TABLE I.-WHOLESALE PRICES OF COMMODITIES FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1910-Continued. METALS AND IMPLEMENTS-Continued. SAWS: Hand, Disston No. 7, 26-inch. [Price per dozen to small jobbers, f. o. b. Philadelphia, on the first of each month.] SHOVELS: Ames No. 2, cast steel, D handle, square point, back strap, black. [Average monthly price per ounce, in New York; quotations furnished by the Director of the Mint.] [Price per pound, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Iron Age.] [Average monthly price per ton, at mills at Pittsburg: quotations from the Bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Association.] [Price per ton, at mills in Pennsylvania; quotations from the Bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Jan... Feb. Association.] TABLE I.-WHOLESALE PRICES OF COMMODITIES FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1910-Continued. METALS AND IMPLEMENTS-Continued. STEEL SHEETS: Black, No. 27, box annealed, one pass through cold rolls. Jan. TIN: Pig. [Price per pound, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Iron Age.] [Price per box of 100 pounds, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Iron Age.] TABLE I.-WHOLESALE PRICES OF COMMODITIES FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1910-Continued. METALS AND IMPLEMENTS-Concluded. ZINC: Sheet, ordinary numbers and sizes, packed in 600-pound casks. [Price per 100 BRICK: Common domestic building. (Price per 1,000, on dock in New York, from the first to the last of each month.] [Price per pound, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Oil, Paint, and Drug Jan.... Feb.. Mar. Reporter.] [Price per barrel, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin.] [Price per barrel, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin.] DOORS: Western white pine, 2 feet 8 inches by 6 feet 8 inches, 13-inches thick, 5-panel, No. 1, O. G. (Price per door, f. o. b. Chicago, on the first of each month.] TABLE 1.-WHOLESALE PRICES OF COMMODITIES FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1910-Continued. LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS-Continued. HEMLOCK: Base price, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] [Price per barrel, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Journal of Commerce and Commercial Bulletin.] [Price per gallon, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Oil, Paint, and Drug MAPLE: Hard and soft, 1-inch, firsts and seconds, 6 inches and up wide. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] OAK: White, plain, 1-inch, 6 inches and up wide. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade OAK: White, quartered, clear and good seconds, 6 inches and up wide, 10 to 16 feet long. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] TABLE I.-WHOLESALE PRICES OF COMMODITIES FROM JANUARY TO DECEMBER, 1910-Continued. LUMBER AND BUILDING MATERIALS-Continued. OXIDE OF ZINC: American, extra dry. [Price per pound, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the Oil, Paint, and Drug Reporter.] PINE: White, boards, No. 2 barn, 10 inches wide, rough. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] PINE: White, boards, uppers, 1-inch, 8 inches and up wide, rough. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] PINE: Yellow, flooring, B, heart face, rift sawn, 1 inch thick, 23 inches wide (counted 3 inches.) [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] PINE: Yellow, siding, long leaf, boards, heart face, 1 inch and 11 inch. [Price per M feet, in New York, on the first of each month; quotations from the New York Lumber Trade Journal.] Jan. Mar... PLATE GLASS: Polished, glazing, area 5 to 10 square feet. |