of Fire Waste’’ COMPLETE APPROVED Installed by Phoenix Sprinkler & Heating Co. Grand Rapids, Mich. Estimates Free Detroit, Mich. 115 Campau Ave. 909 Hammond Bidg Pere Marquette Railroad Co. DUDLEY E. WATERS, PAUL H. KING, Receivers F ACTORY SITES Locations for Industrial Enterprises in Michigan The Pere Marquette Railroad runs through a territory peculiarly adapted by Accessibility excellent Shipping Facilities. Healthful Climate and Good Conditions for Home Life. for the LOCATION OF INDUSTRIAL ENTERPRISES. First-class Factory Sites may be had at reasonable prices. Coal in the Saginaw Valley and Electrica! Development in several parts of the State insure Cheap Power. Our Industrial Department invites correspondence with manufacturers and others seeking locations. All in- quiries will receive painstaking and prompt attention and will be treated as confidential. Address GEORGE C. CONN, Freight Traffic Manager, Detroit, Michigan START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT WITH A Total Account Register WRITE TO-DAY For a Limited Time Only SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY PRICES WILL SURPRISE YOU The Total Account Register is an expert bookkeeper that makes no errors. Watches your business all day long and demands no salary. It debits and credits each transaction at the very time it occurs—and is ever ready to give you totals any moment required. In appearance it resembles a cash register. Is made of solid bronze metal with mahogany base and top—handsomely designed and beautifully finished. An ornament to any store—a safe-guard and money-saving necessity to the successful conduct of a retail business. 1—Shows at a glance what each cus- 6—Reduces the outstanding ac- tomer owes you. counts. 2—Shows total of outstanding ac- 7—Collects petty accounts. counts. t 8—Prevents disputed accounts. 3—Shows cash received, what for 9—Prevents forgotten charges, and from whom. 10—"Bal ks” aicht E 0—"Balances your books” each nig’ 4—Cash paid out, what for and to and saves many hours labor. whom. : “ : 1i—With one writing your accounts = preeee A daily statement to each are posted and errors eliminated. All Styles and Kinds of Salesbooks, Duplicate and Triplicate. Get Our Prices. STAR PAPER COMPANY Salesbook and Store System Dept. 405-7-9 East Main Street Kalamazoo, Michigan Exclusive Territory for Live Salesmen in Michigan N iy D 1 UY WY // UM LL Agee’ LL Lip cm Y Line y Le UL TK AAO YL TSS YA yo SESS SRA NON & 8 BUFFALO, January 3, 1916. DEAL NO. 1601. NEW DEAL Snow Boy Washing Powder 24s MORE PROFIT FAMILY SIZE Swi Ask Your Jobber’s Salesman Lautz Bros. & Co. § é a ‘ £ ADESMAN Thirty-Third Year SPECIAL FEATURES. U 9 ge 2. Under Advantage. 4. News of the Business World. 5. Grocery and Produce Market. 6. Upper Peninsula. 8. Editorial. 10. Detroit Detonations. 12. Financial. 16. Chain Stores. 18. Refrigerated Products. 20. Hardware. 22. The Stevens Bill. 24. Clothing. 26. The Meat Market. 27. Helping the Retailer. 28. Woman’s World. 30. Butter, Eggs and Provisions. 32. Men of Mark. 34. Shoes. 36. Dry Goods. 38. Automobiles and Accessories. 40. The Commercial Traveler. 42. Drugs. 43. Drug Price Current. 44. Grocery Price Current. 46. Special Price Current. 47. Business Wants. NEW POLITICAL PARTY. It is the open season for politica! gossip, yarns and rumors. They are flying thick and fast, and are being brought down to print every day They are of all sorts and descriptions, grave, gay and grotesque. If any man in public life is overlooked, he Gan take it as a sign and a symptom that he is losing ground and must hasten to do something to regain a place in the limelight. Whatever prominent men think or say may be one thing, and what they are cred- ited with, quite another. Candidacies are made over night and are news to men who read about what they are intending to do. Those oftenest men- tioned must be accepted as being the most in the popular mind, for the writers of political gossip at Wash- ington have their fingers on the public pulse and understand what the people wish to hear. Much of what they write is interesting and some of it, important. What Bryan will do is naturally enough a matter of speculation and there are many who would be erat ified to get accurate information. The latest story about his political future is that he and Henry Ford are arrang- ing to inaugurate a new party and launch it soon. At the foundation is peace at any price. That, of course, is the fundamental doctrine. A corol- lary is opposition to any prepared- ness on the part of the United States. Then, to have more allurements, it is to declare for prohibition and wom- en’s suffrage. There may be a few more isms added, but these are said to be the principal planks in the pro- posed platform. It is suggested that. while anti-preparedness may be popu- lar with the German-American AlI- liance, the support thus gained will vanish like a June frost before the prohibition proposition. With Bryan to furnish the oratory and Ford to furnish the finances, quite a stir could be made by the combination. Any new party, whatever its principles, can get a few votes. Whether the suggested project would draw more GRAND RAPIDS, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1916 from the Republicans or the Demo- crats is a question for discussion. The probability is that it will never pass the gossiping stage. Presumably the two men most prominently nam- ed will not be much disturbed by the rumor, since its circulation supplies free advertising, which is a great asset for any one in public life. WOULD BE FAR REACHING. Rumors are not always reliable, but it is an old saying that where there is so much smoke there must be at least a little fire. There is talk, and a sood deal of it in the newspapers that the railroad employes in every branch which is organized, are get- ing ready to make further demands upon the companies and will ask for an eight-hour day and an increased rate of pay for overtime. Within the last few years the wages of engineers, firemen, conductors, trainmen, etc., have been very considerably increas- ed, the aggregate running up into the millions of dollars annually. The corporations complained, resisted as long as they could, and eventually compromised or capitulated. Then, in turn, they asked the authorities for permission to increase their own earning capacity by advancine the rates for passenger and freight serv- ice. These requests have been by no means as successful as those made by the employes. Current rumor has it that instead of having the demand made by rail- road employes cover a certain section at a time, they are all going in to- gether. Moreover, it is said that the unions and brotherhoods have deter- mined that there shall be no debate or discussion, no arbitration, media- tion or compromise. They are cred- ited with the intention of presentinz their demand and ultimatum all at once. They may say to the com- panies that unless there is compliance within a given time, there will be a general and universal strike which will aim to tie up every wheel and paralyze transportation and _ traffic. One of the reasons why they think, this a favorable period for suchi a precedure is, that it is a presidential year and that politics will enter into it. The railroad men of this country make a large army of voters, and the threat will be that men in public posi- tions wishing preferment will have to side with them or lose support. This class of workmen are receiving now $70,000,000 a vear more than they did four years ago, and, according to statistics recently published, while organized labor on the railroads is 19 per cent. of all the employes, they take 28 per cent. of the payroll. It is true that the railroads are doing more business and so making more money than they did a vear ago. It is urged in behalf of the corporations that over 600,000 stockholders receive only 2 per cent. of the gross earnings, while 45 per cent. of it goes to the payroll. Certainly it is to be hoped that the rumors which are rife are not well founded, and that in some way a satisfactory compromise and settlement will be reached withouz resort to a strike. The public as the great third party will be most in- convenienced and be the heaviest loser should it come to a downricht trial of strength, a long drawn out tussle between the companies and their em- ployes. LOOKS LIKE A BETTER PLAN. Senator Norris, of Nebraska, has introduced a constitutional amend- ment to abolish the electoral college. There are a good many arguments which can be cited in favor of his proposition. The present plan is cumbersome, awkward and unneces- sary. Many who know who they want to vote for for President have a very slim idea of who they want to vote for as an elector and presum- ably have never heard of most of them on their party’s ticket. The theory, of course, is to give each state proportionate representation in the government of the United States. This point is easily covered by the Norris bill which provides that presi- dential candidates be voted for direct and that each state be allowed to cast as many ballots as it has members of the House of Representatives and Senators. That would preserve the original idea and be much simpler and more direct, avoiding misunderstand- ing, confusion and sometimes error. There are many who argue that the President should be elected by popu- lar vote, and that if a nominee can secure a hundred thousand over his adversary in any state it oucht’ to count in his favor in the total, where- as the adversary might carry some other state having an equal number of electoral votes by as many hun- dred. It has happened and may hap- pen again that a man has served a term and made a very good President who did not have a maiority of all the votes cast for President nor even a plurality, but he would have suf- ficient votes in the electoral college to win. The representation under the present system or under that which Senator Norris suggests is based on ‘he population of the several states, New York leading in the number of votes, because it has the largest popu- lation. By this plan even the smallest state could not have less than three votes. This gives a geographical rep- resentation which could not be had under a popular vote where, for in- stance, the East interested in certain things might overwhelm the West. Number 1689 There is no very urgent effort being made to change the plan which allows each state to have the votes it is en- titled to alone and by itself, but there is a disposition to declare the elec- toral college as obsolete and an un- necessary part of the election ma- chinery. To be a presidential elector 1s an empty office in fact, although usually counted an honor and dis- tinction, but one which might be done away with without any great damage. ee The official German report on the latest Zeppelin exploit describes how bombs were dropped on “the fortified area of Paris” with considerable damage to the enemy’s ammunition depots and storage warehouses. The ammunition depots in question were tenement houses and the military losses inflicted on the French consist largely of old men, women and babies slain in their homes. consistency is once more vindicated. Thus German realities as against the letter of the law, but is in the habit of referring to the “forts” at Scarborough and Whitby and the Germany insists upon fortified areas of places like London and Paris. A zeppelin raining down death upon the invalids and children, and work- ingmen’s houses of Paris does not con- stitute military operations. It is ter- rorism. Taken in conjunction with the break in the French lines near the Somme River, it is a manceuvre intended to remind the enemy popu- lation that the invader is still at no great distance from the capital, as vigorous and as resolute as ever. In the bombardments of London the usual German plea has been that the only way to strike at the arch enemy, England, is through the air. But there are ways of getting to Paris other than through the air and the killing of invalids, women and chil- dren, especially when one considers that Berlin does not look upon France as her principal enemy and is exceed- ingly sorry for the French. The Zep- pelin shows it. —————— The Iron Age admits that there are clouds on the horizon, but that with prices of steel half again, and in some cases twice as high as they were a year ago, and a volume of business two to two and one-half times as great as in late 1914, we are sti!l moving in the di- rection of higher prices in the steel trade. Ocean freight charges twice the seaboard cost of material are making it increasingly difficult to close for desirable export business. New buying is, on the whole, not heavy, but this causes the mills no unconcern with their bewilder- ing piles of orders for months ahead. Labor shortage in different lines is a factor of uncertainty. An enormous de- mand for machine tools from abroad is developing and propects are gratify- ing. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, 1916 UNDUE ADVANTAGE Sought to Be Secured by Some Man- ufacturers. Ten years of the Federal Pure Food Law have accomplished wonders in the way of correcting manufacturing proces- sess of public food, in compelling honest labeling and in eliminating adulteration. Frauds and the dangerous food prod- ucts offered for sale are rare, and a manufacturer who deliberately issues goods falsely labeled is a notable excep- tion. The danger chiefly to be feared now is the persistent assault being made on honest and wholesome food products in the interests of rivals; efforts to use the big stick of the Government or of this or that official to promote some given product as the only safe and honest one in its class to the detriment of all others. A food official, state or National, who would keep himself strictly neutral and free from partisan entanglements must be very watchful and suspicious of al- most every suggestion brought to him by a food manufacturer. Some of these are deliberately caicu- lated for selfish ends, but there is also another group, honestly born of preju- dice and often selfish without inten- tion. The effort to standardize foods is replete with many such instances, and, while no honest friend of pure food will deny the value of standards for food products, there is a disposition to regard them as dangerously near tread- ing on the toes of legitimate rights of competition; of accomplishing, if not intending to accomplish, the pulling of competitive chestnuts out of the fire for personal or partisan ends. For instance, efforts have been made to prohibit marking “sausages” made differently from the exact standard pro- posed as such without any suggestion that other concoctions were harmful or fraudulent or misbranded. Thousands of efforts have been made to drive oleo- margarine out of the field in the interest of butter, even when it was honestly made, labeled and sold. A movement of one faction of the macaroni trade sought to require that nothing could be legally “macaroni” unless it contained egg, but evidently this failed, for the Department recently recognized standards for “‘mac- aroni” and “egg macaroni.” And now the “hard wheat crowd,” as they are sometimes called, are opposing the efforts of the makers of mixed flours to so amend the law that it may be sold on its merits as a food product. The fight comes on the proposal to remove the Spanish war tax on mixed flours, never altogether above suspicion as to its origin, but now clearly unnecessary since we have a pure food law, and op- erating as a partisan estoppel of honest competition. If flours mixed from wheat and corn are wholesome and nutritious and honestly labeled for what they are, why should they be saddled with a Government tax, which only hampers their chance for competing with clear wheat flour? Testimony is ample to show the de- sirability and food value of mixed flour. The manufacturers are willing to label it truthfully and it can be sold at prices materially lower than all wheat flour. Why should the Government lend itself to a factional fight and at the same time deprive the people of a cheaper bread material? If “flour” is to be only the product of hard wheat, it would be a good deal like patenting the English language, and turning the title to the patent over to a trust. The old familiar “name-on-the-label” bill has cropped up again in Congress. This perennial nuisance is hardly in the class with the above-mentioned deliber- ate attempts to accomplish factional ends, but it has some of the elements of asking the Government to do what manufacturers lack the nerve or ability to do for themselves. As presented, it is cleverly clothed in the righteous gar- ments of a law to protect the consumer, whereas the great mass of consumers have no desire to be protected, know nothing about it and the real beneficiary is the weak-kneed manufacturer. The scheme of requiring that the man- ufacturer’s name be on the label of all food products, whether it also bears the name of the distributor or not is as old as the food law and probably older. To some extent it has been fostered by fussy, sentimental food reformers, who imagine they want to know all about a product, when they are really safe- guarded if they have with the goods any responsible name of a sponsor. In fact. in the great majority of cases the name of their family grocer or local jobber is far more instructive for them and a greater protection than the name and address of some unknown manufacturer in a distant city or State. The chief sponser for “name-on-the- label” laws is the manufacturer who wants his name to go to the ultimate consumer as a constructive advertise- ment. As the man who packs the goods, whose skill gives them quality and a market, he has some right to desire this —in fact, it is natural and proper that he should—but in the great majority of instances he lacks the nerve to put that desire into the form of an insistent con- dition when he contracts with some dis- tributor to pack goods for him under the buyer’s label. He expects the job- ber not only to sell his goods but ad- vertise him to the consumer, in spite of the fact that the jobber would thereby pave the way for his competitive jobber next year, to capture his trade by hay- ing the packer he advertised act as his producer. It may be interesting to know where and by whom a food product is made, but if it results in an injustice to an- other in a mercantile sense, is it of enough value to the consumer to justify Congress or some legislature in taking sides and penalizing one party in com- petition to please another? —_~2~+>___ Carpenter-Udell to Resume Opera- tions. The Michigan Trust Company was appointed receiver of the Carpenter- Udell Chemical Co. on Nov. 6, and after careful consideration of the sit- uation and, owing to the insistent de- mand for the “Imperial Brand” in- secticide and fungicide products, it has been decided that the receiver will resume operations. A great many of the friends and customers of the Carpenter-Udell Chemical Co. had made enquiry as to whether their orders for “Imperial Brand’ lime sulphur solution, Paris green, etc., could be filled and we are pleased to be able to announce that the receiver of the Carpenter-Udell Chemical Co. is prepared to fill orders. Owing to the excessive increase in the cost of materials used in making Paris green and the unprecedented demand for chemicals, that staple will be very high, although none of the manufac- turers have made any definite quota- tions as yet. The receiver has a quan- tity of Paris green on hand tow which will be used to fill orders of customers buying lime sulphur solu- tion and their other products. Owing to the fact that the receiver cannot guarantee to take back the barrels at the end of the season and allow a credit therefor, it has been decided to reduce the price of lime sulphur solution to the customer so that he will not have to pay for the barrel in advance as in the past. Cus- tomers will not only save the ad- vancing of the cost of the barrels at the beginning of the season, but at the end of the season they will prob- ably be able to make such disposition of the barrels as to be considerably ahead by this method over the old- time method. The salesmen are now calling on the trade and taking orders and the company is also prepared to accept orders by mail, telephone or personal calls. —~++>___ Will Test Benzoate Rules of Wiscon- sin, The Curtice Bros. Co., of Roches- ter, has filed a petition asking for an injunction in Wisconsin restraining Pure Food Commissioner George ap Weigle, of that State, from enforcinz the law prohibiting the sale of any food containing benzoate of soda. The complaint declares that the Federal food law permits the use of the pre- servative and that, therefore, the State law is in direct contravention of the National pure food law, indicatine that the fight will be made on the basis of the Federal law being para- mount. The company declares that its food products conform with the food and drugs act of Congress, that benzoate of soda “is not poisonous or deleter- ious or harmful to health,” as deter- mined by decision of the Federal De- partment of Agriculture. The complaint shows that in 1910 Wisconsin enacted a law prohibiting the sale of benzoate of soda when used as a preservative, fixing heavy penalties for violation of the law. and Commissioner Weigle has declared that he will enforce the law, as a re- sult of which the company has been compelled to discontinue sales and shipments of their products into Wis- consin. The fact that the case brought by Curtice Bros. will come before Judge Sanborn, who recently rendered a de- cision in favor of the Corn Products Refining Co., wherein the State at- tempted to compel the company to declare on the label of “Karo” corn syrup that it contained glucose. is re- garded by many as suggesting that Curtice Bros. have more than an even chance to win, although the cases are rather dissimilar. — Commissioner Helme Breaks Out Tn New Place. Lansing, Feb. i—For the past month the air of Michigan has been redolent with discussion about beans, bean prices, bean jobbers, bean can. ners and bean diseases. All this results from the fact {| the bean is, next to bread, the m valuable foodstuff produced in ¢h, country, and, as Michigan produces 70 per cent. of the Nation’s crop, i behooves us not to “spill the be : What_was all the trouble abou; anyway? Well, you see, it was like this: In preparing the beans for mar ket at one stage of the game son nice looking girls at the elevato pick out a lot of bad looking beans known as culls. Most of them are mouldy and decomposed. Theoreti- cally, these beans are supposed to je fed to hogs of the four-legged variety. Practically, these cull beans have been shipped all over the county to canners who canned them for human consumption. The Federal Pure Food Depart- ment got wise to this, and this season when the elevator men began to ship cull beans to brokers and canners they were seized by Federal author- ities. Delegations of jobbers and canners went down to Washineton to get the Department to rule wha: percentage of bad beans they mich sell or can. But the Federal author- ities refused to make a ruling. They knew if they established a percentage, they would find that per cent. present on all occasions. After two delegations had heen down to see the Federal Pure Food authorities and got no satisfaction. the bean jobbers appealed to Gover. nor Ferris to use his good offices to get the Federal authorities to tell the jobbers what kind of beans they could ship without being seized. The Gov- ernor turned the job over to the State Dairy and Food Commissioner. who went down to Washington to get a definite ruling. Dr. Alsberg, head of the Federal Pure Food Denartment, had no ob- jection to talking with the head of the State Food Department. He showed samples of a large number of cans of beans canned with tomato sauce. After washing off the sauce. it could be easily seen that a large Proportion of these beans were culls. Dr. Alsherg made a definite ruling at the request of the Michigan Commis- sioner that, inasmuch as cull beans were only fit to feed stock, that no cull heans would be shipped out of Michigan unless they were firs ground up so they would not be avail- able for canning. The Department also found that many bean jobbers had sold beans to canners that had been picked with machines, but not by girls. This practice the Federal Department an- nounced should be stopped. The De- partment made a ruling that hereafter no dry beans could he shipped excep’ those which had been picked “in good commercial practice.” Under this ruling only those beans known to the jobbers as choice hand-picked can be sold. Possibly prime may also come under this ruling, certainly no other grades. What. effect will this ruling have on the Michigan bean crop? We he- lieve it will raise the price. The cul! beans that the farmer received noth- ing for must be replaced in canning by choice hand picked. This means a greater demand for the beans the farmer gets paid for: more deman? means more price. The price will probably gradually increase from now on until the next crop comes in sight. Another thing. If all beans have to be handpicked in Michigan it means several thousand dollars paid to Mich- igan labor. James W. Helme, _State Dairy and Food Commis- sioner. at ldt 1e rs — +3 >____ Probably the biggest thing about a jealous woman is her suspicion. i] February 2, 1916 Making Money in the Wholesale Gro- cery Business. The stockholders of the National Grocer Company, which conducts fourteen large jobbing house in Mich- igan and Illinois, held their annual meeting in the company’s general offices in Detroit last Tuesday, and re-elect- ed the old board of directors: F. C. Lets, President; C. Elliott, Vice-Pres- ident; William C. Phipps, Second Vice-President; B. B. Cushman, Treasurer and general manager, and W. I. Olwell, Secretary. The reports indicated that the com- pany had a very successful year, the sales showing an increase of $314,- 310.94 over 1914, with net profits for the stockholders, after deducting de- preciations and expenses of all kinds and nature, $334,102.93. Durine the year 1915 the company paid the reg- ular 3 per cent. semi-annual dividends on preferred stock amounting to $90,- 000, and four quarterly dividends of 1% per cent. each were paid on the common stock; also 2 Per cent. extra on the previous year’s earnings, mak- ing a total of $160,000 paid on com- mon stock during the year or total dividends on both preferred and com- mon amounting to $250,000. The common stock earnings for the year were 12.2 per cent. No extra dividend was declared on the common stock at this meeting because it was deemed advisable to retain the excess earnings for im- provements that will be made during the year. The company has recently purchased a piece of ground 120 x 240 on West Larned street, Detroit, on MICHIGAN TRADESMAN which a building will be erected, five stories and basement, containing 172,- 800 square feet, at a total cost of $325,000. A warehouse at Lansing will also be built at an approximate cost of $50,000. These improvements, together with the purchase of the Cadillac property already made, will permit the company to handle its business more economically in these respective points. The usual custom of taking mer- chandise inventory at cost basis, or at the market price if the mar- ket is less than cost, was fol- lowed, although the market value of many commodities on December 31, 1915, was above cost. The com- pany’s undivided profit account as of Jan. 1, 1916, stands at $783,279.54. ——_+-.__ Underwear Mills Forced to Readjust Values. Manufacturers of underwear are being compelled to readjust values in an important way on account of ris- ing costs in all directions, including labor, raw materials of all kinds, whether yarns, paper, etc. The latest lines to be advanced in price include two prominent mills making the bet- ter grades of men’s balbriggans, such as the garments retailing at 50 cents and on which values under normal conditions are unusually constant. These two lines are marking up prices on new business for this season 1214 cents a dozen on shirts and drawers and 25 cents on union suits. It is un- derstood that these new prices them- selves will only hold for a limited amount of business, when prices such as on the shirts and drawers will like- ly have to be marked up another 121% cents a dozen. Mills of this kind have taken this action only slowly, considering the similar action of other lines of cot- ton underwear, the cheap balbrigeans, for example, now being up a total of 20 cents a dozen. But abnormal con- ditions in manufacturing, now apply- ing in practically every factor govern- ing the cost of merchandise, have forced the manufacturers to meet the situation. Business in these goods, such as the 50 cent bals, has been improving steadily along with the rest of the underwear market, and the demand is now active. Jobbers and retailers alike are taking merchandise in a liberal way. Mills in many centers are short of labor and in places such as Amsterdam and* other New York State centers are steadily advertising for help. Many mills are running full in the daytime and at nights in the spinning and knitting departments. There is a constant demand for underwear for export such as wool and merino goods and special kinds of fleeced garments also; it is said there is some demand for men’s fleec- ed shirts and drawers. Foreign buy- ers, it is evident, cannot secure the quantities of merchandise this year as they could a year ago. ——_2>~-<-____ The output of the Holland-St. Louis Sugar Co. at its three factories for the present season was 36,000,000 pounds as compared with 25,000,000 last season. 3 Several Big Ohio Canneries Con- solidate. Rumor, which is generally credited, announces the consolidation of sev- eral of Ohio’s most famous canneries at Circleville and Chillicothe, the Sears & Nichols Co., the Esmeralda Canning Co., the C. E. Sears Co., the Scioto Canning Co., and the Winorr They will operate as one concern, under the management of Walter J. Sears. The old firm of of C. E. Sears & Co. were the pioneer coin packers of the West. EB. E. Smith, of the Esmeralda Co., has long been in the business, and for the past two years had had _ associated with him George W. Drake. Equally well known are all the firms men- Canning Co. tioned, the President of the Ohio Can- ners’ Association being S. B. Orr, of the Winorr Co. —___--¢-— Butter, Eggs, Poultry, Beans and Potatoes, Buffalo, Feb. 1—Creamery butter, extras, 31@32c; first, 29@30c; com- mon, 25@27c; dairy, common to good, 20@26c; all kinds, 18@20c. Chese—Fancy, new, 18c; choice, L7@17uc. ees—Choice, new laid, storage candled 22@23c. Poultry (live)—Chicks per lb. 16@ 18c; cox, 12c; fowls, 16@1ic; ducks, 18@19c; geese, 15@16c; turkeys, 18 (22 29@30c; Poultry (dressed)—Chicks, 17@20c; fowls, 16@18c; ducks, 17@18c; geese, 15@17c; turkeys, 22@25c. Beans—Medium, $4: pea, $4.10; Red Kidney, $4.50@5; White Kidney, $5; Marrow, $4.50@5. Potatoes—$1.10@1.15 per bu. Rea & Witzig. Fully Guaranteed fee mor ai tay ey Me oe : RES aT SS ASN, SSIES ) wet OWA, Absolutely Pure Royal Baking Powder is made of pure Cream of Tartar, and is the highest grade of baking powder that can be made. Its quality and purity are established all over the world. That is the reason it is the easiest to sell and every grocer should always carry a full stock. You can push the sale of ROYAL BAKING POWDER with confidence as well as profit, because you know it will please your customers and make more and surer profit for you than any other baking powder. Contains No Alum NN Ew Rew Boome Sa YORK BVA SUNG POW DIR = Xe > ne MICHIGAN TRADESMAN ~ rTHE BUSINESS WO = = = = wy iwi TU Reta = (( Movements of Merchants. Mears—John Lind succeeds Charles Campbell in the meat business. Otsego—Clyde H. Scott succeeds F. S. Tucker in the grocery business. Lowell—The Scott Hardware Co. has changed its name to the M. W. Gee Co. Orleans—J. C. Osborn, recently of Belding, has opened a general store here. Battle Creek—F. A. Conant has open- ed a shoe store on South Jefferson avenue. Flint—The Economy Shoe Co. has decreased its capital stock from $12,000 to $6,000. Detroit—The Halpin Creameries has changed its principal office to Vassar, Michigan. Ishpeming—Joseph Dronby has en- gaged in the meat business on West Iron street. Manistee—H. Rosenbloom, of Alma, will open a credit clothing store here about Feb. 12. Greenville—R. D. Wiener, of Albion, will engage in the fur, hide and junk business Feb. 12. Detroit—The Detroit Soluble Oil Co. has increased its capital stock from $5,000 to $15,000. Detroit—The capital stock of the Gen- eral Sales Co. has been increased from $25,000 to $75,000. Cass City—John Caldwell has sold his implement stock to John Cole, who has taken possession. Otsego—Frank Fairfield has sold his grocery stock to F. S. Tucker, who will continue the business. Ovid—Frank Alchin succeeds W. W. Woodworth in the garage and auto- mobile supply business. Detroit—The Davis 5 and 10 cent Stores Co. has increased its capital stock from $15,000 to $50,000. Vermontville—George Welch has clos- ed his bakery and removed to Lansing, where he has secured a position. Bellevue—Shaler Bros., of Jackson, have purchased the E. L. Cole hardware stock and will take possession Feb. 19. Alto—Edward Sneeden, recently of McCords, has purchased the meat stock of John Keiser and will continue the business. Ishpeming—Joseph Gill, veteran con- fectionery and ice cream dealer, has closed out his stock and will retire from business. Harbor Beach—The Leszczynski Co., which conducts a general store, has in- creased its capital stock from $10,000 o $25,000. Saranac—D. K. Jepson has sold his interest in the grocery stock of Otis & Jepson to Lee Otis, who will continue the business. Sparta—Thieves entered the D. C. Holt jewelry store Jan. 26 and carried away some stock and the contents of the cash drawer. Kalamazoo—Bert Downs has purchased the Mintline Bros. grocery stock, at 531 Harrison street, and has added a line of meats to the stock. Hopkins—O. P. Gordon has sold his stock of general merchandise to John Tuinhoff, recently engaged in the gro- cery business at Grand Rapids. Benton Harbor—The H. L. Bird Drug Co. stock has been purchased by J. A. Reiber, formerly of the drug firm of Gillespie & Reiber, at St. Joseph. Flint—The capital stock of the Genesee Jewelry Co. has been increased from $1,000 to $8,000 and its name changed to the A. Lee Brown Co. Jackson—Harry Sadares has sold his confectionery stock to Samuel Ziuvas, who will continue the business at the same location on East Main street, Portland—Fire destroyed the two-, story brick building and drug stock of Frank Powers Feb. 1. The loss was partially covered by insurance. Cadillac—W. L. Stinson and V. H. Given have formed a copartnership and purchased the Richard Marcus grocery stock. They will continue the business. Cadillac—F. A. Laurent and Miss Ida La Marre have formed a copartner- ship and taken over the plant of the Seeley dye works and will continue the business. Lansing—Charles G. MacKichan has sold a half interest in his shoe stock to John F. Todd and the business will be continued under the stvle of Mac’s shoe store. Flint—L. M. Kehoe has opened a meat market at 854 Leith street. Mr. Kehoe also conducts a meat market at Mont- rose and is a buyer and shipper of do- mestic cattle. Allen—The Allen Electric Lighting & Power Co. has been incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $2,000, of which amount $1,500 has been subscrib- ed and $680 paid in in cash. Battle Creek—John C. Bauer has sold his interest in the sporting goods stock of Bauer & Hamilton to Frank Hamil- ton, his partner, who will continue the business under his own name. Monroe—The Monroe Carp Pond Co. has engaged in the general fishing busi- ness with an authorized capital stock of $10,000, of which amount $5,000 has been subscribed and paid in in cash. Dowagiac—W. J. Hubbard has sold his interest in the Little & Hubbard stock of general merchandise, to his partner, George H. Little, who will con- tinue the business under his own name. Clinton—The Clinton Clothing Co. has merged its business into a stock company under the same style, with an authorized capital stock of $6,000, all of which has been subscribed and paid in in prop- erty. Benton Harbor—A. Goldbaum, gro- cer on Elm street, has purchased a half interest in the women’s ready-to-wear stock of M. Siegan and the business will be continued under the style of Siegan & Co. Ludington—Sherman Bros., dealers in books, stationery and sewing machines, have dissolved partnership and the busi- ness will be continued by John Sherman, who has taken over the interest of his brother, Frank. Detroit—The Howard Shoe Stores have been incorporated with an author- ized capital stock of $10,000, of which amount $6,800 has been subscribed, $749.85 paid in in cash and $6,050.15 paid in in property. Grand Ledge—A. A .Houghtaling, who conducts a bazaar store at Charlotte, has purchased the C. J. Tucker stock of china and dry goods and will continue the business at the same location under the management of H. G. Harrod. Luther—S. Buckner, who has been closing out his stock of general mer- chandise preparatory to retiring from business, has sold the remainder of his stock and fixtures to the other general dealers, William Reed and F. G. Swan- son. Escanaba—Blomstrom & Peterson, re- tail jewelers, have merged their business into a stock company under the style of Blomstrom & Peterson, Inc., with an authorized capital stock of $25,000, of which amount $20,200 has been sub- scribed, $779.21 paid in in cash and $19,- 420.79 paid in in property. Benton Harbor—Asher Goldman, en- gaged in the grocery trade, has merged his business into a stock company and engaged in the general mercantile busi- ness under the style of Siegan & Co., with an authorized capital stock of $8,- 000, all of which has been subscribed, $4,000 paid in in cash and $4,000 paid in in property. Manufacturing Matters. Detroit—The Owl Baking Co. has changed its name to the Merchants Bak- ing Co. Detroit—The Hygeia Filter Co. has in- creased its capital stock from $25,000 to $70,000. Detroit—The Sterling Motor Co. has increased its capital stock from $310,000 to $705,000. Detroit—The General Spring & Wire Co. has increased its capital stock from $10,000 to $20,000. Battle Creek—The Union Steam Pump Co. has increased its capital stock from $600,000 to $1,000,000. Kalamazoo—The Dunkley Co. has changed its name to the Michigan Can- ning and Machinery So. St. Clair—The capital stock of the Diamond Crystal Salt Co. has been in- creased from $650,000 to $900,000. Battle Creek—The A-B Enameling & Foundry Co. has changed its name to the Ajax Enameling & Foundry Co. Detroit—The Crystal Machine Co. has increased its capitalization from $10,000 to $25,000 and has changed its name to the Crystal Washing Machine Co. Holland—The Holland Ladder Co. has been organized by Thomas Tas- ker and G. Geerts. The company will February 2, i916 occupy the Kleyn building on Sixth street. Greenville—The Hart Specialty Co, has been organized with an authorized capital stock of $10,000 for the purpose of manufacturing toys and children’s furniture. Muskegon—The Stone Products Co. has been organized with an authorized capital stock of $5,000, of which amount $2,500 has been subscribed and $1,050 paid in in cash. Detroit—The Van Dyke Bakery Co, has been organized with an authorized capital stock of $150,000, of which amount $77,500 has been subscribed and paid in in property. Detroit—The Thomas Berry Chemical Co. has been organized with an author. ized capital stock of $100,000, of which amount $80,000 has been subscribed and $10,000 paid in in cash. Kalamazoo — The Kalamazoo Shoe Manufacturing Co. has been organized with an authorized capital stock of $50.- 000, of which amount $40,000 has been subscribed and $20,000 paid in in cash. Zeeland—The Zeeland Knitting Co. has been incorporated with in author- ized capital stock of $5,000, of which amount $2,500 has been subscribed, $1,- 000 paid in in cash and $1,500 paid in in property. Saginaw—The Schust Baking Co. has changed its name to the Schust Co. Besides being engaged in the baking business, the company manufacturers confectionery and carries a jobbing line of specialties. Detroit—J. W. Dopp & Co. has en gaged in the manufacture of all kinds of machinery and allied products with an authorized capitalization of $1,000, all of which has been subscribed and paid in in cash. —_>----__ With the exception of Italy, the Caucasus is the one theater of th war which, until the other day, show ed the least amount of progress on either side. And when one takes into account the relative importance o/ area gained in Europe and in Asia, even the progress of the Italian army has been more significant. In eighteen months’ fighting the main operations in the Caucasus oscillated close t: the Russo-Turkish frontier withou apparent advantage to either side. Put this will have changed if the Ru sians follow up their successes nea Erzerum and invest that city, with its large garrison. Erzerum lies seventy miles inside the Turkish frontier. Its fall, which we need not anticipate to hurriedly, to be sure, would lead to : Russian advance southwest agains’ the line of Harput-Dirabekr, the rou! of the Bagdad railway. Even if si an advance should not materialize the winning of a broad slice of Ar menia would count in the final match ing of gains and losses. In Europ: the Allies have only a very thin sliver of Alsac and a strip of Galacia show. But they have the Africa colonies and, more important their territorial winning in the Caucasus and in lower Mesopotamia, both 0° strategic importance beyond the mere gain in square miles. 2-2-2 The Grand Rapids Foundry Co. has decreased its capital stock from $75,000 to $50,000. Sse AP eS LD SRI February 2, 1916 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Review of the Grand Rapids Produce Market. Apples—Standard varieties, such as Baldwins, Greenings and Wagners command $3@4 per bbl.; Northern Spys, $4@5 per bbl. Bananas—Medium, $1.50; Jumbo, $1.75; Extra Jumbo, $2; Extreme Ex- tra Jumbo, $2.25. Beans—Michigan buyers are paying $3.40 for pea and $4 for Red Kidney, hand picked basis. Beets—60c per bu. Butter—The very unseasonable weather has interfered with the de- mand for the top grades of butter and the market is steady at ic de- cline from a week ago. Undergrades remain steady and unchanged. No further change is expected in the im- mediate future. The make is about normal for the season. Local dealers quote fancy creamery at 30c in tubs and 31c in prints. Local dealers pay 23c for No. 1 and 16c for packing stock. Cabbage—60c per bu or $2 per bbl. Carrots—60c per bu. Celery—Home grown, 25@50c per bunch; California, 75c for Jumbo and 90c for Extra Jumbo. Cocoanuts—$2 per sack containing 100. Cranberries—Late Howes have ad- vanced to $9.50 per bbl. Cucumbers—$2__ per Southern hot house. Eggs—Receipts of fresh are begin- ning to increase and the quality ar- riving is averaging fancy. The mar- ket is steady on the present basis of quotations and the future price depends entirely on weather condi- tions. Local handlers pay 25@26c for fresh. Storage eggs are unchanged at 20c for case count and 23c for can- dled. Egg Plant—$2 per dozen. Fresh Pork—8c for hogs up to 200 Ibs., larger hogs, 7c. Grapes—Spanish Malaga, $7.50@8 per keg of 40@45 lbs. Grape Fruit—Florida is steady at $3.50@4 per box. Green Onions—Shalotts, 65c per dozen bunches. Honey—18c per lb. for white clov- er and 16c for dark. Lemons—California, $4.50 per box for choice, $4.75 for fancy. Lettuce—15@16c per 1b. for hot house leaf, $2 per bu. for Southern head. Maple Sugar—14@15c per Ib. Mushrooms—40@50c per Ib. Nuts—Almonds, 18c per Ib.; fil- herts, 15¢ per 1b.; pecans, 15c per Ib.; walnuts, 16c for Grenoble, 16%4c for California; 15c for Naples; $2 per bu. for Shellbark hickory nuts and $1.75 for large. Onions—The market is unchanged at $2.50 per 100 Ib. sack. dozen for Oranges—California Navals, $3@ 3.75; Floridas, $2.50@2.75. Oysters—Standards, $1.35; Medium Selects, $1.50; Extra Selects, $1.75, New York Counts, $1.85; Shell Oys- ters, $7.50 per bbl. Peppers—Southern grown mand $2.50 per 6 basket crate. Pop Corn—$1.75 per bu. for ear, 4%c per lb. for shelled. Potatoes—The market is weaker than it was a week ago, due to the unseasonable weather which prevail- ed last week over a large part of the com- country. Country buyers are paying 75@80c. Local handlers sell at $1 per bu. Poultry—Local dealers pay as fol- lows, live weight: Fowls, 10c; cocks, 8c; chickens, 11c; turkeys, 20c; ducks, 14c; geese, 11c. Dressed fowls aver- age 3c above these quotations. Radishes—35c for round hot house. Squash—1%c per 1b. for Hubbard. Strawberries—40@50c per qt. for Florida. Sweet Potatoes—$1.25 per hamper for kiln dried Jerseys; $3.50 per bbl. for kiln dried Illinois. Tomatoes—$2 for 4 basket crate, California stock. Turnips—60c per bu. Veal—Jobbers pay 12c for No. 1 and 10c for No. 2. —_2++___ The Grocery Market. Sugar—Eastern refiners advanced their quotations 15 points—from 5.85 to 6c, New York basis. The advance is due to a higher market in raws and strong foreign demand. American refiners now realize that their surplus refining capacity will be taxed to its fullest capacity for the remainder of this year, and while in the event of a sudden armistice or even peace being declared, there may be a senti- mental break or rearrangement of prices, we are becoming more and more convinced that from a reserve standpoint alone, even in the face of actual peace, the Central European powers would not permit the exporta- tion of much, if any, of such surplus supplies as they may have on hand. Tea—The market has ruled quieter during the week, but prices are main- tained on black kinds, especially In- dia-Ceylons for which the enquiry con- tinues fairly good. The country has been inclined to replenish stocks, be- cause of the strength in Colombo, where the shortage of shipping and the higher freight rates operate to cause an advance. It is figured that owing to the delay in arrivals spot teas are in a strong position. For- mosas are hanging fire, despite the fact that they form the bulk of the avail- able supplies of black teas in the market. They are the cheapest, since there is little Foochow, and the Con- gous are quoted at a higher level. Eventually, the trade believes, For- mosas will be taken for blending pur- poses. Some circles in the trade stil! maintain that the preparedness pro- gramme of the Administration will lead to a duty on tea which, at 10 cents a pound, would furnish some $10,000,000. Oihers consider it doubt- ful if the Democratic party would dare to face the tea table argument. Coffee—The advance reported a few weeks ago seems to have been checked and the heavy undertone is more in evidence now than it was at that time. Brazil is still finding it hard to get ship- ping and this is all that keeps prices even steady. Rio 7s are steady to firm, but Santos 4s are perhaps a shade lower than a week ago. Milds are in fair position and the situation is steady. Java is firm at prices somewhat above normal. Mocha is unchanged. Canned Vegetables—The market on tomatoes is unchanged. Corn is selling freely, both spot and future, and is firm, with slight advances on some grades. Peas are selling very freely, the con- sumption having increased quite materi- ally. Prices remain unchanged. Balti- more goods are in seasonable demand, with no changes worthy of note. Canned Fish—Domestic sardines are firmer and some packers are asking an advance. Imported sardines still scarce and firm, without change. Salmon is in excellent condition. The demand is good for this time of the year and stocks are not excessive. Everybody re- ports scarcity of tuna fish. No prices on the new pack have as yet been made. Dried Fruits—Peaches and apricots are holding their own, but the de- mand is not at all active. California prunes of the 1915 crop for future shipment from the Coast are slightly irregular, with some of the smaller packers showing an inclination to shade prices that are apparently being firmly held by the more prominent operators. The stocks being offered at the low basis of prices are very small, and brokers are of the opinion that the irregular tendency in evi- dence is only a temporary movement that will soon disappear. The trade is showing comparatively little inter- est in the future prune market and is buying only very small stocks, mostly at the reduced prices. The larger packers are making no effort to meet the low prices offered by the smaller packers, and are apparently content to wait for the buyers to ex- haust the light supplies of cheaper prunes, when they will be forced to meet the quotations held by the larg- er operators. Oregon future prunes are said to be practically unobtain- able on the Coast, and only a few brokers are able to offer quotations. Only occasional sales are made, and the market is held at a very strong basis. Raisins are dull, with the ex- ception of the seedless varieties, which are in excellent demand at full prices. Currants are unchanged. Citron and peel remain unchanged, with prices firm and stocks available in moderate quantity. Cheese—The market is firm at about 4c per pound advance over last week, with a normal consumptive 5 demand and a good export demand. The stocks are reported to be less than they were a year ago. No change from the present basis of quotations is looked for. Rice—Rough rice is quiet in New Orleans, according to the advices, the receipts being for the mills. Trad- ing in cleaned Honduras is brisk. The Beaumont market is sluggish, but planters are holding for firm prices. Full Association figures are asked. Provisions— Hog products have been fairly active, but the high prices of a few days ago have not been maintained. This has been due to the enormous run of hogs, which has been practically record breaking. The average weights have been below the normal, however, and while this means qa large production of meat it does not mean a_ correspondingly large production of lard. The de- mand for everything in the smoked meat line is light, at prices ranging the same as last week. Pure lard is steady at about %c advance, while compound is having a good consump- tive demand at %c per pound ad- vance. Barreled pork, canned meats and dried beef are steady, with a moderate demand at unchanged prices. Salt Fish—Mackerel rules about the same, with but slight fluctuations and comparatively small demand. Cod, hake and haddock are unchanged and quite, and the warm spell of the week did not stay long enough to seriously affect the situation. The decision of the Supreme Court in upholding the constitutionality of the income tax is what was confidently ex- pected. The first attempt in that direc- tion did not conform to the requirements of the law, as was ably pointed out by the late David B. Hill, then a United States Senator. The necessary prelim- inary adjustments were made and in the light of the latest law, the new statute was very carefully drawn and now ap- pears to be water tight. The income tax has been going on long enough so that it is a settled conviction and con- clusion that those entitled to pay can not honestly escape. It is charged that some are willing to take long chances, bordering on perjury if not crossing clear over, to avoid these payments. That such a course is reprehensible and indefensible goes without saying. Any man who swears to an untruth in con- nection with his income tax rate de- serves to be punished, and that is en- tirely outside the question whether or no be believes in the theory or practice. So long as it is a law, it is the duty of every citizen to observe it. —_+++___. William H. Goodman has sold his grocery stock to Harry Elhart, for- merly of Rockford, who will continue the business at the same location, 818 Division avenue. —_++-+____ Robert Westveld has purchased the grocery stock of Harm Ritzema, who has been engaged in the grocery business at 749 Grandville avenue for the past eleven years. John Tuinhoff, who conducts a gro- cery store at 1900 Clyde Park avenue, has sold his stock to O. P. Gordon, of Hopkins, who has taken possession. UPPER PENINSULA. Recent News From the Cloverland of Michigan. Sault Ste. Marie, Feb. 1—Ted Mc- Kinney is now a full-fledged traveiing man, having been initiated into the mysteries of the road last week. His maiden trip was made over the D.. . S. & A. Railway. Ted represents the firm of P. T. McKinney & Sons. wholesale and retail grocers here. He is one of the Soo’s live wires and a young man of ability. He has had var- ied experience in traveling through- out the State and enjoys the vocation. He is a good mixer and, undoubtedly, will be successful. That was some hockey game that we had here Friday night, when the Soo put it over on St. Paul with a score Of 7 to 2 fayer of Seo. The hockey fans are in high spirits and looking for more worlds to conquer. Some of our boys had souvenirs on their faces which seemed to add to their appearances. Arrangements were also made for taking motion pictures of the Soo and St. Paul hockey teams on McCracken’s out- door rink on the south side. Some fast plays and posed groups of each team were taken and will be used in various motion. picture weeklies, which through their exchanges will distribute the pictures to all parts of the United States and Canada. 9, FP. Aldrich, manager for the Pickford department store, at Pick- ford, was a business visitor here last week. The Soo traveling men are making elaborate preparations for their first annual banquet, which will be held at the Park Hotel next Saturday even- ing. This will be the first get-togeth- er occasion for the boys here and in all probabilities we will have some- thing to report for the next issue which will be interesting to the trav- elers throughout Cloverland. George Bailey, manager of the shoe department of Prenzlauer Bros. de- partment store, entertained a number of friends with a shoe pack party at his commodious summer cottage on Sugar Island. Elaborate preparations were made by Mr. Bailey and that the crowd was not disappointed was vouched for by those fortunate enough to enjoy this treat. After a sumptuous dinner, a few speeches were made which would have made Chauncey M. Depew jealous. Nelson Hall, of the firm of Conway & Hall, druggists, gave an unusually interest- ing talk and surprised the party with his ready wit and oratory which he handed out in a manner as only Mr. Hall can deliver. Werhert Fletcher, assistant cashier of the Sault Savings Bank, rendered a few vocal selections which were well received. The hockey game in the afternoon was won by Mr. Hall’s team beating Mr. Bailev’s team with a score of 6 to 0. Mr. Bailey has marked the channel from Kibby’s boat house so that there was no danger at any time of getting into open water and the trip will long be remembered as a most pleasant affair by all those in attendance. “A man’s character is the reality of himself. His reputation is the Opinion others have formed of him. Character is in him. Reputation is from other people.” It is reported that the Upner Penin- sula Development Bureau is to have a new head in the person of R. M. Andrews. who will succeed Colonel Mott. The Menominee man is well aualified for the management of the Bureau and. as editor of the new magazine, Cloverland, will he able to do much in developing the Upper Peninsula. “A man would rather be last than first—in a funeral procession.” Newhberrv has lost one of its the- aters, as fire last week destroved the vandette. The structure was a frame, covered inside and out with sheet iron. The Caledonian Club entertained MICHIGAN TRADESMAN about 500 of the clan at a banquet which was held at the armory last week in the anniversary of the birth of Robert Burns. The feast was one of the best ever provided in the Soo and the programme greatly enjoyed by all. Geo. P. McCallum was the toastmaster and what he omitted was not worth mentioning. “Some men no sooner get a job age they begin to kick for a day off.” : Chippewa potultry raisers are mak- ing a hit at the various poultry shows this year. R. H. Smith’s white Or- pingtons have made the round of all the larger Southern Michigan shows and captured numerous prizes, be- sides putting Chippewa county on the map as the prize winning poultry country. _J. Newhouse, of the firm of Ryan & Newhouse, _Soo monument dealers, reports business as picking up in his line. While it is not a good sign, generally speaking, it goes to show that although Jack is selling tomb- stones he is not a dead one. Jack is also one of the Soo’s noted singers and his popularity has much to do with getting the business in his line. William G. Tapert. >.> ____ Bankruptcy Proceedings in South- western Michigan. St. Joseph, Jan. 24—In the matter of Ralph J. Barnes, bankrupt, Otsego, an order was entered calling the final meet- ‘ng of creditors at his office on Feb. 8 for the purpose of passing upon the trustee’s final report and account, show- ing total receipts of $570.89 and disburse- ments of $30.79, leaving a halance on hand of $540.10. and for the declaration and payment of a dividend and the pay- ment of administration expenses. Cred- itors were directed to show cause why a certificate should not be made recom- mending the bankrupt’s discharge. Jan. 25—In the matter of the McMahon Wicks Coal Co., bankrupt, Kalamazoo, the trustee having filed his final report and account, an order was made for a final meeting of creditors to be held at the referee’s office on Feb. 7, for the purpose of passing upon the trustee’s final report and account, showing total receints of $2,013.16 and disbursements of $1,012.18 and balance on hand of $990.98, the declaration and payment of a final dividend, the payment of administration expenses and to determine whether or not the trustee shall be authorized to inter- pose objections to the discharge of the bankrupt. Creditors were directed to show cause why a certificate should not he made by the referee recommending the bankrupt’s discharge. In the matter of the Spencer & Barnes Co., bankrupt, Benton Harbor. the ad- journed first meeting of creditors was held at St. Joseph and the examination of the officers of the bankrupt. con- tinued. Claims to the amount of $20,000 were proved and allowed. The trustee filed his first report, showing cash on hand of $31.657.88, whereupon the order of distribution was entered for the pay- ment of certain administration expenses and preferred labor claims. The trustee filed objections to the secured or preferred claim of William G. Newland, which claim was filed for the sum of $28,509, whereupon an order was made by the referee for a special hearing on the matter Feb. 4. Jan. 26—In the matter of Adelbert B. Fargo, bankrupt. Kalamazoo, the final meeting of creditors was held at the referee’s office and the trustee’s final report and account, showing total re- ceipts of $155 was approved and allowed. After the payment of the actual admin- istration expenses there was only the sum of $69.76 to distribute to creditors. The trustee was authorized not to inter- pose objections to the discharge of the bankrupt. Creditors having been directed to show cause why a certificate should not be made recommending the bank- rupt’s discharge and no cause having been s>own, it was determined that such favorable certificate be made. Jan. 27—Bert Ruben, dry goods and clothing dealer at Paw Paw, filed a vol- untary petition and he was adjudged bankrupt and the matter referred to Referee Ranyon, who was appointed re- ceiver. The referee made an order ap- pointing Glenn Warner of Paw Paw, cus- todian. The following are listed as creditors: Township Treasurer of Paw Paw $ 54.51 Crowley Brothers, Detroit ........ 232.55 Jackson Corset Co., Jackson ...... 52.18 Samuel Phillipson & Co., Chicago 99.59 E. Eisenger Co., Chicago pipe wile ieisinie. (0.4 Beacon Falls Rubber Co., Chicago 47.50 iL. C. Gross @o., Chicago ......... 18.38 G. W. Eade & Co., Aurora ...... 193.08 Apsley Rubber Co., Chicago ...... 175.33 Chicago Rubber Co., Chicago .... 21.66 Kalver & Stern, Chicago ........ 36.78 Tucker & Hagen, Chicago ........ 57 -10 Smith Wallace Shoe Co., Chicago 85.68 Feldstein Bros. & Co., New York L. F. Dommerich & Co., New York S. W. Beck & Co., New York Crower-Tynberg Co., New York Morris Mann & Reilly Co., Chicago Pioneer Mfg. Co., Cleveland ...... ! Home Mie. Co., Decatur ......... 19.75 R. B. Smith & Sons, Chicago ...... 148.28 Jackson Skirt & Novelty Co., SHGKSOM oo ee Butler Bros. Ohicaro ..0 600.0... 2, Patterson-Wessels Co., Muscatine, LOWA ee ae Louis Tucker, ©Chicaso ........... Sala Company, Canton, Ohio ..... mubin Bros:, New York .....,..... 1, Wucker & Co, Chicago ...;.... Corticelli Silkk Mills, Chicago .... Piser & Gutkowsky, Chicago ..... Solomon Zion & Co., Philadelphia C. C. Hansen Mfg. Co., Milwaukee J. 8. Metter, South Bend ........ : Rice «& Ash Detroit: .6........... 75 Ainsworth Shoe Co., Toledo ks Ben Oppenheim, Kalamazoo ...... 1712 Henry Kleine & Company, Chicago 24.84 Convers Rubber Shoe Co., Chicago 41.75 Cc. A. Mather & Co); Chicago .... 23/39 Samuel W. Haines & Co., Phila- Gewhia ee 5.25 tiias Dicker, (Paw Paw ..0... 5.5.2: 30.90 aw Paw Vilare (.... 2... 7.00 True Northern Publishing Co., Paw PAW ooo. eel eel. 13.00 Motel cece ee $2,186.68 Assets Stock in trade ..................$1,760.94 In the matter of the Whitcomb Hotel & Mineral Baths, a corporation, bank- rupt, St. Joseph, the adjourned first meet- ing of creditors was held at the latter place and the examination of the officers of the bankrupt continued for the pur- pose of discovering further assets. From the present outlook unsecured creditors will receive less than 2 per cent. Jan. 29—In the matter of Abraham Bernstein, bankrupt, Kalamazoo, the first meeting of creditors was held at the latter place. No claims were proved. The bankrupt was sworn and examined by the referee without a reporter and his examination disclosed there were no assets to administer above the bankrupt’s exemptions, whereupon an order was made by the referee allowing the bank- rupt his exemptions as claimed and that no trustee be appointed. The meeting was adjourned without day; and unless cause to the contrary is shown the estate will be closed within 30 days. Jan. 31—In the matter of George De Kam, bankrupt, Kalamazoo, an _ order was made calling the first meeting of creditors at the latter place on Feb. 11 for the purpose of proving claims, the election of a trustee, the examination of the bankrupt and the transaction of such other business as may properly come be- fore the meeting. —_> + + ____ Honks From Auto City Council. Lansing, Feb. 1—Fred Mott (EI- liott Grocer Co.), who has been ill tor several weeks, suffered another relapse yesterday and for the third time is contined to his home with la grippe. | Our Senior Counselor is staying at home this week nursing a_ badly swollen face caused by an offending molar, ‘The ticket agent at the Ann Arbor station, Owosso, recently refused to sell a ticket to a traveler who ten- dered a $5 bill for a 60 cent fare, simply because he couldn’t change it. Said he had taken in three such bills the same day and was short of change. Roosevelt and Warner banners are now being used in the construction work of one of Grand Rapids’ sky scrapers to protect the workmen from chilly blasts and it is amusing to listen to the remarks of bystanders. We would repeat some of them in this column, but feel certain they would be censured. _ We were just foolish enough to be induced to bring a new car through from Detroit last week for an oily tongued agent, but never again under the present road conditions. Six hours at the wheel and two hours in various places by the wayside. Here’s hoping for the pavedway. The next meeting of the Council will be held Saturday evening, at which several candidates will be ini- tiated and other important business transacted. At 6:30 our ladies aux- iliary will serve one of their famous Bohemian suppers. Special music will arrive at the close of the Council session and the waxed floor will be used as long as desired. Bring your Wives, sisters or sweethearts. If you haven’t either, borrow of your neigh- H. D. Bullen, bors, but come. February 2, 191¢ Activities in Some Michigan Cities Written for the Tradesman. Many new houses will be built St. Johns this year to take care o employes of the Hayes Motor Truc Wheel Co. Zeeland business men have orean ized the Zeeland Boosters’ Club. On, of the matters unders discussion the removal of electric light and tele. phone poles and wires from Mai; street. A membership campaign will be put on soon by the Adrian Commerc Club, An expert has been engage, to direct a civic revival. About 1,600 subscribers of thc Union Telephone Co., of Owosso, anij vicinity, and 600 subscribers of th: Home Telephone Co., of Chesaning. will benefit by the recent order o} the State Railroad Commission re- quiring that physical connections lb; made for long distance service. The Owosso Improvement Association has been active in support of this movement. Ludington has adopted boulevard lights, including ornamental posts with three-lamp clusters, which will be installed this year for three blocks along James street. The remaining three blocks will be taken care of next year. The Stearns Lighting & Power Co. bears the entire expens: of installation and is given two years to complete the work. The St. Louis beet sugar plant slic- ed beets this season for eighty-six days, or 51,000 tons, the product of 5,600 acres. The record day’s run was 195,000 pounds of sugar or five carloads. During the campaign an average of 283 men were employed. The Nashville Booster Club held a successful dinner meeting last week. with about 100 men present. Von W. Furniss was toastmaster and_ th speakers included Lee H. Bierce, o/ the Grand Rapids Association of Commerce, and O. R. Bromley, Divi- sion Freight Agent of the Michigan Central Railway. Signs point to a busy year with the carpenters in Eaton Rapids. After a dormant period the Island City with its fine advantages from manu facturing and residential viewpoints, is waking up. Gas at $1.15 per thousand feet is assured Charlotte after Oct. 1 and this rate will automatically drop cents with every increase of ten mil lion feet consumed until $1 is reached. Improvements and extensions cost- ing $6,000 will be installed this year Coldwater will form a Chamber of Commerce, this decision having been reached at a recent dinner meeting of the Retail Merchants’ Association of that city. L. J. Byers is chairma" of the committee on organization ani a booster meeting will be held soon at the opera house. Almond Griffen. —_2-.___ The Wilder Mortor Heater Co. has been incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $10,000, all of which has been subscribed and paid in in property. —_++.___ There are men so lacking in ini- tiative that they do not even start for a vacant barber chair until some one gives them the nod. ane nels Ae ; ‘ 7 i ‘ t 4 i b as ee ee Wie BLO. ees Sea [olsleserinesnnnecnnstan nsremicaraaareesant cece aa eee * ete RE ; bs i H i : j ¢ 3 | Fd February 2, 1916 German Excess Profits Tax. Manufacturers in this country will scan with interest: the proposals of the German bill for taxing war profits. The German papers to hand show that two schemes have been accepted for consideration by the Federal Council. The Imperial Ger- man Bank is to have a scheme of its own which provides for two taxes— one to balance loss of revenue by the abolition of the tax on notes last August, and the other a tax on 50 Per cent. of the increase in profits in war years. This second tax is also Proposed with regard to all business concerns. It is proposed to tax all excess profits, whether the proceeds of war contracts or not. The years, 1914, 1915 and 1916 are taken as “waz years,” and their results are to be compared with those of the three years 1911-13. Anything above $1,250 is to be treated as excess profit, and each company is required to place half the amount of the excess to a special reserve fund, and this must consist exclusively o German government securities. It is provided that pay- ment of the tax, when eventually made, can be in German war loan stock, valued at par, and it is con- sequently to be expected that the new special reserve of most companies will consist of war loan. Strict regu- lations are laid down regarding the valuation of stock, provision for bad and doubtful debts, depreciation of plant and machinery, the provision of secret reserves and other points MICHIGAN TRADESMAN which provide possible means of evad- ing the tax and heavy penalties arc to be imposed on any attempt to falsify balance sheets. It is not clear if the actual tax will amount to the sum of the special reserve. There is apparently an ex- pectation that the tax will be grad- uated, ranging from about 20 per cent, in the case of small increases to a maximum of 50 per cent. where the excess profit is large. An inter- esting point is that it is not proposed to enforce the payment of the tax until after the war, and it appears that there is much criticism with regard to this by many supporters of the scheme, who fear, probably not with- out reason, that if payment of the tax is delayed until the war is over means may be found of evading it altogether. ———_+--.——_____ Rapid Appreciation of Salmon as Ideal Food. That salmon is fast growing in favor as a food, and at the same time as a food with both nutrition and economy among its qualifications, is manifest to anyone who has lately observed the rapid increase in demand for salmon. The reasons are well expressed and explained by a letter recently sent out by the Kelly- Clark Co., packers of salmon. “Fish food is body food and brain food,” says the letter. “Canned salmon, good canned salmon, is ideal fish food. The sort of canned salmon that lies sog- gily in the can—a clammy, greasy mass— is not an ideal food, since it displeases the senses first of all. “But salmon with large firm flakes and rich, clean oil has created an ideal staple food that few other foods can attain. It is nutritious, delicious and economical. “It is possible for food to be cheap, yet not at all economical. Actually the cheapest food is that which supplies the maximum amount of nutriment at a minimum cost. Some people have learn- ed that, and some people are learning it, but the largest class is yet to learn it. When that knowledge is universal, the demand for good canned salmon will greatly exceed the supply. “Canned salmon, from a standpoint of desirability as a food, regardless of price, appeals to almost every palate. People who will not, can not, eat fresh fish in any form prize canned salmon as a genuine delicacy. Salmon has not completed its cycle when it is turned out of the can into a dish. Eaten that way it justifies its existence, but its raison d’etre is raised to a higher plane when one has sampled the epicurean dishes that can be made of salmon. Omelettes, cutlets, dishes en casserole, wonderful baked concoctions—all these make a liker of good things a lover of salmon. ““Then there is the point of economy, genuine economy. We can accept the report of the Department of Commerce that there is as much nutriment in 16 cents’ worth of the best grade of canned salmon as there is in 36 cents’ worth of eggs. When food buyers realize that there is obtainable so excellent a food as high-grade canned salmon the sub- stitution of fish for meat, urged by so many medical authorities, will be greatly furthered.” Learn a Trade. This may seem somewhat cold- blooded, but, according to statistics, the best way to stay out of the peni- tentiary is to learn a trade. It does not make so much difference what trade the boy learns; any trade learn- ed and followed will have a tendency to keep the boy and later the man out of the penitentiary, if statistics are a criterion. A student of sociology who has been making a study of prison popu- lations finds that there are very few men with trades in the penal insti- tutions of this country. For ex- ample, where there were 177 persons confined in prison, there was not a single carpenter, bricklayer, plasterer, tailor, printer, painter, or member of the other skilled crafts, to be found. In another state, out of all the prisoners in the penitentiaries, 77 per cent. of them had no trades or regu- lar calling. One can easily believe the correct- ness of these statements. It is ob- vious that men having a trade or a regular occupation do not commit crimes to the extent that people do who are without training in any use- ful line of work or endeavor. To ac- quire or learn a trade means four and five years of hard work, and hard workand crime do not go hand in hand; it is the fellow who wants to get along without working who causes the most of the trouble in this world. —Bricklayer and Plasterer. —_+ 2 Abuse some one and we always find an appreciative audience. Barney Langeler has worked in this institution continuously for over forty-five years. Barney says— In the old days easy credits used to get the business, but now days it seems to be that people are looking for GOOD GOODS and PROMPT SERVICE. I guess this is the reason why our business is more than six times as large as it was when the present man- agement took hold. WoRDEN GRAND RAPIDS— KALAMAZOO ({;ROCER COMPANY THE PROMPT SHIPPERS PCHIGANEADESMAN s (Unlike any other Paper.) DEVOTED TO THE BEST INTERESTS OF BUSINESS MEN. Published Weekly by TRADESMAN COMPANY, Grand Rapids, Mich. Subscription Price. One dollar per year, if paid strictly in advance; two dollars if not paid in ad- vance. Five dollars for six years, Payable in advance. Canadian subscriptions, $2.04 payable invariably in advance. Sample copies 5 cents each. Extra copies of current issues, 5 cents; jagues a month or more old, 10 cents; issues @& year or more old, 25 cents. per year, Entered at the Grand Rapids Postoffice as Second Class Matter. ___E. A. STOWE, Editor. February 2, 1916. THE GERMAN TRADE LOSS. Very early in the war developments the general verdict of observing neu- trals was that the only possible salva- tion for Germany's wonderfully de- veloped industries and the retention of her foreign trade depended on so quick a victory that competition should not have time to materialize and get into her foreign fields, Only German as- surance could account for the apparent indifference with which she is permit- ting so long and violent an interruption. No doubt her position, industrially, was a strong one, but it was not impregnable. One would think that the fact that her embassies and consulates jn this and other neutral countries, as well as the public press in keeping her informed as to the ease with which the lack of Ger- man production is being supplied, would at least evoke concern as to the absolute nature of her loss. The interruption of German trade in many of the neutral countries, particu- larly in South America, has been attend- ed by the most serious consequences in the way of financial panics. In the United States the Germans, as a rule, have hastened to come under the bene- fits of the better freedom of American government. Generally in the other countries, not liking the governmental and social conditions, especially among the Latins, the German merchants have retained their allegiance and, of course, their obligations to the Kaiser. Thus when the call to arms was received there was nothing to do but obey, regardless of how essential the personality to the particular enterprise. There was no other alternative, with the German idea of patriotism, but to desert the counting house or bank, regardless of conse- quences to the undertaking, and rush to the colors by the first opportunity or forever bear the brand of traitor. While not all are heeding the call there are enough to most thoroughly wreck such enterprises generally and to cause a state of industrial panic. While this is, no doubt, increased by the necessarily great interruption of English trade on account of military requirements, the credit for the terrible consequences is correctly placed with the Germans, The regaining of any considerable portion of the trade and prestige lost will be a severe tax on even German persistence and thoroughness for a good many years to come. MICHIGAN Germany’s defeat in the American mar- kets, while not attended by any serious economic results, is none the less complete. During the early months of the war there was s very ome concern over the stopping of imports of a few dye n nd peo- . materials and other chemicals an Ple were thrown out of work on ac- count of it. Such interruptions, while serious enough for the few concerned. were scarcely noticed in the stimulation of industries caused by the general in- terruption of trade with the belligerent countries. When consideration was given to the great number of imports on which Ger- many seemed to have monopoly it looked as though she was justified in her apparent assumption of industrial im- pregnability; but as one need after an- other has come to the front, the problem of meeting each has not long baffled the minds brought to it; and this usual- ly in so practical and conclusive a man- ner as to preclude the possibility of such products ever again being controlled by Germany, thus emphasizing the totality of her loss. As an example of the supplying of one such need, Germany was making and furnishing us all barium salts so largely used, notwithstanding extensive deposits of barytes, from which they are made, in a number of localities in this country. As a result of this situa- tion we are already making these salts in half a dozen states, not only enough for our own use, but in sufficient quanti- ty for export. The metal tungsten and other similar substances so essential to the production of high speed tools had always been a monopoly of Germany. In view of the lack when the unprecedented demand for latches and other metal cutting machines became acute, it looked as though the nut would be hard to crack. All de- mands have been supplied by domestic production and that to an extent to result in the lowering of prices. We are not only supplying goods which were formerly manufactured exclusively in Germany, but we are rapidly supplant- ing her in the handling and manipula- tion of foreign products heretofore monopolized by the Teutons. As a case in point, we have recently erected a mill for the reduction of Bolivian tin. At the beginning of the war zinc was hardly worth noting as an article of export from this country, being only $109,000 in six months. In one year the increase of exports is to $11,963,000 for the same length of time. The significance of these changes lies in the fact that they are not likely to be transient. The bitterness Germany has created against herself in the minds and hearts of lovers of liberty all over the world will render the “Made in Ger- many” trade mark not only valuless but a detriment to her manufacturers. In fact, reports from Germany are to the effect that her manufacturers already realize the unfortunate situation which has been forced upon them by the Kaiser and his military wreckers and are taking steps to introduce Russian, Swiss and French trade marks on their products hereafter, in order to avoid their being discriminated against in nearly all the markets of the world. In the meantime American merchants who have German goods on hand are TRADESMAN x them out at sacrifice sales, realiz- deep-seated prejudice which ex- heart of every liberty-loving against anything which comes e land of oppression and tyranny. BS IT COSTS TO GO TO LAW. Everybody has heard and some people know from bitter experience ation is expensive business. lose the that litis It is often entirely than it cheaper to debt is to have a lawsuit about it, and it frequently happens that it i when action is brough wiser to settle than continue. Ob- servations of this sort and many more like them are by the finai a case recently concluded The sum originally The each in Philadelphia. involved was $60. and determined to have his own way about it and both parties were stubborn clung to it tenaciously. The final con- clusion from which there is no ap- peal is favorable to the plaintiff, whose attorney's fees amount to $1,- 700, the case something over $13,000. That is pay- ing out a good deal of money, taking a good deal of time and a lot of hard work, utterly out of proportion to the amount of and the costs in are controversy. It is possible that some great prin- ciple was at stake and that the final settlement precedent, but more likely it is because the liti- gants had some personal animosity and, having started, would not change their minds nor let go, determining to see it through to the bitter end whatever happened. When they sit down and count the cost, the proce-d- ing may look differently. The ia:a which will occur to most people in this connection is that the legal pro- cedure in this country must be some- how at fault where it is possible to spend over $15,000 to settle a case in which only $60 was originally at stake. Certainly there should be some means whereby a man can collect $60 if it is owing to him, but the con- troversy ought not to be permitted to extend over several years and cost any such amount as in this instance. To be sure this is an extreme and unusual suit, but that such a thing could possibly occur, indicates the need of reform in legal procedure. establishes a Some weeks ago a reader of the Tradesman suggested the convenience of using the term Usonian, instead of American, to designate the citi- zens of the United States. Perhaps Usonian sounds too new and arti- ficial for general acceptance. There is, however, a prouder and more glori- ous designation which through vari- ous agencies of propaganda could be generalized, thereby leavine to the citizens of all the countries of this continent its right title of Americans. The sons of Washington’s mighty re- public are and should be known as Columbians. Eventually this would bring about a correction of another case of assumption, by one part, of what belongs only to the whole. Venezuela, Nueva Granda, and Ecua- dor formed a confederation under the name of Colombia. When this union was dissolved, in 1830, Nueva Granda retained the designation be- longing to the three united coun- tries but to none of them separately. February 2, 1516 — COULD NOT BE WORSE. President Harrison and Presid Taft did much to elevate the « dard of appointments to the Fed bench. The same was true, to gree, with President Cleveland. was not a great lawyer like Harr and Taft, but he realized how sary it is that Federal] judges sho be men of great learning, good char acter and judicial temperament. Pres ident Wilson has, unfortunately, followed in the footsteps of his jll: trious predecessors in this respect His selection of Brandeis to the Unit- ed States Supreme Court could not possibly have been worse. The un ness of the man is due to his tem- perament, to his record as an intense and bitter advocate and to the fac that he does not enjoy the best oj reputations in relation to his loyalty to his clients. It is possible, of course, that, o: the bench, Mr. Brandeis may be very different person than the fiery counsel and somewhat intolerant re- former the country has seen in him. He would, as a lawyer, feel it his duty to steep himself in the great traditions of the Supreme Court; to put aside his personal predilections: to sink the partisan in the judge; and, in general,.to bear himself as one desirous to show that he was worthy of the crowning honor of his profes sion. But all this could come only later. The initial objections stand out large to-day. They fall into two classes. One relates to his lack of judicial experience and the want of proof that he has the true judicial habit of mind. The other concerns his connection with many cases or agitations, out of which questions are sure to arise—questions upon which the Supreme Court will have to pass. When they come up, would not Mr. Brandeis, by the ardor o! his advocacy, morally have disquali- fied himself for sitting as a judge? Politically, the Brandeis appoint ment cuts both ways. A veritable red rag to many, it will be hailed b) many others. It will be expected t be peculiarly welcome to Jewish vot ers. The labor unions, in whose be half Mr. Brandeis has done such not able work, will think of him as thei: champion. To the Progressives, th: Brandeis nomination will seem a1 other wicked attempt by Wilson ¢: cut the ground from under their feet Even the Colonel may be imagined asking himself why he never ventured so bold a thing as putting a great radical into the Supreme Court. Bold indeed, the President has been. 1) is another question whether he has been wise. Should a nomination to our highest court have been made a a time and under circumstances whic! make it difficult to think of anything but its political significance? We de cidedly think not. Whatever may be thought of Mr. Brandeis’s ability or fitness, it is a great pity to have a Supreme Court vacancy even appear to be thought of as an opportunity for making an audacious stroke in politics. But for this the blame rests not upon Mr. Brandeis but upon the President. 1 a i Cee leans Se Pe | / chiapas See nace nator Sd amenities Saha! = cco nabaigane ena LaRoO ae oenieeetialnae ciereae ee CCC February 2, 1916 THE AVERAGE MAN. There have been thousands of ser- mons about the man with one talent, and nearly as many about the man who began with five and ended with ten or eleven, but the man with two talents has suffered spiritual neglect. There is nothing very interesting about him. He was merely an aver- age man. Two talents were what most of his neighbors had, so he was neither better nor worse off than they. There was nothing conspicuous about him, so he escaped attention in the crowd. When the time came for the extra dividing of the talents through the distribution of the for- feited talent of the unprofitable ser- vant, he was neither great enough nor good enough to share in it. He kept the talents that were eiven to him and earned more in proportion, and had his modest reward and then the world proceeded to forget about him. That is the way the world has always done, but the man with the two talents is an important although neglected man. In the first place he bears heavier burdens than justly belong to him. He is not poor enough to escape from taxes under the exemption law and he is not rich enough to become a successful tax-dodger, and so he pays taxes out of proportion to his real wealth. He is not poor enough to have his children brought up in an orphan asylum, nor rich enough to turn them over to tutors or send them to private schools, so he has the joy and the burden of bringing up his usually large family while his neighbor with a great deal more wealth has fewer children and grumbles about paying taxes for the support of the schools. If he has a surgical operation he is never poor enough to get it performed in a free clinic, nor rich enough to pay for it without feeling the strain of it. The doctor charges him $100 when he would charge a millionaire $500 or do it for a poor man for noth- ing, but the $100 he pays is one hun- dred times as much in provortion to his means as the $500 paid by the rich man. Upon the man with the two talents falls heavily the burden of supporting the church and _ the state. His taxes make up the great body of the income of village, state and nation. His free contributions sustain the church and provide for its benevolence, but people forget his $10 in their excessive gratitude for the subscription of $100 from the man who has ten talents. The man with two talents is never of interest to the reformer; he is always looking out for the man who is down and out. He never figures in the statistics of the social uplifter; his interest is in the man in the slums. The man of two talents seldom gets on to the front page of the paper, either for doing any good thing or any bad thing. He is the husband of one wife, the father of a half dozen healthy, happy children; he has few bad habits and no vices. He is monotonously virtuous. The minister never preaciies about him and seldom preaches to him. Sermons are addressed either to the very good, exhorting them to continue in their goodness and assur- ing them that the world expects great MICHIGAN TRADESMAN things of them, or to the very bad with exhortations to repent and do better, but the man with two talents who comes to church every Sunday and pays his modest pledge to the support of the church gets overlooked between the two, and perhaps this is fortunate. The average man is a member of the church, but he gets little credit for his conversion. He has no great religious experience to record. He cannot tell how he wandered into terrible and well advertised sin; he can only say that in his humble way he has always tried to be a Christian man. He cannot tell when he was converted, but only knows that he has passed from death unto life be- cause he loves God and man. He does not know when he began to love God any more than he knows when he be- gan to love his mother. There is no demonstration made over him such as is made over the returning prod- igal. There is nothing to be said about him except that he did his duty. The world sheds its tears over pen- intent Magdalenes, but not over wom- en who endure temptation and pre- serve a virtuous character. The world is interested in the conversion of the thief on the cross and the con- fession of the murderer on the gal- lows; but for the man who resisted anger and so never became a mur- derer, for the man who struggled on and paid his debts without stealing, the world has little sympathy. It is because, thank God, there are so many such good men and women. The world’s wealth is safe in the hands of the man of two talents. Forgotten as he is, he is the resource of his country in peace and war. The farmer, the printer, the small mer- chant and the honest mechanic are worth more to society than all the millionaires. The man who makes two blades of grass to grow where formerly there was one, is now, as ever, a benefactor, even though the world has so much grass that it never distinguishes his blade in the meadow or knows what man sowed the seed, or dug out a stone or weed to make room for it. God bless the man with two talents. The man with two talents is neither the hero nor the villian in the play: neither is he a supernumerary. If he has a speaking part at all it is a short one and his principal business is to give a cue to someone else who is later called before the curtain for the applause of the multitude. Never- theless the play could not go on with- out him. Let us not forget, however, that the man with two talents was all the time accumulating a substantial in- crement upon the original investment, steadily adding to the wealth which his Lord entrusted to him, fully de- serving and at length receiving the hearty commendation, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.” The things a woman ‘has heard” convince one that ears are not purely and simply ornamental. ee When a man puts a woman up on a pedestal some one else helps her down. MERITORIOUS MEASURE. The Federal censorship of motion pictures is making encouraging prog- ress in Congress. The Smith-Hughes Federal Motion Picture bill is now under discussion at hearings in Washington before the Committee on Education of the House of Representatives, This Com- mittee of fifteen in the last Congress reported unanimously in favor of the bill after many hearings. There are, however, seven new members: Stone, of Illinois; Key, of Ohio; Sears, of Florida; Hilliard, of Colorado; Dal- linger, of Massachusetts; North, of Pennsylvania; McCracken, of Udaho. This bill provides that every motion- picture film which desires the right to go from one state to another must be licensed by a Federal Commission and cannot be licensed if they find it “obscene, indecent, immoral, inhu- man or of such a character as to tend to impair the health or corrupt the morals of children or adults or incite to crime.” The need of censorship was recently shown by an official in- vestigation of motion pictures by the 3oard of Education of West Vir- ginia in their capital city; Supt. M. P. Shawkey reported that only one- quarter of the pictures examined were good; 75 per cent. were bad and very bad; gun play and murder were found in half of the pictures and deceit, in- trigue, jealousy or treachery was a leading feature in at least 40 per cent. of the programmes presented. The Supreme Court of the United States, on February 23, 1915, decided that both the Ohio and the Kansas Motion-Picture laws are constitu- tional. It answered conclusively the various claims of the motion-picture lawyers who asserted that the state can punish the evil in motion pic- tures after they have been shown but has no authority to prevent the evil before they are exhibited, because to do so would violate the constitution- al guarantee of the freedom of the press. The Court (236 U. S., 244), says: “The first impulse of the mind is to reject the contention. We immediately feel that the argument is wrong or strained which extends the guarantee of free opinion and speech to the multitudinous shows which are advertised on the billboards of our cities and town.” A few people with selfish motives are now forcing the children cf the United States to see bad pictures. The proposed bill endeavors to re- strain these by authorizing a few specially trained persons represent- ing the wholesome and moral will of the Nation effectively to prevent this crime. The president of the Universal Film Manufacturing Co., the largest in the universe, has recently an- nounced in the Motion Picture Week- ly of November 20, 1915, that he pub- lished a talk entitled, “Which do you want?” asking the exhibitors to state whether they preferred clean, whole- some pictures or smutty one. He says more than half of the motion- picture exhibitors of the country want “smutty” films. He says “If the de- mand for them is so overwhelmingly great we will bow to the superior wisdom of the majority.” 9 The question for the voters of the United States to determine is whether we shall permit the greatest educa- tional influence of the land to be con- trolled by the financial interests of a few motion-picture men who prefer “smutty” to wholesome motion pic- tures or whether we shall make sure that it is effectively controlled by some persons representing the vast majority of the parents which, with- out decreasing their amusing power, will influence the children to attain the noblest ideals of personal integri- ty, domestic virtue, and helpful citi- zenship. Canada did not secure official cen- sorship of motion pictures until the churches of that country had made their wishes known to their law-mak- ers. If the churches of the United States will make their desires known to their congressmen and_ senators there is little doubt that Congress will enact the law which will not only elevate the moral life of the children, but increase the confidence of the public in the worth of the pictures and therefore increase their patronage. eee There are a great many interesting facts and figures which can be dug out of the reports of Federal depart- ments if any one will take the time and trouble to search for them. For example, in the statistics gathered by the Interstate Commerce Commission is the statement that during the last ten years 9,479 persons were killed and 21,917 injured by locomotives at highway grade crossings in this coun- try. These are frightful figures when considered in the aggregate. The more so because by the expenditure of money, considerable altogether of course but worth it, they could be avoided and entirely eliminated from the casualty list. It is urged on the part of the railroads and probably with a good deal of force and ac- curacy that the great majority of these catastrophes could have been avoided if people approaching tracks had been sufficiently observant and careful. The fact remains, however, that they were not, and that nearly 10,000 of them lost their lives, and more than twice that number were injured. It is nec- essary to take steps, make laws and spend money to protect people for themselves. The work of eliminating grade crossings has popular approval, but it is not prosecuted with any- thine like the vigor it ought to be. In this State, for instance, millions ought to be expended where hundreds of thousands of dollars are, until there are no more of these danger spots remaining. ee A new Jersey town has abandoned electric lights for its streets and gone back to gasoline lamps. At the present price of gasoline this step does not look like retrenchment and economy, but the real reason is that the town authorities and the electric light company have not come to terms and the electric juice was cut off. The lamp lighter makes his rounds in an automobile. In that meth- od of locomotion he has a great ad- vantage over the lamp lighters of old. 10 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, 15 DETROIT DETONATIONS. Cogent Criticisms From Michigan’s Metropolis. Detroit, Feb. 1—Learn one thing each week about Detroit: One of the corset companies of the city employs 3,000 people and uses 12,000,000 yards of cloth and 10,000,000 yards ot em- broidery and lace to manufacture 7,- 000,000 pairs of corsets yearly. The daily output is 24,000 pairs. A. Winkleman, dry goods. mer- chant of Manistique, was in Detroit on a business trip last week. H. Cohen has opened a fruit and vegetable market at 1476 Mack avenue. While fire destroyed the drug store of E. C. Kinzel last Friday, a new store was being secured at 54 Michi- gan avenue and within a few hours a $25,000 stock was placed in it and the store was ready for business as though nothing had happened. The Kinzel store was located at the cor- ner of Griswold street and Michigan avenue and was one of the leading drug stores in the city. The loss was estimated $105,000, covered by insurance. Other business losses from the fire were as follows: Silver Supply Co., $1,500, insured; City hat store, $1,500, insured; C. Kyte, barber shop, $1,000, not insured; F. T. Wat- son, tailor, $500, insured; Henry Staats, jewelry supplies, $500, insured; P. B. Smith, jeweler, $300, insured; J. G. Meiner, jeweler, $300, insured; F. C. Brinkoff, watch repairer, $100, not insured. Robert Masschelein will open a jewelry store at 1389 Mack avenue about Feb, 15. A. B. McDonald, Kalamazoo dry goods merchant, was in Detroit on a business trip last week. Thieves broke into the store of Robert Mitchell, 742 Gratiot avenue, and stole plumes valued at $100. The plumes were recovered later by a policeman. At the Elks bowling tournament, held in Bay City last week, the high scores were rolled by Detroiters. Henry Marks, representative for the David Adler & Sons Clothing Co., of Milwaukee, with offices at 14 Avenue Theater building, was _ res- nonsible for the honors carried off by the Detroiters in the five men event. His average was 208 per game. Speaking of hotels the other day, a traveling man from Cleveland, re- ferring to a Northern Michigan hotel said the table there was fine, what he objected to was the stuff they put on it. Stetson the Tailor, with a shop in the Breitmeyer building. has opened a new store at 12 Grand River avenue. The new store will be in charge of Edward Unger. Nervousness again prevails among Detroiters over the dismal prospects. Building permits last week aggregat- ed $574,210—a paltry increase of $177,- 900 over last year’s figures for the same week. Kern & Kilets is the name of a new firm which has opened offices at 264-268 Penobscot building. They will conduct a brokerage business. In Detroit there is justice and again there is justice. Tast week a man was arrested and fined for riding a bicycle on the sidewalk in the out- skirts. A short time ago a drunken man who drove his automobile into a crowd, killing one, was acquitted. William Rohde has opened a men’s clothing and furnishing goods store at 273 Chene street. For the benefit of our brother scribe in Grand Rapids we might suggest that when a _ Detroiter is about to step over the brink of eter- ity he at least has the satisfaction of having supped of some of the pleas- ures of life while he lived. The Silver Grocery Co. has moved from its former location at 428 St. Aubin avenue to a newly-remodeled store at 430 St. Aubin avenue. Mr. Silver, the proprietor, is a former “tnat a traveling man, having for a number of years represented the Keith Credit Co. J. B. Henrion, who was shot by a supposedly hold-up man in Mentor, Ohio, last week is very well known in Detroit, where he lived all his life previous to moving to Cleveland twelve years ago. He at one time was manager of the underwear de- partment for A. Krolik & Co., leaving there _to accept a_ similar position with Root, McBride & Co., of Cleve- land. His rise there was rapid, hav- ing been elected President of the Mentor Mills, underwear manufactur- ers, controlled by Root, McBride & Co. At thig writing little hope is held out for his recovery. T. W. Sampson has purchased the East Jefferson grocery, at the corner of Jefferson and Balborough avenues, and has taken possession. The Turner-Moore Manufacturing Co., manufacturer of auto accessories, is building a new factory on Addison avenue. The building will be 75 x 300 feet and be constructed of reinforced concrete. A. W. McNinch, general merchant of Sandusky, was in Detroit last week on business trip. R. C. Schnell, tailor, has moved from his former location at 2590 Jef- ferson avenue, East, to the new store recently completed at 3148 Jefferson avenue, East. The new building at the corner of Oregon and Grand River avenues has been leased by Mrs. Turner, who will open a dry goods store. Safe blowers attempted to crack the big safe of the John V. Sheehan & Co. book store last Friday, but worked several hours in vain, as they failed to get into the inner part of the vault where there was a con- siderable amount of money. J. A. Downey will open a whole- sale and retail confectionery store at 3152 Jefferson avenue, East, F, R. Adams, pioneer general mer- chant of Fairgrove, was in Detroit last week on a business trip. Detonations extends its heartfelt sympathy to L. M. Steward and fam- ily in their bereavement, the loss of Mr. Steward’s father. John Garris‘, has opened a grocery and meat market at 319 Cooper street. At a meeting of the directors of the National Grocer Company, in this city, last week it was announced warehouse to cost $325,000 would be built in Detroit and a ware- house to cost $50,000 would be erect- ed in Lansing. Two hundred employes of the D. J. Healy store entertained with a dan- cing party and luncheon by the man- agement last Saturday night. The entertainment was given as a mark of appreciation for the spirit of co- operation shown by the employes during the holiday rush. The Healy store, dealing in art goods, is one of the largest of its kind in the United States. Harry L, Prey, representative for Edson, Moore & Co., with headquar- ters in Kalamazoo, was in Detroit last week. Mr. Prey has built an enviable reputation on the territory he covers and is popular with the trade and traveling men alike. Schmidt, florist, has moved from 623 Gratiot avenue to 664 on the same street. A. D. Snow has succeeded G. W. Faulman in the grocery business at 31 Kercheval avenue. It is rumored that Mr. Faulman will shortly engage in a manufacturing business. Trusting this will not be considered a knock, we couldn’t help but notice that Mr. Hammer, of Grand Rapids, is a prominent member of the Retail Hardware Dealers’ Association. Phil Napolitan has succeeded S. E. Cragg in the grocery business at 148 Rivard street. A. N. Blumrosen, who came to this city from Ludington and engaged in the men’s furnishing goods business last. October is very optimistic over business conditions in Detroit and states that he has enjoyed a good business since his opening at 3182 Jefferon avenue. : Stanley Krebs, of Philadelphia, has selected for the subject of a speech he is going to deliver, “Two snakes in a business brain.” This is not to be a temperance lecture, as one might at first surmise, but a talk on sales- manship to the retail hardware deal- ers who will convene at Grand Rapids this month. Why the Pere Marquette makes no effort to compete with the interurban lines for more of the Flint business is more than the average man can figure out. The first train leaving for that city is at 8:30 in the morning or 9:30 Detroit time, which brings the traveling men into Flint too late to transact business in the forenoon. The interurban cars, leaving Detroit at 7:20, Detroit time, arrive in plenty of time for the crowds of salesmen to call on trade before the dinner bell rings. The interurban business is so heavy that the D. U. R. is oblig- ed to run double headers. The sign- ed appeals of Paul King now running in many publications will be as valu- able as a pail of sand in the desert as long as the P. M. fails to give the service it should on some of the branches, particularly the Saginaw- Bay City branch. In keeping with the usual policy of cleanliness, C. B. Southworth, pro- prietor of the Park Hotel, at Monroe, is again remodeling and redecorating the hotel. All bedrooms are now equipped with running water and new beds of the highest grade. As men- tioned in these columns sometime ago the Park Hotel has been successfully operated a short distance from two large cities without the aid of a bar. The Misses Dunne, formerly in the dressmaking business, have opened an up-to-date dry goods and fancy goods store at 1044 Beaubien street. They will continue to conduct a dress- making department. William F. Kerwin, connected with the automobile business, as a sales- man, since its inception, has joined the sales force of the Grasser Motor Co., 830 Woodward avenue. C. Fordon, hardware dealer at 1142 Russell street, will move into a new building at 1915 Mack avenue which will be completed within a few days. Before marriage a man will tell a girl he cannot live without her and, if she has a good job, she generally finds out that he told the truth. William Richards. proprietor of a billiard hall at 1414 Mack avenue, will move into a new building being erect- ed by him at 1352-1354 Mack avenue. Bowling allevs will be installed in the new building. Mr. Richards rep- resents his ward as city alderman. M. Kollen will open an up-to-date dry goods at 1423 Mack avenue about March 1. Max Cryskalla has opened a hard- ware store at 3157 Jefferson avenue, East, under the style of the Union Hardware Co. The thirteenth annual convention of the branch store managers of Grin- nell Bros. was held in Detroit last week. Each store reported a satis- factory business for the past year and x seek forward to a banner year for 916. M. A. Vogel, general merchant of Sterling, was a Detroit business vis- itor last week. The Henry Blackwell store was purchased by Bernard Goldman, at- torney, at receiver’s sale last week. Mr. Goldman stated that it is his in- tention to conduct the store himself. Our biographical hero failed to make good for this week, his natural modesty overcoming him at the last moment. As a salesman, we promise to “get him yet.” . The mars to have a difficult ime convincing Germany that i coi baa Preparedness should begin at home. Join the benedicts and be pre- pared—for the worst. James M. Goldstein. BUSINESS-BUILDING PLANS Some Schemes Recommended Reputable Merchants. Every store is looking for mor trade. Any plan or scheme that w3! help to bring in new customers, to bring the old ones in oftener, w; be worth something to the business This collection of trade-gettir plans contains scores that have bee tried by merchants in various Part of the country and found successfu! Each one is susceptible to variatio: to suit the particluar store in whicl; it is used. Before trying out even the simplest, a good deal of thought should be given to it to discover; whether in any way it can be changed from the description with greater ad vantage to the business. Absolute novelty is not necessarily essential in a plan. The fact that it has been used before in a town is not necessarily against it, but it js better not to adopt plans that re semble those used previously by competitors, if one would avoid giv- ing the impression of being an imi- tator. It is one thing, and perhaps a safe one, to imitate a dealer in a totally different branch of trade, and it is another entirely to imitate the nearest competitor’s plans. Originality has a merit of its Own. People look up to the merchant who appears to originate an entirely new scheme for getting trade. The fact that he found the trade-getter in his trade paper is not apparent to the public, who only know that he is using a plan that is new to them. A plan that some other fellow in the locality has used may have al- most the same interest and the same intrinsic value when used again, but it lacks the pulling power that al- ways goes with a scheme that arouses interest and curiosity by reason oi! its absolute novelty. It is not infrequently the case tha: a scheme already used in a town may be made into an apparently new on merely by changing the details some degree. New Family in Town. When a new family comes to town there is a chance to add a new cus tomer to your list. The family us ually comes without preferences i regard to a place to buy their sup plies in your line, In addition to thi usual method of interesting the fami- ly by personal call or by letter, mak: your store known and_ regarded agreeably by delivering to that family a small package of souvenir post- cards showing a comprehensive as- Sortment of views of the localit; including pictures of the inside and outside of your store. Your adver- tisement on the envelope should state your line of business, your good wishes for the newcomers, and the hope that you may be favored with their trade, suggesting that they call upon you for any favors or informa- tion wanted. Interesting the Motorist. In order to interest the motorists, it is a good plan now and then to make them an offer of some free de- vice that will bring them to the store. Where there is no purchase ne pent amt ee Niniemesene nh cat ishp a ayant Raimi Weal inde Scaimeceroenstanie em erasaeete soho fae De Dr overcast ae aeebmmees Sommacaae elo veenmescaret term erent seems MEmetem ere er ne ne icisesmnessse cos poeeeetiomesdiaomrre anew’ Se ee February 2, 1916 stipulated, this may merely take the form of a stick some fourteen .or eighteen inches in length, ruled in quarter inches full length. These sticks or rules should be thin and preferably with a polished surface, from which dirt or dust may easily be wiped, since the careful motorist does not want to plunge a dirty stick into his gasoline tank. If the color is of a rather light gray or brown, the wet section will show more plain- ly when taken out of the gasoline. When a man calls for one of thesz gauges, take pains to try it in his tank, and, if he wishes, mark with red paint the point which indicates a full tank. Even if the rule is the cheapest kind of a stick, -make the presentation of it accomplish some- thing in the way of developing good- will, by rendering it as useful as possible. Help the customer to find a place to carry it in his car, where it will be convenient to reach and not easily lost nor yet in the way. The best place may be under the matting or carpet in the tonneau, or on top of the gasoline tank, or with the tools. Get it placed before he leaves. Your advertisement should, of course, be on the rule. The Fish-Pond Idea. It is always a question how to use a booth at a fair or at a business show in such a way as 7%. secure an adequate return for the labor and in- vestment involved, The fish pond will often prove available in such cases. This may consist of any ar- rangement by which the visitor takes a short pole, with a line and hook on it, and lets the line drop out of sight into something which may re- semble a tub, where there are sup- posed to be water and fish. The sides of the tub may be high enougn so the fisherman cannot see over and in, or the bottom of it may have strips of blue muslin or calico stretch- ed losely across it, so that the hook will drop through when something may be fastened on it by a boy under- neath. By elevating the tub on a platform, and having steps for peo- ple to go up to do their fishing, abun- dant room may be secured under- neath. The proposition may be one of charging a small sum for the priv- ilege of fishing, everyone getting at least their money’s worth of some unknown article, or everyone may be allowed to fish free, receiving a souvenir of some kind. Fun may be created at the show by arranging some special articles to serve as harmless practical jokes on a few well-known men about town, whose friends can be induced to lead them up to fish. The fish pond may be held in the store at times when special sales are carried on. Customers may be allowed to fish once for each dol- lar purchase made, Other variations of the scheme will occur to each mer- chant. Initialed Towels. In order to celebrate the tenth an- niversary, or any other anniversary of owning and operating the store, the merchant may well present some kind of a _ souvenir to his customers. Nothing is more wel- come in any family than a towel, and if arrangements can be made to give MICHIGAN TRADESMAN each family a towel, with the family initials on it, it will be found that peo- ple will flock to the store to get the souvenir, and, if you see fit to give them away only with a purchase of a certain amount, it will still be found that the towel will bring a lot of peo- ple. Where initaled towels are not available, they can be made by buy- ing separate initials and attaching them. One-inch old English initials can be bought for 10 cents a dozen, and a smaller initial is sold at half that price. A variation of this plan might be the use of initial handker- chiefs, on a certain day giving one with each dollar’s worth of goods sold, thus encouraging the purchase of more articles in order to get more handkerchiefs. Children’s Goods. When a store opens up a line or a department or a new supply of goods for children, goods that children like and want, goods they are likely to urge their parents to buy for them, it- will pay to let the children into the store to see those goods. any opport with customers $ community f+ and AS o- ii nieadt ceric vaerena ; Mr. and Mrs, Sweet were married : 1 144 rhage sun Abi. Nave two children, iter, and the family cautiful home on Kent Hills. ident of A. He was President of of Commerce during He is a director and was tormerly Pres [ the Grand Rapids Lumber ector of the National Piano Nat An) sv allONnai latter corpora- > years President umbermen’s As- President of the mh eee Michigan Retail Lumber Dealers’ Asso- id six years director of the Hardwood Lumber Dealers’ n. He was not a mere pas- SArtitiang oan ciy CIATION, and 1X ger in any of these positions, but ht to them the virile force of which he is possessed to a marked de-- gree and indelibly left the impress of his strong individuality on each of the or- to their lasting good and to his own credit . ganizations, Mr. Sweet’s strength is due to his com- plete comprehension of the machinery of modern life—of business, law, govern- ment and the minds of men—and his ability to perceive what is practicable and how to do it. A master of business is about as valuable an asset as a bank or a community can have. We have bat- talions of young men who sce visions and an ample contingent of o!d men who dream dreams, but people who know the road and understand the machine are scarce, Personally, Mr. Sweet is a genial, at- tractive man and a most entertaining conversationalist. He is a strong, stur- dy and courageous writer and speaker who has good ideas and knows how to express them in most excellent English. He is a man of marvelous personal gen- tleness and inward simplicity. His life is marked by personal purity, con- structive ability, shrewd sense and clear, lucid thinking. These qualities—seldom combined to such a remarkable extent in a single individual—serve to make Mr. Sweet one of the most useful men in this community. ——_+2+.___ Late News Concerning Michigan Bankers. Clayton M. Niles has been elected Cashier of the Farmers and Mer- chants National Bank of Benton Har- bor to fill the vacancy caused by the MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 2 1al k under the First National k’s charter. W. M. Baldwin will continue as President, W. M. Pratt as Vice-President and C. I, Monroe as Cashier. The building which is to be the home of the Bank in the future is practically new and modern in €very respect. W. A. Rosenkrans who has been a director and Vice-President of the State Bank of Owosso since its or- ganization in 1907 has been elected Cashier of that bank. While Mr. Rosenkrans will give his time large- ly to the State Savings Bank in the future, he will still be closely con- nected with the Old Corunna State Bank, of which he is Vice-President. Mr. Sidney, for years Assistant Cash- ier, has been elected Cashier of the Corunna bank. George A. Alderton, for many years Vice-President and a director of the Commercial Bank of Saginaw, has been elected President in place of J. F. Brand, who has retired from the more active pursuits of business after being long associated with the bank in various offices. For the past twenty-seven years Mr. Brand has been a director of the bank and still continues in that capacity. He has been its President for the past four- teen years, When the Bank was started in 1888 Mr. Brand became one of the directors, advanced to Vice- President in 1894 and eight years later was elceted President which office he held until he decided to res‘gn. Mr. Alderton is well-known through- out Michigan, being President of the G. A. Alderton & Co. wholesale gro- cery establishment and the Melze- Alderton Shoe Co. In his official con- nection with the Commercial Nation- al Bank he has been a director since 1888 and Vice-President since 1902. Hon. J. W. Fordney becomes Vice- President after fourteen years as director, while R. T. Maynard, the other Vice-President, has but recent- ly become connected with the loca! institution, his previous place of ac- tivity having been with the State Bank of Merrill, where he was Cashier, aes oo oe’ a Gan SPIDSG AVINGSBANK, February 9 1616 nto, Kent State Bank Main Office Fountain St. Facing Monroe Grand Rapids, Mich. Capital - - - ~- $500,000 Surplus and Profits - $500,000 Resources Over 8 Million Dollars hs Per Cent. Paid on Certificates Ask us about opening City Account Coupon Certificates of Deposit pay 3% % interest Coupons cashed each 6 months after one year Largest State and Savings Bank in Western Michigan Fourth National Bank United States Depositary Savings Deposits —_—_— Commercial Deposits 3 Per Cent Interest Paid on Savings Deposits Compounded Semi-Annually I 3% Per Cent Interest Paid on Certificates of Deposit Left One Year Capital Stock and Surplus $580,000 WM. H. ANDERSON, President L. Z. CAUKIN, Cashier JOHN W. BLODGETT, Vice President J. C. BISHOP, Assistant Cashier THE PREFERRED LIFE INSURANCE CO. Of America offers OLD LINE INSURANCE AT LOWEST NET COST What are you worth to your family? Let us protect you for that sum. THE PREFERRED LIFE INSURANCE CO. of America, Grand Rapids, Mich. IF CARE IS USED Securities can be advantageously purchased on this market. Call upon us for information and advice. ALLEN G. THURMAN & CO. 136 Michigan Trust Bldg., Grand Rapids, Mich Most business men are called upon, at sometime, to adminis- ter an estate where the situation demands the selection of I conservative investments with as good yield as goes with 2 RAPIDS MICHIGAN INVESTMENT BANKERS will give you the benefit of their experience and the same competent counsel that has won for them the confidence of their large clientel and many banker patrons, ieanianenntaen torte roes SRA eee os en ee eed isi Som eA sea Me, NRTA Pitas oom iceciasissihathitats February 2, 1916 Manner of Giving Means a Good Deal.* We have so recently passed through the holiday season in which the sub- ject of giving and receiving gifts has taken so prominent a place in our minds that it may be a proper subject for our consideration this morning. There may be some les- sons connected with our experience, which would be worth while to talk about and thus settle some questions in our minds as to methods of giv- ing which will be useful in our future plans. I have heard so many people talk- ing about the difficulty of selecting proper mementos for those who have everything their hearts can wish. It seems to me we should not any of us be troubled about a matter of this kind. To people who have all of the material things for their com- fort and satisfaction, a gracious at- titude, a sympathetic word or a kind- ly message means more than any- thing else and these’ we can always give and be the richer for the giving. The recent appeal made by the So- cial Welfare Association for funds to be used for food, clothing and rent for poor people seems to me a very righteous appeal. These are the things most needed at this season of the year and through our careless giving we often neglect the essen- tials in our selection of remem- brances. The important thing in connection with gifts is to put thought and love into the remembrances and the mistake we usually make is to put off the selection of gifts until the time is imminent for making the presentation and then in our hurry neglect to do more than spend our money and write a message in con- nection with the gift; so that it oc- curs to me it would be a good policy for us to think a long ways in ad- vance of the time for making a gift what it shall be and then we can put the time and thought into it that in some way will always show itself to the recipient of the yift. Gifts that convey pleasant informa- tion, without regard to their intrinsic value, touch the heart often. A photograph or a picture of a home or a favorite tree or a bit of landscape with beautiful memory will mean more than anything that can be pur- chased in the market. A friendly letter always makes a proper gift and almost any of us can at the holiday season or at the time of a birthday put a little thought into a friendly note that will carry love and cheer in every word. Next to letters, it seems to me, the products of our own hands are most attractive gifts. -~>—____ Peach Trust Organized At Fresno. Advices from Fresno report the successful formation of the big peach pool—patterned after the California Associated Raisin Company and in some ways allied to it in the person- nel of the leaders—with $360,000 sub- scribed out of the ultimate $1,000,000, and with a unanimous vote of the subscribers to double their present underwritings. A resolution was adopted, however, by the 1,000 in at- tendance at the organization meeting of January 12, not to authorize the trustees to actually begin trading until $600,000 had been paid in and 75 per cent. of the dried peach acreage has been signed up. Your Envelope Requirements Can be Handled fo Your Satisfaction P. GAGE y G. SEWELL-CLAPP-ENVELOPES 113 Widdicomb Bldg. Grand Rapids, Michigan Any size, any style, as long as it’s an envelope Safe Expert W.L. Slocum,1N Ionia, Grand Rapids, guarantees to open any safe, also change combination. ire, phone or write when in trouble. 15 LOGAN & BRYAN STOCKS, BONDS AND GRAIN 305 Godfrey Building Citizens 5235 Bell Main 235 New York Stock Exchange Boston Stock Exchange Chicago Stock Exchange New York Cotton Exchange New York Coffee Exchange New York Produce Exchange New Orleans Cotton Exchange Chicago Board of Trade Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce Winnipeg Grain Exchange Kansas City Board of Trade Private wires coast to coast Correspondence solicited fi [aS AS d a Se = Its Loose Leaf opens like a Blank Book . Write us EP OosEJEAF @. GRAND RAPIDS, MiCH. Sand Lime Brick Nothing as Durable Nothing as Fireproof Makes Structures Beautiful No Painting No Cost for Repairs Fire Proof Weather Proof Warm in Winter Cool in Summer Brick is Everlasting Grande Brick Co., Grand Rapids So. Mich. Brick Co., Kalamazoo Saginaw Brick Co., Saginaw Jackson-Lansing Brick Co., Rives Junction Citizens phone 61,037. A Short-Time Secured Bond Interest and Principal Guaranteed To yield well over 5% Send for Circular R-66 Hodenpyl, Hardy & Co. Incorporated Securities for Investment 14 Wall St., New York First National Bank Building, Chicago * a Veit Manufacturing Co. Manufacturer of Bank, Library, Office and Public Building Furniture Cabinet Work, High Grade Trim, Store Furniture Bronze Work, Marble & Tile Grand Rapids, Michigan a 16 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, CHAIN STORES. Some Things They Have Taught the Jobber. When I was a boy it was a common saying, “Watch the grocer that has two Stores; if he has three, beware of him.” But as with many other ventures, the failures revealed the defects, and to-day there has been perfected a system of chain stores that are estimated to be doing a volume of business approaching $150,000,000. More business, greater distribution, lower prices, quick “turn-overs,” sales for cash, no losses from bad debts. These are the mainsprings that actuate this business. Our great chain stores are manned by keen, alert, active men who have grown rich in the business. There is nothing wrong in the chain store idea. Asa rule, the community is benefited through its ability to supply merchandise at a moderate cost. This it is enabled to do by means of its great purchasing power, economy of conduct- ing business, sales for cash, and the tut- ting off of a costly delivery service. As far as my observation has gone, the chain stores are buyers of good mer- chandise, and none are more careful in seeing that they get what they buy. No overcharging is allowed. If by any chance this happens, a prompt restitution is made to the purchaser, and the man- ager making the overcharge is called to account. Their competition has done much to stimulate the individual grocer to more active exertions to protect his trade, to see that his store is attractive in its appearance—to watch his expenses —to scrutinize his credit accounts, to see that his customers are pleased, and give them a “service” that ensures their returning to deal with him. The retail grocer was quick to see the danger of the chain stores to his business, and in order to meet the com- petition of low prices formed the scheme of co-operative buying, so as also to receive the lower prices for goods bought in larger quantities. While the chain stores were in the process of development, the wholesale grocer enjoyed their patronage and was more or less indifferent to the fate that confronted the individual retailer. He was for the time being blinded by the large sales he made. But the time came when the chain stores became so strong that they were able to go over the head of the wholesale grocer direct to the manutacturer, and he was forced to realize that his trade with them was gone. Turning again to the individual grocer for trade, he found that he, too, through his newly formed association, had found the way of supplying many of his wants outside of the wholesale grocer, i. e.. by buying in quantities from the manu- facturer and reaping the benefits of low- er cost. To the wholesale grocer was left the retailer, who was slow pay, and who could not afford to take advantage of paying cash for his merchandise. Con- sequently the jobber’s business had to take on to a larger degree than ever the extension of credit, with its larger per- centage of losses. His better class of customers confined their purchases to the merchandise upon which credit was desirable and spent their ready money with their own association. The wholesale grocer was now con- fronted with the great problem how to adjust himself to these new conditions. It was quite evident that he. too, must go through a process of development. He could not change the new condition if he would, for this new business was founded on a sound economical basis. In his first effort to adjust himself the wholesale grocer allowed his resentment against the manufacturer for selling these associations to have free course. He informed the manufacturer that he could not sell him and _ his customers, too. Determined efforts to keep the manufacturer from such selling, while it resulted in some success, was as a tule a failure. The wholesale grocers had lost the trade of the chain stores and now found that the trade of the wideawake independent grocer was being sought by the manufacturer through their co-operative buying associations. This condition quickly had its effect upon the wholesale grocers’ salesmen. They found that they could not compete and consequently refused to offer for sale various staple articles of merchan- dise, leaving the field for such goods largely in the hands of the buying asso- Cciations. The manufacturer, while preferring to deal with the wholesale grocers, saw his trade with them diminishing and consequently was compelled to bring in a new force—a large corps of specialty men—whose business it was to see that distribution was obtained. As chain stores and retail buying exchanges were open to them it was quite natural that they received the greater benefit of their work. They were the easiest channel to obtain distribution. And so their specialty men openly recommended buy- ing through the associations that the buyer secure the advantage of lower price. Such was the condition of affairs with the wholesale grocer and is much so. €ven yet. Resentments, antagonisms, jealousies and boycotting are not the weapons to bring success and the sooner we confess it the better off we will be. Aiter the chain stores had their wonder- ful growth and the retailers had estab- lished their associations, the wholesale grocers began to form associations, This was a step towards meeting the changed conditions and broadened their horizon. The effect has been to make the whole- sale grocer a better merchant and lift him out of petty jealousies and fear of his competitors, Let us remember that all three meth- ods of distribution are legitimate—chain stores, buying exchanges and wholesale grocers. While any one of these three methods might resent the competition of the others the question which inter- ests us is how can we wholesale grocers meet successfully these conditions. What should be our attitude toward the chain stores? To sell them all we can. Whenever there is a chance to do business with them, seek it, They are large distributers and frequent buyers and resemble the “nimble sixpence” in our business. What about the buying exchanges? Sell them also all you can. There are many opportunities when changes in market conditions will show you a profit in the transaction. Both these organiza- tions are in the business world to stay and the sooner we recognize this fact the better it will be for all concerned. But what about the individual retail grocer himself? Do all you can to help build up his trade. First, impress him with the importance of the right use of his credit. You do him a great deal of harm in giving him an undue time to pay his bills; it will eventually under- mine his business. You do both him and yourself harm in allowing discounts for cash beyond the appointed time for such discounts. You are making him and yourseif a poor merchant. The chain store has a wonderful advantage in this matter; it sells only for cash. He is a wise retailer who learns the lesson that prompt payments are his sal- vation. Associations have been brought into existence because of the failure or in- ability of the individual jobber to assist the retailer to withstand the competition from the chain stores. This is unfor- tunate, as it has created buying organiza- tions that cut deeply into the business of the city jobber and tend to make members believe that their jobbers are unfriendly to them. They have also hurt the manufacturer and compelled him to employ an expensive staff of salesmen, first to sell the goods to the associations and then to go out on the street and sell their members because the manufacturer has lost the personal service of the wholesale grocery sales- men, which is a most valuable asset. The next step in the changed condi- tions is that we be willing to learn from our competitors. We have seen the great advantage of co-operative buying and why not take advantage of it our- selves? There are advantages, and I venture to say surprising ones, in buying together. Look at the freight rates sav- ed and consider the desire of the manu- facturer to secure large orders at once, with prompt cash. The fear that some member of the buying community may take undue advantage of his purchase by underselling is overcome by the growth of a mutual confidence. The wholesale grocer has a great ad- vantage to offer the manufacturer. Take a body of wholesale grocers who united- 'y have several hundred salesmen and let them throw off any indifference here- tofore shown toward a manufacturer’s product and become boosters of same. What price would not a manufacturer pay for such a changed condition? In Philadelphia we have demonstrated this power a number of times this win- ter with much advantage to ourselves and the manufacturer. Our salesmen, knowing that their firms are now acting as a unit, have taken hold of the mer- chandise offered and pushed it with much enthusiasm. Heretofore the salesman has occupied a sort of secondary position; one who was trying to get an extra profit, and in whom much confidence would be mis- placed. The salesman now goes to his customer and is ready to help him secure his merchandise so as to enable him to compete with his neighboring chain store. The change is electric. We have made a new salesman; assured of his ability to sell, a retail merchant with renewed confidence in the salesman. a manufacturer glad to see his merc] dise being distributed through the na: al channels onec more. In the cities the days of long cr are gone. If a retailer wishes to in business he must curtail credit oi: to his customers and meet his obligati promptly. His buying exchanges taught him this. The jobber’s sales; is found to be a valuable aid in ot! ways ; helping the grocer with seasona! goods, giving valuable hints as to care of goods and their display. points out the advantage of the pr prietor’s presence in his own store a his executive ability, as compared wit) the average manager of a chain store. and the untold value of a prompt, cou: teous, clean, reliable service. We in Philadelphia are now working along the lines indicated. It is not ye: an Arcadia with us, but we have trav- eled very fast these past four months: overcoming objections and developing friendliness toward one another. Each wholesale grocer stands on the common plane and works unitedly toward the common end—the establishing of the retail grocer on a sound basis—mer- chandise economically handled and in- telligently distributed, with an equitable return upon the amount invested. Our purchases are made as one and our salesmen are well informed as to the cost. We find the manufacturer glad to have the co-operation of our men, who in turn show their apprecia- tion by selling the goods. Credit lines are drawn sharply, and the retail grocer is receiving full value for his invest- ments with the help of a body of men whose own welfare is wrapt up in his success. James Hewitt, President Tri-State Wholesale Gro- cers’ Association. —_+~-+___ Frictionless America. There is more than one way to re duce friction in the world. And a! though the United States may not }: entirely successful in bringing peac: out of the Great War, we can at lea: claim that we smooth the way oi t! world in one respect. For the United States produc: more tale and soapstone than all th rest of the world combined. Mor Over our production has nearly do bled in the last decade, so that \ now produce about 170,000 short to: a year, valued at about $1,860,000. Talc is a simple mineral of whic! soapstone is a massive impure forn Because of its softness it has a wid and varied use: talcum powder can b: used for putting a tire on an automo bile or (we can’t resist it) attire on : lady. In the schoolroom it takes th: form of chalk, and in the factory bleaches cotton cloth or becomes or of the ingredients of paint. One its chief uses is as a filler for many kinds of paper. There are nine states in our coun try that produce talc. Fifty-seven per cent. of it comes from New York and about 40 per cent.—mostly in the forn of soapstone—from Vermont. —_+-<___ Our idea of a hypocrite is a person who throws mud at a man while alivé and puts flowers on his coffin when he dies, Pee eee February 2, 1916 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 17 Che Construction Explains Why (aye? CUSHION SHOES will win your trade. They are the only thoroughly practical Cushion Shoes made. The felt sole is tufted to the leather insole. The stitching goes through the insole and fastens underneath. The felt and leather insole are one inseparable piece—lasted in the shoe and sewed to the welt in the regular way. ] The felt sole cannot work up in ridges or wns | creases, neither can it slip or get out of its | —— 4 proper place. This construction is owned exclusively by us Solid Oak and patent is applied for. Tanned i Counter Let us send you all information on this big \ new cushion line and tell how we get the trade for you. Write now while the matter is before you. Get this line for your locality. 5. Mayer Boot & Shoe Zo. = rox AC Y Milwaukee, Wis. ia PS BA Full eae LOY K ZB Extra Strong | Steel Shank _ Solid Oak ge | Tanned Heel pla Soft Quilted Felt Sole a ——__ Solid Oak =—(_ SolidOakTannedInsole Tanned Outer Sole side Cork Filling “Stitched Through Inner Sole and Fastened Underneath HONORGBILT 18 REFRIGERATED PRODUCTS. Prejudice Gradually Giving Way to Commendation. The possibilities and advantages of refrigeration were discovered by the wholesale distributor in the infancy of the industry, and the great American speculative tendency developed in his mind. He saw the wonderful oppor- tunity for greatly enhanced profits, and so became a speculator. Others follow- ed. The cold storage people, in their desire to secure a greater volume of business, made a vital mistake in offer- ing to finance these speculative move- ments by making excessive advances, which enabled the speculator to extend his purchases and holdings far beyond the limits of his legitimate capital in business. In the old days, the wholesale distributor might manipulate the mar- kets, in his greed for gain, and thus place the retail dispenser in a position of disadvantage and antagonism, which led him to represent to the consuming public that the cold storages had com- bined to force food prices upward. As a result of this misrepresentation, the public press set up a hue and cry which excited the public and led legis- lative bodies to prepare and enact bills, filling the statute books with stringent laws on a subject about which they were grossly ignorant. In every instance the laws have been directed against the cold storage, not the speculator. The result has been a serious blow to a most valuable industry, which entails endless and useless labor upon cold storage warehousemen, and the laws do not correct the real abuses and evils which then existed and still remain in the second and third division of our classi- fication. The public press had disseminated distorted and misleading facts in the belief that they were setting forth true conditions. Let it be noted that this tirade of sensational expression has been directed mostly against the so-called “cold storage monopoly” rather than the refrigerated product. The retail dispenser (the corner gro- cer) is antagonistic because he believes that cold storage is working against his business interests. There are three classes of retail dealers: 1. Those who are honest enough to sell cold storage products as such at a reasonable profit. 2. Those who are prejudiced, without reason, against refrigerated products and will not, knowingly, keep them in stock or offer them to their patrons. 3. Those who buy cold storage foods, knowing them to be such, and sell them at the greatly enhanced prices of fresh goods during the period of lightest pro- duction, thus making an unjust and often an abnormal profit with no thought of or care for the deception practiced on the consumer. The danger to cold storage interests lies chiefly with the third class, where persona] profit combats fiercely any ef- fort on the part of warehousemen or desirable legislation to correct the cry- ing evils involved in their dishonest practices. The last and most important class is the housekeeper, representing the vast army of consumers. None can blame the housewife for her attitude, MICHIGAN TRADESMAN which in the beginning was created by the evil practices of the speculative dis- tributor and the dishonest dispenser, materially fostered by sensational jour- nalism. It must be said for the ladies that many of their leagues and societies did endeavor to get at the root of the mat- ter, and the situation was much im- proved by their investigations and as- sistance. Public sales of storage eggs by housewives’ leagues, accompanied by persistent special advertising, exerted much influence in creating a counter wave of common sense which checked the widely sensational nonsense show- ered upon an unsuspecting public by a long period of yellow journalism. The intervention of foreign strife has given the press so much to write about for the past year that cold storage topics have slept peacefully. Under such con- ditions the present seems to be a good opportunity to consider ways and means for a campaign of education, I have tersely outlined the salient points of public attitude which confront- ed us some years ago, and it seems evi- dent by comparison that this sentiment is materially changing, as shown by the following: The demand for cold storage space has increased during the past few years so rapidly that it has not been possible to construct buildings fast enough to properly care for the business. Had the public rendered a verdict against the wholesomeness of refrigerated goods, or maintained the former attitude, such a demand could not have been created. This remark must be qualified by cer- tain new conditions brought about by the foreign war. It does not seem pos- sible that this factor could account for all of the increased demand. The soft- ening of expression in public press articles and the publication in household magazines of interesting articles of sen- sible character clearly indicate that the efforts expended to educate housekeep- ers have borne good fruit, and that the public mind is at present in a receptive mood, not antagonistic, but open to conviction. It is only fair to state that to the National Housewives’ League much credit is due for their earnest effort, two years ago, to secure reliable infor- mation at first hand, which they report- ed faithfully in the official publication of the league, and for encouraging the public sale of refrigerated eggs at cost by league organizers. Other facts might be cited in support of a changed atti- tude, but sufficient proof has been given and our time may be more advan- tageously directed to a discussion of ways and means for continuing the good work already begun. The suggestions offered are founded entirely upon personal observation and experience, and their discussion by this body should result in direct benefit to the refrigerating industry. While many things might be mentioned bearing upon the subject, there seem to be three im- portant topics which practically cover the ground, both as to the warehouse- man and the public. 1. Uniform state legislation, in har- mony with an adequate Federal law. 2. Proper education of the consum- ing public. 3. Proper regulation of advances. The question of uniform legislation has been before us for some time. The commissioners on uniform state laws investigated the subject exhaustively at their conference in Washington in Oc- tober, 1914. They approved and recom- mended a uniform cold storage law which seems to meet general approval. After a careful study of the proposed law, I offer but one suggestion of change. In the first sentence of Section 6, one word should be inserted for the protection of the warehousemen. The word “knowingly” would accomplish the object. If a Federal law were to be adopted by Congress embodying the points con- tained in the proposed draft, it would settle the difficulties of interstate traffic, and its adoption by the states would be likely to follow. It would, therefore, seem to be our first duty to approve this draft and devote our best energies to securing its prompt adoption by Con- gress. Federal legislation being secured, the next step is to lend all the assist- ance possible to the more important states in securing uniformity in state laws. Having attained success in the leading states, the lesser ones would follow as a natural sequence. The proper education of the public is a matter which really belongs to the retail dispenser, but since his direct in- terest in the majority of cases is likely to be antagonistic to the storage ware- house line of education, it becomes of importance to the warehousemen to act in the matter primarily. So far as gen- eral education goes, the only article which seems to require particular stress is eggs. I would, therefore, make a division of the topic: 1. The dissemination of general in- tormation on the subject of refrigera- tion as applied to food products, both as to its scientific character and the effect which the systematic application of refrigeration has upon foods, and the average limits of perfect preservation. 2. Practical demonstration, as to eggs, direct to the consumer over the dispensing counter, as the best means of proving to the house-keeper the good qualities and moderate price. The educational work would be best accomplished by the employment of an expert writer to prepare scientific and descriptive articles from information to be supplied by a press committee from this body, which shall be published in such magazines, periodicals or papers as the committee may select. This press committee might also assume the task of preparing matter for the public press on uniform legislation. The practical part of proving to a doubting house-keeper that good refrig- erated April and May eggs at 30 cents (or hereabouts) per dozen are better than summer or early fall so-called fresh eggs at 60 cents or more per dozen is a problem which can only be solved by practical demonstration. Special sales of cold storage eggs at practically cost prices have been conducted in severa/ large cities, accompanied by liberal ad- vertising, through the agency of house- keepers’ leagues or other organizations. These sales created a marked change in public sentiment wherever conducted. If individual warehousemen in various sections would take up some plan, to be formulated by this body, along the line February 2, 1° of concerted action, each supplying : certain responsible dealers or hou keepers’ organizations a supply of eg regulating the prices and advertis; liberally to attract purchasers, the ; sults would be more generally con. vincing to the public than all the state- ments which could be presented in any amount of printed matter. Just what | the best manner of carrying out su:| a plan might be brought out by a gen- eral discussion. The proper regulation of advances ; a question which might not seem to }: long to public attitude, but when care fully considered it proves to have bec: the inciting and insidious cause of many of our troubles. It pertains so directly to more favorable relations between cold storage warehouses and the public atti- tude that I plead for a serious consider- ation of the suggestions I have to offer. It is a noticeable fact that in recent years advances to speculative dealers have often exceeded the cost of the goods, and so near!y equaled the market value that no margin of safety was left to the warehouse. Sixty per cent. to 75 per cent. of the market value should be an outside limit, and the sooner this is recognized and adhered to the quicker the public will stop the old hue and cry about cold storage monopoly and specu- lative cornering of the market. The prime cause of the tirade of the public press against cold storages can be traced directly to this evil of which I am speaking. I believe that if cold storage warehouses had never made any ad- vances to their patrons, we would not have had any such agitation against the cold storage industry, neither would we have had legislation of the character which now exists in many states. Never has there been such a demand for stor- age space; hence it follows that safe and sane adjustment of this question can be effected with a minimum of effort or reactionary result on the warehouseman, and the correction will benefit the public and the industry alike, Floyd M. Shoemaker. ——_>+.__ Egg-Yolk Powder Machine. In an October issue of Commerce Reports, the Government's very use- ful daily publication relating partic- ularly to business, appeared a re- quest from a concern at Hankow. China, for information relative to machinery for the manufacture o1 fine egg-yolk powder completely sol uble in cold water. In response three replies were received from the United States, but, unfortunately, the same publication now reports none of the three was satisfactory. Two of the firms gave prices for cake beater: only one quoted on an_ egg-yolk- powder machine. This last mention- ed firm forwarded specimens of the powder made by one of its machines. but the sample failed to meet the chief test, namely, that it should be easily soluble in cold water. Inas- much as the local concern is ex- tremely anxious to obtain equipmen‘ without delay, it might be well for other American manufacturers to send detailed information to the Hankow consulate general. ——_+-.____ One kind of a fool man is the chap who advises his fiancee to take box- ing lessons, February 2, 1916 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 19 FINANCIAL STATEMENT December 31, 1915 The Preferred Life Insurance Company of America GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN ASSETS LIABILITIES First Mortgage Loans on Real Estate................... $366,418.00 Net Reserve, Including Disability Reserve............... $363,822.00 Poets Cash ee... eee... 9,250.00 Deferred Annuities, Not Yet Due...................... 4,200.00 Policv Loans on this Company's Policies as Collateral... . . 21,724.63 Death Losses Unpaid—Proofs Not Received............. 2,350.00 Premium Notes of Which None is for First Year's Premium 3,645.22 All Other ee ee. 1.044.06 OS Nes te ... 488.35 Surplus Apportioned and Uuapportioned $ 20,131.10 Cash on Deposit in Banks......................0..... 50,046.46 Capital Stock ...................... 100,000.00 Net Amount of Deferred and Uncollected Premiums .... . . 24,998.00 Surplus to Policyholders ............................. 120,131.10 Fiumiture and Bixtures ..-.................. ........ 4,947.81 Wiles) Recmied «6... _---+++ 10,028.69 Total Liabilities $491 047.16 Total Assets $491,547.16 PROGRESS IN 1915 New Insurance Paid for During 1915 00 $2,203,379.00 Insurance in Force December 31, 1915.00 $8,382,496 00 PROGRESS BY YEARS ASSETS RESERVE SET ASIDE 1910 $129,444.32 $7,244.00 1911 $190,114.44 $30,416.00 1912 $217,594.03 $77,935.70 1913 $280,900.54 - $159,084.00 1914 $369,127.87 $243,065.00 1915 $491,547.16 $363,822.00 OFFICERS WILLIAM A. WATTS, President E. GOLDEN FILER, Vice-President CLAY H. HOLLISTER, Treasurer CLAUDE HAMILTON, Vice-President R. S. WILSON, Secretary WILLIAM H. GAY, Vice-President DIRECTORS Lewis H. Withey, President Michigan Trust Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. William H. Gay, President Berkey & Gay Furniture Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Henry Idema, President Kent State Bank. Grand Rapids, Mich. A. G. Dickinson, Prop. Grand Rapids Stick. Fly Pap. Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Cc. W. Garfield Chairman of Board, G. R. Sav. Bank, Grand Rapids, Mich. L. A. Cornelius, President Wolverine Brass Works, Grand Rapids, Mich Clay H. Hollister, President Old National Bank, Grand Rapids, Mich. plas Pes leicink ie ’ . Claude Hamilton, Secretary Michigan Trust Company, Grand Rapids, Mich. Stuar - Knappen, rney, einhans, Knappen & Uhl, Grand Rapids, Mich. John B. Martin, Real Estate, Grand Rapids, Mich. Wiliam A. Watts, President Preferred Life Ins. Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Guy W. Rouse, President Worden Grocer Company, Grand Rapids, Mich. E. Golden Filer, President Manistee County Bank, Manistee, Mich. Robert W. Irwin, Secretary Royal Furniture Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Frank J. Cobbs, V. P. & Sec’y Cobbs & Mitchell Co., Cadillac, Mich. Lee M. Hutchins, Treasurer & Manager Hazeltine & Patrick Noud, President State Lumber Company, Manistee, Mich. Perkins Drug Company, Grand Rapids, Mich. R. E. Olds, Pres. & Mngr. Reo Motor Car Co., Lansing, Mich. A. H. Vandenberg, Editor & Gen’l Mngr. The Herald, Grand Rapids, Mich. Chas. A. Peck, Chair. of Board, Kalamazoo Sav. Bank, Kalamazoo, Mich. Van A. Wallin, President Wallin Leather Co., Grand Rapids, Mich. Chas. J. Tolonen, General Agent Preferred Life Ins. Co., Duluth, Minn. 20 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN te ay SY = ~~ — = = S = — = — ~ — — — — STOVES AND a gm l Michigan Retail Hardware Association. President—Frank E. Strong, Battle Creek. : Vice-President—Fred F. Ireland, Beld- ng. Scott, Marine Secretary—Arthur | J. City Treasurer—William Moore, Detroit. The Story of a Hardware Dealer’s Romance. Written for the Tradesman. Chapter I Now at the very outset I must ask you not to smile at this head-line. Why shouldn’t a hardware dealer have a real adventure, if he is really in mind to—and the gods of chance and of fortune smile upon him? If there is one thing above another that irks me, and: almost provokes me tG say unprintable things, it is that silly and supercilious notion some people have that a young, normal and capable man-creature is forever pre- cluded from romantic and colorful Situations and experiences simply be- cause he is a merchant. Do you think that because. forsooth. a man is the owner and proprietor of a retail establishment handlins divers and sundry lines of hardware, such as one is accustomed to find in the more progressive retail hardware Store of the city, things cannot hap- pen to him? Must he necessarily live out a prosaic and commonplace life, with no touch of glamour, no tang of adventure, no haze of If you do, you are wrong. Seaton Moore is a retail dealer—and an eminently successful one, as anybody in Center- ville will testify; and, long before you ro- mance? Elsworth hardware have followed me to the end of this narrative, you will discover that thines happened to Elsworth Seaton Moore. Highly interesting things, too: thing; thrilling, colorful, and romantic to a degree. does not accomplish another thing, I do sincerely trust it will have the effect of exploding that old theory to the effect that, because a man happens to If the telling of this story bea merchandiser, living and remain- ing for the most part in one place, and to a considerable extent the em- bodiment of order and system,—his life isn’t necessarily drab and unin- teresting. Highly favored of the gods of love and of chance was Elsworth Seaton Moore, Centerville. hardware dealer of And yet there was a time when the hero of this story despaired of ever being a hero at all. He was success- ful, to be sure: in fact seemed from the very beginning of his business career to get on with far less diffi- culty than many other men who have achieved conspicuous prestige in the realm of hardware distribution. At the age of 18, just after he had finished his high school course, Elsworth Seaton Moore began clerk- ing in his father’s hardware store: and he began as a cub salesman, with no favoritism. Kindly but firmly the old man told Elsworth Seaton he must win his spurs if he got them. The salary was $6 a week—one bone per; and the store opened at 7 a. m. and closed at 6:30, with a whole hali hour off for luncheon. Wasn't that munificent—eleven hours a day, six days per week, and a big iat envelope Saturday afternoon with $6 in it! Now if you think old man Samue! Moore was a skinflint and a slave. driver, you've got another guess com- ing. He was neither. He Was just a wise, kind-hearted old man—a good merchandiser in his day, by the way —who loved his boy wisely. Just be- cause of his knowledge of the ways of men, he sedulously tried to shield his boy from the Stultifying effects of the easy, down-grade course. His ambition and heart's desire was to see that boy grow into real master- hood. And the desire of his heart Was gratified. Young Moore took to hardware en- thusiastically. I don’t set up the contention that he was the brightest coin minted; but he was fairly cap- able, with no perceptible blind-spots, and with a mind to learn. He didn’t have to be prodded. He had made a fairly good showing at high school. He made a much better showing in his father’s store. He liked the mer- chandise; and he liked people. Sales- manship came easily to him. I guess the thing must have been born in him, That’s the only way I can account for salesmanship of the convineing sort. Traveling men liked him—and they liked him not because he was his father’s son, but because he was a man and a merchant in embryo. In the bud they sensed the blossom. Therefore they opened up their hearts to young Elsworth Seaton Moore. Yes, and they opened up their minds also. Young Moore was a good lis- tener. They saw the eagerness in his honest young face, flushed with verbal reports of the great outside world of industry and commerce and red-blooded business life. So they told young Moore about the doings of the great outside world. They ex- plained materials and processes, and recited fascinating stories of big hard- ware merchandisers of the large cities, who did usual things in unusal ways, and thus brought themselves into terms of intimacy with the capricious goodness of success. These stories of adventurous business enterprise thrilled young Moore, and became a part of his rapidly increasing store of unforgetable acquisitions. So Elsworth Seaton Moore, who realized that, in all human probabil- ity, he would some day bear unaided the responsiblities of a large and growing hardware business, took him- self and his business career rather seriously. He never had any other ambition than to become a hardware dealer. Therefore he applied him- self faithfully. He drove the ma- chinery of his psycho-physical mech- anism at a good lively clip. He never whimpered about the eleven hour schedule, and not once did he sidle up to the him what the prospects were for an in- crease of the weekly stipend. As a matter of fact young Moore realized that $6 a week was about all he was worth, to start with: and he knew that, if he stopped to figure in his room-rent and board, he was a well-paid = cub Conse- quently he didn’t worry about sal- ary item, knowing full well that the salary would increase pari passu with his increasing worth to the house. The elder Moore covertly observed the ways of his ambitious, hardwork- ing son, and his heart sang for joy. The boy wasn’t a bit spoiled by his schooling. There wasn’t a smidgen of snobbery in his anatomy. He talked sensibly to older men. behaved like a gentleman in the presence of ladies, and demonstrated again the possession of good, solid common- sense,—the indispensable substrate of of solid business judgment. boss and ask salesman. Therefore, as the elder Moore felt February 2 j91¢ ae Harness Our own make out of No | Leather. Hand or machine made, We guarantee them absolutely Write for catalogue and price list, Sherwood Hall Co., Ltd. Ionia Ave. and Louis St. GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN REYNOLDS out THE NATION,, TRADE MARK NO Ip (HMR) : ESTABLISHED 1868 1 ‘a> FIRE UNDERWRITE SHINGLES § Reduces Fire Insurance Rates Will Not Ignite from Flying Sparks or Brands Sold by All Lumber Dealers H. M. Reynolds Asphalt Shingle Co. “Originators of the Asphalt Shingle’’ Grand Rapids, Mich. 157-159 Monroe Ave. _ :: Foster, Stevens & Co. Wholesale Hardware es | 151 to 161 Louis N. W. Grand Rapids, Mich. | word. Get your share of this business. catalogues. We have the goods and are glad to tell dealers all about them. The “Dick Famous” Line HAND AND POWER FEED CUTTERS 40 Years the Standard You can’t buy anything better—and you can’t beat our service, for as Distributors for the Central Western States Ask for our printed matter and Clemens & Gingrich Co. Distributors for Central Western States Grand Rapids, Michigan We Stand Back of Every Order We Sell 916 a «he es en! 2 10. February 2, 1916 his son was able to bear responsiblity, he placed responsiblity upon him. He shortened the hours of work, in- creased the pay time and again, gave him occasions for acting upon his own initiative, thus adroitly developing within the younger man real man- agerial qualities. Thus Elsworth Seaton Moore's stat- ure as a business man was not at- tained in a day; nor his ability as a hardware merchant achieved by leg- erdemain. He developed gradually and normally through hard work and vigorous individual efforts wisely evoked by occasional promotions, fatherly encouragement and wise counsel. From the beginning it had been the father’s wish to see his son fully prepared to assume entire responsi- bility for the business; and the father hoped to see the day when the son would open up vast new realms of trade that he, the father, had never felt strong enough to enter. As a matter of fact physical infirmaties that grew upon the elder Moore dur- ing the latter years, made him more cautious and less aggressive; and in the end, he came to lean absolutely upon his man-grown son. And thea the end came suddenly; and Elsworth Seaton Moore became in name, as he had been in fact, proprietor of the Moore Hardware Store of Centerville. In the meantime the years had passed swiftly, and the younger Moore had remained unmarried. Love had passed by on the other side. Romance, the like of which he read: about in books, had never knocked at his door. And Elsworth Seaton Moore felt slighted. He was _ suc- cessful, as men measure success these days; i, e. in terms of money. He had a perfectly splendid business. But his life was drab. Each day was very like the preceding day. Things didn’t happen; and Elsworth Seaton Moore, the hardware. man, had a real grievance against the gods of love and of change. Charles L. Garrison. —_——_>--- << ___ Why Not Always Tell the Truth. Written for the Tradesman. The American newspaper has much to do with the condition of the common people. Not long since one of the lead- ing Michigan newspapers was very much worked up over the report of a com- mission that professed to making the discovery that many men were working for a $10 weekly wage and women as low as $6. “This report,” declared the newspaper editorially, “is profoundly disturbing.” Why so? we ask. Scores of men who are counted among the wealthy peo- ple of the country began life far lower down in a wage sense than even that. It seems to be the aim of a certain class of newspapers, and of magazines as well, to harp upon the high cost of living and the low wages of the workman. Things are not so tremendously out of joint as these would-be mentors pre- tend. A man who has a steady job at $10 a week has no reason to despair; and such wages, judging from the reports, are the lowest, ranging upward from this to more than twice that sum ac- cording no doubt to the earning capacity of the worker. Another point these calamity publica- aa aaa BT STSCI PSII HRT ethane ont MICHIGAN TRADESMAN tions seem to delight in harping upon is the injustice of our laws which, per- mitting them to interpret them, favor the rich as against the poor. This mis- leading practice is one of the worst evils of modern journalism. The fostering of discontent among the masses seems to give these gutter- snipes of journalism a sort of malignant satisfaction. It is born of the false idea that every man who has made a for- tune is necessarily a rascal. The past decade has been prolific of such in- cendiary teachings, and it has worked a hardship to many who might otherwise have been content. To stir up the people with the idea that someone with more money than the ordinary laborer is grinding them in the dust is anything but a pleasant meth- od of righting, or trying to right fancied wrongs, Truth to te!l the laws now on the sta- tute books of most of the states favor labor as against the employer. We are really living in the golden age of the common people, and right now are more opportunities offered the young man for advancement than ever existed before in history of the American republic. This statement is not a mere fulmination of words, but a wonderful and living fact which can be easily demonstrated to the one who cares to investigate. The earning capacity differs in dif- ferent individuals, and it is a poor policy that groups men together like the in- terlocked spokes of a wheel, holding back the deserving pushing worker, that he may stand on an equality with his less ambitious, less capable brother. The great accomplishments of the world were brought about by individual brains rather than by the combined in- tellect of many mediocre people. The most successful men of our time came up from the wage ranks, fully demonstrating the chances for success that are ever open to the most humble citizen of the republic. What sense is there in the eternal harp- ing of the lie that our laws are made to boost the rich man as against the poor? It is an impious falsehood that has been doing business at the old stand for o many years. The capacity for earning is what counts. Every man should of course receive pay according to his abil- ities in his own peculiar line of work. I call to mind a young man who work- ed eleven hours a day for the sum of $8 the week. Hie was not a complainer. At that time he had no press repre- sentative sneering at his employer, urg- ing him to strike unless he got better pay. This young man looked to the future, He belonged to no union, solid himself to no combination of men who dictated when he should work, when he should lay off out of deference to somebody out in York State, or in California who fancied they were not getting their just dues. No, he kept steadily on the job, yet all the time having an eye out for the future. He was ambitious, deter- mined to get above his wage-earning po- sition, planning to rise and become him- sef an employer instead of a laborer. And that man succeeded. To-day he is a millionaire, living in the metrop- olis of the State, an employer of hun- dreds of men. And he is just as honest. just as fair in his dealings with his fel- low man as he was when he first sprung into the field of human endeavor as a common worker at $8 per week. Another man in his early manhood tramped the roads of Western Michigan seeking employment; he found jt of course, He entered upon his duties as a common laborer in one of the mills at what the modern press would call “not a living wage.” He did not remain content in a menial position. The mo- ment opportunity offered he entered upon jobbing work, made money, succeeded in climbing the industrial ladder until he made a name for himself among the sound business men of the community. In fact he was thought so much of that the people made him mayor of the city of his choice, and they tell me he made an excellent official. There are thousands of examples ot low wage men who cut themselves out of their environment, making their way in the world to higher and better things, and they found no laws on the statute books that prevented them from earning a place among the big men of the land. It is the silliest kind of mush pictur- ing the horrible condition of the masses, when truth belies every such statement and brands the retailer of these false- hoods as a calumniator of his race. Old Timer. 21 MODERN AWNINGS~—ALL STYLES ee 1 y Ce my/icove s immno ee mast cs Get our prices before buying CHAS. A. COYE, INC. Grand Rapids, Mich. FREE Cut This Out and check opposite the listed items below what you are interested in and we will send you by return mail two beautiful felt pennants to hang up in your store. Excelsior Mattresses Cotton Felt Mattresses Hair Mattresses Crib or Cot Pads Sanitary Couch Pads Mattress Protectors Bulk Feathers Floss Cushions Coil Wire Springs Woven Wire Springs Wood or Steel Cots Steel Couches and Bed Davenports Institution Beds Feather Pillows Down Cushions Made by the Grand Rapids Bedding Company Established 1890 Grand Rapids, Michigan People are judged somewhat by the FURNITURE they keep S Klingman’s ‘ The Largest Furniture Store in America : Entrance Opposite Morton House Corner Ionia Ave. and Fountain St., Grand Rapids, Michigan 1542 Jefferson Avenue Wilmarth show cases and store fixtures in West Michigan's biggest store In Show Cases and Store Fixtures Wilmarth is the best buy—bar none Catalog—to merchants Wilmarth Show Case Company Grand Rapids, Mich. (Made In Grand Rapids) 22 THE STEVENS BILL. History of a Modern Movement in Merchandising. The Stevens bill was introduced in the House of Representatives February 12, 1914. It was reintroduced in the present Congress by Representative William A. Ayres, of Kansas. It pro- vides for maintaining resale prices of trade marked or branded merchandise under certain conditions, as follows: 1. The provision is permissive, not mandatory; that is, no manufacturer or distributer need come under its provi- sions unless he wishes to do so. 2. In no case is this provision to be granted to any individual or concern who has a monopoly or control of the market for the articles of which it is wished to maintain the resale prices. 3. The price at which the merchan- dise is to be resold shall be stated on the carton or package containing the merchandise, 4. Before permission is granted to carry on the policy of price maintenance, the party wishing it must file a state- ment with the Bureau of Corporations outlining the details concerning methods of marketing, prices of wholesalers, re- tailers, etc. 5. Prices and terms must be uniform to wholesalers, and wholesalers must sell at uniform prices to retailers. 6. Deviations or variations from the standard price sought to be maintained are permitted in the following cases: a. If a dealer should cease to do business. b. Ifa dealer becomes bankrupt. c. If the goods become damaged, de- teriorated or soiled. Provided, in each case, that before the goods are sold at any other than the standard prices, they shall first be offered to the producer or distributer from whom they were obtained at the prices paid for them by the dealer. If the one who supplied the goods refuses or neglects this offer, the dealer may sell them at any price that he wish- es, provided that, if the goods are sold at any other than the standard price because they are damaged, deteriorated or soiled, the fact must be made known to consumers. The demand for National legislation similar in character to that embodied in the Stevens bill originated among the small retailers of the country. The manufacturers were enabled to enforce price maintenance in courts at equity, and under the patent and copyright acts as formerly interpreted, complied with the general desire. In 1908 the United State Supreme Court declared price maintenance under the copyright act illegal, and in 1913, price maintenance was declared illegal under the patent act. Since these de- cisions, the Department of Justice has appeared to be hostile towards price maintenance in any form. Consequently. there is at the present time an uncertain- ty as to just what may be done and what may not be done in regulating resale prices of merchandise through the channels of trade. The recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States do not pro- hibit the price maintenance principles. They simply prohibit certain methods of Price maintenance, the most economical nanan annette An sete a a aaa MICHIGAN TRADESMAN from the standpoint of independent pro- ducers, dealers and the public. Price maintenance is now perfectly possible and legally legitimate if the producer has a selling organization of his own, made up of agents, chain or branch stores, and sells direct to con- sumers, But all of these methods involve great expense in building up the sales organ- izations that in a measure simply dupli- cate organizations already in the field. Thus, while price maintenance has not been prohibited, it is now legally prac- ticable only for the larger and more powerful producers. The added and unnecessary expense involved in con- forming the distribution of goods to the laws of the courts must ultimately be borne by the consumers. ‘Such then is the status of price main- tenance at the present time. Manufac- turers of specialties, depending for dis- tribution upon the jobber and dealer, and manufacturers without selling or- ganizations of their own, but who pro- duce goods that must be widely dis- tributed in order that they may be economically produced at all, are in favor of price maintenance. Manufac- turers who have monopolies in the pro- ductions of the necessaries of life are indifferent to price maintenance. They get their profits anyway. Manufacturers with well-developed selling organizations of their own that reach the retailers or the consumers di- rectly, not only do not care for price maintenance but seem to be hostile to- wards it. Wholesalers are either for or against price maintenance according to whether or not they have special brands of goods that they desire to push. The wholesaler who depends for his living upon the business of pure wholesaling, and who is not a manufacturing jobber, must be favorable to price maintenance. The lack of it will cause his elimination from the field of business sooner or later, and his place will be taken by manufacturing jobbers and by the sales organizations of manufacturers, All of these new forms of distribu- tion of goods appear to be more costly than distribution through the regular jobbers, but the price must be, and is being, paid to make business existence possible for both producers and retail- ers. Ninety per cent. of the retailers of the country, conservatively estimated, are in favor of price maintenance. Prime maintenance is to-day mainly opposed by two classes of retailers. First, those who have developed their business on the basis of a questionable type of advertising and using cut prices on trade marked goods to attract cus- tomers to their stores. Second, those retailers whose costs of doing business are so high that the customary margins allowed them under price maintenance are not large enough to permit them to earn a profit. Their desire to get un- usual margins leads them to combat the price maintenance principle. After all, legislation should be based upon public interest. What is best for the majority should prevail. This prin- ciple is desirable for the reason that it accords with what is best for the con- suming public. Price maintenance im- plies standardization and identification of certain classes of merchandise, and this standardization is desirable from ee eee February 2, 19; Get acquainted with the Yellow Page Specials in cach issue of “Our Drummer.” They will help you pull trade to your store. the standpoint of the public for several - reasons. First, the consumer can tell by one single inspection or trial whether Trade or not. If it is desirable future pur- . chases of the same article will take up Stimulators but little time or energy. Second, the sumer’s and the dealer’s time usually : Vy taken up in demonstrating the goods. Price | i. Third, the standard article serves as a : Advertisin substitutes another article and tells the g consumer “this is just as good” or “this is a better article,” assuming that what : ae logue of General Mer- snows what he means. . : Price maintenance is a need of mod- chandise abounds with ern production. The demand for it these. the producer of a specialty, rather than from the big concern, the producer of many lines, or the trust. The big con- help it in maintaining prices. Price standardization does not check competition. It will rather give us the such an article is suited to his needs standardized article saves both the con- For basis of comparison. When the dealer Our monthly cata- the dealer says is true, the consumer comes from the small manufacturer, or cern does not need any legislation to best results that competition can offer. An Important Flavoring Is Maplei necessary in both the kitchen and the candy shop Order from Louis Hilfer Co. 1503 State Bldg. Chicago, Ill. CRESCENT MFG. CO. Seattle, Wash. Butler Brothers Exclusive Wholesalers of General Merchandise New York Chicago St. Louis Minneapolis Dallas EMPRESS NOW PLAYING Keith Vaudeville| § 7—STAR ACTS—7 ALWAYS A GREAT SHOW DAILY 2:30 and 8:15 10c - 20c - 25¢ - 30¢c - 50c Putnam’s F Menthol Cough Drops Packed 40 five cent packages in carton Price $1.15 Each carton contains a certificate, ten of ; which entitle the dealer to i? ONE FULL SIZE CARTON FREE when returned to us or your jobber properly endorsed PUTNAM FACTORY, National Candy Co. MAKERS GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. . February 2, 1916 Price maintenance is to present-day business what the rule not to strike below the belt js in prize fighting. One blow below the belt may put the best Prize fighter in the world on the floor in a moment, and thus end the struggle. A foul blow in business competition, such as unjustified or dishonest price- cutting has shown itself to be in sey- eral cases, might send the most efficient and socially useful producer in- to a receivership. Finally, to succeed, the standardized price must be fair to the wholesaler, the dealer and the-consumer. Price main- tenance promotes the square deal to all concerned—the producer, the dis- tributer and the consumer. In granting the privilege of maintaining prices to manufacturers, we shall be doing only what has already been done in one way or another by several European coun- tries. We shall only be giving to the small manufacturer of a specialty a right that many large concerns can and do now exercise without question, through their own agencies, chain stores, or selling organizations. That certain retail establishments and other concerns oppose the Stevens bill is not at all surprising, but it is curious that the reasons they offer to the public are not at all their real reasons. For example, you do not hear any cutrate retail store manager say that he objects to the Stevens bill because it will prevent him from continuing to use well-known standard branded mer- chandise at cut prices as a means of at- tracting people to his store, so that he can sell them other goods upon which his profits are long. Nor do you hear any manager of a retail store complain to the public that price maintenance is undesirable because it does not permit him to get as large a profit as he could otherwise squeeze out of his customers. Although these are the real reasons for the objections raised by the few retailers who oppose the bill, they never mention them, but, instead, cry out: “Legalized price maintenance will make the retailer, the errand boy of the man- ufacture.” You don’t hear this com- plaint from the 90 per cent. of the retailers who distribute the great ma- jority of the Nation’s goods. “Price maintenance is unconstitution- al.” Think of that, not on the possibil- ity of using Ingersoll watches at 79 cents as bait to attract trade for other merchandise at big profits. “The consumer will not be able to get any more bargains.’”’ How pitiful! Just as if the price cutter couldn’t cut prices to the consumer on the thousand and one unbranded lines of merchandise if he really wanted to. “Price maintenance would prevent consumers from profiting from the com- petition of retailers.” Sounds good when it comes from the lips of a de- partment store manager, doesn’t it? Is. there no competition in store but the competition in price? Some of the opponents of price main- tenance try to show that if the Stevens bill became a law— All merchandise would be sold at maintained prices. The manufacturer would no longer need the good will of dealers. The dealers would be unable to dis- MICHIGAN TRADESMAN pose of fashionable goods at the close of fashion’s season. All of which is, of course, absurd. No one who knows anything about present-day merchandising thinks even for a moment that all manufacturers want to have their goods at maintained prices. The fact that some merchandise is marketed under maintained prices is sufficient reason for other producers to market their goods in a different way, and consequently in competition for consumer’s trade. It seems to be assumed by the op- ponent of price maintenance in the ar- guments that they make to the public, that price maintenance would result in giving those producers who attempt to market their goods under this policy a monopoly of their line. Nothing could be farther from the actual truth. In the first place, the Stevens bill provides that permission to maintain prices shall not be accorded to monopolies in any goods. In the second place, there is nothing in past experience to show that price main- tenance results in giving the producer any advantage of monopoly whatsoever. The facts are that a price maintained article invites competition and makes it easy for competitors to establish their competition. The time will never come when the manufacturer who depends for his distribution on dealers can get along without the good will of the dealers, and it is perfectly true at the present time that there is no business relationship so satisfactory as that which exists between manufacturers who em- ploy price maintenance. To the objection that dealers would be unable to dispose of goods affected by the influence of fashion at main- tained prices, the answer is obvious. If a manufacturer should attempt to carry out a policy regarding his distribution not in accord with the most economical lines, the dealer would be quick to re- -fuse his merchandise. Let us not judge the price main- tenance policy by any one or a few ex- amples of which you may know in years past, where producers who maintained prices allowed too small margins for the wholesalers and retailers. In some cases, such as the sugar trust and the Standard Oil Company, there were mo- nopolies who would not have an oppor- tunity to come under the provisions of this law at all. Other cases represented mistakes of manufacturers, who either overreached themselves in their greedi- ness, or, still more likely, did not realize what the costs of distributing goods are. It must be remembered that one reason why such small margins have been al- lowed dealers is because of the fear of the price cutters, the concerns that begin to slash prices as soon as a certain per- centage is reached, Under price maintenance, with the manufacturers competing for the good will of the jobbers and retailers, you may be assured that fair margins will result, and that net profits may be se- cured by all who earn them. Paul H. Neystrom. —~+22>____ “Keep a thing for seven years and you'll find some use for it,” says an old proverb. That is one reason why we are still keeping our appendix, TC ARIE UATE EE SITE PPI ASE EI EAA CANT SON IRE STOEL RAE AP ATTA I ST 23 The Livingston Hotel is one of those hotels where you feel ‘“‘at home.” Every employe is in his or her job to make our guests comfortable. That’s what they’re paid for. There is nothing about us to make a guest feel we are favor- ing him with our notice. We are the ones under an obligation to you from the moment you register until you have “checked out.” It is not an expensive hotel at which to stop, and still you can have anything you can find any place in Grand Rapids if you want to take advantage of what we have to offer. There is no better orchestra in the city than the one conducted by Signor Fabbri in our Main Cafe. There is no better dance music than that played by Miss Zema Randale and her orchestra in our White and Black Room. There is no better food in the city than that prepared un- der the supervision of Mr. Joseph E. Bureau. But we can only prove it to you by “showing” you, You will give us the opportunity the next time you're in Grand Rapids, won't you? Management, Frank W. Brandt Joseph E. Bureau Ferner A AOR eee eee PENG & NS x ei {G> The Personal Equation: The tremendously increasing sales of ‘White House’’ Coffee point to the evident conclusion that its superb quality is being recognized all along the line, and that folks are using IT in preference to other available coffees. All thissuggests that YOU, Mr. Grocer, may find “White House’ just THE coffee with which to-completely satisfy not only your CRITICAL customers but THAT OTHER type of patron which believes in you and trusts you to give him the best and most reliable coffee the market affords. Distributed at Wholesale by JUDSON GROCER CO.—Grand Rapids, Mich. 24 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN | | . “e wee tf) CC a FX > ) —___ Sears Joins Roach. L. A. Sears has joined the force of W. R. Roach & Co., of Hart, as general sales manager. This is regarded in the trade as a strong combination, for Roach and Sears are among the best all around men in the canning industry. —_++->____ Occasionally the unkindest cut of all is handed us by a butcher. Your Citizens "Phone a a INDEPENDENT a ae ee (Sah TELEPHONE Places you in touch with 200,000 Tele- phones in Michigan; also with points outside the State. 95,000 Telephones in Detroit. 14,637 Telephones in Grand Rapids. Direct Copper Metallic Long Distance Lines CITIZENS TELEPHONE CoO. — ye : IL dust, dampness and insects. overweight. Franklin Carton Sugar Is Made From Sugar Cane Don’t forget to tell your customers that FRANKLIN CARTON SUGAR is made from SUGAR CANE, because there is a decided preference for cane sugar on the part of the consumers and that makes it easier to sell. It is also true that FRANKLIN CARTON SUGAR is refined by the most modern processes, and then packed in the substantial cartons with the head of Franklin printed in blue on them, and sealed against It therefore comes to you as the sweetest, cleanest, daintiest sugar you can offer your customers, and the ready-to-sell cartons save you time and prevent loss by Original containers hold 24, 48, 60 and 120 Ibs. FULL WEIGHT of all CARTONS and CONTAINERS guaranteed by us THE FRANKLIN SUGAR REFINING COMPANY Philadelphia 28 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN = i WOMANS WORLD — —_ Without Even the Air of a Martyr. Written for the Tradesman. Heroes are all about us—men and wom- en living quiet and obscure lives, who meet the greatest trials so bravely and patiently that they deserve pillars of renown. Mrs. Rhodes now occupies the highest place in my mind’s honor roll of such, for it seems to me she was en- dured and is enduring most admirably, Severer tests than any one else of my acquaintance. I always knew her for a wonderfully brave and plucky woman. but I never realized her heroism until Amy came home. When Amy’s ne’er-do-well and dis- sipated husband finally deserted her, and the income from his earnings, always scanty and irregular, ceased altogether, there was nothing for her to do but to return to her parents, bringing her three children with her. It is easy to show that nothing of this kind ever ought to occur—it is all wrong and might be prevented would people use ordinary prudence and com- mon sense regarding things matrimo- nial. A girl of 19 ought not to marry. She should wait until her mind is more mature and her judgment bet- ter seasoned. And a girl of any age should reject every suitor who fails to measure up to a high standard. Acting on this last bit of wisdom alone, Amy Rhodes never would have become Amy Rucker. All other girls being guided by the same unerring principle, worth- less Bill Rucker would have gone unmat- ed to the end of his days. The preventive measure would have worked perfectly. There is another measure that logical- ly ought to be taken. When a property- less young couple marry, they should be compelled to put up a heavy bond to the state guaranteeing the support of their children. A man who takes a position in which he is required to han- dle money must get a bonding company to be his surety. Why shou'd the matri- monial responsibility alone go without warranty of fulfillment? Such arguments are perfectly valid. Doubtless the measure alluded to would work like a charm. Their only point of weakness is that to most of the heed- less, happy-go-lucky race of human be- ings, they do not recommend themselves as being necessary. So Amy Rhodes married at 19 and without requiring from her lover any evidence of ability or of stability, and Bill Rucker led her to the altar without being obliged to put up a suita- ble bond. Inevitably, when nine years later he defaulted on his nuptial con- tract, Amy with her three little ones, twin boys of 8 and a tiny girl of 6, came home to her parents. It is rare that the return to the pa- ternal rooftree of a married daughter with children is really welcome. A grandchild considered as a small guest —that all dressed up and coached as to proper behavior comes into the house for two or three weeks in the summer or for an occasional day’s visit during the year, and livens the place with joy- ful play and cherub prattle—is a most adorable little being. But grandchildren considered in lots of two or three or more taken into a home to stay right a'ong, to be fed and clothed and sent to school, their noise grating on nerves that have been worn out with the clat- ter of the previous generation, their difficulties to be listened to, their naughtiness to be disciplined, their ailments to be cared for—looked at in this aspect, grandchildren are an en- tirely different proposition. Even when it is death that compels the return, when the daughter’s hus- band is taken from her by sickness or fatal accident, even then, while sym- pathizing deeply with her sorrow, her home-coming is apt to be regarded by her people as something of a hardship. And we adjust ourselves to the changes necessitated by death, with far swifter and more willing reconcilation than to those occasioned by living neglect and wrongdoing. When the daughter's coming back is not caused by death, when it is occa- sioned by the rupture of an ill-advised and unhappy marriage, the situation has in it an added element of bitterness. While she may not have been in the least to blame, there always is present the sting of humilation and disap- pointment. In this case it really seems that the circumstances are peculiarly irritating. The worthless scamp of a husband is living. The return is not to a home of abundant means, but to one that is main- tained only by daily work. The Rhodes always have been poor. They have their full share of sickness and misfortunes and debts. Mr. Rhedes, now considerably past 50, is glad to hold his job of elevator man in a store at rather small wages. Besides Amy, there are three other children, a son of 18 now learning a trade, and two girls of 15 and 12, both in school. Mrs. Rhodes is very bright and was well educated. A few years ago, seeing that they never could get ahead any on her husband’s earnings alone, she learned stenography and typewriting, So capable is she in the work, that in spite of her years and the handicap of family cares, she has for some time been able to hold a fairly well paid position. Amy, while a well-meaning soul and certainly far too good for her rascally husband, is not - her mother’s equal. Friends of the family say she is “more like her father.” She tries to do all she can, but the only employment she can get is in a factory, and her pay is only six or seven dollars a week. “Is she not entitled to a pension?” does some one ask? In the state where they live there is a mother’s pension law, but funds have not been appropri- ated for carrying it into operation. Possibly aid from other public sources might be obtained for Amy and_ her children, but this would amount to “coming onto the county,” and to this Mrs. Rhodes never can bring herself to consent. As the reader will guess, the whole thing falls heavier on her than on Mr. Rhodes or on Amy herself. Mrs. Rhodes thinks more deeply, feels more keenly than they. She must go on with her work, because her earning power is the greatest. To her this coming home means more mouths to feed, more dresses and shoes to buy, more rent to pay, since a larger house had to be taken, It means mornings and evenings crowded with tasks, and Sundays filled with hurried efforts to catch up with ironing and sewing and mending. Mrs. Rhodes always has led a busy life, but while before she had order and system and quiet in her home, now she must have noise and confusion. Other sacrifices have to be made. Since it takes every cent to meet current expenses, certain musical advantages which she had greatly hoped to give the son and the two younger daughters must be foregone and her cherished plan of saving a part of her own salary and buying a little home, must be post- poned indefinitely. February 2, 1915 It is a situation in life that would seem to many of us almost to warrant one’s souring on the whole scheme of things—getting into a frame of mind that would be a chronic protest against the exisiting order. How does Mrs. Rhodes take it? “I never saw anything equal to her poise and_ self-control,” says her em- ployer. “She is the most remarkable woman I know. Best of all she never wears the look nor has the air of a martyr. Sometimes her face shows weariness, but she never complains, and indeed seems unconcious that the bur- den she carries is out of the ordinary.” Who of us but can learn a lesson from such heroism? Quillo. ——__~2~--__ Several Uses for the Pan. An Italian woman stepped up to a clerk in a hardware store the other day in Jacksonville and enquired for a pan. The clerk showed her several varieties of pans, but none pleased her. Then she said, “I wanta da beegest pan. Sometimes washa da babe. Sometimes baka da bread.” GEO. S. DRIGGS MATTRESS & CUSHION CO. Manufacturers of Driggs Mattress Protectors Pure Hair and Felt Mattresses Link and Box Springs Boat, Chair and Window Seat Cushions Write for Prices Grand Rapids Citizens 4120 a steady seller You don’t have to argue for Gold Dust. It moves from your shelves rapidly because housewives have used it for years — they know exactly how it saves them work in scrubbing floors, washing dishes, and countless other household tasks that were a drudg- ery until the advent of Gold Dust. A good stock of Gold Dust means that you won't disappoint any of your best customers. How is your stock? ious SN aa (ETE FAIR BANK SoREaRy) MAKERS “Let the GOLD DUST TWINS your work’? February 2, 1916 Why Nationally Advertised Goods Should Be Preferred. Written for the Tradesman. People send out of town for goods for two reasons—they cannot get the article desired at home or the price is lower elsewhere. Trade marked, adver- tised brands of goods will solve the problem for the small-town merchant when he has brought his customers to recognize the value of quality and serv- ice, Postal and express service, railway and interurban facilities, have made the mail order houses of the larger cities competitors of the small-town merchant. His customers can order goods direct, or shop in the large cities at a small ex- penditure of time and money, but he can retain this trade by handling lines of merchandise which are well known to the buyers of his community, and on which his prices are as low as can be secured in the metropolis. The prices of trade-marked, advertised good are the same everywhere; their style and quality are just the same in the smallest town as in the largest city. How often has a salesman deceived you by saying, “Give my line a trial, push it, talk it to every customer, for the quality is just as good as So-and- So’s brand, and the price is less for the reason that we spend no money in ad- vertising. We put the money that ad- vertising would cost into extra quantity and quality,” and they never forget to impress upon your mind the idea of the large additional profits you will re- ceive by handling their line of goods. They also tell you that the advertising expense on the well-known brands is either added to the price of the article or is deducted from the quality. Sales- men for unadvertised, unknown brands of merchandise contend that “advertis- ing is expensive, and either the manu- facturer, the retailer, or the customer must pay the freight.” They will then explain that it is impossible for the man- ufacturer to stand this expense, and therefore it is up to you and the con- sumer, This line of argument is not only untrue, but it is doing the small- town merchant more harm than all other things combined. Salesmen and manufacturers who succeed in deceiving and thereby “slip one over,” only laugh at you for being “easy.” On every purchase the consumer pays for three things—cost of raw material, cost of manufacture and cost of selling, Advertising is a selling force, and the most successful; manufactures and mer- chants have learned that it is the cheap- est selling force on earth. Advertising rates are, as a rule, based on one-half cent per line for each thousand of cir- culation. For instance, a paper that has a circulation of 100,000 the advertising rates are 50 cents a line each insertion. A $12,500 appropriation for advertising on that basis would reach about half a million readers thirty-six times with a full page of “copy” each time. The cost of a full page advertisement for each visit to each subscriber would ep- Proximate one-third of a cent. No matter how well a salesman may explain the merits of his line of unad- vertised goods, the merchant handling it must go Over the same ground with every prospective customer. It isn’t what you may know about any given MICHIGAN TRADESMAN line of merchandise. What the buying Public knows is what makes easy sales. Selling unknown brands of goods often results in dissatisfied customers and such a customer seldom comes back, but the satisfied one will continue to be your fast friends. Have you ever stopped to consider this problem of advertising expense or whether it is really an expense or not? Your business has grown since you have owned it. You have enlarged your store, employed more help, possibly add- ed a cash register, a typewriter, and an adding machine. Have you advanced prices to pay for this added equipment? Haven’t they decreased operating ex- penses paying for themselves in a Short time and are now earning you a Profit on the investment? Advertising does not increase the cost of manufac- ture, but the shrewd factory owner knows that advertising good goods gives him greater volume of business, which always means decreased cost of making, and handling such goods means a greater volume of business for you, allowing you to turn your invested capital often, and keeping your stock fresh, clean and up-to-date, Experience has shown that dead stock—goods which do not sell readily except at a general clean-up sale—is a prime factor in the failure of the retail dealer, Handling well known lines of merchandise obviates such conditions. There used to be a demand for hand- made shoes, selling from $10 to $15 according to quality. Better shoes can be bought to-day for $2.50 to $7—shoes with more style, wear and comfort. They are also more uniform, because when machines are correctly set every pair will be sewed exactly alike. These machines have decreased labor cost, in- creased the output, secured uniformity and the volume of business has enabled the maker to give his product wide publicity which is to your advantage as well as his own. The maker of adver- tised goods knows that quality and general merit must be maintained to ensure repeat orders, of the buying pub- lic, Only good merchandise is worth advertising, The writer has gleaned these obser- vations from his experience as a travel- ing salesman and, in conclusion, would Say, make your store headquarters for well advertised, standard lines of goods, goods the quality and excellence of which are known factors to the buying public. No matter how small your town or store, if you do this your customers have the same incentive to buy that are offered by the department stores in the large cities. The manufacturer will co- operate with you by furnishing window and counter displays of his wares, which will materially assist in increasing your volume of business and profits, R. J. Concannon. Detroit Grocers Win. As a result of the strenuous protest by the Detroit Retail Grocers’ Association. the Common Council of that city has agreed to exempt delivery automobiles from the requirements of the law re- cently enacted which made it compulsory to lock all cars when left standing with- out someone in control, The law as originally enacted made it necessary to lock all pleasure cars and delivery cars of less than 1,500 pounds capacity. SANITARY SACK PAT’O. SEPT. 5.1905-NOV 18,1913 THE CABAG CO. CLEVELAN tit Tritt UU aod +f You Can Start Right by asking your Miller for Flour Packed in a PAPER LIN THE SANITARY COTTON SACK : ‘The Sack that keeps the Flour /V and the Dirt OU” 400 Millers can supply you, More users are being added every day. t Tr) UN] 4 4 oa ~ ry TTT — — =) A A = ape Pever ‘ H i ins Airey thig mark th : on the flour, / SSP? my sack He ON 2H HS Z tty 1 > “ ty Hf § Gus " 7 i X The Gons 13 & y ys ain eo HEN ) ARB FREY ft ay gone +f H = THE CLEVELAND-AKRON BAG CoO., TT TTT Hla CLEVELAND Seal Brand Salt (Morton Salt Company, Chicago) is packed in this sanitary moisture proof paper lined sack, In a Sanitary Package The sanitary, dust-proof package has revolution- ized food manufacture. The up-to-date grocer welcomes packaged food because they are easy to handle, the turn-over is quick and the profit is certain. Shredded Wheat goes to the consumer in a sanitary package, and it goes to the grocer in a wooden case. It is the only hreakfast cereal packed in odorless spruce wood cases, insuring cleanliness and purity. The case may be easily sold for 10 cents or 15 cents, thus adding to the grocer’s profits. Made only by The Shredded Wheat Company Niagara Falls, N. Y. 30 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN = — = = = B = = = ~ = > — = = — = ITER, EGGS 4 PROVISIO ( eres = ae de. aed (( ae AG iy WA ¢ TA fa Michigan Poultry, Butter and Egg Asso- ation. cl President—H. L. Williams, Howell. Vice-President—J. W. Lyons, Jackson. Secretary and Treasurer—D. A. Bent- ley, Saginaw. ecutive Committee—F. A. Johnson, Detroit; Frank P. Van Buren, Williams- ton; C. J. Chandler. Detroit. Michigan Egg Dealers Recommend Loss-off Buying. Prof. Linton, of the Michigan Ag- ricultural College who has been ac- tive in promoting the loss-off sys- tem in buying eggs has gathered a few experiences and opinions from shippers in this State, some of which are reproduced without reference to names: “It is the only way to buy for all concerned. I only wish we could get everyone at it. Then it would be so much easier.” “Some of my customers who had from fifty to sixty hens received from $17 to $18 above the market price during the summer, where they took good care of their eggs. Eighty per cent. of my customers are well pleas- ed with quality buying.” “One of our customers has not sold us an egg for over one year because we would not buy and pay for rotten eggs. Packers come along and buy, case-count, and ask for more eggs. The grocery man will not buy eggs, loss-off, nor sell loss- off when packers come right along and buy the goods, case-count, and use this method as a leverage to ob- tain, business. The packers, when buying eggs from other shippers, talk quality very strongly. At times they send out quotations, fresh, case-count. When they get eggs from independent shippers they candle eggs and remit on loss-off basis. The same day they will receive shipments from some lit- tle groceryman who has creamed out all the largest and clean eggs, and then they will sell this kind at re- tail. Packers will take eggs, small, dirty and checked, from these par- ties, pay full prices, case-count, and come right back for more. For above reason it is impossible to buy eggs on loss-off basis from _ store- keepers in this vicinity. We candle all our eggs and are satisfied with results. We know what kind of a product we are selling. Nothing would please me more than to see everybody in the country buy eggs loss-off. The result will not be seen until the State Food Department en- forces the laws on the packers and small country as well as city store- keepers for buying or selling rotten eggs.” “We think your department could do something along the line of in- ducing farmers to produce pure breeds. You know the East pays a premuim for white eggs and also for brown eggs, but all of the shades be- tween are not wanted; therefore, we advocate breeds that will lay deep brown eggs or else dead white eggs.” “In other states they are obtain- ing better quality of eggs than we are here in Michigan. States where a few years ago it was hard to sell their eggs now find a ready mar- ket, and it’s all been brought about by buying eggs on a quality bas‘s and educating the farmers to pro- duce better eggs.” “We certainly feel justified in buy- ing on the quality basis and shall continue to work the deal harder this season than before. The great- est trouble we have to contend with is our competitors who are not work- ing that way and buy everything as long as it has a shell on, but we feel that, on the whole, quality basis is the only way to work, and it sim- ply makes us pay that much more for the good stock, so that the country dealer will get just as much from us as, if not more than, he would from the jobber that purchased them straight, and a good many times the country dealer will not take the pains to work this out as he should, and mark the cases or eggs so that he can come back to the farmer for 1 dozen or two of bad eggs in a case. While the method we have been working on has not been very prof- itable every season, the dealer that has the best eggs will sell to us, as he knows he can get more for his eggs, and the dealer who has poor stock will naturally sell them to the man that buys them straight.” “We started buying on a quality basis June 1, 1912. That year, how- ever, we had very little success in Michigan as too many of our com- petitors still stuck to the old meth- od. For this season, during the summer and fall of 1912 we were practically forced to buy three- fourths of our supplies of fresh eggs in other states. We were able at that time to buy candled eggs from these places that were of much bet- ter value than Michigan current re- ceipts. We, of course, did receive some small shipments of eggs on 1 quality basis, but as these came from dealers who bought at mark, the re- turns were not always satisfactory. We started buying again on the same basis about June 1st, 1913, and during that season had much better results than during the previous one. Last summer we bought practically 75 per cent. of our eggs in Michigan and found them of much better value compared with those from other states than they were the previous year. During the summer time we bought almost everything on a quali- ty basis, although we did buy a few current receipts from Michigan car- load shippers. In our judgment, the quality of eggs through this State has been much improved since the campaign started for quality basis buying. Although last summer was probably the hottest on record, we had less dead loss per case than in previous years. The amount of blood rings contained in the eggs was sur- prisingly small considering the heat they went through. In our judg- ment, farmers are producing better eggs and they are being handled in a better manner all around. Even though there are a great many buy- ers who are not buying strictly on a quality basis, everybody connected YOUR OLD SCALE Let me overhaul and re-enamel it and make it good as new. Work guaranteed. Charges reasonable. W. E. HAZARD, 1 Ionia Ave., N. W., Grand Rapids I do all work for Toledo Scale Co. in Michigan February 2, 1916 Watson-Higgins Milling Co. Merchant Millers Grand Rapids <2 Michigan Dandelion Vegetable Butter Color A perfectly Pure Vegetable Butter Color and one that complies with the pure food laws of every State and of the United States. Manufactured by Wells & Richardson Co. Burlington, Vt. We Buy PACKING STOCK BUTTER Wire or write for Prices OETJEN BUTTER CO. 339 Washington St., New York to sell. Both Phones 1217 Mail us samples BROWN SWEDISH, RED KIDNEY, MARROWFAT or WHITE PEA BEANS you may wish MOSELEY BROTHERS Grand Rapids, Mich. The Vinkemulder Company Jobbers and Shippers of Everything in Fruits and Produce Grand Rapids, Mich. MACAULEY SAID Those inventions which have abridged distance have done the most for civilization. USE THE BELL And patronize the service that has done most to abridge distance. AT ONCE Your personality is miles away. Every Bell Telephone is a long distance station. Our Entire Line of GROCERY BAGS BEAR THIS Our Improved Square, self-opening, Grocery and Sugar Bags are the standards of quality. MARK OF QUALITY Every bag full size and uniform strength. « Write for jobbing price list. THE CLEVELAND-AKRON BAG CO., CLEVELAND February 2, 1916 with this business has come to un- derstand that the eggs have to be reasonably good or they will bring a pretty low price. We have con- tinued buying on a quality basis all through the winter, although we have started this week to buy current re- ceipts, as the quality of the eggs com- ing now is quite uniform. As soon as the weather gets warm, however, we intend to go back strictly to a quality basis and under no circum- stances would we consent to go back to the old system of doing business. This method is profitable and satis- factory to us because we know that on every shipment we can make a fair margin, and that we can pay a man who has good stock a good price, and we do not care for the other kind. It is a benefit to the careful, conscientious producer but probably a detriment to the careless, dishonest one. The farmer who has been in the habit of taking incubator eggs and those from stolen nests and selling them for good money prob- ably does not get any benefit from this system, It is a benefit for the consumer in a general way, because anything that eradicates waste and conserves the food supply is natural- ly a benefit to the consumer. It is a benefit in a particular manner be- cause it has a tendency to get the eggs from the farm to the consumer in a much shorter space of time than previously. He is, therefore, able to get a better product at least for no higher cost than before.” —_~+-—___ Wedlock is truly a combination lock. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Are Grocers Losing Out to Special- ists? Is the grocer’s failure to understand the value of quick turn-over and his adherence to old selling methods, gradually turning his business over to the peddlers, one line after another? Such is the claim of W. E. Long, a Chicago writer who has just issued a series of “Ginger Talks” to grocers, in an endeavor to arouse them to some method for correcting the ped- dler inroads on their business. Four of these talks have come to this office, accompanied by a letter in which Mr. Long says: “For several years past certain lines of quick turn-over goods have been slipping away from the grocer. It has been largely his fault that they got away from him. Other people have taken these lines and specialized in them and have made enormous profits out of them. The same oppor- tunity was offered the grocer, but through neglect and a failure to un- derstand all that these quick turn- over lines meant to him, he permitted the opportunity that knocked at his door to pass him by. It looks now as though the time may come when he will lose the bread business, and he not only fails to heed the warning, but utterly fails to appreciate how profit- able this business is to him, and how he can make use of it to fight the chain store and the big downtown stores. “First, the grocer permitted the milk and cream business to get away from him, and right there lost an op- portunity for a profitable business and a daily contact with his customers. Butter is fast following milk and cream. The large creamery concerns are already selling a vast amount of butter direct to the consumer off their milk wagons. Fruit and vegetable wagons, owned by large concerns, as well as by small hucksters, are grad- ually taking this line away from the grocer. Tea and coffee concerns are building up profitable routes in any number of cities throughout the coun- try, and now the bread business is headed that way. “In quite a number of cities—Wash- ington, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Buf- falo, Troy, Albany and several smaller cities—the retail baker, who sells di- rect to the consumer off a wagon, is commencing to be a formidable com- petitor of the grocer for this unusually profitable and desirable bread busi- ness. One large retail bakery in Los Angeles runs 125 wagons, and it is estimated that their business amounts annually to from $400,000 to $500,000. This means that from $80,000 to $100,- 000 is annually diverted from the gro- cer’s cash till to the baker’s coffers in this one city by this one baking con- cern. The grocers of Los Angeles are not only losing this profit, but they are also losing the opportunity to make other sales through the loss of daily contact with their customers that this bread business offers. “The housewife who buys from a retail wagon is far more susceptible to the chain store and the big down- town store than is the woman who 31 buys her bread daily from the neigh- borhood grocer. We feel that this is a subject well worth considering.” —_22+>___ The Younger Generation. Our young people in their habits and tastes cherish and crave and ad- mire health with a devotion unparal- leled since the days of the Greeks. The call of the fields and of the wild, the inoculation of early childhood with the fever of athletics, and the enormous distinction obtained by strength, agility and pluck—even the unprecedented candor of literature and conversation concerning sex, parenthood, eugenics and femininism —all these signs of the time, although they may involve new risks, unques- tionably free young people in large degree from the introspection, senti- mentalism, morbid conscientiousness, prudishness and _ prurience, which have afflicted earlier generations. Fearlessness, self-confidence, even audacity, issue from this healthiness. Nothing is too personal to be men- tioned; nothing too startling to be welcomed; nothing too sacred to be criticized. The most repelling of traits is sickliness, either of body or of mind. Strong doctrine, naked truth, undisguised convictions, are marks of the cult of healthiness, and the resultant type of youth is one which cannot be observed without ad- miration.—Francis Greenwood Pea- body in Atlantic Monthly. —_22+>___ Let us take advantage of our op- portunities lest we become an op- portunity for others. ASK YOUR JOBBER FOR Hart Brand Canned Food HIGHEST QUALITY Our products are packed at five plants in Michigan, in the finest fruit and vegetable belts in the Union, grown on lands close to the various plants; packed fresh from the fields and orchards, under highest sanitary conditions. Flavor, Texture, Color Superior. Quality Guaranteed The HART BRANDS are Trade Winners and Trade Makers Vegetables:—Peas, Corn, Succotash, Stringless Beans, Pork and Beans, Pumpkin, Red Kidney Beans, Spinach, Beets. Fruits:—Cherries, Strawberries, Red Raspberries, Black Raspberries, Plums, Pears, Peaches. W. R. ROACH & CO., HART, MICH. Factories at HART, KENT CITY, LEXINGTON, EDMORE, SCOTTVILLE. MEN OF MARK. F. H. Thurston, the Pioneer Central Lake Merchant. Francis H, Thurston was born Dec. 21, 1833, at Lancaster, Massachu- setts. His parents were Hon. John Gates Thurston, also born at Lan- caster, and Harriet Lee, daughter oi Seth Lee, Esq., and Anna Patrick Lee, of Barre, Massachusetts. He was educated at Lancaster academy and Leicester academy, besides the ordinary common schools, but was not noted as a scholar. His father was a merchant, having begun busi- ness in 1817, and he had four children, two sons and two daughters, one of the latter, Josephine, having died in infancy. Francis was the youngest and, when about 14, entered his father’s store as a clerk. In the spring of 1852 his father sold out the mer- chandise business and rented his store to his brother, Wilder S. Thurston. In 1853 the town of Lancaster held the bi-centennial celebration in com- memoration of the two hundredth an- niversary of its incorporation. F. H. Thurston took part in this and, dress- ed as an Indian, rode along the line of the procession, from the great din- ing tent in South Lancaster to the old brick church in Lancaster Center, about a mile. In September, 1853, he went as clerk into the dry goods store of Chamberlin, Barnard & Com- pany, at Worcester, Massachusetts. Fifty years later, in 1903, he attended the two hundred and fiftieth anni- versary of the incorporation of the old town, by invitation of the town committee, and, having neglected to bring the proper ticket, was adm’‘tted to the church ceremonies on the ad- mission ticket of fifty years before. He also visited the store of Chamber- lin, Barnard & Company, at Worces- ter and the Leicester academy, where fifty-six years before he went to school. Of all the clerks and_ part- ners he had known at the store, but one remained, Otis Putnam, then proprietor, but there was nothing left to remind him of the place as he had known it. In 1855 he went to Illinois, took up a pre-emption west of Loda, and returned to Lancaster, having mean- while voted for John C. Fremont for President. His eyes, never very strong, had shown signs of weakness on the prairies. He went into busi- ness in the old store of his father, with him and another man as part- ners. It was not long before his eyes gave out, the opt’c nerve being seriously affected and after a time he was compelled to give no thought of again engaging in the merchandise business. In 1863 he married Miss Elizabeth A. Crandall, daughter of David S. Crandall, of Paxton, Illinois, and after various experiences, went in 1870 to Northern Wisconsin, where he en- tered some land and for three winters worked at the business of scaling pine logs. Of these he at first knew noth- ing, but during his winter at the busi- ness he was the only scaler on the Oconto river who scaled for all the companies at so much per thousand feet, or who had ever been so em- ployed. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN In the spring of 1873 one of the large mill companies, Holt & Balcom, for whom he had done much work at scaling logs, offered him a position in their store as head clerk. He ac- cepted and remained with this firm six years. In the fall of 1878 he vis- ited the Grand Traverse country, at that time little more than a wilder- ness, in order, if possible, to find a climate somewhat milder than that of Northern Wisconsin. He passed up and down the lakes, and visited. among other places, the spot where now stands the village of Bellaire. The town was at that time represent- ed by a one-sided shanty and a puncheon bridge. After looking about he bought some land at Central Lake, then a little hamlet of half a dozen houses. In the spring of 1879 he went there with his family and ness. For many years the firm has been known as Thurston & Company. Mr. Thurston has no taste or apti- tude for mercantile pursuits, his pref- erence being literary and_ scientific. His course was determined by cir- cumstances and if this sketch con- tains a lesson for the rising genera- tion, it may, perhaps, be that any handicap, however great, may be overcome by determination and that no advantages, however great, can compensate the want of honesty, in- tegrity and application. Tarpon Springs, Florida, Jan. 25— At the request of my son, George Lee Thurston, I wrote, many years ago, the above autobiography to be published in a volume devoted to sketches of the lives of men of more or less prominence in Michigan af- fairs. It was so published, and, | F. H. Thurston. thereafter made the place his home. At first, with another man, he em- barked in merchandise and lumbering, but soon bought out his partner, drop- ped the lumbering and continued in merchandise alone. His career since that time is fairly well known. All goods were then hauled in by teams, and as East Jordan and Bellaire be- gan to grow the business at Central Lake was materially lessened. He was often urged to remove his busi- ness to one or the other of these places, but steadily declined, and for years went through what were pret- ty hard times. He gave money and effort toward building the Chicago & West Michigan Railway, and had at length the satisfaction of seeing Central Lake begin to grow. His late son, George Lee Thurston, was long associated with him in the busi- think, without change. I am asked to complete this report. It may be as well to say here that I became engaged to my present wife, Miss Elizabeth A. Crandall, dur- ing the same year (1856) in which I cast my vote for John C. Fremont as President. An old friend who voted as I did, and at the same time, said to me a few years ago that he doubt- ed if Fremont would have made a good President, to which I replied that in this I agreed with him, but that I was, nevertheless, always glad that I had not voted for James Bu- chanan. In 1858-9, I constructed the first canvas canoe I ever saw or heard of. I built it over my father’s car- riage house and almost without look- ing at it. It did me good service until long after when it was stolen now February 2, 1916 from me. In company with my friend, S. W. Hathaway—at present a prominent lawyer of Boston—and in the summer of 1859 I cruised down the Nashua and Merrimack Rivers ty Newburyport, on the sea. In the summer of 1860 I took this canoe to the head waters of the Merrimack. I had already offered to release M’ss Crandall from our engagement, buz she refused. During this engage- ment, we did not meet for about six years, but we were married at last. She is still with me—we have long passed the period of our golden wed- ding and she is the best asset I have ever had. I tramped through the White Hills and the Franconia and other moun- tains, cruised on the upper Merri- mack, and on Squam and Winnie- saukee Lakes during the summer and fall and found the cond'tion of my eyes improving. I then went back to Lancaster and, after a time, to Illinois, whence I went to Wisconsin, where I spent six years as head clerk for Holt & Balcom. Thence I went to Northern Michigan. It was then a new country, but I tried to make the best of untoward circumstances. My son, George, was with me for a time, but later went to the office of the Mancelona Herald to learn the trade of a printer. He always liked that calling—and his taste for news- paper work may have been influenced by the fact that his maternal grand- father had for many years published the Lockport Courier, in Western New York. We had, while in Oconto, given him the best school facilities that we could and had tried to teach him temperance and to be scrupulous- ly and sternly honest. His mother had lost by an early death her only daughter, many years before, and ? think that her gentle companionship did much toward moulding his after life. He left the printing business after a while, and came to help me in the store He did not say so, but I think that it was largely because he thought that I needed his help. Not long after this, I was grievously wronged by a man whom I had known and trusted for thirty years and only my good credit saved me from going to the wall. Like some of the best men I have known, this man was ruined by speculation. George soon became a partner and remained so up to the time of his death. He wrote for the Michigan Tradesman and other papers for perhaps twenty-fiv years. He took over the editorship and management of the Central Lake Torch and to give him more time, we took in another’ partner, Fred Mohrmann, the brother of his wife. His death came not long afterward, caused I think, by working too hard. Meanwhile, I had gone South for the winters and had passed some years in Southern California, where I built a house on the island of Santa Cata- lina. I later sold this place and came to Florida, in order to be nearer my children. They are both now dead. Yet if I had not made this change, I could not have reached my son be- fore his death. I have now three living grandchildren, all of whom are, I think, well situated. February 2, 1916 George was always a good son | think that there have been few better. As tO motey, | am not aware that any of my family have amassed great wealth. Yet wealth may be too expensive. And I am here reminded of the re- ply of an old Irishman at Green Bay City, who has engaged in sweeping the sidewalk in front of the house of a very mean man who had just died. He was asked by another man of the same sort how much the de- ceased had left, and replied: “He left ivery d Cint Of if. sor” F. H. Thurston. —_2--__ Power of Concentration. Of all the factors which enter into the work of salesmanship, none is more potent or more valuable than the power of concentration. Of all the punish- ments which have ever been devised to give pain to man, perhaps that of the constant dropping of a drop of water is the worst. A drop of water dropping on the head of a victim constantly and incessantly will so wreck his nerves, so upset his reason that no agony in all the world becomes so intense. The sun’s rays, whose genial warmth brings comfort in the springtime, if con- centrated through the medium of a powerful glass, will melt the hardest steel. The psychology of advertising is the science of constantly repeating, con- stantly impressing the sub-conscious mind with the one thought, the one thing, the one picture, until the sub-con- scious mind will give back to the con- scious mind the suggestions it has so often received. The student who reads and reads in- cessantly along some particular line be- comes an expert in that lire of educa- tion. The individual thinking along the line of money until it absorbs his entire thought becomes a miser. Intensity of thought may be carried to the point of injury, but without it no great achieve- ment can be made. The brightest man, who scatters his thoughts in studying any subject, will never master that subject. Some of the most promising men have failed because they scatter. German organization has succeeded because each particular depart- ment has the responsibility of specializ- ing or concentrating on their particular work, these united being federated into one great plan of organization.. A gentleman who made a reputation and wealth by being a successful closer in land sales recently told me the story of the sale by him of a section of land (the section number being 27). Through all the conversation pertaining to the advantages of purchase, my friend kept ever recurring to Section 27. This con- stant concentration of his customer’s mind on this particular number sold the land. With the power of concentration we must have the ability to use the power Properly and intelligently. In cutting steel or granite there must be other ele- ments besides the concentration of hard- ness in the tools used. There must first be good material to concentrate; such material must be properly refined: There must be perfect cohesion of its mole- cules: It must not be brittle or crum- bly: It must be able to stand a blow or shock and rebound without injury: It MICHIGAN TRADESMAN must be able to stand heat or friction without exploding. In a word—quality, judgment and temperament are all nec- essary allies in the use of the power of concentration. The thousand little brooks from a thousand hills concentrated make a mighty force that will overturn any ob- stacle, and so it is in the line of sales- manship. It requires brains, but brains are not all; it requires power of analy- zation, but this is not all; but these to- gether, used at the proper time and place and converged to given focus, pro- duce the results that build buildings and railroads, overcome the obstacles of na- ture, and make commerce and educa- tion. I know of nothing that should be continually hammered into the growing boy and girl, or the young business man So much as the value of constant un- remitting concentration. —_2~+~-___ Small Stores Should Sell for Cash. It would be much better for the small city or town store to sell for cash only, for this would eliminate a source of loss through bad debts which always plays an important part in the losses of a retailer no matter what his line may be. Furthermore, in confining his business to cash sales, he is not only able to take advantage of the best cash discount there is on his mer- chandise and at the very bottom price, but this would enable him to offer it to his customers below the prices of his competitor who very often loses his cash and trade dis- count by selling on credit. Moreover, assuming that the business is at least fairly profitable and by taking the cash in over the counter each day, bills can be paid promptly, a good credit is established, and salesmen from wholesale houses having such a store in their territory, find it con- venient to visit such a store first, and place at the disposal of such a cus- tomer, the crisp, new, salable and fashionable merchandise. If.a merchant has the cash at his command, there are untold bargains which come within his grasp, simply because he has the money. There is no worry of losing a cus- tomer through “dunning” him to pay, nor through possible loss through in- ability on the part of the customer to settle. From the standpoint of the store- keeper, it would seem to me, most advantageous to sell for cash, but the angle of the question which interests me most, is the advantage which comes to the customer, the towns- people, and the community in gener- al, from the necessity of paying for what they buy when they buy it. The all-absorbing question of the day “The High Cost of Living” would be at least partially answered if it was made less easy and convenient for people in small cities and towns, particularly, to buy indiscriminately because they do not have to lay down the cash, but can pay at some future time, or not at all. If one who makes a purchase were to hesitate, and turn the matter over in his mind before satisfying a mere whim, or even what he thinks is a necessary demand, if he were com- pelled in each case to pay for the purchase, there would be less foolish buying and less hard times. It is the extreme ease with which we are able to buy here and there on credit that runs up the excessive cost of living. Geo. H. Williams. —~+-.___ An Idea From Mystery Stories. Everyone is familiar with the con- tests frequently conducted by popular magazines and newspapers, where the last installment of a mystery story is left for the readers to write and a prize is offered for the best production. Working along this same line, a cer- tain dry goods merchant contracted for a large space in the local paper, and wrote a portion of an advertisement on a certain make of men’s overcoats. He 33 stopped apparently right in the middle of the text, and, following, in big letters, came the annoucement that one of these coats wold be given to the person who finished this advertisement in the most creditable manner A large number participated in the contest, with the result that the dealer secured a lot of good advertising mat- ter, and at the same time, got people to learn the special merits of this particu- lar overcoat more thoroughly than would have otherwise been possible. 139-141 Monroe St. Both Phones GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. No. 7 Ionia Ave. N. W. Grand Rapids Store Fixture Co. Grand Rapids, Mich. New and Used Store and Office Fixtures for every kind of business We Pay Highest Cash Price for Fixtures We will take your Old Fixtures in Trade CHEESE We have a fair supply of special makes The last season was _ particularly favorable for the making of good cheese We have the famous Herkimer Co. New York Cheese in the yellow and white September make. are tasty and just right cut. little more, but worth it. They Cost a JUDSON GROCER CO. The Pure Foods House GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, 1916 a Wl My x \ \\ (\ SLL LMIM YY, RY syavy ) lI j v1 Fa Art in Shoes and Their Comparative Value. In the hurry and bustle of mer- chandising we neglect to remember that besides turning over our stock rapidly, there is another phase of our business that is just as admirable and just as worthy of our attention, and that is the shoe itself. Building a Shoe Is an Art, To the casual observer a shoe does not look like a work of art; yet we who have designed a shoe, who have watched that shoe grow out of the shapeless pieces of leather into the perfectly formed and finished prod- uct, know that it must be a work of art because we realize the expert skill and knowledge necessary for its production. The fault lies not in the shoe, but rather in those who do not understand thoroughly the meaning of the word. This beauty, perhaps, is seen more in the custom shoe. I will, therefore, confine my remarks to the hand-made shoe, and later, by practical demonstration, try to show you wherein this beauty lies. As in all other arts, the artist has a certain definite goal to reach—that goal is perfection. It is the shoe- maker’s task to build a shoe so per- fectly that it will stand the closest scrutiny. Let us review, for a moment, the examination his shoe goes under. The first thing we do to this shoe is to give it a cursory survey, turn- ing it over in our hands and feeling for imperfections in a general way. After this superficial examination, we grasp the top part of the shoe with one hand and the heel with the other and straighten out the upper. This is done in order to see whether there is a perfect alignment between the front and back seam; also, to see if there are present any unnec- essary wrinkles, which are sure signs of either poor material or poor last- ing. If we are satisfied, we pass to the vamp, examine the quality of the leather, the shape of the toe and the way the toe cap sits on the vamp. The shoe is then inverted, a finger moves over the sole and the charac- ter of the bottom is noticed. The eye then passes to the shank, then to the heel, and the line between the heel and the heel seat is carefully studied. Should the heel be improp- erly set, we would discover it at once. After this, the finger moves instinctively around the edge of the sole and a sensitive finger can tell whether the shoemaker has used a well cut iron or not. Next, the shoe is placed on a flat surface, and we observe where the sole strikes, and whether the heel has the correct pitch. The shoe is now opened and a hand is inserted, the lining, top facing and insole are all examined, and especially the area at the throat. If the shoe passes these tests suc- cessfully, we do not hesitate to pro- claim it a product of the first order. The shoemaker who made it knows his business and is a craftsman of rare merit in these days. The shoe- maker knows when he is building the shoe that it will be subjected to the closest examination and is, therefore, more than careful to make his shoe as near perfect and beautiful as pos- sible. It is not because of this rigid censorship, but because of his con- scientiousness and love of his work that makes the shoe industry an art. As in the other arts, the aim is to please and a shoe that is well fitted, well lasted, and well finished, must please, for it incorporates in its con- struction all the patience, the thor- oughness, the thought, the experience, the skill, the intelligence, and above all, the love for one’s work that is required in the production of any masterpiece. The thing I think that appeals to us most outside the perfection of execution is the fact that the cus- tom shoe stands above and aloof and smacks of a certain individualism that bespeaks the maker. No two men fit the same, last the same, or finish the same. This character that is so noticeable in a comparison between a “custom” shoe and a “team” shoe. The reason for this lies in the fact that the machine is lifeless, it is a soulless mechanism that does not care about, and is not interested in, the object it produces; but the shoe- maker is interested in, and does care about his shoe—each shoe means something to him; he is proud of it; it is a creation of his own brain: and it is this touch of personality entering into the shoe that makes ir distinctive and artistic. The artistic side of a shoe is rela- tively constant, but its value is not. Value has many interpretations, but we shall only concern ourselves with the one which we understand in the trade as price. Value we will under- stand to mean the amount the shoe will bring. Now, this value is ever waxing or waning, and is caused by so many different things that we shall touch only the more salient ones. The greatest factor in determining the value, or price, the shoe will bring depends on the demand that is made for it. This is a favorite REGARDLESS of the constantly advancing prices of raw materials used in the manufacture of shoes, we have all along insisted that the same QUALITY be put into our product. When you buy Bertsch and H. B. Hard Pan Shoes to-day you buy shoes that have in them the same high standard of quality that has always characterized our lines. There has been no deviation from this principle in the past and there will be no deviation in the future. Regardless of the price of raw material THE QUALITY OF OUR SHOES WILL NEVER BE SHADED. During the last few months advances in material have been so marked that were we to buy all material at to-day’s prices every shoe we make would cost more than the present selling price to produce. Nevertheless our prices have not changed much, and we are not going to raise a shoe as long as we have a foot of leather left to make it from. They will only go up when it becomes a question of self preservation. We will not take advantage of market consider- ations to obtain an advanced price. THEY WEAR LIKE IRON Herold-Bertsch Shoe Co. Manufacturers of Serviceable Footwear Grand Rapids, Michigan gives that - Mr. Shoeman:— Are you going to be happy this year? You are if you depend on Hood Rubbers Hood's “Bullseye” Extra Special Hood’s “Pacer” Red Rubbers Hood's “Standard Hood” the measuring stick for all rubbers Hood's “Old Colony’? Second Quality (equal to many so-called “Firsts” Hood’s “Dixie” at a price (but they wear) All these and others Rubbers for every need Grand RapidsShoe @ Rubber® The Michigan People Grand Rapids February 2, 1916 law of the economist and as we shall endeavor to show, a law which is capable of bending, if not break- ing. In a general sense, however, demand does make the price, but when we think of the custom shoe we hesitate to accept this dictum as final, for we know that although de- mand does increase value, the ab- sence of demand does not necessarily decrease it. For an example, compare a “cus- tom” shoe with a “machine” made shoe. The demand for the latter greatly exceeds that of the former, nevertheless the relative values are obvious. This is accounted for by the fact that entering into the cus- tom shoe are two other important factors—namely, intrinsic worth and workrvanship. The first is too fa- miliar to you all to need any further explanation, and the second we have alrezdy dealt with at considerable leng h but there are a few points still to be emphasized. To be sure, the “tean’ made shoe has good ma- terial and good workmanship, but to i. relative degree. In the custom shoe as much of the construction as is practicable is done by hand. The leathers for the uppe ‘s and soles are all cut by hand. The lasting, the working of the box, cot ters and heels are also all done by hand. Each step in the operation is ne by hand and by one man, and thi man is just as careful in one ph e of the construction as in any. ith the machine shoe, this is not so—: several men handle the same shoe and their main concern is speed. “Waoen speed knocks at the door, be ity goes out the window.” There- fc +, the workmanship and the in- tr sic worth of the machine made s :e cannot be as high as the shoe tu ned out by one man. Hence, our co iclusion must be, that demand in- creases value only when we speak of terms of volume, and value, when considered from the standpoint of the ‘ndividual shoe depending upon in- tr:nsic worth and workmanship. The result is the custom shoe fits better, \ ears ‘better, looks better than a {uctory shoe—and it ought to; it has required more labor, more time, and it is infinitely harder to handle. But do not let my enthusiasm for the custom shoe be mistaken. The custom shoe is a work of art and a masterpiece of shoemaking, but just as much as it surpasses the machine made shoe in beauty, service and fit, it falls below it in practicability. It takes a man a whole day to put on a pair of bottoms on a custom shoe, in fact, four pairs a week is the aver- age for any man to make. Where would we be if it took the individual attention of one man a whole day to put on a pair of soles on all the shoes made? Half the world would go barefooted and no one could possi- bly own more than one or two pairs of shoes at the most. We see, therefore, that each has its value, It is a question of relativity rather that comparison, and although we may favor the one, existing con- ditions make us adopt the other. John Slater. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN Boomlets From Bay City. Bay City, Feb. 1—The Poles of Bay City and vicinity held a big celebra- tion at Pulaski hall Sunday night to commemorate the fifty-third anniver- sary of the uprising of the Polish people against the Russian govern- ment. The Young Women’s Christian As- sociation is putting the finishing touches of its new $75,000 building and has arranged a programme for the opening next month. The building is three stories high and 100 feet square. That the people in Bay county are law abiding is shown by the records that there are at the present time only twelve prisoners in the county jail, and two of these are from Mid- land county. There have never been so few arrests as during this winter. John B. Gurley, who conducts a general store at Maltby, Ogemaw county, has been appointed Postmas- ter to succeed Tobias J. Mudgett, re- moved. The grocery store of Charles A. Kelly was damaged by fire early Sun- day morning. The stock was ruined. The loss on stock and buildings is placed at $7,000, fully insured. A Boosters’ Club was organized at Beaverton, Gladwin county, Monday night for the purpose of boosting the town.and advertising the splendid opportunities in Beaverton and the surrounding territory. J. C. McCabe, Secretary of the Bay City Board of Commerce, with other Bay City boosters, are to be asked to attend their next regular meeting. Charles Scott Campbell, Caro, deal- er in agricultural implements, has filed a petition in bankruptcy in the local Federal court. Liabilities amount to $4,550.21, while the assets amount to $6,970.01. Glen Harris, who for several years has worked the city trade for the Hammond-Standish Co., has resigned his position and accepted a similar position with the Bay City Beef Co. At a meeting of the McKinley Club, which was held Jan. 26, C. R. Wells was elected President to fill the vacancy caused by the death of E. B. Foss, who was killed in an auto- mobile accident in November. McMillan was elected Secretary. The annual banquet will be held Feb, 14. Speakers of National reputation will be secured for the occasion. : Concon, who has been in the employ of the Hammond-Standish Co. for twenty-five years as_ head book-keeper, has resigned. He has accepted a position with H. E. Tre- maine in the Cobalt district and will soon leave for that place. The Board of Commerce has _ se- cured another industry for Bay City. The Hough Electric Pipe Organ Co. has decided to locate here and has secured property for its factory. It will also manufacture phonographs. W. T. Ballamy. —_—__ 6s > _ Farewell Dinner By Cashier Mills. Montague, Feb. 1—E. P. Mills, Cashier of the Farmers’ State Bank, entertained at a four course dinner at the White Lake Inn, Montague, Friday evening, Jan. 28. The dining room was beautifully decorated in red and pink carnations, with ferns in the background very artistically ar- ranged. Plates were laid for thirty and at 8 o'clock the guests entered the dining room. Music was furnish- ed by home talent and J. Vanderwerp, of Muskegon, officiated as toastmas- ter. The guests all responded read- ily. Joseph A. Tuell, Jr., stockholder of the Bank, gave a very interesting talk. Mr. Mills leaves in a short time with his family for Lansing. He will resign his position as Cashier of the Farmers’ State Bank to accept a sim- ilar position at Lansing. We regret very much the loss of Mr. Mills and wish him well in his new field. Carner & Hayes. But the romance of an elopement soon evaporates if the wife has to take in washing to support the husband. Rouge Rex Shoes Made for the Man Who Works Profitable alike for dealer and wearer. Made especially for hard service from leather we ourselves have tanned with this kind of service in view. They sell easily to the man who wants GOOD shoes, and they sell repeatedly to those who have once worn them. This is your chance to get the agency in your town for the coming prosperous years, Drop us a card requesting our salesman to call with samples. Hirth-Krause Company Hide to Shoe Tanners and Shoe Manufacturers Grand Rapids, Mich. knocks of every day wear. This line of ALL SOLID BOYS’ SHOES will help increase your spring sales and build up a steady business on boys’ shoes. ALL SIZES IN STOCK No. 8391—Boys’...... sizes 244 to 5% No. 8394— Youths’....sizes 1214 to 2 No. 8895—Little Gents’....sizes 8% to 12 Rindge, Kalmbach, Logie Company “Makers of Shoes that Wear’ f R. K. L. Seamless Shoe for Boys NO SEAMS—NO RIPS ha IN Our Boys’ Shoes stand the abuse and hard Grand Rapids, Mich. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN COT Cee: Conditions Give Merchants Deliver- ance From Special Sales. The special sales kind of merchan- dising has been overdone. Searcely a merchant can be found who will take exception to this state- ment. The special sale—at first applied as a helpful stimulus to trade at certain seasons when demands donot develop naturally, has been abused until it has become a mania—in which business is done only by a continuous round of “sales.” In this round of “sales” the repu- tation and the wiser policy of many a hitherto honest business house have been ruthlessly sacrificed, until the public, which once believed adver- tising, now looks askance at the an- nouncements of even the most con- servative of the stores. In this mania of special sales, con- sumers have been assiduously edu- cated to think first of price;—quality, style, all those considerations that make for lasting satisfaction, have been passed by in the mad effort to attract by extreme lowness of price on every bit of merchandise offered for sale. Progressive merchants have long realized the need of getting merchan- dising back on a better, more sub- stantial and more profitable basis than the last few years have shown. Some have gone determinedly to work to find a way to do this and to fol- low it, while others have followed the course of least resistance because they could see nothing else to do. effort way is Now—quite without any made by any of them—a opened to all merchants;—an oppor- tunity to do away with the lying, cheating, unmoral, unprofitable spec- ial sale style of merchandising is opened to any merchant who will take advantage of it. How many will see the opportunity and grasp it.? The opportunity to do away with the fake special springs from the wonderful prosperity of this coun- try. The American people are so prosperous that they can afford to buy merchandise of reputation in place of the trash which has been dragged forth to masquerade as “bar- gains” in the special sales. And this prosperity of the people not only has presented this opportuni- ty to put the soft pedal on the sale class of merchandising, but it has also done much to compel merchants to accept this opportunity—for it has practically cleared the markets of the country of the odds and ends of goods which formerly have been purchased to make a sale. Certain stores consider it unnec- essary therefore to hold their rum- mage and other sales this season. What is the use of forcing the situa- tion? What need is there to strain to continue the special sales mania by still further tainting such logical store events as the clearance sales with a lot of cheapened trash espec- ially faked to take the place of the odds and ends of stock that many stores at this season have found it worth while to offer—at less than regular prices? Why not go honestly before the public and tell them that trade has been so good that stocks are clean, and that there will be no need of special sales as in other years? Tell the public plainly that busi- ness has been so good that the store has nothing to offer but fresh, new merchandise at regular prices and that the American people are so well off that they can afford to buy that type of goods and by doing so in- crease the prosperity of their own industries. Think what a _whole- some effect that would have on the public—and you can afford to do that, for business is good and will continue to improve. Here—in the wonderful new con- ditions that exist in the United States—is an almost miraculous de- liverance from the special sales vam- pire which has fattened on the blood of so many mercantile reputations and has made the retail business a matter of choosing between a thin living and a course of mendacious misrepresentation. To-day there is practically no mer- chandise for honest special sales and there is little or no need in the aver- age store for holding special sales. Every shrewd merchant will view h’s clean stocks with satisfaction and will tell himself and his buyers that his store is going to merchandise hereafter on a new basis—a basis in which the guiding policy will be a firm conviction that for every dol- lar’s worth of honest merchandise produced in this country, there is waiting an honest dollar of the con- sumer’s money—waiting, yes and eager. The special sales idea, at best, is practically the same as saying to the public;—“You haven’t the money, the appreciation nor the inclination to pay the full worth of this mer- chandise, but perhaps now that it is a bit shopworn and the season is nearly over you'll find it possible to pay half price for it.” Perhaps it once was necessary to merchandise this way. Whether it was necessary or not, the special sales idea has been overdone and has pull- ed so many honest names througn the mud that most merchants would like to see it eliminated, except s) far as a few periodical sales of genuine character are concerned. Here, then is the opportunity. Americans are prosperous. They can afford to buy what they need and by paying honest prices for honest goods they will develop and increase their own prosperity. Don’t kick against the pricks, Mr. Merchant. You have followed the path of least resistance in falling into the rut of special sales. Now get out of that rut in the same way. Con- ditions are such that to do away with the great number of special sales and bring all your advertising and merchandising talent to bear upon February 2, 1916 the desirability of new fresh mer- chandise is much the easiest way. Don’t fight to continue what you have all along recognized as one of the evils of your business. This is the opportunity. Seize it and do away with the dishonest “spec- ial sale.’—Women’s Wear. —_~++»—____ Don’t parade your troubles before the unsympathetic world. Bury them as a dog does old bones, and growl if any one tries to dig them up. We Make a Specialty of Trimmed and Tailored Hats For the Dry Goods Dep't $12.00 to $36.00 dozen KIMMEL MILLINERY CO. Grand Rapids, Mich orders. Spring Underwear _We are showing a complete line of Men’s, Ladies’ and Children’s Underwear in one and two piece garments at prices that are absolutely right. If you have not already bought your Underwear it will be to your benefit to look over our line before placing Wholesale Dry Goods Paul Steketee & Sons Grand Rapids, Mich. WE style and price. novelties. priced knit garments, “Ha-Ka-Rac” Knit Goods The Complete Line That Will Help You Boost Your Knit Goods Business MAKE this assertion, not because of our en- thusiasm over our products, but because time has proven to our customers and to us that “Ha-Ka- Rac” Knit Goods meet every requirement of service, For over twenty years our knit gloves and mittens have been leaders in their field. And the Same care is exercised in the making of our other knit products—the sweater coats, caps and knit goods Send For Samples We'll be pleased to send you samples of ‘Ha-Ka-Rac’’ Knit Products, and let you see for yourself, at “first hand,’’ the ad- vantages that these goods possess, for you as “quick turn-over’’ merchandise, for your customers as superior, yet reasonably There is no charge if you are not convinced, AND TO-DAY IS A GOOD TIME TO ORDER Perry Glove and Mitten Co. PERRY, MICHIGAN cet Roy le ee February 2, 1916 Training Behind the Counter for Bigger Salesmanship. Written for the Tradesman. Salesmanship is the biggest single factor in modern business. Selling ability—the fine art of mak- ing the other fellow willing to buy the thing you are anxious to sell— plays a tremendous part in modern business. Capital invested in an industrial plant becomes profitable only insofar as the problems of production and distribution are successfully worked out. But distribution is only another term for salesmanship. So we can see at a glance that salesmanship is essential in all manner of manufac- turing enterprises. In all kinds of commercial institu- tions, from the largest wholesale es- tablishment down to the smallest one- man shop, salesmanship is an inevit- able factor, and upon it the success- ful on-going of the enterprise de- pends. It isn’t profitable to compare sales- manship and capital, but each is the complement of the other. In busi- ness both are essential. Selling ability, therefore, is rightly esteemed an asset; and fortunate is the man who possesses it. Wise al- so is he who possessing it in a lim- ited degree, applies himself to the task of increasing it by study, prac- tice, observation and reflection. If younger people connected with our business institutions throughout the country could be made to realize the tremendous possibilities of force- ful salesmanship—opportunities fox rapid promotion, increased pay and the higher rewards of service—they would be much more eager to im- prove their present opportunities. I recently saw a statement from the pen of a big business man to the effect that it is from behind the re- tail counter that most of the best salesmen in the world get their start. Waiting for Opportunities. And yet there are thousands of young people behind retail counters in this country who are waiting for opportunities, and dreaming about the time when they shall come into the big job with more pay. And yet anybody who has done service behind the counter knows that retail stores and shops are full of opportunities, if only the salespeople could see them. Beyond the service accorded to customers, almost always there is the possibility of a better service; and everywhere there are large sources of trade unrecognized and undeveloped. Somebody suggests that something might have been done to placate an irate customer, and the retortis forth- coming, “O, you can’t please every- body!” Perhaps there is an element of truth in the statement. Some people are hard to please—obstinate, arbi- trary and unreasonable, and all that. But this very fact calls for more abil- ity and effort on the part of the sales- force. If everybody were easy to please—and put up with everything— then it wouldn’t require any great effort on the part of the clerk to please the public. But all people aren’t that way; and MICHIGAN TRADESMAN that’s precisely the reason good serv- ice makes a hit with the people. It is a policy maintained in spite of dif- ficulties; it’s a quality acquired at the cost of effort. And it’s the invari- able rule that things of value in this world get their value precisely be- cause of effort and difficulties and sacrifices encountered in them. Successful selling is the kind ol! selling that produces pleased custom- ers, and you don’t have to go out of your own store to acquire the art of pleasing your customers. If you can’t please the people you now sell to, you couldn’t please any other class of trade. securing And when it comes to putting over new ideas, plans and schemes for ac- quiring trade and building a bigger and better business, why can’t you do a little something in this line from your present position behind the counter? Initiative Counts Anywhere. Big salesmen are men of initiative They develop selling plans and schemes of their own. Business is a big game in which the fellow who uses his head in- variably wins out. To what extent are you using your head in your store? Are you acquir- ing the art of thinking for yourself, and acting upon your own initiative? If not, why not? Perhaps you are minded to say, “Well, that isn’t what I’m paid for.” This is a mooted question; but granted that you are right. If itisn’t what you are paid for, you'll get paid for doing it just the same. | mean in this way: it'll make you a more valuable man to your house; and if your employer hasn’t got brains enough to see it, or justice enough to reward you for it, some other fel- low will happen along presently who'll see a big bargain in you, and youll get a chance to go with a new concern at a bigger salary. Anything over and above your stipulated duties—any spontaneous and original efforts of your own to promote the sale of merchandise in your store—isn’t wasted effort, and don’t you think it for a moment. Even assuming that it doesn’t bring you any immediate rewards in the way of increased pay, it is fine pre- paratory work, education and disci- pline. In the matter of initiative it is undoubtedly true that little things are big things. First steps lead to other and more pronounced stages of ad- vancement. The clerk who is learn- ing to act on his own initiative— who is cultivating an eye to see op- portunities for pushing out the busi- ness in new lines and rounding up classes of trade in the community that the store hasn’t been catering to before—is surely on the right track, These are the sort of boys that stand in line for promotion. Three Elements of Salesmanship. I have endeavored to show you in this article that salesmanship is vital to modern business; that it is a rec- ognized asset; and that the men who have it in large measure are the fellows who are pulling down the big sal- aries. But did you ever stop to think that there are just three elements in sales- manship of every sort from the least to the greatest? The merchandise sold, the man who sells it, and the people who buy it. Now you have all three right there in your own store. You have the merchandise: it may be high-grade, medium-priced, or inexpensive; it may be furniture and housefurnishings, hardware, jewelry, shoes, dry goods, notions, confections, groceries, or what not; but anyhow it’s just mer- chandise—things that people buy be- cause they have some conceivable use for it. And you are the sales- man. And the people to whom you sell are the customers who come into your store from time to time. Now there’s a whole lot that m‘ghi be said about merchandise, and at least one good-sized volume mich! be written on customers, their follies and foibles, and all that sort of thine. But the most important element in this trio of essential features is the salesman—you. Do you realize that the whole prop- osition is up to you? That the store policy, the store atmosphere, and the store’s effectiveness all depend upon you—a living personality between the merchandise to be sold and the peo- ple who buy it? Here is where you have a chance to shine, if you wil! to shine. And remember that things that shine in this world are things that pull attention. Chas. IL. Philips. 37 We are manufacturers of TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED HATS for Ladies, Misses and Children, especially adapted to the general store trade. Trial order solicited. CORL, KNOTT & CO., Ltd. Corner Commerce Ave. and Island St. Grand Rapids, Mich. Bell Phone 860 Citz. Phone 2713 Lynch Bros. Special Sale Conductors Expert Advertising —Expert Merchandising 28 So. Ionia Ave. Grand Rapids, Mich. Announcement Our salesmen are now on the road with our 1916 sample line of WIN- TER GOODS, ee Square Blankets, Stable Blankets, Plush Robes, Fur Robes, Auto Robes, Steamer Shawls. Bee Mackinaw Coats, Sweater Coats, Cardigan Jackets, Fur Coats, Blan- ket-lined and Sheep-lined Coats. Sb ss Rain Coats and Khaki Clothing. Bee Our representative in your terri- tory will advise you as to the date he will call. BROWN & SEHLER CO. Home of “SUNBEAM” Goods GRAND RAPIDS MICHIGAN mand will be. to book your order. Overalls For the Painter and Paper Hanger The season will soon be here when garments of this kind begin to sell and market conditions are such that it pays to anticipate what the de- We will be pleased Exclusively Wholesale Grand Rapids Dry Goods Co 20-22 Commerce Ave. Grand Rapids, Mich. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, 1916 AUTOMOBILES AND ACCESSORIES Country to Use Trucks Valued at $120,000,000. The year 1916 opens with greater promise for the motor truck business than any previous year in the his- tory of the business. At the begin- ning of 1912 there were only 20,009 motor trucks in the United States. To-day there are 200,000. In 1916 at least 75,000 motor trucks, valued at $120,000,000, will be boughc and placed in service in the United States if America does not become involved in the European war. The old established truck factories are working overtime to keep up with their orders. Parts makers are work- ing night and day and are simply unable to supply the present demand. War orders are no longer the god- send of a year ago. American busi- ness is absorbing most of the pres- ent output, and those concerns that do not do their truck shopping early will be sadly left when every one is pressing for deliveries in the spring. In the motor truck market there is a greater range of models and prices than there is in the pleasure car field. Besides the conventional rear wheel driven types there are front and four wheel drive models, as well as the six wheel semitractor and_ trailer. Motor wagons from 350 to 500 pounds capacity sell at from $300 to $750. In the 1,000 pound class prices range from $550 to $1,100. The 1,500 pound models show a price variation of $840 to $2,100. A one ton truck can be bought at any price from $870 to $2,450. The one and one-half ton truck varies in price from $1,450 to $3,000. In the two ton class one can choose between $1,475 and $3,000. Among trucks of greater load capaci- ty prices range all the way up to $5,800. A review of the motor truck man- ufacturers shows 221 makers of gaso- line trucks, twenty-four electric wag- on concerns, and two making steam trucks. Between them they list no fewer than 462 different models—407 gasoline, fifty-three electric, and two steam. A significant sign that the vogue of the motor truck is country-wide is the fact that these manufacturers are located in thirty-one different states, ranging from Massachusetts to Texas in the East and South, from New York to Minnesota in the North, and including Washington, Oregon, and California in the extreme West. Michigan leads with forty-one truck makers, New York is a close second with thirty-seven, while Ohio with thirty-one, Pennsylvania with twenty-five, Illinois with twenty, Massachusetts with thirteen, Indiana with twelve and Wisconsin with eleven also cut a respectable figure in the list. There are several outstanding fea- tures in the motor truck offerings for 1916. The most striking are the clean- ness in design, the general reduction in price of the lower-priced models, the prevalence of the worm-drive machine, and the great advances be- ing made by the internal-gear and four-wheel-drive trucks. Experience has proved beyond a doubt that a satisfactory and eco- nomical truck can be built without radius and troque rods, now that the problems of spring suspension are better understood. Few makers, ex- cept in trucks of special design and application, have dared to place the motor anywhere but in front under the conventional hood or bonnet. And in obedience to the demand of the majority of purchasers of mo- tor trucks—those who desire a ma- chine of less than one ton load ca- pacity—prices have been reduced to meet the pocketbook of the average small business man who needs a motor wagon but does not care to pay more than $1,000 for one. The statistics of final-drive types are extremely interesting. In the gasoline type—which means over 95 per cent. of the trucks to be sold this year—there are 202 worm-drive mod- els (including one four-wheel-drive), 115 using chain drive, fifty with in- ternal gear (including ten four-wheel- drive models), twenty-nine with bevel gear (including five four-wheel- drives), twenty four-wheel-drive and a few of other types. These figures, however, are apt to be misleading if one does not con- sider the total production of each class, for it seems probable at this writing that the internal gear drive truck will far outnumber all other types except the worn-drive model, and there is an outside chance it may finish the year in the lead. Electric truck makers still prefer the double side chain drive, there being thirty-two models of this type as against ten spur-gear drives and eleven of all other types combined. Motor truck buyers, however, are paying less attention to the engineer- ing details of the machine than they are to the economy derived in the particular kind of service for which the truck is intended. The class, history and commercial standing of the manufacturer, the ac- cessibility of the parts of the truck for adjustment and repair, the inter- changeability of the various units of con- struction and the ability of the truck to deliver the goods the maximum number of working days under all kinds of road and weather conditions—this is the kind of information which the really well informed buyer demands before he invests in a motor truck. When the lessons of the European war are finally tabulated, not the least will be the part played by the motor truck. The dependence upon gaso- line traction will not only be em- phasized as never before, but the question of design will come up for radical revision. The soldier in the field does not want a truck that needs to be partly torn down to adjust the motor, clutch, brakes, or to repair the final drive mechanism. An army needs food, ammunition and supplies, even when the roads are covered with snow or hub deep in sand or mud. Soldiers have to march on hills as well as on the plains, in the winter as well as in summer. And so it is with the merchant who has to move goods. Business can- not be dependent upon the vagaries of the weather or the condition of the roads. Henry Farrington. Speed Not the Only Essential. “Speed,” says Harry Stutz, the man who brought the world’s champion- ship to America, “is not the prime essential of a race car. Its prime es- sential is stamina, and no car can have too much stamina. Speed is a matter of valve lift, carburetion, and gear ratio. It is not a difficult thing to obtain. There were many cars to whom the Stutz showed its rear axle which could have distanced the Stutz on short brushes in earlier days but short brushes do not win world’s championships; that is the work of stamina. “Any motor car in the hands of anybody should have the power to accelerate quickly, as a safety fac- tor if for no other reason. This, in a way, I suppose might be called speed. I should say also that a man or woman is much more secure in a car which is agile and quick than in a car of the old sluggish type. There are times when a quick getaway means security, and there are times when slowness spells mishap. “The average driver will never drive a car faster than the road or street conditions warrant, no matter how fast his mount may be. So, what harm can there be in putting enough scientifically distributed pow- er into a chasis? We all like to know that the car we are driving is capable of briskness if the need ever arises. It is a sort of preparedness feature that ought to be built into every car —purely as a precaution.” > 2-2 Nothing Wasted. “Well, Bobby,” said the minister to the small son of one of his deacons, “what is the news?” “Popper's got a new set of false teeth.” “Indeed,” said the minister, re- straining a desire to laugh, “and what will he do with the old set?” “Oh, I suppose,” replied Bobby, “they'll cut "em down and make me wear ’em.” FLASHLIGHT The superiority of = EVEREADY Flashlights is Wey proved by the remarkable popularity which they have won. About 80% of all the flashlights sold in this country are Eveready’s. Last year over 18,000,000 EVEREADY Flashlights, Tungsten Batteries and Mazda Lamps were sold. This year sales are still better. All EVEREADY’S are fully guaranteed. It's a great line for you to han- dle. Let us tell you more about it. C. J. LITSCHER ELECTRIC COMPANY Wholesale Distributors 41-43 S. Market St. Grand Rapids, Michigan NOKARBO MOTOR OIL It is the one oil that can be used successfully on all automobiles operated by gasoline or electricity. It will not char or carbonize. ' It is the best oil for the high grade car, and the best oil for the cheapest car. WRITE FOR PRICES AND PARTICULARS The Great Western Oil Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan February 2, 1916 Gabby Sires, Eom Grand Rap- ids. Grand Rapids Jan. 31—Still more facts about Grand Rapids: Grand Rapids is one of the biggest printing centers in the United States. Grand Rapids has the largest num- ber of open air schools for its size of any city in the United States. Grand Rapids is the largest pro- ducer in the world of gypsum prod- ucts. Grand Rapids has a National repu- tation for the beauty of its lawns. Grand Rapids has the second great- est percentage of home owners of any of the large cities of the United States. Now_what about our low wages, Jimmy? The eighth of the series of twelve parties was held Saturday evening and was attended by one of the larg- est crowds of the season. From the looks of the smiling couritenances of our worthy dance committee, the party was some success. About a hundred were in attendance and to the rhythmic strains of Tuller’s or- chestra some forty-five couples can- tered to the lastest strains. If the remaining four parties are attended as well as this last party was, the dance committee will be on Easy street and with a surplus to turn in the general funds of the Council. So be up and doing worthy counselors, and get your shoulders to the wheel for mak- ing the next four parties a grander success than any that have preceded. The ways and means committee has turned over to the patrol of the Kings Guards of the Bagmen the February social festivities. After very careful consideration, intermingled with health yet friendly arguments on several propositions, the happy idea was unanimously adopted to hold an oriental costume party. This party is not to be a fancy costume affair, but each prince and princes is to wear some dress idea harmonizing with the oriental color or costume. There are several very inexpensive ideas which, if carried out, will be very appropriate. It might be well for the ladies to get in touch with each other and frame up the different ideas to be carried out. The meeting of Absal Guild will be called to order at 2:30 Saturday afternoon, Feb. 12, in the Council rooms and a good class of noviciates will be shown the way to the palace of the king. At 8 o’clock a sumptu- ous banquet will be spread in the Council rooms and the eats committee promise something that will both satisfy and please every one in at- tendance. Charles Perkins, chairman of the committee, swears by all that is good and holy that it will be a hope-to-die banquet and not a sand- wich lunch. All Bagmen who pos- sibly can should attend this meeting and evening’s entertainment. Come one, come all and bring your Fez. A policeman can get credit even if he is on the beat. i One of the strangest things in life is that a man never meets his affinity until after he is married. Dave Drummond, the genial saddlery man for the Brown & Sehler Co., re- ports the Pentwater branch badly in- fected with the la grippe germ. He says it necessitated his help in some of the stores during the rush hours. There is no doubt in our minds but what Dave is a past master in the art of handling the retail trade. John J. Dooley reports that he traveled the past week with another drug man and an undertaker’s supply man, which in our minds makes some combination. It is very rare that you see drug men carrying an antidote in the shape of an undertaker’s supply man. : Ask a member of Grand Rapids Council about the Oakland six. The furniture season closed Feb. 1 with an attendance of over 1,500 out- of-town buyers. In point of registra- tion, Ohio ranked first, Michigan sec- ond, Indiana third and Illinois fourth. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN There were registrations from On- tario and Nova Scotia, which goes to prove that the Grand Rapids mar- ket is well known and appreciated by foreign buyers, as well as buyers in our own states. Dr. A, E. Stickley, physician and druggist at Mesick, has moved into his new building, which he has just completed. This will give him an up-to-date drug store with offices and consulation rooms in connection. Saloon men in the: Northern sec- tion of the State are complaining of poor business, which is caused either by New Year’s resolutions or the ex- tremely bad weather of late. We are glad to learn that the G. R. & I. is not going to discontinue their night train from Grand Rapids to Mackinaw, as this train is very es- sential to the boys in making their Northern territory. Don’t bite the hand that is feeding you. The Grand Rapids Leather Novelty Co. has been incorporated to manu- facture leather findings and novelties. W. J. Pratt is President of the con- cern, The Compo Stone Co. has plans draw up for a three-story steel and concrete structure, 41x94 feet. The factory will be located at Fuller Junc- tion. George W. Loucks has purchased the Celrite grocery store, at 971 Cherry street, and will conduct it in connection with his dry goods store at 973 Cherry street. W. H. Anderson is hustling to raise funds to ensure the installation of boulevard lights from Campau Square to the river on Pearl street. The Crathmore Hotel opened its remodeled dining room yesterday for Sunday dinner and served its patrons with a fine turkey dinner for 50 cents. Louie Mertens is sure some hotel man and is rapidly coming to the front. He at present has fifty rooms with bath for the small sum of $1. Can you beat it? Only twenty-six of his children saw W. D. Davis, 94, marry Mrs. Anna Mason, 39, in Plymouth, N. C. Seven of the children couldn’t come to the wedding. Must be he is a friend of Teddy’s. You may dodge reckless automo- bile drivers, escape travel accidents, avoid sprains and broken bones, but some day the undertaker is going to get you. The State creamery men and ice cream makers will hold a convention at Kalamazoo the second week in February. The Elks will give a minstrel show at Powers Theater in the near future. The proceeds of this show will be used to defray the expense of the Elks band on their trip to the Soo convention in June. R. Ellwanger returned Sunday morning from Detroit, where he at- tended a salesmen’s meeting conduct- ed by his firm. Wilbur S. Burns, member of Grand Rapids Council and holding the title of Past Grand Counselor, has em- barked in the soap business for him- self. Wilbur was connected with Gowens '& Sons, of Buffalo, N. Y., for a period of eighteen years as their State representative and during that time established a thriving business. He has launched his efforts in his own behalf and for his own gain. His pop- ular brands of soap are Bobby Burns, Lucky Strike and Wilbur S. Burns family soap. It might be well for the U. C. T. ladies to bear Wilbur’s prod- ucts in mind when they are purchas- ing cleansing material for their home use. Grand Rapids Council unites in wishing brother Burns every success in his new venture. ' Where was Sparks from Electric City last week? An electric eel meter. Some men would rather lose a friend than the best of an argument. What this country really needs is a few more people who are willing does not use a to practice after they get through preaching. Grand Rapids Council unites in sending its heartfelt sympathy to brother L. M, Steward in his recent bereavement in the loss of his father. S. J. Séeley, of Elk Rapids, has been confined to his home for the past two weeks with lagrippe. C. Varney, of Manistee, pro- prietor of a plumbing and heating es- tablishment, is back on the job after a three weeks’ siege of the old re- liable. George W. Wilson, of 625 Lorraine building, is able to be out again after being confined to his home for some time with the regular malady. Wade E. Sackner, who broke his arm cranking his machine, is improv- ing nicely. Fred Buck, who passed through a serious illness of typhoid fever, was back among the live ones Saturday evening at our dance. W. E, Mellinger, of 456 Crescent street, is confined to his home with a serious illness, the nature of which we were unable to learn. Grand Counselor W. S. Lawton re- turned from Detroit Friday evening and has since been on the sick list. Howard Rutka is reported as hav- ing attempted to store up some coal in one of his eyes, the result of which necessitated an operation on that member to remove some fine portions of the black diamond which penetrat- ed the membranous covering. He is reported as recovering nicely from his painful experience. meeting of all Bagmen commit- tees will be held Saturday afternoon Feb. 5, at 2:30 at the Council rooms. All committee members are request- ed to be present. Don’t forget those annual banquet tickets. Don’t forget that next Saturday evening is the regular meeting of Grand Rapids Council. Big doings will see you there. V. Pilkington. 39 Quaker Oats Using More Cotton Bags. The Quaker Oats Company has noti- fied the Southern Wholesale Grocers’ Association that. as a result of the agita- tion by the grocers in favor of using cotton bagging on food products as a step in increasing the output of Southern cotton, it has since last fall been ma- terially adding cotton bagging to its container material. “Since that time actual figures show that we are using on an average over 500.000 cotton sacks per month. which equals 20.000 cotton sacks each working day, or over 6,000,000 cotton sacks per year.” says the company. “There is certainly something in this propaganda of yours. If you can in- fluence the other manufacturers of the country as you have influenced us, it will prove a big thing—we are inclined to think it has already proven a big thing.” The Pyrolin Products Sales Co. has been incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $19,000 common and $1,000 preferred, of which amounts $9,- 900 common and $100 preferred has been subscribed and $1,900 common and $100 preferred paid in in cash. >>» __ The Clipper Belt Lacer Co. has in- creased its capital stock from $100,000 to $200,000. GRAND RAPIDS OIL CO. Jobber of Illuminating and Lubricating Oils and Gasoline GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN United Motor Trucks Therefore, tion. see us. United Motor Trucks are trucks made in Michigan from standardized, individually guaranteed units. what you may not know about the name United you do know by experience or hearsay about the component parts. If there is no United dealer in your community there is an oppor- tunity for a highly profitable connec- Write, wire or come down and United Motor Company Grand Rapids, Mich. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN MECC (pad uct Ht ({ Ferecsetat — ARV a UL — 2 ty if {C “4 G 7, (oe ¢ ioe nc L Se — i is crf Sir HE COMMERCIAL TRAVE ig NY wt (l Grand Council of Michigan U. C. T. Grand Counselor—Walter S. Lawton, Grand Rapids. Grand Junior Counselor—Fred J. Mou- tier, Detroit. Grand Past Counselor—Mark S. Brown, Saginaw. Grand Jackson. Grand Treasurer—Wm. J. Devereaux, Port Furon. L Grand Conductor—John A. Hach, Jr., Coldwater. Grand Page—W. T. Ballamy, Bay City. Grand Sentinel—C. C. Starkweather, Detroit. Grand Chaplain—F. W. Wilson, Trav- Secretary—Maurice Henman, erse City. Grand Executive Committee—FE. A. Dibble, Hillsdale; Angus G. Mc®fachron, Detroit; James E. Burtless, Marquette; L. N. Thompkins, Jackson. Next Grand Council oe eevee Citv, June 2 and 3, 191 Pickings Picked Up in the Windy City. Chicago, Feb. 2—Chicago is back to normal again—same old grind. Cause—the auto show is a thing of the past. One of the most novel displays during auto show week was held in the main dining room of the Audi- torium Hotel, on Michigan avenue. This room was beautifully decorated and on display were four high priced cars of foreign and American make. Admittance by invitation only. . L. Ross, of Detroit, builder of the Ross Eight automobile, manu- factured in Detroit, pulled a scoop on other car-builders during auto week by having the only car on dis- play in the writing room of the La Salle Hotel. G. S. Patterson, sales manager, with the assistance of W. C. Hull, salesman, who form- erly was with the American Cigar Co., of Detroit, were kept busy ex- plaining the good points of this car to hundreds of people, and judging from the list of prospects, Detroit will go down in history as the home of one more successful automobile company. A miracle: Miss Minnie Werner, a stenographer, 23 years of age, fell from the sixteeth story window of the Transportation building in Chicago, a distance 200 feet, into an automo- bile truck. She is still living. This is One more argument in favor of the automobile. Jack Dietrich, Secretary-Treasurer, of the G. J. Johnson Cigar Co., Grand Rapids, stopped off in Chicago on his way to Peoria, Ill. Mr. Dietrich is well pleased with business outlook all over the country. He says his corporation has shipped more Dutch Masters out so far this year than during any corresponding period in the history of the institution. S. R. Chope, of Detroit, was in Chicago last week, looking over the tall buildings. William McClintock, proprietor of the Saratoga Hotel barber shop and Turkish bath rooms, also a sixteen chair day and night shop at 7 South Clark street, returned from Grand Rapids, where he went on a com- bination business and pleasure trip. Mr. McClintock is a Michigan prod- uct, born on a farm just out of Has- tings, moving from there to Ionia, where he was in business. From there he came to Chicago. He owns a very beautiful summer home on White Lake. Is a very successful business man in Chicago and extends the welcome feeling to all Michigan travelers. H. R. Parks, 2525 North Kimball avenue one of Carlson Bros.’ popular salesmen, has made quite a hit of late with his trade, trying to imitate Charlie Chaplin. Even a mustacte sometimes helps to get the business. Just once over gets the business for the Tradesman. William H. Strand received a sample copy of the Tradesman and immediately mailed the writer a dollar for subscription. Card Garrison, Vice-President of the Banner Cigar Manufacturing Co., Detroit, was looking over business in Chicago the past week. Billy Grov, manager of the Downey House, Lansing, spent a few days in Chicago last week, taking in the auto show and looking over the hotels for new ideas. Billy said Chi- cago is no place for a farmer. “Back to Lansing for me,” remarked Billy, as he hired a taxi to take him to the station. Emil Tisch, President of the Tisch Cigar Box Co., and Vice-President and manager of the Tisch Auto Sup- ply Co., of Grand Rapids, spent last week in the city, closing up a few good contracts and speaks very high- ly of the outlook for the coming year. Glen Henschel and wife of Kala- mazoo, are making the Morrison Hotel their home for a few weeks. Mr. Henschel is the Western repre- sentative of the Lo-Vis Company, Inc., of New Haven, Conn. H. McPherson, formerly owner of a cigar store at 1453 Michigan avenue, has closed his store and accepted a position as chief clerk of the cigar stand in the Saratoga Hotel under the ownship of Frank Bawden. We wish him luck. G. J. Johnson, President of the G. J. Johnson Cigar Co., Grand Rap- ids, had a week end with a few friends in Chicago the past week. In the party with Mr. Johnson were G. D. Haan, a druggist of Holland, Alder- man and Mrs. G. W. Welch, of Grand Rapids: Mr. and Mrs. W. G. McDonald. The party spent a very enjoyable Sun- day, taking in a couple of fine lec- tures. Returning home Monday morning, very well pleased with their trip. C. W. Reattoir. ——>+>___ Wafted Down From Grand Traverse Bay. . Traverse City, Feb. 1—James Christofferson, of Manistee, formerly with Boss Oven Co., is now cover ng this part of the State for the Ex- celsior Stove & Manufacturing Co., instead of the Quincy Stove & Fur- nace Co., as mentioned in an earlier issue of the Tradesman. D. E. Sawyer, of Detroit, is now covering this territory for the Hansel- man Candy Co., of Kalamazoo. This territory was formerly covered by the late Everett Smith. W. F. Murphy had the misfortune to slip on the icy walk and break one of the commandments. As there is no compensation for a breakage of this kind, he will continue his work. The many friends of C. C. Fosmire, the candy man at Cadillac, will be pleased to learn that he has not dis- continued the jobbing business, as has been reported, but is in better shape than ever to fill the wants of his many customers. Mr. Fosmire has discontinued carrying a stock of goods at Cadillac and will make all shipments direct from the factories. As it is a hard matter for a jobber in a small town to keep a full stock and keep it fresh and up to the stan- dard demanded by the class of trade he sells, Mr. Fosmire has decided to make this change. Under his new arrangement his customers are as- sured of prompt shipments and of clean and fresh candies at all times. Harry Hurley, our Secretary, has devised a new scheme to show his appreciation to his devoted wife. Knowing she wished to attend the theater Thursday night, he wrote her a nice loving letter telling her how lonesome he was in Manistee. He enclosed a check and told her to go to the show and have a good time. Then he put it in one of his business envelopes without addressing it. When the Commercial Milling Co., at Detroit, received the letter it im- mediately mailed it to Mrs. Hurley, and Friday, while she was reading the city paper giving a glowing ac- count of the show, the mail man de- livered the long-looked-for letter. As Harry is a near neighbor, we will not attempt to tell just what Mrs Hurley said, but Harry will be more careful next time. The rain and sleet falling on the trees and freezing last Thursday caused thousands of dollars of dam- age to fruit trees in the vicinity of Petoskey. Many thousand trees have all the large limbs broken off and only the trunks left standing. Shade trees and shrubbery in the parks at Petoskey and many other cities are nearly ruined. The telephone and electric light companies have also suffered heavily, nearly 150 poles being broken down between Brutus and Alanson. Grover Maple was called to Fre- mont, Ohio, on account of the ill- ness of his little daughter, Dorothy, who is visiting with her mother at her grandparents. Nathan Graham has joined the forces of the Grand Traverse Auto Co. and will have charge of the local agents in this territory. The Grand Rapids & Indiana Rail- road is certainly bidding for the trade in the North part of the State and will surely have the goodwill of the traveling public and the residents of the Petoskey division. It has dis- continued trains Nos. 2 and 3, so the people living South of Petoskey and the people of Petoskey who want to go North and back the same day will have to start the day before. If a traveling man gets an order at 1:30 in the afternoon on Friday, his house in Grand Rapids will get the order Monday morning. Some service! Snow has completely left Northern Michigan, which is putting an awful crimp in business. Over 200 teams are idle within a short distance of Traverse City. Nearly 20,000,000 feet of logs are on skids around Alanson, one firm having 9,000,000 feet on skids on a one-trip haul. Every one is praying for snow. F. W. Wilson. —_++—___ Annual Meeting of Butter and Egg Men. Saginaw, Feb. 2—Arrangements have been made to hold the anrual convention of the Michigan Butter & Egg Association in Detroit at Hotel Statler, Tuesday, Feb. 29. A fine programme is being prepared, with banquet and special entertainment in the evening, which will give the boys plenty of time to take the train for the Indiana convention. If they see fit they can attend the Ohio conven- tion on Monday and get into Detroit for our convention on Tuesday morn- ing. Rooms may be secured at the Statler from $1.50 up. D. A. Bentley, Sec’y. —_~++2—___ Before a wise girl attempts to manage a husband she first acquires the art of managing a kitchen. February 2, 1916 A Large Fraternity. “Yes,” said the principal of the young ladies’ seminary to the proud parent, “you ought to be very happy, my dear sir, to be the father of so large a family, all the members of which appear to be devoted to one another.” “Large family! Devoted!” gasped the old gentleman in amazement. “What on earth do you mean, ma’- am?” “Why, yes, indeed,” said the princi- pal, beaming through her glasses. “No fewer than eleven of Edith’s brothers have been here this term to take her out, and she tells me she expects the tall one with the blue eyes again to-morrow.” Hotel Charlevoix Detroit EUROPEAN PLAN Absolutely Fire Proof Rates, $1 for room without bath: $1.50 and upwards with bath. Grinnell Realty Co., Props. H. M. Kellogg, Manager Park Place Hotel Traverse City, Mich. The leading all the year ‘round hotelin Northern Michigan. All conveniences, All outside Rooms. American plan. W. O. HOLDEN, Mer. Bryant Hotel Flint, Mich. $2.50 AND $3.00 PER DAY Hot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms Rooms with Bath C. H. BLISS, Proprietor ea I ef eS WIRE Yor tetas elo) a) Oe eas wy Lar Se BUD MER Rates $leoo With Shower $1% > Meals So¢ 20, HOTEL CODY EUROPEAN GRAND RAPIDS, MICH. Rates$1 and up. $1.50 and up bath. Snyder’s Restaurant 41 North Ionia Ave. 4 Doors North of Tradesman Special Dinners and Suppers 25c February 2, 1916 Battle Creek Merchants Victimized by Crook. Battle Creek, Feb. 2—Over twenty Battle Creek business men are won- dering what has become of a certain big “cotton grower” who has been receiving unlimited credit from them during the past six or eight months and who owes over $1,200 as a result. The principal in one of the most in- teresting and clever little escapades yet surrounding the careers of local merchants is J. C. Parker, who reg- isters from Mar’s Bluff, South Caro- lina. The situation was a delicate one, but was handled with consummate skill by the amiable Mr. Parker. Mon- day night, when he quietly had his trunks carted to the Michigan Central station for a journey, he evidently had had a premonition that an em- barrassing incident might occur—at any rate, he was fully prepared for it. Two of his creditors, C. C. Thoma and Guy Crane, were informed quietly that Parker was leaving the city. They immediately got out writs of at- tachment, and five minutes before Parker’s train arrived, Constables Henry Lucas and Frank Furner ap- peared on the scene and took posses- sion of his property. The two bills totaled exactly $128, and after paying the amount and costs from his pocket, Parker persuaded the officers to let him go, stating he would be back Wednesday and settle the remainder of his indebtedness. He has yet to put in an appearance, Coincidental to the fact that his possessions were attached at the sta- tion, the management of the Sani- tarium took charge of his trunks for afew hours. He uttered a promissory note for his bill at the institution, amounting to over $700, Following in the footsteps of the disclosures of Parker’s and his wife’s operations while they were registered as guests at the Sanitarium, came an- other problem for local business men who trusted him, to figure out. Thursday afternoon several of the merchants received telephone calls purporting to come from the Sanitar- ium, stating that they might, upon calling at Prosecuting Attorney Kirschman’s office receive checks for the amounts which Parker owed them. This proved to be a hoax, pure and simple, but the solution of the enigma is as far off as ever. Mr. and Mrs. Parker’s operations here are said to have been.as clever as anything of its kind staged here in many years. The former purchased clothes, hats and wearing apparel at the various business places, while his wife did likewise. They cultivated the friendship of many prominent Battle Creek people and immediately became well known. Manager Marks, of the Union cloth- ing store, is said to have been the first victim. Parker purchased two suits of clothes, the local business man believing that, inasmuch as his patron was a guest at the Sanitarium, he could afford to give him credit without even as much as an agree- ment. Mr. Bretz, the tailor, is said to have been the next merchant to fall before the operations of the dis- tinguished looking Southerner, who secured a suit there, also one at the Butcher shop. Just before the holidays, in company with his wife, Parker purchased almost $200 worth of Christmas presents, all of which were charged to his accounts. The C. C. Thoma and Porter Mayo jewelry stores are said to have been victim- ized for large amounts at this time. Mrs. Parker was fully as compe- tent at the game as her husband. She purchased gowns, hats, gloves and articles of all kinds, never failing to receive the desired credit when she gave her address as the Sanitarium. The Sanitarium management, suspect- ing that it might be losing money by allowing Mr. and Mrs. Parker so much credit, after they had been at the institution for a couple of months MICHIGAN TRADESMAN without making a payment, wired Parker’s banker. Word came back that their guest was O, K., and the matter dropped there. One incident displaying the clever manner in which Mr. Parker made and kept his friends, is shown by the fact that he continuously would drop into the various business establish- ments and chat with the manager or Owners, as the case might be. One merchant, whose name is withheld for personal reasons, and who was vic- timized the easiest by the smooth Carolinian, played host to Mr. and Mrs. Parker at an elaborate Christ- mas dinner party. However, in spite of all of Parker’s alleged clever manipulations, there were numerous proprietors of local establishments who politely refused him credit on the strength of his ref- erences. Parker is accredited with using a great portion of diplomacy, as shown by the fact that when once refused, he never pressed a store man- agement to grant him the favors he sought. Some of the local business estab- lishments said to have been victim- ized by Mr. and Mrs. Parker are C. C. Thoma, the Butcher shop, Kapp Clothing Co., Robinson’s, Holly Hei- man, Arcade millinery, Porter J. Mayo, Bretz the tailor, Bolster’s, Guy Crane,, Strickland clothing store and the Union clothing store. Monday, when questioned by Con- stables Lucas and Furner after he, in company with his wife, were ready to leave Battle Creek, Parker stated that he was going to Toledo, wile Mrs. Parker was going through to their home in Mar’s Bluff. Parker stated that he would be back inside of two days. He took with him a handsome Western saddle he pur- chased from Guy Crane and for which the latter had his trunks attached. Parker was liked for his honest manner and was either clever or ec- centric. He always carried a bottle of milk and when asked the reason stated that physicians told him he must have a certain amount of this liquid at regular intervals. He even said that when going back to the Sanitarium from the business district he always had a bottle of milk hid- den in McCamly Park, where it was easily accessible. However, the Sani- tarium officials did not have him classed as a patient. —__2+-_ Chirpings From the Crickets. Battle Creek, Feb. 1—“Herb” Bul- len, acting P. S. C. of Auto City Council and Capital City correspon- ent of the Michigan Tradesman, also loyal sub-publicity man for a certain H. F., of Detroit. was a dinner eater at Bangor last Thursday. All of us who know Mr. Bullen know he earn- ed his dinner that day. He talked Bates tractors, U. C. T.ism, ford cars and read the Tradesman. The salesmanager took a look at one of the boys last Saturday who had just came in off the road and who has had troubles which have dragged him down and said, “Don’t be afraid to eat regular and take time to eat a good one. You know a 10 cent meal makes a 10 cent salesman.” How true that remark rings. A man who goes up against hard competi- tion each day and fights to hold his own business and get some other fellow’s has to have something aboard besides love of family, confidence, coffee and sinkers. John H. Schumacher and S. T. Deam spent Friday at the plant of T. Gottmann & Sons, Chicago. These two gentlemen represent this concern in Michigan. In my letter last week the name of Elmer E. Mills read Elmer E. Wiles or thereabout. I was probably think- ing of Elmer’s curly locks and put a curl on the M. Anyway Elmer is where I said he was and is going to give Cronk and myself an order some ay. Ray S, Teal is learning the Taylor Made way with Fenton J. Cronk in our town. / Everything that happens happens for the best. If the milkman had been on time maybe you would have had sour cream for your coffee. As it was, you cut out your coffee. Mil- lions are spent each year trying to make you do that same thing. “There is a reason.” Harry Hunt was in Battle Creek over Sunday. Has five Indiana coun- ties for Toledo Scale Co. Headquar- ters at South Bend. Feels good and looks the part. The Interurban Hotel, at Niles, is a good place to stop. John and his boys sure cook some eatable dishes. Neat clean rooms. Friendly treat- ment. Charley Moore and I never pass. Things that never happen: A child born on Feb. 29 celebrating his birthday each year. Taxes less than you thought they would be. The mileage of a second-hand car underestimated. A blind want advertisement that is what you thought it was. classified want advertisement that was as attractive as it read. Participation that was as good as anticipation. Thirty days a subscriber and never read the Tradesman. Guy Pfander. —_++-___ Credit System Will Not Work Hard- ship. Lansing, Feb. 2—“To correct any erroneous impression relative to the Lansing Grocers and Meat Dealers’ Association credit system, I would say that this system is not intended to work a hardship on any honest person.” This is the gist of the reply Presi- dent John Affeldt has made to num- bers of persons who have enquired in- to the workings of the new system. “The system,” said President A ffeldt. “is an equitable one and a plan that is entirely fair to both debtor and creditor. There are several varieties of debtors. There is the genuine dead beat, who will pay no bill untess forced to by legal processes. Then we have the debtor who is slow, the person who may have the money in his pocket and who intends to pay all his legitimate obligations, but who likes to feel his money a long time before he applies it to his obligations. “These two types are the ones the system aims to rate and to keep track of so that merchants may know with whom they have to deal and the ex- act possibilities of ultimate payment. Then we have the honest patron who is unable to pay temporarily on ac- count of sickness or other misfortune which he cannot prevent. Many of this type of patrons, you will find, have a first class rating, in fact, many of them have a credit equal to the person who pays cash. Such persons in ninety-nine cases out of one hun- dred are given all the credit and as- sistance the merchant can afford. We have some such cases rated first class that have not been able to pay up for months. “Nevertheless the intent is there and they will pay when they are in a position to do so. It would be un- fair in members of the Association not to assist such patrons, and the aim of the credit system is to take into consideration such cases and con- cede every possible leniency because they are deserving. But the genuine dead beat and we have a number of them listed, will not be given any consideration. Merchants will be given such rating when the _ inten- tional delinquent asks for credit. It is then up to the merchant to take a chance if he deems it advisable. “T think this explanation covers the situation relative to our credit system and I am sure any fair-minded person will note the justness of the plan in its entirety. Because a patron is rated is no reason why the best of feeling should not obtain between him and the dealer. All dealers of 41 any importance are rated by the com- mercial agencies. His rating is some- thing that gives him a standing; it indicates his business ability, his financial resources and his capability. And a merchant with a good rating is proud of it. Why, then, should not the individual be proud of a good rating with his merchant?” The Association’s credit system has now 30,000 ratings and the list will grow, it is said, during 1916. The ratings, it is explained, include out- siders as well as Lansing residents. ——_>+.—__. Brief History of Trading Stamp Con- troversy. The Legislature of Michigan in 1911 enacted a law prohibiting the use of trading stamps in Michigan. The statute is known as Act No. 244, Public Acts of 1911. It was introduced March 26, passed and approved May 1 and took effect Aug. 1, 1911. The first action brought under the Statute originated in Wayne county, where suit was started against the Sperry & Hutchinson Co. to enforce the law. Instead of meeting the issue in man fashion, the Sperry & Hutchinson Co. sought to obtain unfair advantage by going before the United States Cir- cuit Court of Appeals at Cincinnati and endeavoring to secure an injunction pro- hibiting the Attorney General from en- forcing the law. That tribunal threw the trading stamp people out of court. The total cost of contesting this case, which amounted to $700, was contributed by Charles Trankla, of the Boston Store, Grand Rapids. The outcome of the original case brought in Wayne county was the de- feat of the Sperry & Hutchinson Co., but in taking an appeal to the Supreme Court the attorneys of the Sperry & Hutchinson Co. introduced so many technical points having no bearing on the main issue that Roger Wykes, who was then Acting Attorney General, deem- ed it wise to drop the Detroit case al- together and begin a new quo warranto proceeding in the Supreme Court hav- ing for its object the ousting of the Sperry & Hutchinson Co. from the State. On the retirement of Mr. Wykes and the succession of Grant Fellows as At- torney General, the latter held that the expense of conducting this litigation should be borne by the merchants of Michigan, although he gave Mr. Wykes permission to conduct the case in the name of the People of Michigan. Final arguments in the case were submitted by the attorneys of both parties two weeks ago and a decision is looked for within the next two months. Few cases brought for adjudication in the Supreme Court have been con- tested more stubbornly than this case. Only a few days ago the attorneys for the Wurzburg Dry Goods Co., of Grand Rapids, and Taylor, Wolfenden & Co. filed a supplementary brief in the case, which, of course, was answered by Wykes, Jilley & Averill, who are en- trusted by the merchants of Michigan with the work of sustaining the law and making it effective. ——_>--~—__ People of strong character make many enemies, but that doesn’t neces- sarily imply that a man who has many enemies possesses a strong character. — +++ And some of the worst cry-babies are more than 21 years of age. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN wy fi!" S eed) r non nti) yp 5 > DRUGGISTS SUNDRIES: = = Ct 4 = = ZG} (\\\( SS Michigan Board of Pharmacy. President—E. E. Faulkner, Delton. Secretary—Charles S. Koon, Muskegon. Treasurer—George F. Snyder, Grand Rapids. Other Members—Leonard A. Seltzer, Detroit; Edwin T. Boden, Bay City. Next Meetings—Detroit, Jan. 18, 19 and 20; Grand Rapids, March 21, 22 and : Michigan State Pharmaceutical Asso- ciation. President—C. H. Jongejan, Grand Rapids. Secretary—D. D. Alton, Fremont. Treasurer—John G. Steketee, Grand Rapids. Next ee a Oe June 20, 21 and 22, 1 Michigan Pharmaceutical Travelers’ As- sociation. President—W. H. “ala 165 Rhode and preneuner— Welter S Island avenue, Detr Secretary Lawton, Grand Rapids. Taxing Cleanliness. The Democratic majority of the Ways and Means Committee of the House have proposed to solve the revenue prob- so far as it stands at present, by the extension for one year of the ex- isting emergency stamp tax law which accordingly has been done. It is even proposed to extend it to include ready made medicines, etc.; however, this in- creased taxation will probably not be decided upon until after the military and navel committee of Congress have de- cided upon the proposed increase in the preparedness plan. The tax has been a burden to manu- facturers and it is not surprising that they have protested strongly against it. Because of its renewal and the proba- bility that it will be made permanent it is likely that nearly all manufacturers will pass it on to the retailer. As most retailers are forced to meet cut-rate competition an increase of the price to the public is out of the question. While motor cars and other luxuries have so far been exempt from the war tax it seems decidedly unfair to make tooth paste and other toilet articles used for personal hygiene pay this tax. Our sapient law givers declare these are lux- uries. tooth luxury? Are the numerous inhabitants of our fair land who industriously polish their molars twice or thrice daily simply victims of luxurious habits or are they consistent friends of “preparedness,” guarding as they do, their system from invasion by microbic enemies at one of the chief danger points. It should be remembered whenever the tax on toilet articles again, as it will sooner or later, that the Nation which once re- fused to pay a tax on tea is not yet en- tirely automobile or Henry Fordism. lem, But is paste a subject of the comes up converted to the —_»+--. Keeping Frost Off Windows. At this time of year there is apt to be a good deal of trouble about the windows frosting up, especially in the colder localities. A window covered on the inside with frost has the same effect as a window with the curtain down, as far as its advertising value is concerned. A strenuous ef- fort should be made to keep the glass clear. Ventilation will usually get rid of the frosting if the window is enclosed. Bore boles through the bottom of the sash to let the cold air come in and through the top of the window enclosure to let the warm air out. This will have the effect of keeping the air next the glass inside more nearly the temperature of that outside, and there will be little or no precipitation of moisture. Sometimes steam pipes are run around the glass to keep it warm enough to dry off the moisture. This requires, however, a great deal of heat in very cold weath- er. Rubbing the glass with a cloth saturated with alcohol or denatured alcohol will sometimes keep the mois- ture off for a while, but the operation has to be repeated quite frequently, and of course it does not afford a means of getting rid of the frost that is likely to cover the windows during the night. One dealer has found it successful in the case of not very large enclosed windows to fill a cou- ple of jardinieres with unslaked lime, putting articial plants in them to make their presence less conspicuous. This lime absorbs the moisture from the air and leaves none to form upon the window glass. —_2+--___ The Early Use of Sarsaparilla. Sarsaparilla entered into the old balsamum polychrestum of the Lon- don Pharmacopoeia, along with gua- iacum and balsam of Peru, but it was speedily dropped “as affording noth- ing to the main intention.” Decoctum sarsaparillae became official in 1788, apparently at the instance of Sir Wil- liam Fordyce and a few other enthusi- astic believers in its virtue in ven- ereal complaints. The compound decoction, founded on the famous Lisbon diet drink, but without the antimony, was introduced at the same time. Fuller had long before pub- lished a formula for a simple decoc- tion flavored with raisins and Span- ish juice, but he had no great faith in it, and only gave it in compliance with common practice. Soon after- wards a simple decoction was intro- duced into the London Hospital Dis- pensatory. At that time the mealy variety seems to have been in most common use with us. Alleyne, how- ever, says of all the varieties known that probably “they have got into es- teem only, as many other things have done of very little worth, by their bearing a good price and_ being brought a great way.” To Remove Acid Stains From Marble. If the stain was made by nitric acid or any of the nitro compounds like picric acid, and the stain has penetrated to any depth it may be necessarry to repolish the marble. This may be accomplished, according to Henley’s Twentieth Century Book of Recipes, by rubbing it first with sand, beginning with a moderately coarse grained article and changing this twice to finer kind, after which tripoli or pumice is used. The final polish is given by the so-called putty powder (stannous binoxide). A plate of iron is generally used in applying the coarse sand; with the fine sand a leaden plate is used, and the pumice is employed in the form of a smooth surface piece of convenient size. For the final polish- ing coarse linen or bagging is used, wedged tightly into an iron planing tool. During all applications water is allowed to trickle over the face of the stone. In the way of superficial cleansing agents which may be effective in the re- moval of acid stains of unknown char- acter, a paste of equal parts of dried sodium carbonate, powdered pumice and chalk made into a paste with two parts of water and one part of glycerin is suggested. A paste of newly slaked lime brushed uniformly over the stain and allowed to remain for two to three days before washing it off is sometimes use- ful. Labarraque’s solution, or Javelle water, applied a drop or two at a time and rinsed off with water is also rec- ommended. Oxgall made into a paste with a saturated solution of sodium car- bonate is one of the compounds that is occasionally advised, but we do not know on what grounds the oxgall is used un- less it be in support of the sentiment that oxgall is an universal cleansing agent. ——_—_2+~»—___ The Successful Clerk Service. The clerk was discouraged. An elderly lady had just walked out of the store. “That woman comes here every afternoon,’ the clerk complained. “She takes up more of my time than I can really afford to give her. When she first came here I began by humor- ing her. I’ve had to keep it up. The question that bothers me now is whether these extra services we ex- tend to people really pay.” “You bet they do,” the clerk’s friend replied. “Remember this: the per- son who putters around a shop, talk- ing a whole lot and gossiping with everyone that comes in, follows the same habits outside. These people are a big source of loss or gain. That woman is probably the best word-of- mouth advertiser you’ve got.” This advice was good. Unless he violates a settled policy of his store, no clerk can afford to give less serv- ice than the customer asks. If he does, he’ll be doing himself and his employer an injury. A woman may enter a store to buy a 10-cent package of Diamond Dye. She may take up fifteen minutes of a clerk’s time finding just the right shade. The clerk would be foolish to attempt to sell the woman some- thing that was not exactly right. Next week the same woman may re-enter the store and leave three or four profitable prescriptions. Ta PO BR aE ri PO ae eS PTS hi tet OR February 2, 1916 Foot Tablets. A foot tablet that is quite efficacious to the following: 1 said to be is made according Exsiccated Alum ........ 25 parts @annic Acid.) 2... 10 parts Powdered Orris .......... 10 parts Salicylic Acid ............ 5 parts Botic Acid .............. 50 parts Oil of Lavender, q. s. to perfume. Mix the powders thoroughly and incorporate the oil of lavender. Then granulate the powder, using mucilage of acacia to form into large tablets weighing about thirty grains each. The tablets are intended to be dis- solved in warm water. —»+->___ Those are salad days in which the good old long green is plentiful. What Others Think of Us The Rexall Store, Lowell, Mich. You have certainly struck the right idea on Calendars. Since my first year's dis- tribution of them, my customers insist on having your Calendar, and I often get orders for them from people who have moved elsewhere, who say they ‘‘cannot get along without it and do not care for any other kind.”” I never could see any object in paying for a Calendar adver- tising someone else’s business when I can buy yours~—a better Calendar for about the same money and advertise my own business. Very respectfully, D. G. LOOK. If we have interested you to the extent that you desire a sam- ple we shall be glad to forward same upon request without charge to you. Grand Rapids Calendar Co. Grand Rapids, Mich. UNIVERSAL CLEANER Great for the pots—great for the pans Great for the woodwork—great for the hands. ORDER FROM YOUR JOBBER Aol AAG ‘‘Makes the bone and muscle That makes you want fo hustle.’’ #2 Spat SRELING Co, For Sale by all Wholesale Druggists February 2, 1916 1G AN TRADESMA i N ; SALE D 43 4 Pri RUG P , ces quoted are nomi RICE CURRENT 4 Aceti Acids inal, based 3 Bo: Co seeee Q M on mark 7 Gerke oo. @ a woe, ue 3 et the day or i Cit Olie (|... (13 @ 17 N istard, artifil 00@20 25 issue, NV ric seee a. | @1% = eatsfoot 15 00@15 25 Ipecac Beaiatio Resco mad a 80@ 85 Olive, pure’ ae eeee 85@ 95 iron, aa ee @ ie ce 5@ 8 Glive, Akalaca. 2 50@3 50 Kino 7 eae @ 75 Onaie Lo 11@ 15 yellow aga, (me @ 60 Sulphurie 7177777) 70@ 75 Olive, Malaga, 1 55@1 65 Nux Vomica .... @1 bn marcato 22 3 ens : Ba, i a Opium ica .... 05 a 5@ 75 ange Sweet . 50° mith | Cao a Ww: Ammonl ce oa S 3 oes 60 Opium, Capmh. @2 75 O ore 26 deg a Origanum pure .. @2 25 Rhubarb eodorz’d @ cement Walee Woe 7G 1p Poop comm eB 8 me OH Carbonat deg. ..4 @ 9 el glee sees 2 25@2 50 Gene ; Hose, pure ...! 3 00@3 7 Paints We h oride ...... mo i Rosewary wines 1 Geat a ave engaged f B @ 25 aa ened. x 1 50@1 75 7 wih ao 84@ &% é ac ; 7 Mr. F L or the pres Cae a Gausatias | tue 8 50@ Ochre os oil. a 1@ 8% » FLL. Raym ent year rir esas 1 oi ge Eiger a ly asia Game venue en 4 1@ 8% to ond and Mr. L. W. 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Our stock i orders for mon jac see Potassium * Boia 8 So co CK IS larger eae 30c) ac 00 Bicarbonate Hailolece Mix Pst ee 35 mplete t and m Soa s (pow. 30c go Bichromate +e. 115@1 25 powdere White 10 an ever befo ore pi Cut (powd.) > @ 2% poomiee 0@ 7g insect os HD pe eee arbo aoe oo Gh -owder .. so@ 40 assure re and w wo. #en nate aeus ene ar -» 30 orat 1G = oy enate . @ 50 you of good servi e can ete nlorate, xia ana” ae oe 84@ 16 service Licorice acts Chigsata. sraccins 62@ 6 . ution, gal. rE ot eae 8 Se ater granular y5@ 10 aris Green s....- 30@ 35 > 0@ 45 odide Cece 4g «succes S0@ 2a Hazeltin Le @ 45 Permanaganate a ae e : rnica .. ers Brus anaganat 75@4 80 Mis & Perkins Dru C Chamomile (Ger. 48@ 50 Druawiate Swe 20@2 25 Ac or Grand R oS hamomile (hom) aa 90 wie Si posh i“ 106) nd Rapi @ 60 Meee 1.1... mug Oe _ 2 00 ids -- 2 aa Aluay powder . 15@ , aes 2 Acacia, a Al Roots piel aaa and i Acacia, 2nd sees 50 60 aan ee Bismuth a eae - I8S@ 35 ie a0. 45( 50 ee powdered — 90@1 00 trate |. ubni- aeee. Hexle cone U@ 45 te ia — oe er i 3 60@3 65 Acacia powdered’ tog 50 Baiae vet pwd. Ley a meudeca or arb. E 30@ 40 Gi , powd. S Goliad: co Tu ae ee zoe 29@ 30 oa ne UCU eee We 2 aa) oes (Soc. P w) 20@ 25 Gi wdered : i Ca Mel ..... 20@5 75 Asafoetida. : ow.) 40@ 50 Gime Teenaica | i8@ 20 Gate Wee 3 29W3 35 Asafoetida, a 90@1 00 powdered = s+" 0@ 35 Gasca Bias ae "5 aa 36 © see old ; decease 6 Cloves S cess wo to _U. Ss. P, J ise. os «ee enseal pow. 0@ 35 Chal ines ‘ 40 e Camphor Powd. 1 30@1 50 fo. powd. occa. 00 Gh Frepared e _— 36 Sear on cece 56@ 60 io. eecceece] tg 00 Chlorofo recipitated o@ 8% See aa dccca 50@ 55 UiTis | powd. .. 21 WwW 25 Cntoral rm ..... sa an ino ..- ered 55@ 60 -ok , powdered "3 @ 2% Coe i tydrate ; °@ K cueece @ 60 e, powder 30@ ; aine 2 w@ f Myrrh powdered . ig 75 Rhubarb wdered aaa 39 Cucua Butter 4 75 =e ie 4 a 8 RUBAT SoikG i asa 25 Cork er .. + ] arth powdered @ ae ee ieOl 00 Coste less 10 66 0 Py aN gs 9 @ 50 Sarsaparill powd. 25@ 20 Copperas, oe lal @ 1 : Pc powd. 15 aah 45 _ ground a, Hond. 30 Copperas, mo 2@ i TT na Q0@15 20 ™Eround cian Corrosive Sublm 3 1g, 6 Shellac. Bleached 31@. 35 2. und .. nh, n Tartar 3 06W@3 lu | ' , Bleached aoe Mote os. 28@ 30 Cuttlebone . 41@ 5a eam ae 6@ 40 Tameri powdered g 0@ 35 ae aa Oe @ ay NO: 1. meric, 0@ eva Pawder 4 Pragacanth eet __@2 75 Valerian, ne 13@ a Boe Fowder’ ‘G2 ia oc 5 See lips Salts, bbl rs Mr D a Anise ds or ag Salts, less 3 1% 4 ¢ Sage, nise, seee aa Irgot, @eceeaeeue 1 : e ealer ord : Buchu powdered .. 55@ 6 Bird, powdered | = = Flowe’ powdered 2 ieee 50 ? era t : Buchu, powd. .. 75@1 : GONE 8-5 ...a0- @ 10 POrmaliunen we. 1@ 00 ment rial ship Sage, lt oh. S5 Caraway" 200000) 209 BB Gambier wsee----- 20@ is e - | We loose 7 Ns a ee 0 Gina 1 . 206 3 of the Senna, gc ice 72@ ig clos qowd i 2 oowa - Glassware, ; fal 15g = q est flavo d = — 30@ 35 Cananeet 55) 40@ 50 Glassware, full cases ben mal in od 5@ a auber S & 5 ae b@ 40 F Secs ee 18 Gk Salts 10% : smooth red and sing, Zinn powd Bg gb Pla 2, 8G 38 Glue, brown oa: est Ice Cc 5 20 «Flax, ground caceee 6@ - Glue, face cseee LG . ream It is dies a oeilugreeky pow. ig 1) Glue: white’ c. isg 15 $ nds, mp ..- 8 7iue, : tcscce AG to possible true eae ita ao 10 Gee gerd. iso = make Almonds, Bitt a 00@12 Meucd. vada” 40@ 50 Ge .. O@ 7 . artifelal .... a5 Mustard, Dink’ .. “ibe 80 Hops -.-..eeveeee ‘5@ 60 Almouds, seek 5 156@6 00 Bastards nage «. JG 20 lodine ....0 0. 45@ 60 apnenes. ay ao oe co access © Oe a i ouds, eoeeee 5 ce es oes 5 a AG wiearaiag 18¢ : Ve @ise Rape .......... 1 00@1 Po focuses sees iso. 2 fair trial : Amber, crude 65@ 15 Sabadilla, ree fen eet iene 2 25@2 35 er, re les... T5@1 0¢ ill os ce, ae 5 Tla will S hui slain 1 tee ae Sunflower powd.. ; br Mace, powder red sea = : ecu re Bien 2 00@2 25 La Ancien 10 15 Morphine cocscee 4 560@4 75 Seas , your Cajeput wees 4 50@4 75 orm Leva an 20@ 25 Nux Vea 30@6 5 on S cont : Cassa 1 35@1 60 nt .. 1 50@1 75 Nux Sauce wugee @ 7 ract coe seentag 2 Oe Tin Tener: —— = & ’ ‘ peal Lest ..,, : ee 25 Ac eels Pitch, ae @ 30 4 Vo @ 2oni || eece Citronella... eee genie -----<--- cee en g % 3 Gonoanuk fe 75 Quinine Bap ae 12@ 15 1 : Coa “jc ~ 20@ foe ( - Rochelle ae cans @1 20 j otton Seed @ Pia. 1 Saccharine Ss .. 40@ 45 ] e Croton . sees 95@1 05 nl ; - Gait pater |. 16 00@17 00 ce Cuneo 4 ase fo eines 8 oe nen «sees. 46@ 50 ream Hiseras seseres 8 TEQS 00 Buchu _Compo'd 1 00 pi can a ae ucalyptus ceeee 1 T5@2 00 antharadie eeceee @1 50 oap, mott oon 25 . barca age oo 80@1 00 oem . 1 80 —_ white cane 120 15 iper Bont iaea @1 00 ea es 9 : da 20 Juniper W rries 6 00@6 25 Cardam tteeee 0 Soap, white. caste Grand Rapid oe ate rae lees oe ee S Mi Lard, No. 1 oosee- 90@1 05 ae for @ 60 oda Ash . ro .. @ 9&5 9 Cc . Lavender Hodes 5@ 95 oichicum |... ' 1 05 Soda igacnonad .4%@ 10 Lavender, G: wers @6 00 Cischa ......... 75 Soda, Sal ate 1%@ 5 ra 1 2501 7. ee 1 20 Spirits Camphor 1%4@ 5 Linseed, boiled,” 2 00@2 25 Ginger seeeeees = Soe oe mae € h Linseed, bid. ft bbl. @ 79 Ginger . @ 75 Sulphur Subl. .. 2%@ 5 Linseed, ee Cueee nagtes 2 ee fo a nseed, raw, less ao 78 ae Ammon. a 05 Tartar Emetic “ = iS Dame Cocics 48: 80 Vanilla ae 23 @2 00 pig Hazel . 1 00@1 50 ee et nee 3 44 and are intended to be correct at time of going to press. MICHIGAN TRADESMAN GROCERY PRICE CURRENT These quotations are carefully corrected weekly, within six hours of mailing, Prices. however. are liable to change at any time. and country merchants will have their orders filled at market prices at date of purchase. ADVANCED Limburger Cheese Sap Sago Cheese Galvanized Pails Galvanized Tubs Maple Dip Plug Lard Smocked Meat Flour Gasoline DECLINED index to Markets 1 AMMONIA 12 oz. ovals, 2 doz. box 1 60 AXLE GREASE By Columns Col Frazer’s : A 1 1lb. wood boxes, 4 doz. 3 00 Ammonia Sea ee cen ee : 1tb. tin boxes, 3 doz. 2 35 Axle Grease ......--- 3%Ib. tin boxes, 2 dz. 4 25 B 10%. pails, per doz. 6 00 ene oo -o 1 15tb. pails, per doz. 7 20 on a eee 1 25tb. pails, per doz. ..12 00 Ug ee ae 1 BAKED BEANS Breakfast Food ...... 1 No. 1, per doz. ....45@ 90 Brooms ...-.--cesevess 1 No. 2, per doz. 75@1 40 Brushes ........22..+- 1 No. 38, per doz. 85@1 75 Butter Color ......... 1 BATH BRICK Mnelish . |... 23.22. 95 Candles .........+.--- 1 Canned Goods ...... a seihinee Carbon Oils ...-- sere" 3 ~«=_Condensed Pearl Puli Catsup ..--+e-0- serees 9) «Small, 3 doz. box 1 35 rc co 3 Large, 2 doz. box |...1 60 ewin ceases a soc ebeae cooee 3 Folger’s. Chocolate ........... 3 Summer Sky, 3 dz. 1 20 Clothes Lines ....... 4 Summer Sky, 10 dz bbi 400 Mpcoa ...-.----.+---- ; BREAKFAST FOODS Cocoanut ..---+--+++- 3 Apetizo, Biscuits .... 3 0 OPHEC bene tenet 4 Bear ood, Pettijohns 2 13 So eck tens & Cracked Wheat, 242 2 90 Cracked """""5 g Cream of Rye, 24-2 .. 3 00 Scapcguag Ate mice 6 Quaker Puffed Rice .. 4 25 Cea aa Quaker Puffed Wheat 3 45 D a — Biscuit 1 90 Fruits .........- uaker Corn Flakes Dried E nr Corn erp 7 i = : ... 6 Washington SPs .. Evaporated eg . Wheat Hearts ...... 2 05 as Wheatena .......... eeunacenue Goods § Brapored, Siar Com. 3p 8 ar ee rape Nuts .......... Flavoring Extracts ... : Grape Sugar Flakes . 2 60 Flour and Feed ...... 7 Sugar Corn Flakes .. 2 50 Fruit Jars Hardy Wheat Food . -3 25 7 Spee ita a ce : oe Gelatine ........ eee Krinkle Corn akes 7 Mapl-Flake, Whole s » ee Wheat on rvccnnnse 3 60 oe 7 Minn ea erea, Hides and Belts’... g Ralston Wheat Food | toarge I86 ......... Horse Radish ........ 8 Rot Lad Food 188 1 48 ! 8 Ross’s Whole Wheat Ice Cream .....+-.++- Bincult .......-.... 80 J Saxon Wheat Food .. 2 80 Jelly z 8 Shred ee Biscuit : “4 fag Triscuit Scecce ces Pony VaRee oe re e+ Pillsbury’s Best Cer’l 1 35 M Post Toasties, T-2 .. 2 60 Macaroni ........ Sees 8 Post Toasties, T-8 .. 2 70 Mapleine pice rapes ; Post Tavern Porridge 2 80 Meats, Canned ...... BROOMS ee eet S mency Baron oo th 4 v5 oo 8 Parlor, 5 String, 25 tb. 4 50 ee reer Standard Parlor, 23 Th. 4 00 N 4 Common, 23 Ih. ...... 3 75 Nuts ...----eeeeeeees Special, 23 tb. ........ 3 25 ° 8 ee ai see - Sliwes ;...-.-.5--- os Common, iS Ce. Faney, Whisk ....... 1 40 Petroleum Products 8 BRUSHES “soci bese sees bene : Scrub ce roees erie ss oe g Solid Back, 8 in. ...... 75 Play ing Cards’ 11.0.2. g Solid Back, 11 in. .... 95 POUASH .2ccereeesess ; g Pointed Ends ........ 85 Provisions ........... ccaue R ND: 3 ..----.sscccs-c-. Oe Beet eee eee @ NO. 8 oo ceccpecc losses 1 Rolled Oats ......... 9 No 8 ae Salad Dressing ....-. 9 No. 8 Peed 00 Saleratus ...-.---0006- 8 Noo 7 INIT 1 80 Sal Soda .....-.+000- 9 No 4 UI 10 9 No. 3 -.... eneweccccs 10 UTTER COLOR B 10 Dandelion, 25c size .. 3 00 10 CANDLES 190 Paraffine, 6s ......... 10 Paraffine, 128 ....... - is 10 Wicking ......-050+.. 20 CANNED GOODS les 8 tb. Standards .. @ ceceeees ae Table ae 90 Tea ecoeeerese eereeece No. 10 See @2 18 Tobacco .. Blackberries TWin® ..++:se.eeeeeee 12 9 mo see- 1 50@1 90 Standard No. 10 @6 25 Vinegar ” Baked packnrenece ae td Red Kidney @ Wicking ecvcccccccsee 13 String Les 1 00@1 75 Woodenware ..... oo as Wax 75@1 25 Wrapping Paper .... 14 ii chiieins Yv Standard ............ 1 40 Reast Cake ......... @6 Wo. ® .............. 650 oo Te a Little Neck, itp. a 1 25 Ciam_ Bouillon Burnham’s \% pt. .... 2 25 Burnham’s pts. ..... 8 75 Burnham’s qts. ...... 7 50 Corn Mair 66. - 8@ S000 ..0....... 1 00@1 10 Maney 08s @1 30 French Peag Monbadon ea per dom ¢...... .. 1276 Gooseberries No. 2, Fair .......... 1 35 No. 2, Fancy ........ 2 50 Hominy standart 0.0.5. ..2. 85 Lobster MEAD. mec ccecccsecens 1 65 % Ib. Reccecssccs B20 Picnic Flat 22227! o<. © 80 Mackerel _ Mustard, 1 ib ...... 1 80 Mustard, 2 2p. ole. 2 80 Soused, 1% Ih. ...... 1 60 Soused, 2 Ib. Tomato, 1 tb. Tomato, 2 Ib. Mushrooms Buttons, %s ..... @20 Buttons, 18.4... @34 Hotels; 18 |.:.... @29 Oysters Cove, 1 Deco. g 15 Cove, 2 ib. ..... ‘1 40 Plums Plums .......... 90@1 35 Pears In Syrup No. 3 cans, per doz. ..1 50 Peas Marrowfat ...... seei Early June .... 1 10@1 28 Early June siftd 1 45@1 55 ee 1 26 PIR co coceeec. @: No. 10 size can — @3 26 1 75@2 10 Pineapple 95@3 60 Grated Sliced eoccccces ae Raspberries Standard eeveces Salmon Warrens, 1 Ib. Tall .. 2 30 Warrens, 1 Ib. Flat .. 2 45 Red Alaska .... 1 80@1 90 Med. Red Alaska 1 40@1 45 Pink Alaska .... @1 20 Sardines Domestic, \%s ........ 2 85 Domestic, 4% Mustard 2 85 Domestic, % Mustard 3 26 French s ........ %7@14 Prench, 48 ........ 13@23 Sauer Kraut No: 3, CANS ..5... 55... 80 Ne. 10, cans .........; 2 30 Shrimps Dunbar, 1s doz. .... 1 45 Dunbar, 1%s doz. .... 2 70 Succotash MOAT io cnescess cose GOOG... 6. cescece 1 Fancy ......... 1 25@1 40 Strawberries Standard ....... cece 95 MARCY oo. 3.55 scec5. 2 25 Tomatoes GOOG .. 2.350... oe 1 20 MACY, 25. ec cee cass 1 50 No; 430) ccc. cece 3 75 Tuna Case %s, 4 doz. in case ..2 60 1s, 4 doz. in case ..3 60 1s, 4 doz. in case ....5 60 CATSUP Snider’s pints ...... 2 Snider’s % pints .... 1 86 CHEESE Acme 3.66. @19 Carson City @19 Brick: ...3.5.5>5, @20 Leiden .:.......5 @15 Limburger ...... 21 Pineapple ...... 40 60 MOQ 66 ease. @85 Sap Sago ........ @27 Swiss, Doricsiic @20 3 4 CHEWING GUM Adams Black Jack .... 62 Adams Sappota ...... 65 Beeman’s Pepsin ..... 62 Bepennut 2... 62 Chiclets o. 00. o 6 | 33 1 Colgan Violet Chips .. 65 Colgan Mint Chips .... 65 Dentyme 0. ek 62 Doublemint ............ 64 Flag Spruce +. 09 Juicy Fruit . oo Red Robin 62 Sterling Gum Pep... 62 Sterling 7-Point ..... : 2 Spearmint, Wrigleys .. 64 Spearmint, 5 box jars 3 20 Spearmint, 3 box jars 1 92 Trunk Spruce ......... 59 Wucatan |... 1... 2...) ae Oe MONO 2.056. 64 CHOCOLATE Walter Baker & Co. German’s Sweet ...... 23 Premium .......... cose 3D Caracas ..............<' 38 Walter M. Lowney Co. Premium, %s ...... Reo Premium, \%s .......... 35 CLOTHES LINE Per doz. No. 40 Twisted Cotton 95 No. 50 Twisted Cotton 1 30 No. 60 Twisted Cotton 1 70 No. 80 Twisted Cotton 3 00 No. 50 Braided Cotton 1 00 No. 60 Braided Cotton 1 25 No. 60 Braided Cotton 1 85 No. 80 Braided Cotton 3 26 No. 50 Sash Cord .... 1 75 No. 60 Sash Cord .... 3 . No. 60 Jute ......... c. No, 12 Jute ......... 110 desesse. | a Oe 1 No. 60 Sisal Galvanized Wire No. 20, each 100ft. long 1 90 No. 19, each 100ft. long 2 10 No. 20, each 100ft. long 1 00 No. 19, each 100ft. long 2 10 COCOA Bakerg 50000000. 3.555 38 Cl@V@IANG .......cece-0. 41 Colonial, %s .......... 86 Colonial, eo. od | ae ea 42 Hershey’s, %s 32 Hershey’s, %s . - 30 Myler ......6 coos 86 Lowney, 8 - 88 Lowney, Ks 37 1owney, %8 ........ os. On Lowney, 5b. cans .... 37 Van Houten, %s ...... 13 Van Houten, Ks ...... 18 Van Houten, \%s ...... 36 Van Houten, ls ........ 65 VOR TOR on. ccceeecn. B86 WMDD 5.05.-...5..-5655- BA Wilber; 448 ..........., 82 Wilber, is ...... 2 COCOANUT Dunham’s per Ib. ls, BID. case ........ 30 449, BID. Case ....0005 39 %s 15 Th. case ...... 29 A® 15 Ib. case ...... 38 is, 15%. case ........ 87 %s & Ys 165%D. case 328 Scalloped Gems ..... 10 %s & Ms pails ...... 16 Bulk, pas .......... A Bulk, barrels ........ Baker’s’ Brazil Shredded 10 5c pkgs., per case 2 60 26 10c pkgs., per case 2 60 16 10c and 33 5c pkgs., per Case ..... secce a 60 COFFEES ROASTED Rie COMMON ....cccacsccs 19 mir 5... 1 Choice .. Fancy Peaberry Maracaibo " Choice ...........0... 25 Fair Mexican Choice Fancy Guatemala Batt oo. iscccccs sce Meancy .2........0.5. 28 Java Private Growth .... 26@8@ Mandling .......... 31@86 Aukola ............ 30@82 Moch: a chert Bean ........ 35@327 ) —. pene oe HL. Oo Go ooo... ere Bogota Fancy 26 Exchange Market, "Steaay Spot a Strong Package New York” Basis Arbuckle 16 60 SS ST SILO NER SNR IE NTT CT McLaughliin’s XXXX McLaughlin’s x x package coffee is sold to retailers only. Mail all or- ders direct to W. F. Mc- oo & Co., Chicago, Extracts Holland, % gro. bxs. 96 Felix, % gross ..... 4 15 Hummel's foil, % gro. 85 Hummel’s tin, % gro. 1 43 CONFECTIONERY Stick Candy Pails Horehound .......... 9% Standard 5........... Standard, small 9% Twist, small ........ 10 Cases Jumbo. ...5....2.. osce Oe Jumbo, small ........ 10 Big Stick ...0.0... 0.2 9 Boston Sugar Stick ..14 Mixed Candy ails Broken “F051... 60.6... 8 Cut Woat 2 ......0-6. 10 French Cream ...... 10% MOANCY oes csc te ccccs Grocers ...... Sececcce © Kindergarten ....... 12 TCaGOn es. co. 8 Majestic: 4.5....2..2; 10 Monarch: ..5.....0..6. 10 Novelty ..... Soccsccee Le Pars Creams: ....... 11% Premio Creams ...... 14 MOV co occ. cess 9 Special ....... 10 alley Creams % Specialities a. Auto Kisses (baskets) 13 Bonnie Butter Bites .. 17 Butter Cream Corn .. 15 Caramel Bon Bons .. 14 Caramel Dice ..... AAR UE Caramel Croquettes .. 13 Cocoanut Waffles .... 14 Cotty Tomy .......... 14 National Mints 7 Ib ‘tin 16 Iempire Fudge Fudge, Pineapple .... 14 Walnut .. Filbert .... Fudge, Choco. Peanut 13 Honey Moun 14 Fudge, White Center 14 Cherry ...... 14 Fudge, Cocoanut .... 14 Honeysuckle Candy .. 16 Iced Maroons ........ 14 iced.Gems ........... 15 Iced Orange Jellies .. 13 Italian Bon Bons ... 13 . -_ ~ Jelly Mello ........... 12 AA Licorice Drops Oo 1D, DOK... 2... 1 10 Lozenges, Tee: so. 11 Lozenges, Pink ...... 11 Manenus oi... 5.3... . 14 Molasses Kisses, 10 Tb. box 13 Nut Butter Putts ..., 14 Star Patties, Asst. .. 13 Chocolates Assorted Choc. ...... 16 Amazon Caramels .. 16 Champion ae Chips, eke 19 Mmax .6c5 38. ose, 1e Hoe, ‘Assorted aose a8 Ideal Chocolates .... 14 Klondike Chocolates 3 NADODS .....-.5..-... 8 Nibble Sticks ....... 25 Nut Wafers ........ 13 Ocoro Choc. Caramels 17 Peanut Clusters ..... 21 Quintette Cocoses Le ORANG | ese 12 Star Chocolates 1 Superior Choc. (light) 19 Pop Corn Goods Without prizes. Cracker Jack with COUPON ... 2.6.06. -. 8 26 Oh My 100s ........ 3 50 Cracker Jack, with "Prize Hurrah, 100s ........ 8 60 Hurrah, DOS... 0002-5 2 18 Hurrah, 248 ......... - 85 Cough Drops xes Putnam Menthol ... 1 0@ Smith Bros. ......... 1 26 NUTS—Whole Almonds, Tarragona 20 Almonds, California soft shell Drake 18 Braziis .......... 14@16 Filberts 18 Walnuts, Naples “16% @17 Walnuts, Grenoble .. Table nuts, fancy “et Pecans, Large .... @14 Ex. Large @16 Pecans, Shelled No. 1 Spanish Shelled Peanuts ....... 7%@ 8 Ex. Lg. Va. Shelled Peanuts ...... ma Pecan Halves ...... Walnut Halves .... Ose Filbert Meats @30 Alicante Almonds @60 Jordan Almonds February 2, 1916 d Peanuts Fancy H P Suns RAW oo ec. ene 6@ 6% Roasted ........ 7@ 7% H. P. Jumbo, Baw ......... 84@ 9 Roasted ...... 94%2@10 CRACKERS National Biscuit Company Brands in-er-Seal Trade Mark Package Goods Baronet Biscuit ..... Flake Wafers 1 00 Cameo Biscuit ...., - 150 Cheese Sandwich .... 1 00 Chocolate Wafers .... 1 00 big, Newton .,....... 00 Five O’Clock Tea Bet 1 00 Ginger Snaps NBC .. 1 WU Graham Crackers 1 vu Lemon Snaps ....... 60 M. M. Dainties ...., 1 00 Oysterettes .......... 50 ETetz@enOs.. 63.5.5... . bu Koyal ‘Yoast ......., 1 00 Social Tea Biscuit .. 1 00 Saitine Biscuit ...... 100 daraloga Flakes -- 1 60 Soda Crackers, N.B.C. 1 00 Soda Crackerg Prem. 1 uv POKCNS coc 1 00 Uneeda Biscuit ...... 60 Uneeda Ginger Wafer 1 uv Vanilla Waters ..... 1 00 Water Thin Biscuit .. 1 00 Zu Zu Ginger Snaps 50 Zwieback Other Package Goods Barnum’s Animals .. 60 Soda Crackers NBC 2 50 Fruit Cake Bulk Goods Cans and boxes Amimedg oo, 12 Atlantics, Asstd. .... 13 Avena Fruit Cakes .. 12 Bonnie boon Cookies 10 Bonnie Lassies ..... - 10 Bo Peeps, S. or M. 8y, Bouquet Wafers .... 20 Cameo Biscuit ...... 26 Cecelia Biscuit ..... 16 Cheese Tid Bits ..... 20 Chocolate Bar (cans) 20 Chocolate Drop Center 18 Chocolate Drops - as Chocolate Putt Cake 18 Choc. Honey Fingers 16 Circle Cookies ...... Cracknelsp .....cccece - Cream Fingers ....,, Cocoanut ‘Taffy Bar as is Cocoanut Drops ...... 12 Cocoanut Macaroons 18 Cocoanut Molas. Bar 16 Cocont Honey Fingers 12 Cocont Honey Jumbles 12 Cotfee Cakes Iced ... 12 Crumpeta ......... 12 Dinner Pail Mixed oo 10 Extra Wine Biscuit .. 12 family Cookies ...... 10 Fig Cakes Agstd. .... 12 Fireside Peanut Jumb 10 Fluted Cocoanut Bar 12 trosted Creams ..... 10 Frosted Ginger Cook. 10 frosted Raisin Sqs. .. 10 Fruited Ovals ....... 8 Fruited Ovals, Iced .. 9 Full Moon ........... 10 Ginger Drops ........ 13 Ginger Gems Plain -. 10 Ginger Gems, Iced .. 11 Graham Crackers ... 9 Ginger Snaps Family 9% Ginger Snaps Round 9 Hippodrome Bar .... 12 Honey Fingers Ass't 12 Honey Jumbles ...... 1 Household Cooks, Iced 10 Imperiaig ........:... 2 Jubilee Mixed ...... -. 10 Kaiser Jumbles ...... 12 Lady Fingers Sponge 30 Leap Year Jumbles .. 20 Lemon Biscuit Square 10 Lemon Cakes ....... 10 Lemon Wafers ...... 18 Lemona Mace Cakes sacscce 10 Macaroon Jumbles .. 18 ary ANN ....:..... 10 Mandalay ............ 10 Marshmallow Pecans #0 Mol. Frt. Cookie, Iced 11 NBC Honey Cakes .. 12 Oatmeal Crackers ... 9% Orange Gems Oreo Biscuit ........ 26 Othello ..... iecscees | 2D Penny Assorted . .... 10 Picnic Mixed ........ 12 Priscilla Cake ..... 8 Raisin Cookies ...... 12 Raisin Gems ........ 19% See Saw, S. or M. .. 8% Reveres Asstd. ...... 17 Rittenhouse et iz Snaparoons ..... 3 Spiced Jumbles, Iced 13 ccococe I Spiced Cookie eS ee ee a ee ee ee ne ee ee February 2, 1916 6 Sugar Fingers ...... 12 Sugar Crimp ........ 10 Vanilla Wafers 20 Butter Boxes N BC Square ....... 7 Seymour Round ...... 7 Soda Premium Sodas ...... 8 Saratoga Flakes .... 13 Saltines 2° ..........., 18 Oyster Dandy, Oysters ...... 7 N B C Oysters Square : Seem e reer eee e reese Sugar Wafer Specialities AGOTA | oo, Nabisco ....... eeuaee Nabisco ...... Resting ......5....... Festino ..... Lorna Doone AMOI ooo. cl: Champagne Wafers .. Above quotations of Na- tional Biscuit Co., subject to change without notice. CREAM TARTAR Barrels or Drums ..... 5 Hoven 4... i... 46 Sauare Cans .......... 49 Fancy Caddies ........ 54 DRIED FRUITS Apples Bvapor’ed Choice blk @09 Evapor’ed Fancy pkg. Apricots California ....... 94%@/0% Citron Corsican ............ 16% Te 12 rted, . pkg. ee buix ...... 11% Peaches Muirs—Choice, 25tb. .. 6% Muirs—Fancy, 25tb. .. 7% Fancy, Peeled, 25t. ..12 Peel Lemon, American .... 13% Orange, American .... 138% Ralsins Cluster, 20 cartons ..2 25 Loose Muscatels, 4 Cr. 81% Loose Muscatels, 3 Cr. 8% L. M. Seeded, 1 th. 8% @9 Callfornia Prunes 50-100 a eae 80- 90 251. boxes . 70- 80 25tD. boxes ..@ 9% 50- 70 25tb. boxes 49- 60 25%. boxes ..@10% 40-50 25tb. boxes ..@11 EVAPORATED MILK Red Band Brand Baby .. 62). .c 53... 2 40, Tall cc...) 3 50 5 case lots, 5c case lots, 10c less. FARINACEOUS GOODS Beans California Limas .... 6% Med. Hand Picked .. 3 75 less; 10 Brown Holland ..... 3 20 Farina 25 1 th. packages -.-1 60 Bulk, per 100 th. .... 4 50 Original Holland Rusk Packed 12 rolls to container 8 containers (40) rolls 3 20 Hominy Pearl, 100 tb. sack .. 2 50 Maccaronl and Vermicelli Domestic, 10 tb. box .. 60 {mported, 25 tb. box ..3 50 Pearl Barley Chester’ ...:...5...:. 3.40 Portagé ....05....... 4 75 Peas Green Wisconsin bu. 3 25 Split ibs 2... ee: 5% Sago A East India -.......... 7 German, sacks ........ 7 German, broken pkg. Tapioca Flake, 100 tb. sacks a Pearl, 100 tb. sacks .. ‘ Pearl, 86 pkgs. ....... 2 25 Minute, 2 qts., per doz. 1 25 FISHING TACKLE % to 1 in. 2.5.2... 6 4 te Zin. 66.6... 7 1% te 2 in... 9 1% te 2 in. Aas 11 Oe oa... cee LO Roam, 2U Cotton Lines No. 1, 10 feet ........ 5 No. 2°15 feet 2... .... f No. 3, 15 feet ...0..:: 9 No: 4 15 feet)... 10 No. 5, 15 feet ........ 11 No. 6, 15 feet ........ 12 No. 7, 16 feet ........ 15 No. 8, 15 feet ........ 18 No. 9, 15 feet ....... 20 Linen Lines Small ...... sieatec cic cic. 0 Medium ...... Soin Sto. 26 Loree ob 3 oe Poles Bamboo, 14 ft., per doz. 55 Bamboo, 16 ft., per doz. 60 Bamboo, 18 ft., per dos. 80 7 EE FLAVORING EXTRACTS Jennings D C Brand Pure Vanilla No Woz) 85 NO. 2, 124 02) (30. 1 20 No. 4, 2% oz 5 ee cea , 22 No. 3, 2% oz. Taper 2 00 lat 2 00 Terpeneless Pure Lemon No. 1, % oz. Panel .. 75 No. 2, 14% oz. Panel 1 13 No. 4, 2% oz. Panel 2 00 No. 3, 2% oz. Taper 1 75 MAG Se os 1 75 FLOUR AND FEED Grand Rapids Grain & Milling Co. Winter Wheat Purity Patent ...0 0. 6 75 Hancy Spring _..3.. 7. 7 70 Wizard Graham .... 6 50 Wizard, Gran. Meal . 4 80 Wizard Buckw’t ewt. 3 50 RVG 0000.) Valley Cit Lily White Light Loaf Graham so Granena Health .... d aram. Meal .:........ 2 35 Bolted Meal ..... “ 2 25 Voigt Milling Co. Voigt’s Crescent Voists Roval ..... |. Voigt’s Flouroigt ..., Voigt’s Hygienic Gra- ham ' sIs9-) Noon oocrer Watson-Higgins Milling Co. Hertection, (7.00.6) 7 10 ip Top Blour . |... | 6 60 Golden Sheaf Flour .. 6 00 Kern’s Success ...... 7 40 Marshall Best Flour 7 20 Worden Grocer Co. Quaker, paper ...... 6 50 Quaker, cloth ........ 6 60 Kansas Hard Wheat Voigt Milling Co, Calla, Wily. 2 i 7 50 Worden Grocer Co. American EHagle, %s 7 00 American Hagle, 4s 6 90 American Eagle, %s 6 80 Spring Wheat Roy Baker Mazeppa .06.55..... 6 10 Golden Horn bakers .. 7 00 Wisconsin Rye ....... 5 70 Bohemian Rye ...... 6 10 Judson Grocer Co. Ceresota, \%s ...... -. 8 3 Ceresota, Y%S ........ 8 20 Ceresota, ts ........ 8 10 Voigt Milling Co. Columbian: ¢. 6.005... . 7 50 Worden Grocer Co. Wingold, %s cloth .. 7 70 Wingold, %4s cloth .. 7 60 Wingold, %s cloth .. 7 30 Wingold, %s paper .. 7 50 Wingold, %s paper .. 7 30 Meal Bolted .....005..52... € 60 Golden Granulated .. 4 80 Wheat Red 2.0.0 5000. a does 1 28 WRIGG oe. 1 23 Oats io Michigan carlots ...... 52 Less than carlots ..... o4 Corn @arlots) 3... 6.05... . 80 Less than carlots .... 82 Hay Carlota <:....:.-.... 16 @0 Less than carlots .. 18 00 Feed Street Car Feed .... 32 00 No. 1 Corn & Oat Fd 32 00 Cracked Corn <..... 32 00 Coarse Corn Meal .. 32 00 FRUIT JARS Mason, pts., per gro. 4 65 Mason, qts., per gro. 5 00 Mason, % gal. per gro. 7 40 Mason, can tops, gro. 2 25 GELATINE Cox’s, 1 doz. large .. 1 45 Cox’s, 1 doz. small .. 90 Knox’s Sparkling, doz. 1 25 Knox’s Sparkling, gr. 14 00 Knox's Acidu’d doz. .. 1 25 Minute, 2 qts., doz. ..1 10 Minute, 2 qts., 3 doz. 3 25 Nelson’s ..... ee eae 1 50 Oxford ..... Seles gaa e : 75 Plymouth Rock, Phos. 1 25 Plymouth Rock, Plain 90 GRAIN BAGS Broad Gauge ........ 18 Amoskeag ......... Ses 19 Herbs SAG eset i sce. 16 FIGDS <...........- ceee 10 Laurel Leaves ....... 15 Senna Laves ......... 25 HIDES AND PELTS Hides Green, | Noo fo... 2... 15 Green, No. 2 ........ 14 Cured, No t ........ 17 Cured, No.2 .......: 16 Calfskin, green, No. 1 15 Calfskin, green, No. 2 13% Calfskin, cured, No. 1 17 Calfskin, cured, No. 2 15% Pelts Old Wool ........ 60@1 25 Lambs .......... 50@1 00 ‘Shearlings ...... 30@ 765 Brick, Plain Clay, T. D. full count 60 COD ooo... Clear Back .. Short Cut Clr 20 00@21 00 Bean Brisket, Clear 24 00@25 00 Pi Balarel a olateila Goa ale Clear Family Pure in tierces Compound Lard 11 @11% 80 MICHIGAN T 8 RADESMAN 9 Taliow No: f 0500. eoac @ 5 INO. 2 oo. oe @ 4 Wool Unwashed, med. @24 Unwashed, fine .. @20 HORSE RADISH Per doz. Jelly 5b. pails, per dos. 15tb. pails, per pail .. 70 301d. pails, per pail ..1 25 ICE CREAM Piper Ice Cream Co. Brands 0 Bulk, any flavor soc Extra Fancy, any flavor 65 ceeeees -..1 00 Brick, Fancy ...... 1): 1 20 JELLY GLASSES % pt. in bbls., per doz. 15 % pt. in bbls., per doz. 16 8 oz. capped in bbls., per doz ....2.0...... 48 MAPLEINE 2 oz. bottles, per doz. 3 00 1 oz. bottles, per doz. 1 75 16 0z. bottles, per dz. 18 00 32 oz. bottles, per dz. 30 00 MINCE MEAT Per case ..... Sia lee) a MOLASSES New Orleans Fancy Open Kettle ... 42 2 85 Choice eo aE Good ......... 27 Stock 23 Half barrels 2c extra Red Hen, No. 2% ...1 75 Red Hen, No. 5 ......1 75 Red Hen, No. 10 ....1 65 MUSTARD % Th. 6 th. box ...... 16 OLIVES Bulk, 1 gal. kegs 1 10@1 20 Bulk, 2 gal. kegs 1 05@1 15 Bulk, 5 gal. kegs 1 00@1 10 Stuffed, 5 07. 1.6... 7. 90 Stuffed, 8 oz. ........ 1 25 Stuffed, 14 oz. ...... 2 25 Pitted (not stuffed) 14 oz. sence 2 20 sees 90 Sele ees 235 Lunch, 16 oz. ...... . 2 25 Queen, Mammoth, 19 OZ oo Sa a Queen, Mammoth, 28 Oz Manzanilla, 8 “oz. Lunch, 10 oz. : -. Oo Olive Chow, 2 doz. es. per doz... PEANUT BUTTER Bel-Car-Mo Brand 24 Ib. fibre pails .... 14 tb. fibre pails ..... 23 0Z. jars, 1 doz. ....2 30 2 th. tin pails, 1 doz. 3 00 @ QZ. jars, 2 doz. 3. 4.30 PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Iron Barrels Perfection ...05.5..0.0 ¢! ted Crown Gasoline 18. Gas Machine Gasoline 27.9 MM & P Naphtha |. 17.5 Capitol Cylinder ..... 29.9 Atlantic Read Engine 13.9 Summer Black 7.) |. God POlarine . ioc... 6. 29.9 PICKLES Medium Barrels, 1,200 count .. 7 Half bbls., 600 count 4 5 gallon kegs ........ 1 Smail Barrels 2.0......0..., 9 Half barrels ........ 5 00 5 gallon kegs ........ 2 Gherkins Barrels: ...5......... 18 Half barrels ......... 6 5 gallon kegs ........ 2 50 Sweet Small Half barrels ........ 8 50 5 gallon kegs ....... 3 20 PIPES Clay, No. 216, per box 1 75 Barrels PLAYING CARDS No. 90, Steamboat .... 75 No. 15, Rival assorted 1 25 No. 20, Rover, enam’d 1 50 No. 572, Special ...... 1 75 No. 98 Golf, Satin fin. 2 00 No. 808, Bicycle ...... 2 00 No. 682 Tourn’t whist 2 25 POTASH Babbitt’s, 2 doz. .... 1 75 PROVISIONS Barreled Pork 22 00@23 00 pic se eae 15 50@16 00 26 00 Dry Salt Meats S P Bellies .... 144%@15 d Lar 11%@12 Ib. tubs ....advance..%& 60 Ib. tubs ....advance 50 Tb. tubs ....advance % 20 th. pails ...advance % 10 Tb. pails ...advance % 5 Ib. pails ...advance 1 3 Tb. pails ...advance 1 Smoked Meats Hams, 14-16 th. 16 @16% Hams, 16-18 tb. 15% @16 Hams, 18-20 tb. 17 @18 Ham, dried beef Sets ......... 29 @30 California Hams 11 @11% Picnic Boiled AMS ....... 19%@20 Boiled Hams .. 25% @26 Minced Ham .. 12 @12% Bacon 2.17: 15 @ 25 Sausages Bologna ...... - 104%@11 Biver 2... |. --- 9%@10 Frankfort ...... 12 @12% Pork 11 @12 oe eee reece Mea ay MOnSuG . oo. Headcheese .......... 10 Boneless ...... 20 0020 50 Rump, new ., 24 50@265 00 % bbis., 40 tha. .... % bbis., 80 ths. ...... 3 00 Casings Hogs, per tb. ‘ 5 Beef, rounds, set .. 19@20 Beef, middles, set .. 85@90 Sheep 1 15@1 35 Uncolored Butterine Solid Dairy .... 124%@16% Country Rolls .. 13 @19% Canned Meats tb Corned Beef, |... @ 50 Corned Beef, 1 th. .. 2 40 Roast Beef, 2 th. .... 4 50 Roast Beef, 1 th. .... 2 40 Potted Meat, Ham Blaver, 368 5.0)... 4s Potted Meat, Ham Hlavor, ts ....... 90 Deviled Meat, Ham Flavor, 4s ...... o. 4 Deviled Meat, Ham Blavor, %8 ....)... 96 Potted Tongue, 4s .. 48 Potted Tongue, %s .. 90 RICE Raney 05.00.70). @T% Tanan Style ...... 5 @5% Broken =... 02. 8Y4@4 ROLLED OATS Rolled Avenna, bbls. 6 00 Steel Cut, 100 th. sks. 2 10 Monarch, bbis: .: .. 5 75 Monarch, 90 th. sks. .. 2 88 Quaker, 18 Regular .. 1 45 Quaker, 20 Family .. 4 50 SALAD DRESSING Columbia, % pint .... 2 Columbia 1 pint .... 4 Durkee’s, large, 1 doz. 4 50 Durkee’s small, 2 doz. 5 Snider’s large, 1 doz. 2 Snider’s, small, 2 doz. 1 SALERATUS Packed 60 tbs. in box. Arm and Hammer .. 3 00 Wyandotte, 100 %s .. 3 00 SAL SODA Granulated, bbls. .... 1 00 Granulated, 100 Ibs. es. 1 10 Granulated, 36 pkgs. .. 1 26 SALT Common Grades 100 3 ib: sacks ...... 2 60 70 4 Yb. sacks ...., . 2 40 60 5 tb. sacks .. . 2 40 28 10 th. sacks «es 2 20 b6 ID. sacks .:.... | 40 28 ID. Sacks ........ 20 Warsaw 66 Ih. sacks .......... 26 28 tb. dairy in drill bags 20 Solar Rock 56 ID. sacks ../2 5... sie o6 Common Granulated, Fine .... 1 10 Medium, Fine ....... 1 15 SALT FISH Cod Large, whole .... Small, whole .... @i7 Strips or bricks ...9@13 Pollock .......... @ 5% Smoked Salmon Strips 2.000.605... Halibut Strips)... 6.22: diacecuce. 2a Chunks: ...... Galea ecicainc 19 Holland Herring Y. M. wh. hoop bbls. Y. M. wh. hoop % bbls. Y. M. wh. hoop kegs Y. M. wh. hoop Milchers kegs Standard, bbls. ...... Standard, % bbls. .... Standard, kegs ..... 95 Trout No: 1 100 Ibs. 2... . 750 No. 1; 40 Ibs. ........ 2 26 No 1, 10 Ihe: ......¢. 90 No. ft; Ss ibe ..,:...- 16 10 Mackerel Mess, 100 Ibs. ....... 40 Ibs. .. No. 1, 10 Ibs. Lake Herring eoreee -15 50 6 75 1 ROO IDS, 2... 00 40 ibs .2. 4... 2 35 10 Ibs Sdee ecw cs es 58 Sie... 8. 54 SEEDS AMISG .......2-....... 48 Canary, Smyrna .... 8 Caraway Cardomon, Celery .... : Hemp, Russian .... Bird 18 Malabar 1 20 eee. 45 Mixed ie ciate ela g Mustard, white ...... 16 Poppy .....:... aa 30 Rape ..... eeeas sees 20 SHOE BLACKING Handy Box, large 3 dz. 3 50 Handy Box, small 1 25 Bixby’s Royal Polish 85 Miller’s Crown Polish 85 UFF SN Scotch, in bladders .... vacee OG Maccaboy, in jars French Rapple in jars .. 43 SODA Boxes (.....0......... Kegs, English SPICES Whole Spices Allspice, Jamaica . -9@10 Allspice, lg Garden @l1 Cloves, Zanzibar @24 Cassia, Canton .. 14@15 Cassia, 5c pkg. dz. @25 Ginger, African @ 9% Ginger, Cochin Mace, Penang . Mixed, No. 1... Mixed, No. 2 ..._.. @16 Mixed, 5c pkgs. dz. @45 Nutmegs, 70-180 @30 Nutmegs, 105-110 @25 Pepper, Black ..... @16 Pepper, White ..... @25 Pepper, Cayenne @22 Paprika, Hungarian Pure Ground in Bulk Allspice, Jamaica .. @12 Cloves, Zanzibar @28 Cassia, Canton .. @22 Ginger, African .... @18 Mace, Penang ..... @75 Nutmess ........... @35 Pepper, Black ..... @19 Pepper, White @32 Pepper, Cayenne @25 Paprika Hungarian @45 STARCH Corn Kingsford, 40 Ibs. .... 7% Muzzy, 20 1tb. pkgs. 5% Kingsford Silver Gloss, 40 1tb. .. 7% Muzzy, 40 1%. pkgs. .. 5 Gloss Argo, 24 5c pkgs. .... 90 Silver Gloss, 16 3tbs. - 6% Silver Gloss, 12 6tps. 8% Muzzy 48 1Ib. packages ...... 5 16 3tb. packages 4% 12 6Ib. packages ...... 6 S0Ib. boxes ........... 3% SYRUPS Corn Barrels... .... 28 Half barrels ........... 30 Blue Karo, No. 1%, & @0m, 62... - 8 45 Blue Karo, No. 2, 2 dz. 1 95 Blue Karo, No. 2% 2 doz. i ce as . 2 35 Blue Karo, No. 5, 1 dz. 2 30 Blue Karo, No. 10, 67... Gees ae Red Karo, No. 1% 4 doz Ye 2 - 3 80 Red Karo, No. 2,2 dz. 2 30 Red Karo, No. 2%, 2dz. 2 75 Red Karo, No. 5, 1 dz. 2 70 Red Karo, No. 10 % G04 2 ....,......-.. 2 60 Pure Cane Baie oo eo ec... 1S GOOG: co.cc... 5. gees 20 @€nolee ........: toece 20 Folger’s Grape Punch Quarts, doz. case .. 60 TABLE SAUCES Halford, large ...... 3 75 Halford, small ...... 2 25 TEA Uncolored Japan Medium ...,....; - 20@25 Chofee ............ 28@88 Fancy ..........-.. S6@46 Basket-fired Med’m 28@30 Basket-fired Choice 35@37 Basket-fired Fancy 88@45 No. 1 Nibs ........ 36@a2 Siftings, bulk ..... 9@10 Siftings, 1 tb. pkgs. 12@14 Gunpowder Moyune, Medium .. 28@33 Moyune, Choice .. 35@40 Moyune, Fancy .... 50@60 Ping Suey, Medium 25@30 Ping Suey, Choice 35@40 Ping Suey, Fancy .. 45@50 Young Hyson Choice ............ 28@80 Fancy ...--+-.-«.-. &@<6€ 45 li Oeiong Formosa, Medium .. 25@28 Formosa, Choice .. 32@35 Formosa, Fancy ., 50@60 English Breakfast Congou, Medium -- 25930 Congou, Choice ... 30@35 Congou, Fancy .... 40@60 Congou, Ex, Fancy 60@80 Ceylon Pekoe, Medium ses- 28@30 Dr. Pekoe, Choice ., 30@35 Flowery O. P. Fancy 40@50 TOBACCO ne Cc Blot ees aay ie 14 Bugle, 16 oz. tereseee 3 84 an tule tesesscess 11 00 an tch, 8 and 16 os. Dan Patch, 4 oz. on Sa won oe 2 oz. ‘as all, 16 og. ..., Hiawatha, ‘2 Hiawatha, 5¢ May Flower, 16 os. RG poe § 0m O Limit, 16 oz. ae Ce 4... 2 bwa, 8 and 16 CNGd, ite... as 10 Ojibwa, 5c Petoskey Chief, "7 os. 2 oo Petoskey Chief, 14 og 400 Peach and Hon : Red Bell, 16 Oz. - - ; a Red Bell, 8 foij : teaae i oo Sterling, L & D5 6 Sweet Cuba, canister +i Sweet Cuba, 6c coos & 76 Sweet Cuba, 10c eo 95 Sweet Cuba, 1 TD. tin 4 56 Sweet Cuba, % I. foll 2 295 Sweet Burley, 5c L&D 5 76 Sweet Burley, 8 oz. -. 2 45 Sweet Burley, 16 oz. 490 Sweet Mist, % gro. .. 5 76 Sweet Mist. 8 OZ. ... 11 1@ Telegram, 5c seccceee 5 7B Tiger, 5c tree eeeeeeee 6 00 Tiger, 25¢ cans coeee 2 40 Uncle Daniel, 1 th. ae 60 Uncle Daniel, 1 oz. «. & 22 Plug Am. Navy, 16 Om ..... 89 Apple, 10 th. butt 36 Drummond Nat. Leaf, 3 and 6 fp eaf, 2 Drummond Nat. ‘Leaf, = bie per dom... 2. 96 Battle Ax 11.77 32 Bracer, 6 and 12 th. S 30 Big Four, 6 and 16 th. 32 Boot Jack, 2 TD. ...... 44 Boot Jack, Per doz. Pullion, 16 ox’ fe Climax Golden Twins 48 Climax, 14% oz, ccccee 44 Climax, 7 og 47 Day’s Work, 7 & 14 th. 38 Creme de Menthe, tp. 62 Derby, 5 th. boxes ..., 28 Bros., 4 tb. Seecese 6 Four Roses, 10¢ Seccee Of Gilt Edges, 2 th. aos Gold Rope, 6 ana 12 Th. 58 Gold Rope, 4 and 8 tT. 58 G. O. P., 12 and 24 TH. 40 Granger Twist, 6 TB... 46 G. T. W., 10 and 31 Th. 36 Horse Shoe, 6 and 12 Th. 43 Honey Dip Twist, 5 and 10 ft. eecescc.a. 45 Jolly Tar, 5 and 8 th. 40 J. T., 5% and 11 He. .. ¢ Kentucky Navy, 12 ib. § Keystone Twist, 6 th. 45 Kismet, 6 tb. ....... ; « Maple Dip, 16 oz 32 Merry Widow, 12 1D. .. #2 Nobby Spun Roll 6 & 8 £8 Parrot, 13 tho Patterson’s Nat. Leaf 98 Peachey, 6, 12 & 24 Th. 41 Picnic Twist, 5 th. .. 45 Piper Hetdsieck, 4 & 7 T).69 Piper Heldsieck, per dz. 96 Polo, 3 doz., per doz. 48 Redicut, 1% oz. ...... 88 Scrapple, 2 and 4 dos. 48 Sherry Cobbler, Spear Head, 12 oz. << 44 Spear Head, 14% oz. ee ae Spear Head, 7 oz. .. 4 Sq. Deal, 7, 14 & 28 tp. 30 are ot and a Dm. 43 andar avy, 7%, 15 and $6 Wh. 2...) 34 Ten Penny, 6 and 12 th. 36 Town Talk, 14 oz. = -49 Yankee Girl, 12 & 24 Yb. 31 Scrap All Red, Se .......... & 76 Am. Union Scrap .... 8 40 Bam Pipe, Ge ....... § §¢ Cutlas, 2% oz. ...... 26 Globe Scrap, 2 oz. ... 30 Happy Thought, 2 oz. 36 Honey Comb Scrap, 5c 6 76 Honest Scrap, 5c .... 1 55 Mail Pouch, 4 doz. 5e 2 00 Old Songs, 5¢ ....... 5 76 Old Times, % gro. ..5 50 Polar Bear, 5c, % gro. 5 76 Red Band, 5e % gro. 5 Red Man Scrap, 5c .. 1 Scrapple, 5c pkgs. ... Sure Shot, 5¢ % gro. 5 Yankee Girl Scrap 2o0z. 5 76 Pan Handle Scrp %gr 6 76 Peachey Scrap, 5c .... 5 76 Taton Workman, 3% 6 60 46 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN February 2, 1916 « SPECIAL PRICE CURRENT 15 16 17 BAKING POWDER Roasted Proctor & Gamble Co. KC. Dwinnell-Wright Brands = [,enox stccctcsececcess 8 20 12 12 14 Doz. ivory, 6 OZ. ...... sees 4:00 10c, 4 doz. in case ... 85 Teer ae Ivory, 10 6Z; .2....... - 6 75 Smoking Sunes Qualys bs Mop Sticks lde, 4 duz. in case .. 1 25 A - 3 35 F ; 7 25c, 4 doz. in case .. 2.00 All Leaf, 2% & 7 oz. 80 Rob Roy, 5e foil ../1°5 76 Trojan spring = : 50c. 2? doz i ) BB, 8% o. .......... 6 00 Rob Roy, 10c gross ..10 52 Eclipse patent spring = = ; an — : Swift & Company BB, 7 OB. .......... 12809 Rob Roy, 25¢ doz. .... 2 10 No. 1 common ........ 80 10 Th. 14 dz., pin top 13 00 ‘ BB, 14 og. .......... 24 00 Rob Roy, 50c doz. .... 4 10 No. 2, pat. brush holder 8 All cases sold. FF 0. B. Swift’s Pride ........ 2 85 Bagdad, 10c tins .... 1162 S. & M., 5c gross |... 5 76 Ideal No. 7 BS anieing oink oe White Laundry ...... 3 50 , 504 S. & M., 14 0z., doz. ..3 20 [@ ee a ee Poe - Wool, 6 oz. bars ..... 3 36 Banger, 8 ox. .......- : 12Tb. cotton mop heads 1 30 Special Deal No. 1. Badger, 7 oz. ........ 11 52 oe ao: = > = Palis 12 doz. 10c, 12 doz. 1c Wool, 10 oz. bars .... 6 5( _ oe we». 5 76 Soldier Boy, 10c .... : 2 doz. 10c, 12 doz. 15c, eee a eS 60 Pilot, 7 oz. doz. _.... 15 10 qt. Galvanized 2 40 12 -. as aa " Tradesman Co.’s Brand Banner, 40c .......... 3 20 Soldier Boy, 1 tb. 1... 4 = at. E = _ As — sg pn ee ¢ xture, 10¢ 94 Sweet Caporal. 1 ‘oz. 14 qt. Se ’ = , pe ae oe ce -- 6 00 Sweet Lotus, 5c .... 5 76 Fibre 2 70 ae 2 gage Black Hawk, five bxs 2 40 Big Chief, 16 oz .... : _ ee Lead ad : Toothpicks % Barrel Deal No. 3 - Black Hawk, ten bxs 2 25 . Bull “eed ea i. 52 Sweet Rose, 214 oz. .. 30 Birch, 100 packages .. 2 00 8 doz. each, 10, 15 and a kc 15c .. 17.28 Sweet Tip Top, 5c .. > eal 85 Win s Accent i 60 A. B. Wrisley if ne , ns : n Bull Durham, 8 oz. .. : - = — se Traps Half-Barrel Deal No. 3 Good Cheer .......,. 4 00 Bull yoo socal OZ. .. mee een Ge uae 98 Maan. =. : holes -- = 4 doz. each, 10, 15 and . Old Country ...... sees 3 40 Buck Horn, ic ...... ee ak CC 5 74 Mouse, wo oles .. 4 BOG consi nine oo. 16 4 eek Born. Pe. ne Time, 7 oz... 165 10 at. Galvanized ....°1 55 With 2 doz. ide free. White House, 1 I. ....... Scouring Briar Pipe, 5c ..... . - ; icc Pest tk ck ee Dhak Galvanized “+++ 170 All barrels sold F. O. B. White House, 2 tb. ....... Sapolio, gross lots .. 9 5¢ Briar Pipe, 10c .... oe a. Bo toll 5 76 14 qt. Galvanized .... 1 $0 Chicago. Excelsior, Blend, 1 tb. .. Sapolio, half 1 Black Swan, Sc .... 576 Standard, 5c g ¢4 Mouse, wood, 6 holes .. 70 , ’ tree Rapono, half gro. lots 4 36 ee So. i 8 Standard, 10¢ paper 8 6 Mouse, tin, § holes...” 65 Royal Excelsior, Blend, 2 th. .... Sapolio, single boxes 2 40 Blac 3 600 Seal N. C. 1% cut plug 70 Rat on 80 Tip T Bland Sapolio, hand ....... . 240 Bob White, 5c ...... 0 Seal N. G. 12% Gran... 68 a, Wood ........ iL 80 : p Top and, 1 Ib. ..... Scourine, 50 cakes 1 80 Sees, 0 a i 10 Three Feathers, 1 oz. 48 Rat, spring ...... 77-2 1D 1c size .. 96 Royal Blend teseseeceeess Scourine, 100 cakes 3 50 Brotherhood, 1c .... S Tb a Tb cans 135 Royal High Grade .../..” : . Brotherhood, 16 oz. 505 Three Feathers, 10c Superior Blend ........22! (Carnival, 5c ........ 5 70 Three Feathers and 6 oz cans 1 90 sa c sr - Soap Compounds Carnival, % oz. ...... 39 Pipe combination .. 2 25 tb cans 2 50 ombination ..... ot so. =i sk om A dee, tk oe 60 a nace 2 Distributed by Judson Johnson's Fine, 48 2 3 25 a Clip’g, Johnson 30 Tom & Jerry, 7 oz ..1 80 es ‘© Grocer Co., Grand Rapids: Johnson’s XXX 100 6c 4 00 ee a, (se Tom & Jerry, 3 oz. .. 76 sm come 450 bee & Cady. Detroit: Lee pub No sisce a... 2 86 Cigar Clipe, Sey att 5 5 90 & Cady, Kalamazoo; Lee wn; "C] Ydentity, 3 and 16 oz. 30 Trout Line, BC «+++: Oakland white pickle 10 Magic, 3 doz. ....... iis = Big Master, 100 blocks 3 90 ores te ss — oe "3 76 Packaeee free, Sere ago or 106 O44 Master Coffee .... 81 Naphtha, 100 cakes .. 3 90 best 10c kinds Mat: Ge 2. .o 3c a4 = ight, Zz. ia a Sar 2 a iS S i o, Dew, i6c ....12 00 WICKING Yeast Foam, 3 a © poe 15 an Marto Coffee ..... ceeeee: 1) cane a - ot Hunting, Se .......--. 510 No. 0. per gross ......35 | Yeast Foam, 1% doz #5 FI ICK BROTHERS’ SOAP CHIPS oo oo es oe. § © Wo. 1, per gross .... 45 ae see TZPATR BBLS. : ~ = _ weceee : = = = — pt tree = : White City ‘Deh Washing) = 210 lbs......3¢ per Ib. : ust Suits, 5c ........ 6 No. 3, pe SS .... Tip T Cameco. 250 Ibs 4c per lb met Suites, i0c ...-.-. 12 00 iip Lop ee ++.---4¢ p : iain Dried, 25c ..... 2% WOODENWARE Ohio Be 225 Ibs......5Mc per lb. King Bird, 7 oz. .... 2 16 Baskets Pontes. 300 Ibs... ...6%c per Ib Bing Bird. l0c ...... li = eo 1 00 jy, Sor egy Se i 5 76 Bushels, wide band .. 1 = i Little Giant, 1 tb. On Mierke §......... i Hine oC cae ° BRAND e ca ibe SE Snlint large ........ 4 00 ‘ SS ive a. = Sere ay ene 359 FOOTE & JENKS I arney REGISTERED Inger e : 46 oo ss Splint, small ........ 2 009 < Myrtic Navy. “100 ae Willow, Clothes, a : oy he (CONTAINS NO CAPSICUM) yrtle Navy. Sc... -S Dia Gert ee 1 bee ee ce be An Agreeable Beverage of the CORRECT Belfast Type. Maryland Club, 5c om : : 3 Tb. boxes, per gross 2216 | ‘ ee . Mayflower, 5c ....... 8 76 Butter Plates 7 : _ Supplied to Dealers, Hotels, Clubs and Families in Bottles Having os ae Hager _ TELFER’S@:COFFEE Registered Trade-Mark Crowns d vi i, be... smo 4 =~ 206 im erate .... 35 i ' a osm i tes 250 in crate .... 35 A Partial List of Authorized Bottiers: A. L. JOYCE & SON, Grand Rapids and Traverse City, Mich. ; : Nigger Head, 5c te eo ee ee ar DETROIT KALAMAZGO BOTTLING CO., Kalamazoo, Mich.; KILLARNEY BOTTLING CO., Jackson, Mich. vi £ —» on r Bee CL 50 TR ak 48 3 Ib., 250 in crate ...... 70 : wy, 1-12 gro. 11 62 5 th. 250 im crate ...... 90 Old Mi ge css 8 8 Wire End Qld English Crve loz. 96 250 ir io. 35 Ola Crop, be ........ 2% i see “5 poe : 9 : a . : = . S O ME THIN G M O R E ° : Co 5 on 8 Mt 20 in arabe || #5 P.&. 3 of, per ere 570 °* , ret Hand, 1 ox. _..... 63 Churns Patterson Seal, 1% of. 48 Barrel, 5 gal, each .. 2 4 Patterson Seal, 3 oz. .. 96 Barrel. 10 gal each _.2 55 Patterson Seal, 16 oz. 5 00 ge eee Peerless, Sc ........ 5 76 Clothes Pins The chances are that you want something more than printing Peerless, 10c¢ cloth ..11 a2 Sound iece oat ‘ : ae ‘ : : : Peerless, 10c paper ..10 80 ; ee c Wit a a 37 when you want a job of printing—ideas, possibly, or suggestions for Eeertess, 20e _....... 204 4% inch, 5 gross ..... 60 Cherry Blossom Tea 37 : : : Peeriess, 40¢ ........ £ 0S Cartons, 20 2% doz. brs 6 Potrers Ceylon .... 40 them; a plan as likely as possible to be the best, because compris- Plaza, 2 gro. case ....5 76 Egg Crates and Fille : : : , Plow Boy, - pete . : Honey Temes. 12 dz. 20 ing the latest and the best; an execution of the plan as you want it ow Oy, ie ...... No 2 Cpmmpiete 2.8: 40 s ss . Flow =. 14 oz. a - No. 2, complete i. oe CHAR ° OA ie and when you want it. This is the service that we talk about but Pride of Virginia, 1%) 7 — oo 1 85 little, but invariably give. — - gee 5 Case, medium, 12 sets 1 15 LOTR CC gee MET rte Hot, OZ. doz. ..... 2 10 ug eae tee e Prince Albert, 5c .... 48 Faucets q T d C ee G d R d Prince Albert, 10c ...._ 96 Cork lined, 3 in. ...... Hie Poultry and stock charcoal. la esman ompany ee ran api S — — lo —. = Cork sem. » in. eee: Me M.O. DEWEY CO.. Jackson. Mich. nce . <-- Cork lined, 10 in. ...... 99 @& SN IT MO AM rac ipa ei Si eS ee Sn ISNA a ante tp pretest . neerenesentine 0 ou ——— a nan oe we Oo Se awe February 2, 1916 BUSINESS-WANTS PACA Aaa tell ehac eX gate tt Gls an asth terTe] for tw continuous insertion. BUSINESS CHANCES. For Sale—Stock and fixtures of the G. W. Bangs store, Lowell, Michigan. Enquire Judson Grocer Company. 812 No Contract—I don’t use any contract. I don’t want the keys to your store. [ sell your goods and get the prices you want. You can stop the sale any time you wish. I conduct any kind of a sale you want. Write for references and in- formation. W. D. Hamilton, Galesburg, Illinois. 804 List your business propositions with us. Also farm and_ residence property for quick sale. Michigan Real Estate Co., Jackson, Michigan. 788 For Sale—Feed store doing a good busiz ness on railroad in town of 1.000. Han- dled 24 cars of feed since last March. Ad- dress No. 805, care Tradesman. 805 For Sale—Stock of groceries, meats and notions in suburbs of Kalamazoo, doing a good business. Reason for selling have a farm that requires my attention and can not do justice to both. Will bear fullest investigation. Address No. 806, care Michigan Tradesman. 806 Business opportunity, best opening in State for furniture and undertaking busi- ness. Large farming territory. Box 64, RR. BDO No. 4 Capac, Michigan. 807 For Sale—Garage; an Al investment; other business reason for selling. Write or phone, R. J. Glover, Fowlerville, Mich- igan. 808 Auctioneer: Merchandise and real es- tate auctioneering is my specialty. Mag- nus Wangen, Hartland, Minnesota. 809 Wanted—Three Globe-Wernicke cabi- nets, style R323, drawers 9% inches wide, 11% inches high and 20% inches deep. Address C. Chandler, 4 Cushing St., Providence, R. I. 798 For Sale—Private bank in thriving Northern Michigan town. Capital and surplus $5,200, doing good business. Rea- son for selling other interest elsewhere demanding immediate attention. Address No. 799, care Tradesman. 799 For Rent—Two-story and basement store building corner Monroe avenue and Dale street, Grand Rapids. Store 22x 50, heated by furnace. Desirable — living rooms overhead. Suitable for grocery or general store. E. J. Bates, 1308 Sigsbee St., Grand Rapids. : For Sale—$2.500 stock of dry goods at f5¢e on the dollar, spot cash. Address No. 801, care Tradesman. 801 For Sale—Grocery and market over $100 per day cash business. Rent $40, includes seven room flat. Inventory about $2,500, Half cash. Get busy if you want this. Flint Realty Co., 419 Dryden Bldg., Flint, Michigan. 802 For Sale—In Centreville, Michigan, county seat of St. Joseph county, stock groceries and notions $7,500. Business established 388 years. Modern building 26x 80; warehouse 20x40. Good school, 4 churches, knitting mill, electric light and water works. A going business and a money maker. Am selling out because have been 50 years behind the counter and want a rest. Pay anybody’s expenses both ways if don’t find as represented. H. J. Hampson, Centreville, St. Joseph County, Michigan. 803 A financially responsible party is seek- ing a hardware business located in the Central States in a city of 3,000 or more. Would invest $10.000 or more and desires to deal only with principals. It will re- quire a live going business, where tangible evidence will show that condition, to interest him. If you can meet these re- auirements send full description to Hiram W. Josevh, Allegan, Michigan. 810 __ For Sale—Well established coal, feed and implement business. Address No. 811, care Tradesman. 811 Wanted country store stock up to $2,500. Cash and Mason county land pay for same. Box 57, Gwinn, Mich. 796 For Sale—Coffee roasting outfit, com- prising four half bag roasters, one cooler and stoner, one complete smoke suction outfit, one granulating coffee mill and one pulverizer. Reason for selling, must have machines of larger capacity. Coffee Ranch. Grand Rapids. 197 Excellent location for wall paper and paint store. Living rooms in connection. Low rent. Good opportunity for decorator whose wife could attend store. i Write for full particulars. Address Paver- store,’’ care Tradesman. 795 For Sale—Only bakery in town. Fine opportunity. Good location. Right price. Address No. 793, care Tradesman. 793 For Sale—Flour and feed mill with buckwheat run. Fine surrounding farm- ing community. Good established trade. Everything good shape. Electric power. For further information enquire Robert Kellog, Olivet, Michigan. 794 MICHIGAN TRADESMAN 47 For Sale—Well established plumbing and heating business; good paying lo- cality. Object selling, going on farm. Lock Box 209, Bloomington, IU. 792 Sale or Exchange—Improved farm, 120 acres 11% miles from Hersey, Osceola County, Michigan. Good buildings, well watered, rich soil. Will take as part payment stock merchandise to $4,000. Templeton & Alspaugh, Canton, Ohio. 791 For Exchange—I_ will trade general merchandise for a good National cash register, and a good computing scale. A. L. Redman, Olney, Miinois. 783 For Sale—A first-class meat. fruit and vegetable market in a good town. Reason for selling, other business. For particu- lars address No. 784, care Michigan Tradesman. 784 Modern Store For Sale—Business of more than $700 per week, mostly cash. Two large mines running near. Dairy section near coast. Brick _ building; cheap rent; invoice $10,000. Owner has other interests. W. M. Lyons, Cambria, California. 785 For Sale—120 electric portable boat provellers, highest workmanship and ma- terial. Can be applied to any boat ina moment. _ Many a man’s charity reaches the limit when he dispenses free advice. BUSINESS CHANCEs. For Sale—Twenty-acre farm in village of Coopersville, five-room cottage, electric lighted, ample outbuildings, cistern, well of good water, creek in pasture, land in high state of cultivation, seven minutes’ walk to postoffice. Reasonable prices, favorable terms. Write or call on S. H. Plummer on premises. 813 Use an automobile with one of our Commercial Bodies and you will save Time and Money, and give better service to your patrons, which means more business and better profits. We manufacture all kinds of Commercial Bodies for Automobiles, Motor Trucks. Wagons, Drays and R. F. D. If you are interested in improving your delivery system, send for descriptive catalogue. Graham Auto Body Co. CADILLAC, MICH. en AE AE AOSTA MNT ta ee etemmatntimmenbetaninnon. ect sr a Manutactured 2 nh a Class by U ~~ lisel f’ Sanitary Conditions ies wow Made in G. J. Johnson Cigar Co. Makers Grand Rapids, Mich. Truthful Advertising KG Bakinc Powper is constantly making business for thousands of dealers, who, by selling and recommending K C are gaining the everlasting gratitude of the house- wife who appreciates the better value to be had in this brand. YOU profit by this advertising, Mr. Grocer, in the larger margin of profit for yourself—and your customer profits in the guaranteed satisfaction you offer. It will pay you—you will get your value from this advertising —by recommending K C as the “Best At Any Price” per OTe Neca tela WY Can GY